Title: AARHUS CONVENTION
1AARHUS CONVENTION
- Protocol on Pollutant Release and Transfer
Registers
PRTRs Now! 4th Ministerial Conference on
Environment and Health Budapest, Hungary - 23
June 2004
Michael Stanley-Jones Environmental Information
Management Officer Aarhus Convention
Secretariat UN Economic Commission for Europe
2UNECE Convention on Access to Information, Public
Participation in Decision-making and Access to
Justice in Environmental Matters
- Adopted June 1998
- Entered into force October 2001
- Three pillars information, participation, justice
3PROTOCOLS LEGAL BASIS IN CONVENTION
- Article 5, paragraph 9 Requires each Party to
take steps to establish progressively .. a
coherent, nationwide system of pollution
inventories or registers on a structured,
computerized and publicly accessible database
compiled through standardized reporting.
4ADOPTION OF PRTR PROTOCOL
- 21 May 2003 Protocol adopted
- and signed at 5th Ministerial Environment
for Europe conference in Kiev
5MAIN FEATURES OFTHE PROTOCOL (1)
- Obligation on each Party to establish a PRTR
which is - publicly accessible and user-friendly
- presents standardized, timely data on a
structured, computerised database - covers releases and transfers from certain major
point sources - begins to include some diffuse sources (e.g.
transport, agriculture, small- and medium-sized
enterprises) - has limited confidentiality provisions
- allows public participation in its development
6MAIN FEATURES OFTHE PROTOCOL (2)
- and is based on system of reporting which is
- mandatory
- annual
- multimedia (air, water and land) Â Â Â
- facility-specific (point sources)
- pollutant-specific for releases
- pollutant-specific or waste-specific for transfers
7MAIN FEATURES OFTHE PROTOCOL (3)
- Facilities covered (annex I) include
- Thermal power stations and refineries
- Mining and metallurgical industries
- Chemical plants
- Waste and waste-water management plants
- Paper and timber industries
- Intensive livestock production and aquaculture
- Food and beverage production
8MAIN FEATURES OFTHE PROTOCOL (4)
- Pollutants covered (annex II) include
- Greenhouse gases
- Acid rain pollutants
- Ozone-depleting substances
- Heavy metals
- Certain carcinogens, such as dioxins
- TOTAL 86 pollutants
- National registers may include additional
facilities - and substances.
9MAIN FEATURES OFTHE PROTOCOL (5)
- Public access is fundamental
- Objective of Protocol to enhance public
access to information through the establishment
of coherent, integrated, nationwide PRTRs - PRTRs should
- Be accessible through the Internet free of charge
- Be searchable according to the separate
parameters (facility, pollutant, location, medium
etc) - Provide links to other PRTRs and to other
relevant registers - Recommendation Explore links to toxicity and
health information systems
10MAIN FEATURES OFTHE PROTOCOL (6)
- Some general features
- Protocol is minimum instrument - a floor but not
a ceiling - Parties required to work towards convergence
between PRTR systems - Open to non-Parties to Convention and non-ECE
States   Â
11SOME ISSUES IN FUTURE DEVELOPMENT
- Next-step issues
- Storage
- On-site transfers
- And possibly eventually
- Products
- Water, energy and resource use
- Radioactive substances
- Radiation, noise, genetically modified organisms
12CHALLENGES
- Developing guidance for Parties to Protocol
- and guidance for data users
- Identification of environmental and public
health - hot spots
- Communicating PRTR information to general
- public and targeted sectors
- Use of PRTR information for pollution prevention
- initiatives
- Development of toxics release EH indicators
13MORE INFORMATION
- AVAILABLE ON THE AARHUS CONVENTION WEBSITE
- http//www.unece.org/env/pp/prtr.htm