*PRESS RELEASE*

*
*

*TWA Welcomes Breakthrough in Cartagena, Colombia on UN Hazardous Waste
Treaty
*

*
*

*INDIA SUPPORTS BAN AMENDMENT TO TREATY ON HAZARDOUS WASTE
*

*
*

*UN MEET FOR BAN ON HAZARDOUS WASTE EXPORT TO POOR COUNTRIES*

*
*

New Delhi October 22, 2011 – Incessant diplomatic efforts resulted in the
world witnessing a turning point at the 10th Conference of the Parties of
the UN’s Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of
Hazardous Wastes and their Disposal, as 178 countries which are Parties to
it agreed to allow an early entry into force of law of the Basel Ban
Amendment that prohibits all exports of hazardous wastes, including
electronic wastes and old obsolete ships from rich to poor countries like
India.


This happened as a result of an initiative by Indonesia and Switzerland with
the support of environmental groups. Now if 17 more Parties from those
countries that were Parties during COP3 ratify the Ban Amendment, it will
enter into force.
ToxicsWatch Alliance (TWA) urges Government of India to take the lead in
ratifying it and persuading other relevant countries to do so prior to the
next Conference of Parties. So far 71 countries have ratified the amendment.
Prior to COP10, TWA had written to Ministries of Environment, Commerce and
Steel to support Ban Amendment.  In a letter to Ms. Mira Mehrishi,
Additional Secretary, Hazardous Substances Management Division, Ministry of
Environment and Forests, it had demanded that India should ratify the Ban
Amendment to ban hazardous waste
trade<http://toxicswatch.blogspot.com/2011/10/india-should-ratify-ban-amendment-to.html>

China, the European Union, and developing countries strongly supported the
Ban Amendment. Traditional opponents of the amendment like Canada,
Australia, New Zealand, Japan and India changed their stance for the entry
into force of the 1995 treaty. The USA has also opposed but is not a Party
of the Convention. Ahead of the upcoming hearing in the Supreme Court,
Government of India’s support for Ban Amendment is a step in the right
direction.


Basel Convention has regained its original mandate to regulate shipbreaking
not the International Maritime Organisation’s Hong Kong Convention given the
fact that rate of disposal of end of life ships on Alang beach, Gujarat,
Chittagong beach, Bangladesh and Gadani, Pakistan has gathered momentum
unmindful of the death of migrant, casual and vulnerable workers and the
ongoing contamination of South Asian beaches.


It is hoped that it will pave the way for eliminating all hazardous waste
through adoption of substitutes of hazardous materials, Green Design, Clean
Production based on Life Cycle Assessment.


The Basel Ban Amendment was originally adopted in 1995 as a proposed
amendment to the Basel Convention but has recently been stalled due to
uncertainty as to how to interpret the Convention. Now following a
diplomatic working group known as the Country Led Initiative, it has been
decided that the Ban Amendment will go into force when 68 of the 90
countries that were Parties to the Convention in 1995, ratify the agreement.
Currently, 51 of these have ratified the amendment, leaving just 17 more
needed. At present there are 178 Parties to the Convention.


“Finally, the blockade has been lifted and the Basel Ban that has been held
hostage now for many years is liberated,” said Jim Puckett, Executive
Director of the Basel Action Network who was present in Cartagena. “The Ban
Amendment ensures that developing countries are not convenient dumping
grounds for toxic factory waste, obsolete ships containing asbestos, or old
computers coming from affluent countries. It enforces the Basel Convention
obligation that all countries manage their own hazardous waste.”


It is important that Parties disagreed that the International Maritime
Organization’s Hong Kong Convention on ship recycling, provided an
equivalent level of control to that of the Basel Convention. The Hong Kong
Convention has no motive of minimizing the movement of hazardous ships to
poor countries. The Basel Convention ought to act proactively to prevent the
dumping of end-of-life ships on the beaches of poor countries like India.


As of now 33 of the 41 developed countries to which the hazardous waste
export ban applies have implemented it nationally. Commenting on the
Indonesian-Swiss country-led initiative to improve the effectiveness of the
Basel Convention, USA had argued ‘whether it is appropriate for a Convention
body to seek to define terms such as “second hand goods” and “used goods”
and its reference to “specific arrangements that can be applied to used and
end of life goods” while expressing its support to combat illegal traffic in
wastes, and had suggested that term "vulnerable countries” be replaced with
“certain countries”.


COP-10’s decision will exert diplomatic pressure on countries such as USA
that never ratified the treaty. They will have to accept the ban as an
integral part of the Convention after its entry in to force.


Earlier, Waste without Frontiers: Global trends in generation and
transboundary movement of hazardous wastes and other wastes (
http://www.basel.int/pub/ww-frontiers26Jan2010.pdf), a 36 page study by
Basel Convention Secretariat provided a glimpse of the global trends on the
generation and transboundary movements of hazardous and other wastes
produced under the Convention in its first 21 years of existence. TWA hopes
that waste will stop following the path of least resistance due to this
treaty.

Dr. Frank Pearl, the Colombian Environment Minister, the host reminded that
the next generation will at some point come knocking at our door.  Responding
to it, we have heard the knock, we have opened the door, we have looked into
the faces and eyes of our future progeny and we have answered their plea.
The Draft Cartagena Declaration on hazardous wastes and other wastes is
attached<http://www.basel.int/Portals/4/Basel%20Convention/cop10docs/CartagenaDeclaration-30SEPT11.doc>.


TWA appreciates the work of BAN and other environmental organizations which
worked towards this end.

*For Details*: Gopal Krishna, TWA, Mb: 9818089660, E-mail:
[email protected],

Web: toxicswatch.blogpsot.com

Jim Puckett in Cartagena: Phone: +57 3155483958, E-mail: [email protected]

For background Documents on COP10 Basel Meeting: Visit: ban.org (Meetings,
COP10 Section), basel.int

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth?hl=en-GB.

Reply via email to