C-556/14
WyrokTSUE2016-04-07CELEX: 62014CJ0556ECLI:EU:C:2016:207
Analiza orzeczenia
Sekcja wygenerowana przez AI na podstawie treści orzeczenia — nie stanowi cytatu.
Zagadnienie prawne
Czy Komisja Europejska poniosła odpowiedzialność odszkodowawczą (na zasadzie winy lub ryzyka) za odmowę ujawnienia informacji o skradzionych uprawnieniach do emisji gazów cieplarnianych oraz za odmowę zablokowania transakcji dotyczących tych uprawnień, w świetle przepisów dyrektywy 2003/87/WE i rozporządzenia (WE) nr 2216/2004, w szczególności art. 10 tego rozporządzenia dotyczącego poufności danych?Ratio decidendi
Trybunał Sprawiedliwości oddalił odwołanie Holcim, uznając, że Sąd prawidłowo stwierdził, iż Komisja nie ponosi odpowiedzialności odszkodowawczej. Trybunał potwierdził, że art. 10 rozporządzenia nr 2216/2004 ustanawia ogólną zasadę poufności danych zawartych w rejestrach uprawnień do emisji, a wyjątki od tej zasady należy interpretować ściśle. Komisja nie miała uprawnień do ujawnienia informacji Holcim ani do zablokowania skradzionych uprawnień, ponieważ przepisy (art. 20 dyrektywy 2003/87/WE i art. 69 rozporządzenia nr 2216/2004) nie przewidują takich uprawnień w przypadku kradzieży, a jedynie w przypadku ryzyka systemowego lub nieregularności wykrytych przez automatyczną kontrolę. Ponadto, Trybunał uznał, że uprawnienia do emisji i jednostki Kioto mają odmienną naturę i cele, co uzasadnia różne reżimy jawności.Stan faktyczny
Holcim (Romania) SA, firma specjalizująca się w produkcji cementu, posiadała konta uprawnień do emisji zarejestrowane w rumuńskim rejestrze. 16 listopada 2010 r. milion uprawnień należących do Holcim zostało rzekomo bezprawnie przeniesionych na konto we Włoszech, a 600 000 uprawnień do Liechtensteinu. Skradzione uprawnienia, których nie odzyskano, były warte około 15 000 000 EUR. Holcim powiadomiło Komisję i zwróciło się o zamrożenie uprawnień oraz zablokowanie kont, jednak Komisja odmówiła, twierdząc, że nie ma takich uprawnień, a odzyskiwanie uprawnień należy do właściwości organów krajowych.Rozstrzygnięcie
1. Oddala odwołanie.
2. Obciąża Holcim (Romania) SA kosztami postępowania.Pełny tekst orzeczenia
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT (Fifth Chamber)
7 April 2016 (*)
(Appeal — Environment — Scheme for greenhouse gas emission allowance trading in the European Union — Directive 2003/87/EC — Articles 19 and 20 – Regulation (EC) No 2216/2004 — Article 10 — System of registries for transactions concerning emission allowances — Liability for fault – Commission’s refusal to disclose information on and to prohibit all transactions involving stolen emission
allowances — Strict liability)
In Case C‑556/14 P,
APPEAL under Article 56 of the Statute of the Court of Justice of the European Union, brought on 1 December 2014,
Holcim (Romania) SA, established in Bucharest (Romania), represented by L. Arnauts, avocat,
appellant,
the other party to the proceedings being:
European Commission, represented by E. White and K. Mifsud‑Bonnici, acting as Agents,
defendant at first instance,
THE COURT (Fifth Chamber),
composed of J.L. da Cruz Vilaça (Rapporteur), President of the Chamber, F. Biltgen, A. Borg Barthet, E. Levits and M. Berger,
Judges,
Advocate General: P. Mengozzi,
Registrar: A. Calot Escobar,
having regard to the written procedure,
having decided, after hearing the Advocate General, to proceed to judgment without an Opinion,
gives the following
Judgment
1 By its appeal, Holcim (Romania) SA (‘Holcim’) asks the Court to set aside the judgment of the General Court of the European
Union of 18 September 2014 in Holcim (Romania) v Commission (T‑317/12, EU:T:2014:782, ‘the judgment under appeal), by which the General Court dismissed Holcim’s action seeking, first,
compensation for the damage which Holcim allegedly sustained because of the European Commission’s alleged fault (i) in refusing
to disclose to it information concerning greenhouse gas emission allowances allegedly stolen from Holcim and (ii) in prohibiting
all transactions involving those allowances and, secondly, compensation for that damage on the basis of the Commission’s strict
liability.
Legal context
International law
2 The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (‘the United Nations Framework Convention) was adopted on 9 May
1992 and approved, on behalf of the European Community, by Council Decision 94/69/EC of 15 December 1993 concerning the conclusion
of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (OJ 1994 L 33, p. 11). It entered into force, with regard to
the Community, on 21 March 1994.
3 The Kyoto Protocol to the United Nations Framework Convention (‘the Kyoto Protocol’) was adopted on 11 December 1997. That
protocol was approved on behalf of the Community by Council Decision 2002/358/EC of 25 April 2002 (OJ 2002 L 130, p. 1).
4 In accordance with Article 3(1) of the Kyoto Protocol, during the period 2008 to 2012, the States and international organisations
included in Annex I to the United Nations Framework Convention, including the Community, had to ensure that their aggregate
anthropogenic emissions of certain greenhouse gases did not exceed a certain amount, referred to as the ‘assigned amount’.
