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- The Minamata Convention on Mercury 2013: Treaty Architecture, Implementation Progress, and Persistent Challenges in Protecting Human Health and the Environment from Anthropogenic Emissions & Releases
The Minamata Convention on Mercury is the newest of the major global chemicals treaties. Its stated objective is to protect human health and the environment from anthropogenic emissions and releases of mercury and mercury compounds. This article reviews the origins, legal design, institutional machinery, implementation record, and scientific evidence base of the Convention, and it evaluates how far the treaty has moved the world toward its goal since the text was agreed in January 2013, adopted in Kumamoto in October 2013, and brought into force in August 2017. The review is written as a structured narrative synthesis for students and early career researchers. It draws on recent peer reviewed literature on the global #mercury cycle, on #artisanal_and_small_scale_gold_mining, on #biomonitoring of people and wildlife, and on the phase down of #dental_amalgam and other #mercury_added_products. Three findings stand out. First, the Convention has built an unusually complete life cycle architecture that covers supply, trade, products, industrial processes, emissions to air, releases to water and land, waste, and contaminated sites. Second, measurable environmental improvement has been slow and uneven, because global anthropogenic emissions have not clearly fallen since 2013, because a very large #legacy_mercury reservoir keeps recycling into the atmosphere and oceans, and because the largest single source sector remains informal and difficult to regulate. Third, the treaty's flexible obligations, which helped secure near universal participation, also weaken the pressure on Parties to deliver deep reductions. The article concludes that the credibility of the Convention now depends on strengthening the #effectiveness_evaluation cycle, closing monitoring gaps in the tropics and the Southern Hemisphere, financing a genuine transition to #mercury_free_alternatives in gold mining, and connecting mercury policy to wider agendas in #environmental_governance, #circular_economy thinking, and the #sustainable_development_goals. Keywords: mercury; Minamata Convention; multilateral environmental agreement; methylmercury; artisanal and small scale gold mining; effectiveness evaluation; environmental health; chemicals governance 1. Introduction Few chemical elements have shaped environmental law as directly as #mercury. It is a naturally occurring metal, liquid at room temperature, useful in dozens of industrial and consumer applications, and toxic in every form in which humans commonly encounter it. It does not break down. Once released, it moves through air, water, soil, sediment, and living tissue, and it can return to the atmosphere many times before it is finally buried. A mercury atom emitted from a coal fired boiler in one hemisphere can be deposited on a lake in another, be converted by microbes into #methylmercury, and end up in a fish that a pregnant woman eats years later. That combination of persistence, mobility, and toxicity is why mercury could not be managed by national law alone, and why states negotiated a dedicated global treaty. The #Minamata_Convention on Mercury was agreed by negotiators in Geneva on 19 January 2013, adopted and opened for signature in Kumamoto, Japan, on 10 October 2013, and entered into force on 16 August 2017 after the fiftieth instrument of ratification was deposited. It now has more than 150 Parties, which places it among the most widely joined chemicals agreements in the world. Its Article 1 states the objective in a single sentence: to protect human health and the environment from #anthropogenic_emissions and releases of mercury and mercury compounds. The name of the treaty is not decoration. It is a deliberate reference to the industrial poisoning of Minamata Bay in Japan, where a chemical plant discharged methylmercury for decades and thousands of people were harmed. Naming the Convention after the victims was a way of writing memory into international law. More than a decade has passed since adoption. Enough time has gone by for a serious question to be asked: is the Convention working? The question is harder than it looks. Treaties can be judged on several levels. One can ask whether states have joined and passed the required laws, which is a question about legal compliance. One can ask whether emissions and releases have gone down, which is a question about environmental performance. One can ask whether mercury concentrations in people, fish, birds, and marine mammals are falling, which is a question about outcomes. And one can ask whether the treaty caused any observed change, which is the hardest question of all, because the world would not have stood still without it. This article works through those layers. It is written for university students, graduate researchers, and practitioners who need a single, readable, and technically accurate account of the Convention, its scientific foundations, and the debates that surround it. The article does not assume prior knowledge of international environmental law or of #biogeochemistry. Technical terms are explained when they first appear. The article has four broad aims: To explain what mercury does in the environment and in the human body, because the design of the treaty only makes sense against that background. To describe the legal structure of the Convention article by article, and the institutions that run it. To review the evidence on implementation and on measurable outcomes, using recent peer reviewed studies. To set out the main criticisms, the open scientific questions, and a research agenda for the coming decade. Throughout, the argument is that the Minamata Convention is best understood not as a finished solution but as a slow acting instrument whose real test will arrive in the 2030s, when the delayed effects of today's reductions begin to show up in monitoring data. 2. Method and Scope This paper is a structured narrative review rather than a systematic review. That choice is deliberate. The subject spans #environmental_chemistry, toxicology, public health, economics, and international law, and no single systematic search protocol can capture that spread without either excluding whole disciplines or returning an unmanageable number of records. The literature examined here was identified through searches of major bibliographic databases for peer reviewed work published mainly between 2021 and 2026, using combinations of the terms mercury, Minamata Convention, methylmercury, artisanal and small scale gold mining, mercury emissions, effectiveness evaluation, biomonitoring, and dental amalgam. Priority was given to review articles, global synthesis papers, and modelling studies with international author teams, because these give the broadest and most current picture. Primary treaty documents, including the text and annexes of the Convention and the Secretariat's progress reporting, were used to describe legal obligations accurately. Three limits should be stated openly. First, the review depends on published data, and mercury data are unevenly distributed: the Arctic, North America, Europe, and parts of East Asia are relatively well covered, while much of Africa, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and the tropical Americas are not. Second, the review cannot resolve the causal attribution problem described above, and it does not attempt to. Third, the treaty is a moving target. Decisions of the #Conference_of_the_Parties continue to amend annexes and adjust guidance, so any snapshot of obligations ages quickly. Readers should always verify current obligations against the latest official texts. 3. Historical Background: From Minamata Bay to a Global Treaty 3.1 The disease that named the treaty In the 1930s a chemical company in the coastal town of Minamata, in Kumamoto Prefecture, Japan, began producing acetaldehyde using a mercury catalyst. Waste water containing methylmercury was discharged into Minamata Bay. Local families ate fish and shellfish from that bay every day. By the early 1950s cats in the town were behaving strangely, staggering and convulsing. In 1956 the first human cases were formally reported: numbness in the hands and feet, difficulty walking, slurred speech, narrowing of the visual field, hearing loss, and in severe cases convulsions and death. Children who had been exposed before birth were born with profound neurological damage even though their mothers had shown few symptoms. This was the discovery that the placenta does not protect the fetus from methylmercury. It concentrates it. The pollution continued for years after the cause was suspected, and the process of official recognition, compensation, and cleanup stretched across decades. A second outbreak occurred at Niigata in the 1960s from a similar industrial source. #Minamata_disease became one of the defining environmental health disasters of the twentieth century, and one of the clearest examples of how scientific uncertainty, industrial interests, and slow institutional response can combine to prolong harm. Other episodes reinforced the lesson. In Iraq in the early 1970s, grain treated with a methylmercury fungicide and intended for planting was instead ground into flour and baked into bread. Thousands were poisoned. Later, long term cohort studies in the Faroe Islands and the Seychelles examined populations that eat large amounts of fish and marine mammals, and produced much of the epidemiological evidence on which modern exposure guidelines are built. The picture that emerged is consistent with what was seen at Minamata but at lower doses: methylmercury is above all a developmental neurotoxicant, and the developing brain is the most sensitive target (Basu et al., 2023). 3.2 The road to negotiation Global regulatory interest in mercury built slowly. Regional agreements in Europe and North America addressed heavy metals in air. Trade controls emerged in the European Union and the United States. But mercury is a global pollutant, and unilateral action produces leakage: a plant that closes in one country can be replaced by a plant somewhere else, and mercury banned from one product can be exported as raw material for another. The United Nations Environment Programme published its first Global Mercury Assessment in 2002 and concluded that there was sufficient evidence of significant global adverse effects to justify international action. A voluntary partnership approach followed. It was useful but plainly insufficient. In 2009 the Governing Council of the United Nations Environment Programme decided to develop a legally binding instrument, and an Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee met five times between 2010 and 2013. The negotiations were unusually fast for a treaty of this scope. They were also unusually difficult, because mercury touches energy, mining, health care, artisanal livelihoods, and heavy industry all at once. The bargain that emerged is visible in the final text. Rich countries obtained a comprehensive life cycle instrument that covers supply, trade, products, processes, emissions, releases, waste, and contaminated land. Developing countries obtained flexibility, exemptions, long transition periods, and commitments on #capacity_building, #technology_transfer, and finance. Countries with large artisanal gold sectors obtained an approach based on national planning rather than prohibition. The result is a treaty with wide coverage and, in many places, soft edges. 4. Mercury as a Global Pollutant: The Science Behind the Law 4.1 Forms of mercury Mercury exists in three broad chemical categories, and the differences matter enormously for policy. Elemental mercury, written as Hg zero, is the shiny liquid metal. It evaporates at room temperature and its vapour is readily absorbed through the lungs. It has a long atmospheric residence time, on the order of several months to about a year, which is precisely why mercury is a global rather than a local pollutant. This is the form that travels between continents. Inorganic mercury compounds, in which mercury is bound to elements such as chlorine or sulphur, are found in many industrial waste streams, in some skin creams, and in mercury bearing minerals. They are less mobile in the atmosphere and tend to deposit closer to their source. Organic mercury compounds, above all methylmercury, are formed mostly by microorganisms in oxygen poor sediments, wetlands, flooded soils, and parts of the ocean water column. Methylmercury is the form that #bioaccumulation and #biomagnification concentrate in food webs. It binds to proteins, crosses the blood brain barrier and the placenta, and is eliminated slowly. The policy consequence is that emission controls act on elemental and inorganic mercury, but the harm to people and wildlife is delivered mostly as methylmercury, after a series of environmental transformations that no treaty can regulate directly. That gap between the point of control and the point of harm is one of the central difficulties in evaluating the Convention. 4.2 Sources and the global budget Mercury enters the environment from natural processes such as volcanic activity, weathering of rock, and forest fires. It also enters from human activity. And it re enters continuously through re emission of mercury that was deposited earlier, which is neither purely natural nor purely new. Human sources fall into two families. The first is intentional use, where mercury is deliberately employed for its properties: in #artisanal_and_small_scale_gold_mining, in the #chlor_alkali industry, in the production of #vinyl_chloride_monomer, in measuring devices, lamps, batteries, cosmetics, and in #dental_amalgam. The second is unintentional release, where mercury is present as a trace contaminant in raw materials and is liberated when those materials are burned or processed: #coal_combustion in power plants and industrial boilers, smelting and roasting of non ferrous metals such as lead, zinc, copper, and industrial gold, cement clinker production, waste incineration, and oil and gas refining. Global assessments have consistently identified artisanal and small scale gold mining as the largest single source of anthropogenic emissions to air, followed by stationary combustion of coal, with metal production and cement each contributing a further meaningful share. Total anthropogenic emissions to air have been estimated in the region of two thousand tonnes per year in recent inventories, with releases to water and land adding further large and poorly constrained quantities (Keane et al., 2023). Recent inventory work has sharpened this picture in an uncomfortable way. Qiu et al. (2025) reconstructed anthropogenic mercury emissions from 1960 to 2021 at high spatial and temporal resolution and found that global emissions rose by roughly three hundred and thirty per cent across that period. Declines in the industrialised economies of the Global North since the 1990s, and in China since the 2010s, have been completely offset by rapid growth in the #global_south, with the result that global emissions have continued to rise slightly since 2013. By 2021, Global South countries accounted for around two thirds of global emissions while representing about one fifth of the global economy. Under business as usual assumptions, the authors project that emissions could rise by a further ten to fifty per cent by 2030. For a treaty whose objective is to reduce anthropogenic emissions and releases, that is a sobering benchmark. 4.3 Legacy mercury and the problem of delay Even if every new emission stopped tomorrow, mercury concentrations in the environment would not fall to pre industrial levels for a very long time. Centuries of mining, burning, and dumping have loaded the surface ocean, soils, and vegetation with mercury that is continuously re emitted to the air and re deposited. This is the #legacy_mercury reservoir, and it acts as a buffer that delays and dampens the benefits of emission cuts. Modelling has quantified this. Zhang and colleagues (2023) produced an updated global mercury budget from a coupled atmosphere, land, and ocean model and found substantially larger re emission fluxes than earlier estimates, with the effect that primary emission reductions are partially buffered by the recycling of previously deposited mercury. Geyman et al. (2025) synthesised past, present, and projected future emissions and releases in a geochemical box model and showed the scale of the historical loading: the cumulative anthropogenic total over the past five centuries is on the order of one and a half teragrams, while a high growth, fossil fuel intensive future pathway would add a comparable or larger amount between 2010 and 2300. A sustainable development pathway, by contrast, would add substantially less than the historical total. Three practical conclusions follow, and they should be kept in mind through the rest of this article. First, delay is expensive in a way that is easy to underestimate. Every year in which emissions stay high adds to a reservoir that will keep releasing mercury long after the source is closed. Second, the environmental response to the Convention will be slow, spatially uneven, and partly masked. Local ecosystems near a closed point source may recover within years. Open ocean fish may take many decades to respond. Expecting a clean global downward signal in mercury concentrations within a decade of a treaty entering into force is not scientifically realistic. Third, and most awkwardly for policy, the absence of a rapid improvement is not by itself evidence that the treaty has failed. It may equally be evidence that the treaty is working against a very large inherited burden. 4.4 Exposure and health effects The World Health Organization lists mercury among its top ten chemicals of major public health concern. Human exposure occurs through several distinct pathways, and different groups are exposed in different ways (Basu et al., 2023). For most people worldwide, the dominant pathway is dietary, through consumption of fish and other seafood containing methylmercury. In some inland regions, rice grown on mercury contaminated soils is also a significant pathway. Exposure levels therefore track diet, and populations that rely heavily on fish and marine mammals, including many #Indigenous_Peoples in the Arctic and in Amazonian and other tropical river basins, can carry body burdens far above the global average even though they contribute almost nothing to the pollution. For miners and their families, the dominant pathway is inhalation of mercury vapour during the burning of gold and mercury amalgam. This is #occupational_exposure of a particularly severe kind, because it often takes place in homes, in unventilated rooms, and in the presence of children. For some populations, consumer products are the key route. Bastiansz et al. (2022) conducted a systematic review of mercury exposure from #skin_lightening_products and documented creams sold in many countries with mercury content far above legal limits, along with elevated mercury levels in users and, in some cases, in members of their households. Dental amalgam contributes a low level, chronic exposure to elemental mercury vapour in people who carry amalgam fillings. The health effects follow the form and the dose. Methylmercury is above all a developmental neurotoxicant: prenatal exposure is associated with deficits in attention, memory, language, visual spatial processing, and fine motor function, and epidemiological work in the Faroe Islands, the Seychelles, the Arctic, and the Amazon has been central to establishing this. Evidence has also accumulated for cardiovascular and immune effects. Elemental mercury vapour, at occupational doses, produces tremor, insomnia, memory loss, emotional instability, and kidney damage. Inorganic mercury targets the kidneys. Two points are worth emphasising for students. The first is that there is no clearly established threshold below which prenatal methylmercury exposure is certainly harmless, which is why guidance focuses on reducing exposure in women of childbearing age and young children. The second is that #risk_communication about fish is genuinely difficult, because fish is also one of the most nutritious and culturally important foods on earth, and blunt advice to eat less fish can do more harm than good, especially in food insecure populations. Good mercury policy has to reduce the contaminant rather than simply warn people away from the food. 5. The Architecture of the Convention The Convention has thirty five articles and five annexes. It is structured around the life cycle of mercury, and it is easiest to learn in that order. 5.1 Objective, definitions, and scope Article 1 sets the objective: to protect #human_health and the environment from anthropogenic emissions and releases of mercury and mercury compounds. Article 2 defines key terms, including the important distinction between emissions, meaning releases to the atmosphere, and releases, meaning discharges to land and water. Article 2 also defines artisanal and small scale gold mining as gold mining conducted by individual miners or small enterprises with limited capital investment and production. 5.2 Supply and trade Article 3 addresses the tap. It prohibits new #primary_mercury_mining, that is, mining undertaken for the purpose of producing mercury itself. Existing primary mercury mining must be phased out within fifteen years of the Convention entering into force for that Party. Parties are required to identify domestic stocks and supply sources above a defined threshold, and to take steps to ensure that mercury from decommissioned chlor alkali plants is disposed of and does not re enter the market. Article 3 also builds a #supply_and_trade control system based on prior informed consent. A Party may only export mercury with the written consent of the importing Party, and imports are only permitted for a use allowed under the Convention or for environmentally sound interim storage. In practice this creates a paper trail. In practice it is also porous, because mercury is compact, valuable, easy to conceal, and moves through informal channels into artisanal mining regions. Illegal trade in mercury has been a recurring concern at the Conference of the Parties, and it is an area where enforcement capacity is often weakest exactly where the demand is highest. 5.3 Mercury added products Article 4, read together with Annex A, deals with #mercury_added_products. Annex A Part I lists products subject to phase out, with a general deadline of 2020 for the original list. That list includes most mercury containing batteries, certain switches and relays, a range of compact and linear fluorescent lamps, cold cathode and external electrode fluorescent lamps, cosmetics containing more than one part per million of mercury including skin lightening creams, mercury based pesticides and biocides, and non electronic measuring devices such as thermometers and barometers. The Conference of the Parties has power to amend Annex A, and it has used it. Amendments adopted at the fourth and fifth meetings added further categories of lamps and other products and set new phase out dates in the mid 2020s. The direction of travel is clear: the list gets longer and the dates get earlier. Annex A Part II is the exception. It covers dental amalgam, and it prescribes a #phase_down rather than a phase out. Parties must take at least two measures from a menu that includes setting national objectives on caries prevention and health promotion, promoting cost effective mercury free alternatives, promoting research into such alternatives, discouraging insurance policies that favour amalgam over alternatives, encouraging professional organisations and dental schools to educate practitioners in alternatives, and restricting the use of amalgam in its bulk form and in the primary teeth of children and in pregnant and breastfeeding women. The 2023 amendments tightened several of these obligations. The dental amalgam case is instructive because it shows the Convention negotiating between two legitimate public health goods. Amalgam is durable, cheap, technique tolerant, and in many low and middle income settings it is the only restorative material that works reliably in wet field conditions with limited equipment. Removing it too fast, without alternatives and without prevention, risks more untreated caries and more extractions. Kisumbi et al. (2025a) reviewed the global status of the phase down and found progress uneven, with alternatives available but not always affordable, and with dental curricula and professional readiness lagging behind policy. A companion survey of dentists in Kenya found significant gaps in awareness of the Convention and its dental provisions among practitioners who are supposed to be implementing them (Kisumbi et al., 2025b). This is a general lesson: a treaty obligation is only as strong as the professional knowledge of the people at the point of delivery. #public_awareness is not a soft add on; it is part of the delivery mechanism. 5.4 Manufacturing processes Article 5 and Annex B address industrial processes that use mercury. Annex B Part I lists processes to be phased out: chlor alkali production using mercury cells, by 2025, and acetaldehyde production using mercury as a catalyst, by 2018. This last item is a direct legal echo of the Minamata disaster itself, since acetaldehyde production with a mercury catalyst was the process at the Chisso plant. Annex B Part II lists processes to be restricted rather than eliminated, including vinyl chloride monomer production using mercury catalysts, sodium or potassium methylate or ethylate production, and polyurethane production using mercury containing catalysts. Parties must reduce use, emissions, and releases, and must not allow new facilities using these processes. Decisions taken in 2023 tightened controls on several of these categories, with polyurethane and methylate or ethylate production among the processes brought forward for prohibition in the mid 2020s. Vinyl chloride monomer production remains the largest remaining industrial demand for mercury in the world, concentrated in a small number of countries, and its future is one of the most consequential open questions in the treaty. 5.5 Artisanal and small scale gold mining Article 7 and Annex C address #ASGM, and this is where the Convention is most tested. The obligation is structured as follows. A Party that has artisanal and small scale gold mining and processing using mercury amalgamation within its territory must take steps to reduce and, where feasible, eliminate the use of mercury. If that Party determines that such mining is more than insignificant, it must notify the Secretariat and develop and implement a #national_action_plan within three years, and review it every three years. Annex C sets out what the plan must contain: national objectives and reduction targets, steps to eliminate the worst practices, steps to formalise or regulate the sector, baseline estimates of mercury use, strategies to promote mercury reduction and mercury free techniques, strategies to manage trade and prevent diversion of mercury into the sector, strategies to involve stakeholders, a public health strategy including gathering health data and training health workers, strategies to prevent exposure of vulnerable populations especially children and women of childbearing age, strategies to inform miners, and a schedule for implementation. The worst practices identified in the Convention are: whole ore amalgamation, in which mercury is mixed with the entire crushed ore rather than with a concentrate; open burning of amalgam or processed amalgam; burning amalgam in residential areas; and cyanide leaching in sediment, ore, or tailings to which mercury has been added without first removing the mercury. Each of these is both wasteful of mercury and acutely dangerous to health. The scale of the sector is the core of the problem. Recent reviews place artisanal and small scale gold mining in more than eighty countries, with somewhere between fifteen and twenty million miners directly involved, including four to five million women, and with tens of millions more people dependent on the sector for livelihood (Keane et al., 2023; Dossou Etui et al., 2024). It supplies a substantial share of the world's gold. It is largely informal, often unregistered, sometimes illegal, and frequently located in remote areas beyond the practical reach of environmental inspectors. It is also, for the people in it, a rational economic choice in the absence of alternatives. Schwartz et al. (2023) examined how national action plans quantify mercury use and found wide methodological variation, with implications for the credibility of baselines and therefore of any claimed reduction. If the baseline is uncertain by a factor of two, a reported thirty per cent reduction means very little. Aldous et al. (2024) applied theories of change to the sector and argued that interventions succeed only when they address the whole system at once: technology, finance, gold buying chains, land tenure, law enforcement, and health services. Isolated interventions, such as distributing retorts that capture mercury vapour without changing the economics of the gold trade, tend to fail once the project funding ends. #formalization is the mechanism the Convention leans on, but formalization is genuinely difficult. It requires licensing systems that small miners can actually afford and navigate, access to legal gold markets at fair prices, access to credit for mercury free equipment, and a state presence that miners have reason to trust rather than avoid. Where those conditions are absent, formalization on paper simply pushes activity further underground. Lara-Rodriguez et al. (2023) framed the challenge through the lens of the sustainable development goals and argued that mercury elimination in artisanal mining cannot be separated from poverty, decent work, gender equality, and access to finance. The environmental objective and the development objective are the same objective. 5.6 Emissions to air Article 8 and Annex D address emissions from major point sources. Annex D lists five categories: coal fired power plants, coal fired industrial boilers, smelting and roasting processes used in the production of non ferrous metals such as lead, zinc, copper, and industrial gold, waste incineration facilities, and cement clinker production facilities. The obligations differ for new and existing sources. For new sources, Parties must require the use of #best_available_techniques and #best_environmental_practices to control and, where feasible, reduce emissions, within five years of the Convention entering into force for that Party. For existing sources, Parties must include in their national plan one or more of a menu of measures: a quantified goal for controlling emissions, #emission_limit_values, best available techniques and best environmental practices, a multi pollutant control strategy that delivers co benefits for mercury, or alternative measures to reduce emissions from relevant sources. This is a flexible obligation, and it was drafted that way to bring large emitting economies into the treaty. The strength of the approach is that mercury control in the power sector often comes free with controls for other pollutants: flue gas desulphurisation systems, particulate control devices, and selective catalytic reduction all capture mercury to varying degrees. A country decarbonising its electricity system or tightening its air quality law will reduce mercury as a co benefit whether or not it is thinking about mercury at all. The weakness is that the Convention sets no numerical global target, no binding emission limit, and no deadline for aggregate reduction. It requires Parties to have a plan, not to achieve a number. 5.7 Releases to land and water Article 9 covers releases to land and water from point sources not already addressed elsewhere in the Convention. It requires Parties to identify relevant source categories and to take measures to control releases. In practice this article has been the least developed part of the treaty, partly because inventories of aquatic and terrestrial releases are far weaker than atmospheric inventories, and partly because releases to water are dominated by exactly the sources that are hardest to regulate, including artisanal mining tailings and inadequately managed waste. 5.8 Storage, waste, and contaminated sites Article 10 addresses environmentally sound interim storage of mercury other than waste mercury. Article 11 addresses #mercury_waste, drawing on the definitions and machinery of the Basel Convention on hazardous wastes and requiring environmentally sound management and restrictions on recovery of mercury for uses that the Convention has banned. Article 12 addresses #contaminated_sites, requiring Parties to endeavour to develop strategies for identifying and assessing sites contaminated by mercury and providing that any remediation be conducted in an environmentally sound way. The language of Article 12 is weak. Parties must endeavour. There is no mandatory inventory, no cleanup deadline, and no liability regime. Given that contaminated sites are the physical legacy of exactly the industries the treaty regulates, and given that they can be significant ongoing sources of methylmercury to local food webs, this is one of the clearest gaps in the treaty's architecture. 5.9 Finance, capacity, and compliance Article 13 establishes the financial mechanism, which comprises the Global Environment Facility Trust Fund and a #Specific_International_Programme to support capacity building and technical assistance. Article 14 covers capacity building, technical assistance, and technology transfer, with particular attention to developing country Parties and Parties with economies in transition. Article 15 establishes the Implementation and Compliance Committee. The compliance committee is facilitative rather than punitive. It exists to help Parties that are having difficulty meeting their obligations, not to sanction them. It can be triggered by a Party's own submission about itself, by written submissions from a Party about another Party, or on the basis of national reports. There is no penalty regime, no trade sanction, and no dispute settlement mechanism with teeth. This is common in modern multilateral environmental agreements and it reflects a considered judgement that cooperation produces better results than confrontation when the underlying problem is often incapacity rather than bad faith. Whether that judgement is correct in the mercury case is contested. 5.10 Health, information, research, and reporting Article 16 addresses #health aspects. It encourages Parties to promote the development and implementation of strategies to identify and protect populations at risk, to promote science based educational and preventive programmes on occupational exposure, to promote appropriate health care services for prevention, treatment, and care for populations affected by mercury exposure, and to establish and strengthen institutional and health professional capacities. The word encourages matters. Article 16 is hortatory, not mandatory. The health provisions of a health treaty are among its softest. This has been criticised, and defenders respond that health systems are a domestic competence and that the World Health Organization, not the Convention, is the appropriate institution for health service delivery. The result nonetheless is that the article most directly connected to the treaty's stated objective imposes the fewest hard duties. Article 17 covers information exchange, Article 18 covers #public_awareness, information, and education, and Article 19 covers #research_and_monitoring, including modelling, monitoring of mercury levels in vulnerable populations and in environmental media, and assessment of the impacts of mercury on human health and the environment. Article 20 provides that Parties may develop and execute implementation plans. Article 21 requires each Party to report to the Conference of the Parties, through the Secretariat, on the measures it has taken to implement the Convention, on the effectiveness of those measures, and on possible challenges in meeting the objectives of the Convention. #reporting is on a fixed cycle, with short national reports at more frequent intervals and fuller reports less often. National reports are the raw material of any assessment of implementation, and their quality varies considerably. Article 22 requires the Conference of the Parties to evaluate the effectiveness of the Convention periodically, beginning no later than six years after entry into force, on the basis of available scientific, environmental, technical, financial, and economic information. This article is discussed in detail in section 7. 6. Institutional Machinery 6.1 The Conference of the Parties The Conference of the Parties is the supreme decision making body. It adopts amendments to annexes, issues guidance, approves the budget, and reviews implementation. Its meetings have been held roughly every two years. The first was held in Geneva in 2017, shortly after entry into force. Subsequent meetings have progressively filled in the operational detail that the treaty text left open: guidance on best available techniques and best environmental practices, guidance on national action plans for artisanal mining, guidance on interim storage, thresholds for mercury waste, and the framework for effectiveness evaluation. The fifth meeting, held in 2023, coincided with the tenth anniversary of the Convention's adoption and had a distinctly reflective character. Parties reviewed a decade of work, adopted further amendments to the product and process annexes, considered the financial mechanism, and advanced the first effectiveness evaluation. Delegations from Africa and Asia and the Pacific pressed for stronger and more predictable financing for developing countries, a theme that recurs at every meeting. 6.2 The Secretariat The Secretariat, based in Geneva, services the Conference of the Parties, collects and publishes national reports, coordinates technical work, and supports Parties in implementation. It is small relative to the scope of the treaty and its core budget is modest by the standards of global institutions, which shapes what it can realistically do. It publishes regular progress reporting on the state of implementation (Secretariat of the Minamata Convention on Mercury, 2025). 6.3 Scientific and technical bodies The Convention has developed scientific advisory arrangements to support effectiveness evaluation, including an open ended scientific group tasked with assessing monitoring data and trends. It also draws on the wider mercury science community, on regional monitoring networks, and on the Global Mercury Partnership, which brings together governments, industry, non governmental organisations, and researchers in thematic partnership areas covering artisanal mining, coal combustion, products, waste, supply and storage, and fate and transport. This #policy_science_interface is one of the more successful features of the mercury regime. Mercury science is a relatively small and well connected international field, and the same researchers who publish the global assessments frequently participate in the technical work of the Convention. The advantage is fast transfer of knowledge. The risk, which should be acknowledged, is a narrow evidence base and limited independent challenge. 6.4 Financing The financial mechanism has two arms. The #Global_Environment_Facility provides project finance to eligible countries for enabling activities such as initial assessments, national action plans, and inventories, as well as for larger investment projects. The Specific International Programme provides smaller, targeted support for institutional strengthening. Two structural problems recur. The first is quantum: the sums available are small relative to the cost of transforming an entire artisanal mining sector or retrofitting a national coal fleet. The second is sequencing: enabling activities such as inventories and plans are relatively well funded, but the implementation of those plans, which is where the money is actually needed, is not. A country can complete an excellent national action plan and then find no financing to execute it. That pattern, documented across many chemicals and waste agreements, produces a large stock of plans and a small stock of change. 