[The European Green Deal] must put people first, and pay attention to the regions, industries and workers who will face the greatest challenges. Since it will bring substantial change, active public participation and confidence in the transition is paramount if policies are to work and be accepted. A new pact is needed to bring together citizens in all their diversity, with national, regional, local authorities, civil society and industry working closely with the EU’s institutions and consultative bodies.Footnote 1
I. Introduction
While today there is an overwhelming scientific consensus on the existence of anthropogenic climate change, the question of how to tackle this multi-faceted issue remains thorny. Disinformation is common and actively fuelled by special interest groups, sometimes with the help of scientific experts.Footnote 2 Moreover, ultimately, climate mitigation measures need to be taken by political institutions based on democratic processes, which warrants consulting citizens and other interested parties (which we refer to as “civil society”; infra, Section II.1).
The division of labour and of responsibilities between science and politics may lead to tensions between climate experts’ recommendations on the one hand and the preferences of political institutions, citizens and interest groups on the other. Examples include Swiss voters’ rejection of the proposed revision of the Federal CO2 Act in June 2021Footnote 3 and the Yellow Vests protests in 2018–2019 in response to the French government’s decision to increase fuel taxes. Recent attempts at strengthening the position of citizens in climate policy have produced mixed results. One prominent example is the French Citizens’ Convention for Climate established in 2019 to deliberate climate issues: while this initiative was initially commended for its innovativeness and inclusiveness, many commentators – including the members of the Convention themselvesFootnote 4 – have criticised the reluctance of the French government and legislature to adopt the Convention’s proposals and the influence of special interest groups on the process.Footnote 5
How do these tensions play out in the European Union (EU)? As a supranational organisation, the EU has the potential to effectively address the intricate collective action problem of climate change, both within the Union and beyond.Footnote 6 At the same time, it has been repeatedly criticised for its “democratic deficit”Footnote 7 and for its failure to involve all civil society actors equally.Footnote 8 Yet, EU primary law contains a strong commitment to civil society participation.Footnote 9 Moreover, the Aarhus Convention, which the EU ratified in 2005, provides that the public must be able to participate in environmental law-making.Footnote 10
In this article, we examine how the EU primary law principles of democracy, openness and transparency are implemented in EU environmental – and, more specifically, climate – law-making processes. These three principles structure civil society participation in the EU.Footnote 11 Our focus lies on the European Commission (EC), which must “promote the general interest of the Union” and has the exclusive right of legislative initiative.Footnote 12 Article 11(3) of the Treaty on European Union (TEU) in particular tasks the EC with “carry[ing] out broad consultations with parties concerned in order to ensure that the Union’s actions are coherent and transparent”.
Consulting civil society at the pre-legislative stage is especially important in environmental and climate law-making: the Aarhus Convention emphasises that its Parties “shall provide for early public participation, when all options are open and effective public participation can take place”.Footnote 13 So far, environmental law scholarship has mostly been focusing on the judicial branch, and climate litigation is a booming field of research.Footnote 14 This judicial angle is certainly relevant and in line with recent developments around the globe, including in Europe.Footnote 15 Yet, environmental and climate policy is not primarily the product of judicial decisions: it is, first and foremost, expressed in environmental and climate legislation. Hence, examining the activity of other (non-judicial) institutions is crucial in order to add to the existing literature.
In this article, our aim is to assess whether the consultations that the EC conducts pursuant to Article 11(3) TEU in the field of climate policy align with the three aforementioned principles of EU primary law. More specifically, we provide a critical evaluation of the consultations conducted by the EC prior to the adoption of the European Climate Law (ECL), which entered into force in July 2021 and forms part of the European Green Deal (EGD). As the ECL has significant implications for the future of EU climate policy, studying civil society participation in the context of its elaboration allows us to shed light on the EC’s recent practice of consultations in the field. While the EC did not conduct consultations on the ECL specifically, it relied on the results of two prior consultations carried out on closely related topics, namely the “Clean Planet for All” Communication (CPAC) and the 2030 Climate Target Plan (CTP; infra, Section III).
We proceed as follows: first, we clarify the main concepts connected to the EC’s consultations, as well as the legal framework that governs them (Section II). We then move on to our two case studies, namely the consultations conducted by the EC on the CPAC and the CTP. After providing a brief overview of these consultations (Section III), we evaluate them in light of the EU primary law principles of democracy, transparency and openness (Section IV), before concluding (Section V).