5 The assigned amount was expressed in tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent, one tonne being equivalent to one ‘assigned amount
unit’. During the period 2008 to 2012, as a supplement to actions for the purpose of meeting quantified emission limitation
and reduction commitments, each State included in Annex I to the Kyoto Protocol could vary its assigned amount, so that it
was not less than its actual emissions. To that end, the parties could carry out a range of operations by means of the assigned
unit amounts and the other types of unit provided for by the Kyoto Protocol (together ‘the Kyoto units’).
6 On 30 November 2005, the Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention serving as the meeting of the
Parties to the Kyoto Protocol adopted Decision 13/CMP.1. The annex to that decision sets out the ‘[m]odalities for the accounting
of assigned amounts’.
7 As set out in paragraph 44 of the Annex to Decision 13/CMP.1, ‘each national registry shall make non-confidential information
publicly available’. Paragraph 47 of that annex lists the information referred to in paragraph 44, including the units held
and the transactions carried out in the context of the national registry. That information consists in a series of data relating
to the Kyoto units held, issued, acquired, transferred or cancelled in the accounts held in the national registries.
European Union law
8 Directive 2003/87/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 13 October 2003 establishing a scheme for greenhouse
gas emission allowance trading within the Community and amending Council Directive 96/61/EC (OJ 2003 L 275, p. 32), as amended
by Regulation (EC) No 219/2009 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 11 March 2009 (OJ 2009 L 87, p. 109, ‘Directive
2003/87’), states, in recital 5 of that directive, that it ‘aims to contribute to fulfilling the commitments [stemming from
the Kyoto Protocol] of the European Community and its Member States more effectively, through an efficient European market
in greenhouse gas emission allowances, with the least possible diminution of economic development and employment’.
9 Article 1 of Directive 2003/87 provides that that directive ‘establishes a scheme for greenhouse gas emission allowance trading
within the Community (hereinafter referred to as the “Community scheme”) in order to promote reductions of greenhouse gas
emissions in a cost‑effective and economically efficient manner’.
10 Article 2 of Directive 2003/87, relating to the scope of that directive, provides, in paragraph 1 thereof:
‘This Directive shall apply to emissions from the activities listed in Annex I and greenhouse gases listed in Annex II’.
11 Article 3(a) of Directive 2003/87 defines the greenhouse gas emission allowance (‘the emission allowance’) as being ‘an allowance
to emit one tonne of carbon dioxide equivalent during a specified period, which shall be valid only for the purposes of meeting
the requirements of this Directive and shall be transferable in accordance with the provisions of this Directive’.
12 In accordance with Article 11(2) and (4) of that directive, during the five-year period beginning on 1 January 2008, the competent
authority of the Member State concerned is to issue, each year, to the operator of an installation coming within one of the
sector[s] of activities listed in Annex I to that directive a certain number of emission allowances. The allowances must be
issued by 28 February of the year in question (year N).
13 In accordance with Article 12(3) of Directive 2003/87, by 30 April of year N+1 at the latest, the operator of an installation
must surrender a number of emission allowances equal to the total emissions actually emitted from that installation during
the calendar year N.
14 Article 19(2) and (3) of Directive 2003/87 provides:
‘2. Any person may hold allowances. The registry shall be accessible to the public and shall contain separate accounts to
record the allowances held by each person to whom and from whom allowances are issued or transferred.
3. In order to implement this Directive, the Commission shall adopt a Regulation for a standardised and secured system of registries
in the form of standardised electronic databases containing common data elements to track the issue, holding, transfer and
cancellation of allowances, to provide for public access and confidentiality as appropriate and to ensure that there are no
transfers which are incompatible with the obligations resulting from the Kyoto Protocol. That Regulation shall also include
provisions concerning the use and identification of [certified emission reductions] and [emission reduction units] in the
Community scheme and the monitoring of the level of such use. ...’
15 Article 20 of that directive provides:
‘1. The Commission shall designate a Central Administrator to maintain an independent transaction log recording the issue,
transfer and cancellation of allowances.
2. The Central Administrator shall conduct an automated check on each transaction in registries through the independent transaction
log to ensure there are no irregularities in the issue, transfer and cancellation of allowances.
3. If irregularities are identified through the automated check, the Central Administrator shall inform the Member State or Member
States concerned who shall not register the transactions in question or any further transactions relating to the allowances
concerned until the irregularities have been resolved.’
16 Pursuant to Article 19(3) of Directive 2003/87, the Commission adopted Commission Regulation (EC) No 2216/2004 of 21 December
2004 for a standardised and secured system of registries pursuant to Directive 2003/87 and Decision No 280/2004/EC of the
European Parliament and of the Council (OJ 2004 L 386, p. 1). That regulation was repealed as from 1 January 2012 by Commission
Regulation (EC) No 994/2008 of 8 October 2008 (OJ 2008 L 271, p. 3). However, taking into account the date of the conduct
of which the Commission is accused, the present dispute remains governed by Regulation No 2216/2004, as amended by Commission
Regulation (EU) No 920/2010 of 7 October 2010 (OJ 2010 L 270, p. 1, ‘Regulation No 2216/2004’).
17 Article 5 of Regulation No 2216/2004, on the independent transaction log provided for in Article 20 of Directive 2003/87,
provides in paragraph 3:
‘The Central Administrator designated pursuant to Article 20 of Directive 2003/87/EC shall operate and maintain the Community
independent transaction log in accordance with the provisions of this Regulation.’
18 Article 10 of Regulation No 2216/2004 provides:
‘1. All information, including the holdings of all accounts and all transactions made, held in the registries and the Community
independent transaction log shall be considered confidential for any purpose other than the implementation of the requirements
of this Regulation, Directive 2003/87/EC or national law.
