Ministry of the Environment | |
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Miljödepartementet | |
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Formed | 1987[1] |
Minister responsible | Lena Ek, Minister for Environment |
Website | |
www.sweden.gov.se/sb/d/2066 |
Kingdom of Sweden |
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The Ministry of the Environment (Swedish: Miljödepartementet) is a government ministry in Sweden responsible for environmental issues and construction. The ministry also has the overall responsibility for coordinating the government's work on sustainable development.
The ministry offices are located at Tegelbacken 2 in central Stockholm.
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The ministry was founded in 1987 as the Ministry of the Environment and Energy (Swedish: Miljö- och energidepartementet). Previously environmental issues had been handled by the Ministry of Agriculture (Swedish: Jordbruksdepartementet) and energy issues had been handled by the Ministry of Industry. In 1990 the name was changed to the Ministry of the Environment and energy issues were transferred back to the Ministry of Industry, although supervision of nuclear energy was retained. In 1991 the ministry was renamed to the Ministry of the Environment and Natural Resources (Swedish: Miljö- och naturresursdepartementet).
From 1 November 2004 to 1 January 2007, during the cabinet of Göran Persson, the ministry was known as the Ministry of Sustainable Development (Swedish: Miljö- och samhällsbyggnadsdepartementet). The cabinet of Fredrik Reinfeldt which took office on October 6, 2006, decided to rename the ministry to its old name. At the same time, energy issues were transferred to the Ministry of Enterprise, Energy and Communications, and housing issues were transferred to the Ministry of Finance.
The ministry is headed by the Minister for the Environment, currently Lena Ek (c), who is appointed by the Prime Minister. Below ministerial level, operations are directed by a State Secretary (Swedish: statssekreterare). The ministry also has a press secretary and political advisers, who work closely with the minister on policy issues.
The ministry is divided into the following divisions:
The Ministry of the Environment is principal to the following government agencies:
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