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The
Regional Ozone Network in Europe and Central Asia was created in
2003 with the technical and financial support from the Multilateral
Fund, the Czech Republic, Hungary and the Slovak Republic. It is
now part of UNEP DTIE's OzonAction Compliance Assistance Programme
and includes the following 12 member countries:
Albania, Armenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Georgia, Kyrgyzstan,
Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Moldova, Montenegro, Serbia,
Turkey and Turkmenistan.
The ECA network is a dynamic group of countries spread over three
sub-regions (Caucasus, Balkan, Central Asia). The following Countries
with Economies in Transition (CEIT countries) participate in selected
network activities as part of their GEF-funded institutional strengthening
projects:
Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan.
Several former ECA network countries have already acceded to the
European Union and have been reclassified as Article 2 countries.
Candidate countries include Croatia, Macedonia (FYR) and Turkey
and potential candidate countries Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Montenegro and Serbia.
The network is supported by implementing agencies (UNDP, UNIDO,
World Bank) and bilateral partners (Austria, Czech Republic, European
Commission, Poland, Hungary, Romania, Sweden) as well as the Multilateral
Fund and Ozone Secretariats. Additional partners include the World
Customs Organisation's Regional Intelligence Liaison Office (RILO
CIS), the International Institute of Refrigeration (IIR) as well
as industry, TEAP and TOC experts.
Regional networking provides a regular interactive forum for Ozone
Officers from the region to exchange experiences, develop skills,
and share knowledge and ideas with counterparts from both developing
and developed countries in order to meet compliance, the provisions
of the Montreal Protocol and its amendments. Through regular network
and thematic meetings and on-going dialogues, networking helps ensure
that Ozone Officers have the information, skills and contacts required
for managing national ODS phase-out activities successfully. Specific
compliance assistance is provided to countries with compliance issues.
The ECA network is coordinated by 2 staff based in Paris. Institutional
strengthening and training projects are implemented by the IS/CP/RMP
Officer also based in Paris.
Major achievements of the ECA network concern the high level of
Article 7 and Country Programme data reporting and the ongoing ratification
of the remaining amendments of the Montreal Protocol. All countries
have their ODS legislation and licensing systems in place.
A significant achievement is the participation of four GEF-funded
CEIT countries in the network meetings since 2006, which was made
possible through a co-funding approach. Experts from ECA network
countries also participated in the MeBr training organised in the
GEF-supported CEIT countries. We expect to continue this synergetic
cooperation in future.
Two Sub-regional Green Customs workshops financed by the Government
of Norway and the Czech Republic were organized by UNEP in Georgia
and Uzbekistan. These workshops sensitized customs and enforcement
officers on how important their role is in implementing trade-related
Multilateral Environmental Agreements such as the Montreal Protocol,
CITES and the Rotterdam, Stockholm, Basel Conventions.
The establishment of the framework agreement between RILO CIS and
UNEP will support activities related to regional customs cooperation
and prevention of illegal trade. RILO CIS participates in the ECA
network meetings and compiled cases of illegal trade in ODS in their
member countries. Cooperation with RILO ECE was also initiated.
The ECA network also funded the participation of selected experts
in international conference focusing on innovation in refrigeration
technologies and methyl bromide alternatives.
Information exchange and the implementation of ECA network activities
is supported by the ECA website which receives more than 1000 hits
per months. The site provides up-to-date information on network
activities as well as meeting documents and presentation (http://fr1.estis.net/sites/ecanetwork/).
The evaluation of the ECA network in the context of the CAP evaluation
provides an overall positive assessment highlighting that CAP is
one of the most important instruments to facilitate compliance;
that the ECA network coordinates well with other implementing agencies;
that there is good cooperation and mutual assistance between more
advanced and less advanced countries; and that the involvement of
GEF-supported countries in the ECA network activities is a very
positive aspect.