2. The following entities may obtain data stored in the registries and the [Community independent transaction log]:
(a) the law enforcement and tax authorities of a Member State;
(b) the European Anti-fraud Office of the European Commission [OLAF];
(c) Europol;
(d) registry administrators of Member States.
2a. Transaction data may be provided to the entities listed under paragraph 2. upon their request to the Central Administrator
or to a registry administrator if such requests are justified and necessary for the purposes of investigation, detection and
prosecution of fraud, tax administration or enforcement, money laundering, terrorism financing or serious crime.
2b. An entity receiving data in accordance with paragraph 2a shall ensure that the data received is only used for the purposes stated in the request in accordance with paragraph 2a and is not made available deliberately or accidentally to persons not involved in the intended purpose of the data use. This
provision shall not preclude these entities to make the data available to other entities listed in paragraph 2, if this is
necessary for the purposes stated in the request made in accordance with paragraph 2a.
2c. Upon their request, the Central administrator may provide access to anonymised transaction data to the entities listed in
paragraph 2 for the purpose of looking for suspicious transaction patterns. Entities with such access may notify suspicious
transaction patterns to other entities listed in paragraph 2.
2d. Registry administrators shall make available through secure means to all other registry administrators the names and identities
of persons whom they refused to open an account for, or whom refused to nominate as an authorised representative or additional
authorised representative.
2e. Registry administrators may decide to notify to national law enforcement authorities all transactions that involve a number
of units above the amount determined by the registry administrator and to notify any account that is involved in a number
of transactions within a 24‑hour period that is above an amount determined by the registry administrator.
3. Each competent authority and registry administrator shall only perform processes concerning allowances, verified emissions,
automatic national allocation plan table changes, accounts or Kyoto units where necessary to carry out their functions as
competent authority or registry administrator.’
19 Article 27(1) of Regulation No 2216/2004 provides:
‘If, on 1 April of each year starting in 2006, an installation’s annual verified emissions for the preceding year have not
been entered into the verified emissions table …, the registry administrator shall block the transfer of any allowances out
of the operator holding account for that installation.’
20 Article 69 of Regulation No 2216/2004 provides:
‘The Central Administrator may suspend access to the Community independent transaction log and a registry administrator may
suspend access to his registry if there is a breach of security of the Community independent transaction log or of a registry
which threatens the integrity of the Community independent transaction log or of a registry or the integrity of the registries
system ...’
Background to the dispute
21 Holcim, a company specialised in the production of cement, aggregates, asphalt and ready-mixed concrete, has emission allowance
accounts registered at the Romanian registry. On 16 November 2010, one million allowances belonging to it were allegedly unlawfully
transferred to an account in Italy and 600 000 allowances transferred to Liechtenstein. The allowances stolen and not recovered
as at the date on which the application was lodged at the General Court were, in the appellant’s view, worth about EUR 15 000 000.
22 By letter of 24 November 2010, Holcim officially notified the incident to the Commission and asked it to ‘request ... the
National Registries to freeze’ the emission allowances allegedly stolen and ‘block the ... accounts’ through which the allowances
had passed. By letter of 25 November 2010, the appellant lodged a complaint with the Romanian public prosecutor. By letter
of 2 December 2010, the appellant’s lawyers asked the Commission to ‘suspend and refuse access to [the] accounts’ through
which the allowances allegedly stolen had passed.
23 By letter of 14 December 2010, the competent Head of Unit of the Commission replied to the appellant’s lawyers in the following
terms:
‘...
As regards your request to suspend and refuse access to relevant accounts, our view is that the recovery of any allowances
which are claimed to have been transferred fraudulently is a matter for national law and national law enforcement authorities.
The Commission has no powers to block any such allowances in a registry account.
As regards transactions with allowances, please note that this information is pursuant to Article 10 and Annex XVI of Regulation
[No 2216/2004] confidential for five years. Notwithstanding this provision, the Commission does co-operate with relevant law
enforcement authorities to solve the [issue of] unauthorised access to [the] accounts [in question].
Finally, concerning your request to stop any transfer of allowances in national registries until standard banking security
measures have been implemented, such action would be disproportionate and lacks legal base …’
24 By letter of 22 December 2010, the Director-General of the ‘Climate Action’ Directorate-General of the Commission, in the
capacity as Central Administrator of the independent transaction log provided for in Article 20(1) of Directive 2003/87, replied
to the letter of 24 November 2010 in similar terms.
25 As is apparent from paragraph 30 of the judgment under appeal, on 28 December 2010 interlocutory proceedings were brought
against the Commission by a company other than the appellant before the Tribunal de première instance de Bruxelles (Court
of First Instance, Brussels) (Belgium). The aim of those proceedings was, in particular, to have the President of that court
order the Commission to ‘disclose the identity of the holder or holders’ of the accounts in which the allowances allegedly
stolen appeared and ‘block all national registries in which [such] allowances [were] registered’. On 21 February 2011, Holcim
lodged an application for leave to intervene before the Tribunal de première instance de Bruxelles in order to secure the
same measures as those sought by the other company.
26 By letter of 18 March 2011, the Chief Prosecutor of the Office for the Investigation of Organised Crime and Terrorism (Romania)
informed the appellant that it had sent a request to the Belgian judicial authorities on 11 January 2011 by way of letters
rogatory. The aim of that request was, essentially, that the Directorate-General of the Commission with responsibility for
maintaining the independent transaction log should, first, prohibit the national authorities responsible for maintaining national
registries from accounting for and authorising transactions involving the emission allowances belonging to Holcim. Secondly,
that Directorate‑General was requested to produce a range of information and data concerning the alleged unauthorised transfer
of the stolen emission allowances and any subsequent transaction concerning those allowances.
