Last update: 22/06/2004
Agencies System
APAT
belongs to a network system known as the Environmental Agency
System. In Italy, there are currently 21 Regional Agencies (ARPA)
and Provincial Agencies (APPA) established with specific Regional
Laws. It is an example of a consolidated federal system, which
matches direct knowledge of the territory and local environmental
problems with national environmental prevention and protection
policies. The network is actually a reference point, both
institutional and technical/scientific, for the whole country. The
establishment of APAT represents the system’s cohesion, while
respecting local territories. It favours a more homogeneous
development of cooperation and collaboration issues.
Indeed, the need to create opportunities of exchange and discussion
between ARPA and APPA Agencies, in order to promote a more
coordinated development, emerged since the establishment of the
first Regional Agencies. For this reason, when the new law
established the APAT (Italian Environment Protection and Technical
Services Agency) it also provided for the creation of a Federal
Council, chaired by the APAT’s Director General and composed
of the legal representatives of environmental protection Agencies.
The Council has advisory functions on agreements between Agencies
and the Ministry of Environment with particular regard to: fund
allocation and resource utilization; technical and operational
methods in carrying out ARPA and APPA activities and the
APAT’s duty of coordinating ARPA and APPA Agencies. Other
structures that are shared by the Agencies are National Thematic
Centres
(CTN), created in resemblance of European Environment Agency
provisions. Agencies participate to this joint project according to
their specializations and technical excellence.
The need to coordinate, promote and harmonize technical and
operational methods for the activities of regional and provincial
agencies over the whole country and the need to exchange opinions
on common issues and deepen knowledge on organizational and
managerial issues, led Agencies to create a research and monitoring
structure. This is the Observatory on the Organization and
Management of ARPA and APPA Agencies (ONOG).
It was created in November 1999, by a voluntary agreement between
the ARPA-APPA and ANPA, and renewed in March 2003 with a three-year
agreement between the APAT and ARPA-APPA. Its duty is to develop
surveys and fund researches on particularly sensitive themes of
interest to the Agency System.