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UNEP Training Manual on International Environmental Law 4. COMPLIANCE AND ENFORCEMENT OF MULTILATERAL ENVIRONMENTAL AGREEMENTS I. Introduction Multilateral Environmental Agreements (MEAs) are a result of international action by governments to develop standards through treaties or through non- binding instruments, that come from intergovernmental fora and influential international declarations, resolutions, and conference documents. These treaties or non-binding instruments provide obligations for Governments to undertake either individual or joint action to implement international legal instruments. This chapter focuses on MEAs in the form of treaties, which follow the process of ratification, adhesion, or accession by governments who then assume the obligations as soon as the treaty enters into force. The ratification, accession or adherence of a treaty by a state is the beginning of the process of implementation of its provisions at the national level. The process and required actions for implementation of MEAs normally depend upon the provisions of the treaty but in most cases the actions range from implementing national measures provided for in the environmental treaty such as adopting policies, developing and/or strengthening national legislation and institutions, and/or taking up administrative action to implement MEAs. Since parties to most MEAs are required to report on measures taken to implement treaties, a review process is vital as well as early determination of which entity, at national level, will handle reporting, or the focal point of the particular treaty. For many years, issues of compliance with and enforcement of MEAs were considered as matters for a state to address when implementing any international environmental legal instrument. More recently, the negotiation of MEAs, decisions of the Conference of the Parties (“COP”), and the work of Convention Secretariats have established and/or provided for mechanisms to monitor compliance which have included, inter alia, reporting mechanisms and the development and implementation of non-compliance procedures for some core MEAs. MEAs are normally negotiated under the framework of international organizations that parties also work with to facilitate the implementation of the conventions and intervene by providing technical assistance to governments in the implementation process. Institutional mechanisms established by MEAs such as Convention Secretariats and the main governing bodies of treaties (COP) also play a role in facilitating and overseeing implementation of MEAs. Compliance mechanisms are tools that have also been established by MEAs to ensure efficacy of environmental treaties and to keep track of the implementation of MEAs. Under the auspices of the United Nations Environment Programme (“UNEP”), governments recently adopted global guidelines to assist and guide the process of implementation of MEAs. These guidelines were adopted in February 2002 by UNEP Governing Council decision SSVII/4 for the purpose of enhancing compliance with, and enforcement of environmental law, and are referred to as Guidelines for Compliance with and Enforcement of Multilateral Environmental Agreements. Compliance efforts can take a wide variety of forms, including education, technical assistance, voluntary compliance programmes, subsidies and other forms of financial assistance, or incentives, administrative enforcement, civil judicial enforcement and criminal enforcement. This chapter focuses on implementation of MEAs and explores some of the issues and challenges that led governments to address issues of compliance and enforcement of MEAs at the international level in the past few years. This chapter also analyzes existing mechanisms developed to ensure compliance with and enforcement of MEAs as well as the opportunities brought by the adoption of the UNEP’s Compliance and Enforcement Guidelines to enhance the implementation of MEAs. II. International Framework “Compliance” means the conformity with obligations, imposed by a state, its competent authorities and agencies on the regulated community, whether directly or through conditions and requirements, permits, licenses and authorizations, in implementing MEAs Compliance also means the fulfilment by the contracting parties of their obligations under a MEA. “Environmental law violation” means the contravention of national environmental laws and regulations implementing MEAs. "Environmental crime" means the violations or breaches of national environmental laws and regulations that a state determines to be subject to criminal penalties under its national laws and regulations. “Enforcement” means the range of procedures and actions employed by a state, its competent authorities and agencies to ensure that organizations or persons, potentially failing to comply with environmental laws or regulations implementing MEAs, can be brought or returned compliance and/or punished through civil, administrative or criminal action. 1. The Importance of Compliance and Enforcement The need to ensure implementation of MEAs, the proliferation of MEAs as well as the emergence of environmental violations or offenses (at times loosely referred to as crimes), crimes emanating from violations of existing environmental conventions are said to be the reason for the emphasis at the international level on issues relating to compliance and enforcement of environmental law. With more than 500, or according to some almost 1000, MEAs in place around the globe and the realization that there is a need for the implementation of these MEAs, the attention is shifting from treaty-making which preoccupied the international community since the 1970s to compliance and enforcement and implementation of existing treaties. Another issue of great concern, which also caused governments to focus on issues of compliance and enforcement was the emergence of criminal activity involving violations of existing MEAs (dealing with trade, chemicals, wastes) including illegal traffic and trade in banned products. In response to concerns by governments on the increase of environmental crimes with transboundary effects, UNEP organized a workshop on MEAs Compliance and Enforcement, held in 1999 in Geneva, Switzerland. The workshop examined the implementation of three major MEAs, including the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (“CITES”), the Montreal Protocol on Substances that deplete the Ozone Layer (“Montreal Protocol”), and the Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and their Disposal (“Basel Convention”). This workshop indicated there was a significant increase in environmental crimes, including illegal traffic in banned chlorofluorocarbons and hazardous wastes, as well as illegal trade in wildlife species which were undermining the objectives of the three treaties. The serious global problem of environmental crimes was underscored, as well as the need to enhance the capacity of different actors who have a role in ensuring compliance with and enforcement of MEAs. The participants and experts attending this workshop were drawn from different types of enforcement agencies from both developed and developing countries including the Convention Secretariats and other enforcement organizations like INTERPOL, the World Customs Organization, the International Network for Environmental Compliance and Enforcement (“INECE”), the European Union Network for the Implementation and Enforcement of Environmental Law (“IMPEL”), and the Commonwealth Secretariat. CITES, the Montreal Protocol, and the Basel Convention have some form of compliance mechanisms. In comparing the reports and statistics on violations of the MEAs and the cost of the environmental damages caused by these violations, it was clear that there was a need to find ways to prevent environmental crimes by enhancing compliance with and enforcement of MEAs. In assuming obligations in a MEA to be implemented at the national level, a state party to a treaty is expected to take measures to implement the MEA and to make use of the facilities provided for by environmental treaties that are aimed at facilitating the process of implementation at the national level, including inter alia: • Provision of technical assistance in development and strengthening of legislation; • Adoption of compliance and enforcement policies; • Undertaking administrative action; • Planning (action plans, inventories, strategies); • Capacity building; • Financial assistance; and • Technology transfer. In identifying some of the challenges parties face in the process of implementation, it is important to note, for example, that compliance requires identifying roles and responsibilities of the key players (depending on the MEA, the lead organization should be identified). It also requires effective coordination in the government structure 40 Chapter 4 COMPLIANCE AND ENFORCEMENT OF MULTILATERAL ENVIRONMENTAL AGREEMENTS
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