
For use of the media only;
not an
official document.
PRESS RELEASE
Governments
Give Green Light to Phase Out of World's Most
Hazardous Chemicals
Stockholm Convention on Persistent
Organic Pollutants (POPs)
Set for Signature on 22-23 May
Nairobi/Geneva,
9 May 2001 - An historic chemicals convention, which many scientists expect will deliver a
healthier world for people and wildlife from the polar regions to sub Saharan Africa and
Latin America, is set to be signed this month in Stockholm by more than 100 countries.
Klaus
Toepfer, the Executive Director of UNEP, under whose auspices the treaty was negotiated, said: "Persistent organic pollutants threaten the health and
well-being of humans and wildlife in every region of the world".
"It is
therefore vital that after adopting and signing the Convention in Stockholm governments
follow up quickly by ratifying the treaty so it can enter into force by 2004 at the
latest," he said. Fifty ratifications are required to make the agreement legally
binding.
"In the
meantime, work must start right away on preparing countries to take action under the
treaty," said Mr. Toepfer. "By adopting strong resolutions in Stockholm for the
interim period, governments will ensure an immediate start to international action against
these most dangerous of chemicals."
The
agreement, covering a dozen persistent organic pollutants (POPs), has been welcomed by the
indigenous people of the Arctic.
The
pollutants concerned, which include pesticides, industrial chemicals and hazardous
by-products of combustion, are known to become concentrated in the fats of Arctic animals
and to build up in the breast milk of nursing mothers.
Shelia
Watt-Cloutier, Vice-President of the Inuit
Circumpolar Conference which represents Inuit in Alaska, Russia, Canada and Greenland/Denmark,
said: "When people eat traditional 'country food', many POPs are passed to children through the placenta and breast milk.
Fundamentally this is an issue of public health and cultural survival. If we cannot eat
our traditional food, our way of life will surely vanish. The Arctic is hit hard by these
pollutants, but POPs are a global issue for contamination is reported on all
continents".
"Thankfully
the world has had a wake up call. Mothers of the world from the Arctic to tropical Africa,
South America and Asia are united in supporting the global POPs convention. We are very
pleased that these countries are coming together in Stockholm, Sweden, to sign this vital
convention as a first step towards curbing and eradicating these hazardous substances. We
call on countries to not only sign but ratify the POPs convention as soon as
possible," said Ms Watt-Cloutier, whose organization is a winner of a United Nations
Environment Programme (UNEP) Global 500 Award.
Fernando
Bejarano, director of the Red de Accion Sobre Plaguicidas y Alternativas en Mexico
(Network for Action on Pesticides and their Alternatives in Mexico) also welcomed the
signing of the Convention. "The Stockholm Convention is a landmark treaty for the
protection of human health. It makes the Precautionary Principle a reality and future
generations will thank governments for their foresight," he said.
Mr Bejarano
said they were especially pleased by the provisions in the treaty to tackle dioxins and
furans, two groups of pollutants produced mainly as a by-product from incinerators and
other combustion processes.
"We look
forward to finding innovative ways to work with our governments to implement the treaty,
especially those provisions that will lead to the elimination of the industrial
by-products dioxins and furans," he said.
Mr Toepfer
added: "I am particularly pleased that the United States has announced that it is
joining the list of over one hundred countries signing the POPs convention. This
underlines that international cooperation on environmental issues is very much alive and
well as we enter the new millennium," he said.
The meeting
in Sweden, where countries will sign the Stockholm Convention, is to take place between
the 22 and 23 of May. It follows a meeting in Johannesburg, South Africa, last December
where the treaty's text was finalized.
The 12
initial POPs are aldrin, chlordane, DDT, dieldrin, endrin, heptachlor, mirex, toxaphene,
polychlorinated biphenols (PCBs), hexachlorobenzene, dioxins and furans.
Of all the
pollutants released into the environment every year by human activity, POPs are among the
most dangerous. They are highly toxic, causing an array of adverse effects, notably death,
disease, and birth defects, among humans and animals. Specific effects can include cancer,
allergies and hypersensitivity, damage to the central and peripheral nervous systems,
reproductive disorders, and disruption of the immune system.
These highly
stable compounds 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 (and often seasonal) process of evaporation, deposit, evaporation,
deposit, be transported through the atmosphere to regions far away from the original
source.
In addition,
POPs concentrate in living organisms through another process called bioaccumulation.
Though not soluble in water, POPs are readily absorbed in fatty tissue, where
concentrations can become magnified by up to 70,000 times the background levels. Fish,
predatory birds, mammals, and humans are high up the food chain and so absorb the greatest
concentrations. When they travel, the POPs travel with them. As a result of these two
processes, POPs can be found in people and animals living in regions such as the Arctic,
thousands of kilometers from any major POPs source.
The Stockholm
Convention sets out control measures covering the production, import, export, disposal,
and use of POPs. Governments are to promote the best available technologies and practices
for replacing existing POPs while preventing the development of new POPs. They will draw
up national legislation and develop action plans for carrying out their commitments.
While the
control measures will apply to an initial list of 12 chemicals, a POPs Review Committee
will consider additional candidates for the POPs list on a regular basis. This will ensure
that the treaty remains dynamic and responsive to new scientific findings.
Most of the
12 chemicals are subject to an immediate ban. However, a health-related exemption has been
granted for DDT, which is still needed in many countries to control malarial mosquitoes.
This will permit governments to protect their citizens from malaria a major killer
in many tropical regions until they are able to replace DDT with chemical and
non-chemical alternatives that are cost-effective and environmentally friendly.
Similarly, in
the case of PCBs, which have been widely used in electrical transformers and other
equipment, governments may maintain existing equipment in a way that prevents leaks until
2025 to give them time to arrange for PCB-free replacements. Although PCBs are no longer
produced, hundreds of thousands of tons are still in use in such equipment. In addition, a
number of country-specific and time-limited exemptions have been agreed for other
chemicals.
Governments
agree to reduce releases of furans and dioxins, which are accidental by-products and thus
more difficult to control, "with the goal of their continuing minimization and, where
feasible, ultimate elimination".
Other national measures required under the treaty relate
to reporting, research, development, monitoring, public information and education.
Fortunately,
there are alternatives to most POPs. The problem is that high costs, a lack of public
awareness, and the absence of appropriate infrastructure and technology often prevent
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.
Note to
journalists: The meeting
will take place at the Folkets Hus, City Conference Centre, Barnhusgatan, Stockholm. A
press accreditation form and hotel and meeting information is available at www.chem.unep.ch/pops/. Press conferences are
scheduled for 13:15 on Tuesday, 22 May and for 13.15 on Wednesday, 23 May at the City
Conference Centre. For additional information, please contact POPs press officer Michael
Williams in Geneva at 41-22-917 8242, 41-79-409-1528 (cellular), or Michael.Williams@unep.ch. In Nairobi, please
contact UNEP Spokesman Tore Brevik at 254-2-623292, fax: 254-2-623692, or cpiinfo@unep.org or Nick Nuttall, Media Officer, at
254-2-623084, fax: 254-2-623692, or nick.nuttall@unep.org