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AGENDA 21 OBLIGATIONS
Chapter 9
SECTION II.
CONSERVATION AND MANAGEMENT OF RESOURCES FOR DEVELOPMENT
PROTECTION OF THE ATMOSPHERE
INTRODUCTION
9.5. The present chapter includes the
following four programme areas:
·
Addressing the
uncertainties: improving the scientific basis for decision-making;
·
Promoting
sustainable development:
·
Energy
development, efficiency and consumption;
·
Transportation;
·
Industrial
development;
·
Terrestrial and
marine resource development and land use;
·
Preventing
stratospheric ozone depletion;
·
Transboundary
atmospheric pollution.
PROGRAMME AREAS
A. Addressing the
uncertainties: improving the scientific basis for decision-making
Objectives
9.7. The basic objective of this programme
area is to improve the understanding of processes that influence and are
influenced by the Earth's atmosphere on a global, regional and local
scale, including, inter alia, physical, chemical, geological,
biological, oceanic, hydrological, economic and social processes; to
build capacity and enhance international cooperation; and to improve
understanding of the economic and social consequences of atmospheric
changes and of mitigation and response measures addressing such changes.
Activities
9.8. Governments at the appropriate
level, with the cooperation of the relevant United Nations bodies
and, as appropriate, intergovernmental and non-governmental
organizations, and the private sector, should:
·
Promote research
related to the natural processes affecting and being affected by the
atmosphere, as well as the critical linkages between sustainable
development and atmospheric changes, including impacts on human health,
ecosystems, economic sectors and society;
·
Ensure a more
balanced geographical coverage of the Global Climate Observing System
and its components, including the Global Atmosphere Watch, by
facilitating, inter alia, the establishment and operation of additional
systematic observation stations, and by contributing to the development,
utilization and accessibility of these databases;
·
Promote
cooperation in:
·
The development
of early detection systems concerning changes and fluctuations in the
atmosphere;
·
The establishment
and improvement of capabilities to predict such changes and fluctuations
and to assess the resulting environmental and socio-economic impacts;
·
Cooperate in
research to develop methodologies and identify threshold levels of
atmospheric pollutants, as well as atmospheric levels of greenhouse gas
concentrations, that would cause dangerous anthropogenic interference
with the climate system and the environment as a whole, and the
associated rates of change that would not allow ecosystems to adapt
naturally;
·
Promote, and
cooperate in the building of scientific capacities, the exchange of
scientific data and information, and the facilitation of the
participation and training of experts and technical staff, particularly
of developing countries, in the fields of research, data assembly,
collection and assessment, and systematic observation related to the
atmosphere.
B. Promoting sustainable development
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Energy development, efficiency and
consumption
Objectives
9.11.
The basic and ultimate objective of this programme area is to reduce
adverse effects on the atmosphere from the energy sector by promoting
policies or programmes, as appropriate, to increase the contribution of
environmentally sound and cost-effective energy systems, particularly
new and renewable ones, through less polluting and more efficient energy
production, transmission, distribution and use. This objective should
reflect the need for equity, adequate energy supplies and increasing
energy consumption in developing countries, and should take into
consideration the situations of countries that are highly dependent on
income generated from the production, processing and export, and/or
consumption of fossil fuels and associated energy-intensive products
and/or the use of fossil fuels for which countries have serious
difficulties in switching to alternatives, and the situations of
countries highly vulnerable to adverse effects of climate change.
