Discussion Papers 1995. No. 20. 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary
CENTRE FOR REGIONAL STUDIES OF HUNGARIAN 
ACADEMY OF SCIENCES 
 
 
DISCUSSION PAPERS 
 
 

No. 20 
 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of  Environmental Protection in 
the Republic of Hungary 
 
 

by  
BENKŐNÉ, 
LODNER Dorottya 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Series editor 
HRUBI, László 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Pécs 
1995 





Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

INTRODUCTION 
In order to discuss the topic indicated by the title above, some fundamental 
concepts must be clarified first as to what is meant by environmental pro-
tection from the legal point of view, and what its content elements are. When 
defining the concept of environment, the starting point of the current legis-
lature was an environmental protection and human approach. Only those 
elements are included which can be influenced by human behaviour, acti-
vity or negligence, either in a positive or negative way. Further restrictions of 
legal regulations – the fact that protection does not cover the whole sur-
rounding environment – can be explained by the following. From one point 
of view, certain elements of the environment had already been put into dif-
ferent protection categories before the overall legal regulation of environ-
mental protection took place in 1976 (e.g. working environment into 
labour safety; monument environment into preservation of monuments). 
From another point of view, and for reasons of justification, only those 
elements can be included which have a significant impact upon either a 
wider community or the natural environment. Within the concept of envi-
ronment two subcategories can be differentiated: natural and artificial. The 
former refers to the complex of natural elements which together produce an 
effect on the biological conditions of human life at a given place and time. 
The latter (the built environment) consists of the environment shaped by 
people according to their own needs. This differentiation is justified by the 
need for different types of legal regulation for protection. (The earth and 
water for instance, as elements of the environment, are managed according 
to different criteria as compared to the protection of separate protected en-
vironmental objects; although the former, in addition to other elements, also 
appear in the protection regulations of the settlement environment but with 
a different focus.) 
Several concepts have been coined by Hungarian professionals but 
there is no unified standpoint as far as environmental protection is concerned. 
These definitions share the following features: human-centredness environ-
mental protection activity is aimed at keeping people and their health safe, 
and complexity in two different meanings. The first is the complexity of 
protection which presumes the mutual participation of several components, 
in close interrelationship with one another (e.g. social, political, legal, 
economic, technical, biological, ecological etc.). The second is the complex-


Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

ity of elements; protection, with the above mentioned restrictions, covers all 
the elements of the environment (earth, water, air, flora and fauna, land-
scape, settlement environment etc.) and manages them as a whole, concent-
rating on their interrelationships. Although the legal regulation of environ-
mental protection does not define the concept of environmental protection, 
but rather sets the aims of the law and the task of environmental protection 
(see Act II on environmental protection in 1976)), the component elements 
of protection can be deduced from the general regulations. Consequently, en-
vironmental protection means a conscious activity to serve the health condi-
tions and interests of both the present and the future generations, including: 
• the prevention of dangerous phenomena, environmental damage 
detrimental to people (damage protection); 
• the elimination and reduction of the already existing decline in the 
quality of the environment (damage limitation); 
• the rational social use of utilisable natural resources and natural en-
vironmental elements; 
• the conservation and rehabilitation of natural areas (nature conser-
vation); 
• the creation and continuous improvement of socially favourable 
living conditions for the future (systematic nature conservation). 
Nature conservation, as the list above suggests, is situated within the 
conceptual scope of environmental protection. It covers the protection, con-
servation and specific goal-oriented maintenance of both the natural areas, 
more or less free from human intrusion, with scientific and cultural signifi-
cance (e.g. caves, certain species of plants); and also products of human 
creation (e.g. parks). 
As a result of the socio-economic changes in the Republic of Hun-
gary, a new attitude can be seen concerning the management of environ-
mental protection issues. The government program, through the uniform 
adjustment of the natural and man-made environment, has set the aim of 
developing the conditions and quality of life. This task, however, is far from 
easy. The decline of environmental quality is a direct consequence of the last 
four decades’ economic policy. The material- and energy-intensive econo-
mic structure; the high proportion of pollutive technologies and equally pol-
lutive different branches of industry; excessive economic centralisation; 
and the neglect of infrastructure were all factors inducing and conserving en-
vironmental pollution. The situation of environmental protection was further 


Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

hindered by the monolithic political system and the state administration 
which served it, by giving priority to production interests only and pushing 
the non-productive sector into the background. As a means of implementing 
this policy, the regulations, besides declaring the principle of prevention, 
were characterised by the idea of subsequent intervention. The dominance 
of the direct commands of authorities; the scattered allocation of tasks and 
competence; the concentration of sectoral and environmental interest repre-
sentation and assertion in the hands of a certain ministries (e.g. the ministries 
of agriculture and industry) were all factors which prevented effective envi-
ronmental protection activity by the state. The present government wants to 
stop the disintegration of environmental quality by the millennium. The pri-
mary task is to reduce the harmful effects directly endangering the health 
conditions of the population; that is to improve the air and water quality, and 
to solve the problem of waste disposal. Other aims of high priority are the 
conservation of the irreplaceable natural environment and active participa-
tion in the regional and global protection of the Carpathian Basin. 
In order to achieve these aims it is essential to reform the legal regula-
tions of environmental protection; an environment-friendly jurisdiction 
should be established and this principle is also endorsed by the legislature. 
What are the characteristics today of the Hungarian central legislation serv-
ing the interests of a healthy environment? Concerning environmental pro-
tection, the body of law consists of a vast number of legal instruments, a 
conglomeration quite difficult to survey. A relatively small number of over-
all regulations can be found wholly covering the environment protected by 
law. The majority of present provisions apply first to specific elements of the 
environment and to the wholly or partly damaging activities (e.g. soil pro-
tection: qualitative and quantitative protection of agricultural lands, mineral 
resource protection; waste: dangerous, solid and liquid, of settlements) and 
second, they are associated with economic activity in the environment. On 
the other hand, the provisions concerning environmental elements are often 
linked with economic activities (e.g. forestry, waterworks, mining). Further-
more, all those legal norms should be mentioned as a result of which, in the 
context of the socio-economic changes and the renewal of jurisdiction and 
the state administration system and its operation, environmental protection 
tasks are determined and allocated and their scope changed.  
The fundamental condition of an effective and productive administra-
tion is an unambiguous and implementable legal regulation from the point of 


Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

view of substantive and procedural law. In terms of environmental protec-
tion, the present body of law does not meet these requirements. Concerning 
the legislation of the recent period following the change of system, three 
main courses can be differentiated in the updating of legal regulations: 
 the modification of certain fields within the area of environmental 
protection (e.g. the 27/1992 (I. 30.) government decree on the cont-
rol of the formation of toxic waste and on the activities related to 
their neutralisation), the re-regulation of general issues (e.g. the 
1992 Act LXXXIII on certain separated state funds, including the 
Central Environmental Protection Fund), and the introduction of 
new subject matters to be regulated (e.g. the Ministry of Environ-
mental Protection et. al.’s 18/1991 (XII. 18.) decree on the control 
and check of motor vehicles from the environmental protection 
point of view; and the 86/1993 (VI. 4.) government decree on the 
temporary regulation of inspecting the environmental effects of 
certain activities); 
 the integration of environmental protection regulations into the 
mechanisms „commanding” economic change (e.g. state compa-
nies, co-operatives) and the re-regulation of branches of industry 
(e.g. new laws on mining); 
 norms regulating the management and organisation of environ-
mental protection and the restructuring of the scope of tasks and 
competence (e.g. the 1991 Act XX, 24/1992 (I. 28.) government 
decree on the modification of environmental protection provisions 
of the law and on the tasks and competence of the clerk of local 
government). 
As far as the result is concerned, these legal provisions can be consi-
dered to be dealing with minor issues, means and organisational framework 
only without clarifying their content, the essential questions constituting the 
environmental protection activity of the state. The central legislation still 
lacks the regulation of procedural issues of environmental protection admi-
nistration. (In this respect, however, improvement can be expected in the 
new law on environmental protection.) Even if there are some implications, 
these are included in the system of a given branch or field with dominant 
branch-centredness, without paying enough attention to the complexity of 
environmental protection issues and the complicated inter-relationship bet-
ween environmental elements and the negative effects on them. Briefly, effi-
ciency is prevented by the fact that there is no synthesising system co-ordi-


Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

nating minor details, and that both the organisation and its functioning are 
too disparate.  
The main courses of the necessary changes are: 
• in every aspect, the jurisdiction should consider from an environ-
mental protection point of view (instead of the former practice of 
pollution neutralisation); 
• as a consequence of the principle of the legal state, the regulation 
should be normative: instead of the „wishful” declaration of environ-
mental protection principles, the executive government and the 
whole public administration should be given concrete tasks which 
are defined and surrounded with guarantees; 
• the regulations should help to assert the principle of the causer’s re-
sponsibility: the polluter should pay; 
• regulated and fair procedures open to the public should be introduced 
for cases which cannot be treated within the framework of nor-
mative regulations; 
• the environmental protection information system should be further 
developed: it should serve simultaneously the work of the authorities 
and the evaluation of the state of environment (as a consequence of 
the latter function, the environmental data of a given region should 
be accessible for anyone anywhere, in a systemic form); 
• a new law on environmental protection should be framed (the draft 
has already been made); 
• the publicity of environmental protection should be stated in this 
law; 
• special rules of the assertion of environmental protection rights, both 
individual and collective, should be laid down in law; 
• state participation in environmental protection cannot be reduced ra-
dically; the tasks of the state should be defined and a normative task-
financing system should be worked out; 
• concerning the fulfilment of environmental protection tasks, the par-
ticipation of the state and of the persons and institutions involved in 
the economy, and the financial burden of the population should be 
regulated by law; 
• it is essential that the public administration should be both professi-
onal and independent; therefore management and production in-
terests should be separated from each other, the work of the autho-
rities and the government should rely on independent expertise, and 
the activities of the authorities should be rendered independent 
from the dominance of local economic interest; 
10 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

• the multi-level central legislation (law, cabinet decree, ministerial de-
cree) should be limited to a minimum decree as a result of which 
local governments could gain more opportunities to exercise regulat-
ing activities over environmental protection; 
• the fundamental elements of the public administrational system of 
environmental protection, especially the carrying out of local tasks, 
should be defined in law. 
The legal regulation of environmental protection is characterised by 
creating requirements for different activities. As a consequence, this regula-
tion is essentially a collection of requirements containing the prescriptions of 
duties. It is public administration law which has a determining role in the re-
gulation, although environmental protection aspects and provisions can be 
found in other branches of law as well (constitutional, civil and criminal). 
 I believe, that the question of how to set up and operate a public admi-
nistration system whose responsibility is to solve the environmental pro-
tection problems of pressing necessity cannot be neglected. What I find 
especially important to consider in connection with the environmental pro-
tection legislation and the location of the related tasks and competencies is 
the aspect of regionality. That is, different problems in different regions, 
settlement groups and types. Several problems have been induced by the 
new local governments replacing the former Council system; by the way 
they have taken responsibility, their opportunities to influence the environ-
mental state of settlements and their regions, and their integration in the 
administration work of environmental protection.  
Therefore, in this paper, I have decided to emphasise the organisation-
legal aspects of environmental protection administration. I will show the 
Hungarian state control of environmental protection, the different types of 
territorial (local) organisations dealing with environmental protection admi-
nistration. I will also describe the system of task and competence division in 
the context of local governments and among deconcentrated state administ-
ration organs and last I will analyse the environmental protection activity of 
local governments on the basis of the legal background and practice. 
11 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

1 THE STATE CONTROL OF ENVIRONMENTAL 
PROTECTION 
Environmental protection as an aim and task set by the state presupposes an 
overall and general political control broken down into different units. The 
more concrete handling of this issue, specified by distinct activities and or-
ganised by tasks and competence is the state control. The state control of 
environmental protection can be divided into two subsystems: 
 overall and general control over environmental protection as a whole, 
including the following: the legislative work of the parliament; the 
controlling, organising, co-ordinating and supervising activities of the 
government; the control of the minister and Ministry of Environmental 
Protection and Regional Development, and the decisions of municipal 
governments with respect to the whole of the settlement environment 
(e.g. environmental protection conception and planning); 
 control over the special fields of environmental protection, i.e. the con-
trol of activities dealing with both the objects of the environment pro-
tected by law (earth, water, air, flora and fauna, landscape and settle-
ment environments) and with detrimental phenomena endangering the 
environment (e.g. noise, waste). The underlying principle of the con-
trol of these special fields of environmental protection is that environ-
mental protection as such is not regarded as a distinct branch activity. 
Consequently, control is still dispersed to a certain extent. There are 
other reasons, however, rooting in the past; the state administrational 
tasks of environmental protection had been integrated into the activi-
ties of different state administration organs much earlier than the com-
plexity of the environmental protection issue were recognised; state 
administration was gradually shaped in accordance with the unfa-
vourable changes in the quality of certain environmental elements. The 
ministers who exercise control over special fields are as follows: the 
minister of environmental protection and regional development; of ag-
riculture; of social welfare; of industry and commerce; of transport, te-
lecommunications and water management. Figure 1 and 2 show the 
state control system of environmental protection and the division of 
tasks and competence. 
In addition to the unified management of the environmental protection 
issue, state control requires the simultaneous use of differentiated attitudes if 
12 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

we concentrate on the real chances of implementation. Even in the former 
system, plans were made to solve the fundamental problems of environment-
13 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

Figure 1 
Central administration of environmental protection 
 
 
 
 
Parliament
 
 
 
  Committee of Envi-
ronmental Protection
 
 
 
 
↓ 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Government 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
general direction, co-ordina-
 
 
 
 
tion, development, control  
↓ 
 
↓ 
 
↓ 
 
↓ 
 
↓ 
Ministry of Trans-
 
  Ministry of Environ-
 
 
portation, 
mental Protection 
Ministry of 
Ministry of Industry 
Communication and 
Ministry of Welfare
and Regional 
Agriculture 
and Commerce 
Water Economy 
Development 
 
 
 
 
• tasks from the international 
in the duties of health policy
see Figure 2 
• soil quality and humus re-
• direction of the activities of 
cooperation in the environ-
• specifying health protection 
serve protection 
of discovering and complex 
mental protection (water e-
tasks in the prevention or 
• regulated agricultural land 
utilisation of mineral 
conomy issues of the envi-
reduction of health damaging 
use and protection 
resources 
ronmental protection) 
effects of the environment 
• realisation of the require-
• definition of the criteria for 
• definition of the criteria for 
ments of agricultural envi-
the use of vehicles (air qua-
the production, storage and 
ronment economy 
lity protection)  

distribution of health damag-
 control of recultivation, me-
ing (toxic) materials 
lioration and irrigation 

• realisation of competent 
 specifying public health 
forestry 
conditions of the planning 
• permission of commerce, 
and operation of establish-
quality and right use cont-
ments     
rol of plant protective ma-
terials, fertilisers, and me-
liorative and soil protective 
materials 
 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

Figure 2 
Administration activities of the Ministry of Environmental Protection and Regional Development 
Participation in the go-
 
Direction of environmental protection 
 
Direction of 
 
Direction of 
vernment administration
construction 
organisations 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
General direction
 
Special direction 
 
 
 
 
 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 


 
 
 
 
 national programme, budget-
•  environmental policy: a 
legislation (decrees), lawfulness, 
• harmonisation of the built 
• subordinate institutes, o-
ary resources – recommenda-
definition of the strategy 
supervision, control, organis-
and natural environment 
ther budgetary organisa-
tion 
purposes 
ing, co-ordination 
• architectural protection 
tions (Institute of the En-
• foreign relations (assertion of the 
• environmental quality: e-
 
of the settlement’s envi-
vironmental Policy) 
environmental protection inte-
valuation of the environ-
Air quality protection 
ronment 
• organisations of the re-
rests) 
mental conditions 

gional public administra-
 
technical, ecological and 
• development of regulation of 
• monitoring: system of the 
tion and other regional
General landscape 
aesthetic respects in the 
the economy (assertion of the 
statistical information 
budgetary institutions 
protection 
spatial structure of the 
environmental protection inte-
(harmonisation and func-
built and natural environ-
 
 
rests) 
tioning) 
ment (in the land use ma-

Water protection 
 creation of the system 
nagement) 
 
and methodology of en-
 
vironment analyses 
Nature protection 
• means, methods & know 
 
how of the environmental 
Protection against 
protection: environment-
radioactivity 
friendly, energy-saving 
 
and waste-less techno-
Protection against noise 
logies (incentives, deve-
and vibration 
lopment) 
 
