The Convention on Long-range Transboundary Air Pollution – a 40th Anniversary health-check
It is 40 years since the UNECE published the Convention on Long-range Transboundary Air Pollution (CLRTAP). Although applying the CLRTAP has achieved a great deal, air pollution is still a challenge. Therefore this webinar describes the factors that led to the CLRTAP, its many successes, and why we still need further reductions in emissions.
It is 40 years since the UNECE published the Convention on Long-range Transboundary Air Pollution (CLRTAP). Up until the 1970s, legislators and policy makers typically regarded air pollution as only a local issue. However, a growing body of scientific evidence overwhelmingly shows that air pollution is at least a continental problem, not just local. As a result of this, the CLRTAP was formed, which committed its signatories to significantly reduce emissions of damaging pollutants.
The CLRTAP triggered several international protocols to set targets for emissions reductions of pollutants such as sulphur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide, ammonia, fine particulate-matter, ammonia and persistent organic pollutants (POPs).
Although applying the CLRTAP has achieved a great deal, air pollution is still a challenge. Therefore this webinar describes the factors that led to the CLRTAP, its many successes, and why we still need further reductions in emissions.
Your Speaker
Rick Gould - Senior Air Quality Advisor for the Environment Agency. Rick's main area of work concerns the National Emissions Ceilings Directive, which sprang from the CLRTAP.
Presentations
Slides from webinar - S.Clubb, IEMA Head of Policy and Practice - CLICK HERE
Convention on Long-range Transboundary Air Pollution: A 40-year success story - Rick Gould, Senior Air Quality Advisor for the Environment Agency - CLICK HERE
Focus on the Resources & Waste Strategy for England: Extended Producer Responsibility for Packaging / Consistency in Business Recycling
In this session we provided an overview of the impact on business of recent UK policy proposals connected to extended producer responsibility for packaging and measures to support consistency in business recycling in England. By joining the session attendees will gain case study examples and best practices to replicate in their own organisations.
It is 40 years since the UNECE published the Convention on Long-range Transboundary Air Pollution (CLRTAP). Although applying the CLRTAP has achieved a great deal, air pollution is still a challenge. Therefore this webinar describes the factors that led to the CLRTAP, its many successes, and why we still need further reductions in emissions.
This webinar will give you an overview of the legal controls that currently apply to air quality in England and an overview of the Government’s latest Air Quality Strategy, alongside a summary of recent air quality focused legal cases (including planning cases).
The webinar introduces the progress in developing Low Emission Zone (LEZ) legislation in Scotland via the Transport (Scotland) Bill.
In this session, we’ll discuss the challenge of Air Quality and how we can inspire change for the better.
The Resources & Waste Strategy introduce a shift of focus from site-based reforms to the waste supply chain, to stop the waste getting to the illegal sites in the first place. This includes carriers, brokers, dealers regime reform and duty of care reform, including electronic waste tracking. This webinar explores what has already been done, obtains an overview of these reforms and assesses how these changes could impact industry stakeholders. It is perfect for you if you work in sustainability, environmental management and wish to accelerate more resource effective practices throughout your organisation.
We're all on the move so often, but did you know that only around 3% of drinks packaging is collected for recycling? Looking to overcome this issue, the government published its long-awaited Resources and Waste Strategy for England last December. In this webinar, we’ll discuss the impacts of a deposit return scheme.
Scientists have been aware of the impact of air pollution as far back as the seventeenth century. Now that more of us live in cities, we are closer than ever to pollution sources, and the detrimental impact on the environment and our health has reached crisis point. In this IEMA Book Club, we’ll discuss The Invisible Killer by Gary Fuller.
