(Calenda announcement 996495)
Economic law is in the process of being greened, and this dynamic leads to a rethinking, in the same movement, of the actors and methods of economic law on the one hand and environmental law on the other. From corporate law to international trade law, from public procurement law to competition law: no branch of economic law seems to escape greening today. It is a new generation of environmental law that is, in the process, emerging. In contrast to traditional administrative environmental law, which is formally steered by public authorities and applies to industrial installations and projects located on national territory, this economic environmental law is, for the most part, developed and implemented by non-state actors with a capacity for transnational projection.