• public relations (with ci-
Neutralisation of waste 
vil organisations and mo-
 
vements) 
 
Protection of mineral re-
sources, soil, flora, fauna 
and forest (participation)   
 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

al protection – but without considering the reality of realisation. In the field 
of legal regulation, the troubles stemmed from the implementability of 
provisions (obligations and prohibitions) and assertability of environmental 
protection interests; while they contributed to – or at least did not prevent – 
the serious environmental problems arising parallel with the economic prob-
lems of the country. In this respect, the present task is to achieve the simul-
taneous consideration of economy and environmental protection in the deve-
lopment programs of depressed areas, since these regions are struggling not 
only with an economic but also with an ecological crisis. 
The state of the Hungarian environment is declining continuously. 
This tendency, however, varies by degrees in the given fields of environ-
mental protection and in the different areas suffering from environmental 
pollution problems. 65% of the drinking water supply does not enjoy natural 
protection against pollution of aboveground origin. Drinking water in one 
third of the villages is detrimental to health and the long-term postponing of 
sewage-building further endangers the drinking water supply usable at pre-
sent. 44.3% of the population living in settlements on 11.2% of the whole 
territory of the country, mainly along the Northeast–Southwest industrial 
axis, must inhale highly polluted air. The majority of municipal dumps in the 
settlement networks do not meet the present environmental protection and 
public health regulations. About 52–55% of the population must suffer from 
traffic noise pollution, and the list of problems of pressing necessity could be 
continued.  
The government program mentioned in the introduction ranks the tasks 
to be solved assigning priorities to them. These objectives concentrate 
mainly on the special fields of environmental protection but, at the same 
time, their being related to the endangered areas and regions is obvious. As a 
part of the determination of task-groups in detail, the goals of the air pro-
tection strategy can be mentioned as an example for the management of en-
vironmental problems differentiated by territories: the improvement of the air 
quality of highly polluted areas, including the capital and bigger cities; the 
conservation of the air quality in non-polluted areas; the protection of sen-
sitive ecosystems; the fulfilment of tasks of international obligations pri-
marily and naturally focusing on highly polluted and border areas. The task 
of supplying healthy drinking water is referred to the competence of local 
governments by legislation (with the provision of available target-supports 
from central sources), and this problem is acute in certain areas only. In 
17 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

the body of law on environmental protection, the question of regionality is 
raised in connection with almost every element of the environment under 
protection, although to different degrees depending on the special features of 
specific branches. To name a few examples: the protection of air and water 
quality is based on the division of the territory of the country into qualitative 
categories; nature conservation is related to, inter alia, protected regional ca-
tegories (national park, area of outstanding natural beauty, and protected na-
ture conservation area of national or local importance). The presence of this 
aspect is obvious in the case of settlement environment protection connected 
with limited areas determined by public administration boundaries. In this re-
spect, regionality enjoys general legal protection in terms of environmental 
protection as a multi-compound object of environmental protection; an envi-
ronmental unit representing a special independent quality. I would like to 
emphasise here that, because of the complexity of environmental problems, 
the expertise-, means- and financial resource-intensity of environmental 
protection, and also the „disrespectful” nature of pollution to public admi-
nistration boundaries, make it necessary for municipal governments, strug-
gling with similar problems to think in terms of regionality and to co-operate 
with each other.  
In most cases, the solution of regional environmental problems is 
realised either on the level of central state administration or by being broken 
down to the level of individual settlements, usually in decisions aimed at im-
proving the quality of environments isolated from one another. In practice, 
the implementation of tasks is embodied in the activities of the deconcentrat-
ed organs of the ministry responsible for environmental protection through 
administrational means of authorities. As will be discussed later in the chap-
ter on the environmental protection activities of local governments, there is a 
missing link in the chain between the centre and settlements. The umbrella 
management of the environmental problems of settlements would require 
the substantial involvement of county governments, but this is not pos-
sible within the present framework of legal regulations. 
18 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

2 TERRITORIAL DIVISION OF LABOUR IN THE 
ADMINISTRATION OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION 
In spite of the establishment of environmental protection organs with a gene-
ral scope of authority, and the continuous expansion of their competence, the 
territorial (local) administrational, organisational system and its operation, in 
charge of implementing the state tasks of environmental protection, is still 
characterised by disunity. What are the characteristic features of the territo-
rial organisational structure of environmental protection administration? 
At present, there are three different types of organs endowed with a 
general scope of authority concerning environmental protection: the en-
vironmental protection inspectorate, the national park (nation conserva-
tion) directorate and the county and municipal organs of the State Public 
Health and Medical Officer Service. Nevertheless, the word „general” has 
slightly different meanings in these cases. Environmental protection inspec-
torates play a determining role in their regions. A few examples of their tasks 
from the Ministry of Environmental Protection and Regional Development’s 
(KTM’s) 1/1990 (XI. 13.) decree, article 6, paragraph (2) are: in its opera-
tional area, the inspectorate is responsible for the following tasks affecting 
environmental protection as a whole: 
• the observation and evaluation of the state of the environment and 
environmental protection; the forecast of significant predictable 
effects on the environment and data service concerning these; 
• the territorial and professional co-ordination of environmental pro-
tection tasks which require the synchronised participation of many 
different organs; and 
• laboratory activities in connection with professional administration.  
The inspectorate’s functioning as an environmental protection authori-
ty with a general scope of competence is strengthened by the recent 86/1993 
(VI. 4.) government decree on the temporary regulation of inspecting the en-
vironmental effects of certain activities. According to this, the inspectorate is 
the authority endowed with the right to authorise environment impact inspec-
tion; compulsory activities and facilities required for their implementation. 
In addition to the above-mentioned functions, the inspectorate carries 
out tasks of professional administration (professional authority), in connec-
tion with the protection of air quality, qualitative and quantitative protection 
19 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

of waters, protection against the detrimental effects of waste, radioactivity, 
noise and vibration although with not a full scope of competence since other 
deconcentrated organs and municipal governments also have tasks and 
scopes of competence in these fields. (This division will be discussed later.) 
National park (nation conservation) directorates are competent not 
only to carry out the territorial tasks of professional administration and (pro-
fessional) authority in connection with nature conservation, but they also 
enjoy tasks and competence regarding other fields of environmental pro-
tection. Therefore, on the basis of the 3/1990 (XI. 27.) KTM decree, article 
2, paragraph (1), they are entitled to exercise authority and professional 
authority in the first instance concerning the following issues: general pro-
tection of landscape, forest and mineral resources; and protection of flora 
and fauna. Their expanded scope of tasks can be illustrated well by the 
content of paragraph (2) of the same decree; although a little „blemished”, 
their practical implementability – because of the naming of tasks without 
specifying their content – seems to be doubtful. I would like to mention only 
a few examples to support the above facts. In its operational area (nature 
conservation region), the directorate performs the following in accordance 
with territory development: 
 • tasks in connection with areas of nature not enjoying protection; 
 • participation in the management of mineral resource protection and 
in the performance of environmental protection supervision of mine-
ral resource exploration, production and utilisation, etc. 
All these are beyond its environmental protection scope of compe-
tence. 
In the field of environmental protection, there is also a certain division 
of tasks and competence between the territorial organs of ministries (directo-
rates) and local governments. 
All of the tasks which fall outside the scope of environmental pro-
tection (e.g. the protection of landscape, forest, mineral resources, flora and 
fauna) cover only participatory (partial) competence. The authorities of these 
fields, which should represent, among others, the interests of environmental 
protection, are different deconcentrated organs subordinated to the ministries 
of agriculture, and of industry and commerce. The administrational activi-
ties performed by the territory-level public administrational organs of the mi-
nistry responsible for environmental protection, complement one another, co-
vering more or less all fields of environmental protection. The only element 
20 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

