The
United Nations Conference on Environment and Development,
Having met at Rio
de Janeiro from 3 to 14 June 1992,
Reaffirming the Declaration
of the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment,
adopted at Stockholm on 16 June 1972, a/ and seeking
to build upon it,
With the goal of establishing
a new and equitable global partnership through the
creation of new levels of cooperation among States,
key sectors of societies and people,
Working towards international
agreements which respect the interests of all and
protect the integrity of the global environmental
and developmental system,
Recognizing the integral
and interdependent nature of the Earth, our home,
Proclaims that:
Principle
1
Human beings are at
the centre of concerns for sustainable development.
They are entitled to a healthy and productive life
in harmony with nature.
Principle
2
States have, in accordance
with the Charter of the United Nations and the principles
of international law, the sovereign right to exploit
their own resources pursuant to their own environmental
and developmental policies, and the responsibility
to ensure that activities within their jurisdiction
or control do not cause damage to the environment
of other States or of areas beyond the limits of national
jurisdiction.
Principle
3
The right to development
must be fulfilled so as to equitably meet developmental
and environmental needs of present and future generations.
Principle
4
In order to achieve
sustainable development, environmental protection
shall constitute an integral part of the development
process and cannot be considered in isolation from
it.
Principle
5
All States and all
people shall cooperate in the essential task of eradicating
poverty as an indispensable requirement for sustainable
development, in order to decrease the disparities
in standards of living and better meet the needs of
the majority of the people of the world.
Principle
6
The special situation
and needs of developing countries, particularly the
least developed and those most environmentally vulnerable,
shall be given special priority. International actions
in the field of environment and development should
also address the interests and needs of all countries.
Principle
7
States shall cooperate
in a spirit of global partnership to conserve, protect
and restore the health and integrity of the Earth's
ecosystem. In view of the different contributions
to global environmental degradation, States have common
but differentiated responsibilities. The developed
countries acknowledge the responsibility that they
bear in the international pursuit of sustainable development
in view of the pressures their societies place on
the global environment and of the technologies and
financial resources they command.
Principle
8
To achieve sustainable
development and a higher quality of life for all people,
States should reduce and eliminate unsustainable patterns
of production and consumption and promote appropriate
demographic policies.
Principle
9
States should cooperate
to strengthen endogenous capacity-building for sustainable
development by improving scientific understanding
through exchanges of scientific and technological
knowledge, and by enhancing the development, adaptation,
diffusion and transfer of technologies, including
new and innovative technologies.
Principle
10
Environmental issues
are best handled with the participation of all concerned
citizens, at the relevant level. At the national level,
each individual shall have appropriate access to information
concerning the environment that is held by public
authorities, including information on hazardous materials
and activities in their communities, and the opportunity
to participate in decision-making processes. States
shall facilitate and encourage public awareness and
participation by making information widely available.
Effective access to judicial and administrative proceedings,
including redress and remedy, shall be provided.
Principle
11
States shall enact
effective environmental legislation. Environmental
standards, management objectives and priorities should
reflect the environmental and developmental context
to which they apply. Standards applied by some countries
may be inappropriate and of unwarranted economic and
social cost to other countries, in particular developing
countries.
Principle
12
States should cooperate
to promote a supportive and open international economic
system that would lead to economic growth and sustainable
development in all countries, to better address the
problems of environmental degradation.
Trade policy measures
for environmental purposes should not constitute a
means of arbitrary or unjustifiable discrimination
or a disguised restriction on international trade.
Unilateral actions to deal with environmental challenges
outside the jurisdiction of the importing country
should be avoided.
Environmental measures
addressing transboundary or global environmental problems
should, as far as possible, be based on an international
consensus.
Principle
13
States shall develop
national law regarding liability and compensation
for the victims of pollution and other environmental
damage. States shall also cooperate in an expeditious
and more determined manner to develop further international
law regarding liability and compensation for adverse
effects of environmental damage caused by activities
within their jurisdiction or control to areas beyond
their jurisdiction.
Principle
14
States should effectively
cooperate to discourage or prevent the relocation
and transfer to other States of any activities and
substances that cause severe environmental degradation
or are found to be harmful to human health.
Principle
15
In order to protect
the environment, the precautionary approach shall
be widely applied by States according to their capabilities.
Where there are threats of serious or irreversible
damage, lack of full scientific certainty shall not
be used as a reason for postponing cost-effective
measures to prevent environmental degradation.
Principle
16
National authorities
should endeavour to promote the internalization of
environmental costs and the use of economic instruments,
taking into account the approach that the polluter
should, in principle, bear the cost of pollution,
with due regard to the public interest and without
distorting international trade and investment.
Principle
17
Environmental impact
assessment, as a national instrument, shall be undertaken
for proposed activities that are likely to have a
significant adverse impact on the environment and
are subject to a decision of a competent national
authority.
Principle
18
States shall immediately
notify other States of any natural disasters or other
emergencies that are likely to produce sudden harmful
effects on the environment of those States. Every
effort shall be made by the international community
to help States so afflicted.
Principle
19
States shall provide
prior and timely notification and relevant information
to potentially affected States on activities that
may have a significant adverse transboundary environmental
effect and shall consult with those States at an early
stage and in good faith.
Principle
20
Women have a vital
role in environmental management and development.
Their full participation is therefore essential to
achieve sustainable development.
Principle
21
The creativity, ideals
and courage of the youth of the world should be mobilized
to forge a global partnership in order to achieve
sustainable development and ensure a better future
for all.
Principle
22
Indigenous people
and their communities and other local communities
have a vital role in environmental management and
development because of their knowledge and traditional
practices. States should recognize and duly support
their identity, culture and interests and enable their
effective participation in the achievement of sustainable
development.
Principle
23
The environment and
natural resources of people under oppression, domination
and occupation shall be protected.
Principle
24
Warfare is inherently
destructive of sustainable development. States shall
therefore respect international law providing protection
for the environment in times of armed conflict and
cooperate in its further development, as necessary.
Principle
25
Peace, development
and environmental protection are interdependent and
indivisible.
Principle
26
States shall resolve
all their environmental disputes peacefully and by
appropriate means in accordance with the Charter of
the United Nations.
Principle
27
States and people
shall cooperate in good faith and in a spirit of partnership
in the fulfilment of the principles embodied in this
Declaration and in the further development of international
law in the field of sustainable development.
Report of the United
Nations Conference on Environment and Development
Rio de Janeiro, June 1992.
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Rio Declaration on Environment and Development
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Principles on forests
Non-legally binding authoritative statement of principles
for a global consensus on the management, conservation
and sustainable development of all types of forests.
Preamble: (a) The subject of forests is related to
the entire range of environmental and development
issues and opportunities, including the right to socio-economic
development on a sustainable basis. (b) The guiding
objective of these principles is to contribute to
the management, conservation and sustainable development
of forests and to provide for their multiple and complementary
functions and uses.
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Convention on Climate Change
Report of the Intergovernamental Negotiating Committee
for a Framework Convention on Climate Change on the
Work of the Second Part of this Fifth Session, held
at New York from 30 april to 9 may 1992.
The report of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee
for a Framework Convention on Climate Change on the
second part of its fifth session will be issued as
document A/AC.237/18 (Part II). This addendum contains
the text of the United Nations Framework Convention
on Climate Change, as agreed upon and adopted by the
Committee on 9 May 1992, in annex I. Resolution INC/1992/1
on interim arrangements, adopted by the Committee
on 9 May 1992, is contained in annex II.
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