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1
On the implementation of requirements of the
PRTR Protocol to the Aarhus Convention
Michael Stanley-Jones Environmental Information
Management Officer Environment, Housing and Land
Management Division United Nations Economic
Commission for Europe WORKSHOP ON ENVIRONMENTAL
MONITORING AND REPORTING BY ENTERPRISES 4-6
September 2006, Warsaw, Poland
2
From the Aarhus Conventionto the Protocol on
PRTRs
  • UNECE Convention on Access to Information,
    Public Participation in Decision-making and
    Access to Justice in Environmental Matters
  • 25 June 1998 - Adoption of the Convention at the
    4th Ministerial Environment for Europe
    Conference, Aarhus, Denmark. Signed by 39
    countries and the European Community
  • 30 Oct 2001- Entry into force of the Convention
  • 21 May 2003 - Adoption of the Protocol on PRTRs
    at extra-ordinary meeting of the Parties,
    within the framework of the 5th Ministerial
    Environment for Europe Conference (Kiev,
    Ukraine)

3
Status of Convention Ratifications
Kyrgyzstan Latvia Lithuania Luxembourg Malta
Moldova, Rep. of Netherlands Norway
Poland Portugal Romania Slovakia Slovenia Spain S
weden Tajikistan Turkmenistan Ukraine United
Kingdom European Community
Albania Armenia Austria Azerbaijan Belarus
Belgium Bulgaria Cyprus Czech Republic Denmark
Estonia Finland Former Yugoslav Rep. of
Macedonia France Georgia Greece Hungary Italy Ka
zakhstan
Convention total 39 Parties (PRTR Protocol 37
Signatories, including Germany, Iceland, Ireland,
Serbia Montenegro. Protocol Parties as 1 Sep
2006 indicated by )
4
Access to information provisions
  • Selected features of Convention article 5 Active
    Dissemination
  • Transparency and accessibility of information
    systems
  • Immediate dissemination of information in cases
    of imminent threat to health or environment
  • Sufficient product information to ensure informed
    environmental choices
  • Pollutant release and transfer registers
  • Increased access to information through Internet
  • Article 5, paragraph 3
  • each Party to ensure that environmental
    Information progressively becomes available In
    electronic databases which are easily accessible
    to the public through public telecommunication
    networks

5
Legal basis of PRTR Protocol in Aarhus Convention
  • Legal basis article 5, para. 9 and article 10,
    para. 2 (e) and (i) of the Aarhus Convention,
    requiring 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. (art.
    5, para. 9)
  • taking into account international processes
    and developments, including the elaboration of an
    appropriate instrument concerning pollution
    release and transfer registers or inventories .
    (art. 10, para. 2(i) )

6
Requirements of Protocol on PRTRs
  • Facilities and pollutants covered
  • General obligations placed on Parties
  • Obligations placed on owners / operators
  • Elements of reporting
  • Quality assessment and validation
  • Future steps
  • and
  • Possible applications (not required)

7
Facilities covered
  • 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
  • Textiles, Tanneries, Shipbuilding

8
Pollutants covered
  • Pollutants covered (annex II) include
  • Greenhouse gases
  • Acid rain pollutants
  • Ozone-depleting substances
  • Heavy metals
  • Certain carcinogens, such as dioxins
  • TOTAL 86 pollutants
  • N.B. National registers may include additional
    facilities and substances, e.g. European Union
    includes 91 individual substances or groups of
    substances

9
Government
  • Chooses among various technical options for
    the design of a central, publicly accessibly
    register to determine the institutional framework
    required for ensuring a coordinated system of
    information flow to it
  • Sets forth the rights and responsibilities of
  • various key players, e.g.
  • the obligation of pollutant-emitting facilities
    to report, and
  • the right of the general public to participate
    in decisions concerning PRTRs

10
Elements explicitly set forth in the Protocol or
implicit in its requirements
1. Institution to manage the national PRTR
system (art. 2, para. 5) 2. Structure for
inter-agency coordination 3. Appropriate systems
for enforcement (art. 3, para. 1) Collection,
validation and management of data 4. Collection
of data submitted by owners or operators of
reporting facilities (art. 7, paras. 2 and
5) 5. Assessment of the quality of the data
collected in terms of completeness,
consistency and credibility (art. 10, para. 2) 6.
Collection of information on releases from
diffuse sources (art. 7, para. 4) 8.
Development and management of a register
comprising a structured, computerized
database able to maintain data for 10
reporting years (art. 4, para. (j) and art. 5,
para. 3) 9. Dissemination of information and
training (arts. 8, 11 and 15).
11
Basic obligation of operators
To submit the information specified with
respect to those pollutants and waste for which
thresholds were exceeded Each Party decides
with respect to a particular pollutant to apply
either a release threshold or a manufacture,
process or use (MPU) threshold will be
used Facility operators do not choose under
which requirement (pollutant threshold or MPU) to
report