27 As is apparent from paragraph 37 of the judgment under appeal, on 7 April 2011, OLAF replied to that request sent by way of
letters rogatory and sent the Romanian public prosecutor, as the Commission clarified, a ‘CD-ROM and a hard drive containing
300 gigabytes of information’. However, on the same date, the Commission again refused to disclose to Holcim the data requested
concerning the transactions on the Community independent transaction log.
28 By letter of 31 May 2011, the appellant’s lawyer informed the Commission that the aim of the interlocutory proceedings was
to have the Commission ordered to block the emission allowances allegedly stolen on 16 November 2010 and disclose ‘their current
location in the national registries’. He then asked the Commission not to permit the surrender of those allowances and, at
the very least, to block them and reallocate them to their rightful holder.
29 By order of 3 June 2011, the President of the Tribunal de première instance de Bruxelles ruled that he had ‘no jurisdiction’
to entertain the proceedings.
30 On 18 July 2011, the Commission replied to the letter sent to it by the appellant’s lawyer on 31 May 2011, and confirmed that
‘the recovery of any allowances which [were] claimed to have been transferred fraudulently [was] a matter for national law
and national law enforcement authorities’. The Commission also stated that it had no powers ‘to block [emission] allowances
in a registry account as such allowances continue[d] to represent legally valid compliance instruments’.
Procedure before the General Court and the judgment under appeal
31 By application lodged at the General Court Registry on 11 July 2012, Holcim brought an action for a finding that the European
Union was liable for the conduct of the Commission and an order for the European Union to pay Holcim a sum by way of compensation
for its damage. In support of its action, Holcim alleged, principally, that the European Union was liable on the basis of
fault, that is to say liable by virtue of unlawful conduct, and put forward 12 pleas in law. In the alternative, Holcim claimed
that the European Union should incur strict liability, that is liability for lawful conduct, on the basis of a single plea
in law.
32 In paragraph 59 of the judgment under appeal, the General Court held that the conduct of which Holcim accused the Commission
that might give rise to those types of liability consisted in the alleged refusal by the Commission, first, to ‘disclos[e]
the localisation of … stolen [emission allowances]’ and, secondly, its refusal to ‘[block the] stolen [emission allowances]’.
33 By the judgement under appeal, the General Court dismissed the action in its entirety.
Forms of order sought by the parties before the Court of Justice
34 Holcim claims that the Court should:
– set aside the judgment under appeal;
– refer the case back to the General Court to be judged again;
– in the alternative, without referring the case back to the General Court, grant the form of order sought by Holcim as requested
before that Court; and
– order the European Union to pay the costs incurred before the General Court and the Court of Justice.
35 The Commission contends that the Court should:
– dismiss the appeal;
– order the appellant to pay the costs.
The appeal
36 By its appeal, Holcim challenges, first, the dismissal by the General Court of its claim for damages for fault-based liability.
It relies on 12 grounds of appeal in that regard. The first 7 grounds are directed at the first form of conduct of which the
Commission is accused, namely the refusal to ‘disclose the location of the stolen allowances’, whereas the 8th to 12th grounds
are directed at the second form of conduct of which the Commission is accused, relating to the refusal ‘to block those allowances’.
Secondly, Holcim challenges the dismissal by the General Court of its claims for damages for strict liability and puts forward
one ground of appeal in that regard.
The grounds of appeal concerning the fault-based liability of the European Union
The first and third grounds of appeal
– Arguments of the parties
37 By its first ground of appeal, Holcim submits that the General Court misinterpreted the balance between confidentiality and
transparency laid down by Article 10 of Regulation No 2216/2004, by affording exaggerated and unlawful protection to the interests
of the thieves of the stolen allowances to the detriment of the interests of the victims. In particular, the General Court
erred in law in holding that Article 10 of Regulation No 2216/2004 provides for a general rule for preserving the confidentiality
of the information in the registries, since that finding implies that the exceptions to such a general rule should be interpreted
strictly.
38 In that regard, the appellant complains that the General Court held, in paragraph 107 of the judgment under appeal, that the
information in the national registries and independent transaction log provided for in Article 20(1) of Directive 2003/87
could be disclosed ‘as a rule, only [to the benefit of] authorities exercising public powers’. Such a limitation of the beneficiaries
of such information would preclude almost any form of disclosure. Holcim adds that the General Court, in paragraph 122 et
seq. of the judgment under appeal, adopted an excessively restrictive interpretation of the expression ‘law enforcement authorities’,
laid down in Article 10 of Regulation No 2216/2004, in holding that the reference to the ‘law’ had to be interpreted as referring
only to the criminal law.
39 Consequently, the appellant submits that the General Court also vitiated that judgment by contradictory reasoning, since the
possibility of obtaining information on the stolen emission allowances depends solely on the specialisation of the authority
in question.
40 The third ground of appeal put forward by Holcim is directed at paragraphs 153 to 155 of the judgment under appeal. By that
ground of appeal, the appellant submits that the General Court’s incorrect interpretation of Article 10 of Regulation No 2216/2004
infringed Article 19 of Directive 2003/87 and, in particular, the balance between confidentiality and transparency sought
by that provision, in granting almost absolute protection to the principle of confidentiality. Whereas the protection for
the confidentiality of accounts is direct and certain pursuant to that strict and erroneous interpretation of Article 10 of
Regulation No 2216/2004, the right to transparency claimed by the victims of thefts is applied indirectly, if at all, since
any disclosure of the data relating to the stolen allowances is left to the discretion of the national criminal authorities.