7. Effectiveness Evaluation: How Do We Know If It Is Working? 7.1 The legal requirement Article 22 requires periodic evaluation of the Convention's effectiveness. The first evaluation was to begin no later than 2023. The evaluation must be based on available scientific, environmental, technical, financial, and economic information, including monitoring data on mercury levels in the environment and in vulnerable human populations, national reports, and information on implementation. 7.2 What effectiveness means There is a hierarchy of indicators, and confusing them is the most common error in student work on this topic. Output indicators measure what the treaty machinery produces: number of Parties, number of national reports submitted, number of national action plans completed, number of laws passed, number of exemptions registered. Outcome indicators measure what Parties actually do: quantity of mercury traded, number of chlor alkali plants converted, tonnes of mercury use avoided in artisanal mining, emissions reported from point sources, mercury added products withdrawn from the market. Impact indicators measure the state of the world: mercury concentrations in air, in precipitation, in water, in sediment, in fish, in birds, in marine mammals, and in human blood, hair, and urine. A treaty can score well on outputs and poorly on impacts, and in the short term that is exactly what one should expect, because of the legacy problem described in section 4.3. A rigorous evaluation therefore needs all three levels plus a causal argument connecting them. 7.3 Environmental monitoring Monitoring is the backbone of the impact assessment, and here the picture is mixed. Atmospheric monitoring of gaseous elemental mercury and of mercury in precipitation is well established in North America, Europe, and parts of East Asia, with long time series that allow trend detection. Coverage in the tropics, in Africa, in South Asia, and across much of the Southern Hemisphere is far thinner. Since the Southern Hemisphere contains a large and growing share of emissions, and since the tropics contain most artisanal gold mining, this is not a minor gap. It is a gap precisely where the action is. Biotic monitoring has advanced considerably. Evers et al. (2024) compiled the Global Biotic Mercury Synthesis database, drawing on more than five hundred and fifty thousand data points from the peer reviewed literature, and used it to describe mercury concentrations in the taxa named in the Convention, namely fish, sea turtles, birds, and marine mammals. The authors argue that existing biomonitoring programmes can be integrated into a coherent global framework capable of detecting spatial gradients and temporal trends, provided sample sizes and methods are harmonised. This is the most concrete proposal yet for turning Article 22 into a measurable exercise, and it also reveals the scale of the data deficit: coverage is dense in some regions and absent in others, and comparability across studies is often poor. Human #biomonitoring is the third pillar. Mercury in hair reflects methylmercury exposure from diet over recent months. Mercury in urine reflects exposure to elemental and inorganic mercury, including from amalgam and from mining. Mercury in cord blood reflects prenatal exposure. Coordinated human biomonitoring can therefore detect exactly the exposures the treaty targets. Basu et al. (2023) review this evidence and note that most people worldwide carry some mercury burden, that certain groups carry much higher burdens, and that tracking the Convention's effectiveness requires deliberate attention to that variation rather than reliance on global averages that hide it. 7.4 What the evidence currently shows Several conclusions can be drawn with reasonable confidence. Trade and supply controls appear to have had real effects. Primary mercury mining has declined and the legal international mercury trade has become more visible and more constrained. Illegal flows persist. Product phase outs have worked reasonably well where alternatives existed and where regulatory capacity was adequate. Mercury thermometers, mercury batteries, and mercury switches have largely disappeared from formal markets in many countries. Fluorescent lighting is being displaced by light emitting diodes for reasons that have little to do with the Convention but which serve its purposes. Mercury in cosmetics is a partial success at best, since illegal skin lightening creams continue to circulate through informal and online markets (Bastiansz et al., 2022). Dental amalgam use is falling in many countries, driven by a combination of the Convention, improved preventive dentistry, patient preference, and better composite materials, though the pace and the readiness of dental systems vary widely (Kisumbi et al., 2025a). Industrial process conversion has proceeded, with mercury cell chlor alkali capacity largely eliminated in Europe and reduced elsewhere. Vinyl chloride monomer production using mercury catalysts remains the major unresolved industrial demand. Emissions to air have not clearly fallen at the global level. This is the most important negative finding, and it comes from the inventory work discussed earlier. Qiu et al. (2025) find that global anthropogenic emissions have continued to rise slightly since 2013, with reductions in some regions offset by growth in others. Whatever else the Convention has achieved, it has not yet bent the global emissions curve downward. Environmental concentrations show regional declines in some well monitored areas, particularly in the North Atlantic and parts of North America and Europe, consistent with earlier regional emission reductions. There is no clear global downward trend, and modelling suggests that re emission of legacy mercury will continue to buffer the response for decades (Zhang et al., 2023; Geyman et al., 2025). The honest summary is that the Convention has succeeded in building institutions and in changing intentional uses, and has not yet succeeded in reducing total anthropogenic mercury flowing into the environment. 8. Critical Analysis: The Strengths and Weaknesses of the Design 8.1 Strengths Life cycle coverage. The Convention regulates mercury from the mine to the waste dump. Few chemicals agreements are as complete. This makes leakage between stages harder, at least in principle. Near universal participation. More than one hundred and fifty Parties, including the largest emitters, gives the treaty legitimacy and reach. A stricter treaty with forty Parties would very likely have achieved less. A functioning science policy interface. The Convention is closely coupled to an active research community, and the design of effectiveness evaluation around monitoring data is a genuine innovation among chemicals treaties. Explicit attention to the informal sector. By addressing artisanal and small scale gold mining directly in a dedicated article, the Convention acknowledged a source that a purely industrial treaty would have ignored. It also placed public health strategy inside an environmental instrument, which is unusual. Adaptive annexes. The ability of the Conference of the Parties to amend the product and process annexes means the treaty can tighten over time without renegotiation, and it has done so. 8.2 Weaknesses No numerical targets. There is no global reduction target, no national allocation, no timetable for aggregate emission cuts. Compare this with the Montreal Protocol, which specified phase out schedules for named substances with dated percentage reductions, and which is generally regarded as the most successful environmental treaty ever concluded. The Minamata Convention's flexibility bought participation at the price of ambition, and the emissions data suggest the price was real. Soft obligations on emissions. Article 8's menu approach for existing sources allows a Party to satisfy its obligation by adopting a plan without necessarily reducing anything. Best available techniques are defined with regard to economic and technical considerations, which gives wide national discretion. Soft obligations on health. Article 16 encourages rather than requires. For a treaty named after a disease, this is a striking asymmetry. Weak treatment of contaminated sites. Article 12 asks Parties to endeavour to develop strategies. There is no obligation to inventory, remediate, or fund. Facilitative compliance only. There is no meaningful consequence for a Party that simply does not implement. Financing shortfall. The gap between the resources available and the cost of transition, particularly in the artisanal mining sector, is very large, and it is the single most frequent complaint from developing country Parties. Baseline and data quality. If mercury use in artisanal mining is uncertain by a wide margin, then reductions cannot be verified (Schwartz et al., 2023). Without credible baselines, effectiveness evaluation risks measuring reporting behaviour rather than reality. 8.3 The equity dimension The distribution of mercury harms and mercury benefits is deeply unequal, and any serious analysis has to say so plainly. Historically, most anthropogenic mercury was emitted by the industrialised economies of Europe, North America, and later East Asia, during periods of coal driven growth. That mercury is now in the global reservoir and it circulates everywhere. Today the largest emitting sector is artisanal gold mining, concentrated in low income countries and undertaken by people with very few alternatives, producing gold that is largely consumed as jewellery and investment in wealthier markets. Meanwhile the populations with the highest measured exposures include Arctic Indigenous communities who eat marine mammals and fish and who emit essentially nothing, and Amazonian riverine and Indigenous communities living downstream of gold mining. Their diets are being contaminated by an industrial history and a global gold market in which they have no meaningful voice. This is why #vulnerable_populations appear so prominently in the Convention's text and why the Conference of the Parties has repeatedly returned to the participation of Indigenous Peoples and local communities. It is also why a purely technical framing of the mercury problem is inadequate. Mercury policy is distributive policy. Any transition that removes mercury from artisanal mining without providing miners with a viable livelihood will either fail or will simply transfer harm. 8.4 Interaction with climate and other environmental change Mercury does not sit in a sealed compartment. Its cycle is coupled to climate and land use in ways that are only partly understood, and #climate_change complicates the Convention's task in at least four ways. Thawing permafrost holds large quantities of mercury bound in frozen organic soils, and warming may mobilise some of it into Arctic rivers and the ocean. Warming waters can alter methylation rates and change the structure of food webs, which affects how much methylmercury accumulates in the fish that people eat, independently of how much mercury is present. More frequent and more intense wildfires re emit mercury stored in vegetation and soils. Decarbonisation of the power sector, by contrast, is a powerful and underappreciated mercury control measure. Closing coal plants removes a major emission source without any mercury specific regulation at all. The practical implication is that the Convention's success depends partly on policies made entirely outside it. That is not a criticism of the treaty. It is an argument for treating mercury as one thread in an integrated approach to pollution, climate, and biodiversity, rather than as a self contained problem. 9. Comparison with Other Multilateral Environmental Agreements Placing the Convention in context helps to explain both its design and its limits. The Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer is the benchmark for success. It worked because the number of controlled substances was small, the producers were few and identifiable, technically and economically viable substitutes existed or could be developed quickly, the science was unusually clear, and the treaty combined dated phase out schedules with a dedicated multilateral fund and trade restrictions against non Parties. Mercury has almost none of those features. Its sources are diffuse, its largest sector is informal, substitution is uneven, and no single industry can be persuaded to switch. The Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants is a closer relative. It also regulates persistent, bioaccumulative, long range transported substances, also uses annexes that can be amended, also relies on national implementation plans, and also depends on the Global Environment Facility. Its global monitoring plan, which tracks concentrations in air and human milk, is a direct model for the Minamata effectiveness evaluation. The Stockholm experience also carries a warning: chemicals can be listed for elimination and nonetheless continue to circulate through stockpiles, waste, and exemptions for many years. The Basel Convention on hazardous waste supplies the operational definitions and controls that Minamata's Article 11 relies on for mercury waste, which is a good example of treaty to treaty borrowing that avoids duplication. The Rotterdam Convention on prior informed consent for hazardous chemicals in international trade provides the conceptual template for Minamata's trade provisions. Read together, these four agreements form the core of the international chemicals and waste regime, and there has been a long running effort to make them work more closely together. For a student, the useful generalisation is this: treaties that regulate a small number of substances produced by a small number of firms can use hard schedules and succeed quickly. Treaties that regulate a substance embedded in millions of livelihoods and thousands of processes must be flexible, and flexibility slows them down. The Minamata Convention is an instrument of the second kind, and it should be judged as one, without lowering the standard of judgement. 10. What Would Make the Convention Work Better? The following priorities emerge from the literature reviewed here. They are presented as arguments, not as settled conclusions, and students are encouraged to contest them. Close the monitoring gap where the emissions are. Trend detection requires long, consistent time series. The Southern Hemisphere and the tropics have neither. Investment in monitoring stations, in harmonised biotic sampling, and in human biomonitoring in artisanal mining regions and in Indigenous communities would transform the evidence base for effectiveness evaluation (Evers et al., 2024; Basu et al., 2023). Fix the baselines in artisanal mining. Reduction claims are meaningless without credible starting points. Standardising the methods used to quantify mercury use in national action plans is a technical fix with large political consequences (Schwartz et al., 2023). Finance the transition rather than the paperwork. Enabling activities are funded; implementation is not. Mercury free processing technologies exist, including gravity concentration combined with direct smelting, borax based methods, and controlled cyanidation in properly engineered facilities, but they require capital, training, and access to markets. The systemic view taken by Aldous et al. (2024) suggests that partial interventions predictably fail. Connect gold buyers to mercury reduction. The demand side of the gold chain is concentrated in refiners, banks, jewellers, and technology firms. Supply chain due diligence and traceability, if applied seriously to artisanal gold, could create commercial pressure for mercury free production that no environment ministry can generate on its own. Treat health as an obligation, not an encouragement. Strengthening Article 16 in practice, through guidance, indicators, and financing for health system capacity in exposed communities, would align the treaty's operation with its name. Give contaminated sites a real regime. An obligation to inventory and to prioritise sites, with technical guidance and finance, would address a permanent source term that current provisions barely touch. Prepare for the emissions plateau. If global emissions do not fall by the end of this decade, the Convention will face a legitimacy problem. The Conference of the Parties should consider whether some form of quantified collective target, even an indicative one, is now necessary, and should study how the co benefits of climate and air quality policy can be counted and encouraged within the mercury regime. 11. A Research Agenda for Students For readers who intend to work on this subject, the following questions are open, tractable, and important. How large is the artisanal and small scale gold mining sector really, and how much mercury does it use? This is a measurement problem with enormous policy leverage. Remote sensing, gold trade statistics, and field surveys can all contribute. What actually changes miner behaviour? There is an evidence gap on the effectiveness of interventions. Well designed evaluations, including randomised or quasi experimental designs where ethical, would be extremely valuable. How quickly do fish respond to reduced mercury inputs? Ecosystem scale studies and long time series can constrain the lag between emission reduction and exposure reduction, which is central to any evaluation of the Convention. How do climate driven changes in temperature, hydrology, fire, and permafrost alter mercury cycling? This is the biggest scientific uncertainty in projecting future exposure. What is the true burden of disease from mercury, and how is it distributed? Better exposure data, especially in the tropics, would improve estimates that currently rest on limited cohorts. Does the Convention change national behaviour? Comparative legal and political analysis, using national reports, legislative records, and interviews, could test whether ratification is followed by real regulatory change or by symbolic compliance. How does mercury policy interact with the gold market, with informal economies, and with organised crime? This is a political economy question, and it is badly under researched relative to its importance. 12. Conclusion The Minamata Convention on Mercury is a serious, comprehensive, and widely supported treaty. It regulates the entire life cycle of a global pollutant. It has built institutions, generated national plans, driven mercury out of many products and several industrial processes, tightened international trade, and created the beginnings of a global monitoring system. It has done all of this in barely a decade, which by the standards of international environmental law is quick. It has not yet reduced global anthropogenic mercury emissions. The most careful recent inventory work indicates that emissions have continued to rise slightly since 2013, as reductions in some regions have been cancelled out by growth in others, and that the largest single sector, artisanal and small scale gold mining, has proved extremely resistant to control. Behind this sits an even harder fact: a vast legacy reservoir of previously emitted mercury will continue to recycle through air, land, and ocean for centuries, buffering the benefits of whatever reductions are achieved and delaying the moment when improvement becomes visible in fish, in wildlife, and in people. Two readings of this situation are possible, and both are defensible. The pessimistic reading is that the Convention's flexibility, adopted to secure participation, has left it without the leverage to force reductions, and that a treaty which cannot bend the emissions curve is a treaty that manages a problem rather than solving it. The optimistic reading is that the Convention was always going to be a slow instrument, that the intentional use provisions are working, that the monitoring and evaluation machinery is only now becoming operational, and that the decisive period is the decade ahead rather than the decade behind. What both readings share is a clear implication. The credibility of the Minamata Convention will be decided by whether the artisanal gold mining transition is financed and delivered, whether monitoring is extended to the regions where mercury is actually being emitted, and whether the effectiveness evaluation cycle is used honestly, including when it produces uncomfortable answers. Protecting #human_health and the environment from anthropogenic emissions and releases of mercury is a promise written into Article 1. Keeping that promise now depends less on the text of the treaty and more on what its Parties are willing to pay for and to enforce. Author Statement and Limitations This article is a narrative review prepared for educational purposes. It does not report new empirical data. Interpretations of treaty obligations are provided for teaching and should not be treated as legal advice; readers should consult the official text of the Convention and the decisions of the Conference of the Parties for authoritative wording. Obligations, annexes, and phase out dates are amended periodically, and readers should verify current requirements against official sources. Numerical estimates of emissions, mercury use, and population figures carry substantial uncertainty, which the cited sources discuss in detail. References Aldous, A. R., Tear, T., and Fernandez, L. E. (2024). The global challenge of reducing mercury contamination from artisanal and small-scale gold mining (ASGM): evaluating solutions using generic theories of change. Ecotoxicology, 33(4-5). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10646-024-02741-3 Bastiansz, A., Ewald, J., Rodriguez Saldana, V., Santa-Rios, A., and Basu, N. (2022). A systematic review of mercury exposures from skin-lightening products. Environmental Health Perspectives, 130(11), 116002. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP10808 Basu, N., Bastiansz, A., Dorea, J. G., Fujimura, M., Horvat, M., Shroff, E., Weihe, P., and Zastenskaya, I. (2023). Our evolved understanding of the human health risks of mercury. Ambio, 52(5), 877-896. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13280-023-01831-6 Dossou Etui, I. M., Stylo, M., Davis, K., Evers, D., Slaveykova, V. I., Wood, C., and Burton, M. E. H. (2024). Artisanal and small-scale gold mining and biodiversity: a global literature review. Ecotoxicology, 33(4-5), 484-504. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10646-024-02748-w Evers, D. C., Ackerman, J. T., Akerblom, S., Bally, D., Basu, N., Bishop, K., Bodin, N., Braaten, H. F. V., Burton, M. E. H., Bustamante, P., Chen, C., Chetelat, J., Christian, L., Dietz, R., Drevnick, P., Eagles-Smith, C., Fernandez, L. E., Hammerschlag, N., Harmelin-Vivien, M., Harte, A., Krummel, E. M., Lailson Brito, J., Medina, G., Barrios Rodriguez, C. A., Stenhouse, I., Sunderland, E., Takeuchi, A., Tear, T., Vega, C., Wilson, S., and Wu, P. (2024). Global mercury concentrations in biota: their use as a basis for a global biomonitoring framework. Ecotoxicology, 33(4-5), 325-396. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10646-024-02747-x Geyman, B. M., Streets, D. G., Olson, C. I., Thackray, C. P., Olson, C. L., Schaefer, K., Krabbenhoft, D. P., and Sunderland, E. M. (2025). Cumulative anthropogenic impacts of past and future emissions and releases on the global mercury cycle. Environmental Science and Technology, 59(17), 8578-8590. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.4c13434 Keane, S., Bernaudat, L., Davis, K. J., Stylo, M., Mutemeri, N., Singo, P., Twala, P., Mutemeri, I., Nakafeero, A., and Dossou Etui, I. (2023). Mercury and artisanal and small-scale gold mining: review of global use estimates and considerations for promoting mercury-free alternatives. Ambio, 52(5), 833-852. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13280-023-01843-2 Kisumbi, B. K., Osiro, O. A., Gathece, L. W., and Maina, S. W. (2025a). Dental amalgam phase-down: status, alternatives, strategies and preparedness for implementation: a review. International Journal of Dentistry, 2025, 6688410. https://doi.org/10.1155/ijod/6688410 Kisumbi, B. K., Gathece, L. W., Osiro, O. A., and Maina, S. W. (2025b). Knowledge on the Minamata Convention on Mercury and dental amalgam phase down, availability and selection of mercury-free restorative materials among dentists in Kenya: a cross-sectional study. Pan African Medical Journal, 52, 1. https://doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2025.52.1.44453 Lara-Rodriguez, J. S., Nunez-Cacho, P., Molina-Moreno, V., and Corpas-Iglesias, F. A. (2023). How does eliminating mercury from artisanal and small-scale gold mining lead to achieving sustainable development goals? Natural Resources Forum, 47(2), 214-228. https://doi.org/10.1111/1477-8947.12279 Qiu, X., Liu, M., Zhang, Y., Zhang, Q., Lin, H., Cai, X., Li, J., Dai, R., Zheng, S., Wang, J., Zhu, Y., Shen, H., Shen, G., Wang, X., and Tao, S. (2025). Declines in anthropogenic mercury emissions in the Global North and China offset by the Global South. Nature Communications, 16, 1179. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-56274-2 Schwartz, M., Smits, K., and Phelan, T. (2023). Quantifying mercury use in artisanal and small-scale gold mining for the Minamata Convention on Mercury's national action plans: approaches and policy implications. Environmental Science and Policy. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsci.2022.12.002 Secretariat of the Minamata Convention on Mercury. (2025). Minamata Convention on Mercury: Progress Report 2024. Geneva: Secretariat of the Minamata Convention on Mercury. Selin, H., and Selin, N. E. (2020). Mercury Stories: Understanding Sustainability through a Volatile Element. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. United Nations Environment Programme. (2024). Minamata Convention on Mercury: Text and Annexes, 2024 edition. Geneva: United Nations Environment Programme. Zhang, Y., Zhang, P., Song, Z., Chen, L., Chang, X., Xie, H., and Wang, X. (2023). An updated global mercury budget from a coupled atmosphere-land-ocean model: 40 per cent more re-emissions buffer the effect of primary emission reductions. One Earth, 6(3), 316-325. #MinamataConvention2013 #MercuryTreaty #StopMercuryPollution #MercuryFreeFuture #GlobalMercuryGovernance #HgPollution #ToxicMetals #EnvironmentalHealth #ChemicalSafety #PlanetaryHealth #MinamataCOP #MercuryScience #ASGMReform #MercuryAndHealth #EnvironmentalLaw
- Conserving Wildlife That Knows No Borders: A Legal, Institutional and Scientific Analysis of the Bonn Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (1979)
Animals that move across national frontiers cannot be protected by any single state acting alone. A crane that breeds in Siberia, rests in Central Asia and winters in South Asia is protected only as well as the weakest link in that chain. The Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals, adopted in Bonn on 23 June 1979 and in force since 1 November 1983, is the only global treaty built specifically around this problem. This article offers a structured, student oriented but scholarly examination of the Convention, usually called CMS or the #Bonn_Convention. It sets out the ecological logic of animal movement, traces the treaty's origins in the Stockholm Conference of 1972, dissects its legal architecture (Appendix I strict protection, Appendix II cooperative agreements, and the Article IV family of daughter instruments), describes its institutions, and evaluates its record. The analysis draws on the Convention text, the decisions of the Conference of the Parties up to and including COP15 held in Campo Grande, Brazil, in March 2026, the first State of the World's Migratory Species report of 2024, its 2026 interim update, and the wider peer reviewed literature on #migration_ecology and international wildlife law. The evidence is sobering. Although the treaty family has grown steadily, and although individual recoveries such as the saiga antelope and the scimitar horned oryx show that reversal is possible, the share of CMS listed species with declining populations rose from 44 per cent in 2024 to 49 per cent in 2026, and the share threatened with extinction rose from 22 to 24 per cent. The article argues that the Convention's central weakness is not its text but the gap between listing and delivery: the absence of several of the world's largest range states, chronic underfunding, weak compliance machinery, and the mismatch between site based protection and species that depend on entire corridors. It concludes with a set of reforms centred on #ecological_connectivity, mandatory corridor level impact assessment, flyway scale financing, and the integration of CMS targets into national biodiversity plans under the Kunming Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework. Keywords: migratory species; international wildlife law; Bonn Convention; ecological connectivity; conservation status; flyways; transboundary governance; biodiversity treaties 1. Introduction Every year, billions of animals move. Arctic terns fly from pole to pole. Humpback whales swim from polar feeding grounds to tropical breeding lagoons. Wildebeest tread the same grass circuits across the Serengeti and Mara. Monarch butterflies cross a continent over several generations, so that no individual insect completes the round trip its lineage began. Bar tailed godwits fly without landing for more than a week. These journeys are among the most remarkable phenomena in biology, and they are also among the most fragile, because they depend on many places at once. This dependence creates a governance problem that ordinary conservation law cannot solve. A national park is a fixed thing. A migratory animal is not. A country may spend heavily on protecting a breeding colony and still watch the population collapse because a stopover wetland two thousand kilometres away was drained, or because a fishing fleet in international waters set hooks where the birds feed, or because a fence was built across a corridor that a herd had used for ten thousand years. Conservation biologists describe this as the weakest link property of #migratory_networks: the survival of the population is set by the worst conditions anywhere along the route, not by the average. International law responded to this problem in 1979. Meeting in the then West German capital, delegates adopted the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals. The treaty is commonly known by the city where it was signed. It entered into force on 1 November 1983, and it is administered by the United Nations Environment Programme, with a Secretariat based in Bonn. Its purpose is deceptively simple. It asks the states that lie along the route of a migratory animal, which the Convention calls #Range_States, to act together, because separately they cannot succeed. By the time of the fifteenth meeting of the Conference of the Parties in March 2026, the Convention had 133 Parties, roughly two thirds of the world's sovereign states, with Germany continuing as depositary. The Convention has generated a family of subsidiary instruments covering waterbirds, cetaceans, albatrosses, bats, gorillas, sharks, marine turtles, dugongs, raptors, antelopes and more. It has produced action plans, guidelines on light pollution, decisions on deep seabed mining, and joint programmes with other treaties. Judged by institutional output, it is a busy and creative regime. Judged by ecological outcome, the picture is far less encouraging. The first comprehensive assessment of the treaty's subject matter, the State of the World's Migratory Species report published at COP14 in Samarkand in February 2024, examined the 1,189 species then listed in the Appendices. It found that 44 per cent had declining populations, that 22 per cent were threatened with extinction, and that nearly all listed fish, 97 per cent, faced extinction risk. An interim update released before COP15 in 2026 found that matters had worsened: 49 per cent of listed species populations were declining and 24 per cent faced extinction. Migratory fish populations had fallen by roughly 90 per cent on average since the 1970s. This article asks how a treaty with such a clear diagnosis and such an elaborate institutional apparatus can preside over such poor results, and what could be done differently. It is written for students of environmental law, conservation science, international relations and public policy. It uses plain language, but it follows the structure and evidentiary standards of a peer reviewed journal article. Technical terms are explained where they first appear. The argument advanced here is that the Bonn Convention is best understood not as a failure but as an incomplete instrument. Its normative content is sound. Its coverage, its financing, its compliance mechanisms and its relationship to the sectors that actually kill migratory animals, namely fisheries, energy, agriculture and transport infrastructure, are not. Improvement therefore lies less in redrafting the treaty than in closing the distance between what Parties promise in Appendix I and what they permit in their own economic planning. 2. Aim, Objectives and Research Questions The aim of this article is to provide a comprehensive and critical account of the Bonn Convention as a legal and scientific instrument, and to assess its effectiveness in conserving migratory species across their entire ranges. Five objectives follow from this aim. First, to explain the ecological foundations of animal migration and why these foundations generate a distinctive legal problem. Second, to reconstruct the historical origins of the Convention and the negotiating choices embedded in its text. Third, to analyse the Convention's legal architecture, including the obligations arising under Appendix I and Appendix II and the character of the daughter instruments concluded under Article IV. Fourth, to evaluate implementation, using both institutional evidence from Conference of the Parties decisions and biological evidence from status assessments and the peer reviewed literature. Fifth, to identify reforms that would improve outcomes, and to locate those reforms within the wider architecture of global #biodiversity_governance. The article is guided by four research questions. What legal obligations does the Convention actually impose, and how strong are they? How has the treaty evolved through its subsidiary agreements and the practice of its Conference of the Parties? What does the available evidence say about whether listed species are doing better than unlisted ones? And what structural changes would most plausibly improve the conservation status of migratory species over the next decade? 3. Methodology This study uses a qualitative, doctrinal and interdisciplinary method. It is not an empirical study in the statistical sense; it does not generate new population data. It synthesises three bodies of material. The first body of material is primary legal material. This includes the text of the Convention itself, particularly Articles I to V, which contain the definitions, the fundamental principles, the Appendix I obligations, the Appendix II framework and the guidelines for concluding agreements. It also includes the texts of the daughter agreements, and the resolutions and decisions of the Conference of the Parties. Resolutions are not binding in the formal sense, but in practice they constitute the working law of the regime, and any serious analysis must treat them as such. The second body of material is institutional and assessment literature. This includes the State of the World's Migratory Species report prepared for the Convention by the United Nations Environment Programme World Conservation Monitoring Centre and released in 2024, its interim update released before COP15 in 2026, the Red List assessments of the International Union for Conservation of Nature, and reporting on the outcomes of COP14 in Samarkand and COP15 in Campo Grande. The third body of material is the peer reviewed scientific and legal literature on migration ecology, #connectivity_conservation, bycatch, illegal killing, infrastructure impacts and treaty effectiveness. The analytical approach combines doctrinal legal analysis, which asks what the rules require, with an effectiveness framework drawn from the study of international environmental regimes, which asks three separate questions: whether states comply with what they agreed, whether the agreement changes behaviour that would otherwise have occurred, and whether the environmental problem itself improves. These three questions can have different answers. A regime can enjoy high compliance and still fail ecologically, if what was agreed was too weak or too narrow. This distinction is central to the argument developed below. The main limitation of the method is that attributing biological outcomes to a legal instrument is extremely difficult. Migratory species are affected by climate, agriculture, fisheries, disease and land use, most of which lie outside the treaty's direct reach. Where causal claims are made in this article, they are made cautiously, and counterfactual reasoning is flagged as such. 4. The Ecological Foundations: Why Migration Is a Governance Problem 4.1 What migration is Migration, in the biological sense, is a persistent, directed movement of individuals between separate areas used at different stages of the life cycle. It is not random wandering, and it is not simply dispersal. It is a repeated, often seasonal, strategy that allows animals to exploit resources which are abundant in one place at one time and absent at another. Migration is astonishingly diverse in form. It may be latitudinal, as when waders travel from Arctic breeding grounds to tropical mudflats. It may be altitudinal, as when ungulates climb mountains in summer and descend in winter. It may be longitudinal, as with some raptors. It may be nomadic and rainfall driven, as with many arid zone species. It may span a single lifetime, or, as in the monarch butterfly, several generations. The legal definition in the Convention is narrower and more practical than the biological one. A #migratory_species, for the purposes of the treaty, is a species or lower taxon of wild animals a significant proportion of whose members cyclically and predictably cross one or more national jurisdictional boundaries. Three elements matter: the movement must be cyclical, it must be predictable, and it must cross a border. An animal that ranges widely but stays inside one country is outside the Convention's core scope, however endangered it may be. 4.2 Why migratory animals are unusually vulnerable Several features of migration make migratory species disproportionately exposed to human pressure. They depend on multiple, spatially separated habitats. A population needs a breeding site, one or more stopover or staging sites, and a non breeding site. The loss of any one of these can undo the protection of the others. Stopover sites are particularly critical because they are used at very high densities: a single intertidal flat may host a large fraction of an entire flyway population for a few weeks each year, which means a single act of reclamation can affect a species across a hemisphere. They are concentrated in space and time. Concentration is efficient for the animal but catastrophic when it meets a hazard, whether a hunting network, a badly sited wind farm, a poisoned carcass, or a line of pylons. They cross jurisdictions with radically different levels of capacity and political will. Enforcement that is exemplary in one country may be non existent in the next. They are exposed to the open ocean and to other areas beyond national jurisdiction, where responsibility is diffuse and monitoring is weak. Seabirds and pelagic sharks spend much of their lives in waters no state owns. They are sensitive to timing. Migration is cued by day length, temperature and food availability. Climate change shifts the timing of plant growth and insect emergence, but not necessarily the cues that trigger departure, producing what ecologists call phenological mismatch: the animal arrives after the peak of food, and breeding success falls. 