which falls outside their competence is soil protection. This is especially true 
in the case of the qualitative and quantitative protection of agricultural lands, 
and more or less in the case of the protection and rational utilisation of min-
eral resources. The former is referred to the competence of plant and soil 
protection agencies; the latter, according to the new law on mining, pri-
marily to the competence of the district inspectorates of mines and also, in 
specific cases, to the public geological service.  
The following conclusion can be drawn regarding the management of 
the environmental issue: in one group of fields, it is connected with econo-
mic activities (e.g. agriculture, mining) which potentially imply the endan-
gering and damaging of the given environmental element or, as a conse-
quence of a chain-reaction, of the whole environment. In the other (e.g. 
water management and the qualitative and quantitative protection of waters), 
the separation of economic activity and environmental protection was one of 
the reasons behind the reorganisation of ministerial and territorial organs 
(e.g. formerly the Ministry of Transport, Telecommunications and Water 
Management, presently the Ministry of Environmental Protection and Re-
gional Development; formerly the water management directorate, presently 
the environmental protection inspectorate; in the former system, water mana-
gement and environmental protection belonged to the same ministry, that of 
Environmental Protection and Water Management; territorial tasks, as a con-
sequence of the centralised management, were referred to the environmental 
protection and water management directorate, including nature conservation 
which did not have a separate territorial apparatus.) 
These facts are partly responsible for the disparate state of environ-
mental protection administration, especially as far as the ministry of agricul-
ture is concerned. Each of the different types of deconcentrated organs, such 
as the land office, the office of agriculture, the plant and soil protection agen-
cy, the animal and food inspection agency, forest inspectorate, perform the 
professional administration of environmental protection, in certain cases as 
each other’s professional authorities. 
In order to promote the efficiency of administration, considering the 
deconcentrated organs of this ministry, I would find it more useful to in-
crease the concentration of the tasks and task-groups, and to link the different 
activity fields, which are strongly connected to one another, in fewer types of 
organs. 
On the basis of similar considerations, since our environment is a uni-
fied whole and cannot be protected separately, and also because of the fact 
21 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

that nature conservation – despite its specific features – is an integral part of 
environment protection, I think it would be worth considering the amalgama-
tion of nature conservation directorates and environmental protection inspec-
torates. In my opinion, it is hardly justifiable to operate two independent or-
ganisations for one and the same purpose. It would save much time and ener-
gy not to mention the advantages provided by the concentration of physical 
resources, technical means and the possibility of quick decision-making 
which could contribute to the management of problems on a more complex 
level. 
Although not being an organ of environmental protection, the third 
type in the list, the State Public Health and Medical Officer Service, is to 
perform a fundamental role in this issue. Its special importance is given 
by the activity it performs: while overseeing public health, it examines and 
evaluates the current state of all the elements of the environment and their 
effect on the population; it lays the scientific foundation of public health re-
quirements whose observance and assertion make it possible to prevent the 
development of environmental damage and consequent health problems (see 
the 1991 Act XI on the State Public Health and Medical Officer Service). 
Besides being empowered with general tasks to protect the health of the po-
pulation, it has concrete duties in each field of environmental protection: 
e.g. the regular check of the air-pollution levels of settlements; the inspec-
tion of drinking water, mineral and medicinal water and aboveground waters 
from the point of view of public health in places of human use; the exami-
nation of the detrimental effects of dangerous (toxic) waste and its virulence; 
the set-up and assertion of hygienic limit values of noise, vibration and par-
ticulate pollution of mineral and plant origin. 
Last but not least, the official authority of the service must be men-
tioned which covers, with the exception of the armed forces, all natural and 
legal entities and partnerships which have not legal entities. It has almost un-
limited rights of supervision; and in its decisions, if the presence of condi-
tions defined in the legal regulation is given, it may go as far as to constrain 
or suspend the complete functioning of an institution or facility, or to stop its 
activity detrimental to and jeopardising health. In cases of the danger of se-
rious or large-scale health damage, it is entitled to perform all measures 
which are necessary to avert danger.  
The scope of tasks and competence of further organs dealing with, 
among others, environmental protection administration, covers certain fields 
of environmental protection and, within these, certain specific groups of 
tasks. Besides those mentioned earlier, the following organs belong here: the 
county transport inspectorate (the check and control of motor vehicles from 
22 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

the environmental protection point of view), the quite recent chief architect 
and his office (21/1992 (XII. 4.) KTM decree on chief architects); the Public 
Administration Offices of the capital and the counties in the threefold role: 
• sees to legal supervision (over the decisions of local governments 
concerning environmental protection), 
• judges the possibility of legal remedies submitted against the official 
decisions affecting environmental protection made by the mayors or 
the clerk; participates in the performance of tasks and competence of 
environmental protection or in close relation to it (e.g. atomic ener-
gy, flood-prevention and inland waters, local water-damage preven-
tion), 
• performs territorial co-ordinating activities. 
In my opinion, this latter type of activity, which is to provide the syn-
chronised operation of environmental protection activities, is a cardinal 
question, since the development and operation of a synchronised system of 
activities, which depend on one another, is the essential condition to achieve 
efficiency in the fields of planning, development, decision-making and 
checking in terms of environmental protection. The question of how to assert 
the interests of environmental protection in state and local government and 
national and local relationships („local” including not only settlements but 
settlement-groups, regions, counties, if the legislation acknowledges the exis-
tence of independent county-interest; regions); furthermore, among the spe-
cific fields of environmental protection (e.g. protections of plant, soil, water 
supply, air-cleanliness); and also during the procedures of special authorities 
are all issues which require both co-ordination and its legal and financial 
guarantees. The question of territorial co-ordination in environmental pro-
tection has not been solved so far. Even though several types of organs per-
form co-ordination (the environmental protection inspectorate; in principle 
the county government whose detailed discussion comes in the next section; 
the municipal government and the Public Administration Office empowered 
with general territorial competence of co-ordination by the 1990 Act LXV, 
article 98, paragraph (2) modified by 1994 Act LXIII, article 52), the regula-
tion does not cover the whole scope of this activity. Consequently, the envi-
ronmental protection administration activity is not free from troubles. 
From the point of the division of the scope of tasks and competencies it 
is important to mention the method of how to develop their operational areas; 
a question which is one of the fundamental conditions of co-operation a-
mongst the organs of environmental protection administration and those 
which carry out this sort of tasks as part of their activities. In the thinking of 
the ministry responsible, there are two types of territorial units: settlement 
and region. The regions of environmental protection and those of nature con-
23 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

servation do not overlap each other and even their centres do not always co-
incide. The regions limiting the operational areas of inspectorates do not 
have full scope in their performing of tasks and competence, since several 
fields of environmental protection activities are assigned to other deconcent-
rated types of organs, organised quite often within the framework of the 
county. 
It can be mentioned as a further characteristic feature that regions do 
not respect public administration boundaries, which applies to both county 
and settlement boundaries. The picture is further coloured by the fact that 
several deconcentrated organs with environmental protection activities (fo-
rest inspectorate, district inspectorate of mines, geologic service, territorial 
chief architect) are organised on a regional basis; occasionally with the inter-
nal units of county offices. These regions do not overlap either each other, or 
the regions covering the competence area of the territorial organs of the 
KTM. (The degree of deviation varies from one county to another; it will not 
be discussed in detail.) At the same time the State Public Health and Medical 
Officer Service, as I have already mentioned, functions by focusing on the 
totality of the environment and the interrelationships of the specific elements 
of the environment; in the organisational arrangement based on the county 
(town). The result of this situation suggests that the expertise of the specific 
ministries did not agree as to how to prevent, eliminate or reduce detrimental 
environmental effects: in the case of the environmental protection inspecto-
rate, for instance, air quality protection activities are determined by catch-
ment basins, because these are what the set-up of regional boundaries of en-
vironmental protection are based on; in the case of the State Public Health et. 
al Service, by the town or county; in the case of municipal governments, by 
the public administration boundaries of settlements. (In my opinion, one of 
the reasons behind this is the multiple reorganisation of the central state 
control and organisational system of environmental protection, which can be 
traced back to the early 70s.) Obviously, this does not make any difference as 
far as the facts are concerned; certain professional tasks of environmental 
protection of a similar nature enjoy a double moral: they can be carried out 
within the framework of public administration boundaries or by neglecting 
them. 
The crucial problem, I think, is that the maintenance of a healthy hu-
man environment should be done on settlement-level, treating the environ-
ment as a whole; and it is the duty of local government, to carry out this 
task, as will be mentioned later. Nevertheless, the decisions of authorities 
24 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