41 By its fourth and fifth grounds of appeal, directed at paragraphs 167, 168 and 174 of the judgment under appeal respectively,
Holcim submits in essence that the interpretation of Article 10 of Regulation No 2216/2004 adopted by the Commission, endorsed
by the General Court, which unlawfully protects the confidentiality of the data requested, has the same effects as an unlawful
expropriation of its emission allowances.
42 In addition, in accordance with that interpretation, Holcim submits that the General Court failed to have regard to the principle
of effective judicial protection, on the ground that the restrictive confidentiality rules which flow from such an interpretation
would, in essence, render pointless any judicial proceedings brought in order to recover the stolen emission allowances.
43 The Commission contends that those grounds of appeal should be rejected.
– Findings of the Court
44 It must be pointed out, first of all, that Regulation No 2216/2004 was adopted pursuant to Article 19(3) of Directive 2003/87.
That regulation must ensure, in the words of that provision, ‘public access’ to a standardised and secured system of registries
and ‘confidentiality as appropriate’ of the electronic data contained in that system.
45 Next, it must be noted that Article 10(1) of Regulation No 2216/2004 provides that all information held in the registries
is to be ‘considered confidential for any purpose other than the implementation of the requirements of th[at] Regulation,
Directive 2003/87/EC or national law’.
46 Lastly, as regards the data relating to the names of holders of the transferring accounts and acquiring accounts of the emission
allowances and the date and time of those transactions, the Court has held that a request for the reporting of such data comes
exclusively under the specific rules governing public reporting and confidentiality contained in Directive 2003/87 and in
Regulation No 2216/2004 (see judgment in Ville de Lyon, C‑524/09, EU:C:2010:822, paragraph 41).
47 In addition, the Court found that such data must remain confidential for purposes other than the operation and maintenance
of the registries (see judgment in Ville de Lyon, C‑524/09, EU:C:2010:822, paragraph 50).
48 In the light of those considerations, it must be found, first, that the General Court did not err in law in holding, in paragraphs 106
and 107 of the judgment under appeal, that Article 10 of Regulation No 2216/2004 established, as a general rule, that the
data held in the registries was confidential and that, therefore, the exceptions to that general rule had to be interpreted
strictly.
49 Secondly, it must be pointed out that the arguments set out in paragraphs 38 and 39 of the present judgment are based on a
misinterpretation of the judgment under appeal.
50 Consequently, in stating in paragraph 107 of the judgment under appeal that the exception to the confidential treatment of
the data contained in the registries benefits ‘as a rule, only authorities exercising public powers’, the General Court did
not in any way adopt an excessively restrictive interpretation of Article 10 of Regulation No 2216/2004. It simply pointed
out that the entities listed in Article 10(2) of that regulation, that is those which may obtain the data at issue, are public
persons, equipped, as such, with powers falling outside the scope of the general law.
51 Similarly, the General Court did not restrict the possibility of benefiting from the disclosure of the information in the
registries solely to law enforcement authorities. The General Court simply held, in paragraph 122 of the judgment under appeal,
that the President of the Tribunal de première instance de Bruxelles, as a judge hearing an application for interim measures,
could not be considered ‘a law enforcement authority’ within the meaning of Article 10(2)(a), inasmuch as he was not responsible
for any investigation concerning the emission allowances. In addition, the General Court did not in any way justify the non-disclosure
of the information at issue to that authority on the basis of the latter’s specialisation. It follows from those considerations
that the judgment under appeal is not vitiated by any contradictory reasoning.
52 In any event, it must be found that the General Court took into account, contrary to Holcim’s claims, the interest of the
holders of the stolen emission allowances.
53 First, in paragraph 154 of the judgment under appeal, the General Court held that a victim of an alleged criminal offence,
such as the theft of emission allowances, may obtain the disclosure of data relating to those allowances held in the registries
and the Community independent transaction log, pursuant to Article 10 of Regulation No 2216/2004. It stated that Article 10
did not preclude the authorities listed in Article 10(2) from disclosing to those victims the confidential information concerning
the stolen emission allowances, nor those victims, on the basis of the information disclosed to them, from bringing judicial
proceedings for the seizure and recovery of those allowances.
54 Secondly, in paragraph 121 of the judgment under appeal, the General Court found, without being contradicted by the appellant,
that, in response to the request of the Romanian public prosecutor, OLAF had sent that national authority a series of data
concerning the stolen allowances. In the light of the sending of that data, the General Court held that the appellant could
not validly claim that the Commission had refused to disclose information to the Romanian public prosecutor on the basis of
its confidentiality.
55 In those circumstances, it must be found that the General Court did not err in law in finding that the Commission had not
infringed in a sufficiently serious manner the balance between confidentiality and transparency laid down in Article 10 of
Regulation No 2216/2004 and that, consequently, the General Court did not disregard Article 19 of Directive 2003/87.
56 In the light of all the foregoing considerations, the first and third to fifth grounds of appeal must be rejected
The second and sixth grounds of appeal
– Arguments of the parties
57 By its second ground of appeal, Holcim submits that, in confirming the Commission’s interpretation of Article 10 of Regulation
No 2216/2004, the General Court infringed the confidentiality rules laid down by the Kyoto Protocol. The ground of appeal
is in two parts. By the first part of the second ground of appeal, the appellant submits that, as the General Court recognised
in paragraph 131 of the judgment under appeal, the Annex to Decision 13/CMP.1 forms part of the European Union legal order.