4.3 Why migratory animals matter There is a strong instrumental case for conservation, quite apart from the ethical one. Migratory animals move energy and nutrients across ecosystems. Salmon returning upstream carry marine nitrogen into forests. Seabirds fertilise islands. Whales that feed at depth and defecate at the surface support plankton growth. Migratory birds and bats consume enormous quantities of insects, including crop pests, and pollinate plants across vast distances. Migratory ungulates shape grasslands through grazing and trampling, influencing fire regimes and carbon storage. When migration collapses, these functions do not simply shrink; they can disappear abruptly, because migration is often a threshold phenomenon that ceases entirely once numbers fall below a critical mass. Migration is also a cultural and economic asset. Wildlife tourism built on migratory spectacles supports rural economies. Coastal and inland communities have hunted, harvested and celebrated migrations for millennia, and many indigenous knowledge systems are organised around them. The important conceptual point, and one the Convention grasped early, is that #animal_migration itself, as a phenomenon, can be endangered even when the species is not. A species may persist as scattered resident populations while its great journeys vanish. Conservation that counts only individuals will miss this loss entirely. 5. Historical Origins and Drafting 5.1 The Stockholm impulse The Convention's origins lie in the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment, held in Stockholm in 1972. The Action Plan adopted at Stockholm recommended that governments consider an international convention on migratory species, and the recommendation was taken forward by the Federal Republic of Germany, which hosted the negotiations. The 1970s were a fertile decade for wildlife treaties: the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands was concluded in 1971, the World Heritage Convention in 1972, and the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species in 1973. Each of these addressed a different slice of the problem. Ramsar protected wetland sites. The World Heritage Convention protected outstanding places. CITES regulated international trade. None of them addressed the movement of animals as such. A migratory bird could be traded legally, live in a wetland that was not listed, and still be exterminated by habitat loss at a single unprotected stopover. The Bonn Convention was designed to fill exactly this gap, and it is best understood as one member of a complementary set rather than as a stand alone regime. 5.2 The negotiating problem and the two Appendix solution The negotiators faced a dilemma familiar to all international lawmaking. Strong, precise, binding obligations produce good law but few ratifications. Weak, flexible obligations attract broad membership but achieve little. The solution adopted in 1979 was to split the difference by creating two tiers, and this remains the treaty's defining feature. For species in real danger of extinction, listed in Appendix I, the Convention imposes relatively hard obligations directly on the Parties, including a prohibition on taking. For species that are not necessarily on the brink but that would benefit from coordinated management, listed in Appendix II, the Convention does not impose substantive obligations at all. Instead it creates a duty to try: Parties that are Range States should endeavour to conclude further agreements tailored to the species concerned. This design is often described as a #framework_convention with a built in engine for producing more law. Whether the engine has run fast enough is one of the central questions of this article. 6. Legal Architecture 6.1 Key definitions and the concept of favourable conservation status The definitions in Article I do real analytical work. A Range State is any state that exercises jurisdiction over any part of the range of a migratory species, or a state whose flag vessels take that species outside national jurisdictional limits. The second half of that definition is important and often overlooked: it captures distant water fishing nations whose vessels kill migratory animals far from their own coasts. Taking is defined broadly to include taking, hunting, fishing, capturing, harassing, deliberate killing and attempting any of these. This breadth matters, because harassment and disturbance can be as damaging to a breeding colony as shooting. Conservation status is the sum of the influences acting on the species that may affect its long term distribution and abundance. The status is #favourable_conservation_status when four conditions hold together: population dynamics data indicate that the species is maintaining itself on a long term basis as a viable component of its ecosystem; the range is neither currently being reduced nor likely to be reduced on a long term basis; there is, and will be in the foreseeable future, sufficient habitat to maintain the population on a long term basis; and the distribution and abundance of the species approach historic coverage and levels to the extent that potentially suitable ecosystems exist and are consistent with wise wildlife management. That fourth condition is remarkable and radical. It sets the benchmark not at mere survival but at something close to historic abundance. Very few migratory species anywhere in the world meet it. If taken seriously, it converts the treaty from a rescue instrument into a restoration instrument. In practice, it has been used more as an aspiration than as a legal test, but it remains available to any Party or scientific body willing to invoke it. 6.2 Fundamental principles: Article II Article II sets out the general commitments. Parties acknowledge the importance of migratory species being conserved and of Range States agreeing to take action to this end whenever possible and appropriate. They pay special attention to species with unfavourable conservation status and take individually or in cooperation appropriate and necessary steps to conserve such species and their habitat. They acknowledge the need to take action to avoid any migratory species becoming endangered. Article II also contains a preventive orientation, which anticipates the later development of the #precautionary_principle in international environmental law. The instruction to act before species become endangered is, in principle, a mandate to protect common species while they are still common. This is one of the treaty's most underused provisions. The 2024 status report showed why it matters: a large share of Appendix II listed birds are currently assessed as Least Concern, yet around a third of them are declining. Waiting until they qualify as threatened is precisely the failure mode Article II warns against. 6.3 Appendix I: endangered migratory species Appendix I lists migratory species that are endangered, meaning in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of their range. As of the 2026 interim assessment, Appendix I contained 188 species, comprising 28 terrestrial mammals, 23 aquatic mammals, 103 birds, eight reptiles and 26 fish. For these species, Article III imposes obligations on Parties that are Range States. They shall endeavour to conserve and, where feasible and appropriate, restore habitats of importance in removing the species from danger of extinction. They shall endeavour to prevent, remove, compensate for or minimise the adverse effects of activities or obstacles that seriously impede or prevent the migration of the species. This is the textual hook for everything the regime has later done on barriers, fences, dams, power lines and shipping lanes. They shall, to the extent feasible and appropriate, prevent, reduce or control factors that are endangering or are likely to further endanger the species, including strictly controlling the introduction of, or controlling or eliminating, already introduced exotic species. Most concretely, Parties that are Range States of an Appendix I species shall prohibit the taking of animals belonging to that species. This is a hard prohibition, not a duty to endeavour, and it is the sharpest edge of the whole Convention. The prohibition admits four exceptions. Taking may be allowed if it is for scientific purposes; if it is for the purpose of enhancing the propagation or survival of the affected species; if it is to accommodate the needs of traditional subsistence users of the species; or if extraordinary circumstances so require. Crucially, any such exception must be precise as to content and limited in space and time, and such taking should not operate to the disadvantage of the species. Parties must inform the Secretariat as soon as possible of any exception made. The exception regime deserves careful reading, because it is the point where the treaty is most often stretched. The requirement that an exception be precise, bounded in time and space, and not disadvantageous to the species is demanding. A blanket, open ended national hunting authorisation for an Appendix I species would not satisfy it. In practice, monitoring of exceptions has been uneven, and the reporting obligation has not always been observed. 6.4 Appendix II: species requiring cooperation Appendix II lists migratory species that have an unfavourable conservation status and that require international agreements for their conservation and management, and also species whose conservation status would significantly benefit from the international cooperation that could be achieved by an international agreement. The obligation here, in Article IV, is procedural rather than substantive. Range State Parties shall endeavour to conclude agreements where these would benefit the species, giving priority to those species with an unfavourable conservation status. Article IV also allows Parties to conclude agreements for any population or geographically separate part of any species whose members periodically cross national boundaries, which means the treaty's cooperative machinery can extend beyond the strict Appendix listings. Listing a species in Appendix II therefore does not, by itself, protect it. It is an invitation to negotiate. Its practical value depends entirely on whether Range States take up the invitation, and how ambitiously. This is the structural gap at the heart of the Convention, and it explains why so much of the regime's real content lives in its daughter instruments rather than in the parent text. Species may be listed in both Appendices, and this dual listing has become common. It combines strict protection with a mandate for cooperative management. At COP14, for example, Lahille's bottlenose dolphin, the Peruvian pelican and the sand tiger shark were placed in both Appendices. 6.5 Article V: the blueprint for agreements Article V is a drafting guide. It sets out what an AGREEMENT concluded under the Convention should contain: coverage of the whole range of the species, a name and definition of the species covered, an object, a coordinating body, provisions on conservation of habitat and migration corridors, review of conservation status, contingency plans, prohibition of taking where appropriate, exchange of information, research, and public education. Article V also states that agreements should be open to accession by all Range States, whether or not they are Parties to the Convention. This is one of the most quietly important provisions in the whole treaty, because it allows the regime to reach into states that have never ratified the Convention itself. It is the legal basis for the participation of non Parties in memoranda of understanding. 6.6 Reservations, amendments and the practice of listing Appendices are amended by the Conference of the Parties, ordinarily by a two thirds majority of Parties present and voting. Amendments enter into force for all Parties after a set period, except for those Parties that enter a reservation. Reservations are a safety valve: they allow a state that objects to a particular listing to remain in the treaty without being bound by that listing. They also weaken the practical effect of listings, especially where a reserving state is a major range or harvesting state. The reservation practice was visible after COP14, and reservations have been withdrawn subsequently in at least one case, which shows the mechanism can be temporary rather than permanent. 7. Institutions 7.1 The Conference of the Parties The Conference of the Parties, or COP, is the decision making organ. It meets roughly every three years. It reviews the conservation status of migratory species, assesses progress, adopts and amends the Appendices, adopts resolutions and decisions, adopts the budget, and provides guidance to subsidiary bodies. The COP is where the treaty grows. Because the Convention text has never been formally amended in any substantial way, almost the entire modern content of the regime, including its work on light pollution, renewable energy, marine noise, bycatch, aquatic wild meat, ecological connectivity, deep seabed mining and infrastructure, has been generated through COP resolutions. This is a common pattern in modern environmental treaties, and it gives the regime flexibility, but at the price of legal softness: resolutions guide, they rarely bind. Recent COPs illustrate both the ambition and the limits. COP14, held in Samarkand, Uzbekistan, in February 2024 under the theme that nature knows no borders, was the first COP of a global environmental treaty held in Central Asia. It adopted the #Samarkand_Strategic_Plan for Migratory Species 2024 to 2032, added 14 new species, subspecies and populations to the Appendices, including the Eurasian lynx, the Balkan lynx, Pallas's cat, the guanaco, the Magellanic plover and the sand tiger shark, launched a Global Partnership on Ecological Connectivity, and finally agreed, after nearly two decades of inconclusive negotiation, on institutional arrangements for the Central Asian Flyway, with a coordinating unit hosted in India. It also adopted a resolution urging Parties to refrain from deep seabed mining until sufficient scientific information exists to ensure no harmful effects on migratory species. COP15, held in Campo Grande, Brazil, from 23 to 29 March 2026 under the theme of connecting nature to sustain life, was the first CMS COP hosted in Brazil, at the edge of the Pantanal wetland. It approved 70 proposals, including 15 amendments to the Appendices covering 40 species, subspecies and populations, 16 concerted actions, and 39 resolutions. Species added or uplisted included the Zimbabwe population of the cheetah, the striped hyena, the giant otter, the snowy owl, thresher sharks and hammerhead sharks. A Regional Action Plan for Amazonian migratory catfish was adopted, along with a resolution on Important Marine Turtle Areas, a strengthened bycatch resolution, and a decision to develop a resource mobilisation strategy aimed at supporting developing countries. Ministers adopted a Pantanal Declaration on connectivity, financing and wetlands. Notably, the Bukhara deer was the only species proposed for downlisting, an unusual and welcome signal of recovery. 7.2 The Scientific Council The Scientific Council provides scientific advice. It advises on research, recommends species for listing, recommends conservation and management measures, and makes recommendations on the effectiveness of agreements. It has been restructured over the years, with a mix of Party appointed councillors and COP appointed thematic experts covering areas such as climate change, bycatch, aquatic wild meat and connectivity. The Council is one of the Convention's genuine strengths. Its listing recommendations are evidence based and its thematic work has fed directly into COP resolutions. Its weakness is capacity: it is small, largely voluntary, and asked to review an enormous taxonomic and geographic range. 7.3 The Standing Committee and the Secretariat The Standing Committee, created by COP resolution rather than by the treaty text, provides policy and administrative guidance between COPs and oversees budgets, arrears and governance. Arrears in contributions have been described in official reporting as a persistent challenge. The Secretariat, provided by the United Nations Environment Programme and based in Bonn, arranges meetings, maintains the Appendices, promotes agreements, handles reporting and liaises with other bodies. Several of the daughter instruments have their own secretariats, some co located with the CMS Secretariat, which has produced a degree of administrative consolidation often referred to as the #CMS_Family. 8. The Daughter Instruments: Where the Regime Does Its Work Article IV has produced two categories of subsidiary instrument: legally binding Agreements, and non binding memoranda of understanding. 8.1 The binding Agreements Seven binding Agreements have been concluded. Each is a treaty in its own right, with its own parties, its own meeting of the parties, and in most cases its own secretariat and budget. The Agreement on the Conservation of African Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds, known as #AEWA, concluded in 1995, is the largest. It covers more than 250 species of birds that depend on wetlands along the flyways linking Africa, Europe, the Middle East, Central Asia and parts of the Arctic. Its Action Plan sets out obligations on species protection, habitat conservation, hunting management, research and education, and it works through a table that assigns populations to categories with different levels of protection. AEWA is often cited as the most sophisticated flyway instrument in existence, and its International Single Species Action Plans have driven measurable recoveries for particular populations. The Agreement on the Conservation of Small Cetaceans of the Baltic, North East Atlantic, Irish and North Seas, known as ASCOBANS, dates to 1991 and focuses on porpoises and dolphins, especially the problem of fisheries bycatch. The Agreement on the Conservation of Cetaceans of the Black Sea, Mediterranean Sea and Contiguous Atlantic Area, known as ACCOBAMS, concluded in 1996, addresses whales and dolphins in a heavily used and heavily degraded marine region, including underwater noise, ship strikes and bycatch. The Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels, known as #ACAP, concluded in 2001, is the response to one of the clearest and most solvable conservation crises of the modern era. Longline and trawl fisheries kill large numbers of seabirds that follow vessels and are dragged under by baited hooks. ACAP has become an authoritative source of best practice advice on mitigation measures, and its guidance on bird scaring lines, night setting, weighted branch lines and hook shielding devices has been adopted by regional fisheries management organisations. The Agreement on the Conservation of Populations of European Bats, known as EUROBATS, concluded in 1991, addresses roost protection, pesticide impacts, and, increasingly, the mortality of bats at wind turbines. The Agreement on the Conservation of Gorillas and Their Habitats, concluded in 2007, is unusual in that gorillas are not classic long distance migrants, but they are transboundary, and the Agreement addresses poaching, disease, including Ebola, and habitat loss. The Agreement on the Conservation of Seals in the Wadden Sea, concluded around 1990, is the smallest and most localised, but it demonstrated early that trilateral coordination could work. 8.2 The memoranda of understanding Alongside the binding Agreements, the Convention has generated roughly twenty memoranda of understanding. These are not treaties. They are political commitments signed by Range States, and often by cooperating non governmental organisations. They cover, among others, the Siberian crane, the slender billed curlew, marine turtles of the Atlantic coast of Africa, marine turtles of the Indian Ocean and South East Asia, the great bustard, the Bukhara deer, the aquatic warbler, West African elephants, the #saiga_antelope, Pacific Islands cetaceans, the dugong, Mediterranean monk seals, the ruddy headed goose, grassland birds of southern South America, migratory birds of prey in Africa and Eurasia, the huemul, migratory sharks, and High Andean flamingos. The memoranda are the regime's pragmatic compromise. They are quick to negotiate, they impose no legal liability, and, critically, they are open to non Parties. A state that has never ratified the Convention can sign a memorandum and take part in coordinated conservation work. This has extended the treaty's practical reach well beyond its formal membership. Their weakness is equally clear. A memorandum can be signed and then ignored, with no legal consequence whatsoever. Several have suffered from weak implementation, sparse reporting and inadequate funding. The literature on the Sharks memorandum in particular has noted the gap between listing large numbers of shark species and achieving any measurable reduction in fishing mortality, because the actual regulation of fishing happens in regional fisheries bodies, where CMS has influence but no authority. 8.3 Concerted Actions, Special Species Initiatives and Action Plans Beyond Agreements and memoranda, the COP has developed lighter tools. Concerted Actions are time bound priority conservation measures for particular species, adopted by the COP and implemented by Range States, sometimes with dedicated funding. COP14 adopted new Concerted Actions for six species, including the chimpanzee, the straw coloured fruit bat and the blue shark, and extended existing ones for nine, including the giraffe and the Atlantic humpback dolphin. COP15 adopted a further set covering chimpanzees, dolphins, bats, sharks and seabirds. Regional and thematic initiatives such as the Central Asian Mammals Initiative, the African Carnivores Initiative run jointly with CITES, the joint CITES and CMS Jaguar Initiative, and the Central Asian Flyway arrangements agreed at COP14, allow the regime to work at landscape scale rather than species by species. 9. Relations With Other Treaties The Bonn Convention does not operate in isolation. It sits within a dense cluster of biodiversity related agreements, and its effectiveness depends heavily on how well it interlocks with them. The Convention on Biological Diversity provides the umbrella framework for biodiversity governance. The Kunming Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, adopted in 2022, is the most consequential external development for CMS in a generation. Its Target 3, the commitment to conserve at least 30 per cent of land and sea by 2030, explicitly requires protected areas to be well connected. Its Target 4 requires urgent management action to halt human induced extinction of threatened species and to recover them. Its Target 2 requires restoration of degraded ecosystems. Each of these is impossible to deliver for migratory species without exactly the kind of transboundary coordination CMS exists to provide. The Samarkand Strategic Plan was explicitly designed to align the Convention's own goals with the Global Biodiversity Framework, and at COP15 Parties agreed to mainstream the Strategic Plan into National Biodiversity Strategies and Action Plans, partly in order to unlock financing from the Global Environment Facility. CITES regulates international trade in specimens of listed species. The two conventions are complementary rather than overlapping: CITES controls the movement of dead or living specimens across borders, CMS addresses the movement of live animals in the wild. Joint programmes on African carnivores and jaguars show the potential of coordinated listing and enforcement. The Ramsar Convention on Wetlands protects sites of international importance, many of which are the staging posts on which flyways depend. In practice, Ramsar site designation is one of the most direct means of implementing the habitat obligations under Article III. The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea provides the jurisdictional backbone for marine conservation, including the duty to cooperate on highly migratory species and marine mammals. The recent Agreement on Marine Biological Diversity of Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction, the BBNJ Agreement, opens the possibility of area based management tools in the high seas, and Parties at COP15 explicitly welcomed its entry into force as a vehicle for protecting migratory species where no state has jurisdiction. This is potentially transformative for seabirds, sharks, turtles and whales. Regional fisheries management organisations matter more than almost any of the above for marine migratory species, because they set the rules that govern the fishing gear that actually kills them. CMS and ACAP have influenced these bodies through best practice guidance, but they cannot legislate for them. This asymmetry is a persistent structural weakness. Finally, regional legal orders can amplify CMS obligations. Within the European Union, the Birds Directive and the Habitats Directive create enforceable, judicially reviewable obligations that in some respects go beyond the Convention. Where such regional enforcement exists, CMS obligations acquire teeth; where it does not, they rely on national goodwill. 10. National Implementation Whatever the COP decides, migratory animals are saved or lost in national law and local practice. Implementation requires several things at once. It requires legislation. Appendix I species must be given strict protection in domestic law, with the prohibition on taking translated into criminal or administrative sanctions, and with exceptions drawn narrowly enough to satisfy the treaty's precision requirement. It requires spatial planning. Habitat obligations under Article III mean little unless breeding, staging and wintering sites are identified, mapped and protected, and unless corridors between them are kept functional. The 2024 status report found that nearly 10,000 Key Biodiversity Areas are important for CMS listed species, but that more than half by area lie outside protected or conserved areas, and that 58 per cent of monitored sites important for listed species face unsustainable levels of human pressure. Coverage varies sharply by region, with Europe far ahead of Asia. It requires #environmental_impact_assessment that takes migration seriously. Roads, railways, fences, dams, transmission lines, wind farms and ports are typically assessed on their local footprint. A migratory corridor is not local. Assessment frameworks that only ask about impacts within a project boundary will systematically miss the harm. It requires enforcement capacity. Anti poaching patrols, customs cooperation, laboratory forensics, and the political will to prosecute. It requires monitoring and reporting. Parties submit national reports to the COP. Reporting rates and quality have historically been uneven, which weakens the evidence base and makes the assessment of compliance difficult. Finally, it requires the involvement of local communities and indigenous peoples. Migration corridors run through farms, pastures and fishing grounds, not only through parks. COP14 and COP15 both formally recognised the role of indigenous peoples and local communities and, at COP15, the value of multiple knowledge systems alongside conventional science. Where communities gain from migration, through tourism, ecosystem services or benefit sharing, protection tends to hold. Where they bear only costs, through crop damage, livestock predation or lost land, it tends to fail. 11. Case Studies 11.1 The saiga antelope: recovery is possible The saiga is a steppe antelope of Central Asia with a distinctive drooping nose, capable of moving hundreds of kilometres across Kazakhstan, Mongolia, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan and the Russian Federation. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, poaching for horn and meat, combined with the loss of state managed protection, drove the population down catastrophically. In 2015, a mass mortality event caused by a bacterial infection triggered by unusual weather conditions killed a very large fraction of one of the main populations within weeks. The saiga has been the subject of a CMS memorandum of understanding since 2006, backed by action plans, coordinated anti poaching enforcement in Kazakhstan, protected area expansion, and corridor management. The result is one of the clearest conservation recoveries of the century so far. Numbers rose from tens of thousands to well over a million, the species was reassessed to a lower risk category by the IUCN in late 2023, and the 2026 interim status report listed the saiga among the seven CMS listed species whose status has improved. Two lessons follow. First, coordinated international action, when it is genuinely funded and enforced by a committed state, works. Second, recovery brings new problems: as numbers rise, conflict with agriculture increases and pressure for regulated harvest returns. Managing success is itself a governance task. 11.2 Albatrosses and the bycatch problem Albatrosses are among the most threatened bird groups in the world. The main cause is not habitat loss but incidental capture in fisheries, principally longline and trawl operations, in which birds attempting to seize bait are hooked and drowned. Because albatrosses are extremely long lived, breed slowly, and often raise a single chick every one or two years, even modest additional adult mortality drives populations down. The response through ACAP has been technically excellent. The mitigation package is well established: setting lines at night, weighting lines so hooks sink quickly beyond diving depth, using bird scaring streamer lines, managing offal discharge, and using hook shielding devices. Where these measures have been adopted and enforced, seabird mortality has fallen dramatically, in some fisheries by over 90 per cent. The failure is not scientific. It is jurisdictional. The measures must be implemented by fishing fleets under the authority of flag states and regional fisheries bodies, many of which are outside the CMS system, and compliance on the high seas is difficult to verify. Illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing is entirely outside the frame. This case shows, with unusual clarity, that CMS can produce knowledge and consensus but cannot by itself produce enforcement in the sectors that matter. 11.3 African Eurasian waterbirds and the flyway approach AEWA remains the best evidence that the Article IV mechanism can produce something more than paper. It brings together the Range States along a set of flyways, maintains a population level table that determines the strictness of protection, and produces single species action plans for populations in trouble. Achievements include improved coordination of hunting management, the phasing out of lead shot in wetlands in many countries, and coordinated recovery efforts for particular species. The regime also demonstrates the limits of coordination when critical bottleneck sites are being destroyed. Where intertidal flats have been reclaimed at scale, no amount of hunting regulation at the other end of the flyway can compensate. The population level approach used by AEWA is nonetheless a model that other regions, including the Central Asian Flyway, have sought to emulate, which is precisely what the arrangements agreed at COP14 with a coordinating unit in India are intended to achieve. 11.4 Migratory sharks and rays Sharks and rays are the taxonomic group in the worst condition under the Convention. The 2024 report found that nearly all listed fish were threatened with extinction, and that migratory fish populations had declined on average by around 90 per cent since the 1970s. The Sharks memorandum of understanding, concluded in 2010, has expanded its species coverage considerably, and COP15 added thresher sharks and hammerhead sharks to Appendix I. Yet Appendix I listing for a commercially fished shark creates an immediate and unresolved tension. It requires Range State Parties to prohibit taking, but sharks are caught overwhelmingly as bycatch in fisheries targeting other species, and shark fins remain valuable. The COP15 bycatch resolution acknowledged this directly, urging Parties to take precautionary measures where bycatch levels are unquantified, to review and enact legislation prohibiting the taking of Appendix I listed chondrichthyan species, and to encourage regional fishery bodies to assess populations. Whether this rhetoric translates into landing bans and gear restrictions is the test that matters. 11.5 Terrestrial corridors: ungulates, fences and infrastructure Long distance land migrations are collapsing worldwide, and the mechanism is usually simple: a barrier. Fences erected for livestock disease control, border security or land tenure cut herds off from seasonal ranges. Roads and railways fragment corridors. Mining and irrigation take water and space. Once the movement stops, animals that starved in place do not re establish the route, because migratory knowledge is often socially transmitted from experienced individuals to younger ones. When the knowledgeable animals die, the route dies with them. The Convention's Article III duty to remove obstacles to migration is directly on point, and the Central Asian Mammals Initiative, together with the Global Partnership on Ecological Connectivity launched at COP14 and the connectivity decisions taken at COP15, represents the regime's most serious attempt to operationalise it. Practical tools exist: wildlife friendly fence designs, overpasses and underpasses, seasonal road closures, and, most importantly, the identification and legal recognition of corridors in national spatial planning. The obstacle is that infrastructure decisions are made by ministries of transport, energy and defence, not by environment ministries, and they are made on timescales and with political priorities that conservation agencies rarely influence. 11.6 Marine turtles Marine turtles migrate between nesting beaches and distant foraging grounds, often crossing many jurisdictions and the high seas. They are covered by two CMS memoranda, for the Indian Ocean and South East Asia and for the Atlantic coast of Africa, and by a hawksbill turtle action plan adopted at COP14. Threats include bycatch, coastal development that destroys nesting beaches, artificial light that disorients hatchlings, plastic ingestion, direct take of eggs and adults, and rising sand temperatures, which skew hatchling sex ratios towards females because sex is determined by incubation temperature. The COP15 resolution on Important Marine Turtle Areas is a direct attempt to move from species listing to spatial protection of the specific places that matter, and it aligns closely with the marine corridor logic now emerging in the ocean policy world. It is too early to assess results, but conceptually it is the right direction: it treats the route, not just the animal, as the object of protection. 12. What the Evidence Says About Effectiveness Any honest evaluation must separate three questions. Has the regime produced institutional output? Unambiguously yes. It has grown from a framework treaty into a family of agreements covering most major taxonomic groups of migratory animals, it produces detailed technical guidance, and its COPs generate large numbers of resolutions and action plans. Has it changed state behaviour? Partially. There is clear evidence of behavioural change in specific areas: the adoption of seabird bycatch mitigation in some fisheries, the phasing out of lead shot in some wetlands, coordinated anti poaching enforcement for the saiga, cooperative flyway management under AEWA, and the reduction of illegal bird netting in some Mediterranean locations. There is also clear evidence of non change in others, particularly where economic interests are strong. Has the ecological problem improved? No. This is the uncomfortable core finding. The trend for CMS listed species has worsened over the two years between the 2024 baseline report and the 2026 interim update: the proportion of listed species with declining populations rose from 44 to 49 per cent, and the proportion facing extinction rose from 22 to 24 per cent. Of the 386 listed species reassessed since 2022, 26 moved into a more threatened category, including 18 migratory shorebirds, while only seven improved. Three interpretations are possible, and they are not mutually exclusive. The first is selection bias. Species are listed precisely because they are in trouble. A worsening trend among listed species does not necessarily mean listing causes harm; it may mean listing captures the worst cases. Supporting this reading, analyses of extinction risk indices show that listed birds have a steeper trajectory of increasing risk than migratory birds as a whole, consistent with the Convention selecting the most vulnerable species. The second is lag. Conservation action takes years to show demographic effects, especially for long lived species with slow reproduction. A treaty measure adopted in 2024 cannot be expected to show a population signal by 2026. The third, and the most serious, is that the regime's instruments are simply too weak relative to the drivers. The 2024 assessment identified overexploitation and habitat loss, degradation and fragmentation as the two leading threats. Overexploitation is driven by fisheries, hunting and trade; habitat loss is driven by agriculture, energy and transport infrastructure. None of these sectors is governed by CMS. The Convention can advise, list, coordinate and exhort, but it cannot regulate a fishing fleet, refuse a dam licence, or stop a highway. The honest conclusion is that all three interpretations carry weight, and that the third is the one that should drive reform. 13. Emerging and Intensifying Threats Several pressures have grown sharply in prominence in the last decade and are now firmly on the Convention's agenda. Climate change alters the timing and geography of migration, shifts breeding ranges poleward and upward, destroys stopover wetlands through drought and sea level rise, and can decouple animals from their food supply through phenological mismatch. It also interacts with every other threat, making populations less able to absorb shocks. Renewable energy infrastructure presents a genuine dilemma. Wind turbines kill birds and bats through collision and, for bats, barotrauma; solar farms can occupy stopover habitat; transmission lines cause collision and electrocution, a leading mortality source for large birds such as bustards, cranes and raptors. Since decarbonisation is itself essential for migratory species, the answer is not opposition but siting: routing infrastructure away from corridors and bottlenecks, using curtailment at high risk times, and marking or burying lines. The Convention's energy task force work is precisely aimed at this. #Light_pollution disrupts navigation in nocturnally migrating birds, disorients turtle hatchlings and alters insect behaviour. Global guidelines adopted through the COP process represent one of the treaty's more successful normative innovations, because they translate an abstract obligation into concrete engineering advice. #Illegal_killing remains a major driver, particularly of birds along Mediterranean and Asian routes. It is amenable to enforcement, and where enforcement has been applied it has worked, as demonstrated by the sharp reduction in illegal netting in Cyprus documented in the 2024 report. Bycatch and aquatic wild meat, meaning the use of stranded or captured marine megafauna for food, have been given a strengthened mandate at recent COPs, reflecting evidence that both are more widespread than previously assumed. Disease is an increasingly severe threat. Highly pathogenic avian influenza has caused mass mortality events in seabird and waterbird colonies, and the concentration of migratory animals at colonies and staging sites makes them ideal amplifiers. Migration also spreads pathogens, which places migratory species awkwardly at the centre of debates about #One_Health. Deep seabed mining is a prospective threat that the Convention has addressed pre emptively, urging Parties not to proceed until it can be shown that migratory species, their prey and their ecosystems will not be harmed. Whatever one thinks of the merits, this is a rare example of a biodiversity treaty acting before the damage rather than after it. Chemical pollution, plastics, and underwater noise complete the list, each with well documented effects on particular groups. 