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POPS
Stockholm Convention Now International Law
“The Stockholm
Convention will save lives and protect the natural environment --
particularly in the poorest communities and countries - by banning
the production and use of some of the most toxic chemicals known to
humankind", said Executive Klaus Toepfer of the United Nations
Environment Programme (UNEP)…”/bigger>/fontfamily>
United Nations
Environment Programme/bigger>/fontfamily>
May 14, 2004/bigger>/fontfamily>
/bigger>/fontfamily>
Stockholm/bigger>/fontfamily>
Convention on POPs to Become International Law, Launching Global
Campaign to Eliminate 12 Hazardous Chemicals
From UNEP Geneva/bigger>/fontfamily>
Friday, May 14, 2004/bigger>/fontfamily>
STOCKHOLM/NAIROBI, 14 May 2004 - The 2001 Stockholm Convention on
Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) enters into force on Monday, 17
May, marking the start of an ambitious international effort to rid
the world of PCBs, dioxins and furans, and nine highly dangerous
pesticides.
"The Stockholm Convention will save lives and protect the natural
environment -- particularly in the poorest communities and countries
- by banning the production and use of some of the most toxic
chemicals known to humankind", said Executive Klaus Toepfer of the
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), under whose auspices
the Convention was adopted.
"Over the next several years national investments plus donor pledges
of hundreds of millions will channel more than $500 million into an
overdue and urgently needed initiative to ensure that future
generations do not have to live as we do with measurable quantities
of these toxic chemicals stored in their bodies", he said.
Much of this funding will be managed by the Global Environment
Facility (GEF), which serves as the financial mechanism for the
Convention on an interim basis.
Of all the pollutants released into the environment every year by
human activity, POPs are amongst the most dangerous. For decades
these highly toxic chemicals have killed and sickened people and
animals by causing cancer and damaging the nervous, reproductive and
immune systems. They have also caused uncounted birth defects.
Governments will seek a rapid start to action against POPs when they
meet for the first meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the
Convention (COP 1) in Punta del Este, Uruguay, in the first week of
May 2005. They will fast-track efforts to:
* Reduce or eliminate the carcinogenic chemicals known as dioxins
and furans, which are produced unintentionally as by-products of
combustion. Many of the required improvements in technologies and
processes may prove expensive and technically challenging,
particularly for developing countries;
* Assist countries in malarial regions to replace DDT with
increasingly safe and effective alternatives. Until such
alternatives are in place, the Convention allows Governments to
continue using DDT to protect their citizens from malaria - a major
killer in many tropical regions;
* Support efforts by each national Government to develop an
implementation plan. Already, over 120 developing countries have
started to elaborate such plans with funds from the GEF. The COP
will also focus on channelling new funds into POPs projects;
* Measure and evaluate changes in the levels of POPs in the natural
environment and in humans and animals in order to confirm whether
the Convention is indeed reducing releases of POPs to the
environment;
* Establish a POPs review committee for evaluating additional
chemicals and pesticides to be added to the initial list of 12 POPs;
* Finalize guidelines for promoting "best environmental practices"
and "best available techniques" that can reduce and eliminate
releases of dioxins and furans.
In addition to banning the use of POPs, the treaty focuses on
cleaning up the growing accumulation of unwanted and obsolete
stockpiles of pesticides and toxic chemicals that contain POPs. Dump
sites and toxic drums from the 1950s, '60s and '70s are now decaying
and leaching chemicals into the soil and poisoning water resources,
wildlife and people. The Convention also requires the disposal of
PCBs and PCB-containing wastes.
Every human in the world carries traces of POPs in his or her body.
POPs are highly stable compounds that can last for years or decades
before breaking down. They circulate globally through a process
known as the "grasshopper effect". POPs released in one part of the
world can, through a repeated process of evaporation and deposit, be
transported through the atmosphere to regions far away from the
original source.
Fortunately, there are alternatives to most POPs. The problem has
been that high costs, a lack of public awareness, and the absence of
appropriate infrastructure and technology have often prevented their
adoption. Solutions must be tailored to the specific properties and
uses of each chemical, as well as to each country's climatic and
socio-economic conditions.
For additional information, please contact: Eric Falt, UNEP
Spokesperson, in Nairobi, on tel: +254-20-62-3292, mobile:
+254-733-682656 or e-mail:
eric.falt@unep.org ; Nick Nuttall, UNEP Head of Media, on tel:
+254-20-623084, mobile: +254-733-632755 or e-mail:
nick.nuttall@unep.org ;
or Michael Williams, UNEP Information Officer, in Geneva, on tel:
+41-22-917- 8242, mobile: +41-79-409-1528 or e-mail:
michael.williams@unep.ch
.
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