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Environmental problems are no respecters of national boundaries, yet it remains the case that the principal actors at international level are nation states. Traditionally, the only means available for regulating the behaviour of nation states has been through a system of international law, codified in treaties and conventions. Since the beginning of the century more than 170 multilateral environmental treaties and instruments have been established, covering subjects ranging from the atmosphere and the marine environment, to nature conservation and transboundary watercourses. The vast majority of these agreements are regional in their scope, and many of them apply only to Europe. A list of relevant international conventions and agreements can be found in Annex 1.
Contributing to the development of many of these the agreements is a confusing array of international organisations and agencies. The major players are listed in Box 1. They include world organisations with a pan-European dimension (for example, the UN Economic Commission for Europe - UN-ECE); predominantly economic organisations with a membership including, but extending beyond western Europe, (e.g. the OECD); organisations that were originally exclusively western European but are now beginning to include countries of central and eastern Europe (CEE) (e.g. the Council of Europe); and a network of separate organisations and agencies that have recently come together under the pan-European umbrella of the 'Environment for Europe' process (see Section 3.4).
Box 1: International institutions with an environmental role
UN Institutions | |
---|---|
UNEP | UN Environment Programme |
UN-ECE | UN Economic Commission for Europe |
UNESCO | UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation |
UNDP | UN Development Programme |
WHO | World Health Organisation |
FAO | Food and Agriculture Organisation |
WMO | World Meteorological Organisation |
IMO | International Maritime Organisation |
Institutions wider than Europe with an Environmental Role | |
OECD | Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development |
GATT | General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade |
CSCE | Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe |
European Institutions | |
EC | European Community |
EFTA | European Free Trade Association |
Council of Europe | |
Financial Institutions | |
World Bank | |
EBRD | European Bank of Reconstruction and Development |
EIB | European Investment Bank |
Regional Organisations | |
OSPAR | Oslo and Paris Commission |
Rhine Commission | |
Danube Commission | |
Helsinki Commission | |
Benelux Economic Union |
The effectiveness of international environmental organisations and agreements
Many of the organisations listed in Box I have made significant contributions to environmental co-operation in Europe. For example, the United Nations Economic Co-operation for Europe (UN-ECE), which brings together in one forum all 55 countries from both western and eastern Europe, has elaborated nine regional legal instruments aimed at environmental protection. These cover air and water pollution -including the 1979 Convention on Long-Range Transboundary Air Pollution (CLRTAP - see Box 2) industrial accidents and environmental impact assessment. In addition, the UN~ECE has played a key role in furthering the development of pan-European environmental co-operation in the 'Environment for Europe' process (see Section 3.4).
Box 2: The Convention on Long-Range Transboundary Air Pollution
The 1979 Convention on Long-Range Transboundary Air Pollution and its protocols - covering emissions of sulphur (1985 and 1994), nitrogen oxides (1988) and volatile organic compounds (1991), and on international cost-sharing for monitoring air pollutants (EMEP, 1984) - together provide a European air pollution control framework including legislative, advisory, research and monitoring activities. In 1993, the then 21 Parties to the 1985 Helsinki Protocol had together reduced their sulphur emissions by 43 per cent in comparison with 1980, considerably exceeding the 30 per cent reduction to which they were pledged. Of the 25 Parties to the 1988 Sofia protocol on the control of NOx emissions, seventeen have succeeded in stabilising N0x emissions at 1987 levels, and five of these have cut their emissions by more than 25 per cent. With the signature of a new Sulphur Protocol in 1994, an Implementation Committee has been established to strengthen the monitoring of compliance by signatories with their obligations. |
Despite such achievements, the effectiveness of many of these organisations has been limited by one or more of the following factors:
Examples of the more effective international agreements include the Vienna Convention on the Protection of the Ozone Layer, and the Convention on Long-Range Transboundary Air Pollution (see Boxes 2 and 3). But the success of other agreements has been mixed.