This article is a legal (ie a normative and not a fully-fledged empirical) study, though we occasionally draw on political science studies. As our focus lies on the EC, we do not assess the consultative practices of other EU institutions or Member States, nor do we look at fields of environmental policy other than climate policy. The European Economic and Social Committee (“the voice of organised EU civil society”Footnote 16 ) and the European Committee of the Regions (which, as its name suggests, represents regional and local interests) are not part of our analysis either, as these advisory bodies fulfil a distinctive function in the EU legislative process that differs from civil society input solicited by the EC in the pre-legislative phase.Footnote 17 Our findings are also limited by the fact that the consultations conducted by the EC on the CPAC and the CTP serve as our main case studies; further work would be needed to determine whether these findings are case-specific or more broadly applicable. Despite these limitations, the analysis that follows may prove useful for future environmental and especially climate consultations by the EC and as a contribution to the (still nascent) legal scholarship on civil society participation in environmental and climate policy.
II. Setting the stage: consultations by the EC
Considering the fluctuating terminology that can be encountered in EU policy documents and scholarship, a legal analysis of the EC’s consultations in relation to climate mitigation legislation requires clarifying the main relevant concepts at the outset: the participants in these consultations (Section II.1), the concepts of participation (Section II.2) and consultation (Section II.3) and the specificities of EU environmental and climate law-making (Section II.4).
1. Participants in EC consultations
Article 11(3) TEU tasks the EC with “carry[ing] out broad consultations with parties concerned”. The term “parties concerned” is mentioned several times in EU primary law, albeit in relation to subject matters that differ from EC consultations.Footnote 18 Meanwhile, EU law, legal and political science scholarship, policy documents and other legal instruments pertaining to civil society participation in environmental law-making, such as the Aarhus Convention,Footnote 19 use inconsistent terminology to describe the participants in law-making processes in general and in EC consultations in particular.Footnote 20 Commonly used terms include “citizens” (Articles 10(3) and 11(1) TEU), “representative associations” (Article 11(1) and (2) TEU), “civil society” (Article 11(2) TEU), “the public” or “the public concerned” (Article 2(4) and (5) of the Aarhus Convention), “stakeholders” (a term used in the EC’s Better Regulation Guidelines (BRGs) and in scholarshipFootnote 21 ) and “interest groups” (a concept that is frequently encountered in political science scholarshipFootnote 22 ). These various terms partly overlap and are hence often used interchangeably: for example, stakeholders are persons or groups that have an interest (a stake) in (ie who are concerned by) an issue. Yet, their meaning is not always congruent: not all stakeholders are interest groups; not all interest groups are representative associations; nor are citizens identical with civil society or the public. Considering the vast array of potential participants in EU law-making processes, conceptual clarity seems essential.
As the EC must conduct “broad” consultations (Article 11(3) TEU), an extensive interpretation of the term “parties concerned” seems appropriate. According to EU legal scholars, this expression encompasses “not only the addressees of EC measures, but all interested circles”;Footnote 23 for instance, Article 11(3) TEU applies to affected third-country nationals.Footnote 24 Prior to the adoption of Article 11(3) TEU, the EC also referred to the notion of “interested parties” in the context of consultations.Footnote 25 A broad interpretation is in line with the EC’s observation that “all relevant interests in society should have an opportunity to express their views”.Footnote 26 Scholars further point out that this broad understanding is apposite given that participants in consultations do not have legal authority and given the EU primary law principles of participatory democracyFootnote 27 (see infra, Section II.2) and of equal consideration of EU citizens (Article 9 TEU).Footnote 28 Last but not least, a broad definition is especially suited to consultations on climate issues, which typically “concern” many individuals and organisations (infra, Section II.4).
In this article, we choose to refer to “civil society”, a term that also appears in Article 11(2) TEU and Article 15(1) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU),Footnote 29 and which we use as a synonym for “parties concerned”. While civil society is an essentially contested concept,Footnote 30 it is understood to encompass both individuals and organised groups and to designate “the interface between the public and the private”.Footnote 31 The EC too refers to civil society and more specifically to “civil society organizations”, which it views as “facilitators of a broad policy dialogue”; its conception of civil society is broad, especially because it seems to include “organisations representing social and economic players”Footnote 32 . The EC’s understanding of civil society has been criticised for being ambiguousFootnote 33 and misleading,Footnote 34 as some consider that the term usually excludes business interests. Smismans, for instance, argues that the notion of “civil society” is used by the EC as part of “a legitimating discourse for all its existing interactions, including those with all sorts of private lobby actors”.Footnote 35 Be that as it may, the term “civil society”, even more than the notion of “parties concerned”, enables us to highlight the inclusive character that consultations should display. As our two case studies show, some improvements are still necessary in terms of inclusiveness (eg as regards the accessibility and representativeness of EC consultations; infra, Sections IV.2–4).