which are able to support the achievement of this aim are unique and di-
vided by the special fields, or even within them. Another preventative 
factor is the lack of a unified territorial strata to handle the environmental 
protection issue: it is based on the county, for example, in the case of certain 
particular and partial tasks and concerning the activity of the State Public 
Health et. al. Service, motivated by the sanitary protection of people and co-
vering the totality of the human environment; with regard to the inspecto-
rates, which carry out the general tasks of environmental protection as well, 
it is fundamentally regional, without respect to public administration boun-
daries. And a third factor, concerning the division of the scope of tasks and 
competencies, the legislation does not know about anything else between the 
sphere of state and local government but settlements; if it is a task to be per-
formed by either local governments or public administration. 
In my opinion, in order to support the productive environmental pro-
tection activity of local governments and to increase the efficiency of envi-
ronmental protection administration, it would be necessary to manoeuvre the 
operational areas of organs, empowered to carry out the tasks of environ-
mental protection administration on the spot, closer to each other. One of the 
possible options is to set up multi-county regions. The different organs could 
exercise their environmental protection activities in operational areas based 
on a common agreement among themselves; their management would be 
provided from one and the same central settlement; and, if necessary, they 
could function broken down into county- or local-level organisational units. 
In the following section I will discuss the environmental protection 
activity of local governments which has already been referred to quite fre-
quently so far. 
25 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

3 THE ROLE OF MUNICIPAL AND COUNTY GOVERNMENTS 
IN ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION ACCORDING TO THE 
LEGAL BACKGROUND AND PRACTICE 
Environmental protection activity means the simultaneous performance of 
several groups of tasks in order to contribute to the development, mainte-
nance and continuous improvement of a healthy and aesthetic environment. 
The protection itself is carried out on several levels, whose main types 
are as follows: 
• the elimination of existing detrimental environmental effects, such as 
polluters; 
• measures affecting environmental protection to improve the environ-
mental state of particular settlements, settlement-groups, counties 
and special regions; 
• the solution of specific problems emerging from the certain fields of 
environmental protection (e.g. management of toxic waste, supply of 
healthy drinking water); 
• the assertion of environmental protection requirements during the 
procedures which affect or utilise the environment. 
As a general rule, protection against detrimental effects is realised in 
the activity of authorities. The establishment of these official measures for 
environmental protection requires a high-quality professional background 
and knowledge, and special material conditions (e.g. a laboratory network). 
All of these can be found either at the environmental protection inspectorates 
or the different deconcentrated organs. The central jurisdiction, however, has 
assigned some concrete scope of authority to the mayor and the clerk of mu-
nicipal governments while ignoring the complete set up of required condi-
tions. 
During the shaping and protection of the environment, every citizen 
must be provided with an acceptable environmental quality by the state (see 
the relevant constitutional provision on the right to a healthy environment). 
Without the meaningful participation of the population, however, this aim 
cannot be achieved; the mere external intervention of the entitled authorities 
cannot serve the purpose. The activity of local governments is essential. 
Realising the importance of this fact, the local government act – unlike the 
former Council Act – declares the protection of the man-made and natural 
26 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

environment as one of the local public services of municipal governments. 
The intention behind this is, that, in terms of environmental protection, local 
governments should assert the will of the community within their own scope 
of tasks and competence, in accordance with the local characteristics and 
claims. As a result of these types of considerations, the tasks of environ-
mental protection of local interest and importance are assigned to municipal 
governments. Their activities in environmental protection administration are 
of different origin: one part of the tasks and competence is inherited from the 
former Council system (local or county), either unchanged or passed down to 
settlement level; another part derives from the reorganisation of the scope of 
tasks and competence of environmental protection and water management 
directorates (the legal predecessor of environmental protection inspecto-
rates); and there are some new types of competence as well, which are in-
tended to create the conditions for the active participation of local govern-
ments in environmental protection activities (e.g. regulation, planning and 
co-ordination on local government level, the establishment and independent 
management of environmental protection funds of local governments). 
When analysing their scope of tasks, the general provisions of the local 
government act provide a useful starting point. In connection with local 
government rights, the law declares the following: 
• local government proceeds autonomously in public affairs of local 
concern that fall within its scope of tasks and competencies; 
• local affairs involve supplying the population with public services, 
exercising public power locally, and creating the organisational, 
personal and financial conditions for all the forgoing; 
• within the framework of this law, local government may indepen-
dently regulate, or in individual cases freely administer, local affairs 
in accordance with its duties and competence. Its decisions may be 
superseded by the courts, and by the Constitutional Court, but only 
in the case of a provision of the law being violated; 
• the law may set the compulsory tasks and competence of the local 
government. Simultaneously, the Parliament ensures the financial 
conditions necessary for implementing them and decides on the 
measure and manner of budget allocations. 
On the basis of the above mentioned provisions, the following con-
clusions can be drawn concerning the scope of tasks of local governments in 
the case of environmental protection. According to the local government act, 
the main idea is that, depending on the needs of the community and the avail-
27 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

able financial resources, local governments are free to decide as to which 
tasks to perform and to what extent.  
Among the other compulsory tasks, the provision of healthy drinking 
water is one of the most important. Since it belongs to the group of compul-
sory tasks, in this case the parliament takes the responsibility of ensuring the 
necessary financial conditions as well (see above). Depending solely on the 
financial capabilities of local governments, fulfilment of this requirement 
would be rather doubtful. In practice, the solution requires the set up and 
maintenance of a target-support system. 
As a result of the division of competence among the territorial organs 
of the KTM and local governments, which was carried out on the basis of 
environmental effects and the importance of natural areas, the scope of com-
petence of typically environmental protection administration assigned to lo-
cal governments by different laws1, covers three different fields, i.e. the pro-
tection of air quality, noise and vibration, and nature conservation. Concern-
ing the official affairs in these fields, the division of competence is based on 
the importance of activities violating the protection of environment. Local 
governments are assigned to perform tasks of local concern; to be more 
exact, to judge the illegal activities of plants performing public service, and 
to determine their related rights and duties. 
In terms of nature conservation, local governments are assigned to 
attend to protected areas of local concern. That is those which were not qua-
lified earlier as having national importance, but which were declared as 
being protected, therefore their maintenance and protection justified. 
In addition to the duties described above, they are to perform the fol-
lowing tasks either of environmental protection or related to it: 
• within the framework of local water management: drainage, sewage 
treatment, rainwater drainage, flood and inland waters prevention, 
local water-damage prevention; 
• within the framework of community management: the management 
of liquid and solid settlement wastage, ensuring the cleanliness of 
communal areas, and the maintenance of green areas; 
• within the framework of agricultural administration: animal car-
casses, certain partial tasks of animal sanitary matters and plant pro-
tection; 
                                                           
1 1990 Act LXV on local governments; 1991Act XX on the scope of the tasks and compe-
tence of local governments and their organs, Commissioners of the Republic and other 
centrally subordinated organs (law on competence), etc. 
28 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