Activities
9.12. Governments at the appropriate
level, with the cooperation of the relevant United Nations bodies
and, as appropriate, intergovernmental and non-governmental
organizations, and the private sector, should:
·
Cooperate in
identifying and developing economically viable, environmentally sound
energy sources to promote the availability of increased energy supplies
to support sustainable development efforts, in particular in developing
countries;
·
Promote the
development at the national level of appropriate methodologies for
making integrated energy, environment and economic policy decisions for
sustainable development, inter alia, through environmental impact
assessments;
·
Promote the
research, development, transfer and use of improved energy-efficient
technologies and practices, including endogenous technologies in all
relevant sectors, giving special attention to the rehabilitation and
modernization of power systems, with particular attention to developing
countries;
·
Promote the
research, development, transfer and use of technologies and practices
for environmentally sound energy systems, including new and renewable
energy systems, with particular attention to developing countries;
·
Promote the
development of institutional, scientific, planning and management
capacities, particularly in developing countries, to develop, produce
and use increasingly efficient and less polluting forms of energy;
·
Review current
energy supply mixes to determine how the contribution of environmentally
sound energy systems as a whole, particularly new and renewable energy
systems, could be increased in an economically efficient manner, taking
into account respective countries' unique social, physical, economic and
political characteristics, and examining and implementing, where
appropriate, measures to overcome any barriers to their development and
use;
·
Coordinate energy
plans regionally and subregionally, where applicable, and study the
feasibility of efficient distribution of environmentally sound energy
from new and renewable energy sources;
·
In accordance
with national socio-economic development and environment priorities,
evaluate and, as appropriate, promote cost-effective policies or
programmes, including administrative, social and economic measures, in
order to improve energy efficiency;
·
Build capacity
for energy planning and programme management in energy efficiency, as
well as for the development, introduction, and promotion of new and
renewable sources of energy;
·
Promote
appropriate energy efficiency and emission standards or recommendations
at the national level, 2/ aimed at the development and use of
technologies that minimize adverse impacts on the environment;
·
Encourage
education and awareness-raising programmes at the local, national,
subregional and regional levels concerning energy efficiency and
environmentally sound energy systems;
·
Establish or
enhance, as appropriate, in cooperation with the private sector,
labelling programmes for products to provide decision makers and
consumers with information on opportunities for energy efficiency.
2. Transportation
Objectives
9.14. The basic objective of this programme
area is to develop and promote cost-effective policies or programmes, as
appropriate, to limit, reduce or control, as appropriate, harmful
emissions into the atmosphere and other adverse environmental effects of
the transport sector, taking into account development priorities as well
as the specific local and national circumstances and safety aspects.
Activities
9.15. Governments at the appropriate
level, with the cooperation of the relevant United Nations bodies
and, as appropriate, intergovernmental and non-governmental
organizations, and the private sector, should:
·
Develop and
promote, as appropriate, cost-effective, more efficient, less polluting
and safer transport systems, particularly integrated rural and urban
mass transit, as well as environmentally sound road networks, taking
into account the needs for sustainable social, economic and development
priorities, particularly in developing countries;
·
Facilitate at the
international, regional, subregional and national levels access to and
the transfer of safe, efficient, including resource-efficient, and less
polluting transport technologies, particularly to the developing
countries, including the implementation of appropriate training
programmes;
·
Strengthen, as
appropriate, their efforts at collecting, analysing and exchanging
relevant information on the relation between environment and transport,
with particular emphasis on the systematic observation of emissions and
the development of a transport database;
·
In accordance
with national socio-economic development and environment priorities,
evaluate and, as appropriate, promote cost-effective policies or
programmes, including administrative, social and economic measures, in
order to encourage use of transportation modes that minimize adverse
impacts on the atmosphere;
·
Develop or
enhance, as appropriate, mechanisms to integrate transport planning
strategies and urban and regional settlement planning strategies, with a
view to reducing the environmental impacts of transport;
·
Study, within the
framework of the United Nations and its regional commissions, the
feasibility of convening regional conferences on transport and the
environment.
3. Industrial development
Objectives
9.17. The basic objective of
this programme area is to encourage industrial development in ways that
minimize adverse impacts on the atmosphere by, inter alia, increasing
efficiency in the production and consumption by industry of all
resources and materials, by improving pollution-abatement technologies
and by developing new environmentally sound technologies.
Activities
9.18. Governments at the appropriate
level, with the cooperation of the relevant United Nations bodies
and, as appropriate, intergovernmental and non-governmental
organizations, and the private sector, should:
·
In accordance
with national socio-economic development and environment priorities,
evaluate and, as appropriate, promote cost-effective policies or
programmes, including administrative, social and economic measures, in
order to minimize industrial pollution and adverse impacts on the
atmosphere;
·
Encourage
industry to increase and strengthen its capacity to develop
technologies, products and processes that are safe, less polluting and
make more efficient use of all resources and materials, including
energy;
·
Cooperate in the
development and transfer of such industrial technologies and in the
development of capacities to manage and use such technologies,
particularly with respect to developing countries;
·
Develop, improve
and apply environmental impact assessments to foster sustainable
industrial development;
·
Promote efficient
use of materials and resources, taking into account the life cycles of
products, in order to realize the economic and environmental benefits of
using resources more efficiently and producing fewer wastes;
·
Support the
promotion of less polluting and more efficient technologies and
processes in industries, taking into account area-specific accessible
potentials for energy, particularly safe and renewable sources of
energy, with a view to limiting industrial pollution, and adverse
impacts on the atmosphere.
