Catalan law establishes that urban figures must include information on geological risks in their procedure and approval to achieve the safety and well-being of people, adequate levels of quality of life, environmental sustainability and preservation against natural and technological risks.
- Decree 305/2006 of July 18, approving the Urban Planning Law Regulations (articles 5, 59, 69, 72, 84 and 86).
- Legislative Decree 1/2010, of August 3, Consolidated Text of the Urban Planning Law (articles 9 and 51).
- Law 3/2012, of February 22, modifying the revised text of the Law (articles 9 and 51).
According the current law, the ICGC compulsorily informs the urban planning, indicating the possibility that the geological risk affects the development of the new planning instruments. The reports on geological risk issued by the ICGC, which are based on the information provided in the plan itself, indicate whether in the territorial scope that includes the planning under consideration, the risk limits, conditions or prevents the foreseing planning.
Guide for the EIRG elaboration
Considering the large number of figures submitted to public information, the ICGC and the Secretary of the Urban and Territorial Agenda consider necessary that the geological risk study be systematized incorporating a specific study EIRG.
The objective of the EIRG is to identify and characterize the geological phenomena that can affect the sustainable development of a new urban sector in relation to the incidence of geological risk. This study must be provided by the promoter of the Urban Development figure.
The EIRG guide, more than a guide for the elaboration of the study in strictum sense, is the document by means the promoter of the plan knows the criteria that ICGC uses to determine if the geological hazard conditions the development of a sector.