Consequently, such an annex must be taken into consideration in order to assess the legality of the EU confidentiality rules
concerning emission allowances and, in particular, Article 10 of Regulation No 2216/2004. The interpretation of that article
by the General Court infringes the confidentiality rules laid down by the Kyoto Protocol, in particular since the General
Court held, in paragraphs 134 and 135 of the judgment under appeal, that the information envisaged in paragraphs 44 and 47
of the Annex to Decision 13/CMP.1 should be made available to the public only when it is non-confidential in nature.
58 By the second part of that ground of appeal, concerning the findings in paragraphs 139 to 146 of the judgment under appeal
as to whether the nature and aims of emission allowances and Kyoto units were identical, the appellant submits, first of all,
that the General Court has not set out the grounds for its statements. Next, it submits that the fact that the Kyoto units
are mentioned, together with emission allowances, in Article 10(3) of Regulation No 2216/2004, shows that the two instruments
have the same nature and are subject to the same confidentiality rules. Lastly, in Holcim’s view, emission allowances and
Kyoto units pursue the same aim of reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
59 By its sixth ground of appeal, directed at paragraph 179 of the judgment under appeal, Holcim complains that the General Court
failed to observe the principle of legal certainty in that, in the area of publicity, it should have applied to the emission
allowances the same rules laid down for the Kyoto units in paragraphs 44 and 47 of the Annex to Decision 13.CMP/1, given that
those two types of instrument have the same nature.
60 The Commission contends that the second and sixth grounds of appeal should be rejected.
– Findings of the Court
61 In the first place, it must be found, first, that contrary to Holcim’s claims, the General Court did not accept, in paragraph 131
of the judgment under appeal, that the Annex to Decision 13/CMP.1 forms part of the EU legal order and may be relied upon
before the Courts of the European Union. By contrast, it held that, even if that were the case, the plea in law raised before
it could be rejected on other grounds. Secondly, as is apparent from paragraph 46 above, a request for the reporting of the
data contained in the registries comes exclusively under the specific rules governing public reporting and confidentiality
contained in Directive 2003/87 and in Regulation No 2216/2004 (Ville de Lyon, C‑524/09, EU:C:2010:822, paragraph 41).
62 In this instance, it must be found that, as the General Court held in paragraph 138 of the judgment under appeal, paragraphs 44
and 47 of the Annex to Decision 13/CMP.1 relate only to the disclosure to the public of information relating to the units
stemming from the Kyoto Protocol system. Such a system remains distinct from the Community scheme for greenhouse gas emission
allowance trading, established under Article 1 of Directive 2003/87.
63 In the context of the Community scheme, Article 3(a) of that directive defines the emission allowance as an instrument ‘valid
only for the purposes of meeting the requirements of this Directive and shall be transferable in accordance with the provisions
of this Directive’.
64 In addition, as the General Court found in paragraphs 144 and 145 of the judgment under appeal, the Kyoto units are instruments
which the States and the international organisation party to that convention may use in order to meet their obligations laid
down in it. On the other hand, in the EU scheme, the emission allowances are instruments that can belong to the assets of
the natural and legal persons who carry out the activities referred to in Annex I to Directive 2003/87. Consequently, as is
apparent from Article 1 of that directive, emission allowances reflect a commercial logic.
65 That logic consists in ensuring that the reductions of greenhouse gas emissions required to achieve a predetermined environmental
outcome take place at the lowest cost. By allowing in particular the allowances that have been allocated to be sold, the scheme
is intended to encourage a participant in the scheme to emit quantities of greenhouse gases that are less than the allowances
originally allocated him, in order to sell the surplus to another participant who has emitted more than his allowance (judgment
in Arcelor Atlantique et Lorraine and Others, C‑127/07, EU:C:2008:728, paragraph 32).
66 Holcim’s arguments have not therefore showed the existence of an error of law by the General Court when it held that emission
allowances and Kyoto units are different in nature and address different aims. Consequently, the publicity regime established
by the Annex to Decision 13. CMP/1 as regards the Kyoto units cannot be applied to emission allowances, even if such a measure
were to form part of the EU legal order.
67 In addition, it must be held that in not applying to emission allowances the rules provided for in the Annex to Decision 13/CMP.1
concerning the Kyoto units, the General Court did not fail to have regard to the principle of legal certainty, given the different
nature of those two instruments.
68 Consequently, the second and sixth grounds of appeal must be rejected.
The seventh ground of appeal
– Arguments of the parties
69 By its seventh ground of appeal, Holcim complains that the General Court, in essence, did not penalise the failure to observe
the duty of care incumbent upon the Commission which required it to disclose the data relating to the stolen emission allowances.
The scope of that duty could be defined by analogy, by referring to the obligations imposed on the Member States by Council
Directive 91/308/EEC of 10 June 1991 on prevention of the use of the financial system for the purpose of money laundering
(OJ 1991 L 166, p. 77).
70 The Commission contends that the seventh ground of appeal should be dismissed
– Findings of the Court
71 It must be pointed out that, in paragraphs 183 to 185 of the judgment under appeal, the General Court examined the plea in
law alleging an infringement of Directive 91/308 and held it to be inadmissible, since that plea in law did not satisfy the
requirements of coherence and intelligibility required under Article 44(1)(c) of the Rules of Procedure of the General Court.
However, Holcim does not call in question those paragraphs of the judgment under appeal or the grounds justifying such a declaration
of inadmissibility.
