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AGENDA 21 OBLIGATIONS
Chapter 39
INTERNATIONAL LEGAL INSTRUMENTS AND MECHANISMS
Objectives
39.2. The overall objective of the review
and development of international environmental law should be to evaluate
and to promote the efficacy of that law and to promote the integration
of environment and development policies through effective international
agreements or instruments taking into account both universal principles
and the particular and differentiated needs and concerns of all
countries.
39.3. Specific objectives are:
·
To identify and
address difficulties which prevent some States, in particular developing
countries, from participating in or duly implementing international
agreements or instruments and, where appropriate, to review and revise
them with the purposes of integrating environmental and developmental
concerns and laying down a sound basis for the implementation of these
agreements or instruments;
·
To set priorities
for future law-making on sustainable development at the global, regional
or subregional level, with a view to enhancing the efficacy of
international law in this field through, in particular, the integration
of environmental and developmental concerns;
·
To promote and
support the effective participation of all countries concerned, in
particular developing countries, in the negotiation, implementation,
review and governance of international agreements or instruments,
including appropriate provision of technical and financial assistance
and other available mechanisms for this purpose, as well as the use of
differential obligations where appropriate;
·
To promote,
through the gradual development of universally and multilaterally
negotiated agreements or instruments, international standards for the
protection of the environment that take into account the different
situations and capabilities of countries. States recognize that
environmental policies should deal with the root causes of environmental
degradation, thus preventing environmental measures from resulting in
unnecessary restrictions to trade. Trade policy measures for
environmental purposes should not constitute a means of arbitrary or
unjustifiable discrimination or a disguised restriction on international
trade. Unilateral actions to deal with environmental challenges outside
the jurisdiction of the importing country should be avoided.
Environmental measures addressing international environmental problems
should, as far as possible, be based on an international consensus.
Domestic measures targeted to achieve certain environmental objectives
may need trade measures to render them effective. Should trade policy
measures be found necessary for the enforcement of environmental
policies, certain principles and rules should apply. These could
include, inter alia, the principle of non-discrimination; the principle
that the trade measure chosen should be the least trade-restrictive
necessary to achieve the objectives; an obligation to ensure
transparency in the use of trade measures related to the environment and
to provide adequate notification of national regulations; and the need
to give consideration to the special conditions and development
requirements of developing countries as they move towards
internationally agreed environmental objectives;
·
To ensure the
effective, full and prompt implementation of legally binding instruments
and to facilitate timely review and adjustment of agreements or
instruments by the parties concerned, taking into account the special
needs and concerns of all countries, in particular developing countries;
·
To improve the
effectiveness of institutions, mechanisms and procedures for the
administration of agreements and instruments;
·
To identify and
prevent actual or potential conflicts, particularly between
environmental and social/economic agreements or instruments, with a view
to ensuring that such agreements or instruments are consistent. Where
conflicts arise they should be appropriately resolved;
·
To study and
consider the broadening and strengthening of the capacity of mechanisms,
inter alia, in the United Nations system, to facilitate, where
appropriate and agreed to by the parties concerned, the identification,
avoidance and settlement of international disputes in the field of
sustainable development, duly taking into account existing bilateral and
multilateral agreements for the settlement of such disputes.
Activities
39.4. Activities and means of
implementation should be considered in the light of the above basis for
action and objectives, without prejudice to the right of every State to
put forward suggestions in this regard in the General Assembly. These
suggestions could be reproduced in a separate compilation on sustainable
development.
A. Review, assessment and fields of action
in international law for sustainable development
39.5. While ensuring the effective
participation of all countries concerned, Parties should at periodic
intervals review and assess both the past performance and effectiveness
of existing international agreements or instruments as well as the
priorities for future law making on sustainable development. This may
include an examination of the feasibility of elaborating general rights
and obligations of States, as appropriate, in the field of sustainable
development, as provided by General Assembly resolution 44/228. In
certain cases, attention should be given to the possibility of taking
into account varying circumstances through differential obligations or
gradual application. As an option for carrying out this task, earlier
UNEP practice may be followed whereby legal experts designated by
Governments could meet at suitable intervals, to be decided later, with
a broader environmental and developmental perspective.
39.6. Measures in accordance with
international law should be considered to address, in times of armed
conflict, large-scale destruction of the environment that cannot be
justified under international law. The General Assembly and its Sixth
Committee are the appropriate forums to deal with this subject. The
specific competence and role of the International Committee of the Red
Cross should be taken into account.
39.7. In view of the vital necessity of
ensuring safe and environmentally sound nuclear power, and in order to
strengthen international cooperation in this field, efforts should be
made to conclude the ongoing negotiations for a nuclear safety
convention in the framework of the International Atomic Energy Agency.
B. Implementation
mechanisms
39.8. The parties to international
agreements should consider procedures and mechanisms to promote and
review their effective, full and prompt implementation. To that effect,
States could, inter alia:
·
Establish
efficient and practical reporting systems on the effective, full and
prompt implementation of international legal instruments;
·
Consider
appropriate ways in which relevant international bodies, such as UNEP,
might contribute towards the further development of such mechanisms.
C. Effective participation in international
law making
39.9. In all these activities and others
that may be pursued in the future, based on the above basis for action
and objectives, the effective participation of all countries, in
particular developing countries, should be ensured through appropriate
provision of technical assistance and/or financial assistance.
Developing countries should be given "headstart" support not only in
their national efforts to implement international agreements or
instruments, but also to participate effectively in the negotiation of
new or revised agreements or instruments and in the actual international
operation of such agreements or instruments. Support should include
assistance in building up expertise in international law particularly in
relation to sustainable development, and in assuring access to the
necessary reference information and scientific/technical expertise.
D. Disputes in the field of sustainable
development
39.10.
In the area of avoidance and settlement of disputes, States should
further study and consider methods to broaden and make more effective
the range of techniques available at present, taking into account, among
others, relevant experience under existing international agreements,
instruments or institutions and, where appropriate, their implementing
mechanisms such as modalities for dispute avoidance and settlement. This
may include mechanisms and procedures for the exchange of data and
information, notification and consultation regarding situations that
might lead to disputes with other States in the field of sustainable
development and for effective peaceful means of dispute settlement in
accordance with the Charter of the United Nations, including, where
appropriate, recourse to the International Court of Justice, and their
inclusion in treaties relating to sustainable development.
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