4. Terrestrial and marine resource
development and land use
Objectives
9.20. The objectives of this programme area
are:
·
To promote
terrestrial and marine resource utilization and appropriate land-use
practices that contribute to:
·
The reduction of
atmospheric pollution and/or the limitation of anthropogenic emissions
of greenhouse gases;
·
The conservation,
sustainable management and enhancement, where appropriate, of all sinks
for greenhouse gases;
·
The conservation
and sustainable use of natural and environmental resources;
·
To ensure that
actual and potential atmospheric changes and their socio-economic and
ecological impacts are fully taken into account in planning and
implementing policies and programmes concerning terrestrial and marine
resources utilization and land-use practices.
Activities
9.21. Governments at the appropriate
level, with the cooperation of the relevant United Nations bodies
and, as appropriate, intergovernmental and non-governmental
organizations, and the private sector, should:
·
In accordance
with national socio-economic development and environment priorities,
evaluate and, as appropriate, promote cost-effective policies or
programmes, including administrative, social and economic measures, in
order to encourage environmentally sound land-use practices;
·
Implement
policies and programmes that will discourage inappropriate and polluting
land-use practices and promote sustainable utilization of terrestrial
and marine resources;
·
Consider
promoting the development and use of terrestrial and marine resources
and land-use practices that will be more resilient to atmospheric
changes and fluctuations;
·
Promote
sustainable management and cooperation in the conservation and
enhancement, as appropriate, of sinks and reservoirs of greenhouse
gases, including biomass, forests and oceans, as well as other
terrestrial, coastal and marine ecosystems.
C. Preventing stratospheric ozone depletion
Objectives
9.23. The objectives of this programme area
are:
·
To realize the
objectives defined in the Vienna Convention and the Montreal Protocol
and its 1990 amendments, including the consideration in those
instruments of the special needs and conditions of the developing
countries and the availability to them of alternatives to substances
that deplete the ozone layer. Technologies and natural products that
reduce demand for these substances should be encouraged;
·
To develop
strategies aimed at mitigating the adverse effects of ultraviolet
radiation reaching the Earth's surface as a consequence of depletion and
modification of the stratospheric ozone layer.
Activities
9.24. Governments at the
appropriate level, with the cooperation of the relevant United
Nations bodies and, as appropriate, intergovernmental and
non-governmental organizations, and the private sector, should:
·
Ratify, accept or
approve the Montreal Protocol and its 1990 amendments; pay their
contributions towards the Vienna/Montreal trust funds and the interim
multilateral ozone fund promptly; and contribute, as appropriate,
towards ongoing efforts under the Montreal Protocol and its implementing
mechanisms, including making available substitutes for CFCs and other
ozone-depleting substances and facilitating the transfer of the
corresponding technologies to developing countries in order to enable
them to comply with the obligations of the Protocol;
·
Support further
expansion of the Global Ozone Observing System by facilitating - through
bilateral and multilateral funding - the establishment and operation of
additional systematic observation stations, especially in the tropical
belt in the southern hemisphere;
·
Participate
actively in the continuous assessment of scientific information and the
health and environmental effects, as well as of the
technological/economic implications of stratospheric ozone depletion;
and consider further actions that prove warranted and feasible on the
basis of these assessments;
·
Based on the
results of research on the effects of the additional ultraviolet
radiation reaching the Earth's surface, consider taking appropriate
remedial measures in the fields of human health, agriculture and marine
environment;
·
Replace CFCs and
other ozone-depleting substances, consistent with the Montreal Protocol,
recognizing that a replacement's suitability should be evaluated
holistically and not simply based on its contribution to solving one
atmospheric or environmental problem.