2. Participation
Another important concept is participation. The provision that inspired Article 11 TEU (ie Article I-47 of the Draft Treaty Establishing a Constitution for Europe) was titled “Principle of Participatory Democracy”.Footnote 36 Today, Article 10(3) TEU guarantees EU citizens’ “right to participate in the democratic life of the Union”. Like Article 11(3) TEU, this provision belongs to the TEU’s “Provisions on Democratic Principles”Footnote 37 and is non-justiciable.Footnote 38 In its White Paper on European Governance (WPEG), the EC identified participation as one of the five “principles of good governance” (besides openness, accountability, effectiveness and coherence) that should help reform the EU and restore citizens’ trust.Footnote 39
Participation comes from the Latin word particeps (participant), “the one who takes part” (partem capere). Participation in law-making is “the involvement of individuals or groups – who are not part of the elected or appointed legal decision-making bodies – in preparing, making or implementing collectively binding decisions”.Footnote 40 Participation is deemed especially important in environmental and climate matters, as was already acknowledged in the 1992 Rio Declaration on Environment and Development.Footnote 41 Ensuring participation is one of the main obligations of the parties to the Aarhus ConventionFootnote 42 and the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).Footnote 43 This emphasis on participation can be traced back to the already mentioned fact that environmental issues usually affect a wide circle of individuals and groups (see also infra, Section II.4).
More generally, under various conceptions of legitimacy, participation is considered to strengthen the legitimacy of law-making processes. In terms of democratic legitimacy, participation is deemed to increase input legitimacy (government by the people) “because it enriches public deliberation with new arguments”.Footnote 44 It also serves output legitimacy (government for the people) by feeding valuable knowledge into the law-making process, which in turn is expected to lead to more informed law-making outcomes.Footnote 45 Securing output legitimacy is especially important for the EC given its weak democratic accountability.Footnote 46 Between input and output, participation is further considered to foster throughput legitimacy (government with the people), a procedural criterion that concerns “the efficacy, accountability and transparency of the EU’s governance processes along with their inclusiveness and openness to consultation with the people”.Footnote 47 Finally, participation is beneficial for sociological legitimacy because it can be expected to strengthen the acceptance of legislation. The WPEG thus sees participation as a way to improve the “quality, relevance, and effectiveness of EU policies”.Footnote 48
Yet, not any kind of participatory instrument can achieve these objectives; more opportunities for participation do not automatically lead to greater democratic legitimacy.Footnote 49 Among other criteria, participation needs to ensure equal representation in order to be democratically legitimate; in this context, “the openness and inclusiveness of consultations, as well as the equality of representation, can be considered to be reliable indicators of the democratic quality of a participatory process”.Footnote 50 Participatory instruments should also be available to non-organised individuals and not just tailored to organised interests.Footnote 51 As a matter of fact, some scholars criticise the EC’s conception of participation for privileging “already organised groups”.Footnote 52 We will return to these equality considerations in the context of our two case studies (infra, Section IV).
3. Consultation
Consultation is one channel through which participation can be enabled.Footnote 53 The term goes back to the Latin verb consultare (to deliberate, to debate frequently or to interrogate). While participation revolves around those who take part (the participants), consultation focuses on the act that triggers participation. This difference in perspective is relevant because soliciting participation usually means defining the terms of (and hence shaping) this participation.
Consultations may occur at different stages of the legislative process, but they typically happen in the pre-parliamentary phase. In the EU, Article 11(3) TEU enshrines a duty of the EC “to carry out broad consultations with parties concerned in order to ensure that the Union’s actions are coherent and transparent”. The limited resources of the EC render it all the more dependent on external input and expertise.Footnote 54 The EC’s conception of consultation is set out in various policy documents, especially its WPEG of 2001, its 2002 Communication “Towards a Reinforced Culture of Consultation and Dialogue” and its Better Regulation Guidelines (BRGs), which were last updated in 2021.Footnote 55 Its practice of carrying out consultations is even older than the WPEG, though these past consultations were ad hoc and not streamlined.Footnote 56 Quittkat and Finke identify three phases in the development of the EC’s consultation practice:Footnote 57 a first phase of informal and closed consultations with experts and mostly economic stakeholders, which lasted until the 1980s; a second phase during which consultations also included the European social partners and non-governmental organisations (NGOs); and, finally, a third phase that started at the turn of the century and is reflected in the WPEG, where the EC presents consultations as a driver of democratic participation.
