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  UNEP ON THE GROUND
Promoting the implementation of environmental law through enhanced knowledge sharing

On 5 June four UN agencies, in collaboration with the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and other key partners, concluded a week of meetings to promote new tools and better access to information to assist Parties to more effectively implement obligations under 18 Multilateral Environment Agreements (MEA).


The Multilateral Environment Agreements and Knowledge Management (MEA IKM) Initiative seeks to develop harmonised and interoperable information systems in support of knowledge management activities among 18 MEAs for the benefit of Parties and the environment community at large.


"Collaboration in the implementation of our respective mandates towards concrete results is crucial in overcoming the challenge of institutional fragmentation in the field of international environmental law" noted Ms. Mrema, who assumed her function as Director of the UNEP Division of Environmental Law and Conventions last week.


"The MEA Information and Knowledge Management Initiative is a creative way of enhancing environmental governance and giving expression to one coherent body of international environmental law. MEA Secretariats are collaborating with the Secretariats of UNEP and other organizations to develop innovative information and knowledge tools to better support decision making and implementation. Such initiatives are welcomed by CITES." said John E. Scanlon Secretary-General of CITES and co-chair of the Steering Committee.


The Steering Committee of the MEA IKM Initiative met for the fifth time to discuss key knowledge management issues, such as easier-to-use joint on-line reporting tools for MEA Parties, the development of a thesaurus on Environmental Law and Conventions and the translation of InforMEA tools into different languages. The MEA IKM initiative, which was inspired by the renewed emphasis the United Nations is placing on information and communication tools, is one of the largest sustainable development knowledge management projects in the UN system.


For further information please visit the InforMEA website www.informea.org and the InforMEA facebook page https://www.facebook.com/informea.org


Or contact: eva.duer@unep.org or marcos.silva@cites.org

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  UNEP ON THE GROUND
Tehran Convention COP5: a milestone in Caspian cooperation

Caspian States adopt Biodiversity Protocol and will establish Convention Secretariat in the region.


From 28 to 30 May, ministers of environment and other high-level government officials of the five Caspian States met in Ashgabat for the fifth Conference of the Parties (COP5) to the Tehran Convention Framework Convention for the Protection of the Marine Environment of the Caspian Sea. They took major decisions towards ensuring a sustainable future for the Caspian Sea.


Countries unanimously adopted the Biodiversity Protocol, and two of them have already signed it. The Protocol is an international treaty that obliges the Parties to work together and guides them in the conservation and restoration of the unique Caspian habitats and species such as the celebrated sturgeon and the Caspian seal.


This is the third in a series of Protocols to the Convention. The first two were concluded and signed in 2011 and 2012: the “Aktau” Protocol on regional cooperation in addressing oil spills, and the “Moscow” Protocol on the protection of the Caspian Sea against land-based sources of pollution. The Protocols underline the countries' commitment to cooperating and taking action against the environmental threats facing that Sea.


In recent decades, rapidly growing oil and gas activities, industrial and agricultural pollution, overexploitation of biological resources, and destruction of endemic species’ natural habitats have jeopardized the health and environmental balance of the Caspian Sea’s fragile ecosystem.


The 2003 Tehran Convention—signed by Azerbaijan, the Islamic Republic of Iran, Kazakhstan, the Russian Federation and Turkmenistan—was a historic breakthrough to halt environmental degradation in the Caspian Sea and to preserve one of the world’s most precious ecosystems.


As the first legally binding agreement between these five countries, this Convention illustrates how only through cooperating with each other can these countries effectively protect the marine environment and with it the livelihoods, health, and well-being of present and future generations.


More Information: mahir.aliyev@unep.org

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Environmentand  UNEP ON THE GROUND

Environment and Security Initiative sends team of experts to arsenic mining site in Georgia

Following an arsenic spill in Tsana, Georgia, a team of experts led by UNEP and the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, visited the country from 2 to 6 May, in the framework of the Environment and Security Initiative project "Addressing Emergency Environment and Security Threats at the Arsenic Mining Site in Tsana, Georgia". International and national experts assessed the situation at three locations in the Tsana area, where arsenic containing mining waste is stored.


The mining factory ceased its operation in the beginning of 1990s leaving mercury containing waste stored at three sites in Tsana (Tsana 1-3). Due to poor management, over 50,000 tons of arsenic containing waste resulting from former Soviet times production of arsenic anhydride and metallic arsenic pose significant risks to the surrounding environment and communities.


The mission was in response to the appeal by Georgia’s Minister of Environment and Natural Resource Protection to OSCE and the ENVSEC Initiative following a flooding in September 2013 that increased the risk of leakage.


The expert team visited Georgia’s National Environmental Agency, which is undertaking the environmental monitoring, including analysis of soil and water samples, and held meetings with the local administration of Lentekhi. They also provided an initial briefing to the Minister, who pledged full support to the technical mission.


More Information: marika.palosaari@unep.org

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NewEnvironmentalismSummit   UNEP ON THE GROUND
New Environmentalism Summit and Green Week 2014

On 3 June, the European Commission organized an event that brought together celebrities, former politicians, business leaders, media and other personalities, and some of the world’s leading NGOs to discuss why we haven’t collectively made the necessary breakthroughs and how we might do so in the future. UNEP Executive Director Achim Steiner participated with a TEDx-style talk.


On 4 June, UNEP held a high-level panel discussion on green economy, finance and sustainable production and consumption in Small Island Developing States. UNEP was also involved in a number of sessions, including in the launch of the International Resource Panel (IRP) assessment report "Decoupling in practice".


The following side sessions were held, with UNEP and UNEP-hosted IRP representatives: “Gearing up cities for the circular economy” (with IRP member Maarten Hajer), “Resource efficiency: how to get investors on board?” (with Charles Anderson, Director, UNEP Finance Initiative), “International dimension: resource efficiency in the Sustainable Development Goals” (with George C. Varughese, President of Development Alternatives and IRP member; Prof. Stefan Bringezu, Wuppertal Institute and IRP member; and Prof. Ernst Ulrich von Weizsäcker, Co-Chair of IRP, Co-President of The Club of Rome and lead author of the Decoupling II report), and “Building the knowledge base for a greener economy” (with Joy A. Kim, Senior Economic Affairs Officer, UNEP/Division of Technology, Industry and Economics).


More Information see: New Environmentalism Summit and Green Week

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  UNEP ON THE GROUND

Environment and Security Initiative: Experts convene to address climate change and security risks in South Caucasus

As part of the ENVSEC project “Climate Change and Security in Eastern Europe, Central Asia and the Southern Caucasus“, UNEP and OSCE jointly held two national consultation workshops: in Tbilisi, Georgia, on 8 May, and in Yerevan, Armenia, on 12 May. The workshops convened representatives and experts from national ministries and agencies, international organizations and civil society. Participants examined recent analyses of the trends and impacts of climate change and discussed policies to tackle climate change and its associated potential security risks.


Under this project, launched in 2013 with the support of the EU Instrument for Stability Programme and the Austrian Development Agency, national and regional consultation workshops are held to contribute to three regional climate change and security reports: for Eastern Europe, Central Asia and the Southern Caucasus. The project aims to increase the understanding and awareness of climate change as a security challenge, and the consequent need for transboundary cooperation on climate change adaptation, and enhancing national and local stakeholders’ capacity to anticipate, prevent and mitigate the potential associated security risks.


More Information: marika.palosaari@unep.org

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