Environmental performance reviews united nations
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- Chapter 4 IMPLEMENTATION OF INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENTS AND COMMITMENTS 4.1 General framework for international
3.6 Policymaking framework Monitoring and information Uzbekistan has made significant progress towards the creation of an integrated environmental monitoring system. The 2002 Regulations on State Environmental Monitoring set out the scope, purposes and outputs of state environmental monitoring in the country and specify the tasks and responsibilities of six governmental bodies: the SCNP, Uzhydromet, the Ministry of Health, the Ministry of Agriculture and Water Management, the State Committee on Geology and Mineral Resources and the SCLR. Monitoring activities should be conducted based on a government-approved monitoring programme. The SCNP was made responsible for the coordination of state environmental monitoring, the approval of a unified monitoring methodology to be followed by the relevant government bodies, and for the collection and evaluation of monitoring data and their delivery to decision makers and the public, including in the form of the annual national state-of-the-environment report. Although the state environmental monitoring system was expected to cover wildlife monitoring, the Regulations do not establish responsibilities to this effect. As a result, biodiversity and ecosystem monitoring remains underdeveloped in Uzbekistan. To better coordinate the implementation of the state environmental monitoring programme, the SCNP established an inter-agency coordination council in 2002. Since 2006, the council has not been meeting; nonetheless, the coordination continues at the working level. To follow up the Regulations, the Government approved two subsequent monitoring programmes. The first programme (for 2003–2005) was approved in 2003, the second one (for 2006–2010) in 2006. It would appear that these subsequent programmes represented a compilation of routine monitoring activities by the six governmental bodies responsible for the state monitoring programme. Activities were frequently described in a very general form and clear priorities were not set. Nonetheless, the programmes demonstrate the increase in state budget allocations for environmental monitoring in Uzbekistan. From 2003 to 2006, the annual allocations for such monitoring increased from 1,884.6 million to 2,818.8 million sum (or in current US dollars from $1.94 million to $2.31 million). Specific measures for the development of the state environmental monitoring programme were included in the state action programmes for environmental protection for 1999–2005 and 2008–2012 adopted by the Government in 1999 and 2008, respectively. The latest programme envisages, for instance: (a) the procurement of equipment for monitoring emission sources, the pollution of agricultural lands and groundwater; (b) the preparation of specific biodiversity studies; and (c) the development of a centralized environmental database at the SCNP Information Centre. It is too early to assess whether any progress has been made in these areas. In parallel, the Government approved some programmes to strengthen monitoring in areas where pollution levels were of particular concern. These related to integrated observations of water quality in specific stretches of the of Amu Darya River, the Kashka Darya River and the Zarafshan River, in areas of the Surkhandarya region that are exposed to the transboundary impact of the Tajik Aluminium Plant and in the cities of Almalyk and Bekabad. The SCNP issued several guidance documents to facilitate the comparability of monitoring results and information exchange. Nevertheless, a number of gaps and weaknesses remain, especially gaps in monitoring coverage, the obsolete nature of monitoring equipment and devices, the low reliability of monitoring data, the non-comparability of monitoring methods and procedures with internationally agreed standards, the lack of a centralized or interconnected environmental database, and, last but not least, the insufficient use of monitoring results in policymaking and decision-making. According to the 2000 Law on State Cadastres, the Government must establish and continually update 21 state cadastres, including those on land, surface water, groundwater, forests, flora, fauna, protected natural Chapter 3: Monitoring, information, public participation and education 51 areas and waste. Data should include quantitative and qualitative assessments as well as monetary estimates of each resource. Not only is the task overambitious, but its implementation is not supported by staff, financing or methodological guidance. As a result, the progress made in the compilation of individual cadastres is rather poor. The Regional Environmental Action Plan for Central Asia, jointly adopted by Uzbekistan and other Central Asian States on 21 September 2001, listed important objectives and short-term measures for implementation in the period 2002–2007 in terms of monitoring and information. Uzbekistan has made significant progress towards the objective set in the Plan to improve the emission monitoring system and the monitoring of surface water quality in transboundary rivers in Uzbekistan’s territory. There is no evidence, however, that Uzbekistan has implemented the measures listed in the Plan related to upgrading the system to monitor the transboundary movement of air pollutants or to set up an online information exchange system and computer databanks. Following the joint resolution of the Collegiums of the SCNP and Uzhydromet of 28 September 1998 (Resolution No. 9/1/17), a draft programme was prepared by both authorities in 2000 aimed at the development and modernization of the monitoring of atmospheric air and sources of its pollution for 2000– 2005. The overall cost of programme implementation was estimated at almost US$ 7.5 million. Although state financing was intended to be the main source of funding for programme implementation, the programme was actually prepared for potential international donors. As no donor support was found, the draft programme has not been adopted or implemented. Public participation Uzbekistan adopted some legal and regulatory documents promoting the principles of public access to information, including environmental information. These relate to the 2002 Law on the Principles and Guarantees of Freedom of Information, the new edition of the 2002 Law on the Appeals of Citizens, and the 2007 Cabinet of Ministers Resolution on Measures for Further Interaction of Public and State Economic Management Bodies and Local Public Authorities with Legal and Natural Persons using Information and Communication