Target
Set for a Global Phase-Out by 2008 Nairobi,
27 December 2005 - A promise made three years ago to rid
Sub-Saharan Africa of leaded petrol has been met.
Today the United Nations Environment
Programme (UNEP) announced that as of 1 January 2006 the
region’s vehicle fuels will be lead-free.
The phase-out, promised at the World
Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) in 2002, means
a healthier world for millions of people across the region.
Lead, a notorious heavy metal, is
linked with a wide range of ailments and ill health including
damage to the brains of babies and young children.
It has been phased out in many parts
of the world already including North America and Europe.
Until a few years ago pretty much all countries in Sub-Saharan
Africa were using leaded petrol.
Klaus Toepfer, Executive Director
of UNEP, said: “This is a real environmental and health
achievement and I pay tribute to all those governments
like, companies and others such as the World Bank who
kept this promise made at WSSD”.
“We also need to work to tackle other
pollutants, promote alternative fuels such as bio-fuels
and hydrogen alongside more efficient and less polluting
vehicles and transportation networks and systems that
are environment and people friendly. Not just in developed
countries but for everyone across the globe,” he added.
Leaded Petrol
The Partnership or PCFV (see notes
to editors of members) was formed at WSSD in 2002 as a
so called Type II partnership with its first aim of phasing
out leaded petrol in sub-Saharan Africa.
It was established to take forward
the Dakar Declaration of 2001 where sub-Saharan African
countries agreed to phase out leaded petrol.
In 2002, only one country of the forty-nine
countries in sub-Saharan Africa-- Sudan—was fully unleaded.
With South Africa to go unleaded on
1 January 2006, all of sub-Saharan Africa will have switched.
In early 2006 the Partnership will
launch a global leaded gasoline phase-out for the rest
of the developing world and economies in transition with
the goal of eliminating leaded petrol world-wide by 2008.
The campaign will be backed up by
workshops and awareness campaigns aimed initially at the
Middle East, the handful of North African countries remaining
and West Asia.
Currently well over 30 countries globally
are still using leaded petrol.
Some of the biggest challenges are
faced in the small and far flung islands of the Pacific
including Micronesia.
Other countries so far without plans
to phase-out lead include Afghanistan, Algeria, Bhutan,
Cambodia, Cuba, Iraq, Laos, Mongolia, Myanmar, North Korea,
Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan.
The Partnership is now focusing its
attention on the very high levels of sulphur found in
fuels in developing countries and economies in transition.
Sulphur
Unlike lead, which was once required
as an additive in engine fuels as an ‘anti knocking’ agent,
sulphur is naturally occurring in petroleum.
In Europe sulphur levels in diesel
vehicle fuels are typically 10 to 50 parts per million.
In many developing countries this can be at levels up
to a 1,000 times higher.
For example most African countries
are currently at 5,000 parts per million with some countries,
in Africa and elsewhere, having even higher sulphur content.
These include the Sudan with a sulphur
content in diesel of 11,000 parts per million; Ethiopia,
Kenya, Iraq, Jordan and Tunisia with sulphur content in
diesel at 10,000 parts per million and Zambia with an
estimated 7,000 parts per million.
Some countries in Latin America, such
as Nicaragua, Panama, Venezuela, Honduras have sulphur
contents currently at 5,000 parts per million.
The Partnership agreed at a meeting
in Nairobi in early December to work towards a long term
target of 50 parts per million for sulphur in diesel and
petrol vehicle fuels. Timetables to meet the target are
to be set nationally and regionally.
Sulphur causes emissions of fine particles
or flecks of soot which have been linked to health problems
including heart attacks in the elderly and vulnerable
groups. It can also damage trees and other biological
systems as a result of the formation of sulphuric acid.
“It is cause for extreme concern.
So I am delighted that the Partnership for Clean Fuels
and Vehicles (PCFV) is now looking at this issue too so
we can end the bipolar world in which developed countries
have cleaner and healthier sulphur levels than developing
countries,” said Mr Toepfer.
The introduction of lead-free petrol
and diesel with reduced sulphur content also allows for
the introduction of emission control technologies on vehicles
including catalytic converters and particle traps.
Notes to Editors
Global and regional maps showing where
leaded petrol is still in use and sulphur levels in diesel
can be found at www.unep.org
on 27 December.
UNEP’s web site on the Partnership
can be found at http://www.unep.org/pcfv
For more Information Please Contact:
Nick Nuttall, UNEP Spokesperson, on Tel: 254 20 623084,
Mobile: 254 733 632755 or E-mail: nick.nuttall@unep.org
If there is no prompt response
please contact Elisabeth Waechter, UNEP Associate Media
Officer, on Tel: 254 20 623088, Mobile: 254 720 173968,
e-mail: elisabeth.waechter@unep.org
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