Poland drafts law to ‘terminate’ controversial Energy Charter Treaty

(EurActiv, 2 Sep 2022) Activists have drawn attention to a previously unnoticed draft law from the Polish government setting the country on course to withdraw from a 1990s treaty they say was designed to protect fossil fuels and needs to be abandoned in light of the climate crisis.

The draft law on the “termination of the of the Energy Charter Treaty” and its protocols was agreed by the Polish government on 10 August and sent to the country’s lower chamber, Sejm, by Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki on 25 August.

It says the charter’s investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) clause constitutes “a threat to the autonomy of EU law and the principle of mutual trust between Member States” and should be terminated “to ensure legal certainty in the EU legal order”.

The filing, made over the summer holiday period and without an official announcement, has gone largely unnoticed until now.

The move came as a surprise to green activists who have been campaigning for years against the treaty, which stands accused of protecting fossil fuel investments and undermining the Paris Agreement on climate change.

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EurActiv, 2 Sep 2022: Poland drafts law to ‘terminate’ controversial Energy Charter Treaty