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Briefing and Information Documents Climate Change, Clean Technology and Green Growth Opportunities in Africa - Note by the Secretariat
Climate change, as the United Nations Secretary-General has said, is “the defining challenge of our generation”. Its potential consequences for economic and social well-being are so profound that many have preferred to simply avoid imagining the unimaginable. There are, however, numerous solutions that already exist or are in the pipeline, many of which respond to other challenges such as reducing society’s inefficient use of resources, improving food security, health and livelihoods for the world’s poor, providing employment opportunities and even re-energizing a stagnant global economy in a process that is being described as “greening the economy”.
United Nations Environment Programme, African Union, African Ministerial Conference on the Environment (AMCEN) Download:
June 21, 2010 to June 25, 2010 |
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Briefing and Information Documents Rules of Procedure for the Convention for the Protection and Development of the Marine Environment of the Wider Caribbean Region
(Cartagena Convention)
These rules of procedure shall apply to any meeting or conference convened under the auspices of the Convention for the Protection and Development of the Marine Environment of the Wider Caribbean Region.
United Nations Environment Programme, Caribbean Environment Programme Download: English, Spanish, French
May 24, 2010 to May 28, 2010 |
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Briefing and Information Documents Template for National Reporting on the Cartagena Convention and its Protocols
The Convention for the Protection and Development of the Marine Environment of the Wider Caribbean Region, known as the Cartagena Convention, is a legally binding regional agreement for the protection and development of the Wider Caribbean Region. The Convention focuses on land-based sources of pollution, dumping of wastes at sea, pollution from ships, biodiversity protection, and airborne pollution among other things. Within the Convention, three protocols have been developed to deal with these issues: the Oil Spills Protocol; the Specially Protected Areas & Wildlife Protocol (SPAW); and Land-Based Sources and Activities Protocol (LBS).
United Nations Environment Programme, Caribbean Environment Programme Download: English, Spanish, French
October 25, 2012 to October 27, 2012 |