14. Strengths of the Convention It is important not to let a critical assessment slide into dismissal. The Convention has real and distinctive strengths. It is the only global instrument organised around the ecological reality of movement. No other treaty is. Its two tier structure has allowed it to attract broad membership while retaining a hard core of protection for the most endangered species. Its daughter instruments have permitted regional and taxonomic tailoring, which a single global rulebook could never have achieved. A shark and a bat and a gorilla require different measures. Its openness to non Parties, through Article V and through the memoranda of understanding, has extended its reach well beyond its formal membership. Its scientific machinery, though small, is credible, and its guidance products, on light pollution, on power lines, on bycatch mitigation, on infrastructure, are used by practitioners well outside the treaty system. Its recent turn towards ecological connectivity and corridor level thinking is scientifically correct and puts it ahead of most site based conservation regimes. And it demonstrably works when Parties want it to. The saiga, the scimitar horned oryx and the Mediterranean monk seal did not recover by accident. 15. Weaknesses and Critiques 15.1 Incomplete membership The most obvious structural weakness is that several of the world's largest and most ecologically significant states are not Parties, including the United States, Canada, China and the Russian Federation. Their absence removes entire flyways, ocean basins and land corridors from the treaty's formal reach. Non Parties can and do participate in memoranda of understanding, which mitigates the problem, but participation without ratification means no legal obligation and no financial contribution. 15.2 Soft obligations and weak compliance machinery Outside Appendix I, the Convention's obligations are largely obligations of effort. Parties shall endeavour. Endeavour is not a standard that can easily be adjudicated. The Convention has no compliance committee with real teeth, no dispute settlement in regular use, no sanctions, no trade measures of the kind that give CITES leverage. Enforcement is essentially reputational. 15.3 The listing to action gap Adding a species to an Appendix is a decision that costs nothing and can be taken quickly. Implementing protection for that species costs money and political capital and takes years. The regime is much better at the first than the second. As one observer noted at COP14, by the time the Convention lists a species, it may already be too late, since listing criteria depend on unfavourable conservation status. This is the central critique of the entire architecture: it is reactive by design, even though Article II tells Parties to be preventive. 15.4 Financing The core budget of the Convention is small relative to its mandate, arrears are a recurring problem, and many memoranda of understanding operate with little or no dedicated funding. COP15's decision to develop a resource mobilisation strategy, with particular attention to developing countries, is an acknowledgement of this. Many of the most important range states for migratory species are also among the least able to pay for corridor protection, monitoring and enforcement. Without transfers, the obligations are unrealistic. 15.5 The sectoral blind spot CMS regulates conservation ministries. The threats are generated by fisheries, agriculture, energy, mining and transport ministries. Nothing in the treaty gives environment officials the power to override an infrastructure decision, and in most states they do not have it domestically either. This is the deepest problem, and it cannot be solved by better treaty drafting. It can only be addressed by embedding migratory species requirements into the planning and permitting law of other sectors. 15.6 Data gaps For many listed species, particularly fish, invertebrates and animals in the tropics, basic population data do not exist. Trends are inferred rather than measured. This undermines both listing decisions and evaluation. Advances in tracking technology, satellite telemetry, geolocators and biologging have transformed what is knowable, and initiatives to map ungulate migrations and marine connectivity are beginning to fill the gaps, but the coverage remains uneven and biased towards large, charismatic and northern species. 16. Discussion The Bonn Convention presents a paradox that is common to modern environmental treaties: growing institutional sophistication alongside deteriorating ecological outcomes. Understanding why requires distinguishing between the treaty as a normative statement and the treaty as a causal force. As a normative statement, CMS is impressive. Its definition of favourable conservation status sets a restoration benchmark. Its Article II preventive duty is ahead of its time. Its Article III duty to remove obstacles to migration anticipated the science of connectivity by decades. Its Article IV engine has produced an extensive family of instruments. As a causal force, it is constrained by three things. It is constrained by scope. Its obligations bite hardest on direct taking. But taking is only one of the two leading threats, and habitat loss and fragmentation, the other, is driven by land use decisions in which the treaty has no formal standing. It is constrained by membership. A treaty that does not include several of the largest range states cannot regulate the full range of any species that occurs in them. It is constrained by enforcement. Without a compliance mechanism, the treaty relies on the domestic will of each Party, and domestic will varies enormously. The path to greater effectiveness therefore runs through other regimes rather than through the Convention alone. The Global Biodiversity Framework, with its connectivity language in Target 3 and its species recovery language in Target 4, gives migratory species advocates a lever inside national planning processes. The BBNJ Agreement gives them a lever in the high seas. Regional fisheries bodies remain the decisive arena for marine species. National environmental impact assessment law is the decisive arena for terrestrial corridors. The Convention's most valuable function may increasingly be as a knowledge producer and coordinator that supplies the scientific and normative content which other, harder regimes then enforce. This is not a diminished role. It is arguably the role a framework convention was always meant to play. But it means that measuring the treaty's success by counting resolutions is a category error. The right metric is whether the corridor was kept open, whether the fishery adopted the mitigation, whether the wetland survived. 17. Recommendations Seven reforms follow from the analysis. Broaden membership through incentives rather than exhortation. Non Party range states should be offered technical assistance, data access and funding channels conditional on accession, and the practical benefits of membership should be made concrete rather than symbolic. Make ecological connectivity a legal requirement rather than an aspiration. Parties should commit to identify, map and legally designate migratory corridors and bottleneck sites in national spatial planning law, with a presumption against development that severs them. The Global Partnership on Ecological Connectivity provides the institutional vehicle; what is missing is the domestic legal hook. Reform impact assessment. Environmental impact assessment and strategic environmental assessment law should be amended to require explicit consideration of impacts on migratory populations across their range, not merely within the project footprint. Cumulative assessment across multiple projects along a corridor should be mandatory. Close the fisheries gap. CMS and ACAP guidance on bycatch mitigation should be transformed into binding conservation and management measures within regional fisheries management organisations, and Parties should be required to report on what their flag vessels do outside national waters, which the Convention's own definition of Range State already contemplates. Fund the regime properly. The resource mobilisation strategy mandated at COP15 should target predictable, multi year, flyway scale financing, blending core contributions, Global Environment Facility funding, and payments linked to ecosystem services delivered by migratory animals. Strengthen compliance without alienating Parties. A review mechanism modelled on peer review, with published national reports, independent scientific commentary and a standing implementation committee, would raise the reputational cost of non compliance without requiring the political impossibility of sanctions. Act preventively. Article II already requires it. The Convention should systematically list and act on species that are still common but declining, particularly Appendix II birds currently assessed as Least Concern, rather than waiting for them to reach the threshold of endangerment. 18. Limitations and Directions for Future Research This article is a synthesis, not a primary empirical study. Its principal limitation is the attribution problem already noted: it is not possible, from the available evidence, to isolate the causal contribution of the Convention from the many other forces acting on migratory populations. A properly designed counterfactual analysis, comparing matched listed and unlisted species while controlling for initial status, taxonomy, geography and threat profile, would be an extremely valuable contribution and does not yet exist in a comprehensive form. Three further research priorities stand out. First, systematic study of national implementation. What proportion of Parties have actually translated Appendix I obligations into enforceable domestic law, and how narrowly are exceptions drawn in practice? Second, evaluation of the memoranda of understanding as an instrument type. Do non binding instruments produce measurable conservation outcomes, and under what conditions? Third, the political economy of corridors. Who bears the cost of keeping a migration route open, who captures the benefit, and what transfer mechanisms could align the two? 19. Conclusion The Bonn Convention was built on a single, correct insight: that an animal which crosses borders can only be conserved by the states on both sides of those borders acting together. Nearly half a century later, that insight has produced a global treaty with 133 Parties, seven binding agreements, some twenty memoranda of understanding, a growing body of technical guidance, and a strategic plan aligned with the world's biodiversity targets. It has also produced a warning. The first comprehensive assessment of the Convention's own subject matter, published in 2024, and its update in 2026, showed that the species the treaty exists to protect are, in aggregate, getting worse rather than better: from 44 per cent of listed species in decline to 49 per cent, and from 22 per cent facing extinction to 24 per cent, in the space of two years. The recoveries of the saiga antelope, the scimitar horned oryx and the Mediterranean monk seal prove that this trajectory is not inevitable. They also show what reversal requires: sustained funding, real enforcement, coordinated action across all the states in the range, and the political will to keep going for decades. The Convention's text is not the obstacle. Its architecture, particularly the duty to remove obstacles to migration and the demanding definition of favourable conservation status, is more ambitious than most of what has been built on top of it. The obstacle is the distance between listing a species in an appendix and changing the decisions that kill it: the fishing gear, the fence, the transmission line, the drained wetland, the reclaimed mudflat. Closing that distance is the work of the next decade, and it will happen in fisheries bodies, planning ministries, and national courts as much as in conference halls. Migratory animals do not recognise borders. The task, still unfinished after nearly fifty years, is to build a legal order that behaves as if it understands that. References Bauer, S., and Hoye, B. J. (2014). Migratory animals couple biodiversity and ecosystem functioning worldwide. Science, 344(6179), 1242552. Beal, M., Dias, M. P., Phillips, R. A., et al. (2021). Global political responsibility for the conservation of albatrosses and large petrels. Science Advances, 7(10), eabd7225. Birnie, P., Boyle, A., and Redgwell, C. (2009). International Law and the Environment (3rd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. 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Report of the Fifteenth Meeting of the Conference of the Parties, Campo Grande, Brazil, 23 to 29 March 2026, including amendments to the Appendices. Bonn: UNEP/CMS Secretariat. Dias, M. P., Martin, R., Pearmain, E. J., et al. (2019). Threats to seabirds: A global assessment. Biological Conservation, 237, 525 to 537. Dingle, H. (2014). Migration: The Biology of Life on the Move (2nd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Fraser, K. C., Davies, K. T. A., Davy, C. M., et al. (2018). Tracking the conservation promise of movement ecology. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, 6, 150. Hays, G. C., Bailey, H., Bograd, S. J., et al. (2019). Translating marine animal tracking data into conservation policy and management. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 34(5), 459 to 473. Intergovernmental Science Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (2019). Global Assessment Report on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services. Bonn: IPBES Secretariat. 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Key conservation issues for migratory land and waterbird species on the world's major flyways. Bird Conservation International, 18(S1), S49 to S73. Lascelles, B., Notarbartolo di Sciara, G., Agardy, T., et al. (2014). Migratory marine species: their status, threats and conservation management needs. Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems, 24(S2), 111 to 127. Loss, S. R., Will, T., and Marra, P. P. (2015). Direct mortality of birds from anthropogenic causes. Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics, 46, 99 to 120. Milner Gulland, E. J., Fryxell, J. M., and Sinclair, A. R. E. (eds.) (2011). Animal Migration: A Synthesis. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Nathan, R., Monk, C. T., Arlinghaus, R., et al. (2022). Big data approaches lead to an increased understanding of the ecology of animal movement. Science, 375(6582), eabg1780. Newton, I. (2008). The Migration Ecology of Birds. London: Academic Press. Runge, C. A., Watson, J. E. M., Butchart, S. H. M., et al. (2015). Protected areas and global conservation of migratory birds. Science, 350(6265), 1255 to 1258. Sands, P., and Peel, J. (2018). Principles of International Environmental Law (4th ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Trouwborst, A. (2012). Transboundary wildlife conservation in a changing climate: adaptation of the Bonn Convention on Migratory Species and its daughter instruments to climate change. Diversity, 4(3), 258 to 300. Tucker, M. A., Bohning Gaese, K., Fagan, W. F., et al. (2018). Moving in the Anthropocene: Global reductions in terrestrial mammalian movements. Science, 359(6374), 466 to 469. United Nations Environment Programme World Conservation Monitoring Centre (2024). State of the World's Migratory Species. Cambridge: UNEP WCMC, prepared for the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals. United Nations Environment Programme World Conservation Monitoring Centre (2026). Interim Update to the State of the World's Migratory Species. Cambridge: UNEP WCMC, prepared for the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals. Vickery, J. A., Ewing, S. R., Smith, K. W., et al. (2014). The decline of Afro Palaearctic migrants and an assessment of potential causes. Ibis, 156(1), 1 to 22. Wilcove, D. S., and Wikelski, M. (2008). Going, going, gone: Is animal migration disappearing? PLoS Biology, 6(7), e188. #Bonn_Convention_1979 #Convention_on_Migratory_Species #CMS_COP15 #Campo_Grande_2026 #Samarkand_COP14 #Appendix_I_species #Appendix_II_species #Range_State_cooperation #Flyway_conservation #Transboundary_wildlife_law #Migratory_Species_Conservation #Wildlife_Corridors #International_Environmental_Law #Global_Biodiversity_Framework #Conservation_Across_Ranges
- The Antarctic Treaty of 1959: Peace, Science, and the Governance of a Continent Held in Common
The Antarctic Treaty, signed in Washington on 1 December 1959 and in force since 23 June 1961, remains one of the few international agreements that has kept an entire continent free of war, weapons testing, and territorial conflict for more than six decades. This article examines how the treaty was built, how it works in practice, and whether its founding promises still hold under twenty-first century pressures. It traces the origins of the agreement in the International Geophysical Year of 1957 to 1958, when scientists from rival Cold War blocs worked side by side on the ice, and shows how that unusual moment of cooperation was translated into binding legal text. The study then analyses the core provisions of the treaty, including the ban on military activity, the guarantee of scientific freedom, the prohibition on nuclear explosions and radioactive waste disposal, the inspection system, and the famous compromise in Article IV that suspends rather than settles competing territorial claims. The article follows the growth of the wider Antarctic Treaty System, including the Convention on the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources and the 1991 Protocol on Environmental Protection, and assesses current stress points: consensus paralysis in marine protected area negotiations, rapid growth in tourism, expanding krill fishing, the entry of new and ambitious state actors, biological invasion risk, and above all a changing climate that is altering sea ice, ice shelves, and ecosystems faster than the governance system can respond. The analysis concludes that the treaty has succeeded remarkably as a peace and science instrument but is now under-equipped as an environmental instrument, and it sets out practical reforms that could close that gap without reopening the sovereignty settlement that has kept the peace. Keywords: Antarctic Treaty; Antarctic Treaty System; demilitarisation; science diplomacy; common pool resources; Madrid Protocol; CCAMLR; polar governance 1. Introduction Antarctica is the coldest, windiest, driest and highest continent on Earth. It holds around ninety per cent of the planet's ice and about seventy per cent of its fresh water. It has no permanent human population, no indigenous inhabitants, no cities, and no farms. It is also, by international agreement, a place where no state may test a weapon, build a fort, or send an army. That agreement is the #Antarctic_Treaty, a short document of fourteen articles signed by twelve countries in 1959 and now binding on more than fifty states. The treaty is often described in textbooks as a Cold War curiosity, a rare piece of good news from a decade otherwise defined by nuclear brinkmanship. That description is true but incomplete. The treaty was not an accident of goodwill. It was a carefully designed legal instrument that solved a very specific problem: seven states claimed slices of the continent, two of those claims overlapped in a three way tangle on the Antarctic Peninsula, and two superpowers refused to recognise any claim at all while reserving the right to make their own. Left alone, that situation had the makings of a serious dispute in a region where military logistics were already being tested. The treaty did not resolve the dispute. It froze it, and in doing so it created space for something else to grow: an international system of research, environmental protection and peaceful coexistence that has now lasted longer than the Cold War itself. This article asks three questions. First, how did the #sovereignty_freeze and the commitment to #peaceful_purposes actually come about, and what were the negotiators trying to achieve? Second, how has the legal architecture performed in practice, measured against its own stated goals of #demilitarisation, #scientific_cooperation, and the prevention of international discord? Third, what are the main pressures on the system today, and does the treaty in its current form have the tools to deal with them? The argument developed across the following sections is that the treaty has been extraordinarily successful in the domains it was designed for, and increasingly strained in domains it was never designed for. Nobody in 1959 was thinking about a hundred thousand cruise passengers a year, about krill oil supplements, about genetic material harvested from ice-dwelling microbes, or about the collapse of sea ice extent across an entire ocean basin. The treaty's greatest strength, its ability to keep contentious questions off the table, is also the source of its greatest weakness, because the same #consensus_decision_making rule that protects the peace can also block urgently needed conservation measures. The article is written for students and researchers approaching Antarctic governance for the first time, but it engages seriously with the scholarly debate and does not simplify away the difficulties. Section 2 reviews the literature. Section 3 sets out the method and sources. Sections 4 and 5 cover history and legal structure. Sections 6 to 9 examine the treaty's four functional pillars: peace, science, environmental protection, and living resource management. Sections 10 and 11 examine contemporary pressures and the debate over reform. Section 12 discusses limitations, and Section 13 concludes. 2. Literature Review Scholarship on Antarctica sits at the meeting point of international law, international relations, environmental science and history. Each field asks different questions of the same treaty, and reading across them is essential to understanding why assessments of the system vary so widely. 2.1 The legal literature Legal scholars have generally treated the treaty as an example of successful functional regime building. The central object of analysis is Article IV, which is frequently described as the most elegant piece of diplomatic drafting of the twentieth century. Research handbooks in #polar_law consistently identify the article as the hinge on which everything else turns, because it allows claimant and non-claimant states to participate in the same institutions without either conceding anything (Scott and VanderZwaag, 2020). The literature also devotes considerable attention to the question of what kind of legal space Antarctica actually is. It is not a res nullius open to occupation, because the treaty forbids new claims. It is not clearly a res communis or common heritage of mankind either, because the treaty never adopted that language and the claimant states have resisted it. The dominant scholarly position is that Antarctica occupies a distinctive legal category, governed by a self-contained system whose legitimacy rests on practice rather than on a general theory of title. A second legal debate concerns the relationship between the Antarctic Treaty System and general international law, particularly the law of the sea. Because the treaty applies to the area south of sixty degrees south latitude while preserving high seas rights, and because claimant states assert maritime zones from their claimed coasts, the interaction between the two regimes generates unresolved questions about jurisdiction over fishing, shipping and seabed resources. This tension has grown more visible as commercial activity in the #Southern_Ocean has increased. 2.2 The international relations literature Political scientists have been more sceptical. The recurring theme in this body of work is that the treaty system is a club, that the club is dominated by a small number of wealthy states with the resources to run research programmes, and that the requirement to demonstrate "substantial scientific research activity" in order to obtain decision-making power creates a barrier to entry that is functionally financial rather than intellectual. Scholars in this tradition point out that the treaty converts scientific capacity into political voice, which means that #science_diplomacy in Antarctica is never innocent. Building a station is simultaneously a research decision and a claim to standing. Recent work in this field has focused on the entry of new actors and on what some authors describe as the return of #geopolitics to the ice. The steady expansion of Chinese research infrastructure, renewed Russian activity including seismic surveying in areas of potential hydrocarbon interest, and stated ambitions from a range of middle powers have prompted debate about whether the system's founding bargain can absorb states that did not participate in making it. The scholarship is divided. Some authors read the new activity as ordinary treaty-consistent behaviour that reflects the widening global distribution of scientific capacity. Others read it as strategic positioning ahead of a possible future contest over resources, and argue that the treaty's silence on many questions is being exploited. 2.3 The environmental science literature Environmental scientists have produced the most urgent and, arguably, the most influential recent literature. The consistent message is that Antarctic and Southern Ocean systems are changing faster than governance is adapting. Assessments of the state and future of Antarctic environments have set out two divergent trajectories, one in which emissions are curbed and Antarctic systems remain broadly recognisable, and one in which they are not and the continent is transformed within the lifetime of students now entering the field (Chown and Brooks, 2019; Rintoul et al., 2018). Analyses of protected areas have found that the existing network is poorly aligned with biodiversity, being shaped more by history, logistics and politics than by conservation need. Studies of Antarctic wilderness have shown that formally protected wilderness fails to capture the continent's biological richness, most of which is concentrated in the small ice-free areas where humans also want to build (Leihy et al., 2020). Work on #sea_ice_loss has moved rapidly. The record low sea ice extents of the early 2020s prompted analyses suggesting a possible regime shift rather than ordinary variability (Purich and Doddridge, 2023), and studies documented catastrophic breeding failure in emperor penguin colonies following the loss of fast ice beneath them (Fretwell et al., 2023). Research on #biosecurity has demonstrated that ship traffic connects Antarctic coasts to ports across the world, creating pathways for #non_native_species that the current regulatory regime addresses only partially (McCarthy et al., 2022). 2.4 The gap this article addresses The three literatures rarely speak to one another in a sustained way. Legal writing tends to assess the treaty against legal criteria, political writing against power criteria, and scientific writing against ecological criteria. The result is that the treaty is simultaneously described as a triumph, a club, and a failure, depending on which shelf the reader takes the book from. This article attempts an integrated assessment: it evaluates the treaty against the goals it set for itself, and then asks whether those goals are still the right ones. 3. Methodology This study uses a qualitative, interpretive research design combining doctrinal legal analysis with documentary policy analysis and a structured review of recent scientific literature. 3.1 Research design The doctrinal component involves close reading of the primary legal instruments: the Antarctic Treaty itself, the Convention for the Conservation of Antarctic Seals, the Convention on the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources, the Protocol on Environmental Protection to the Antarctic Treaty and its annexes, and the unratified Convention on the Regulation of Antarctic Mineral Resource Activities. Provisions are analysed in terms of their ordinary meaning, their context, and the object and purpose of the instrument, following the standard interpretive approach of general treaty law. The documentary component draws on the publicly available institutional record of the system: the Final Reports of the Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meetings, the reports of the Committee for Environmental Protection, the reports of the CCAMLR Commission and its Scientific Committee, inspection reports produced under Article VII, and information papers submitted by parties and observers. These documents are treated as evidence of state practice and of the internal reasoning of the regime, not as neutral descriptions. The scientific component is a targeted review of peer-reviewed research published mainly between 2019 and 2025 on Antarctic climate, biodiversity, fisheries, tourism and biosecurity, selected for relevance to governance questions rather than for comprehensive coverage of Antarctic science. 3.2 Analytical framework The analysis is organised around two theoretical lenses. The first is regime theory, which understands the treaty as a set of principles, norms, rules and decision-making procedures around which actor expectations converge. This lens is used to assess institutional performance, particularly the relationship between rule design and #compliance. The second is common-pool resource theory, which examines how groups manage shared resources that are difficult to exclude others from and where one user's consumption reduces what is available to others. Antarctica presents an unusual case because the treaty largely removed the most contested resource questions from the table, effectively converting a potential commons tragedy into a managed abstention. The framework is useful for asking what happens when abstention becomes harder to sustain, as it has in fisheries and tourism. 3.3 Scope and boundaries The study covers the area south of sixty degrees south latitude, the treaty's own definition of its application area, while recognising that CCAMLR applies to a wider area defined by the Antarctic Convergence and that climate and ecological processes respect no boundary at all. The temporal focus is on the period from 1959 to the present, with emphasis on developments since 2015. 4. Historical Background: From Rival Flags to a Shared Continent 4.1 The age of claims Human contact with Antarctica is recent. The continent was probably first sighted in 1820, and the heroic era of exploration associated with Scott, Amundsen, Shackleton and Mawson ran only from the late nineteenth century into the 1910s. Formal territorial claims followed exploration and, more importantly, followed the commercial exploitation of whales. The United Kingdom made the first claim in 1908, followed over the next three decades by New Zealand, France, Norway, Australia, Chile and Argentina. These seven claims were justified on a mixture of grounds: discovery, effective occupation, the sector principle projecting lines of longitude to the pole, geological continuity with a nearby landmass, and historical inheritance from earlier colonial title. The legal quality of the claims varied enormously, and several rested on foundations that would struggle in a contemporary tribunal. Three of them, those of the United Kingdom, Chile and Argentina, overlapped on and around the Antarctic Peninsula, the most accessible and biologically productive part of the continent. That overlap produced repeated incidents through the 1940s and 1950s, including the removal of rival markers, the establishment of competing bases, and at least one exchange of gunfire in which no one was killed. Roughly one sixth of the continent, the sector known as Marie Byrd Land, was claimed by nobody at all. The United States and the Soviet Union occupied a distinctive position. Neither recognised any of the seven claims. Neither made a claim of its own. Both reserved the right to do so in the future on the basis of their own exploration and activity. The Soviet Union additionally asserted a historical interest deriving from the Bellingshausen expedition of 1819 to 1821. Any settlement of the Antarctic question that ignored either superpower was worthless, and any settlement that required either to recognise the others' claims was impossible. 4.2 The International Geophysical Year The break came from science. The International Geophysical Year, running from July 1957 to December 1958, was a coordinated global research programme involving sixty-seven countries and focusing on the physics of the Earth: geomagnetism, the ionosphere, glaciology, seismology, oceanography and solar activity. Antarctica was central to the programme because so little was known about it and because it mattered so much to global systems. Twelve nations established stations on the continent for the #International_Geophysical_Year. Crucially, they agreed to set political questions aside for the duration. Stations were built without prejudice to claims. Data were exchanged. Scientists visited one another's bases. The Soviet Union built Vostok in the interior, the United States built a station at the geographic South Pole, and, remarkably, none of this triggered the diplomatic crisis that might have been expected. The IGY demonstrated that the continent could be worked cooperatively, and it created a constituency, the scientists themselves, with a strong professional interest in keeping it that way. The IGY also created a practical problem. The stations existed. The programme was ending. What was to happen to them? Withdrawing would waste enormous investment. Staying without agreement would reopen every question the IGY had suspended. This is the immediate context in which the United States, in May 1958, invited the other eleven IGY states to a conference on the future of Antarctica. 4.3 The Washington Conference The Conference on Antarctica opened in Washington on 15 October 1959 and closed on 1 December 1959 with the signature of the treaty. The twelve participants were Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Chile, France, Japan, New Zealand, Norway, South Africa, the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom and the United States. The treaty entered into force on 23 June 1961 after ratification by all twelve. The negotiation was difficult and the outcome was not preordained. Claimant states arrived determined to protect their titles. Non-claimants arrived determined not to legitimise them. Several proposals circulated, including internationalisation under United Nations trusteeship and a condominium of the interested states. Both were rejected: internationalisation because claimants would not surrender title and because the superpowers had no wish to hand the question to a General Assembly increasingly filled with newly independent states, and condominium because it implied a shared title that non-claimants would not accept. What emerged instead was a treaty that decided almost nothing about sovereignty and a great deal about conduct. It is, in essence, an agreement about behaviour rather than about ownership. That framing was the key to success, and it remains the key to understanding everything that has happened since. 5. The Legal Architecture of the Treaty 5.1 Article I: peace and demilitarisation Article I is the treaty's opening statement and, in political terms, its most consequential. It provides that Antarctica shall be used for peaceful purposes only and prohibits, among other things, the establishment of military bases and fortifications, the carrying out of military manoeuvres, and the testing of any type of weapon. The article does not exclude military personnel or equipment from the continent. It expressly permits their use for scientific research or for any other peaceful purpose. This provision was practical rather than permissive: in 1959, only military organisations possessed the ships, aircraft and logistical capacity required to support polar operations, and a rule excluding them would have been a rule excluding almost everyone. To this day, national Antarctic programmes rely heavily on military #logistics, particularly for air transport and icebreaking. The legal line drawn by Article I is therefore a line about function rather than uniform. A naval vessel resupplying a station is lawful. The same vessel conducting an exercise is not. Antarctica thus became the first demilitarised continent, and Article I is properly understood as an #arms_control instrument. It predates the Outer Space Treaty of 1967, the Seabed Arms Control Treaty of 1971, and the various nuclear-weapon-free zone treaties, and it influenced all of them. 5.2 Article II: freedom of scientific investigation Article II preserves the freedom of scientific investigation in Antarctica and the cooperation toward that end, as applied during the International Geophysical Year. This is a rare treaty provision that explicitly writes an existing practice into permanent law. #freedom_of_scientific_research is not merely permitted; it is protected as a continuing right. The significance of this article is easy to underestimate. It means that no state may lawfully exclude another state's scientists from any part of the treaty area, including areas subject to claims. A claimant cannot require a visa. It cannot demand a permit as a condition of entry to a claimed sector. The practical effect is to make territorial claims almost meaningless in daily operational terms, which is precisely what non-claimants wanted and precisely why claimants had to be reassured by Article IV. 5.3 Article III: exchange and openness Article III operationalises Article II. It requires parties, to the greatest extent feasible and practicable, to exchange information regarding plans for scientific programmes, to exchange scientific personnel between expeditions and stations, and to exchange and make freely available scientific observations and results. This is an early and unusually strong #open_data provision. Its logic is twofold. Scientifically, shared data produce better continental-scale results, since no single state can instrument an area of fourteen million square kilometres. Politically, transparency about programmes is itself a confidence-building measure. A state that must announce its plans in advance and host foreign scientists at its stations has limited scope for concealment. Article III therefore functions quietly as part of the treaty's #verification architecture. 