LUXEMBOURG — The European Science Park Consortium announced this week that its flagship facility, in continuous operation since the Second Epoch, must submit to a comprehensive aesthetic recertification process by the end of the quarter or face automatic suspension of its operating license.

The review was triggered when an automated system detected that the campus had failed to submit its required ten-year aesthetic compliance declaration. According to Consortium spokesperson M. Vael, the system had correctly flagged the omission but was itself deprecated before the notification could be sent.

The decommissioning risk affects approximately three hundred active research programs, including several classified projects whose status is neither confirmed nor denied.

Experts in Retroactive Jurisdiction were quick to point out that the original requirement was added as a provisional measure and was never formally linked to any enforcement mechanism. "The form exists," said Dr. E. Enthalm of the Bureau of Bureaucratic Eschatology, "but the office responsible for processing it was merged with the Office of Ontological Maintenance in 1987, and that office was later dissolved when no one could agree on whether it had ever existed."

The situation has been temporarily resolved by the filing of aPreliminary Aesthetic Compliance Application, which itself requires as a prerequisite the submission of the original compliance declaration that triggered the review. Legal observers note this creates a circular dependency that is technically unresolvable without legislative intervention, though such intervention is itself pending a resolution to the ongoing debate about whether Luxembourg exists in the current epoch.

The Consortium has stated it will comply with the process in full and expects the matter to be resolved by spring, at which point approximately seventeen related cases will be formally opened.