Since the early 2000s, the EC has been relying on online consultations, including in environmental policy.Footnote 58 Yet, just as participation does not automatically strengthen democratic legitimacy (supra, Section 2), the democratising potential of digital consultations is not self-evident. Political scientists note that individuals seldom respond to the EC’s online consultations and that, even when they do, their input is hardly acknowledged.Footnote 59 Another consideration is the way in which questionnaires are designed: some online consultations are “reduced to simple opinion polls, organised as multiple-choice questionnaires not even leaving a leeway for deviant opinions”.Footnote 60 At the same time, empirical research shows that participation usually increases when questionnaires mostly consist of closed questions and preformulated answers.Footnote 61 In other words, to strengthen democratic legitimacy, online consultations must be designed in a way that stimulates participation without excessively constraining it.
4. Specificities of environmental and climate law-making
What makes consultations in the context of environmental and especially climate law-making distinctive? Environmental (including climate) law-making is characterised by the following general features. First, as a policy area, it is often confronted with significant scientific uncertainty,Footnote 62 one of the overarching themes of this special issue. While anthropogenic climate change is a well-established fact, areas of doubt remain, especially regarding its consequences. Footnote 63 The precautionary principle, one of the guiding principles of environmental law (see also Article 191(2) TFEU), is one way of responding to this challenge. Second, as already mentioned, environmental and climate issues affect a particularly large number and wide range of persons, be it individuals or organisations. Third, and relatedly, environmental and climate issues involve many conflicting interests, which renders the forging of political compromises especially challenging and makes consultations all the more important.Footnote 64 A fourth characteristic is the urgency to act:Footnote 65 the pressure to take climate mitigation measures further complicates the law-making process and makes it harder to reach political compromises. It can also act as an additional constraint on consultation procedures.
As regards environmental and climate law-making in the EU, it is worth recalling the following specificities. First, environmental (including climate) issues are a shared competence of the EU and its Member States (Article 4(2)(e) TFEU). Second, such issues are deemed of transversal relevance: they “must be integrated into the definition and implementation of the Union’s policies and activities” (Article 11 TFEU). Third, the past years have witnessed significant developments in the field of EU environmental and climate policy. While the Lisbon Treaty only brought about minor changes in this areaFootnote 66 and was followed by a period of stagnation,Footnote 67 the EC has since distinguished itself as “one of the strongest promoters of environmental interests of the Union”.Footnote 68 This has especially been the case since the EU ratified the Paris Agreement (2015), which led to the EGD (2019) and to the ECL (2021). Finally, as already highlighted, both the Aarhus Convention and the UNFCCC, two treaties to which the EU is a party, require strengthening participation in the field of environmental policy.
III. The EC’s consultations in connection with the ECL
This section provides a brief overview of the consultations conducted by the EC in connection with the ECL, namely the consultations on the CPAC and the CTP. Next, we assess these consultations in light of EU primary law (Section IV).
The ECL is the first act of secondary law implementing the EGD. The EGD aims to establish a greener economic growth strategy as well as climate neutrality by 2050.Footnote 69 It has been a priority on the agenda of EC President Ursula von der Leyen, partly due to growing demands coming from civil society.Footnote 70 One of the first steps envisioned in the EGD was to develop the ECL, a legally bindingFootnote 71 instrument enshrining the 2050 climate neutrality objective and an intermediate greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions reduction target for 2030.Footnote 72
As emerges from the EC’s proposalFootnote 73 and amended proposal,Footnote 74 no consultation took place on the ECL as such. This can be explained by the fact that in 2018 and 2020 civil society had been given the opportunity to express itself on two related EC communications: the CPAC, which defines climate neutrality as an objective for 2050;Footnote 75 and the CTP, which provides for a 2030 GHG emissions reduction target of 55% compared to 1990 levels.Footnote 76 The ECL enshrines the targets previously set out in these two non-legally binding policy documents. Given that the ECL represents a milestone in EU climate policy and establishes the framework for the adoption of delegated acts,Footnote 77 it seems important to scrutinise these two consultations, as they are closely linked to the ECL.