5.4 Article IV: the sovereignty formula Article IV is the intellectual centre of the treaty. It contains two paragraphs. The first provides that nothing in the treaty shall be interpreted as a renunciation of previously asserted rights or claims to territorial sovereignty, as a renunciation or diminution of any basis of claim that a party may have, or as prejudicing the position of any party regarding its recognition or non-recognition of any other state's claim. The second provides that no acts or activities taking place while the treaty is in force shall constitute a basis for asserting, supporting or denying a claim to territorial sovereignty in Antarctica, and that no new claim, and no enlargement of an existing claim, shall be asserted while the treaty is in force. Read together, these paragraphs perform a striking manoeuvre. They tell claimants that they lose nothing. They tell non-claimants that they concede nothing. And they tell everyone that nothing anyone does from now on will change the legal position of anyone. Building a station generates no title. Issuing a permit generates no title. Denying the validity of a claim generates no counter-title. The clock stops. The seven claims therefore still exist on paper. Australia still asserts sovereignty over roughly forty-two per cent of the continent. The overlapping British, Chilean and Argentine claims still overlap. But because #Article_IV drains these claims of legal consequence for as long as the treaty operates, they have become, in the words of many commentators, dormant rather than dead. This is the compromise that made everything else possible, and it is also the reason why the system is fragile in a way that is not always visible. The peace of Antarctica rests not on a resolved question but on a suspended one. 5.5 Article V: nuclear provisions Article V prohibits any nuclear explosions in Antarctica and the disposal there of radioactive waste material. This made Antarctica the world's first #nuclear_free_zone. The provision was concluded before the Partial Test Ban Treaty of 1963 and reflected genuine concern that the continent's isolation made it attractive as a testing ground. In practice the ban has been observed. A small nuclear reactor operated at the United States McMurdo Station in the 1960s and early 1970s and was removed after operational problems, with contaminated material shipped out; this episode is treated in the literature as consistent with the letter of Article V, which addresses explosions and waste disposal rather than power generation, but it accelerated the norm against nuclear installations that now prevails. 5.6 Article VI: area of application Article VI defines the treaty area as the region south of sixty degrees south latitude, including all ice shelves, while providing that nothing in the treaty shall prejudice the rights of any state under international law with regard to the high seas within that area. This definition creates an important complication. Ecological systems do not stop at sixty degrees south. The Antarctic Convergence, the oceanographic front where cold Antarctic water meets warmer sub-Antarctic water, lies further north in most sectors and is the biologically meaningful boundary of the Southern Ocean. When the parties came to regulate marine living resources, they had to adopt a different and larger area, which is why CCAMLR's boundary follows the Convergence rather than a line of latitude. The mismatch between the political boundary and the ecological boundary is a permanent feature of Antarctic governance. 5.7 Article VII: inspection Article VII establishes the treaty's #inspection_regime. Each Consultative Party has the right to designate observers, who enjoy complete freedom of access at any time to any and all areas of Antarctica, including all stations, installations and equipment, and all ships and aircraft at points of discharging or embarking cargoes or personnel. Aerial observation may be carried out at any time over any area. The scope of this right is remarkable. There is no notice requirement, no right of refusal, and no exempted zone. In an era when arms control verification was the hardest problem in diplomacy, the Antarctic Treaty simply granted unlimited, unannounced, mutual inspection and it worked. Inspections have been conducted regularly since 1963, often jointly by two or more states, and the resulting reports are made public. No inspection has ever found a military installation or a weapons test. The #transparency created by Article VII is arguably the treaty's most underrated achievement. It is a functioning verification system that has operated for six decades without a serious dispute, in a domain where each party has the physical ability to check the others directly. 5.8 Articles VIII to XIV: jurisdiction, meetings, dispute settlement, review Article VIII addresses the jurisdictional puzzle created by Article IV. If sovereignty is frozen, who has criminal and civil jurisdiction over persons in Antarctica? The treaty's answer is partial: observers, exchanged scientific personnel and their staff are subject only to the jurisdiction of the state of which they are nationals. Everyone else is left to the general position, which in practice means that states apply their own law to their own nationals and operators. This produces gaps, particularly for tourists, contractors and third-country nationals, and it is a recognised weakness. Article IX establishes the Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meetings, the system's legislative organ. It provides that representatives shall meet to exchange information, consult together on matters of common interest, and formulate, consider and recommend to their governments measures in furtherance of the treaty's principles and objectives. The listed subjects include the use of Antarctica for peaceful purposes, the facilitation of scientific research and international cooperation, the exercise of inspection rights, questions of jurisdiction, and the preservation and conservation of living resources. Article IX also creates the two-tier membership structure. The original twelve are Consultative Parties. Other acceding states may become Consultative Parties during such time as they demonstrate their interest in Antarctica by conducting substantial scientific research activity there, such as the establishment of a scientific station or the despatch of a scientific expedition. This is the provision that ties decision-making power to research capacity, and it is the single most criticised feature of the treaty. It has been described as a merit test, and equally as a wealth test, and the truth is that it is both. Article X commits parties to exert appropriate efforts, consistent with the Charter of the United Nations, so that no one engages in any activity in Antarctica contrary to the principles or purposes of the treaty. This is the treaty's answer to the problem of third parties, and it is a weak one, resting on effort rather than obligation of result. Article XI provides for dispute settlement by negotiation, inquiry, mediation, conciliation, arbitration, judicial settlement or other peaceful means chosen by the parties, with referral to the International Court of Justice requiring the consent of all parties to the dispute. That consent requirement means the ICJ route has never been used. No dispute under the treaty has ever been formally litigated, which supporters read as evidence of success and critics read as evidence that contentious questions are simply never pressed. Article XII governs modification and review. The treaty may be modified at any time by unanimous agreement of the Consultative Parties. In addition, after thirty years from entry into force, that is from 1991, any Consultative Party may request a conference to review the operation of the treaty. No such request has ever been made. This provision is frequently and wrongly reported as meaning that the treaty expires. It does not. The treaty is of indefinite duration. The review clause is an option that nobody has chosen to exercise. Article XIII opens accession to any state that is a member of the United Nations, and to other states invited by consent of all Consultative Parties. Article XIV designates the United States as depositary. 5.9 Membership today The treaty has grown from twelve parties to more than fifty. Of these, twenty-nine hold Consultative Party status with full decision-making rights, while the remainder are non-consultative parties entitled to attend meetings but not to participate in decisions. The Consultative Parties include the original twelve plus states that subsequently established substantial research programmes, among them Brazil, Bulgaria, China, the Czech Republic, Ecuador, Finland, Germany, India, Italy, the Netherlands, Peru, Poland, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Ukraine and Uruguay. The #Consultative_Parties act by consensus. There is no voting, no majority rule, and no mechanism to override a single objection. This is the procedural fact that dominates everything the system does today. 6. The Antarctic Treaty System: Building Outward The 1959 treaty is the foundation, but it is not the whole building. Over six decades the parties constructed additional instruments, which together with the treaty and the measures adopted under it form the #Antarctic_Treaty_System. 6.1 Seals and the precedent of anticipatory regulation The Convention for the Conservation of Antarctic Seals was concluded in 1972 and entered into force in 1978. It regulates commercial sealing in the treaty area at a time when there was no commercial sealing to regulate. This is its interest: it is an instrument of anticipatory governance, adopted because parties recognised that unregulated exploitation could resume and preferred to have rules in place before the ships arrived rather than after. The convention has effectively never been tested, but the precedent it set, of legislating ahead of the problem, was important for what followed. 6.2 CCAMLR and the ecosystem approach The Convention on the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources was adopted in 1980 and entered into force in 1982. It was a direct response to the rapid growth of Soviet krill fishing in the 1970s and to the recognition that Antarctic krill is not simply a commodity but the structural centre of the Southern Ocean food web, sustaining whales, seals, penguins, flying seabirds, fish and squid. #CCAMLR is remarkable for Article II, which commits the parties not merely to sustainable harvesting of target species but to the maintenance of ecological relationships between harvested, dependent and related populations, and to the prevention of changes that are not potentially reversible over two or three decades. This is the #ecosystem_approach written into binding law, decades before it became mainstream in fisheries management. It is coupled with a #precautionary_approach that requires managers to act in the face of uncertainty rather than waiting for proof of harm. CCAMLR is administered by a Commission based in Hobart, supported by a Scientific Committee. Its area of application follows the Antarctic Convergence rather than the sixty degree line, and it therefore includes sub-Antarctic islands under undisputed national sovereignty, which required its own careful drafting to avoid reopening sovereignty questions. Like the ATCM, the Commission decides by consensus. 6.3 Minerals: the convention that never was Through the 1980s the Consultative Parties negotiated the Convention on the Regulation of Antarctic Mineral Resource Activities, adopted in 1988. It would have created a licensing framework for mineral exploitation, with strict environmental conditions and a complex institutional structure balancing claimant and non-claimant interests. It never entered into force. Australia and France declined to sign, arguing that a regulatory framework for mining implied acceptance of mining, and that the only acceptable position was prohibition. They were supported by a vigorous campaign from environmental organisations and by growing public opposition. Because the convention required ratification by all claimants, the Australian and French refusal killed it. The failure of the minerals convention is the most instructive episode in the system's history. It shows that the Consultative Parties, having negotiated an instrument over six years, could be pushed by domestic opinion and by two determined states into abandoning it and adopting the opposite policy. It shows the power of the consensus rule to block as well as to build. And it produced, in short order, the Protocol. 6.4 The Protocol on Environmental Protection The Protocol on Environmental Protection to the Antarctic Treaty, known as the #Madrid_Protocol, was adopted in 1991 and entered into force in 1998. It is the most far-reaching environmental instrument in the system. Article 2 designates Antarctica as a natural reserve, devoted to peace and science. Article 3 sets out environmental principles that must govern all activity, requiring that activities be planned and conducted so as to limit adverse impacts, and establishing that the protection of the Antarctic environment and of its intrinsic, wilderness, aesthetic and scientific values shall be a fundamental consideration in the planning and conduct of all activities. Article 7 contains the provision for which the Protocol is best known: any activity relating to mineral resources, other than scientific research, is prohibited. This is a flat #mining_ban with no licensing exception and no time limit. Article 25 provides for modification. The Protocol may be modified at any time by unanimous agreement. In addition, after fifty years from entry into force, that is from 2048, a review conference may be requested by any Consultative Party. Critically, the mining ban has an additional lock: it cannot be removed unless a binding legal regime on mineral resource activities is in force, which itself would require agreement including all the states that were Consultative Parties in 1991. This has generated one of the most persistent misunderstandings in public discussion of Antarctica. The Protocol does not expire in 2048. The mining ban does not lapse in 2048. What becomes available in 2048 is a procedural right to request a review conference, which any party may request but no party is obliged to attend with any particular position, and which could only change the ban through a demanding sequence of agreement and ratification. The date is a threshold, not a cliff. It is nonetheless a date around which expectations and speculation have clustered, and that in itself has political effects. The Protocol also created the Committee for Environmental Protection, an expert body that advises the ATCM. The #CEP considers environmental impact assessments, protected area management plans, non-native species issues, and the state of the Antarctic environment. It has no decision-making power of its own; it advises, and the ATCM decides. 6.5 The annexes The Protocol operates through annexes, which contain the detailed rules. Annex I establishes the #environmental_impact_assessment system, with three tiers: a preliminary stage, an initial environmental evaluation for activities with a minor or transitory impact, and a comprehensive environmental evaluation, subject to international scrutiny, for activities likely to have more than a minor or transitory impact. The phrase "more than a minor or transitory impact" is the threshold on which the whole system turns, and it has never been authoritatively defined. Annex II addresses conservation of Antarctic fauna and flora, prohibiting the taking of native species without a permit and regulating the introduction of #non_native_species. Annex III addresses waste disposal and management, requiring the removal of most wastes from the treaty area and prohibiting open burning of waste. Annex IV addresses marine pollution, drawing on the standards of the international shipping regime. Annex V establishes the protected area system, creating Antarctic Specially Protected Areas, entry to which requires a permit, and Antarctic Specially Managed Areas, which coordinate activities in places of concentrated use. Annex VI, on liability arising from environmental emergencies, was adopted in 2005. It has not yet entered into force, because it requires approval by all the states that were Consultative Parties at the time of adoption, and a number have not yet completed the necessary domestic steps. The #liability_annex therefore stands as a visible marker of the system's implementation gap: an instrument agreed in principle by all and operative for none. 6.6 Institutions The system was for decades deliberately institution-light. There was no permanent Secretariat until 2004, when one was established in Buenos Aires, and its mandate is administrative rather than executive. It supports meetings, maintains records, and manages the exchange of information. It does not monitor, enforce, or initiate. Alongside the formal bodies sit two influential non-state organisations. The Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research, or #SCAR, is a body of the International Science Council and provides independent scientific advice to the ATCM. The Council of Managers of National Antarctic Programs, or #COMNAP, brings together the operational agencies that actually run stations and ships and provides practical expertise. Non-governmental organisations, notably the Antarctic and Southern Ocean Coalition, and the tourism industry association, IAATO, attend meetings as observers or experts. The system is thus more open to non-state input than its reputation as a closed club suggests, though input is not the same as influence. 7. Peace and Demilitarisation in Practice 7.1 The record Measured against its primary objective, the treaty has succeeded completely. In more than sixty years, there has been no war in Antarctica, no weapons test, no military base, no fortification, and no manoeuvre. The inspection system has operated without a party ever being denied access. Warships have transited and naval aircraft have flown, but always in support roles that the treaty permits. No state has attempted to fortify a claim. This is not a trivial achievement. Consider the counterfactual. Two of the claimant states, Argentina and the United Kingdom, fought a war in the South Atlantic in 1982 over islands lying immediately north of the treaty area, in a dispute directly connected to their competing Antarctic and sub-Antarctic claims. That war did not extend south of sixty degrees. The treaty held even between belligerents. Similarly, the treaty held through the entire Cold War, through the collapse of the Soviet Union, and through the more recent deterioration in relations between Russia and Western states, a deterioration that has been felt at Antarctic meetings in the form of blocked consensus but never in the form of military activity. 7.2 Why it has held Several explanations are offered in the literature and each captures part of the truth. The first is low stakes. Antarctica has no accessible resources worth fighting for under current technology and prices, no population, and no strategic terrain. Peace is cheap when nothing is at issue. The second is high cost. Operating in Antarctica is extraordinarily expensive and difficult. Any military operation would require the same logistics chain that barely sustains a scientific station, in an environment where equipment fails and rescue is impossible. Deterrence is provided by the ice. The third is institutional. The treaty removed the specific issue, sovereignty, that could plausibly have generated conflict, and replaced it with a dense network of meetings, exchanges and inspections that make cooperation habitual. States that meet annually, host one another's scientists, and inspect one another's stations do not easily slide into confrontation. The honest assessment is that all three explanations operate together, and that the relative weight of the institutional explanation is the one that matters for the future. If stakes rise, will the institution still hold? That question cannot be answered from the historical record, because the stakes have never risen. 7.3 The dual-use problem One genuine complication is the growing difficulty of distinguishing peaceful from military activity in a world of #dual_use technology. Satellite ground stations located in Antarctica are extremely valuable because polar orbiting satellites pass overhead on every orbit. Such stations support scientific data downlink, weather forecasting, and navigation systems. The same infrastructure can support military satellite operations and precision navigation for weapons systems. The treaty text offers little help here. It prohibits military bases and manoeuvres and weapons testing. It says nothing explicit about receiving satellite signals. States operating such facilities describe them as scientific. Other states have raised questions, notably in relation to installations associated with global navigation satellite systems, and the matter has been discussed at ATCMs without resolution. This is the clearest example of a #governance_gap that the 1959 drafters could not have anticipated and that the consensus rule makes difficult to close. 8. Science and Cooperation in Practice 8.1 What the ice has told us The scientific case for Antarctic governance is easy to state. Ice cores drilled at Vostok, Dome C and elsewhere have provided continuous records of atmospheric composition and temperature stretching back hundreds of thousands of years, giving the single strongest empirical foundation for understanding the relationship between greenhouse gases and climate. The Antarctic ozone hole was detected by British Antarctic Survey scientists at Halley in the mid-1980s, a discovery that led directly to the Montreal Protocol, one of the most effective environmental treaties ever concluded. Subglacial lakes, including Lake Vostok, have revealed environments isolated for millions of years. Meteorite collections from the ice sheet have provided material from Mars and from the early solar system. Southern Ocean observations underpin understanding of global ocean circulation and of the ocean's uptake of heat and carbon. None of this would have been possible without Articles II and III. Continental-scale science requires continental-scale access, and access requires that no state be able to fence off a sector. 8.2 The politics inside the science Yet science in Antarctica has never been purely scientific. Because Article IX ties Consultative Party status to substantial research activity, the decision to build a station is simultaneously a decision to acquire a seat at the table. Stations are therefore built in places that serve political visibility as well as scientific need, and their distribution across the continent reflects logistics and access as much as research priority. This produces two effects. First, it concentrates human presence, and therefore environmental impact, in the small ice-free coastal areas that are also the most biologically valuable. The #station_footprint problem is a direct consequence of the incentive structure. Second, it raises questions of #legitimacy and #inclusivity. States that cannot afford a research programme cannot obtain decision-making power over a continent that the system itself describes as being managed in the interest of all mankind, a phrase that appears in the treaty's preamble. #capacity_building initiatives and partnerships between programmes have gone some way toward broadening participation, but the structural barrier remains. 8.3 Data sharing today The Article III commitment to make scientific results freely available has been institutionalised through data centres and directories, and Antarctic science is by international standards unusually open. Nevertheless, gaps persist. Data on the environmental performance of stations, on the precise locations and impacts of activities, and on some categories of operational information are shared less consistently than pure research data. Environmental monitoring, in particular, is uneven across national programmes, which weakens the evidence base for the very environmental decisions the system is asked to take. 9. Environmental Protection and Living Resources in Practice 9.1 The Protocol's real-world performance The Protocol changed Antarctic operations. Waste that was once dumped or burned is now removed. Environmental impact assessment is routine for new construction. Protected areas are designated and managed. Sewage treatment has improved. Old abandoned bases have been cleaned up, though many remain. But the Protocol's weaknesses are equally clear. The EIA system relies on self-assessment by the proposing state, with international scrutiny only at the highest tier, and the threshold triggering that tier is undefined. The CEP can advise but cannot require. There is no independent inspectorate for environmental compliance comparable to the Article VII inspection right for military compliance. The #enforcement architecture is, in effect, national law plus peer pressure. The protected area network illustrates the problem. Antarctic Specially Protected Areas cover a very small fraction of the continent, and analyses have shown that their distribution correlates poorly with the distribution of biodiversity, reflecting instead where stations happen to be and where designation was politically easy (Hughes and Grant, 2017; Leihy et al., 2020). Efforts to make the network representative have been discussed for years within the CEP without producing a comprehensive redesign, because designation ultimately requires ATCM consensus. 9.2 CCAMLR and the krill question Antarctic krill is the largest single fishery in the Southern Ocean and the target of growing commercial interest, driven by demand for aquaculture feed and for krill oil supplements. The fishery is concentrated in Area 48, around the Antarctic Peninsula, the South Shetland Islands, the South Orkneys and South Georgia, which is precisely where krill-dependent predators, including penguins, seals and whales, feed during the breeding season. CCAMLR manages the #krill_fishery through a precautionary catch limit for the region as a whole, plus a much lower trigger level that has functioned as the operative cap. The scientific concern is not that the total catch approaches the biomass, which it does not, but that catch is spatially and temporally concentrated in exactly the places and seasons where predators are least able to move elsewhere. Local depletion can harm dependent populations even when the stock as a whole appears healthy. This is precisely the situation Article II of the convention was written to prevent, and it is the clearest test of whether the ecosystem approach can be operationalised rather than merely proclaimed. Efforts to revise the krill management framework, moving from a single regional trigger to spatially explicit management that distributes catch away from predator hotspots, have been pursued in the Commission for years. Progress has been slow, and agreement has repeatedly foundered on the consensus requirement. 9.3 Marine protected areas and the consensus wall CCAMLR has adopted two #marine_protected_areas: the South Orkney Islands Southern Shelf MPA in 2009 and the very large Ross Sea Region MPA, agreed in 2016 after years of negotiation and entered into force in 2017. The Ross Sea agreement was celebrated as proof that consensus among twenty-six members, including states with divergent interests, could still deliver conservation on an ocean scale (Brooks et al., 2020). Since then, the record has been one of blockage. Proposals for MPAs in East Antarctica, the Weddell Sea, and the Antarctic Peninsula region, all developed with extensive scientific support and co-sponsored by multiple members, have been tabled repeatedly and repeatedly failed to achieve consensus, with objections centring on the sufficiency of the scientific basis and on the relationship between conservation measures and fishing access. The result is that CCAMLR has adopted no new large MPA since 2016, despite an organisational commitment to a representative system of protection. This is the sharpest illustration of the system's central dilemma. Consensus is what makes the Antarctic settlement stable, because no state can be outvoted on matters touching its interests, and no state therefore has reason to defect. Consensus is also what makes conservation slow, because a single member can hold an entire proposal indefinitely. The rule that protects the peace obstructs the protection of the ocean, and there is no obvious way to have one without the other. 10. Contemporary Pressures 10.1 Climate change The single largest threat to Antarctica does not originate in Antarctica and cannot be regulated by the Antarctic Treaty System. #climate_change is produced by emissions everywhere and delivered to the ice by the atmosphere and the ocean. The evidence of change is now substantial. The Antarctic Peninsula has warmed markedly, ice shelves have collapsed, and glacier flow has accelerated in parts of West Antarctica. Attention has focused on the marine-based sectors of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, particularly around the Amundsen Sea, where warm ocean water reaches the underside of glaciers and where the question of #ice_sheet_stability has direct implications for global sea level over centuries. Sea ice has produced the most abrupt recent surprise. Antarctic sea ice extent had been comparatively stable, even slightly increasing, for decades, in contrast to the Arctic. Since the mid-2010s it has fallen sharply, with record low extents in the early 2020s. Analyses have raised the possibility that the system has shifted into a new state rather than experiencing ordinary variability (Purich and Doddridge, 2023). The ecological consequences are already visible: the loss of fast ice beneath emperor penguin colonies has produced widespread breeding failure, with entire colonies losing a season's chicks (Fretwell et al., 2023). Warming also affects the terrestrial environment. Ice-free areas are projected to expand, which sounds like an increase in habitat but in practice means that isolated, endemic communities adapted to extreme conditions will be connected to one another and exposed to competitors. Combined with rising human traffic, this substantially raises invasion risk (Chown and Brooks, 2019; Lee et al., 2022). The governance problem is structural. The ATCM can regulate what happens in Antarctica. It cannot regulate what happens to Antarctica. Its only available response is adaptive: making protected areas climate-resilient, tightening biosecurity, and reducing the local stressors that compound climate impacts. Some scholars argue that the system should speak with a collective voice into global climate processes, on the ground that the Consultative Parties have a treaty duty to protect an environment that global emissions are destroying. Others reply that this would politicise the ATCM and risk fracturing the consensus that holds it together. 10.2 Tourism Antarctic tourism has grown from a few thousand visitors in the 1990s to figures exceeding one hundred thousand in recent seasons, counting both landed passengers and those on cruise-only voyages. The industry is dominated by expedition cruise operators, most of whom belong to a self-regulating association that sets standards for landing sites, group sizes, wildlife approach distances, and biosecurity. Self-regulation has worked better than critics expected, but it is not a substitute for law. #Antarctic_tourism raises several distinct governance problems. Visits concentrate at a small number of accessible, wildlife-rich sites on the Peninsula, producing cumulative impacts that no single voyage's environmental assessment captures. Vessels increase the risk of introducing non-native organisms via hulls and cargo. Larger vessels raise the prospect of a mass rescue in an area with negligible rescue capacity. Newer activity types, including marathons, submersible dives and semi-permanent land camps, sit uneasily within a regulatory framework designed around ship-based visits. The Consultative Parties have discussed tourism regulation for decades and have adopted numerous non-binding guidelines and site-specific rules. A comprehensive, binding framework has repeatedly failed to emerge, again because agreement requires consensus and because states differ over whether tourism should be capped, priced, zoned, or simply managed (Bastmeijer et al., 2023). The result is a body of #soft_law of uncertain force, layered over an industry association's own rules, layered over the national law of the flag state. 10.3 Fishing and bioprospecting Beyond krill, the toothfish fisheries of the Southern Ocean have historically attracted illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing, and while CCAMLR's catch documentation scheme has reduced this substantially, the risk persists. Fishing generates the strongest commercial interest in the region and therefore the strongest incentive to resist conservation measures. #bioprospecting, the search for commercially valuable genetic and biochemical material in Antarctic organisms, presents a different problem. Antarctic organisms have evolved extraordinary adaptations, including antifreeze proteins and cold-active enzymes, with applications in medicine, food processing and industry. The Antarctic Treaty System has no regime governing the ownership or benefit-sharing of such material. Research is protected by Article II and its results are supposed to be freely available under Article III, but the patenting of derived products sits outside the system entirely. The parties have discussed the issue at successive meetings without agreeing on more than the collection of information, partly because any regime touching ownership brushes uncomfortably close to the sovereignty questions Article IV was designed to avoid. 10.4 New actors and shifting geopolitics The composition of Antarctic activity is changing. China has expanded its presence substantially, operating multiple stations across different sectors and opening a new coastal station in the Ross Sea region in 2024. India, South Korea, Turkey, Iran and others have expressed or acted on ambitions to expand polar research. Russia has maintained an extensive station network and has conducted marine seismic surveys in the Southern Ocean that it describes as scientific research and that other parties and analysts have questioned as potentially relevant to hydrocarbon assessment. Interpretations diverge sharply. One reading is that this is exactly what the treaty invites: states demonstrating interest through science, joining the system, and accepting its rules. On this account, the growth of activity is evidence of the treaty's continuing attraction, not of its erosion. The alternative reading is that some activity constitutes positioning: building presence in strategically useful locations, generating data with resource relevance, and accumulating the practical footprint that would matter if the settlement ever changed. Concerns about #resource_nationalism intensify around the 2048 date, even though, as noted, that date has no legal significance for the mining ban's continuation. The most careful assessment available in the literature is that intentions cannot be read from activity, that the treaty's inspection system exists precisely so that states need not rely on guessing, and that the appropriate response to uncertainty is to use the transparency tools the treaty already provides rather than to assume bad faith. The corollary is that if states stop conducting inspections, or if inspections become politically difficult, the system loses the instrument that has kept trust cheap. 10.5 The strain on consensus Underlying all of the above is the deterioration in relations among major parties. Antarctic meetings have in recent years experienced difficulty in adopting even routine texts, with disagreements spilling over from wider international disputes. Agreements on matters as uncontroversial as commemorating anniversaries or endorsing scientific reports have been delayed or blocked. Whatever one thinks about the merits of particular objections, the pattern indicates that the machinery of consensus is under strain in a way that it was not for most of the treaty's life. 11. Discussion: Is the Treaty Fit for Purpose? 11.1 Judging by the treaty's own standards If the Antarctic Treaty is assessed against the objectives written into its preamble and its operative articles, it must be judged a success. The preamble states that it is in the interest of all mankind that Antarctica shall continue forever to be used exclusively for peaceful purposes and shall not become the scene or object of international discord. Antarctica has been used exclusively for peaceful purposes. It has not become the scene of international discord. Scientific cooperation has continued and expanded. Inspections have been carried out without incident. No new claims have been made. By these standards, the #treaty_architecture works, and the ingenuity of Article IV deserves the praise it receives. The treaty solved a problem that looked unsolvable by refusing to solve it, and it converted an intractable legal question into a manageable practical arrangement. 11.2 Judging by contemporary standards If the treaty is assessed against contemporary expectations of environmental governance, the verdict is far more mixed. The system has no independent monitoring body, no compliance mechanism with teeth, no operative liability regime, no binding tourism framework, no bioprospecting regime, an unrepresentative protected area network, and a decision rule that allows any single member to prevent action indefinitely. It has produced a legally binding mining ban, which is a genuine achievement, and an ecosystem-based fisheries convention whose principles are ahead of their time but whose implementation lags behind them. The deeper point is that these are not failures of will alone. They are consequences of design. The treaty was built to prevent conflict, and the tools it uses to prevent conflict, above all consensus and the suspension of contested questions, are the same tools that now prevent decisive environmental action. One cannot straightforwardly remove consensus without reopening the question of who has the authority to bind whom in a territory whose ownership is unresolved. The stability of the peace and the sluggishness of the conservation are two faces of the same mechanism. 11.3 The reform debate Three broad positions can be identified in the literature. The first, which may be called the conservationist position, holds that the environmental crisis is severe enough to justify changing decision rules, for example by permitting qualified majority voting on conservation measures within CCAMLR, or by giving the CEP a stronger role. Its proponents argue that a system that cannot protect the environment it has declared a natural reserve is failing at its own declared purpose. The second, the stabilist position, holds that the consensus rule is the price of the peace and that any attempt to change it risks unravelling the settlement. On this view, a state that could be outvoted on fishing today could conclude that the system no longer serves it and could begin to test Article IV. Slow conservation is better than fast collapse. The third, the pragmatist position, holds that the real problem is not the decision rule but the underuse of powers the system already possesses. The parties can already designate protected areas, already conduct inspections, already require environmental assessment, already adopt binding measures at the ATCM. What is lacking is not authority but political will and administrative capacity. On this view, reform should focus on strengthening implementation: bringing Annex VI into force, resourcing the Secretariat, establishing systematic environmental monitoring, tightening #biosecurity requirements, and making inspections routine and environmentally focused rather than occasional and militarily focused. This article's assessment is that the pragmatist position is the most defensible in the short term and the least sufficient in the long term. The immediate wins are all in implementation, and they do not require reopening anything. But if sea ice continues to retreat, if krill fishing continues to concentrate, and if a single member continues to block every marine protected area proposal, then the conservationist critique becomes harder to answer, because a system that consistently fails to act is not in fact preserving the status quo. It is permitting change by inaction. 