Best available techniques not entailing excessive costs (BATNEEC), sometimes referred to as
best available technology, was introduced in 1984 with Directive 84/360/EEC and applied to air pollution emissions from large industrial installations. In 1996, Directive 84/360/EEC was superseded by the
Integrated Pollution Prevention and Control (IPPC) Directive 96/61/EC, which applied the framework concept of
Best Available Techniques (BAT) to, amongst others, the integrated control of pollution to the three media air, water and soil. The concept is also part of the directive's recast in 2008 (Directive 2008/1/EC) and its successor directive, the
Industrial Emissions Directive 2010/75/EU published in 2010. A list, with "Adopted Documents", of industries which are subject to the IPPC directive contains more than 30 entries, including everything from the ceramic manufacturing industry to the wood-based panels production industry. BAT for a given industrial sector are described in reference documents called
BREFs (Best Available Techniques Reference documents), as defined in article 3(11) of the
Industrial Emissions Directive. BREFs are the result of an exchange of information between
European Union Member States, the industries concerned, non-governmental organizations promoting environmental protection and the
European Commission pursuant to article 13 of the directive. This exchange of information is referred to as the
Sevilla process because it is steered by the European IPPC Bureau within the
Institute for Prospective Technological Studies of the European Commissions'
Joint Research Centre, which is based in Seville. The process is codified into law by Commission Implementing Decision 2012/119/EU. The most important chapter of the BREFs, the BAT conclusions, are published as implementing decisions of the
European Commission in the
Official Journal of the European Union. According to article 14(3) of the
Industrial Emissions Directive, the BAT conclusions shall be the reference for setting permit conditions of large industrial installations.
Pollution control According to article 15(2) of the
Industrial Emissions Directive, emission limit values and the equivalent parameters and technical measures in permits shall be based on the best available techniques, without prescribing the use of any technique or specific technology. The directive includes a definition of best available techniques in article 3(10): "best available techniques" means the most effective and advanced stage in the development of activities and their methods of operation which indicates the practical suitability of particular techniques for providing the basis for emission limit values and other permit conditions designed to prevent and, where that is not practicable, to reduce emissions and the impact on the environment as a whole: : - "techniques" includes both the technology used and the way in which the installation is designed, built, maintained, operated and decommissioned; : - "available" means those developed on a scale which allows implementation in the relevant industrial sector, under economically and technically viable conditions, taking into consideration the costs and advantages, whether or not the techniques are used or produced inside the Member State in question, as long as they are reasonably accessible to the operator; : - "best" means most effective in achieving a high general level of protection of the environment as a whole.
Food, drink and milk industries A Reference Document on Best Available Techniques (BREF) in the food, drink and milk industries of the
European Union was published in August 2006, and reflected an information exchange carried out according to Article 16.2 of Council Directive 96/61/EC. It runs to more than 600 pages, and is replete with tables and flowchart diagrams. The 2006 BREF on these industries was superseded by another published in January 2017, which runs to more than 1000 pages. ==United States environmental law==