The CPAC consultation ran from 17 July to 9 October 2018. The online questionnaireFootnote 78 contained seventy-four questions to which the EC received 2,805 valid responses. Out of these, 2,078 came from individuals and 727 from professionals or organisations.Footnote 79 One aim of the consultation was to identify an appropriate GHG emissions target for the EU by 2050. The options available to respondents were: (1) reducing emissions by 80% compared to 1990 levels; (2) reducing them within the range of 80–95%; or (3) achieving a balance between emissions and removals (net zero). Just over half of respondents (53%) chose this third option. The target of climate neutrality set out in the CPAC’s final version aligns with this result. After the consultation, almost all contributions and two reports (a nineteen-page synopsis reportFootnote 80 and a 120-page in-depth reportFootnote 81 ) were published online.
The CTP consultation took place from 31 March to 23 June 2020. The online questionnaireFootnote 82 contained sixty-one questions to which the EC received 4,031 valid responses. Of these, 3,302 came from individuals and 729 from organisations.Footnote 83 One question pertained to the appropriate GHG emissions reduction target for 2030, for which 77% of respondents chose the most demanding of the three proposed options,Footnote 84 namely a reduction of at least 55% compared to 1990 levels. This target is enshrined in the final version of the CTP. After the consultation, all contributions, a thirteen-page synopsis reportFootnote 85 and a 273-page in-depth reportFootnote 86 were published online.
IV. Assessing the EC’s consultations through the lens of EU primary law
In this section, we evaluate the EC’s consultations in light of three principles of EU primary law that (as shown in previous workFootnote 87 ) govern the participation of civil society in EU law-making: democracy, openness and transparency. These principles are also reflected in the EC’s BRGs, which highlight four general principles that should structure consultations: (1) effectiveness, (2) coherence and, importantly for our purposes, (3) participation and (4) openness and accountability (transparency being a component of openness). Footnote 88
Democracy is an umbrella category that stands for citizen involvement in law-making processes.Footnote 89 Among its many dimensions, two are particularly relevant for our purposes: equality requires treating citizens equally and giving “equal attention” to them (Article 9 TEU); participation means that individuals and civil society organisations must be able to express their views in EU law-making processes (Article 11 TEU; supra, Section II.3). Openness demands that the EC proactively engages with civil society to strengthen democratic participation (see, eg, Articles 1, 10(3) and 11(2) TEU and Article 15(1) TFEU). Transparency, a component of openness, is more passive and is achieved via publicity measures and the right of access to documents, among other means (see, eg, Article 11(2) TEU and Article 15(2) and (3) TFEU).
Based on an analysis of ECL-related consultations through the prism of these principles, five main issues can be highlighted: the EC’s discretion in the context of consultations (Section IV.1), the general (Section IV.2) and linguistic (Section IV.3) accessibility of consultations, the representativeness of submissions (Section IV.4) and the feedback provided by the EC (Section IV.5).
1. The EC’s discretion in the context of consultations
The EC enjoys some leeway on when, how and even whether to consult.Footnote 90 The BRGs state that consultations are mandatory for initiatives with impact assessments, evaluations conducted alongside impact assessments, communications with the explicit purpose of launching a consultation process and green papers, while consultations are recommended for evaluations of broad public interest and fitness checks.Footnote 91 The EC has the option of not holding consultations in some cases, including “where there is a need for urgent action or where the feedback would bring little added value”.Footnote 92 As already mentioned, in the case of the ECL, two consultations had already been carried out on related topics, which warrants the conclusion that no additional feedback was needed. While this flexibility allows for a more efficient use of resources, it also gives the EC the exclusive power to decide ex ante when feedback would not be appropriate or useful. This discretion is potentially problematic from the perspective of democracy and openness, unless exceptions are interpreted narrowly.
Another aspect of the EC’s discretion pertains to the design of the questionnaires used in the consultations (which is also relevant from the perspective of accessibility; infra, Section 2). A first issue is length: the questionnaires we examined contained sixty-one and seventy-four questions, respectively. While such large numbers of questions generate more precise and nuanced results, the obvious downside is that potential respondents may be discouraged from participating. Lengthy questionnaires also stand in a tension with the BRGs’ minimum standard of clarity, which requires that “all consultations … be clear and concise”.Footnote 93 Another difficulty is that respondents may not have input on every single issue. While the questionnaires anticipate this by stating that there is no need to answer every one of their questions,Footnote 94 the issue of length is not entirely solved, as going through all of the questions remains time-consuming.
