Workers
Initiative for Lasting Legacy Takes Forward Fight Against
Climate Change up to Battle for Safer Production and Consumption
of Chemicals
Nairobi, 17 January 2006 – A strategy to replicate over
20 concrete case studies, showcasing chemicals safety in
West Africa, climate change and energy efficiency in European
homes and cyanide pollution in Pacific mines, was agreed
today at an international trade unions meeting.
The decision was among a wide ranging strategy to mainstream
environment and sustainable development within the trade
unions movement adopted at the close of a unique assembly
of organized labour and the United Nations Environment Programme
(UNEP).
The assembly, involving representatives from over 150 trade
unions, underlined that the environment and job security
were mutually supportive.
It has finally put paid to the once popular perception
that conservation and environmental protection is a burden
and threat to employment.
Indeed trade union leaders agreed that the environment
protection represents not only a track to decent, healthy
and long lasting employment but a source of new jobs in
areas from renewable energy up to cleaner production processes.
Klaus Toepfer, UNEP’s Executive Director, said today at
the close of the Assembly: “Trade Unions and their role
in the work place can be a catalyst for positive environmental
change while bearing witness to occupational practices that
have the potential to harm or improve not only workers and
their families but planet Earth as a whole”.
“This Assembly has finally blown away any lingering notions
that environmental protection and job stability and job
creation are contradictions. So I am delighted that we have
finally come together to forge a forward looking road map
for closer cooperation. I am also delighted that Cristina
Narbona, the environment minister of Spain, was able to
be with us and share her experiences of joining hands with
organized labour in the battle against global warming,”
he added.
“I am sure that the many case studies, presented here on
chemicals and climate change up to cleaner production initiatives,
will be taken forward and replicated across the developing
and developed world,” said Mr. Toepfer.
Among the case studies presented was one from Nigeria,
where a campaign has been launched to consign health hazardous,
outdated and obsolete chemicals to the history books. It
should eventually benefit an estimated five million factory
workers along with the wider West African environment.
Another was a joint Norwegian and Russian programme is
educating and training staff at Russian factories in areas
such as health and safety and cleaner production techniques.
Gains are expected to include healthier working conditions
and reduced emissions to land, water and air.
Meanwhile in Germany a project is underway to make 300,000
apartments energy efficient under a renovation scheme. It
should generate 200,000 jobs while cutting greenhouse gas
emissions by two million tonnes.
A further one includes a survey by trade unions of cyanide
pollution linked with mining operations in New Caledonia.
Cristina Narbona said such case studies were vital information
paths able, through replication, to empower workers across
the globe towards a more sustainable world: “Citizens including
trade unions are eager to be more active in areas of social
and environmental responsibility”.
“It is crucial that national governments act to break the
vicious cycle, based often on the lack of information and
the inability to participate, that has restricted the contribution
of these central civil society organizations in our mutual
quest for a more sustainable and just world,” she added.
Trade unions also agreed that environmental rights such
as access to basic resources like water and energy should
stand side by side with more traditional workers rights
such as freedom of association and collective bargaining.
Trade unions also agreed to embrace the targets and timetables
of the 2000 Millennium Development Goals and the Johannesburg
Plan of Implementation which was forged at the 2002 World
Summit on Sustainable Development.
Other agreements, outlined in the Workers’ Initiative for
a Lasting Legacy adopted in Nairobi, Kenya, at the first
Trade Unions’ Assembly on Labour and the Environment, include
action on climate change and promotion of sustainable production
and consumption patterns.
It was also agreed to strengthen cooperation between unions
and organizations like UNEP, the World Health Organization,
the International Labour Organisation and government ministries
including environment, social, labour and health ministries
in order to improve occupational health and safety and achieve
wider environmental goals.
The three day Assembly, held at UNEP’s headquarters with
the support of the UN Global Compact, re-affirmed that decent
and secure jobs are vital for sustainable livelihoods and
that they are only possible in an environmentally healthy
world.
Trade Unions today pledged to work towards government reforms
that recognize environmental rights and to assess, plan
and monitor programmes that deliver safe and environmentally-friendly
industrial, manufacturing and production processes.
Other areas include working for the ratification and implementation
of key treaties that promote important social, economic
and environmental objectives alongside monitoring of governments
so that their purchasing, regulation and land-use policies
meet sound social and environmental targets.
A specific commitment is to work to ensure a complete ban
of asbestos use and its safe disposal as set out in the
Basel Convention on hazardous wastes.
The Workers’ Initiative for a Lasting Legacy or WILL2006
Assembly was organized by UNEP in collaboration with the
International Labour Organization (ILO)and the International
Labour Foundation for Sustainable Development (Sustainlabour).
Notes to Editors
Details and documents for the Trade Unions’ Assembly on
Labour and the Environment http://www.will2006.org/
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