ECA network brochure Solidarity
& Partnerships 20 Years of the Montreal Protocol
4 Years of the Regional Ozone Network for Europe & Central Asia
- a regional contribution to the celebration of the 20th anniversary
of the Montreal Protocol to highlight the contributions of all stakeholders
and partners to the successful implementation of the Montreal Protocol
in the ECA region and to put a face to the main actors on the stage
and behind the scene. The brochure is in English/Russian and was
launched during MOP 2007 and the Environment for Europe conference.
ECA
network brochure "Solidarity & Partnerships" (English/Russian)
Side event of ECA network during Environment for Europe conference,
Belgrade, Serbia, 10-12 October 2007 organized in cooperation
with UN Economic Commission for Europe and the Government of Serbia
on 20th anniversary of the Montreal Protocol: Contribution
to Climate Change mitigation and to preventing environmental crime.
The side event was facilitated by Mr. Christophe Bouvier, Director
of UNEP's Regional Office for Europe.
Side
event of ECA network during Environment for Europe conference, Serbia,
10-12 October 2007
First regional celebration of 20th Anniversary of Montreal Protocol
during ECA network meeting, Ashgabat, Turkmenistan, 26.2.-2.3.2007
- H. E. Minister Makhtumkuli Akmuradov, Minister of Nature Protection
of Turkmenistan opened the ECA network meeting and the first regional
celebration of the 20th anniversary of the Montreal Protocol which
included mission statements of the participation organizations,
discussions on the future of the Protocol and full media coverage.
ECA
network meeting in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan, 26 February - 2 March
2007
Beside the implementation of the agreed ECA work programme, the
following strategic objectives will be pursued:
- Inter-regional cooperation with UNEP Regional Offices e.g. to
share information on illegal trade issues (iPIC), CD-ROM / web-based
customs training, to review meeting agendas and to recommend resource
persons
- Inter-agency cooperation with bilateral partners and implementing
agencies i.e. during network, thematic and contact group meetings
- Stakeholder cooperation e.g. with Regional Intelligence Liaison
Offices (RILOs) and International Institute of Refrigeration (IIR)
- Thematic & contact group meetings e.g. to review TPMP implementation
or MeBr phase-out projects, to support national stakeholder consultations
and data collection
- Programmatic assistance e.g. to develop electronic tools for issuing
licenses, to comply with plans of action, to up-date legislation,
to improve licensing systems and for special compliance initiatives
- Regional awareness focusing on activities with regional scope
e.g. videos with sub-titles, bilingual booklets, outreach of existing
awareness materials and regional conferences
- Country-to-country assistance e.g. to train new Ozone Officers,
to verify reliability of data, to share lessons learned from project
implementation and to support special compliance initiatives
- High-level missions and letters to ministers in coordination with
all stakeholders involved and on a case-by-case basis e.g. to support
ratification and signing of project documents
- Information exchange with GEF-assisted CEIT countries and joint
activities through co-funding approaches e.g. joint meetings or
- Synergetic cooperation with GEF-supported CEIT countries
- Funding expert participation in international conferences focusing
on innovation in refrigeration technology and methyl bromide alternatives
- Green Customs Initiative activities in the ECA network in coordination
with RILO CIS and RILO ECE
- Supporting the implementation of UNEP climate neutral strategy
e.g. through tree planting, use of electronic conferencing, participation
in Billion Tree campaign and Climate Neutral network
UNEP climate neutral strategy aims:
(1) to reduce the climate footprint of UNEP through adoption of
sustainable management practices
(2) to lead by example and to raise awareness of similar
organizations, of governments, and of the public as a whole
(3) to develop methods, procedures, and approaches that could be
used by others to achieve the same
As part of UNEPs climate neutral strategy, a preliminary
comprehensive GHG inventory was prepared in March 2008 and a verifiable
comprehensive inventory is scheduled for March 2009. It is planned
to off-set UNEPs 2008 carbon footprint through the purchase
of certified emission reductions (CDM Gold Standard). The price
for such emission reductions is fluctuating and currently around
36 USD per ton CO2.
ECA climate-friendly approach to organize regional network meetings
According to UNEPs climate neutral strategy, the ECA network
adopted its climate-friendly approach to organise regional network
meetings from 1 January 2008. The first climate-friendly network
was hold in Tirana, Albania, 25-28 March 2008 aiming to minimize
its carbon footprint while creating awareness on climate change
and testing new approaches such as tree planting.