12
  • Reporting requirements of
    operators
  • (Article 7 -
    continued)
  • Each Party shall require owners or operators of
    facilities specified
  • in annex I who
  • Release any pollutant specified in annex II in
    quantities exceeding
  • applicable thresholds,
  • Transfer off-site any pollutant in annex II in
    quantities exceeding
  • applicable thresholds,
  • Transfer off-site hazardous waste exceeding 2
    tons per year
  • or other waste exceeding 2,000 tons per year,
    where the Party has
  • opted for waste-specific reporting (as in the
    European Union)
  • Transfer off-site any pollutant specified in
    annex II in waste water
  • destined for waste-water treatment in
    quantities exceeding the applicable
  • threshold

13
Specific reporting elements
  • Name, street address, geographical location and
    activities
  • of the reporting facility
  • Name of the owner or operator and, as
    appropriate, company
  • Name and numerical identifier of each specified
    pollutant
  • Amount of each specified pollutant released to
    the environment,
  • both in aggregate and according to whether
    release is to air, to
  • water, or to land, including underground
    injection
  • either
  • amount of each pollutant transferred off-site
    in the reporting
  • year, distinguishing between amounts for
    disposal and for recovery,
  • and
  • name and address of facility receiving the
    transfer,
  • or
  • amount of waste transferred off-site,
    distinguishing between
  • hazardous waste and other waste, for any
    operations, indicating
  • whether waste is destined for recovery or
    disposal
  • and for transboundary movements of hazardous
    waste,
  • name and address of the recoverer or disposer
    and
  • actual site receiving the transfer

14
Reporting elements(continued)
  • Amount of each specified pollutant in waste
    water transferred off-site
  • Type of methodology used to derive information
    on amounts,
  • indicating whether based on measurement,
    calculation or estimation
  • (M, C, E)
  • Information to include releases and transfers
    from routine and from
  • extraordinary events
  • Owners or operators to be required to collect
    releases and transfers
  • data needed with appropriate frequency, and
    to
  • Records of the data from which the reported
    information was derived
  • must be kept available for the competent
    authorities for 5 years,
  • including description of M, C or E.

15
Quality assessment (Article 10)
  • Owners or operators are to assure the quality of
    the information
  • they report
  • Quality assessment of data duty of the Parties,
    in particular as to
  • completeness consistency
    credibility
  • taking into account guidelines developed by
    the MOP
  • Draft Guidance to implementation of the Protocol
    on PRTRs
  • Penultimate version released 31 July 2006
    available on
  • web sites of UNECE Working Group on PRTRs and
    WGEMA

16
Best Available Information (BAI)
standard(article 9, para. 2)
  • Owners or operators of facilities required to
    ensure the quality
  • of information they report and to use best
    available information
  • Best available information may include
  • monitoring data
  • emission factors
  • mass balance
  • equations
  • indirect monitoring or other calculations
  • engineering judgments, and
  • other methods
  • Nb. EU adopting more stringent guidance on BAI

17
Quality assurance and control
  • Calibration and maintenance of the monitoring
    system
  • Use of recognized quality management systems
  • Periodic checks by an external accredited
    laboratory
  • Certification of instruments and personnel under
  • recognized certification schemes
  • Elements for guidelines on strengthening
    environmental
  • monitoring and reporting by enterprises,
    para 36 (i)
  • (ECE/CEP/AC.10/2006/4)

18
Validation
  • Where appropriate, validation should be done in
    accord
  • with internationally approved methodologies
  • e.g. ISO, European Committee for
    Standardization (CEN)
  • However, in some cases, national or sector
    methodologies
  • may be superior to Internationally-approved
    ones,
  • or such approval may be pending (HOT ISSUE)
  • Validation of data may be more easily achievable
    if
  • responsibility is delegated to local or
    regional authorities
  • or to the regional or local offices of national
    authorities,
  • since they will be closer to the operators and
    are more likely
  • to have an overview of their activities
  • Guidance on validation is evolving

19
Next steps for Protocols future implementation
  • Setting up the Protocols institutional
    architecture
  • rules of procedure and compliance review
    mechanism
  • financial arrangements
  • technical assistance mechanism,
  • international cooperation and reporting
  • International PRTR Coordinating Group
  • SAICM / ICCM etc
  • Completion of technical guidance on
    implementation
  • Further guidance on dissemination of PRTR
    information
  • or data users guide suggested

20
Possible future applications
  • Pan-European Environment and Health Information
    System (Environment-for-Europe Ministerial
    Conference / WHO Europe)
  • Commercial property management information
    systems (due diligence research, e.g.
    Environment Agency of England and Wales)
  • Integration into Global Reporting Initiative,
    Socially Responsible Investment (SRI), and
    evolving ISO standards and OECD guidelines
  • SAICM national performance tracking under ICCM
  • Convergence of regional PRTR systems (North
    American Taking Stock, European PRTR, East Asia?)

21
PRTR success story
  • For the 10-year period from 1988 to 1997,
    atmospheric emissions of some 260 known
    carcinogens and reproductive toxins from the
    United States Toxics Release Inventory reporting
    facilities have been reduced by approximately 85
    in the State of California, and by some 42 in
    the rest of the country (i.e., for all chemicals
    listed in California as known to cause either
    cancer or reproductive toxicity and reported as
    air emissions under TRI ).
  • From P. Sand (2002)

22
MORE INFORMATION AVAILABLE ON THE AARHUS
CONVENTION WEBSITE http//www.unece.org/env/pp/p
rtr Aarhus Clearinghouse http//aarhusclearinghou
se.unece.org
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