D. Transboundary atmospheric pollution
Objectives
9.27. The objectives of this programme area
are:
·
To develop and
apply pollution control and measurement technologies for stationary and
mobile sources of air pollution and to develop alternative
environmentally sound technologies;
·
To observe and
assess systematically the sources and extent of transboundary air
pollution resulting from natural processes and anthropogenic activities;
·
To strengthen the
capabilities, particularly of developing countries, to measure, model
and assess the fate and impacts of transboundary air pollution, through,
inter alia, exchange of information and training of experts;
·
To develop
capabilities to assess and mitigate transboundary air pollution
resulting from industrial and nuclear accidents, natural disasters and
the deliberate and/or accidental destruction of natural resources;
·
To encourage the
establishment of new and the implementation of existing regional
agreements for limiting transboundary air pollution;
·
To develop
strategies aiming at the reduction of emissions causing transboundary
air pollution and their effects.
Activities
9.28. Governments at the appropriate
level, with the cooperation of the relevant United Nations bodies and,
as appropriate, intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations,
the private sector and financial institutions, should:
·
Establish and/or
strengthen regional agreements for transboundary air pollution control
and cooperate, particularly with developing countries, in the areas of
systematic observation and assessment, modelling and the development and
exchange of emission control technologies for mobile and stationary
sources of air pollution. In this context, greater emphasis should be
put on addressing the extent, causes, health and socio-economic impacts
of ultraviolet radiation, acidification of the environment and
photo-oxidant damage to forests and other vegetation;
·
Establish or
strengthen early warning systems and response mechanisms for
transboundary air pollution resulting from industrial accidents and
natural disasters and the deliberate and/or accidental destruction of
natural resources;
·
Facilitate
training opportunities and exchange of data, information and national
and/or regional experiences;
·
Cooperate on
regional, multilateral and bilateral bases to assess transboundary air
pollution, and elaborate and implement programmes identifying specific
actions to reduce atmospheric emissions and to address their
environmental, economic, social and other effects.
Means of
implementation
International and regional cooperation
9.29. Existing legal instruments have
created institutional structures which relate to the purposes of these
instruments, and relevant work should primarily continue in those
contexts. Governments should continue to cooperate and enhance their
cooperation at the regional and global levels, including cooperation
within the United Nations system. In this context reference is made to
the recommendations in chapter 38 of Agenda 21 (International
institutional arrangements).
Capacity-building
9.30. Countries, in cooperation with the
relevant United Nations bodies, international donors and
non-governmental organizations, should mobilize technical and financial
resources and facilitate technical cooperation with developing countries
to reinforce their technical, managerial, planning and administrative
capacities to promote sustainable development and the protection of the
atmosphere, in all relevant sectors.
Human resource development
9.31. Education and awareness-raising
programmes concerning the promotion of sustainable development and the
protection of the atmosphere need to be introduced and strengthened at
the local, national and international levels in all relevant sectors.
Financial and cost evaluation
9.32. The Conference secretariat has
estimated the average total annual cost (1993-2000) of implementing the
activities under programme area A to be about $640 million from the
international community on grant or concessional terms. These are
indicative and order-of-magnitude estimates only and have not been
reviewed by Governments. Actual costs and financial terms, including any
that are non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia, the specific
strategies and programmes Governments decide upon for implementation.
9.33. The Conference secretariat has
estimated the average total annual cost (1993-2000) of implementing the
activities of the four-part programme under programme area B to be about
$20 billion from the international community on grant or concessional
terms. These are indicative and order-of-magnitude estimates only and
have not been reviewed by Governments. Actual costs and financial terms,
including any that are non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia,
the specific strategies and programmes Governments decide upon for
implementation.
9.34. The Conference secretariat has
estimated the average total annual cost (1993-2000) of implementing the
activities under programme area C to be in the range of $160-590 million
on grant or concessional terms. These are indicative and
order-of-magnitude estimates only and have not been reviewed by
Governments. Actual costs and financial terms, including any that are
non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia, the specific strategies
and programmes Governments decide upon for implementation.
9.35.
The Conference secretariat has included costing for technical assistance
and pilot programmes under paragraphs 9.32 and 9.33.
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