----- forwarded message -----
Date: Mon, 27 Jan 2003 20:27:29 -0700
From: Teresa Binstock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: U.S. Gov't plans to Thwart Global Mercury Reduction Efforts

> [URLS at end of post]
>
> US Plans to Thwart Global Mercury Treaty Talks,
> Leaked Document Shows:
> Environ and anti-Hg Groups Demand US to Remain Open to Global Talks
>
> Washington, DC. January 27, 2003 - A leaked internal government document shows that 
>the United 
States will attempt to  foil future talks on the creation of an international 
instrument 
(treaty) on mercury during the upcoming February  meeting of the United Nations 
Environment 
Program (UNEP) Governing Council in Nairobi.  Today, the Ban Mercury Work  Group 
(Ban-Hg-Wg), a 
coalition of 28 non-profit groups from around the world, condemns the latest US 
foreign policy 
and  demands the US to fulfill its earlier pledge to remain open to future treaty 
talks on 
global mercury issues.
>
> "The global mercury crisis is a conflagration raging under our noses, meanwhile the 
>US is 
intent on ensuring that the  global community fiddles, while the world burns," said 
Jim Puckett, 
a Ban-Hg-Wg spokesperson.
>
> The leaked document states that, "we [US] should block any attempt to move forward" 
>on a 
binding mercury treaty and "strive to prevent specific references to a convention" in 
the 
anticipated Mercury Resolution expected to be adopted by  UNEP Governing Council in 
Nairobi.  
The document further revealed, "the USG [US government] should oppose convening a  
formal expert 
or policy group meeting such as the September 2002 Mercury Working Group" and "oppose 
assessment 
of other  heavy metals."  This comes in apparent response to a unified December 
European Union 
position, which states ".that the  Member States support and actively work for 
concrete 
international actions to be initiated on mercury and its compounds,  for instance a 
legally-
binding instrument.and that global assessment of other heavy metals such as lead and 
cadmium  
shall commence."
>
> Already, the European Union and the Latin American and Caribbean countries (GRULAC) 
>in Geneva 
last September at UNEP's  special meeting on the Global Mercury Assessment concluded 
that 
options for a legally binding global treaty addressing  mercury and perhaps other 
toxic heavy 
metals should be explored.  Earlier during these talks the US stated that they  would 
remain 
open to such treaty possibilities but now they appear to be clearly laying down a 
policy 
opposing such  action.
>
> Additionally, the Environmental Council of the States (ECOS), an organization made 
>up of local 
and state government  environmental officials throughout the United States, has also 
asked the 
federal government to call for a treaty to be  accomplished within 6 years.
>
> "Mercury is a toxic time bomb that is about to explode.  We are talking about an 
>immortal 
toxic substance that is  reaching threshold levels in the biosphere.  This crisis can 
only be 
ignored at the peril of all fish consumption, child  development, and the very genetic 
integrity 
of our species, worldwide," said Michael Bender of the Ban-Hg-Wg.  "The US  must not 
be allowed 
to prevent the global community from taking obvious actions to save the health of 
future  
generations."
>
> Bender also said that the US could do more to reduce mercury releases from 
>coal-fired power 
plants-the world's largest  mercury polluters-but that the internal US document 
attempts to 
downplay the issue. "Furthermore, for the largest  anthropogenic source of mercury, 
coal-fired 
power plants, mercury emissions are just a small part of a much broader air  pollution 
problem 
that many nations need to confront," states the document.
>
> --------------
>
> Background:
>
> Mercury is a persistent, bio-accumulative toxin that has increased at least three 
>fold in the 
atmosphere and ocean over  the past century, posing a risk to human health, wildlife 
and the 
ecological balance.  The US Food and Drug  Administration and 41 states warn consumers 
to limit 
or not eat certain fish due to mercury levels and ten states advise  pregnant women 
and children 
to limit consumption of canned tuna, the most consumed fish in the US.  A potent 
neurotoxin,  
mercury exposures can affect the brain, kidneys and liver, and cause developmental 
problems.  
Data from the Centers for  Disease Control indicates that 1-in-12 women of 
childbearing age have 
unsafe mercury levels, translating into over  300,000 children born each year in the 
US at risk 
of exposure to mercury.
>
> The UNEP Working Group met in Geneva in September 2002 and finalized the global 
>mercury 
assessment report for submittal  to the Governing Council/Global Ministerial 
Environment Forum 
in Nairobi, Kenya, February 3 to 7, 2003.   Based on the  report's key findings, the 
Working 
Group concluded "there was sufficient evidence of significant global adverse impacts  
to warrant 
international action to reduce the risks to human health and/or the environment 
arising from the 
release of  mercury into the environment."  In its September 23, 2002 meeting summary, 
the 
Working Group "stressed the need to pay  particular attention to vulnerable 
populations subject 
to special (mercury) risk, namely children, pregnant women, and  woman of childbearing 
age as 
well as indigenous people, communities dependent on fish as a source of food and  
occupational 
exposure when addressing the global adverse impacts of mercury."  The Working Group 
also 
"emphasized that  it was not necessary to have full consensus or complete evidence in 
order to 
take action and therefore potentially  significant global adverse impacts should also 
be 
addressed."  The Governing Council will also consider whether other  heavy metals of 
possible 
global concern warrant assessments.
>
> For more information contact:
>
> Michael Bender, Mercury Policy Project, 802-223-9000, E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> Jim Puckett, Basel Action Network, 206-652-5555, E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> For more information visit:
>
> http://www.mercurypolicy.org.
> http://www.ban.org/Ban-Hg-Wg
> http://www.chem.unep.ch/mercury


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