• within the framework of industrial and commercial administration: 
some specific tasks related to mining and recycling; 
• within the framework of environmental protection and territorial de-
velopment administration: the co-ordination of tasks concerning en-
vironmental protection, the regulation of social affairs on local level, 
the working out of management plans and programs, etc. 
During the implementation of these tasks, as I have already mentioned, 
they may exercise their right to independent regulation, by framing decrees 
in order to handle the social affairs on a local level not regulated by law and, 
on the basis of empowerment by law, to ensure their implementation. It must 
be further emphasised that, empowered by law, local governments have the 
right to freedom of speech and initiative concerning the questions of local 
concern but outside the scope of tasks and competencies of local govern-
ments; and, as a guarantee, those who are concerned are obliged to be ac-
countable in turn. This competence has a significant role in matters of envi-
ronmental protection, since the overwhelming majority of official measures 
belong to state administration organs of environmental protection. In order 
to ensure the implementability of their voluntarily undertaken tasks, munici-
pal governments must take up other opportunities given by the local govern-
ment act: especially with the right to establish different types of associations 
(water supply, sewage management, wastage collection and neutralisation, 
etc. not completely without tradition); to set up companies and institutes to 
provide public services together with the self-organising communities of the 
inhabitants. I would like to stress here an urgent need, awaiting legislation, 
for the lawful declaration of the special regulations of environmental protec-
tion publicity and the individual and collective assertion of civic rights re-
garding environmental protection (e.g. by the institutionalisation of actio po-
pulis
, which has been urged for quite a long time in the professional litera-
ture2). 
Simultaneously, the information system of environmental protection 
should be further developed in order to provide both a foundation for official 
activities and also data required for the evaluation of the state of the environ-
ment. This goal must be achieved as soon as possible. The environmental 
data of each region must become available for anyone in a unified and sys-
temic form. To outline our duties to be done, I would like to refer to the No 1 
decree of the XVIII general assembly of the Council of European Settle-
                                                           
2 See Tarr, Gy. 1991
29 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

ments and Regions entitled „The quality of life and the environment of the 
peoples of Europe”. This document specifies several tasks which are worth 
considering in our country: settlements and regions must play a fundamental 
role in the realisation of the environmental policy; they must endeavour to 
involve citizens and to form a dialogue with all the different forces of socie-
ty, especially with companies; the competence and intervention ability of ter-
ritorial governments must be expanded according to the needs and require-
ments of the local community; the data list on environment must be made 
compulsory and the citizens’ right to inquiry in this respect must be gua-
ranteed. 
Municipal governments possess the following rights in environmental 
protection matters: 
 regulation (framing of decrees) belongs to the competence of the bo-
dy of representatives, e.g. declaration of protected natural areas of 
local concern, determination of local noise- and vibration-pro-
tection requirements; the regulation of air-pollution caused by 
household activities; 
 the tasks and competencies of functionaries, the mayor and the clerk 
of local government are also regulated by the central legislation. 
The following tasks are referred to the competencies of the mayor, 
with the restriction mentioned earlier: protection of air quality, noise 
and vibration which are defined to be dangerous to the settlement, 
judgement of activities violating nature conservation (service 
activity in the first two cases and in connection with natural areas of 
local concern). Other environmental protection affairs of local inte-
rest are performed by the clerk. 
The scope of authority of the mayor: 
• restriction or suspension of the operation of industrial facilities pol-
luting the environment e.g. noise-pollution to a dangerous level; 
• in favour of the protection of air quality, obligation to use e.g. other 
energy resources or operational modes; the restriction of water con-
sumption; 
The scope of authority of the clerk: 
• giving permission concerning e.g. vineyard and fruit plantation, tree- 
and vine-surgery, stubble-burning; 
• prohibition e.g. regarding nature conservation; 
• determination of discharge emission limit values e.g. in the field of 
protection of air quality, noise; 
30 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

• imposing fines, e.g. regarding nature conservation, air-pollution; 
• supervision, e.g. protection against damaging agents in the field of 
plant protection, etc. 
In practice, the assigned tasks of environmental protection to munici-
pal governments raises several problems. To examine a couple of them set-
tlements have been given one of the most difficult tasks in the field of envi-
ronmental protection (air, noise). To be able to make decisions they need 
measurements, a professional standpoint and expertise. Since they are not 
able to provide these on their own, they cannot do anything else but turn to 
the inspectorate, and pay for their services should they have the financial re-
sources to cover the expense. 
„Settlements are many, inspectorates are few” – the projects are lag-
ging behind, and the decisions of settlements are often made without con-
sidering the regulations on environmental protection.  
Even in general, they have been given too many tasks without having 
the essential conditions for them; no professionals, no financial resources, no 
technical apparatus. Ignorance is quite typical; the environmental protection 
issue is often ranked at the bottom of priorities of the settlements. The 
natural areas are not always considered to be important and the lack of 
money hinders their restoration and conservation. Solid waste disposal is still 
uncontrollable at present and municipal dumps are of extremely low techni-
cal quality. The practice of „one settlement, one well, one dump” is becom-
ing more frequent, which, besides the small financial means, might expose 
the underground waters to further dangers. 
Although the conditions of instrumental measurements are missing, 
the mayor – as we have already seen – may, for instance, stop the function-
ing of a plant. (The measure should be immediate, the reality of this com-
petence is questionable.) The measurements made by the inspectorates at 
the request of local governments keep stalling, since they also struggle with 
the lack of professionals (staff numbers), not to mention the often long dis-
tance between the headquarters of the inspectorates and the given settle-
ments. The inspectorate is not compelled by law to provide a professional 
foundation for the official decisions of local governments. The practical 
solution is realised by the entrepreneurial form of operation in market 
conditions. Occasionally, on the request of local governments, the in-
spectorates provide their services on the basis of administrative co-opera-
tional agreements (called entrepreneurial contracts). 
31 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

The increasing independence of settlements within the framework of 
the local government system brings about more important administrative 
tasks in the case of environmental protection as well. To meet these require-
ments, however, neither local governments nor their administrative apparatus 
are prepared. At the same time, the environmental conflict situations and the 
increasing presence of economic and market interests increasingly must be 
taken into account. Essentially, what is needed is the gradual reduction of the 
central role and the effective assertion of civic freedom and self-governing. 
It would be desirable, especially in the case of villages, to assign realistic, 
implementable and controllable rights and obligations to local governments. 
First of all, some education and attitude-shaping would be required, since the 
ignorance of the population, and in some cases even of the local government 
is so deep that it prevents the efficiency of environmental protection activi-
ties. Municipal governments could be supported to undertake environmental 
protection roles by the involvement of independent professional organs, 
which could be employed when needed. As far as the efficiency of their acti-
vity is concerned, it is not without importance how the other type of local go-
vernment, that is the county governments, takes part in the performance of 
environmental protection tasks. In the rest of my paper, I will elaborate on 
this question. 
The starting point of an evaluation concerning the environmental pro-
tection activities of counties is provided by the legal provisions regulating 
the scope of tasks and competencies of county governments.3
As a matter of fact, the laws regulating the scope of tasks and compe-
tencies of local governments did not take the counties into account in terms 
of environmental protection affairs, before the modification of these laws in 
1994. The problem I find most crucial here is that the legislature seems to 
have completely ignored the special nature of environmental pollution in that 
it does not respect settlement boundaries, and also the impossibility of pro-
tection and development when isolated by settlements and centrally com-
manded. The county government task in connection with environmental pro-
tection is named in paragraphs (1) and (2) of article 80 in the law on com-
petencies: 
 The synchronisation of tasks in connection with settlement deve-
lopment and landscaping, and the protection of the built and natural 
environment – except for the tasks of conservation of monument 
                                                           
3 Related legal norms: 1990 Act LXV on local governments modified 1994 Act LXIII. 
32 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

buildings which either belong to authorities or are defined in other 
separate legal provisions – is assigned to municipal governments in 
their operational area; furthermore, if they cover the majority or the 
whole of the county, to the county government. 
 The preparation and implementation of local decisions and opinions 
in regard to the local government tasks cited under the paragraph a-
bove, are referred to the competence of the representative body of 
the settlement or the chief architect in the office of county govern-
ment. 
This legal provision is open to criticism from several points of view: 
• the location of tasks and competence under the chapter title of envi-
ronmental protection and territorial development is regulated within 
the framework of construction affairs. Consequently, territorial de-
velopment administration as a county-level task is equal with con-
struction administration; involving settlement development, land-
scaping and environmental protection; 
• the declaration of environmental protection as construction affairs 
implies the unreasonable limitation of this task’s scope; 
• the wording of the regulation is too general, involving interpretation 
problems. 
It is not quite clear what is meant by the task in connection with the 
protection of the built and natural environment covering the majority or the 
whole of the country. It is essentially the same as the environment regulated 
by the law and its protection. Although this protection is realised in the tasks 
of several authorities and local governments, the concrete scope of tasks and 
competencies of county governments is still missing in the legal regulations. 
It is also ambiguous what the legislator has meant; protection and synchroni-
sation, or the synchronising of the performance of protective activities. The 
question of synchronising itself is not without problems either. As I have al-
ready pointed out, the inspectorate, functioning as a professional administra-
tive organ of environmental protection on a territorial level, is responsible for 
the territorial and professional co-ordination of environmental protection 
tasks which require the synchronised function of many organs.4 The Public 
Administration Offices of the capital and the counties also have certain co-
                                                           