A second design issue pertains to how questions are phrased. Closed questions – on which both questionnaires mostly relied – are a double-edged sword. On the one hand, choosing among predefined answers makes it easier to express one’s opinion; moreover, providing a synthesis of answers to closed questions involves less discretion on the part of the EC. On the other hand, closed questions make it harder for respondents to convey their point of view with precision and limit the possibility of formulating proposals. Open questions or additional comment boxes give more options to respondents; however, in the two consultations we studied, such boxes were nearly always limited to 200 or 1,000 characters. In the CTP consultation, no less than sixty-six respondents complained about the way in which the questions were phrased, stating that they steered participants in specific directions.Footnote 95 Besides open questions and spaces for comments, the EC gives respondents the option of submitting position papers if the questionnaire does not sufficiently allow them to voice their opinion.Footnote 96 Yet, given the length of the questionnaires, many participants probably will not take advantage of this additional option.
To summarise, the discretion enjoyed by the EC has some advantages, such as the efficient use of resources. However, it can also significantly constrain participation (eg through how the questionnaires are designed). This may be problematic from the perspective of the participatory dimension of democracy and from the angle of openness, two principles that would be better achieved by using shorter questionnaires and less constricting wording.
2. The general accessibility of consultations
A second dimension that warrants further consideration pertains to the general accessibility of consultations (which is a precondition to effective participation). Prima facie, EC consultations are highly accessible: they all take place online via the “Have Your Say” web portal,Footnote 97 a single point of access that enables participation at different stages of the legislative process. The website makes it possible to browse current and past initiatives by keywords, topic, stage of the process, feedback period, type of act and document category.Footnote 98
While online consultations may remove obstacles to participation in specific situations, several issues arise in relation to accessibility. First, online consultations are not as inclusive as they appear. In 2018, when the CPAC consultation took place, the share of households with internet access varied widely (eg 98% in the Netherlands, 78% in Lithuania, 76% in Greece and 72% in Bulgaria).Footnote 99 While consultations do not only target individuals, it seems problematic to exclude up to a quarter of the population of some Member States, and all the more so in relation to climate issues, which affect everybody. Online consultations may thus be problematic from the perspective of equality (even if the aforementioned percentages increase every yearFootnote 100 ), as they are not easily accessible by some sections of the population.
Second, an online call is arguably not sufficient to trigger participation. Active dissemination via various channels is necessary to ensure that potential respondents know about the consultation. Among the minimum standards listed in the BRGs, outreach requires “ensur[ing] adequate awareness-raising and publicity” and using appropriate communication tools.Footnote 101 In relation to the ECL, several public eventsFootnote 102 were organised in parallel to the decision-making process, which enabled the EC to draw attention to the latter and to gather helpful information. Yet, given the limited representativeness of responses to both consultations (see infra, Section IV.4), the EC could probably have engaged with its target audience more effectively, in line with the principle of openness.
Third, accessibility also hinges on the duration of the consultation period. One of the five minimum standards set out in the BRGs requires ensuring “sufficient time for participation” (ie “as a rule”, a period of twelve weeks).Footnote 103 This is the time that participants were given in the two consultations under scrutiny. A consultation period of twelve weeks avoids significantly slowing down the law-making process, which is especially important in environmental and climate matters (supra, Section II.4). Meanwhile, short deadlines have a disparate impact on participants with limited resources, such as non-organised individuals or small organisations.Footnote 104 While a consultation period of slightly less than three months seems reasonable, it remains on the shorter side. In Switzerland, for instance, “[t]he duration of the consultation period is at least three months” (emphasis added), though exceptions are possible in the case of urgency.Footnote 105
Fourth, regarding the accessibility of consultation results, nearly all submissions pertaining to the CPAC and CTP were published online in their original language, together with two kinds of reports (a synopsis and an in-depth report; supra, Section III). This is in line with the BRGs, which list the “publication of contributions and results” among the five minimum standards applicable to consultations.Footnote 106 This publication practice appears to satisfy the requirements of transparency and openness, but it creates issues in terms of linguistic accessibility (infra, Section IV.3).
To conclude, while the general accessibility of consultations seems satisfactory from the perspective of transparency, further improvements are necessary from the perspective of democracy and openness. Issues connected to unequal access need to be addressed, and communication around consultations needs to be more proactive to raise awareness.
3. The linguistic accessibility of consultations
One dimension of accessibility concerns linguistic aspects. This issue arises at two stages of the consultation process: when the questionnaire is published and at the post-consultation stage.