The following activities have already been implemented in the context
of the ECA network meeting in Tirana, Albania:
1. Off-setting of approximately 44 tons of carbon emissions from
participants travel through purchase of certified emission reductions
(CDM Gold Standard) according to UNEPs carbon neutral strategy.
The resulting costs of approximately 1600 USD correspond to 5% of
the travel costs (tickets & DSA) or 7% of the ticket costs.
2. Commitment of the ECA network towards reducing its carbon footprint
through joining the UNEPs Climate Neutral Network (http://www.climateneutral.unep.org/)
3. Planting of local tree species if their long-time growth can
be ensured and raising awareness through registration of the planted
trees in UNEPs Billion Tree Campaign (www.unep.org/billiontreecampaign/)
4. Electronic dissemination of workshop documents and presentations
as well as up-loading of such documents to the meeting website to
avoid print-outs (http://fr1.estis.net/sites/ecanetwork/)
5. Description of the ECA climate-friendly approach on the home
page of the EAC network to demonstrate commitment and raise awareness
of others (http://fr1.estis.net/sites/ecanetwork/)
6. Sharing of good practices and lessons learned from climate-friendly
meetings with colleagues and friends and through the media with
the general public
Further options will be tested in the context of future meetings:
7. Verification of flight itineraries as proposed by the travel
agency by an independent service (e.g. UNON) to minimize flight
time, travel time and costs
8. Alternative modes of travel e.g. by train or car where meaningful,
feasible, cost efficient and recommended by local UNDP offices
9. Expert presentations via web-, video or phone-conference to avoid
unnecessary travel
10. No or reduced air-conditioning in the meeting and hotel rooms
11. No use of plastic cups and plastic bottles
12. Inclusion of vegetarian food options in the lunch menu
13. Energy / environmental audit of the meeting venue in the margin
of the meeting e.g. using a checklist
Tree-planting experience
During the first climate-friendly meeting of the ECA network, the
Honourable Minister Lufter Xhuveli of the Ministry of Environment,
Forestry and Water Management of Albania, arranged a symbolic tree-planting
event during which participants from 30 different countries planted
70 trees near to the meeting venue Chateau Linza. The intention
of the symbolic tree-planting event was raising awareness on climate
neutral strategies among the participants.
The trees, tools and holes were prepared in advance to the meeting
and therefore the activity took about half an hour. It was well
received by all participants, had some recreational side-effect
and contributed to team-building. The tree-planting was followed
by a group session and a coffee break. The overall time requires
was about 1 hour.
The ECA network has registered these trees in UNEPs Billion
Tree Campaign www.unep.org/billiontreecampaign/) and signed up as
an inter-governmental partner of UNEPs Climate Neutral Network
(http://www.climateneutral.unep.org/)
Photos
from tree planting in Albania, 25-28 March 2008
Montreal Protocol and climate change
Already in the past, the Montreal Protocol contributed significantly
to climate protection by phasing out substances which had contributed
to both ozone-depletion and global warming at the same time. Such
contribution has been found to be 5 10 times more than the
expected contribution by the developed countries under the Kyoto
Protocol during its first commitment period between 2008
2012. This synergetic effect will further be accentuated through
the accelerated phase-out of HCFCs, which was recently decided by
the XIXth Meeting of the Parties.
Please provide any comments and suggestions to:
Mr Halvart Koeppen
Regional Officer for Europe and Central Asia
UNEP DTIE
OzonAction Programme
15 rue Milan
75441 Paris Cedex 09
France
Tel: (33)1443714-32
Fax: (33)1443714-74
Email: halvart.koppen@unep.fr
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