Box 3: The Vienna Convention for the Protection of the Ozone Layer
Negotiations for the convention began in 1981, following the accumulation of scientific evidence on the destruction of the ozone layer. The convention has been signed and ratified by over 130 nations and entered into force in 1988. The convention's objectives include the protection of human health through co-operation in scientific research, the exchange of information and the adoption of measures to reduce adverse effects on the ozone layer. It is a framework convention, leaving more specific action to protect the ozone layer to later protocols. The Montreal Protocol (1987) set required monitoring reports, and introduced trade sanctions and provisions for dispute settlement. The London Amendment (1990) added new provisions in relation to technology transfers and financial mechanisms, including a Multilateral Fund to assist with compliance costs. The Copenhagen Amendment (1992) speeds up the chemical phase-out dates and makes financial arrangements firmer. |
A key problem with all international environmental agreements is that their success ultimately depends on the willingness of 'sovereign' nation states to agree to them and implement them properly. As a result, treaties incorporating detailed targets and structures have often taken years to draft, and even longer to ratify. The growing sense of urgency in addressing increasingly complex problems has led to a shift in favour of 'softer' conventions which can be drafted and signed within a relatively short time frame. These may include codes of practice, guidelines or frameworks which allow wide discretion in interpreting their precise requirements. They may be easier to agree, but their very flexibility can reduce their effectiveness.
Other factors limiting the success of conventions include:
The scope of agreements
Effective international action relies on the availability of comprehensive and reliable data to identify particular problems, establish their causes, and reveal gaps and failures in existing policies and actions. It was, for example, scientific observation that first revealed the hole in the ozone layer over Antarctica. A start has been made in establishing reliable data collection systems but much more needs to be done.
The lowest common denominator — are targets demanding enough?
Conventions rely on a convergence of interests between sovereign nation states. As a result, agreements often reflect the ambitions and targets of the 'lowest common denominator'. As the number of parties to a convention grows, so the precise scope and effectiveness of the agreement is reduced. The 1992 Climate Change Convention is just one example (see Box 4).
Box 4: The Climate Change Convention
The main objective of the Convention, which was opened for signature at UNCED in 1992 and has been signed by over 130 parties, is the stabilisation of greenhouse gas emissions to limit interference with the climate system, Emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases should be returned to 1990 levels by the year 2000 - although this target is not binding. Recent findings by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) suggests that this target is wholly inadequate, and that emissions of greenhouse gases in fact need to be reduced by 60% in order to stabilise atmospheric concentrations. |
The number of signatories
One advantage of international conventions and agreements is their potentially-wide field of application. In practice, however, this may be limited for several reasons, including
Especially among the countries of central and eastern Europe, severe resource shortages have had a major impact on their ability to participate in environmental conventions
The concept of 'burden sharing' as a means of evening out the often heavy costs of pollution reduction has gained ground recently, particularly in relation to the Convention on long-range Transboundary Air Pollution (CLRTAP). During negotiations leading to the 1994 Oslo Protocol on further SO2 reductions, the establishment of an Acidification Fund was examined. Under the proposed fund, countries in transition would receive money based on their GDP and abatement costs, with richer nations contributing on a similar basis.
In addition, countries in transition require improved technical assistance if international standards are to be met. This can be made available through clearing-houses, referral services, exchange programmes or technology rights banks.
Perhaps the weakest aspect of international environmental conventions lies in their implementation and enforcement. Parties to international agreements generally find external monitoring and enforcement systems unacceptable, and wish to control monitoring themselves. Information gathered in this manner may be incomplete or inaccurate due to differing monitoring methods and standards.
Some progress has been achieved with the establishment of the OECD's Environmental Performance Review Programme, the principal aim of which is to help countries improve their performance through peer review. For European countries outside the OECD, similar environmental review programmes are to be carried out within the framework of the UN-ECE. But environmental performance reviews are time-consuming and depend on the willingness of countries to participate.
The UN-ECE is currently monitoring compliance with each of its instruments and will present its findings to their Signatories or Parties. The 1994 CLRTAP Protocol on Further Reduction on Sulphur Emissions includes the establishment of a formal Implementation Committee to keep the issue of compliance continually under review.
If monitoring reveals the failure of a party to implement the obligations of an international convention, there is however little that can be done in the absence of effective enforcement mechanisms. In the final analysis, it may be public opinion alone that can exert pressure on states to respond more vigorously to environmental challenges, to participate in conventions and to live up to their environmental obligations. But the public requires far wider access to information about international conventions and agreements and their effectiveness, an area where, traditionally, public and parliamentary involvement has been minimal.
One of the main strengths of the European Union is that - unlike other international organisations - it is a legislative body. When it acts in a legislative capacity, its Directives, Regulations and Decisions are binding on the Member States, and can be enforced by the EU's Court of Justice.
This legislative — or 'command and control'-
approach has formed the basis of the EU's environmental policy over the
past 20 years. There are now more than 300 Directives and Regulations
designed to respond to a wide range of problems, including many (but
not all) of the twelve priority problems listed in Europe's
Environment.(1)
EU legislation covers
The rapid development of the EU's environmental policy is indicated by Figure 1.
