REALWorld Law

Sale and purchase

Environmental liability

Is the buyer of a real estate asset in this country responsible for soil pollution or contamination of the building even if it did not cause the pollution or contamination?

France

France

In accordance with the ‘polluter pays’ principle, a landowner cannot be held responsible for historic contamination of the soil/groundwater. The French Supreme Court holds that owning title to a property is not enough to render the owner liable to carry out the remediation required by the environmental authorities (the préfet and the environmental authorities, DREAL or DRIEAT in Ile-de-France). However, if it is established that the landowner has been negligent or that he has not been ‘stranger’ to the process of production of pollution, then it is assumed that he could be considered as liable. Nonetheless, the notion of ‘stranger’ has not been defined by the legislatives.

French regulations do, however, state that environmental liability is transferred in the case of an asset purchase, when the buyer has the status of an 'operator' under the Seveso regulations, i.e when the buyer has a new operating permit to carry out 'classified activities for the protection of the environment' (Installation classée pour la protection de l'environnement or ICPE).

Consequently, where 'classified activities' are carried out on a site, the operator (the entity holding the permit issued by the environmental authorities to carry out the activities) will be held liable for pollution (historical or recent) unless it can prove that it is not responsible for the pollution and the previous operator, which caused the pollution, can be traced.

It is assumed that a third party can take over the obligation to restore a site after it has been polluted, when investing in a site which has these problems. This transfer of the obligation is coupled with the transfer of liability. This means that if the site is not properly restored, then the third party will be liable, but, if that investor becomes insolvent, the initial polluter will be liable again.

The French Environmental Code provides that the seller of a site where a 'classified installation' has been operated must inform a prospective buyer of any related dangers or inconveniences and disclose a list of any chemical or radioactive substances which have been stored on the site.