11.4 The role of science in legitimacy One further theme deserves emphasis. The treaty's legitimacy has always rested on science. The Consultative Parties govern because they research. That bargain is defensible only if the research actually informs the governance. Where the CEP and the CCAMLR Scientific Committee produce clear advice and the political bodies decline to act on it, the bargain weakens. The claim to govern on behalf of all mankind, made by states that gained their seats through scientific investment, becomes harder to sustain when scientific advice is treated as one input among many, to be balanced against commercial fishing interests. This is not a technical point about procedure. It goes to the foundation of the system. If states outside the club conclude that the club neither protects the environment nor shares the benefits, pressure for an alternative arrangement, perhaps through the United Nations, will grow. That pressure existed in the 1980s, when the question of Antarctica was raised in the General Assembly, and it subsided partly because the Protocol demonstrated that the system could deliver. It could return. 12. Limitations of This Study Several limitations should be acknowledged. First, the study is desk-based. It draws on published documents and literature, not on interviews with negotiators, delegates or scientists. The internal reasoning of delegations, particularly in relation to blocked consensus, is therefore inferred rather than observed. States that block proposals rarely explain themselves fully in public records, and the reasons offered in meetings may not be the operative ones. Second, the study relies overwhelmingly on English-language sources. Significant scholarship and policy analysis exists in Spanish, Russian, Chinese, French and other languages, particularly from claimant states and from newer entrants, and its absence introduces a real bias into any assessment of motives and intentions. Third, the scientific literature reviewed here is selective. Antarctic science is vast and this article engages with it only where it bears directly on governance questions. Readers should not treat the scientific claims made here as a systematic review. Fourth, the situation is moving. Sea ice conditions, fisheries negotiations, membership questions and geopolitical relations are all in flux, and any assessment written at a particular moment risks being overtaken. The structural analysis offered here is intended to outlast the particulars, but the particulars matter. Fifth, the article takes the treaty's continued existence as its analytical frame. It does not seriously model scenarios of breakdown, partly because such modelling would be speculative and partly because no state currently advocates breakdown. This may understate tail risks. 13. Conclusion and Recommendations 13.1 Conclusion The Antarctic Treaty of 1959 is a short document that did a difficult thing. It took a continent that seven states claimed, that two superpowers refused to concede, and that nobody could govern, and it turned it into a place where scientists from rival blocs work in each other's stations and where armies have never gone. It did this not by settling the argument but by putting the argument in a box, locking the box, and building a laboratory on top of it. The achievement is real and it should not be diminished by the criticisms that follow it. #demilitarisation has held completely. #peaceful_purposes has held completely. #scientific_cooperation has produced discoveries, from the ozone hole to the ice core record, that changed how the world understands itself. The #inspection_regime worked when arms control verification worked nowhere else. The Protocol delivered a binding mining prohibition at a moment when the alternative was a licensing regime. These are not small things. But the box the treaty locked has begun to rattle. Not because any state is preparing to break it open, but because the world outside has changed in ways the box was not designed for. A treaty that suspends sovereignty says nothing about a warming ocean. A rule that requires consensus cannot deliver a protected area network when one member says no. A system that ties power to research capacity cannot easily explain itself to states that cannot afford research. And a continent declared a natural reserve devoted to peace and science is losing its sea ice regardless of what its Consultative Parties decide at their annual meeting. The honest conclusion is therefore double-edged. As an instrument of peace, the Antarctic Treaty is among the most successful agreements in the history of international law. As an instrument of environmental protection, it is a good framework operating well below its own potential, constrained by a decision rule it cannot easily abandon and confronted by a threat it cannot regulate. Whether the first success can survive the second failure is the open question of the next twenty-five years. 13.2 Recommendations The following recommendations follow from the analysis and are framed to be achievable within the existing legal structure. Bring Annex VI into force. The liability annex has been agreed since 2005 and remains inoperative because some states have not completed domestic approval. Completing ratification requires no new negotiation and would close a visible gap in the system's credibility. Institutionalise environmental inspections. Article VII inspections are legally unconstrained and could readily be used to assess environmental compliance, including waste management, station footprint, biosecurity practice and adherence to protected area management plans. Making such inspections regular, jointly conducted, and publicly reported would create meaningful accountability without requiring any change to the treaty. Adopt a binding tourism framework. Growth in visitor numbers, diversification of activity, and cumulative impacts at concentrated sites have outrun the capacity of guidelines and industry self-regulation. A binding instrument addressing site capacity, activity types, vessel standards and biosecurity should be a priority for the ATCM. Strengthen biosecurity. Ship traffic connects Antarctic coasts to ports worldwide. Mandatory hull cleaning standards, ballast water controls, cargo inspection protocols, and clothing and equipment decontamination should be standardised across all national programmes and all tourist operators, and monitored rather than assumed. Redesign the protected area network. The current network reflects history rather than biodiversity. A systematic conservation planning exercise, drawing on existing biogeographic classifications and on climate projections, should identify a representative network including areas likely to remain suitable as the climate changes, and the parties should commit to designating it on a defined timetable. Break the marine protected area deadlock in CCAMLR. Options include splitting large proposals into components that can be agreed sequentially, building explicit review and sunset provisions into designations to address concerns about permanence, linking designation to guaranteed research access, and strengthening the requirement that objections be accompanied by specific scientific reasoning that the Scientific Committee can assess. Move krill management to a spatially explicit basis. The concentration of catch in predator foraging areas is the central risk. Distributing catch across subareas in proportion to biomass and away from breeding colonies is the measure most clearly supported by the ecosystem approach that CCAMLR's own founding article demands. Address bioprospecting. The parties should agree, at minimum, mandatory reporting of biological prospecting activity and of resulting patents, as a first step toward a benefit-sharing arrangement that does not require resolving sovereignty. Broaden participation. Structured partnerships that allow states without independent logistics to obtain meaningful research participation, including berths, laboratory access and data rights, would widen the base of the system and strengthen its claim to act in the interest of all mankind. Protect the inspection norm. Above all, the parties should resist any erosion of the unconditional right of access under Article VII. It is the treaty's most valuable asset, and it is the one that would be hardest to rebuild if lost. Antarctica is not a wilderness because it is empty. It is a wilderness because, sixty-six years ago, a group of states that disagreed about almost everything agreed that some places should be left to science and peace. That agreement was not inevitable and it is not self-sustaining. It is maintained, meeting by meeting, by people who have decided that it is worth maintaining. Whether the generation now studying these questions makes the same decision is the only guarantee the continent has. 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C., Werenkraut, V., Winfield, I. J., and Roy, H. E. (2020). Invasive non-native species likely to threaten biodiversity and ecosystems in the Antarctic Peninsula region. Global Change Biology, 26(4), pp. 2702 to 2716. Lee, J. R., Terauds, A., Carwardine, J., Shaw, J. D., Fuller, R. A., Possingham, H. P., Chown, S. L., Convey, P., Gilbert, N., Hughes, K. A., McIvor, E., Robinson, S. A., Ropert-Coudert, Y., Bergstrom, D. M., Biersma, E. M., Christian, C., Cowan, D. A., Frenot, Y., Ruoppolo, V., and Wall, D. H. (2022). Threat management priorities for conserving Antarctic biodiversity. PLOS Biology, 20(12), e3001921. Leihy, R. I., Coetzee, B. W. T., Morgan, F., Raymond, B., Shaw, J. D., Terauds, A., Bastmeijer, K., and Chown, S. L. (2020). Antarctica's wilderness fails to capture continent's biodiversity. Nature, 583(7817), pp. 567 to 571. McCarthy, A. H., Peck, L. S., and Aldridge, D. C. (2022). Ship traffic connects Antarctica's fragile coasts to worldwide ecosystems. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 119(3), e2110303118. Purich, A., and Doddridge, E. W. (2023). Record low Antarctic sea ice coverage indicates a new sea ice state. Communications Earth and Environment, 4, 314. Rintoul, S. R., Chown, S. L., DeConto, R. M., England, M. H., Fricker, H. A., Masson-Delmotte, V., Naish, T. R., Siegert, M. J., and Xavier, J. C. (2018). Choosing the future of Antarctica. Nature, 558(7709), pp. 233 to 241. Rogers, A. D., Frinault, B. A. V., Barnes, D. K. A., Bindoff, N. L., Downie, R., Ducklow, H. W., Friedlaender, A. S., Hart, T., Hill, S. L., Hofmann, E. E., Linse, K., McMahon, C. R., Murphy, E. J., Pakhomov, E. A., Reygondeau, G., Staniland, I. J., Wolf-Gladrow, D. A., and Wright, R. M. (2020). Antarctic futures: An assessment of climate-driven changes in ecosystem structure, function, and service provisioning in the Southern Ocean. Annual Review of Marine Science, 12, pp. 87 to 120. Scott, K. N., and VanderZwaag, D. L. (Eds.) (2020). Research Handbook on Polar Law. Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham. Siegert, M. J., Bentley, M. J., Atkinson, A., Bracegirdle, T. J., Convey, P., Davies, B., Downie, R., Hogg, A. E., Holmes, C., Hughes, K. A., Meredith, M. P., Ross, N., Rumble, J., and Wilkinson, J. (2023). Antarctic extreme events. Frontiers in Environmental Science, 11, 1229283. Turner, J., Marshall, G. J., Clem, K., Colwell, S., Phillips, T., and Lu, H. (2020). Antarctic temperature variability and change from station data. International Journal of Climatology, 40(6), pp. 2986 to 3007. Hashtags #Antarctic_Treaty #Antarctic_Treaty_System #Antarctica #peaceful_purposes #demilitarisation #scientific_cooperation #Article_IV #sovereignty_freeze #Madrid_Protocol #mining_ban #CCAMLR #Southern_Ocean #polar_law #science_diplomacy #global_commons #international_law #environmental_governance #marine_protected_areas #climate_change #geopolitics
- Governing the Global Movement of Toxic Materials: A Critical Review of the Basel Convention (1989) on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and Their Disposal
The Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and their Disposal is the central legal instrument that governs how dangerous waste crosses national borders. Adopted in 1989 and in force since 1992, it now binds almost every country in the world. This article reviews the origins, legal design, evolution, and performance of the treaty, and it asks a simple question that matters to students, regulators, and researchers alike: has the Convention actually changed the way toxic materials move around the planet? The study uses a doctrinal and integrative review method. It reads the treaty text and its annexes closely, traces the decisions of the Conference of the Parties, and compares those legal commitments with recent empirical evidence on waste flows, enforcement, and health outcomes. Three findings emerge. First, the Convention has built a durable procedural architecture, based on notification, consent, tracking, and the duty to take waste back, and this architecture has raised the political and administrative cost of careless dumping. Second, the treaty has proved capable of growth. The 2019 Ban Amendment, the plastic waste entries that took effect in 2021, and the electronic waste entries that took effect in 2025 show that the regime can absorb new waste streams without renegotiation of the parent treaty. Third, and less comfortably, the Convention still leaks. Definitional ambiguity, weak customs capacity, the absence of one major exporting state from the party list, the recycling exemption, and the reuse loophole all allow harmful cargo to keep moving toward places that cannot handle it safely. The article argues that the next stage of reform should focus less on adding new categories of waste and more on closing the gap between paper obligations and port level practice. It proposes a reform agenda built around harmonised customs coding, digital traceability, mandatory producer responsibility upstream, and serious financial support for recycling infrastructure in receiving countries. The paper is written for advanced students and early career researchers who need both a reliable account of the law and a critical view of its limits. Keywords: Basel Convention; hazardous waste; transboundary movement; prior informed consent; environmentally sound management; waste trade; electronic waste; plastic waste; environmental justice; international environmental law 1. Introduction Waste is the shadow of production. Every factory, hospital, mine, refinery, and household leaves behind material that nobody wants. Some of that material is merely useless. Some of it is poisonous, corrosive, explosive, or infectious, and it stays dangerous for decades. What a society does with this residue tells you a great deal about its values, its wealth, and its politics. For most of the twentieth century, the answer was simple: bury it, burn it, or send it somewhere else. The third option became attractive in the 1970s and 1980s, when rich industrial states began to regulate disposal strictly at home. Once domestic disposal became expensive and unpopular, the economics of #waste_trade changed. A drum of contaminated solvent that cost hundreds of dollars to treat legally in Europe or North America could be shipped abroad for a fraction of that price. Shipping containers were cheap, borders were porous, and many poorer states had neither the laws nor the laboratories to detect what was arriving. The result was a quiet and profitable traffic in poison. The #Basel_Convention was the international community's answer to that traffic. It was adopted in Basel, Switzerland in March 1989, and it entered into force on 5 May 1992. Its formal name states its purpose plainly: the Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and their Disposal. It does not ban the movement of dangerous waste outright. Instead, it builds a control system. Before waste crosses a border, the exporting state must notify the importing state and any transit states, and the shipment may proceed only if those states give written agreement. This is the #prior_informed_consent procedure, and it sits at the heart of the treaty. Alongside it stands a second core idea, #environmentally_sound_management, which requires that waste be handled in a way that protects human health and the environment wherever it ends up. The Convention today has close to universal membership. As of mid 2024 there were 191 parties, including the European Union. The United States has signed but has never ratified, which leaves the world's largest economy outside the party framework, a fact that will occupy us later in this article. The treaty has not stood still. It has grown in three important directions. In 2019 the #Ban_Amendment finally entered into force, prohibiting the export of hazardous waste from a listed group of wealthier countries to all other countries. In 2021 new entries brought most #plastic_waste under the control system. In 2025 further entries brought all #e_waste, hazardous and non hazardous alike, under the same consent requirement. Each of these steps was achieved by amending the annexes rather than by writing a new treaty, which is an underappreciated feature of the Convention's design. And yet the picture on the ground remains troubling. Container ships still carry mixed plastic bales to countries with no capacity to sort them. Used electronics still arrive in West African and South Asian ports labelled as second hand goods and end up burning in open yards. Ships still beach on tidal flats to be cut apart by workers with no protective equipment. The gap between the law on the page and the practice at the port is the central problem this article addresses. 1.1 Research problem The scholarly literature on the Convention tends to split into two camps. Legal scholars analyse the text, the annexes, and the decisions of the Conference of the Parties, and often conclude that the framework is sophisticated but underenforced. Empirical and policy scholars analyse trade statistics, health data, and case studies, and often conclude that the framework has been outmanoeuvred by industry and by the informal economy. The two literatures rarely speak to each other in a sustained way. This article tries to bring them into one conversation. 1.2 Research questions The article is organised around four questions. What legal architecture does the Convention establish, and what assumptions about state behaviour does that architecture rest on? How has the regime evolved since 1989, and what does that evolution reveal about its adaptive capacity? What does recent evidence say about the Convention's effect on actual flows of hazardous, plastic, and electronic waste? Where does the regime fail, and what reforms would plausibly close those failures? 1.3 Contribution and structure The contribution is threefold. The article offers a consolidated and accessible account of the treaty for students entering this field. It links the legal analysis to recent empirical work on waste flows and enforcement. And it sets out a reform agenda that is concrete rather than aspirational. The remainder of the paper proceeds as follows. Section 2 traces the historical background. Section 3 explains the method. Section 4 sets out the legal architecture in detail. Section 5 examines the Ban Amendment. Section 6 examines the plastic and electronic waste amendments. Section 7 turns to implementation and compliance. Section 8 assesses effectiveness against the evidence. Section 9 identifies persistent weaknesses. Section 10 places the Convention within the wider regime complex. Section 11 presents illustrative country and sector cases. Section 12 discusses reform. Section 13 draws out implications, Section 14 states limitations, and Section 15 concludes. 2. Historical Background: How the Toxic Trade Was Born 2.1 Regulation at home, displacement abroad The story begins with success rather than failure. During the 1970s, industrialised states passed serious environmental legislation. The United States enacted its resource conservation and hazardous waste statutes. European states tightened landfill and incineration rules. Public tolerance for toxic dumps collapsed, a shift often summarised by the phrase "not in my back yard." These laws worked in one sense. They made domestic disposal safer. But they also made it far more expensive. Waste that once cost very little to dump now cost a great deal to treat. At the same time, containerised shipping made international freight cheap and routine, and many newly independent states were desperate for foreign currency and open to almost any deal that promised it. The result was a predictable displacement. Hazardous material began to flow from places with strict rules to places with weak ones. Critics gave this pattern a name that has stuck: #toxic_colonialism. The term is deliberately provocative, and some scholars find it too blunt, but it captures something real. The direction of flow followed the contours of economic power. 2.2 The scandals that forced action Three episodes did more than any academic argument to create political pressure for a treaty. The first is the voyage of the Khian Sea. In 1986 a cargo ship left Philadelphia carrying thousands of tonnes of incinerator ash. Country after country refused it. The ship changed its name twice and wandered for months. Part of the cargo was dumped on a beach in Haiti under the label of fertiliser. The rest disappeared into the ocean. The #Khian_Sea became a symbol of a system with no accountability. The second is the Koko incident. In 1987 and 1988, thousands of drums of chemical waste from Italy were stored in a yard in the village of Koko, in Nigeria, under a private arrangement with a local landowner. The drums leaked. People fell ill. Nigeria recalled its ambassador and seized an Italian ship. The #Koko_incident turned the issue into a matter of sovereignty and dignity, not just of pollution. The third came later but confirmed the pattern. In 2006 the tanker Probo Koala offloaded caustic waste in Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire, after refusing to pay for proper treatment in Europe. The material was dumped at sites around the city. At least fifteen people died, thousands were hospitalised, and more than one hundred thousand people sought medical help. The #Probo_Koala case showed that the treaty, by then more than a decade old, had not eliminated the problem it was written to solve. 2.3 Negotiation and adoption Negotiations took place under the auspices of the United Nations Environment Programme in the late 1980s. Two coalitions pulled in different directions. Many African and other developing states, supported by environmental groups, wanted an outright ban on exports of hazardous waste from rich to poor countries. Industrialised states and industry associations wanted a regulated trade, arguing that some waste genuinely needs specialised treatment facilities that only exist in a handful of countries, and that a ban would trap dangerous material in places with no capacity to treat it. The 1989 text is a compromise, and it leans toward the second camp. It regulates rather than prohibits. This is why the Convention was described at the time, and is still described by some scholars, as a weaker instrument than its supporters had hoped. The dissatisfaction of the developing world with that compromise is the direct cause of two later developments: the regional #Bamako_Convention of 1991, which does impose an import ban on African states, and the long campaign for the #Ban_Amendment inside the Basel system itself. Understanding this founding compromise is essential. Almost every later controversy in the regime, from the recycling exemption to the treatment of used electronics, is a continuation of the 1989 argument between regulation and prohibition. 3. Methodology 3.1 Research design This article uses an integrative review design that combines doctrinal legal analysis with a structured reading of recent empirical and policy scholarship. The design is qualitative and interpretive. It does not test a hypothesis with new data. It synthesises what is already known, evaluates the internal logic of the legal framework, and compares that logic with observed outcomes. This approach is standard in international environmental law scholarship, where the object of study is a body of rules whose effects are diffuse, delayed, and hard to isolate from other causes. 3.2 Sources of law The primary legal sources are the consolidated text of the Convention and its annexes as maintained by the Secretariat, the decisions of the Conference of the Parties, the technical guidelines on #environmentally_sound_management, and the reports of the Implementation and Compliance Committee. Regional instruments, including the Bamako Convention and the Waigani Convention, and the waste shipment rules of the European Union and the Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development, are treated as comparators. 3.3 Literature identification Secondary literature was identified through searches of major bibliographic databases using combinations of terms such as Basel Convention, transboundary waste, hazardous waste trade, plastic waste amendments, e waste governance, and waste crime. Preference was given to peer reviewed work published within the last five years, with a small number of older works retained where they are foundational and have not been superseded. Grey literature from intergovernmental bodies and from established monitoring organisations was used where it supplies data that the academic literature does not. 3.4 Analytical framework The analysis is organised around four evaluative dimensions that are commonly used to assess multilateral environmental agreements. Scope. Does the regime cover the materials and the conduct that cause the harm? Procedure. Are the control mechanisms coherent, workable, and proportionate? Compliance. Do parties in fact do what they have promised, and what happens when they do not? Outcome. Has the harm actually decreased? A regime can score well on the first three dimensions and still fail on the fourth. Keeping the dimensions separate prevents the common error of treating legal elegance as evidence of environmental success. 3.5 Limits of the method Three limits should be stated at the outset. Official trade data on waste is incomplete and is known to be manipulated through misdeclaration, so any quantitative claim about flows carries uncertainty. Illegal flows are by definition unrecorded, and estimates of their size rest on seizure data and inference. Finally, attributing changes in waste flows to the Convention alone is difficult, because unilateral measures, notably China's 2018 restriction on imports of recovered materials, reshaped the market at the same time as the Basel amendments took effect. 4. The Legal Architecture of the Convention 4.1 Objectives The Convention pursues three linked objectives. The first is to reduce the generation of hazardous waste at source and to encourage its management as close as possible to where it is produced. This second half of the idea is known as the #proximity_principle, and it is paired with a related expectation of national #self_sufficiency in disposal capacity. The second objective is to restrict cross border movement except where such movement is consistent with sound management. The third is to establish a regulatory system for the movements that are permitted. Note the ordering. Prevention comes first, restriction second, regulation third. In practice, the third objective has absorbed most of the institutional energy, and #waste_minimisation, which should logically come first, has received the least sustained attention. This inversion is one of the quiet failures of the regime. 4.2 What counts as waste, and what counts as hazardous The Convention defines waste as substances that are disposed of, are intended to be disposed of, or are required to be disposed of under national law. Disposal is defined broadly through Annex IV, and it includes both final disposal operations, such as landfill and incineration, and recovery operations, such as recycling and reclamation of metals. This is a crucial point that students often miss. Sending material abroad for recycling is a form of transboundary movement for disposal under the Convention's own vocabulary. Hazardousness is established in two ways. A waste is hazardous if it belongs to a category in Annex I, which lists waste streams and constituents such as clinical waste, waste oils, waste containing lead, mercury, cadmium, or asbestos, and if it displays one of the characteristics in Annex III, such as being explosive, flammable, poisonous, corrosive, ecotoxic, or infectious. A waste is also hazardous if the domestic law of the exporting, importing, or transit state defines it so. This second route matters, because it means that hazardousness is partly a matter of national definition, and national definitions differ. To reduce that uncertainty, the Convention added two lists. Annex VIII, sometimes called the amber list, contains wastes that are presumed hazardous. Annex IX, sometimes called the #green_list, contains wastes that are presumed not hazardous unless they are contaminated to the point of showing an Annex III characteristic. The #amber_list and the #green_list are administrative conveniences rather than final answers, and the boundary between them has become the main battlefield of the regime. Almost every recent amendment has been a fight about which list a material belongs on. There is also a residual category. Annex II covers wastes requiring special consideration, and it is into Annex II that the newer entries for plastics and electronics were placed. Two exclusions deserve mention. Radioactive waste subject to other international control systems is outside the Convention. Waste from the normal operation of ships, which is covered by the international convention on pollution from ships, is also excluded. 4.3 The general obligations Parties accept a set of general obligations under Article 4 that are easy to state and hard to implement. Parties may prohibit the import of hazardous waste, and if a party exercises that right, other parties must not export to it. Parties must not export to a state that has prohibited import, and must not export where they have reason to believe that the waste will not be managed soundly. Parties must reduce generation of hazardous waste to a minimum. Parties must ensure that adequate disposal facilities exist, so far as possible within their own territory. Parties must prevent pollution arising from waste management and must minimise its consequences. Parties must not permit export to or import from a non party, unless a separate agreement exists that meets the Convention's standards. Export to Antarctica is prohibited outright. The obligation not to export where the exporter has reason to believe that management will be unsound is the most demanding and the least enforced. It converts the exporting state into a supervisor of conditions in a foreign country. Few exporting authorities have the information, the mandate, or the appetite to make that judgement seriously. 4.4 The prior informed consent procedure The operational core of the treaty is a procedure, set out in Article 6 and elaborated in Annexes V A and V B. The sequence runs as follows. The exporter, through the competent authority of the exporting state, sends a written notification to the competent authority of the importing state and to any state of transit. The notification must describe the waste, its origin, its composition, its hazard characteristics, the intended disposal operation, the carrier, the disposal facility, and the insurance arrangements. The importing state must respond in writing, consenting with or without conditions, refusing, or requesting more information. Transit states must also respond, although some parties allow tacit consent for transit. Only after written consent is received may the shipment begin. Each consignment travels with a movement document that follows the waste from the point of departure to the point of disposal. The disposal facility must confirm receipt, and must certify completion of the disposal operation, and that certification travels back to the exporting state. Two additional duties give the procedure teeth. If a movement cannot be completed as planned, the exporting state has a duty to take the waste back. And if a movement is carried out illegally through the fault of the exporter or generator, the exporting state must ensure that the waste is returned or otherwise managed soundly. The #notification_procedure and the #movement_document create a paper trail. In theory that trail permits auditing, prosecution, and statistical analysis. In practice its usefulness depends entirely on the quality of the customs and environmental agencies at each end of the chain. 4.5 Illegal traffic Article 9 defines #illegal_traffic. A movement is illegal if it takes place without notification, without consent, with consent obtained through falsification or misrepresentation, if it does not conform materially to the documents, or if it results in deliberate disposal in contravention of the Convention and of general principles of international law. Parties are required to introduce domestic legislation to prevent and punish illegal traffic. The Convention explicitly states that illegal traffic in hazardous waste is criminal. This is an unusual and significant statement for a multilateral environmental agreement, and it has provided a hook for national prosecutors and for cooperation between customs services. The weakness is that the Convention does not itself define penalties, does not create an international enforcement body, and does not provide a compulsory mechanism for resolving disputes about whether a particular shipment was illegal. Enforcement therefore depends on national #customs_enforcement capacity, and that capacity varies enormously. 4.6 Institutions The Conference of the Parties is the decision making body. It meets roughly every two years and adopts decisions, technical guidelines, and amendments to the annexes. The Secretariat, based in Geneva and administered jointly with the Rotterdam and Stockholm conventions, services the process, receives national reports, and supports capacity work. An Open Ended Working Group prepares technical matters between meetings. Each party must designate a #competent_authority, which is the body empowered to receive and issue notifications, and a #focal_point, which handles information exchange. These designations look bureaucratic, but they are the practical hinge of the whole system. Where the competent authority is understaffed or is not connected to the customs service, notifications are processed slowly, consent is given without scrutiny, and the paper trail becomes decorative. A network of #Basel_Convention_Regional_Centres provides training and technical assistance in different regions. Their budgets are modest relative to the scale of the task. 4.7 Compliance and liability At its sixth meeting in 2002 the Conference of the Parties established a #compliance_mechanism, in the form of an Implementation and Compliance Committee. The committee is deliberately non adversarial. It can consider submissions from a party about its own difficulties, from one party about another, or, in limited circumstances, referrals from the Secretariat concerning reporting. Its function is to help rather than to punish. It cannot impose sanctions. A separate instrument, the Protocol on Liability and Compensation for Damage Resulting from Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and their Disposal, was adopted in December 1999. It has never entered into force. The absence of a functioning #liability_protocol is one of the most consequential gaps in the regime. Where damage occurs, victims must rely on national tort law, on ad hoc settlements, or on nothing at all. 5. The Ban Amendment: From Regulation Toward Prohibition 5.1 Origins The 1989 compromise did not satisfy the states that had experienced dumping. Within a few years they returned to the Conference of the Parties with a simple demand: prohibit the export of hazardous waste from rich countries to poor countries entirely, whether for disposal or for recovery. The Conference agreed in principle in 1994 and adopted the text of an amendment in 1995. The amendment inserts a new preambular paragraph and a new Article 4A, and it prohibits the export of hazardous waste for any purpose, including recycling, from parties listed in a new #Annex_VII to parties not listed there. Annex VII comprises the members of the Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development, the European Union, and Liechtenstein. 5.2 The long delay The amendment then spent almost a quarter of a century in limbo. The obstacle was a technical dispute about how many ratifications were needed to bring it into force, and behind that technicality lay a real political disagreement. Several major exporting states argued that a blanket ban would deprive developing countries of access to valuable secondary materials and would harm legitimate recycling industries. Developing country coalitions and environmental groups argued that this was a rationalisation for continued dumping. The dispute was finally resolved and the #Ban_Amendment entered into force on 5 December 2019 for those parties that had ratified it. 5.3 What the Ban Amendment does and does not do It is important to be precise about its reach, because it is frequently overstated. The amendment binds only those parties that have ratified it. It prohibits movements from Annex VII parties to non Annex VII parties. It does not prohibit movements between two non Annex VII parties, so trade from one developing country to another remains regulated by consent rather than banned. It does not bind parties that have not ratified. It does not bind non parties, which is the crux of the United States problem. And it does not cover wastes that are not classified as hazardous, which is why the classification battles over plastics and electronics matter so much. The practical significance of the Ban Amendment is therefore uneven. Within the European Union it has been reinforced by regional law that goes further. Elsewhere it functions more as a normative statement than as an operational constraint. Still, its entry into force has symbolic weight. It marks the moment when the international community formally accepted, at least in principle, that the #Global_North should not solve its waste problem by sending it to the #Global_South. 6. Growing the Regime: Plastics and Electronics 6.1 Why the annexes matter The Convention can be updated without renegotiating the treaty, because the lists of controlled wastes live in the annexes, and the annexes can be amended by decision of the Conference of the Parties. Amendments to the annexes take effect for all parties that do not formally object within a set period. This is an unusually flexible design for an environmental treaty, and it explains how a 1989 instrument has managed to reach materials that barely existed as policy problems when it was written. 