Explanatory Memorandum to COM(2013)325 - Signing of the Minamata Convention on Mercury

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dossier COM(2013)325 - Signing of the Minamata Convention on Mercury.
source COM(2013)325 EN
date 31-05-2013


Mercury and most of its compounds are highly toxic to humans, ecosystems and wildlife. This chemical element has therefore been recognised as a substance of global concern by the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) since 2003 1 and is, at EU level, subject to a comprehensive set of control measures under the Community Strategy Concerning Mercury (“the Strategy”) adopted in 2005 2 .

Based on the policy approach defined in the Strategy, the EU has asked since 2005 for the negotiation of a global, legally binding instrument on mercury under the auspices of UNEP. Mercury is persistent and mercury emissions into the air are subject to long-range atmospheric transport, deposition all over the world and accumulation in the food chain, in particular in fish. Measures limited to the geographical area of the EU alone are therefore not sufficient to tackle the global mercury problem.

The agreed overall EU position (Council Conclusions of December 2008) called for a comprehensive mercury instrument, covering actions to reduce the supply of mercury; reduce the demand for mercury in products and processes; reduce international trade in mercury; reduce atmospheric emissions of mercury; achieve environmentally sound management of mercury-containing wastes; find environmentally sound storage solutions for mercury; address remediation of existing contaminated sites; and, increase knowledge. The Council stressed the importance of continuing to participate actively in negotiations on all elements of the future global mercury convention in its Conclusions of June 2012.

By Decision of the Governing Council GC 25/5 in February 2009, UNEP installed an Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC) and gave it a similarly broad mandate for a comprehensive global legally binding instrument on mercury.

Based on this mandate, five INCs were held: INC-1 in Stockholm in June 2010, INC-2 in the town of Chiba, Japan, in January 2011, INC-3 in Nairobi, Kenya, in November 2011, INC-4 from 27 June to 2 July 2012 in Punta del Este, Uruguay, and finally INC-5 in Geneva from 13 to 18 January 2013.

On 14 December 2010, the Council authorised the Commission to participate, on behalf of the EU, as regards matters falling within the Union's competence and in respect of which the Union has adopted rules, in the negotiations on a legally binding instrument on mercury, in consultation with a special committee of representatives of Member States, and in accordance with the negotiating directives set out in the Addendum to this authorisation.

INC-5 came to closure as planned by agreeing to the text of a comprehensive global legally binding instrument to tackle mercury, as the Minamata Convention on Mercury, thereby fulfilling the mandate given by UNEP GC Decision 25/5 to conclude the negotiation process prior to the 27th Regular Session of the UNEP Governing Council (Nairobi, 18-22 February 2013).

The Union was a key driver for the conduct of this negotiating process and took an active part in the outcome which is within the limits of the negotiating directives addressed to the Commission.

The 27th session of the UNEP Governing Council welcomed the completion of the negotiation process and requested the Executive Director to convene a conference of plenipotentiaries for the purpose of adopting the convention and of opening it for signature.

The new convention on mercury will be opened for signature at a Diplomatic Conference to be held in Kumamoto (Japan), 7-11 October 2013. It will be named 'Minamata Convention on Mercury', after the town near Kumamoto where the worst ever case of mercury pollution took place in the years 1950.

The content of the convention on mercury is in line with the overall EU position, as agreed by Council in 2008 and confirmed in 2012.

In view of the above, it is appropriate for a representative of the European Union to sign, subject to subsequent conclusions, the Minamata Convention on Mercury.