Abstract

The European Parliament’s mandate to the Commission to develop a thematic strategy for soil protection highlights the need to adopt measures that prevent, limit or reduce the impact of human activities on soil. In Spain, the Royal Decree 9/2005 of 14th January fulfils the provisions of the Wastes Law 10/1998 of 21st April, and establishes a list of potentially soil contaminating activities and criteria and standards for declaring that sites are contaminated, subject to prior consultation with the Autonomous Communities. The Royal Decree shall not apply to publicly owned sites where military installations are located. Within a period of two years from the date on which it enters into effect, the Ministry of Defence shall approve, subject to previous acceptance by the Ministry of the Environment, a decontamination plan for such sites. As the Ministry of Defence owns more than 1% of the whole National territory, the selection of a case study is the first step in the definition of a practical methodology for demonstration of the economic viability of the environmental remediation. It involves estimating a range of values for the potential profit that could be obtained when the site is disaffected from use and introduced into the market.

Details

Title
Remediation Of Former Military Sites
Author
Grima, J; García-Delgado, R
Publication year
2006
Publication date
2006
Publisher
W I T Press
ISSN
1746-448X
e-ISSN
1743-3541
Source type
Other Source
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2261142167
Copyright
© 2006. Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the associated terms available at https://www.witpress.com/elibrary .