Regarding the questionnaires, the one pertaining to the CPAC was published in all official EU languages, and participants could respond in any of them.Footnote 107 In the framework of the CTP consultation, the EC stated that all linguistic versions would be made available online.Footnote 108 This promise was eventually fulfilled, but only at least two weeks after the launch of the consultation (and probably even later).Footnote 109 Even if responses could be submitted in any EU language, an English-only questionnaire represents a major (if temporary) linguistic obstacle to participation and is problematic from the perspective of democracy (including equality) and transparency. Turning to the feedback provided post-consultation, the CPAC synopsis report was published in English, while the CTP synopsis report was made available in all official EU languages. Both in-depth reports, which were compiled by a private contractor, were published in English only.
To be meaningful, consultations must enable participants to understand the issue at hand, to submit feedback and to understand how their submissions were processed (on the feedback stage, see infra, Section IV.5). Consultation documents exclusively available in English are problematic because they prevent effective participation for many potential respondents. Of course, translating a document into twenty-three languages is resource-intensive, and the EC needs to carefully choose which documents to prioritise for translation. This order of priority should depend, among other considerations, on the primary users of the documentation: translating in-depth reports that are probably used primarily by a specialised audience or as internal working documents is arguably less pressing than translating a consultation questionnaire. At the very least, the synopsis reports and especially the questionnaires should be made available in all EU languages. Linguistic inaccessibility raises issues from the perspective of the principle of democracy due to the variable English proficiency levels of potential respondents and the obstacles to participation this creates. It also stands in a tension with the principles of transparency and openness, which are only guaranteed for some participants.
4. The representativeness of consultations
A fourth issue pertains to the representativeness of consultations, which is linked to the EU primary law principles of democracy and openness: judging from the responses received by the EC, was equal participation achieved in these two cases?
Several positive features can be highlighted in terms of representativeness. First, there were no explicit barriers to participation in the sense that the consultations were not restricted to specific categories of respondents. This is particularly appropriate in the field of climate policy, given the large circle of affected individuals and organisations (supra, Section II.4). Moreover, one of the BRGs’ minimum standards requires adopting a “consultation strategy [that] targets all interested parties”.Footnote 110 Second, both consultations elicited a relatively high number of responses (2,805 for the CPAC and 4,031 for the CTP). To compare this with other consultations on EC communications conducted between 2018 and 2020, the consultation on the European Climate Pact generated a similar level of participation (3,510 submissions),Footnote 111 while other consultations triggered significantly fewer responses (683 for the Sustainable and Smart Mobility Strategy,Footnote 112 326 for the European Democracy Action PlanFootnote 113 and 462 for the new EU strategy on safe and affordable medicinesFootnote 114 ). Third, approximately three-quarters of respondents were individuals Footnote 115 and not businesses or environmental NGOs, for instance. This could be because many individuals in the EU are concerned about climate changeFootnote 116 and because the questions were relatively easy to grasp for laypersons.Footnote 117 In any case, the self-selection biasFootnote 118 that is often observed in consultations and that leads to an overrepresentation of the economic sector was not noticeable in these two cases. In this regard, the EU law principles of democracy and openness seem to have been achieved (though this does not mean that some interest groups did not use alternative, less visible and more exclusive channels to make their voices heard, which may raise issues in terms of transparency and equality).
Nevertheless, several difficulties can be noted. First, democracy and transparency issues may arise when respondents participate anonymously, a possibility explicitly provided for in the BRGs.Footnote 119 Anonymous submissions make it more difficult to determine whether equal participation is guaranteed; moreover, opting for anonymity enables interest groups to conceal their identity when making self-interested proposals (though it does not protect them from requests for access to documents, as both questionnaires emphasise). Interestingly, the option of anonymity was mainly used by (self-declared) individuals. A second difficulty is astroturfing,Footnote 120 which takes the form of organised campaigns and multiple identical submissions.Footnote 121 Astroturfing may jeopardise representativeness by conveying a false impression of genuine civil society engagement while participation is actually engineered. Some small campaigns occurred in relation to the CPAC consultation, whereas the CTP consultation led to a campaign that made up 8% of responses.Footnote 122 From the perspective of democracy and transparency, it is crucial that the EC highlights the existence and relative weight of such campaigns (as it did in its reports on the two consultationsFootnote 123 ) to dispel misleading impressions of spontaneous civil society involvement. Another issue is geographical representativeness. While for both consultations submissions originated from all but one Member State,Footnote 124 the largest share of responses (35% in the CPAC consultation and 53% in the CTP consultation) came from Germany. This overrepresentation is problematic from the perspective of democracy and openness. Further research would be needed to identify the reasons for this imbalance and the ways in which it could be remedied, but the example shows that participation in other countries – especially those most vulnerable to climate change – needs to be promoted more.
