Developing nations, legal experts and NGOs that
attended the meeting all voiced the concern that the International Maritime
Organization’s Hong Kong Convention will not stop hazardous wastes such as asbestos,
PCBs, residue oils and heavy metals from being exported to the poorest
communities and most desperate workers in developing counties. The Hong Kong
Convention, which was adopted in 2009, but has not yet been ratified by a
single country, has no intention of minimizing the movement of toxic ships to
developing countries.
Currently the 1989 Basel Convention is the only
legal instrument on transboundary movements of waste, and the only legal tool
developing countries can successfully use to stop toxic ships from entering
their territorial waters.
Liabilities not on the polluter
The developing countries’ statement was supported
by the Basel Action Network and the NGO Shipbreaking Platform, a global
coalition of labor rights and environmental organizations dedicated to
promoting safe and environmentally sound ship recycling and preventing toxic
ships from disproportionately burdening developing countries.
"The Hong Kong Convention is radically
different from the Basel Convention as it puts the costs and liabilities of
waste management on the importing state and not the polluter – who in this case
is the ship owner", said Ingvild Jenssen, Director of the NGO Shipbreaking
Platform. "The Hong Kong Convention does not even prohibit the dangerous
beaching method, a substandard method of ship dismantling whereby ships are
broken up on tidal beaches by untrained and unprotected workers, causing severe
pollution, injuries and deaths."
"The Basel Convention clearly considers that
illegal traffic of hazardous waste is a criminal activity. The Hong Kong
Convention, however, does not require the criminalization of illegal transfer
of hazardous waste", added Dr. Marcos Orellana from the Centre of
International Environmental Law (CIEL).
EU acting double faced
While human rights and legal experts asserted that
the Hong Kong Convention lacked much of the protections for developing
countries found in the Basel Convention, the European Union argued strongly
that the two instruments were equivalent. It is widely believed that the
European Union and the shipping industry wish to remove ships from the Basel
Convention.
"The European Union appears to be towing the
shipping industry line to pull ships from a strong legal regime to a weaker one,"
said Jenssen. "It is shameful that the EU on the one hand claims to be a
strong supporter of the Basel Ban Amendment for most hazardous wastes, but when
it comes to hazardous waste ships dumped on South Asian beaches by ship owners
making great profit at the expense of impoverished, desperate laborers and the
local environment, they want Basel to look the other way."
Source: RecyclingPortal.EU (Sourced from NGO Shipbreaking Platform). 24 October
2011
2 comments:
Sad to hear that the NGO Platform still denies fundamentals and doesn´t understand the subject after years of participating in these discussions at IMO, Basel Convention and other occassions, but congratulations that they´ve pushed this important development at IMO.
The EC hasn´t started their initiative to exclude ships from BC without doing their homework. How strong is an instrument when more than 90% of its addressees don´t comply and nobody can enforce it? Yes, more shipwoners should take more care & responsibility, but when not speaking with one voice towards green & safe recycling it provides more "options" for not following HKC, as it is weakened by the NGO Platform. It needs some thorough understanding, investigations, and looking beyond personal horizons to come to the conclusion that ships have to be excluded from BC for establishing HKC on a regional basis. This allows to pave the path towards improvements, from shipowners and ship recyclers. Working against the Hong Kong Convention delays establishing a global understanding and standard of HSE-compliant ship recycling, finally risking lifes of workers longer than necessary. Officially the NGO officially wants to safe workers life, or not?
Sad to hear that the NGO Platform still denies fundamentals and doesn´t understand the subject after years of participating in these discussions at IMO, Basel Convention and other occassions, but congratulations that they´ve pushed this important development at IMO.
The EC hasn´t started their initiative to exclude ships from BC without doing their homework. How strong is an instrument when more than 90% of its addressees don´t comply and nobody can enforce it? Yes, more shipwoners should take more care & responsibility, but when not speaking with one voice towards green & safe recycling it provides more "options" for not following HKC, as it is weakened by the NGO Platform. It needs some thorough understanding, investigations, and looking beyond personal horizons to come to the conclusion that ships have to be excluded from BC for establishing HKC on a regional basis. This allows to pave the path towards improvements, from shipowners and ship recyclers. Working against the Hong Kong Convention delays establishing a global understanding and standard of HSE-compliant ship recycling, finally risking lifes of workers longer than necessary. Officially the NGO officially wants to safe workers life, or not?
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