6.2 The plastic waste amendments By the second decade of this century, plastic had become the most visible waste problem in the world. Rivers carried it to the sea. It appeared in fish, in soil, in drinking water, and in human tissue. At the same time, the international trade in plastic scrap had grown enormous, and much of it was mixed, dirty, and effectively unrecyclable. When China restricted imports of recovered materials from 2018, that trade did not stop. It redirected toward Southeast Asia and Turkey, and the receiving countries were quickly overwhelmed. The #China_import_ban thus exposed how dependent the global recycling story had been on a single destination. At its fourteenth meeting in 2019, the Conference of the Parties adopted amendments to Annexes II, VIII, and IX to bring plastic scrap under control. The entries became effective on 1 January 2021, and they work as a triangle. Entry #A3210 in Annex VIII covers plastic waste that is presumed hazardous, for example because it contains or is contaminated with hazardous constituents. Entry #B3011 in Annex IX covers plastic waste that is presumed not to be hazardous. This includes waste consisting almost entirely of one uncontaminated polymer, and a narrow set of mixtures of polyethylene, polypropylene, and polyethylene terephthalate, provided that they are almost free of contamination and are destined for separate recycling of each material in an environmentally sound manner. Entry #Y48 in Annex II is the catch all. It captures plastic waste, including mixtures, that does not fall into either of the other two categories. The effect is that most plastic scrap crossing a border now requires prior informed consent. Only clean, sorted, single polymer streams, or the narrow permitted mixtures, escape the procedure. The design has been criticised from two directions. Some argue that the exclusions in B3011 are too generous, and that categories such as certain fluoropolymers and cured resins should never have been placed outside the control system. Others argue that the requirement of recycling "in an environmentally sound manner" is doing far too much work, because the phrase is not defined with enough precision to be operational at a customs desk in a busy port. If the exporter simply asserts that recycling abroad will be sound, and nobody verifies the claim, then the exemption swallows the rule. This is the central critique advanced in the recent legal literature on the plastic entries. At its sixteenth meeting in 2023 the Conference adopted updated technical guidelines on the environmentally sound management of plastic waste, and it has continued to develop the Partnership on Plastic Waste, which brings governments, industry, and civil society together. Guidelines and partnerships are useful. They are not, however, a substitute for definitions that a border officer can apply. 6.3 The electronic waste amendments Electronic waste is the fastest growing waste stream in the world. According to the Global E waste Monitor, the world generated about 34 billion kilograms of e waste in 2010. By 2022 that figure had risen to roughly 62 billion kilograms, an average of about 7.8 kilograms for every person alive. Only about 22 per cent of that mass was documented as formally collected and recycled in an environmentally sound way. The rest was informally processed, dumped, stockpiled, or simply lost from view. The material matters because of what is inside it. Circuit boards carry lead and brominated flame retardants. Older screens contain mercury. Batteries contain cadmium, cobalt, and lithium. Cables are sheathed in plastic that releases dioxins when burned. In informal recycling yards, workers, often including children, strip and burn this material by hand to recover copper and gold. The resulting exposure to #heavy_metals and #dioxins is a documented and serious #public_health problem. The original Convention captured only some of this. Entry A1180 covered certain hazardous electrical assemblies and scrap. Non hazardous electronic scrap moved freely. And because used equipment intended for reuse is not waste, exporters could and did declare shipments as second hand goods for repair and resale. A large share of those goods, on arrival, proved to be broken. At its fifteenth meeting in June 2022, the Conference of the Parties adopted amendments to Annexes II, VIII, and IX with the explicit purpose of making all electrical and electronic waste subject to prior informed consent. They took effect on 1 January 2025. Entry #A1181 in Annex VIII replaces the old A1180 and covers hazardous e waste, its components, and waste from processing e waste, such as shredder fractions. Entry #Y49 in Annex II covers all other e waste, its components, and processing residues. The combined effect is straightforward: from the start of 2025, both hazardous and non hazardous e waste require the importing country's written agreement before it can be shipped. This is a genuine strengthening of the regime, and it is arguably the most significant substantive change since the Ban Amendment. It gives receiving states a legal right to say no to shipments they cannot handle, and it removes the convenient category of harmless electronic scrap. Two complications should be noted. First, the amendments did not automatically flow through into the parallel control system operated among members of the Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development. Because there was no consensus among #OECD members on how to treat e waste moving between them, from the start of 2025 each member country applies its own controls in line with its domestic law and international obligations, and members inform the OECD Secretariat of what controls they apply. The result is a patchwork within the OECD area rather than a single rule, which weakens the coherence of the change. Second, the reuse question is not solved. The amendments regulate waste. They do not regulate functioning second hand equipment. The line between a working laptop destined for a real second hand market and a broken one destined for a burning yard is drawn by testing and documentation, and testing regimes remain inconsistent. As long as that line is soft, the #reuse_loophole remains open. 7. Implementation and Compliance 7.1 The domestic transposition problem An international treaty does almost nothing by itself. It works only when it is turned into national law, national procedures, and national budgets. Every party to the Basel Convention is obliged to designate authorities, to legislate against illegal traffic, to control shipments, and to report annually. The record here is uneven in a way that follows familiar lines. States with mature environmental bureaucracies transposed the Convention quickly and have layered additional requirements on top of it. States with limited administrative capacity have often adopted the legislation on paper and then struggled to operate it. A ministry may hold the formal designation as competent authority while having no laboratory able to test a suspicious cargo, no database linking notifications to customs declarations, and no legal power to detain a container at the dock. This is not a moral failing of poorer states. It is a resource problem, and the Convention has never been equipped with the financial mechanism that would be needed to solve it. #capacity_building under the Convention is real but modest, and it is delivered largely through the regional centres and through voluntary contributions. 7.2 National reporting Parties must submit annual reports on the wastes they export and import, on their disposal and recovery operations, on accidents, and on measures taken to implement the Convention. These reports are the raw material of the Convention's only global dataset on hazardous waste flows. The dataset is valuable and is badly underused by researchers. It is also incomplete. Many parties report late. Some do not report at all. Categories are applied inconsistently across countries, so figures are not always comparable. Quantities are sometimes reported in ways that make aggregation difficult. The weakness of #national_reporting has a consequence that goes beyond statistics. If nobody knows how much hazardous waste is moving and to where, then nobody can say with confidence whether the regime is working. The absence of good data is itself a governance failure, and it protects the status quo. 7.3 The compliance committee in practice The Implementation and Compliance Committee has developed a useful body of work on generic issues such as reporting delays, national definitions, and the difficulties of applying the Convention to specific waste streams. It has been far less active on individual cases of non compliance. Party to party submissions are rare, for the obvious reason that governments are reluctant to accuse each other. Self referral requires a state to admit its own failure. The result is a mechanism that functions as a technical advisory body rather than as an enforcement body. That is by design, and it reflects the general preference in multilateral environmental agreements for facilitation over confrontation. Whether that preference is adequate for a regime dealing with conduct the treaty itself calls criminal is a fair question, and it is one that students should take seriously rather than accept as settled. 7.4 Enforcement at the border The real test happens at the port. A container arrives. Its declaration says recovered plastic, sorted. Inside there may be exactly that. There may also be mixed household rubbish, food residue, and electrical items. Detecting the difference requires physical inspection, and physical inspection of even a small fraction of container traffic is expensive and slow. Customs services face several structural difficulties. The commodity classification codes used for international trade were not designed to match the Basel categories, so a shipment can be correctly coded for trade purposes and still tell the inspector nothing about whether it is controlled waste. Documentation is easy to falsify. Waste can be routed through intermediate ports to obscure its origin, a practice sometimes described as port hopping. And the profit margins in #waste_crime are attractive relative to the penalties that follow detection. Cooperative enforcement operations, run jointly by customs and environmental agencies across many countries, have repeatedly found large numbers of illegal or suspicious waste shipments in short bursts of concentrated inspection. Those operations are valuable, but their findings also imply that the volume detected under normal conditions is a small fraction of the volume moving. 8. Assessing Effectiveness 8.1 What has clearly improved It would be wrong to describe the Convention as a failure. Several achievements are solid. The most flagrant forms of dumping have become much harder. The kind of arrangement that produced the Koko incident, in which drums of chemical waste were left in a village yard under a private contract, is now illegal almost everywhere, is politically toxic, and carries criminal exposure. Norms have shifted, and shifted decisively. A common vocabulary now exists. Terms such as prior informed consent, environmentally sound management, and transboundary movement are used by regulators, industry, and courts across very different legal systems. That shared language allows cooperation that would otherwise be impossible. A procedural infrastructure exists. Competent authorities, notification forms, movement documents, and take back duties are in place across most of the world. This infrastructure is imperfect, but it exists and can be strengthened. Building it from nothing would take decades. The regime has also demonstrated that it can adapt. Plastics and electronics were brought under control through annex amendments in a matter of years, without reopening the parent treaty. Compared with the paralysis of some other areas of international environmental law, that is a real institutional strength. Finally, the Convention has served as an anchor for regional and national law. The European Union's waste shipment rules, the Bamako Convention, and many national statutes are built on the Basel scaffolding. 8.2 What has not improved Against this, the record on outcomes is sobering. Global generation of hazardous waste has increased since the Convention entered into force, and it continues to increase. The treaty's first objective, minimisation at source, has not been achieved. This is not surprising, because the Convention contains no quantitative reduction target, no timetable, and no reporting obligation tied to a reduction pathway. It regulates movement, not production. Waste continues to reach places that cannot manage it. Monitoring organisations continue to document illegal shipments of electronic waste arriving at ports in Southeast Asia and West Africa. Informal recycling yards continue to operate, and the health burden they impose falls on the poorest workers. The redirection effect is well documented. After China restricted imports of recovered materials, plastic scrap flows moved to Malaysia, Vietnam, Thailand, Indonesia, India, and Turkey. Several of those countries subsequently imposed their own restrictions, and the flows moved again. Regulation in one place displaces the problem rather than solving it, so long as the underlying supply of poor quality material continues. Recent empirical work on the period around the plastic amendments suggests a partial reshaping rather than a transformation. Trade appears to have shifted somewhat toward movement among European and other OECD countries, which is a better outcome in life cycle terms than long distance shipment to countries with weak treatment infrastructure. But the amendments did not stop the export of problematic material, and their effect is entangled with the effect of the earlier Chinese restriction, which makes clean attribution difficult. 8.3 The effectiveness paradox The Convention scores reasonably well on scope, quite well on procedure, poorly on compliance, and inconclusively on outcome. This is the paradox at the heart of the regime, and it deserves a name: the #implementation_gap. The explanation lies in the theory of behaviour the Convention assumes. Prior informed consent presupposes that the importing state has the information, the technical capacity, and the political independence to refuse a shipment that it ought to refuse. Where any of those three conditions fails, consent becomes a formality. A ministry that cannot test a cargo cannot know what it is consenting to. A ministry under pressure to attract foreign investment may prefer not to know. In other words, the Convention protects capable states well and vulnerable states poorly, which is close to the opposite of what it was written to do. This is the strongest argument for prohibition rather than regulation, and it explains why the Ban Amendment retains its moral force even though its legal reach is narrow. #treaty_effectiveness in this field cannot be measured by counting ratifications. 9. Persistent Weaknesses 9.1 Definitional ambiguity The Convention allows national law to determine hazardousness in part, and it uses qualitative standards such as environmentally sound management without a precise operational definition. This gives flexibility, but it also gives room for manoeuvre. Exporters gravitate toward the most permissive available interpretation. Two states can look at the same container and reach different legal conclusions about it. A regime built on consent cannot function well when the parties do not agree on what is being consented to. 9.2 The recycling exemption Because recovery counts as a form of disposal, recycling is regulated. But recycling is also the principal justification for continued trade. The argument runs that secondary materials are valuable, that developing countries benefit from access to them, and that a ban would destroy legitimate industry. There is something in this argument. #urban_mining is genuinely important, and some #critical_raw_materials are recovered more efficiently in large specialised facilities than in small national plants. The trouble is that the label of recycling is easy to attach and hard to verify. Material declared for recycling may be dumped, burned, or stockpiled on arrival. The recycling justification therefore becomes a route around the control system. Any serious reform has to attach verification to the label. 9.3 The reuse loophole Second hand goods are not waste. That is legally correct and socially sensible, since second hand markets serve real needs and extend product life. But the boundary is porous. A shipment of used computers may contain a mixture of working, repairable, and dead machines, and the proportions are often discovered only after arrival. #due_diligence obligations on exporters to test and document functionality exist in some jurisdictions and are absent in others. 9.4 The non party problem The United States has signed the Convention but has not ratified it. It is therefore not a party. The Convention's rule against trade with non parties does not solve this, because that rule permits separate bilateral or multilateral arrangements that meet the Convention's standards, and such arrangements exist. The consequence is that a very large generator of hazardous, plastic, and electronic waste operates outside the multilateral framework. This creates both a practical gap and a fairness problem for the parties that have accepted the discipline. 9.5 Enforcement asymmetry Enforcement depends heavily on the state that receives the cargo, which is frequently the state with the least capacity. The Convention places a duty of care on the exporting state, but that state has limited incentive and limited ability to police what happens at the far end. There is no international inspectorate, no compulsory reporting of seizures, and no standing mechanism for compensating victims, because the liability protocol never entered into force. 9.6 Data poverty The Convention's own database is the best global source on hazardous waste movements, and it is not good enough. Reporting is late, patchy, and inconsistent. Trade statistics for waste are known to be affected by deliberate misdeclaration. The absence of reliable data prevents rigorous evaluation and allows every side of the debate to select the numbers that suit it. Improving #traceability is therefore not a technical detail. It is a precondition for accountability. 9.7 Silence on production The deepest weakness is structural. The Convention governs the movement and disposal of waste. It says almost nothing about the design of products, the choice of materials, or the volume of production. It is an end of pipe instrument in a world where the pipe keeps getting bigger. As long as producers face no obligation to design out hazard and to finance the end of life of what they sell, the flow of dangerous residue will keep growing, and the Convention will spend its energy directing a stream that it has no power to reduce. 10. The Convention Within a Wider Regime Complex 10.1 Regional instruments The Bamako Convention, adopted by African states in 1991, is the most important regional response to the perceived weakness of the Basel compromise. It bans the import of hazardous waste into Africa entirely, treats such import as a criminal act, and covers radioactive waste, which Basel does not. It is stricter than Basel on paper. Its implementation has been limited by the same capacity constraints that limit Basel implementation on the continent, which teaches an important lesson: stringency on paper does not compensate for weakness in administration. The Waigani Convention performs a similar function for the South Pacific, and comparable arrangements exist in other regions. 10.2 The OECD control system Members of the Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development operate a parallel control system for waste destined for recovery, using colour coded lists that are broadly aligned with Basel but designed to make trade among members easier. The relationship between the two systems is generally cooperative, but the treatment of electronic waste after 2025 shows what happens when they diverge. Without consensus among members, each now applies its own controls to e waste and informs the OECD Secretariat of what those controls are. The picture is fragmented, and fragmentation creates room for #regulatory_arbitrage. 10.3 European Union law The European Union has consistently gone further than the Basel minimum. Its waste shipment legislation implements the Ban Amendment, imposes strict rules on shipments within the Union, and has been revised to phase out exports of plastic waste to countries outside the OECD and to tighten the conditions under which other waste may be exported for recovery. The #EU_Waste_Shipment_Regulation is now among the most demanding waste trade regimes in the world. It demonstrates that a large economic bloc can raise standards unilaterally without collapsing its recycling sector, which is an important counterargument to the claim that stricter rules are economically impossible. 10.4 The chemicals conventions The Basel, Rotterdam, and Stockholm conventions share a secretariat and are increasingly managed together. The #Stockholm_Convention on persistent organic pollutants restricts the production and use of substances such as certain flame retardants, and Basel then governs the waste that contains them. The #Rotterdam_Convention applies a prior informed consent procedure to trade in hazardous chemicals and pesticides, mirroring the Basel logic at an earlier point in a material's life. Together the three instruments trace a rough chemical life cycle. The coordination is administratively sensible, but it has not yet produced a genuinely integrated policy that follows a substance from synthesis to disposal. 10.5 The plastics treaty negotiations Since 2022, states have been negotiating a new international instrument on plastic pollution. The relationship between that instrument and the Basel Convention is one of the most important open questions in this field. A #plastics_treaty that addresses production volumes, product design, chemicals of concern, and producer responsibility would attack the problem at the point where Basel is silent. An instrument that concentrates only on waste management, by contrast, risks duplicating Basel while adding little. Scholars have argued that the Basel guidance on environmentally sound management could supply a ready made normative foundation for the new instrument, which would strengthen both. This connection deserves close attention from anyone entering the field now. 10.6 Trade law Waste is also a good in the eyes of international trade law, and restrictions on its movement are trade restrictions. The tension between environmental protection and trade liberalisation has been managed rather than resolved. Multilateral environmental agreements with trade measures have generally been treated with deference, and no serious challenge to Basel measures has succeeded. Even so, the possibility of conflict shapes how far states are willing to go, and it is one reason why export bans are drafted carefully and narrowly. #policy_coherence between the trade and environmental regimes remains unfinished business. 11. Illustrative Cases 11.1 Electronic waste in West Africa Ghana has become one of the most studied destinations for used electronics. Large quantities of equipment arrive as second hand goods. Some of it works and is sold, which supports a real market in affordable technology and should not be dismissed. Much of it does not work, and it ends up in scrap yards where cables are burned to recover copper. The health consequences for workers and nearby communities have been documented repeatedly, including elevated #lead_exposure and exposure to combustion by products. Ghana was one of the states that pushed for the electronic waste amendments, working with Switzerland, and the resulting entries are sometimes described in the literature as the Swiss Ghana amendments. This is a good example of the Convention's political dynamic. A receiving state, having experienced the harm, works with a wealthy state to change the classification rules, and the change then binds exporters everywhere. The lesson of Ghana is not that trade in used electronics should stop. It is that the difference between a functioning market in reused goods and a dumping ground depends entirely on testing, documentation, and the existence of formal #recycling_capacity at the destination. Where #informal_recycling is the only option available, the trade becomes harmful regardless of what the paperwork says. 11.2 Plastic waste in Southeast Asia After the Chinese restriction, plastic scrap flooded into Malaysia, Vietnam, Thailand, and Indonesia. Recycling operations, many of them unlicensed, opened rapidly. Contaminated bales were burned or dumped. Public anger grew, and several governments began sending containers back to their countries of origin, using the Convention's take back duty as their legal basis. This episode is instructive in two ways. It shows that the Convention's procedural rights can be used effectively by a determined receiving state, which is a genuine success worth recording. It also shows that those rights are exercised only after the harm has arrived, which is a structural weakness. Prevention at the point of export would have been far cheaper for everyone involved. Malaysia's experience has been examined closely in recent scholarship, which finds continuing enforcement gaps, underdeveloped domestic infrastructure, persistent informal processing, and difficulty in applying the prior informed consent procedure at scale, even as national policy moves toward #extended_producer_responsibility. 11.3 Turkey and the European connection Turkey became one of the largest destinations for European plastic scrap after the Asian restrictions took hold. Researchers and civil society organisations documented open dumping and burning of imported material, and Turkey subsequently tightened its own import rules. The case illustrates that the redirection of flows is not confined to the poorest countries. A middle income economy with a substantial industrial base can still be overwhelmed by the volume and the poor quality of imported scrap. It also shows that the geography of the waste trade is not fixed. It follows price signals, and price signals move quickly. 11.4 Ship breaking in South Asia End of life ships contain asbestos, heavy metals, residual oils, and polychlorinated biphenyls. Many are beached and dismantled on tidal flats in South Asia in conditions that are dangerous for workers and damaging to the coastal environment. Whether a ship sailing under its own power toward a breaking yard counts as waste under the Convention has been contested for years, and owners have used flags of convenience and last minute sales to complicate the legal analysis. A separate international instrument on ship recycling was developed to address this specific problem. #ship_breaking remains a live example of how a determined industry can exploit the boundary between a functioning object and a waste object, and of why precise definitions matter more than broad aspirations. 12. Discussion: A Reform Agenda The analysis above suggests that adding further categories of waste to the annexes, while useful, is no longer where the largest gains lie. The binding constraint is implementation. Six reforms follow from the evidence. 12.1 Align customs codes with Basel categories The single most practical improvement available is unglamorous. Waste categories under the Convention and the commodity codes used in international trade should be mapped onto each other, so that a customs declaration itself reveals whether a shipment is controlled. Without #harmonised_customs_codes, border officers are asked to enforce a legal regime using a classification system designed for an entirely different purpose. Several countries and regional bodies have begun this work. It deserves multilateral priority. 12.2 Build digital traceability Notification and movement documents should be electronic, interoperable, and linked to customs systems and to facility permits at the destination. #digitalisation would allow real time cross checking, automatic flagging of anomalies, and far better statistics. Some parties have already moved to electronic notification. Distributed ledger approaches have been proposed for waste chains, and while #blockchain is not a magic solution, the underlying requirement of a tamper resistant shared record is exactly what the regime lacks. The point is not the technology. The point is that a paper system administered by understaffed agencies in a dozen jurisdictions cannot track a container across an ocean. 12.3 Define environmentally sound management operationally The phrase must be turned into criteria that can be verified. That means facility level standards, independent certification, audit rights, and a public register of approved destination facilities. An exporter should have to name the facility, and that facility should have to appear on a list that someone has actually inspected. This is how other high risk trades are regulated, and there is no principled reason why waste should be treated more loosely. 12.4 Push responsibility upstream The Convention regulates the end of the pipe. Upstream instruments regulate the beginning. Mandatory producer responsibility, eco design requirements that limit hazardous constituents and improve repairability, and minimum recycled content rules all reduce the volume and toxicity of what eventually has to be shipped. The negotiation of a plastics instrument offers an opportunity to make this connection explicit. Basel should be positioned as the downstream partner of an upstream policy, not as a substitute for one. This is where the language of the #circular_economy earns its keep, provided it is backed by law rather than by branding. 12.5 Finance capacity where the waste lands Prior informed consent is meaningful only if the consenting state can evaluate what it is being offered. That requires laboratories, trained inspectors, licensed treatment facilities, and legal authority to detain and return cargo. Capacity support at the current scale is not enough. A predictable financial mechanism, funded in part by the industries that generate the waste, would be a more honest arrangement than the present reliance on voluntary contributions. 12.6 Revive liability The failure of the liability protocol leaves victims without remedy and leaves exporters without financial exposure. A workable regime of strict liability, compulsory insurance, and a compensation fund would change the economics of careless export more effectively than any amount of exhortation. This is politically difficult. It is also the reform with the clearest deterrent logic, and it follows directly from the #polluter_pays principle that the international community claims to accept. The #precautionary_principle points the same way: where the consequences of a mistaken shipment are irreversible, the burden of proof should sit with the exporter. 13. Implications for Research, Policy, and Teaching 13.1 For researchers Three gaps stand out. First, there is no rigorous independent evaluation of whether prior informed consent changes the behaviour of exporters, as opposed to changing the paperwork that accompanies their behaviour. Second, the health burden of informal processing of imported waste is documented in specific locations but is not quantified globally in a way that would permit cost benefit reasoning about export bans. Third, the interaction between the Basel regime and the emerging plastics instrument needs sustained legal analysis before that instrument is finalised, not after. Methodologically, the field would benefit from far greater use of the Convention's own reporting database, combined with mirror trade statistics. Discrepancies between what an exporter says it sent and what an importer says it received are a promising indicator of illegal flows, and this technique is underused. 13.2 For policymakers The main message is that classification reform has now largely done its work, and administrative reform has barely begun. A government that has ratified every amendment but cannot inspect a container has complied with the letter of the regime and defeated its purpose. Investment in customs capacity, laboratory capacity, and facility licensing will produce more environmental benefit per unit of effort than another round of annex negotiation. Receiving states should also recognise the leverage they now hold. The e waste entries give every party a legal right to refuse shipments they cannot handle. Exercising that right requires political will more than it requires new law. 13.3 For students Three lessons are worth carrying away from this case. The first is that international law rarely fails because its rules are wrong. It fails because the institutions that must apply the rules are weak. The Basel Convention is a well drafted instrument administered by a system that is badly under resourced at exactly the points where the harm occurs. The second is that definitions are power. The entire history of this regime, from the 1989 compromise to the argument over B3011, is a history of disputes about which materials belong in which category. Whoever controls the boundary controls the flow. The third is that environmental problems have a geography. Waste moves along the gradient of wealth and power. Any regime that ignores that gradient, and pretends that all states can protect themselves equally through procedural rights, will reproduce the inequality it was written to correct. This is the core insight of the #environmental_justice literature, and it explains why the phrase #waste_colonialism, uncomfortable as it is, continues to appear in serious scholarship. Progress toward #SDG12 and toward #sustainable_development more broadly depends on taking that geography seriously rather than wishing it away. 14. Limitations This article is a review, not an empirical study. It generates no new data on waste flows, and it relies on official statistics and monitoring reports whose limitations have been acknowledged. Its assessment of effectiveness is therefore qualitative and provisional. The article also gives more attention to plastics and electronics than to other important streams, including used lead acid batteries, mercury bearing waste, incinerator residues, and end of life vehicles. That emphasis reflects the balance of recent literature rather than a judgement that the other streams matter less. Finally, the regime is moving. The electronic waste entries took effect only in 2025, European export restrictions are being phased in, and the plastics instrument is still under negotiation. Any assessment written now is an assessment of a system in transition, and conclusions about the effect of the newest measures must remain tentative until several years of data are available. 15. Conclusion The Basel Convention was written in response to a scandal. Its founding purpose was to stop wealthy countries from solving their waste problem by making it somebody else's. More than three decades later, the honest verdict is mixed. The Convention built something durable. It created a shared vocabulary, a workable procedure, a network of national authorities, and a mechanism for growth that has allowed a 1989 treaty to reach the plastic and electronic waste streams of the 2020s. The Ban Amendment, the plastic entries that took effect in 2021, and the electronic waste entries that took effect in 2025 are real achievements, won by patient diplomacy against resistant interests. But the Convention also inherited a compromise it has never fully escaped. It regulates movement rather than prohibiting it, and regulation depends on the capacity of the state that receives the cargo. That capacity is weakest precisely where the waste goes. The result is a regime that works best for the countries that need it least. Waste still burns in yards where it should never have arrived, and the people who suffer are the people who had the least say in producing it. The next phase of reform should be less about what goes on which list and more about whether anyone can check. Harmonised customs coding, digital traceability, verifiable standards for sound management, real financial support for receiving states, a functioning liability regime, and serious upstream obligations on producers would together achieve more than another decade of annex amendments. None of these is technically difficult. All of them are politically demanding, which is the usual condition of environmental progress. The Basel Convention remains the indispensable instrument in this field. It should not be defended as a success or dismissed as a failure. It is an unfinished project, and the task of finishing it now falls to a generation of students, lawyers, engineers, and officials who will inherit both the treaty and the waste. Hashtags #Basel_Convention_1989 #transboundary_movement_of_hazardous_wastes #hazardous_waste_control #prior_informed_consent_procedure #environmentally_sound_management_of_waste #Basel_Ban_Amendment #plastic_waste_amendments #ewaste_amendments_2025 #international_environmental_law #global_waste_trade #environmental_justice_and_waste #circular_economy_policy #waste_governance #toxic_trade_regulation #hazardous_waste_disposal References Amberg, S., and Mitrano, D. M. (2025). Exploring the essential use concept for primary microplastics regulation in the European Union. Environmental Science and Technology, 59(16), 7799. Balde, C. P., Kuehr, R., Yamamoto, T., McDonald, R., Althaf, S., Bel, G., Deubzer, O., Fernandez-Cubillo, E., Forti, V., Gray, V., Herat, S., Honda, S., Iattoni, G., Khetriwal, D. S., Luda di Cortemiglia, V., Lobuntsova, Y., Nnorom, I., Pralat, N., and Wagner, M. (2024). The Global E-waste Monitor 2024. United Nations Institute for Training and Research and International Telecommunication Union, Geneva and Bonn. Basel Action Network (2022). Holes in the Fence: A Global Overview of Loopholes in the 2021 Basel Convention Plastic Waste Amendments. Basel Action Network, Seattle. Bel Hassen, M., Bellaaj Zouari, A., Abdennadher, M., Assaf, J. C., Nakad, M., Abboud, R., Khammeri, Y., Banni, M., Panzeri, A., Gomes, L., and Hamd, W. (2025). Plastics pollution: pathways, impacts, and regulatory challenges in marine environments. Frontiers in Environmental Science, volume 13. Chang, Y. C., and Sun, J. (2026). Trade related measures in plastic rule governance and China's participation. Pacific Focus. Demaria, F., Vico, A., and Fernandez Gabard, L. (2024). Contested Waste: Environmental Conflicts and Waste Picker Resistance in the Global South. Routledge, London. Fitzmaurice, M., Brus, M., Merkouris, P., and Rydberg, A. (editors) (2021). Research Handbook on International Environmental Law, second edition. Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham. Furuhata, M. (2023). Global plastic pollution and international legal and policy responses. Material Cycles and Waste Management Research, 34(1), 3. Guggisberg, S. (2024). Finding equitable solutions to the land based sources of marine plastic pollution: sovereignty as a double edged sword. Marine Policy, 159, 105960. Gundogdu, S., and Walker, T. R. (2021). Why Turkey should not import plastic waste pollution from developed countries? Marine Pollution Bulletin, 171, 112772. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2021.112772 Jiang, X., and Bateer, B. (2025). A systematic review of plastic recycling: technology, environmental impact and economic evaluation. Waste Management and Research. https://doi.org/10.1177/0734242X241310658 Khan, S. A. (2020). Clearly hazardous, obscurely regulated: lessons from the Basel Convention on waste trade. American Journal of International Law Unbound, 114, 200-205. https://doi.org/10.1017/aju.2020.38 Latkar, A. (2025). The matter of value: circular economy for plastics, extended producer responsibility schemes and recycling in India. Journal of Consumer Culture. https://doi.org/10.1177/13591835251389548 Schumacher, K. A., and Agbemabiese, L. (2021). Electronic waste legislation in the United States: an analysis of the disparate design and resulting influence on collection rates across states. Journal of Environmental Planning and Management, 64(6), 1067-1088. Secretariat of the Basel Convention (2023). Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and their Disposal: Texts and Annexes. United Nations Environment Programme, Geneva. Thapa, K., Vermeulen, W. J. V., Deutz, P., and Olayide, O. E. (2023). Transboundary movement of waste review: from binary towards a contextual framing. Waste Management and Research, 41(1), 52-66. https://doi.org/10.1177/0734242X221105424 van der Marel, E. R. (2022). Trading plastic waste in a global economy: soundly regulated by the Basel Convention? Journal of Environmental Law, 34(3), 477-497. https://doi.org/10.1093/jel/eqac017 Yang, S. (2020). Trade for the environment: transboundary hazardous waste movements after the Basel Convention. Review of Policy Research, 37(5), 713-738. https://doi.org/10.1111/ropr.12386 Zhao, C., Qi, X., Wang, J., Du, F., and Shi, X. (2022). Predicting possible new links to future global plastic waste trade networks. Sustainability, 14(8), 4692.