Figure 1: EU environmental legislation adopted each year
The influence of the Community's environmental legislation extends well beyond the borders of its current twelve Member States. Even before some of them assume full EU membership, all seven countries of the European Free Trade Association (EFTA) apply the main features of the EU's environmental policy, following the formation of the European Economic Area (EEA) in 1993. The EEA extends the EU's single market and associated policies to a total of 19 countries stretching from the Arctic to the Mediterranean.
Meanwhile, in central and eastern Europe (CEE), Association Agreements with Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Bulgaria and Rumania require some movement towards EU environmental standards. Eventual EU membership for CEE applicant countries will require the full application of Community environmental legislation (although in some cases with lengthy transitional periods). Substantial financial support for a number of environmental projects and programmes in the region is already available through the EU's PHARE programme.
Since 1973, EU environmental legislation has developed within a framework set by series of Environmental Action Programmes. These periodically set out how the EU proposes to develop its environmental policy and legislation over the coming four or more years. The fifth such programme, entitled Towards Sustainability: A European Community Programme of Policy and Action in relation to the Environment and Sustainable Development - was published in 1992.(2) It sets out a new approach towards tackling the environmental challenges facing Europe in the period to the year 2000, and is described more fully in Section 3.3 below.
A point of departure for the fifth programme is that the EU's traditional approach to protecting the environment has its limitations. It is beyond the scope of this paper to attempt a complete evaluation of the EU's environmental policy, but some preliminary conclusions can be made. A few of the EU's more notable successes are listed in Box 5.
Box 5: Achievements of EU environmental legislation
|
Despite these achievements, the Commission itself has recognised the weaknesses of EU environmental policy and is taking steps to improve matters.
Over the past twenty years, EU legislation has developed in an ad hoc manner according to a shifting policy agenda. Individual Directives sometimes reflect a lack of adequate scientific data and/or unsatisfactory political compromises. As a result
In addition, the impact of many items of legislation is gravely weakened by inadequate implementation an enforcement.
Gaps in Coverage
Limited objectives of some EU legislation
In addition to these gaps in coverage, many items of EU legislation do not go far enough to be properly effective.
Single-medium approach
EU environmental legislation has generally sought to control emissions to, or protect the quality of, individual media - air, water and (to a far lesser extent), soil. This 'single medium' approach fails to acknowledge that the environment needs to be considered as a whole: controls on emissions to one medium can often result in a shift of pollution to another. For example, reducing acid emissions from the stacks of large combustion plants through the installation of flue-gas desulphurisation (FGD) equipment can lead to increases in water or soil pollution. Integrated pollution control (IPC) by contrast seeks to reduce pollution to the environment as a whole. Proposed EU legislation requiring Member States to introduce a system of integrated pollution prevention and control (IPPC) has yet to be agreed by Member States.
Failures of implementation and enforcement
One essential precondition for effectiveness is that legislation is properly implemented and enforced on the ground. Failure to put into effect the requirements of EU environmental directives is a now a serious problem. In 1993 the number of suspected infringements of environmental Directives - almost 400 - came second only to those relating to the internal market.(3)
Key items of legislation that have not been properly implemented include Directive 79/409 on the Conservation of Wild Birds, Directive 85/337 on environmental impact assessment, and several Directives on water and waste.
An essential first step towards tightening up on implementation is to improve the availability of information about developments in each Member State. The only Member State for which an independent, regular and complete review is undertaken of the manner in which all items of EU environmental legislation are implemented, and of their impact on practice, is the UK.(4)
Many environmental directives include varying requirements that governments report regularly to the Commission on how they are implementing the legislation. However, these reports may be compiled only infrequently, incompletely, or not at all. As a result, information essential for gauging the effectiveness of EU legislation is denied both to the Commission and the general public. The Standardised Reporting Directive 91/692 seeks to place Member States' reporting obligations on a sounder footing, but it remains to be seen how effective this will be.
In the absence of such basic information, the Commission has been obliged to rely on complaints from other Member States, MEPs, businesses, NGOs or individuals as the basis for enforcement action.
Under the terms of its instituting. Regulation 1210/90, the question whether the European Environment Agency should have a part to play in monitoring the implementation of Community measures in the Member States was postponed for decision until the completion of a review of the Agency's first two years of operation. Whether or not the Agency is eventually to be given a formal role in the monitoring and enforcement of EU legislation, it would seem essential that the Agency should undertake comparative reviews of policy implementation to provide information and guidance to the Commission and the Member States on the effectiveness of different policy measures and approaches.
For references, please go to https://eea.europa.eu./publications/92-827-4083-8/page004.html or scan the QR code.
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