To conclude, while representativeness is satisfactory in some respects (such as the consultations’ open framing and the participation of individuals), other dimensions of representativeness (eg geographical representativeness) require improvement. Of course, as the EC highlights, consultations are “in most cases not statistically representative of the target population”; statistically representative data need to be collected by other means, such as Eurobarometer surveys.Footnote 125 Nevertheless, this does not entail that the EC should not aim to achieve at least some level of representativeness, which is linked to accessibility (supra, Sections IV.2 and IV.3) and, more generally, to the EU primary law principles of democracy and openness.
5. The feedback provided by the EC
The feedback stage happens after the end of the consultation period, once the contributions have been processed. The BRGs provide clear guidance on the provision of feedback (the third and final phase of the consultation) and on the content of the synopsis report.Footnote 126
The in-depth reports are a first step towards showing that the EC acknowledges the submissions and does not only conduct consultations pro forma. They contain statistics on the categories of respondents and present the answers to the various questions in an easily readable manner. In this regard, the principle of transparency – which requires more than the mere availability of information – seems fulfilled (on linguistic accessibility, however, see supra, Section IV.3). On the other hand, the in-depth reports are very lengthy, which defeats transparency. The synopsis reports offer more concise summaries of the submissions. They explain the methodology used to assess the contributions, provide an overview of respondents and contain a selection of answers to the main questions. Their length (approximately ten pages) makes them accessible and easy to read; yet, these reports are too short to adequately reflect the results of the consultations – and, therefore, to satisfy transparency requirements – on their own (ie without the in-depth reports).
The major weakness of the feedback provided by the EC is its lack of responsiveness to the submissions. The EC does not explain whether and how this input influenced the law-making process, which goes against the BRGs’ recommendation “[to make known to respondents] how, and to what extent, their input has been taken into account and to understand why certain suggestions have not been taken up”.Footnote 127 This lack of responsiveness is problematic from the perspective of the participatory prong of democracy and with regard to openness and transparency.
Overall, consultation results are easily readable, though issues remain in terms of linguistic accessibility (supra, Section IV.4) and length. Moreover, to achieve meaningful participation, openness and transparency, the EC should explain the weight given to these submissions; otherwise, participants’ responses can be easily ignored, which defeats the purpose of consultation.
V. Overall assessment and conclusion
How are we to evaluate the consultations conducted by the EC in connection with the ECL? Based on the five main issues we have highlighted (supra, Section IV), were the applicable principles of EU primary law – democracy, openness and transparency – sufficiently taken into account in the context of these two consultations?
Regarding democracy, when looking at its participatory dimension, positive aspects include the adequate duration of the consultations and the grassroots participation triggered by the consultations; improvements remain necessary as regards the length and biased formulation of the questionnaires. Regarding the equality dimension of democracy, it is crucial to translate the most relevant documentation addressed to civil society in all of the EU’s official languages. Moreover, online consultations have their advantages, but they become problematic when they de facto exclude significant subsections of the population in some Member States.
In terms of openness, the moment chosen to consult civil society seems appropriate. Other positive features include the fact that participation was open to all and that respondents came from different sectors and Member States. However, participants from some Member States were overrepresented. Another weakness is the absence of detailed feedback from the EC highlighting how the responses influenced the law-making process.
Transparency is the EU primary law principle that was best implemented in the consultations we focused on, as a significant amount of information was made available online. Nevertheless, improvements remain necessary (eg by providing information on how submissions were taken into consideration, as well as in terms of linguistic accessibility and length). This matches the observation that the EU institutions tend to prioritise transparency in their approach to civil society participation while neglecting other important requirements of EU primary law.Footnote 128
To ensure that participatory instruments such as consultations are even more in line with the primary law principles of transparency and especially of democracy and openness, and in order to strengthen the democratic legitimacy of EU law-making processes not only through commitments on paper but also in practice, the EC will need to conduct additional efforts in the future, including and especially when consulting civil society on environmental and climate issues. In this context, the early and effective consultation of civil society is particularly important and makes it possible to elaborate legislation that is both evidence-based and democratically legitimate.
Acknowledgments
The authors thank the participants in the conference “Transparency and Participation in the Face of Scientific Uncertainty” (University of York and Maastricht University, 27–28 January 2022), especially Nikos Archontas (Secretariat-General of the European Commission), Mariolina Eliantonio and Annalisa Volpato for valuable input and feedback. The authors would also like to thank the anonymous reviewer(s) for their helpful comments and suggestions.
Competing interests
The authors declare none.