72 In that regard, it must be noted that, in an appeal, the appellant may not rely on pleas in law declared inadmissible by the
General Court, where the finding that they are inadmissible is not contested (judgment in France Télécom v Commission, C‑202/07 P, EU:C:2009:214, paragraph 93).
73 Consequently, the seventh ground of appeal must be rejected.
The eighth and ninth grounds of appeal
– Arguments of the parties
74 By its eighth ground of appeal, directed at paragraphs 204 and 205 of the judgment under appeal, Holcim complains that the
General Court, in essence, failed to penalise the breach of the duty of sound administration incumbent upon the Commission
which required it to block the circulation of the stolen emission allowances. In view of the fact that technically the Commission
has the power to block certain allowances, it cannot be accepted, first, that the only case in which the Commission may block
the transactions in the independent transaction log is the presence of systemic risk, as provided for in Article 69 of Regulation
No 2216/2004 and, secondly, that the Commission does not have the power to block the transactions concerning emission allowances
at the level of the national registries.
75 Holcim further submits that the General Court infringed the rules on the burden of proof in failing to order the Commission
to produce to it the administrative file relating to blocking of the registries in January 2011.
76 By its ninth ground of appeal, Holcim submits that, in paragraph 210 of the judgment under appeal, the General Court failed
to observe the principle of legal certainty in not penalising the conduct of the Commission for, first, having suspended access
to the registries in January 2011 and, secondly, having refused Holcim’s request to block certain allowances.
77 Holcim further states that, in other circumstances, the Commission did indeed block such allowances. The General Court therefore
erred in law in failing to request the Commission to present evidence on that issue in order to clarify it.
78 In addition, the judgment under appeal is vitiated by a failure to state the grounds in that the General Court did not respond
to Holcim’s argument that, in essence, it cannot be claimed that the Commission must choose between the total blocking of
the system and no intervention at all.
79 The Commission contends that those grounds of appeal should be rejected.
– Findings of the Court
80 It must be noted, first of all, that, in accordance with the principle of sound administration, the EU institutions must examine
all the relevant particulars of a case with care and impartiality and gather all the factual and legal information necessary
to exercise their discretion (see, to that effect, judgment in Brookfield New Zealand and Elaris v CPVO and Schniga, C‑534/10 P, EU:C:2012:813, paragraph 51).
81 In this instance, Holcim’s complaints summarised in paragraphs 74 and 76 above are based on the incorrect premiss that the
Commission was empowered to block the appellant’s allowances in circumstances such as those of the present case. However,
as the General Court was fully entitled to hold, in paragraphs 201 and 205 of the judgment under appeal, neither Article 27
nor Article 69 of Regulation No 2216/2004 allowed, in the present case, the Commission to block the stolen emission allowances.
In particular, Article 69 only allows all access to be suspended to a registry in the event of systemic risk. Holcim does
not, however, rely on any other provision of Regulation No 2216/2004 or Directive 2003/87 which would allow the Commission
to block the stolen allowances.
82 Since there is no provision allowing the Commission to block the appellant’s allowances in circumstances such as those of
the present case, it must be found, first, that the General Court did not err in holding that the Commission had not failed
to have regard to the principle of sound administration and, secondly, that the General Court did not fail to have regard
to the principle of legal certainty.
83 It must be found, next, that the complaints summarised in paragraphs 75 and 77 above are inadmissible. By its complaints,
Holcim seeks, in essence, to have the Court of Justice substitute its own assessment of the facts and evidence for that carried
out by the General Court in the judgment under appeal.
84 Lastly, it must be found that, in paragraph 209 of the judgment under appeal, the General Court provided a sufficient explanation
of the reasons why the Commission could only carry out a generalised suspension of all access to the registries in the event
of systemic risk. Consequently, the judgment under appeal is not vitiated by a failure to state the grounds.
85 In the light of all of the foregoing considerations, the eighth and ninth grounds of appeal must be rejected.
The 10th ground of appeal
– Arguments of the parties
86 This ground of appeal is directed at paragraphs 214 and 215 of the judgment under appeal and relates to an alleged infringement
of Article 20 of Directive 2003/87. Holcim complains that the General Court, first, did not expand on the concept of an ‘automated
check’ and held, nevertheless, that Holcim should have proved that the theft could have been detected by such an ‘automated
check’. Secondly, Holcim submits that the General Court should have found that the Commission had unlawfully refrained from
ordering the national registries not to register the transactions concerning the stolen emission allowances, whereas the obligation
not to register them in the case of irregularities stems from Article 20 of Directive 2003/87. Lastly, Holcim complains that
the General Court failed to examine its argument, as illustrated in Annex D.10 to the appeal, according to which the Commission
had illegally ordered the national registries not to disclose the data relating to the stolen emission allowances.
87 The Commission contends that the 10th ground of appeal should be rejected.
– Findings of the Court
88 By the first part of the 10th ground of appeal, Holcim does not attribute to the General Court any error of law capable of
calling in question the legality of the judgment under appeal. Accordingly, the first part of the ground of appeal must be
rejected.
89 As regards the second part of that ground, relating to the alleged duty of the Commission to block the allowances on the national
registries, it is sufficient to point out that Article 20 of Directive 2003/87 does not confer on the Commission any power
to block emission allowances in a case such as the present. Indeed Article 20 provides only, in paragraph 3 thereof, that
‘if irregularities are identified through the automated check, the Central Administrator shall inform the Member State or
Member States concerned who shall not register the transactions in question …’.
90 Lastly, the third part of the 10th ground of appeal concerning Annex D.10 to the appeal is inadmissible, in that the appellant
has not indicated sufficiently precisely the legal arguments specifically advanced in support of its application to have the
judgment under appeal set aside (see, to that effect, judgment in Italy v Commission, C‑280/14 P, EU:C:2015:792, paragraph 42).