4 1/1990 (XI. 13.) KTM. decree, article 6 paragraph (2) c. 
33 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

ordinating tasks and concrete competencies.5 When considering these facts, 
it seems to be obvious that the synchronising activity of county governments 
is „up in the air”. It’s a task without the minimum guarantees of conditions 
regarding its implementability, in contrast to the concrete tasks and compe-
tencies of the above mentioned deconcentrated organs. 
Neither the law on environmental protection in force at present – nor 
the draft of the new one – takes county governments into consideration when 
discussing the allocation of tasks and competencies. They are not mentioned 
more than once: municipal governments must co-operate with county go-
vernments, among others. 
In spite of these facts, in practice the counties have declared they will 
deal with the environmental problems on their territories as voluntarily un-
dertaken tasks. In their organisational rules, regulating both the establishment 
of committees and the division of the general assembly’s office, the issue of 
environmental protection is also present as a result of their independence, in 
quite different forms. 
The following common and generalised features can be summarised. 
• The establishment of a committee with exclusively environmental 
protection tasks is exceptionally rare, there are none among the offi-
cial organisational units. 
• In the case of several counties, the term „environmental protection” 
does not even appear in committee names (e.g. the committee of in-
frastructure and tourism). 
• In most cases, the title of the unit of the office empowered to perform 
environmental protection tasks does not contain any hint as to 
environmental protection (e.g. the department of territorial develop-
ment and communal affairs). 
• In some cases, it is rather difficult to derive the environmental pro-
tection task from the title (e.g. financial and economic secretariat). 
• The most frequently connected tasks, reflected in the naming as well, 
are the following: territorial development, communal affairs, econo-
my; other examples: agriculture, enterprise organisation, tourism, 
monument conservation, architecture. 
• The fact that environmental protection has been pushed into the 
background is obvious when examining the tasks declared; the 
„connected tasks” mentioned earlier mean the complementing other, 
                                                           
5 See the points d) and p) of the (2) paragraph of article 98 of the 1990 Act LXV modified by 
1994 Act LXIII. 
34 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

often quite detailed, branch-activities with the tasks of environment-
al protection. 
• In some counties, the county-level co-ordination of environmental 
protection tasks is entitled to function and position (e.g. in Baranya 
county the councillor in charge of construction, water management 
and environmental protection exercises supervision over the imple-
mentation of the tasks of this field, as defined by the general assemb-
ly; in the counties of Borsod-Abaúj-Zemplén and Vas, environ-
mental protection falls under the competence of the chief architect of 
the county). The lack of professionals in the area of environmental 
protection in counties has already led to problems. Only a few coun-
ties employ special engineers qualified in environmental protection. 
(Formerly, these professionals carried out tasks related to environ-
mental protection and nature conservation.) If the function of county 
governments does not change essentially (if they are not assigned to 
perform a concrete scope of tasks and competencies), it would seem 
to be a real danger that the enthusiastic professionals who are both 
able and willing to act will leave the administrative apparatus. 
• In some cases, this task has been located in the so-called background 
organs, probably as a result of the prioritisation of tasks and the 
significant limitation of meaningful activities (minimal scope). The 
organisational structure and the consequent division of tasks provide 
only the framework for particular actions. Still, I do believe that the 
level of the actual activity can be negatively affected by the fact that 
the office tasks of environmental protection are connected to the 
activity of the assembly through a series of linked transmissions. 
Following the brief summary of structure, I would like to deal with the 
tasks and competencies named in the regulations applying to counties. A-
mong the tasks and competencies of the assembly, article 80 paragraph (1) 
of the law on competence is reiterated in the regulations of each county, al-
though differently worded. 
The naming of these tasks usually takes place within the scope of eco-
nomic and territorial development tasks. The main types of tasks defined as 
environmental protection and which are voluntarily undertaken by county 
governments are as follows: 
• working out of plans and conceptions; 
• analyses of the environmental state of the county and the related pro-
tection activities;  
35 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

• tasks aimed at the improvement of environment quality; 
• activities concerning nature conservation;  
• support of the environmental protection activities of municipal go-
vernments; 
• performance of territorial tasks in connection with environmental 
protection. 
The way these environmental protection tasks are undertaken is well 
reflected by the assembly agendas and decisions. The tasks which the coun-
ties dealt with and the subject matters they declared as scheduled tasks in 
1991 and 1992 are as follows:  
• the situation of county-level environmental protection and nature 
conservation; 
• the tasks of county governments related to the protection and deve-
lopment of built and natural environments; 
• the working out of an environmental protection concept and an 
action plan on a county level;  
• concepts and study plans with environmental protection considera-
tions and effects; 
• concept for sewage treatment and drainage; 
• a complex waste disposal study plan, a municipal dump system; 
• county government tasks of infrastructure development; 
• the launching of the working out of a territorial development strategy 
(concept), involving the tasks of environmental protection; 
• the program of work of county governments in 1992–94 (although 
with different wording and content, each program deals with coun-
ty-level tasks favouring environmental protection); 
• agendas affecting particular small areas (e.g. the protection and utili-
sation of the river Tisza in Csongrád county). 
On the whole it can be concluded that county governments have un-
dertaken the improvement of environmental quality in their areas, and they 
are ready to act. The practical implementability of this task, however, seems 
to be rather doubtful in most cases. 
Returning to the different forms of practical activity of counties, I 
would like to draw attention to the positive instances of regional inquiries in 
certain counties, launched on the basis of empowerment by the assembly. 
The project was based on the undertaking of co-ordination tasks of regional 
concern by the assembly. The office staff travelled all over their counties; 
36 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

giving out questionnaires, inquiring about the problems and plans of munici-
pal governments. The final aim is to work out the territorial development 
concept of county, including the definition of tasks of environmental pro-
tection on a county-level. 
The following group of activities contains the different forms of 
support given to municipal governments to help with the implementation of 
their tasks and to enable them to cope with their problems in environmental 
protection affairs: 
 information service in various forms, for example the organisation 
of public meetings by districts (water management, sewage, the fu-
ture of public utilities etc.); an information service for the publica-
tion of tenders in the official paper of the local government and also 
for the legal regulations of environmental protection tasks in the 
competencies of municipal governments; 
 training, refresher courses, and attitude-shaping among the popula-
tion, e.g. organisation of lecture-series given by the local profes-
sionals on environmental protection; publication of notices in the lo-
cal paper; organisation of environmental protection days, and pub-
lic relations action; 
 professional and technical consulting and support in environmental 
protection affairs, e.g. participation in the economic and technical 
preparation of decisions on development issues; in smaller settle-
ments, the project management of water supply public utilities; 
 tasks of organisation: co-ordination, e.g. in the case of nature con-
servation, sewage and waste disposal affecting multiple settlements; 
 nature conservation: the special duty of county governments in this 
field stems from the fact that formerly the protection of natural areas 
of local concern was referred to their competence; they kept giving 
support to settlements, especially in the period of transition, but 
also since then, e.g. proposal declaring particular natural areas to be 
protected; professional help related to the management of protected 
areas, the identification of endangering phenomena, and pro-
posals to take the necessary measures; 
 the set-up and organisation of associations with tasks concerning re-
gional-level environmental protection, or issues related to it; e.g. 
forest and game management, water and communal waste  manage-
ment. One of the biggest hindrances to the problem-management of 
environmental protection is the isolation of settlements. The associ-
37 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

