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Extraction,
processing, use, recovery/recycling and final disposal of natural
resources have significant environmental effects. Producers, manufacturers
and consumers are only likely to introduce environmentally less
harmful or least-damaging production and consumption methods if
they get the correct incentives, including appropriately priced
natural resources and supportive government regulation. This encourages
resource preservation and discourages squandering of materials
along the processing chain, including material collection and
recovery at the end of product life. The transition to sustainable
natural resource management in commodity producing developing
countries is however complicated by the important role such resources
play as generator of employment, government and export revenue.
Conversely, the rapidly industrializing (developing) countries
generally have material-intensive growth patterns, making such
countries prime consumers and importers of primary and secondary
material.
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Our work aims at conducting
analytical activities and building capacity in developing countries
on the use of suitable regulatory and economic instruments for encouraging
environmentally sound and economically viable management of natural
resources. For the time being, this work focuses on two clusters:
(a) The
use of economic instruments and supportive government regulation
for internalizing environmental costs and benefits in prices of
natural and synthetic rubber and products made thereof. Since
1997, three joint workshops of UNCTAD and the International Rubber
Study Group (IRSG) on the opportunities and constraints for internalizing
environmental costs and benefits in prices of rubber and rubber
goods have been held (in Manchester, UK, in June 1997, in Bali,
Indonesia, in October 1998, and in Vera Cruz, Mexico, in October
1999. Discussions at the workshops have focussed on two issues:
The use
of payments for carbon sequestration services pursuant to the
Kyoto Protocol of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change
for enhancing the competitiveness of natural rubber, encouraging
the use of environmentally friendly production methods and the
preservation of eco-balance and bio-diversity.
The use
of economic and supportive regulatory instruments for enhancing
sustainable management of scrap tyres, including their re-use
and recycling, with particular emphasis on developing countries.
(b) A
series of seminars on the requirements for encouraging environmentally
sound and economically viable management of natural resources,
including secondary material recovered from waste, in rapidly
industrializing (developing) countries. The seminars review material-
and country-specific environmental and economic effects of the
trade restrictions of the Basel Ban Amendment and identify and
analyse distortions affecting the sustainable management of natural
resources and environmentally sound management of waste. Furthermore,
the seminars discuss preventive, pro-active government policies
and the use of economic instruments to reduce economic and social
adjustment costs of the Basel Ban Amendment with a view to reconciling
the developmental needs of the countries and the environmental
objectives of the Basel Convention. The seminars also explore
ways and means of inter-developing country co-operation on suitable
pro-active policy approaches for limiting distortionary effects
and encouraging the use of environmentally sound technologies,
including for the reduction of waste generation.
Related
projects :
Reconciliation
of Environmental and Trade Policies
The
Creation of Multi-stakeholder Advisory Panels on Environmentally
Sound and Economically Viable Management of Secondary Lead in
India and the Philippines
Publications
:
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Proceedings of the
first
(.pdf, 200KB) and second
(.pdf, 342KB)
Joint Workshop of UNCTAD/IRSG on opportunities and constraints
for the internalization of environmental costs and benefits
into the prices of natural and synthetic rubber and products
made thereof
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