Germany: Legal Roadmap to Ecocide Law Published

Summary

  • The Directive, adopted in April 2024, requires all EU Member States to transpose its provisions by 21 May 2026. 

  • The report, titled "Die Umsetzung der 'Ökozid'-Regelung der überarbeiteten Umweltstrafrechts-Richtlinie in deutsches Recht" (“The Implementation of the 'Ecocide' Provision of the Revised Environmental Crime Directive into German Law”), is the first of its kind in Europe to provide concrete legal pathways for implementing the Directive’s “qualified offence” provision. This provision targets destruction or irreversible damage to ecosystems, protected habitats, or the quality of air, soil, and water — harm defined by its scale, severity, and long-term impact. 

  • Dr Sina also situates the Directive’s qualified offence provision within a broader international context, noting its alignment with the 2021 definition of ecocide proposed by the Independent Expert Panel for the Legal Definition of Ecocide.

  • The legal opinion identifies two principal legislative approaches:

    • Result-based: Amend § 330 of the German Criminal Code to classify ecosystem destruction as an aggravated environmental crime.

    • Risk-based: Introduce a new standalone offence of ecocide based on the danger posed, rather than the outcome— thereby offering much stronger protective leverage.

  • Dr Sina also recommends stronger corporate accountability. The report proposes that companies whose actions amount to ecocide should face financial penalties proportionate to their global turnover — potentially up to 10%. 

  • Additionally, the opinion highlights critical intersections with German permitting law, recommending clarification under which conditions licensed activities can be prosecuted if they result in substantial environmental harm or violate key legal safeguards.

Read the full legal opinion: ‘Die Umsetzung der 'Ökozid'-Regelung der überarbeiteten Umweltstrafrechts-Richtlinie in deutsches Recht’, authored by Dr Stephan Sina and published by the Ecologic Institute here 

Dr. Hermann E. Ott, Honorary Professor at the University for Sustainable Development Eberswalde, former Green Party Bundestag member and founding director of ClientEarth Germany, said:

"This legal opinion advances the integration of the ‘ecocide concept’ into German law. The new federal government has an opportunity to set an example for all of Europe in how nature and the environment can be protected from severe destruction."

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