ations, set up on the basis of county initiatives, and functioning 
often with the participation of the county, are aimed at improving 
this situation. I find this form of co-operation extremely effective; 
its increased spread and extension with environmental protection 
tasks is worth considering; 
 the development of the county’s environmental situation with finan-
cial means. The subsidies are designed to provide financial sup-
port and orientation for the implementation of regional-level tasks. 
The budget and target-support conceptions of some counties even 
express this aim concretely. 
Both the definition of concrete tasks and the forms of support show ex-
treme variety; e.g. the establishment of an Environmental Protection Fund to 
help the environment management activities of counties on settlement level; 
county funds to set up municipal dumps and to support the implementation 
of community tasks in settlements and regions. 
On the basis of practical experience, it can be said that, in spite of their 
difficult financial situation, counties are endeavouring to influence environ-
mental protection activity and to relieve the environmental problems of spe-
cific settlements and settlement-groups. 
Within the framework of the Hungarian public administration system, 
the county can be generally said to have lost its basis, and to lack the oppor-
tunity of playing an integrative role for political reasons. Nevertheless, the 
country must be run and this is a professional (public administrational, legal, 
technical) matter, not a political one. This general statement is also true for 
environmental protection. 
Although co-ordination, professional consultation and organisation are 
all essential elements of environmental protection activity, they are not regu-
lated appropriately by legal regulations. One chain is missing in this field: 
the county. The „interdependence” characteristic in environmental protection 
is not realised on the legislative level. When a specific issue affects more 
settlements, its management cannot be left to chance. The different interest 
relations and the conflicts of interests within and among settlements make it 
necessary to have an intermediate level for the sake of co-ordination and the 
optimal management of environmental problems. State power asserts a cent-
ral will, while the settlements are incapable of co-operating. Spontaneous co-
operative connections are organised, but not for the systematic development 
of a best possible solution. 
38 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

It is inevitable that the intermediate-level co-ordinating organ is miss-
ing at present; what exists is disorder, and no one is ready to undertake the 
territorial co-ordination of environmental protection. 
As far as environmental protection is concerned, the opportunities of 
the county are limited, because: 
• it is allowed to exercise a consultative sort of activity only, but the 
problems require intervention; cities of county rank, for example, 
function in isolation, polluting the neighbouring settlements; to set 
up so many „islands” is not a solution in regional affairs; 
• it is hopeless to co-ordinate and organise without the necessary 
means; from the legal point of view, a county does not co-ordinate; 
it might perform the co-ordination of regional-level solutions, but 
presently it does not have the means. 
Co-ordination with settlements is unaccomplishable. Conceptions and 
plans are made (e.g. waste management) but their being accepted by every 
settlement is just impossible. It is a fact that no one is responsible for general 
and branch plans on a territorial level. 
Seeking a way for the future, the following aspects should be consi-
dered. 
Environmental protection, as an organic part of the complex scope of 
territory development, cannot be solved by mere central control. This is be-
cause each county has to face its own special problems, and each has diffe-
rent potentials and opportunities. When managing their problems, settle-
ments are not able to think in terms of regionality. Consequently, territory 
development should be dealt with by county governments. 
Environmental protection and environment shaping requires decisions 
prepared by professionals and legitimised by elected organs. They cannot be 
solved by exclusively official means. When regulating the environmental 
protection functions of county governments, it is their self-government as-
pect which should be strengthened – or better to say, established – instead of 
their being empowered with official tasks of authority. 
It is desirable to concentrate further the official tasks of environmental 
protection at the inspectorates. The breaking down of regional organs of en-
vironmental protection and nature conservation to county-level units could 
provide a possible alternative, which could upgrade the role of county go-
vernments and contribute to a more efficient co-operation on a regional 
level. 
39 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

To support the implementation of developments which go beyond the 
interests of particular settlements, but at the same time benefit the given 
region, are both required and needed. On the basis of experience, it can be 
concluded that infrastructure development and updating can be one of the 
most effective means of environmental protection. 
After these preliminary remarks, I would like to deal with the desirable 
tasks of county governments which serve environmental protection. 
 Analyses of the environmental situation of the county; the ranking of 
tasks and assigning of priorities; the schedule of implementation. To 
achieve implementability, it would be required to set up a county-cent-
red information base on the state of the environment (specified by dif-
ferent fields as well) relying on the computer database of inspectorates. 
Simultaneously, all the authorities concerned should be compelled to 
provide information on environmental protection by the law.  
 Development of decision-making competencies, development of and 
agreement to concepts (e.g. the issue of setting up of dumps cannot be 
left within the competence of local governments). The development of 
the water supply, solution to the problem of waste water: settlements 
and settlement groups can be connected efficiently to a purifying plant 
system with suitable technical procedures and, on the basis of this, the 
orientation of settlements to co-operate with one another on small 
area solutions concerning dumps and waste transport. 
 Co-ordination. Legal and financial guarantees are required to synchro-
nise the environmental protection concerns settlements, settlement 
groups and the state. As I have stressed several times so far, these 
problems do not respect settlement boundaries and cannot be solved 
without the state undertaking tasks; regional co-ordination is essential. 
The co-ordinating activity of counties may cover the co-ordination of 
developments (on condition of an information base), the implementa-
tion of legal provisions and the environmental protection activities of 
settlements. Concrete fields of co-ordination might be as follows: 
• dumps providing district-based solid waste disposal, 
• the placement of sewage treatment plants, 
• development of sewage system, water supply and gas network, 
• water management of surface waters (planning, project manage-
ment), 
• reconstruction, afforestation, etc., 
• settlement interests, organisation. 
40 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

 To launch and support associations would require the survey of needs 
and concrete organising activity. For example, a small area of a certain 
size would provide enough tasks for an environmental protection ad-
ministration association. The organisation, developed on the basis of 
mutual agreement and with respect to the official competence of the 
clerk, would function with professional responsibility and perform dif-
ferent tasks, e.g. surveys, investigations and proposal-making, etc. 
  Another possible alternative would be the county’s support concerning 
the involvement of external experts to help the environmental protec-
tion activities of municipal governments (e.g. with an information ser-
vice, and organising activity). This form might be made continuous as 
well, should more settlements require and utilise collectively the use-
ful potentials hidden in it. 
  Giving opinions, making proposals. County governments might be 
given an opinion-giving and proposal-making competence in the case 
of assessing tenders with the (partial or complete) objectives of envi-
ronmental protection concern. This could contribute to a better asser-
tion of regional viewpoints (economical, technical) when making deci-
sions, since it is not always considered at the central level, who is go-
ing to receive the given subsidy (e.g. two neighbouring settlements 
when it is not reasonable). 
 Education, attitude-shaping and refresher-courses
 Financial means for environmental protection purposes, and perhaps a 
share of fines to eliminate county and small area environmental prob-
lems; as a support for meaningful co-ordinating activities, but without 
the function of distributing money

As a result of my experience, based on inquiries to the counties, I do 
believe that their work is needed, and despite their extremely constrained op-
portunities, they want to make efforts for the sake of the protection of the en-
vironment. 
41 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

 
4 CONCLUSIONS 
We must be aware of the fact that it is simply impossible immediately to 
solve all the problems accumulated during the past decades and to carry out 
the radical changes required by both the social-economic changes and the 
advance towards Europe. We must, however, set the goal and pursue it con-
sistently by all means to prevent the making of decisions affecting and utilis-
ing the environment without imposing prevention and the production of new 
crisis centres. To achieve these goals, the framing of the new law on environ-
mental protection based on new principles cannot be postponed any longer. 
This law is responsible, among many other things, for the establishment of a 
clear-cut system of division of tasks, responsibility and burdens among the 
population, local governments, the state and the participants in the economy. 
This constitutes the framework within which the reformed regulation of the 
structural and operational system of environmental protection administration 
could be carried out. To consider the complex interrelationship of environ-
mental elements and effects, to set up realistic objectives and tasks, to estab-
lish suitable (legal, economic, technical) conditions and, last but not least – in 
terms of my special field of research – to establish an effective and pro-
ductive, reliable and accountable administration are all principles which must 
be fundamental for the legislation. The environmental protection function of 
local governments must be re-considered, and the role of county govern-
ments cannot be neglected. 
42 

Benkőné, Lodner Dorottya: 
The Legal-Administrative Questions of Environmental Protection in the Republic of Hungary. 
Pécs : Centre for Regional Studies, 1995. 44. p. Discussion Papers, No. 20.  
 
 

 
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