91 Having regard to those considerations, the 10th ground of appeal must be rejected.
The 11th ground of appeal
– Arguments of the parties
92 By its 11th ground of appeal, Holcim submits, in essence, that contrary to the statement of the General Court in paragraph 219
of the judgment under appeal, it had already in its originating application pleaded a failure to have regard to the principle
of equal treatment, notably in the context of the pleas in law concerning the principles of sound administration and diligence.
In particular, Holcim was treated less favourably than other undertakings, whose emission allowances had been blocked at the
beginning of 2010. The General Court should therefore have found that such an argument constituted an amplification of pleas
previously relied upon and, consequently, could not have been considered inadmissible.
93 The Commission contends that the 11th ground of appeal should be rejected.
– Findings of the Court
94 It must be pointed out that, in its originating application before the General Court, Holcim did not argue that it was treated
less favourably that than companies whose emission allowances had been blocked at the beginning of 2010.
95 In any event, even if such an argument could be considered an amplification of pleas previously relied upon, it must be found
that the appellant’s arguments seek, in essence, to have the Court carry out factual appraisal, in particular as regards the
conditions in which the Commission is alleged to have blocked the accounts at the beginning of 2010, which exceeds the competences
of the Court in the context of an appeal.
96 In the light of those considerations, the appellant’s 11th ground of appeal must be rejected.
The 12th ground of appeal
– Arguments of the parties
97 The 12th ground of appeal is directed at paragraph 224 of the judgment under appeal and relates to an alleged failure to have
regard to the principle of effective judicial protection. Holcim complains that the General Court held, in essence, that even
if the stolen emission allowances were not blocked, Holcim could have brought legal proceedings giving it the real possibility
of being able to recover those allowances.
98 The Commission contends that the 12th ground of appeal is unfounded.
– Findings of the Court
99 In that regard, it is sufficient to note, first, that Article 10 of Regulation No 2216/2004 does not preclude the authorities
listed in Article 10(2) of that regulation from disclosing to the victims of theft the confidential information stored in
the registries concerning the stolen emission allowances. Secondly, nor does such a provision preclude the victims of theft
from using the information which they have thus obtained in order to bring judicial proceedings for recovery of such allowances.
100 It follows from this that the General Court did not undermine the principle of effective judicial protection in holding, in
paragraph 223 of the judgment under appeal, that bringing judicial proceedings in order to recover the stolen emission allowances
is not conditional upon those allowances being the subject of a blocking decision.
101 In those circumstances, the 12th ground of appeal must be rejected.
The ground of appeal concerning the strict liability of the European Union
Arguments of the parties
102 Holcim submits that the judgment under appeal is vitiated by a failure to state the grounds as regards the determination of
the unusual nature of the damage sustained by that company. The General Court failed to state the grounds for its findings,
in paragraph 237 of the judgment under appeal, according to which, first, business confidentiality could not be guaranteed
without the application of the confidentiality rules such as those laid down in Article 10 of Regulation No 2216/2004 and,
secondly, the absence of such a provision would compromise the very existence of an emission allowance market.
103 In addition, in a case such as the present, the Court should temper the conditions required in order to engage the strict
liability of the European Union, by distancing itself thus from the case-law arising from the judgment in FIAMM and Others v Council and Commission (C‑120/06 and C‑121/06, EU:C:2008:476).
104 The Commission contends that the present ground of appeal should be dismissed.
Findings of the Court
105 A plea alleging that liability is incurred for a lawful act of the European Union must be rejected, and the Court does not
need to adjudicate on the possibility of liability being incurred on the part of the European Union for such acts, inasmuch
as the material and non-material damage alleged by the appellant are not unusual or special (see, to that effect, judgments
in Développement et Clemessy v Commission, 267/82, EU:C:1986:253, paragraph 33, and Sviluppo Italia Basilicata v Commission, C‑414/08 P, EU:C:2010:165, paragraph 141).
106 In the present case, it must be found that Holcim simply alleges a failure to state the grounds in the judgment under appeal
as regards the unusual nature of the damage which it has sustained. In the appellant’s view, the General Court has not stated
the grounds, in paragraph 237 of the judgment under appeal, for its statements that, first, business confidentiality could
not be guaranteed without the application of confidentiality rules such as those laid down in Article 10 of Regulation No 2216/2004
and, secondly, the absence of such a provision would compromise the existence of an emission allowances market.
107 It must be found that the General Court, in particular in the analysis carried out in the first and third pleas in law of
the judgment under appeal, explained to the requisite legal standard the reasons underlying the adoption of the scheme established
by Article 10 of Regulation No 2216/2004.
108 The present ground of appeal must therefore be rejected.
109 It follows from all of the foregoing considerations that the appeal must be dismissed in its entirety.
Costs
110 Under Article 184(2) of its Rules of Procedure, where the appeal is unfounded, the Court is to make a decision as to the costs.
111 Under Article 138(1) of those Rules, applicable to the procedure on appeal by virtue of Article 184(1) thereof, the unsuccessful
party is to be ordered to pay the costs if they have been applied for in the successful party’s pleadings. Since the Commission
has applied for costs to be awarded against Holcim and Holcim has been unsuccessful, Holcim must be ordered to pay the costs
of the appeal proceedings.
On those grounds, the Court (Fifth Chamber) hereby:
1. Dismisses the appeal;
2. Orders Holcim (Romania) SA to pay the costs.
[Signatures]
* Language of the case: English.
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