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The Climate Litigation Database

Luossavaara Kiirunavaara AB v. European Commission

Geography
International
Year
2023
Document Type
Litigation

About this case

Filing year
2023
Status
Decided
Geography
International
Court/admin entity
European UnionEuropean Court of Justice
Case category
Suits against governmentsGHG emissions reduction and tradingEU ETS
Principal law
European UnionPrimary LawTreaty on the Functioning of the European UnionEuropean UnionSecondary LawDirectives2003/87/EC
At issue
Whether the European Commission erred in law or exceeded its discretion under the ETS Directive by refusing to include iron ore pellet sub-installations under the sintered ore benchmark for free emission allowances, and whether that refusal violated the principles of equal treatment, non-discrimination, and the obligation to state reasons under Article 296 TFEU.
Topics
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Documents

Summary

This case concerns an appeal (Case C-621/23 P) brought by Luossavaara-Kiirunavaara AB (the appellant), a Swedish mining company, against a judgment of the General Court of the European Union of July 26, 2023. The General Court had dismissed its action for annulment of Article 1(3) of Commission Decision (EU) 2021/355 (the “contested decision”). The European Commission was the defendant at first instance, and the Kingdom of Sweden, which supported the appeal, was an intervener. Under the EU ETS Directive, certain industrial installations may receive free allowances based on harmonized benchmarks for their sectors or products. Luossavaara-Kiirunavaara AB (Swedish company) challenged the decision (EU) 2021/355 of the European Commission, which rejected Sweden’s proposal to cover a sub-installation producing iron ore pellets using the benchmark for sintered ore. The company sought annulment of this decision via the General Court and then appealed to the CJEU. Luossavaara Kiirunavaara AB advanced that iron ore pellets are replaceable by sintered ore, so they should qualify for the same benchmark. The Commission should ensure free allocations to promote the most emission-efficient techniques, which would include pellets. Moreover, the appellant argued that the restrictive interpretation violated principles of equal treatment, non-discrimination, and the duty to state reasons, as well as potentially EU environmental obligations. On 22 May 2025, the CJUE rejected the appeal, upholding the General Court’s decision. Indeed, it confirmed that in the context of the development of benchmarks, the Commission must pursue a general objective of incentivising the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions to the extent feasible, that obligation not having the character of an obligation of result. Furthermore, the Court found that iron ore pellets cannot be considered equivalent to sintered ore for the benchmark, because the production processes and uses differ sufficiently. Therefore, the Commission provided sufficient reasoning for its decision, and the refusal does not violate the obligation to state reasons under Article 296 of the TFEU.

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Group
Topics
Policy instrument
Risk
Just transition
Greenhouse gas
Economic sector
Adaptation/resilience