Technologies. The 2001 Regional Environmental Action Plan for Central Asia listed a set of objectives according to which Uzbekistan and other Central Asian States had agreed to promote public access to environmental information and public participation in decision- making on environmental measures. Some progress has been made to meet these objectives. Great efforts are required in areas where no, or only slight, progress has been made. These relate to the following objectives: To provide consulting assistance with regard • to implementing the basic provisions of the Convention on Access to Information, Public Participation in Decision-making and Access to Justice in Environmental Matters (Aarhus Convention); To involve the local public in broad discussions • when a development project is at the drafting stage; To involve the public in discussions on draft • laws. According to the Programme of Actions on Nature Protection (PANP) for the period 2008– 2012, preparations are under way in Uzbekistan for accession to the Aarhus Convention. Much has to be done in the country to comply with the Convention’s provisions, especially those related to public participation and access to justice. Detailed procedures are lacking in current legislation and regulations. Ad hoc efforts by the SCNP and some other public authorities to involve the public in decision-making are not systematic and as such do not establish a transparent and clear framework. Environmental education Through their Joint Order No. 242/33/79 of 7 November 2005, the Ministry of Higher and Secondary Special Education, the Ministry of Public Education and the SCNP adopted the Programme (2006–2010) and the Concept on the Development of Environmental Education, Training and Retraining of Environmental Manpower, and Perspectives of Improving the System of Professional Training. These authorities established the Coordinating Council on Environmental Education and Education for Sustainable Development. The Council meets regularly to promote efforts made by governmental institutions and NGOs to implement the programme. Very limited progress has been made in the implementation of the above-mentioned programme. 52 Part I: Policymaking, planning and implementation Many specific actions established in the programme have not been implemented, in particular: the drafting of a resolution for submission to the Government on the development of continuous environmental education; the creation of an environmental education information and resource centre; the organization of a national conference on environmental education and ESD; the publication of textbooks on ESD; and the creation of museums of ecology and local lore in regional centres. At its meeting of 31 May 2007, the SCNP Collegium discussed further measures for the improvement of environmental education in the country and considered a draft national action plan for the implementation in Uzbekistan of the UNECE Strategy for Education for Sustainable Development and the United Nations Decade of Education for Sustainable Development. In particular, it decided to strengthen the environmental training centre at the National University; to develop a programme for training and retraining environmental experts; to organize training seminars for the staff of the three public authorities; and to publish manuals for teaching the subjects of the environment and sustainable development. To date, there is no evidence that these decisions have been implemented. The national action plan on ESD has not been finalized. The PANP envisages the development of a new concept on continuous environmental education and ESD; the introduction of the requirements of the UNECE Strategy for Education for Sustainable Development into the State Standard on Environmental Education; the publication of an information and analytical review of environmental education in Uzbekistan; and the publication of environmental textbooks and manuals for preschool education institutions, schools, vocational training institutions and universities. 3.7 Conclusions and recommendations Uzbekistan made significant progress towards the creation of an integrated environmental monitoring system. The SCNP coordinates the monitoring activities of six public authorities under the state monitoring programmes. However, the inter-agency coordination council has not met since 2006. While Uzbekistan substantially improved the monitoring of pollution sources, the urgently needed progress was not made in developing its ambient environmental monitoring networks. Network density far from meets the requirements of national monitoring regulations. The concentrations of a number of pollutants identified by the international community as being the most harmful to human health and the environment are not measured. Biodiversity and ecosystem monitoring remain underdeveloped in Uzbekistan. The country does not have an integrated or interconnected environmental electronic database. Recommendation 3.1: The State Committee for Nature Protection, in coordination with other government bodies and with the assistance of the inter-agency coordination council on environmental monitoring, should: (a) Enlarge the environmental monitoring networks in an optimal way to meet the requirements of monitoring regulations; (b) Increase the number of parameters measured, in particular PM 2.5 , PM 10 , volatile organic compounds, polyaromatic hydrocarbons and persistent organic pollutants in ambient air, and additional biological parameters in water; (c) Switch gradually to automatic measurement, and improve data quality control and storage procedures; (d) Make the monitoring of biodiversity an effective part of the state monitoring programme; (e) Establish an integrated environmental database at the State Committee for Nature Protection which should be interlinked with the environmental databases of the other public authorities operating environmental monitoring programmes. Although Uzbekistan continues to apply most former USSR ambient environmental standards (MACs), it has either formally reapproved them as national standards, or slightly revised or reissued them. There is no inter-agency coordination for consultation in Uzbekistan when reviewing, developing or revising MACs. As a result, there is a disparity between the nominal MACs and their actual implementation (compliance). Since a number of Uzbek standards are below the detection threshold, it is impossible to know whether or not they are being implemented. Owing to budget limitations, many pollution parameters that should be measured according to monitoring standards are not routinely monitored. Recommendation 3.2: The Ministry of Health, jointly with the State Committee for Nature Protection, should