What we know so far
European Council President Antonio Costa stated publicly that Albania's path to European Union membership depends on meeting environmental legislation requirements in full — a warning that carries direct implications for the Zvërnec resort crisis. The EU Delegation in Tirana formally requested information from Albanian authorities about the permitting and environmental assessment processes behind the coastal development projects. The European Commission said in May 2026 that it was closely monitoring developments in the Pishë Poro-Nartë landscape. Albania must close Chapter 27 of its EU accession negotiations — the environment chapter — before membership can be achieved. That chapter requires Albania to demonstrate capacity to manage candidate Natura 2000 sites, align its Environmental Impact Assessment directives by 2027, guarantee public participation in environmental decision-making under the Aarhus Convention and maintain enforcement capacity resistant to corruption. Conservation organisations and legal observers say the process that produced the coastal resort approvals has visibly breached each of these requirements. EcoAlbania said: "No EU accession on the ruins of nature." Italian Green MEP Angelo Bonelli publicly condemned Prime Minister Rama for selling Albania's natural heritage to foreign investors. Solidarity demonstrations were held outside the European Parliament in Brussels. Albania opened EU accession negotiations on Cluster 4 — which includes Chapter 27 — in September 2025, but environmental organisations are now formally calling on the European Commission to suspend those negotiations pending a comprehensive review of Albania's environmental compliance record.
Tirana, Albania / Brussels
European institutions, Albanian public authorities, NGOs and legal/environmental observers named in the linked evidence records.
7 linked evidence records are listed below.
The legal change itself is supported by official law and EU report records. Effects on specific sites still need project-by-project documents.
Full environmental impact assessments, public consultation records, implementation details, site-specific maps and enforcement records.
This report documents currently available information about Tirana, Albania / Brussels. All documented material is kept separate from claims that still need checking. The page should be read together with the linked evidence records, official source documents and verification notes listed below.
The primary sources for this report include EUalive / EcoAlbania / Al Jazeera / EUobserver / European Western Balkans / European Commission Delegation Tirana. Each item listed in the evidence table below carries its own source attribution and verification status. Where official documents exist they are linked directly.
The current verification status is Verified. Save Albania assigns this label when available source documents, location evidence and independent confirmation are sufficient to support the report. The status will be updated as new evidence is submitted or becomes available through public records.
Readers are encouraged to submit additional documents, maps, photographs or source links using the form in the sidebar. All submissions are reviewed before being added to the evidence record. Nothing is published without a source check.
Evidence linked to this article
| Evidence | Type | Date | Status | Source | View |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| European Commission Albania Report 2024 | EU enlargement report | 2024 | Verified | European Commission | View open_in_new |
| European Commission Albania Report 2025 | EU enlargement report / official PDF | 04 November 2025 | Verified source; original PDF not downloaded into v2 due runtime download limitation | European Commission / DG Enlargement and Eastern Neighbourhood | View open_in_new |
| Constitutional Court Decision No. 45 dated 31.07.2025 – Protected Areas Law challenge | Court decision / official PDF | 31 July 2025; PDF published 2025 | Verified source; original PDF not downloaded into v2 due runtime download limitation | Gjykata Kushtetuese e Republikës së Shqipërisë / Constitutional Court of Albania | View open_in_new |
| Constitutional Court periodic bulletin – July 2025 decision summary | Court bulletin / official PDF | January 2026 bulletin covering July 2025 | Verified source; original PDF not downloaded into v2 due runtime download limitation | Constitutional Court of Albania | View open_in_new |
| AOS Albania legal analysis – Law 21/2024 before Constitutional Court | NGO legal/environmental analysis | 04 July 2025 | Partly verified / NGO analysis | AOS Albania | View open_in_new |
| Reporter.al – Constitutional Court leaves protected-area law in force | Investigation/news report | 31 July 2025 | Partly verified; media source cross-checked with court decision link | Reporter.al / BIRN Albania | View open_in_new |
| Citizens.al – Constitutional Court legitimises protected-area law changes | Local investigation/news report | 31 July 2025 | Partly verified; cross-check with court document | Citizens.al | View open_in_new |
Timeline
- European Commission Albania Report 2024
- European Commission Albania Report 2025
- AOS Albania legal analysis – Law 21/2024 before Constitutional Court
- Reporter.al – Constitutional Court leaves protected-area law in force
- Citizens.al – Constitutional Court legitimises protected-area law changes
Why it matters
Changes to protected-area law can affect how decisions are made for national parks, wetlands, coastlines and public land. The key public-interest question is whether environmental safeguards, consultation and enforcement remain strong enough.
What is still missing
Full environmental impact assessments, public consultation records, implementation details, site-specific maps and enforcement records.