review the list of maximum allowable concentrations (MACs) to limit substantially the number of regulated parameters to those that can be measured, to the Chapter 3: Monitoring, information, public participation and education 53 extent possible, and to make the MACs consistent with international standards and guidelines. The SCNP regularly publishes a national report on the state of the environment and the use of natural resources and a report presenting the results of emission and discharge monitoring. The reports are largely descriptive and do not follow the UNECE Guidelines for the Preparation of Indicator-based Environment Assessment Reports in Eastern Europe, Caucasus and Central Asia endorsed at the sixth Environment for Europe Ministerial Conference (Belgrade, 2007). Uzhydromet, the Ministry of Health, the Ministry of Agriculture and Water Management and the State Committee on Geology and Mineral Resources publish the environmental data that they collect for a limited number of public authorities only. The State Committee on Statistics does not publish a regular statistics compendium on the environment. A limited number of environment- related data are published in the national Statistical Yearbook, which is distributed as a sales publication only. Recommendation 3.3: The Centre of Hydrometeorological Service (Uzhydromet), the State Committee on Statistics, the Ministry of Health, the Ministry of Agriculture and Water Management and the State Committee on Geology and Mineral Resources should make the environmental data that they collect and process easily accessible to the public by uploading data sets and their easy-to-read interpretations on their websites, while considerably increasing the number of copies of their current environment-related publications for wide circulation throughout the country and launching new ones, such as a freely accessible annual compendium of environmental statistics. These public authorities and the State Committee for Nature Protection should use the UNECE Guidelines for the Preparation of Indicator-based Environment Assessment Reports in Eastern Europe, Caucasus and Central Asia endorsed at the sixth Environment for Europe Ministerial Conference (Belgrade, 2007). Uzbekistan adopted some legal and regulatory documents promoting the principles of public access to information, including environmental information. The Law on State Ecological Expertise and the Cabinet of Ministers Resolution on the Regulations on State Ecological Expertise restrict public participation in the environmental impact assessment of proposed activities, plans and programmes. Legislation does not provide for public participation in the issuing of environmental permits in Uzbekistan. Preparations are under way in Uzbekistan towards accession to the Aarhus Convention. Much has to be done in the country to comply with the Convention’s provisions, especially those related to public participation and access to justice. Ad hoc efforts by the SCNP and some other public authorities to involve the public in decision-making are not systematic and as such do not establish a transparent and clear framework. Recommendation 3.4: The State Committee for Nature Protection and the Ministry of Justice, in cooperation with the representatives of civil society, should continue their work to introduce mechanisms and requirements of the Convention on Access to Information, Public Participation in Decision-making and Access to Justice in Environmental Matters (Aarhus Convention) in the national legislation and regulations to make them clear, transparent and consistent. Uzbekistan adopted the Programme (2006–2010) and the Concept on the Development of Environmental Education, Training and Retraining of Environmental Manpower, and Perspectives of Improving the System of Professional Training. However, many specific actions established in the programme have not been implemented. The national action plan for the implementation in Uzbekistan of the UNECE Strategy for Education for Sustainable Development has been under preparation since 2006. The environmental training of civil servants is not consistent or systematic. Recommendation 3.5: The Ministry of Higher and Secondary Special Education and the Ministry of Public Education, in cooperation with the State Committee for Nature Protection and other stakeholders, including non- governmental organizations and the mass media, should: (a) Speed up the finalization of the national action plan for the implementation in Uzbekistan of the UNECE Strategy for Education for Sustainable Development; (b) Review the composition of the Coordinating Council on Environmental Education and Education for Sustainable Development by raising the level of representation and involving all stakeholders to make the Council an effective instrument for implementing the Strategy. 55 Chapter 4 IMPLEMENTATION OF INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENTS AND COMMITMENTS 4.1 General framework for international cooperation Political and legal framework The basic principles of international environmental cooperation are defined in Uzbekistan’s foreign policy, which embraces the principles of adherence to the norms of international law. The 2008 Programme of Actions on Nature Protection for 2008–2012 provides the most recent framework for international environmental cooperation, which is closely linked to regional environmental protection. It aims to meet the commitments contained in ratified multilateral environmental agreements (MEAs), to participate in international programmes and projects dealing with nature protection, and to foster inter- State cooperation aimed at minimizing the negative impacts generated by transboundary pollution and the development of mechanisms for the rational use of natural resources in border areas and water basins. It must be kept in mind that the 1992 Constitution recognizes in its preamble the “priority of the generally accepted norms of international law”, which may also include non-treaty obligations. This may lead Uzbekistan to take steps to comply with the international norms embodied in environmental treaties to which it is not a party. Institutional framework The State Committee for Nature Protection (SCNP), the Ministry of Agriculture and Water Management, the Ministry of Foreign Economic Relations, Investments and Trade, the Ministry of Culture and Sports and the Centre of Hydrometeorological Service (Uzhydromet) are the executing agencies of the major MEAs ratified by Uzbekistan. Table 4.1 summarizes the distribution of these governmental bodies in terms of the MEAs in question. Download 5.03 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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