- Twenty Years of Global Chemical Governance: An Evaluation of the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants (2001) and Its Record in Eliminating and Restricting POPs
The Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants, adopted in 2001 and in force since 2004, is the central global legal instrument that aims to eliminate or restrict the production and use of #persistent_organic_pollutants. This article reviews the legal design of the treaty, the science that supports it, and the evidence gathered over two decades on whether it works. Using a structured narrative review of peer reviewed studies published mainly between 2020 and 2025, together with official treaty documents, the article traces the movement of the Convention from an initial list of twelve chemicals to a list of thirty seven chemicals or chemical groups by the middle of 2025. The evidence shows real success. Concentrations of many legacy #pesticides and industrial chemicals have fallen in air, in human milk, and in wildlife. Yet the record is uneven. Unintentionally produced chemicals such as hexachlorobenzene and hexachlorobutadiene have not declined and in some monitoring networks have increased. Newly listed groups such as #per_and_polyfluoroalkyl_substances are chemically and analytically difficult, widely dispersed, and hard to remove from commerce. Recycling exemptions have allowed banned #brominated_flame_retardants to return to consumer goods, including children's toys, through the #circular_economy. Compliance procedures under Article 17 remain unadopted after more than twenty years, and #national_implementation_plans are frequently out of date, especially in low income and middle income countries. The article also examines a recent scholarly dispute about whether the listing process has become too broad, and it argues that the deeper problem is weak implementation rather than an excess of nominations. The article closes with recommendations for students, researchers, and policy makers on monitoring, financing, waste management, and the coordination of the Convention with the Basel and Rotterdam treaties and with the emerging global instrument on plastic pollution. Keywords: Stockholm Convention; persistent organic pollutants; chemical governance; global monitoring plan; effectiveness evaluation; POPRC; PFAS; brominated flame retardants; multilateral environmental agreements 1. Introduction Some chemicals do not go away. They resist sunlight, they resist bacteria, they resist the chemical reactions that break down most substances in soil and water, and they travel on wind and ocean currents to places where they were never made and never used. They collect in fat, they move up the food chain, and they appear in the blood of people who have never worked in a factory and in the milk of mothers who live thousands of kilometres from the nearest industrial region. These substances are known as #persistent_organic_pollutants, usually shortened to POPs. The scientific and political response to this problem produced one of the most important environmental treaties of the modern era. The Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants was adopted at a diplomatic conference in Stockholm on 22 May 2001 and entered into force on 17 May 2004. Its stated purpose is to protect human health and the environment from POPs. Its central legal mechanism is simple to state and difficult to achieve: parties must eliminate or restrict the production, use, import, and export of listed chemicals, must reduce and where possible eliminate releases of chemicals that are formed unintentionally, and must manage stockpiles and #POPs_waste in an environmentally sound way. The Convention began with twelve substances, a group that journalists and campaigners called the #dirty_dozen. These included the organochlorine #pesticides aldrin, chlordane, dieldrin, endrin, heptachlor, hexachlorobenzene, mirex, toxaphene, and #DDT, the industrial chemicals #polychlorinated_biphenyls, and the unintentionally produced #dioxins and furans. By the middle of 2025, after successive decisions by the Conference of the Parties, thirty seven chemicals or chemical groups were regulated. The most recent additions, agreed at the twelfth meeting of the Conference of the Parties in Geneva in the spring of 2025, were the insecticide #chlorpyrifos, the industrial substances known as #medium_chain_chlorinated_paraffins, and the large family of #long_chain_perfluorocarboxylic_acids. This growth is often described as proof that the treaty is alive and responsive. It can also be read as a warning. Every new listing creates new obligations for every party, and many parties lack the laboratories, the inspectors, the customs systems, and the hazardous waste facilities needed to meet those obligations. A treaty that lists many chemicals but is implemented by only some of its members will produce uneven protection, and because POPs travel, uneven protection is a global problem rather than a local one. The purpose of this article is to give students and early career researchers a clear, evidence based account of what the Stockholm Convention is, how it works, what it has achieved, where it has fallen short, and what the main scientific and policy debates now are. The article is written in plain language but follows the structure of a peer reviewed review article. It is organised around five research questions. First, what is the legal and institutional architecture of the Convention, and how does a chemical actually become a listed #POP? Second, what are the scientific criteria that define persistence, #bioaccumulation, #long_range_environmental_transport, and toxicity, and how well do those criteria work in practice? Third, what does the monitoring evidence say about #effectiveness, that is, have environmental and human concentrations of POPs actually fallen since the treaty entered into force? Fourth, what are the main structural weaknesses of the regime, including exemptions, recycling loopholes, financing gaps, and the absence of a compliance mechanism? Fifth, what reforms are proposed in the recent literature, and how do they connect with wider developments in global chemicals and #waste_governance? The article contributes to the literature in three ways. It synthesises monitoring results from air, human milk, and biota that were published mainly after 2020, so that the picture of effectiveness is current. It brings the recent and unusually direct scholarly argument about the future of the listing process into a teaching oriented framework. And it links the Convention to the wider system of chemical governance, including the Basel and Rotterdam Conventions, the Minamata Convention on mercury, and the negotiations on a global instrument on plastic pollution, so that students can see the treaty as one part of a larger and still incomplete system rather than as an isolated legal object. 2. Materials and Methods This study is a structured narrative review. It does not attempt the exhaustive coverage of a systematic review with a formal protocol, because the subject spans law, chemistry, toxicology, and public policy, and because the aim is synthesis and education rather than meta analysis. However, the search and selection process followed explicit rules so that the reasoning can be checked and repeated. 2.1 Sources and search strategy Three categories of material were used. The first category is the primary legal material: the text of the Convention and its annexes, the decisions of the Conference of the Parties, and the reports of the #POPs_Review_Committee. The second category is peer reviewed scientific literature, retrieved from major indexing databases using combinations of the terms Stockholm Convention, persistent organic pollutants, global monitoring plan, effectiveness evaluation, POPRC, human milk, passive air sampling, brominated flame retardants, perfluoroalkyl substances, and national implementation plan. The third category is grey literature produced by international organisations and by observer organisations that attend the meetings of the Conference of the Parties, used only for factual detail about negotiations and never as evidence of environmental trends. 2.2 Inclusion criteria Priority was given to work published from 2020 onward, because the aim was to describe the current state of the regime rather than its history of scholarship. Older work is cited only where it is foundational and where no recent equivalent exists. Studies were included if they reported original monitoring data relevant to POPs listed under the Convention, if they evaluated implementation or compliance, if they analysed the legal or institutional structure of the treaty, or if they reviewed the toxicology of listed substances in a way that is directly relevant to regulatory decisions. 2.3 Analytical approach The analysis follows a simple logic that is common in the evaluation of #multilateral_environmental_agreements. A treaty can be assessed at three levels. The first level is output, meaning the rules that the treaty produces, such as listings, guidance documents, and national plans. The second level is outcome, meaning changes in the behaviour of states, firms, and individuals, such as the closing of a production line or the destruction of a stockpile. The third level is impact, meaning measurable change in the environment and in human bodies, such as declining concentrations of a chemical in air or in blood. Many treaties look successful at the level of output and much weaker at the level of impact. The Stockholm Convention is unusual because it built an impact measurement system into its own text through the #global_monitoring_plan required by Article 16, and this makes a genuine evaluation possible. 2.4 Limitations of the method Three limitations should be stated at the outset. First, monitoring coverage is not evenly distributed. Long time series exist mainly for Europe, North America, the Arctic, and a small number of sites elsewhere, so global statements rest on a thin base in Africa, in parts of Asia, and in Latin America. Second, national reporting under Article 15 is incomplete, which means that statements about compliance are partly statements about the willingness of governments to report. Third, this article is a review, not a new empirical study, and it therefore inherits any bias in the published record, including the tendency of journals to publish clear results rather than ambiguous ones. 3. What Makes a Chemical a POP: The Scientific Basis 3.1 The four defining properties The Convention does not regulate chemicals because they are unpleasant or because they are unpopular. It regulates them because they possess a specific combination of physical, chemical, and biological properties. Annex D of the treaty sets out screening criteria, and these criteria are the scientific gate through which any candidate substance must pass. The first property is #persistence. A substance qualifies if its half life in water is longer than two months, or if its half life in soil or in sediment is longer than six months, or if other evidence shows that it is sufficiently persistent to justify consideration. Half life is the time needed for half of the quantity present to break down. A chemical with a half life of six months in soil will still be present, in reduced quantity, many years after it was applied. The second property is #bioaccumulation. A substance qualifies if the bioconcentration factor or the bioaccumulation factor in aquatic species is greater than five thousand, or if the logarithm of the octanol water partition coefficient is greater than five. In simpler terms, the chemical prefers fat to water. Because organisms cannot easily excrete it, the chemical accumulates in tissue and then #biomagnifies as predators eat prey. This is why the highest concentrations are often found in top predators such as polar bears, killer whales, birds of prey, and in human populations whose diet depends on marine mammals or fatty fish. The third property is #long_range_environmental_transport. A substance qualifies if its half life in air is longer than two days, or if monitoring data show that it is found in remote regions far from any source, or if models of environmental fate predict that it will travel. This criterion is the legal reason why POPs require a global treaty rather than national laws alone. A pesticide sprayed in a warm agricultural region can evaporate, travel through the atmosphere, condense in a colder region, evaporate again in the next warm season, and repeat this process until it reaches polar latitudes. This stepwise movement is called the #grasshopper_effect, and the tendency of cold regions to act as a final sink is called #global_distillation. The fourth property is #adverse_effects. There must be evidence of toxicity or ecotoxicity, or evidence of potential for damage to human health or to the environment, that justifies international action. 3.2 Why these criteria matter for teaching Students often ask why some famous toxic chemicals are not listed. The answer is that the Convention is not a general list of poisons. A highly toxic substance that breaks down in days is a serious occupational hazard but it is not a POP, because it does not travel and it does not accumulate. Conversely, a substance of moderate toxicity that persists for decades and reaches the Arctic is exactly the kind of substance the Convention exists to address. The regime is built around the idea that #irreversibility is the central danger. Once a persistent chemical has been distributed across the planet, no policy can retrieve it. Regulation must therefore act before the distribution is complete, which is a demanding requirement for any political system. 3.3 The three classes of listed chemicals The chemicals covered by the Convention fall into three practical classes, and the distinction matters because each class requires a different kind of control. Intentionally produced #pesticides form the first class. These substances were manufactured deliberately and applied deliberately, and control therefore means stopping production, withdrawing registrations, collecting stockpiles, and finding alternatives. DDT, aldrin, chlordane, endosulfan, lindane, and now chlorpyrifos belong here. Intentionally produced #industrial_chemicals form the second class. These were made for use in products and processes: polychlorinated biphenyls in transformers and capacitors, brominated flame retardants in electronics and textiles, perfluorinated substances in firefighting foams and water repellent coatings, chlorinated paraffins in metalworking fluids and plastics. Control here is harder, because the chemical is embedded in millions of products that remain in use for decades. The stock of a POP inside buildings, vehicles, and appliances is often far larger than the annual production, and this stock leaks slowly for many years. #Unintentionally_produced_POPs form the third class. Dioxins, furans, hexachlorobenzene, hexachlorobutadiene, and polychlorinated biphenyls can all be created as by products of combustion and of industrial processes. Nobody wants them, nobody sells them, and nobody can simply stop producing them. Control means changing processes, applying #best_available_techniques and #best_environmental_practices, controlling waste incineration, and limiting open burning. This is the class where the Convention has struggled most, and the monitoring evidence discussed later in this article confirms that difficulty. 4. The Legal Architecture of the Convention 4.1 The objective and the precautionary principle Article 1 states the objective of the Convention in a single sentence: to protect human health and the environment from persistent organic pollutants. It does so while referring to Principle 15 of the Rio Declaration, which is the #precautionary_principle. This reference is not decorative. It means that a lack of full scientific certainty is not a reason to delay a cost effective measure where there is a threat of serious or irreversible damage. Because POPs are by definition irreversible on human timescales, the precautionary principle is written into the logic of the treaty rather than added to it. 4.2 The three annexes The operational core of the Convention is a system of three annexes, and every student of the treaty should be able to explain them. #Annex_A covers elimination. Parties must take measures to eliminate the production and use of the chemicals listed there. This is the strictest category, and it contains most of the listed substances, including aldrin, chlordane, dieldrin, endrin, heptachlor, hexachlorobenzene, mirex, toxaphene, polychlorinated biphenyls, the brominated flame retardants, short chain chlorinated paraffins, and, since 2025, chlorpyrifos, medium chain chlorinated paraffins, and long chain perfluorocarboxylic acids. #Annex_B covers restriction. Chemicals here may still be produced and used, but only for acceptable purposes that are written into the annex. DDT is the classic case, because it remains permitted for disease vector control, principally against malaria mosquitoes, where no equally effective and affordable alternative is available. Perfluorooctane sulfonic acid was also placed in Annex B, reflecting the number and variety of its uses at the time of listing. #Annex_C covers unintentional production. Parties must reduce total releases of the listed by products with the goal of continuing minimisation and, where feasible, ultimate elimination. Dioxins, furans, hexachlorobenzene, hexachlorobutadiene, polychlorinated biphenyls, and pentachlorobenzene appear here. A single chemical can appear in more than one annex, because a substance may be both deliberately produced and unintentionally formed. This overlap is a source of confusion for students, but it reflects chemical reality. 4.3 Exemptions and acceptable purposes The annexes are not absolute prohibitions. Two flexibility mechanisms exist. A #specific_exemption is a time limited permission, registered under Article 4, that allows a named party to continue a named use for a fixed period, normally five years, with the possibility of extension. An #acceptable_purpose is a continuing permission attached to Annex B substances. These mechanisms were politically necessary. Without them, many states could not have joined, because a sudden ban on a chemical used in essential infrastructure, in medicine, or in defence equipment would have been impossible to implement. But exemptions are also the softest part of the treaty. Observers at the 2025 Conference of the Parties noted that the three new listings arrived with a long list of exemptions attached, and argued that extensive exemptions weaken the protective purpose of the listing. The Convention has also, for the first time, reopened a completed listing in order to add a new exemption, in the case of the ultraviolet stabiliser UV-328 and its use in sealant tape and adhesives for aircraft. Delegations stressed that this should not become a precedent, but the fact that it happened at all shows how strong the pressure for flexibility can be. 4.4 Core obligations of parties Beyond the annexes, the Convention imposes a set of duties that together form a life cycle approach. Article 3 requires parties to prohibit or restrict production, use, import, and export of listed chemicals, with narrow exceptions such as environmentally sound disposal. Article 5 requires action plans to reduce releases of unintentionally produced POPs, including the promotion of best available techniques for new sources in listed source categories. Article 6 addresses #stockpiles and wastes. Parties must identify stockpiles, manage them safely, and dispose of waste in a way that destroys the POP content or transforms it irreversibly, so that the material does not simply move from one place to another. Article 7 requires each party to prepare a #national_implementation_plan, transmit it to the Conference of the Parties within two years of the Convention entering into force for that party, and update it as new chemicals are listed. The national plan is the hinge between international law and domestic action, and its quality is a good predictor of whether obligations will be met. Article 9 provides for information exchange, and Article 10 requires public information, awareness, and education, including the participation of workers, women, and children in awareness programmes. Article 11 addresses research, development, and monitoring. Article 12 addresses technical assistance, and Article 13 addresses financial resources. Article 14 established interim financial arrangements through the #Global_Environment_Facility, which remains the principal funding channel. Article 15 requires periodic national reporting. Article 16 requires the Conference of the Parties to evaluate the #effectiveness of the Convention at regular intervals, using comparable monitoring data. Article 17 requires the Conference to develop procedures and mechanisms for determining non compliance and for treating parties found to be in non compliance. That last article deserves emphasis. More than two decades after entry into force, the compliance procedures required by Article 17 have still not been adopted. Every other mechanism required by the treaty is in place. The one that would give the regime teeth is not. This is the single most important institutional fact about the Stockholm Convention, and any serious evaluation must begin from it. 5. How a Chemical Gets Listed: The Work of the POPs Review Committee 5.1 The three stage process Article 8 establishes the #POPs_Review_Committee, a subsidiary scientific body composed of government designated experts, drawn from the five United Nations regions. A listing proceeds through three stages, and each stage produces a specific document. The first stage is #screening. A party submits a proposal, and the Committee checks the substance against the Annex D criteria of persistence, bioaccumulation, long range transport, and adverse effects. If the criteria are satisfied, the proposal moves forward. The second stage is the #risk_profile, prepared according to Annex E. This document evaluates whether the chemical is likely, as a result of long range environmental transport, to lead to significant adverse human health or environmental effects such that global action is warranted. It is essentially a scientific hazard and exposure assessment. The third stage is the #risk_management_evaluation, prepared according to Annex F. This document considers socio economic factors: what alternatives exist, what they cost, what the health and environmental benefits of control would be, what the consequences for waste management would be, and what exemptions might be needed. The Committee then recommends to the Conference of the Parties whether to list the chemical, in which annex, and with what exemptions. The final decision is political, taken by the Conference of the Parties, which normally meets every two years. Amendments to the annexes enter into force for parties after a defined period, with an opt out provision for parties that have made the relevant declaration. 5.2 The pipeline and the growing list Since 2009 the Conference of the Parties has added nineteen new chemicals or chemical groups to the annexes, covering both pesticides and industrial chemicals. The additions include lindane and its isomers, pentabromodiphenyl ether and octabromodiphenyl ether commercial mixtures, perfluorooctane sulfonic acid, endosulfan, hexabromocyclododecane, polychlorinated naphthalenes, hexachlorobutadiene, decabromodiphenyl ether, short chain chlorinated paraffins, dicofol, perfluorooctanoic acid, perfluorohexane sulfonic acid, methoxychlor, Dechlorane Plus, and UV-328. The three additions of 2025 have already been noted. Substances now under review or under discussion include polybrominated dibenzo-p-dioxins, mixed brominated and chlorinated dioxins and furans, and the cyclic volatile methylsiloxanes known as D4, D5, and D6. The siloxane nomination in particular has provoked scientific controversy, because these substances are volatile and behave differently from the classic fat seeking POPs, and because some experts argue that the evidence for adverse effects at environmentally relevant concentrations is weak. 5.3 A live scholarly dispute In 2024 a Perspective article in a leading environmental journal argued that the Convention stands at a crossroads. The authors contended that the criteria for long range transport, if applied loosely, could open the door to a very large number of nominations, that some recent nominations, including UV-328 and the siloxanes, are questionable on scientific grounds, that #regrettable_substitution is a real risk when a chemical is banned without a proper assessment of its replacements, and that inadequate compliance and implementation already undermine the treaty. Their conclusion was that the Convention risks losing credibility and practical utility if the listing process outruns the capacity of parties to implement decisions. A group of ten researchers replied in 2025. Their argument was that a high number of nominations is evidence that the treaty is doing exactly what it was designed to do, and that the correct response to an implementation burden is to strengthen implementation rather than to slow down nominations. They also defended the scientific case for UV-328, including evidence that plastic debris can carry chemical additives over long distances. The original authors then published a rebuttal, agreeing that both sides share the goal of protecting the Convention and disagreeing about the diagnosis. This exchange is valuable for students for reasons that go beyond its content. It shows that international environmental law is not a settled body of rules applied by neutral technicians. It is an arena in which scientists argue, in public, about what the evidence means, about how much uncertainty a regulator may tolerate, and about the balance between ambition and feasibility. Both positions in this dispute are defensible. The regime cannot protect anyone if it lists chemicals that nobody eliminates, and it cannot protect anyone if it refuses to list chemicals that are demonstrably spreading through the global environment. 6. Health and Environmental Effects: Why the Convention Exists 6.1 Human exposure pathways The dominant route of human exposure to most classic POPs is #diet, specifically fatty foods of animal origin: fish, meat, dairy products, and eggs. Because POPs concentrate in fat, and because they biomagnify along food chains, a person's exposure depends less on where they live than on what they eat and on the position in the food chain of the animals they consume. Inhalation and dust ingestion are more important for some newer POPs, especially flame retardants that migrate out of furniture, electronics, and building materials into indoor dust. Occupational exposure remains significant for workers in waste handling, recycling, firefighting, and pest control. Exposure in the womb and through #breastfeeding transfers the mother's body burden to the child at the most sensitive stage of development. Human milk is therefore both a route of exposure and, unexpectedly, an excellent monitoring tool. Because it is fatty, it concentrates the substances of interest. Because it is collected non invasively, it can be sampled in large populations. Because it comes from mothers of known age and parity, it can be standardised. The World Health Organization and the United Nations Environment Programme have used coordinated human milk surveys for decades, and these surveys now form one of the core datasets of the Convention's effectiveness evaluation. 6.2 Documented health outcomes The health literature on POPs is large, and any brief summary risks simplification. The following outcomes are consistently reported in the recent reviews and cohort studies. #Endocrine_disruption is the mechanism most often described. Many POPs bind to or interfere with hormone receptors, or alter the synthesis, transport, and metabolism of hormones. The thyroid system is a repeated concern, and altered thyroid hormone status during pregnancy and early childhood is associated with impaired neurodevelopment. #Neurodevelopmental_effects are documented for several substances. Chlorpyrifos is the clearest recent case, and evidence of harm to the developing brain was central to the argument for its global listing. Polychlorinated biphenyls and brominated flame retardants have also been linked to deficits in cognitive and behavioural outcomes in children. #Reproductive_effects include reduced sperm quality, altered ovarian function, and adverse pregnancy outcomes. Reviews of endocrine disrupting chemicals published in the last five years consistently report associations between exposure and reduced fertility indicators, although the size of the effect varies with the chemical and with the exposure level. #Immunotoxicity has become one of the most policy relevant endpoints, particularly for perfluoroalkyl substances, where reduced antibody response to childhood vaccination has been reported in several cohorts. #Carcinogenicity is established for some POPs and suspected for others. Dioxins are the most studied group in this respect. #Metabolic_effects, including associations with obesity, insulin resistance, and type 2 diabetes, have been reported in both laboratory and epidemiological studies, and this line of research has grown quickly. Two features of this evidence base should be understood clearly. First, most human evidence is observational, and observational evidence cannot establish causation with the same confidence as a controlled experiment. Second, humans are exposed to mixtures, not to single chemicals, and the study of #mixture_effects remains one of the weakest areas of the science. Regulation nevertheless proceeds, and reasonably so, because the precautionary principle exists precisely for situations where waiting for perfect evidence means accepting irreversible harm. 6.3 Ecological effects and vulnerable populations Wildlife effects were the earliest warning signal. Eggshell thinning in birds of prey, reproductive failure in seals, and immune suppression in marine mammals were documented long before the treaty existed. Top predators in the Arctic and in marine ecosystems remain the most exposed organisms on the planet, because they sit at the end of long food chains in regions that act as sinks for globally transported chemicals. This creates one of the most striking injustices in environmental policy. #Indigenous_peoples of the circumpolar north bear some of the highest body burdens of POPs in the world, although they produce almost none of these chemicals. Their traditional foods, including fish, seals, and caribou, are precisely the foods in which POPs concentrate. The Convention explicitly recognises that Arctic ecosystems and indigenous communities are particularly at risk, and the presence of newly listed substances such as chlorpyrifos in Arctic air, snow, water, ice, and traditional food species has been part of the evidence used to justify global bans. A comparable injustice affects communities near informal waste sites in low income countries, where the burning of electronic waste releases dioxins, furans, and brominated compounds into the air, soil, and food of people who did not consume the original products. 7. Implementation: From Treaty Text to National Practice 7.1 National implementation plans The #national_implementation_plan required by Article 7 is the document in which a party explains how it will meet its obligations. A good plan contains an inventory of POPs in the country, an assessment of institutional and legal capacity, a set of action plans with timetables, and an estimate of the resources needed. In practice the quality of these plans varies widely. Two recurring problems appear in the literature. The first is that plans become outdated. Each time the Conference of the Parties adds new chemicals, parties are expected to review and update their plans. A recent critical review of implementation across Africa found that, as of early 2024, plans addressing the amendments agreed in 2019 were still unavailable for most countries globally, even though two further Conferences of the Parties had taken place since then. The gap between listing and national planning is therefore measured in years, and during those years the chemical continues to circulate in trade and in products. The second problem is that plans are often prepared as project deliverables rather than as governing documents. A plan written to satisfy a funding requirement, and then placed on a shelf, produces no environmental benefit. The literature on #capacity_building repeatedly stresses that the difficulty is not writing the plan but maintaining the institutions that would implement it: customs officers who can identify a restricted chemical in a shipment, laboratories that can measure it, inspectors who can enforce a ban, and treatment facilities that can destroy the waste. 7.2 Inventories and the problem of the unknown stock Before a country can control a chemical it must know where the chemical is. Inventories of polychlorinated biphenyls in electrical equipment, of stockpiles of obsolete pesticides, of brominated flame retardants in electronic waste, and of firefighting foams containing fluorinated compounds are the practical foundation of implementation. They are also expensive, technically demanding, and easy to postpone. The problem is especially acute for POPs that are embedded in products. A country may have no production and no imports of a listed flame retardant and still have a very large quantity of that flame retardant inside the televisions, computers, sofas, and insulation panels already in its homes and offices. This hidden stock will enter the waste stream over the following decades. Research on the import of electrical and electronic equipment and associated plastic additives into African countries over several decades has shown how large these accumulated reservoirs can be, and how poorly they are captured by conventional trade statistics. 7.3 Waste, destruction, and the low POP content limit Article 6 requires that POPs waste be disposed of so that the POP content is destroyed or irreversibly transformed. This connects the Stockholm Convention directly to the #Basel_Convention, which governs the transboundary movement and environmentally sound management of hazardous wastes and which sets the technical guidelines that define what counts as low POP content. The concentration limit is decisive. If the limit is set high, then waste containing significant quantities of a banned chemical may legally be recycled into new products. If it is set low, the same waste must be destroyed, which is more expensive and requires facilities that many countries do not have. This is not a technical footnote. It determines whether a banned chemical leaves the economy or circulates within it. High temperature incineration in properly controlled facilities remains the most widely used destruction route, although it must itself be managed carefully, because poorly controlled combustion of chlorinated and brominated materials generates dioxins and furans, which are themselves listed under Annex C. Non combustion technologies exist but are not widely available. In much of the world, the practical alternative to destruction is not a cleaner technology but open burning and informal dumping, which is the worst outcome for every party involved. 7.4 Financing Article 13 requires developed country parties to provide new and additional financial resources to enable developing country parties and parties with economies in transition to meet the incremental costs of implementation. The Global Environment Facility serves as the principal entity of the financial mechanism. The literature is broadly consistent in its assessment: funding has enabled a great deal of useful work, particularly the preparation of national plans, the establishment of monitoring capacity, and some large scale disposal projects, but it is not remotely sufficient to address the accumulated legacy of POPs in the countries that need help most. The cost of building a hazardous waste treatment system for a large country is measured in billions, not millions, and no existing financial mechanism approaches that scale. This is one reason why analyses of the Convention repeatedly return to the same conclusion: the binding constraint is not the law and not the science but the money and the institutions. 8. Measuring Effectiveness: The Global Monitoring Plan 8.1 Design of the monitoring system Article 16 obliges the Conference of the Parties to evaluate effectiveness, and it specifies that the evaluation must be based on comparable monitoring data. This produced the #global_monitoring_plan, which collects data in core media across the five United Nations regions. The core media are ambient air, human tissue in the form of human milk or blood, and, for water soluble POPs such as the perfluorinated substances, water. Other media such as soil, sediment, and biota support the interpretation of trends. The plan operates on a multi year cycle. Regional organisation groups compile regional reports, and a coordination group synthesises them into a global report. These reports then feed into the periodic effectiveness evaluation. The second effectiveness evaluation was completed and welcomed by parties in 2023. The choice of core media is scientifically sensible. #Ambient_air is the most direct indicator of current releases, because air responds quickly to changes in emissions and because atmospheric transport is the main route by which POPs reach remote regions. #Human_milk integrates dietary exposure over a long period and reflects the body burden of the population. #Water is essential for the perfluorinated substances, which do not follow the fat seeking behaviour of classic POPs and which are not captured properly by fat based monitoring. 8.2 Passive air sampling and its value for developing countries One of the most important practical innovations in POPs monitoring is the #passive_air_sampler. Unlike an active sampler, it needs no electricity and no pump. It is deployed for weeks or months, absorbs chemicals from the air, and is then sent to a laboratory for analysis. This makes global monitoring affordable and makes it possible to sample in locations without reliable power. Passive sampling programmes coordinated with United Nations support have generated data on dioxin like compounds and on perfluoroalkyl substances in air in developing countries, providing baseline information where none previously existed. Regional passive sampling networks have also produced long time series. A European network operating for fifteen years has provided one of the most complete pictures anywhere of how POPs concentrations in air have changed since the Convention came into force, and a global network of sampling sites has produced a comparable multi year record. 8.3 The evidence from air The air monitoring record supports a two part conclusion, and the two parts point in opposite directions. The first part is encouraging. Concentrations of many legacy pesticides and of polychlorinated biphenyls have declined. In a global network of sampling sites, concentrations of #endosulfan began to fall at approximately the time of its listing as a POP in 2011, which is one of the clearest attributions of an atmospheric decline to a Convention decision. For several other legacy POPs, concentrations had already begun to fall before listing, because national regulations in major producing and using countries were adopted earlier. This is an important nuance: the treaty often confirms and globalises a decline that national policy started. The second part is uncomfortable. For several substances the decline is very slow or absent. Most strikingly, the unintentionally produced compounds #hexachlorobenzene and #hexachlorobutadiene have increased in the global atmosphere to the point where they are among the most abundant and most widely dispersed POPs measured. Because these substances are by products rather than commercial goods, banning production has no effect on them. Reducing them requires the identification of the industrial processes that form them and the application of controls to those processes, which the Convention has not yet achieved at scale. A separate study of the Great Lakes region reported that atmospheric concentrations of hexachlorobenzene had changed little over twenty five years. The lesson for policy is direct. The Convention is good at stopping things that are deliberately made and sold. It is much weaker at stopping things that appear as a side effect of industrial activity, and Annex C therefore represents the least successful part of the regime. 8.4 The evidence from human milk The human milk data provide the most compelling evidence that the Convention has improved human exposure. Coordinated exposure studies conducted over two decades, using pooled national samples collected under a standard protocol, allow comparison across countries and over time. For #DDT, the decline is large. Analyses of repeated national participation report overall decreases of roughly fifty to eighty per cent over ten year periods in Africa, in the Asia and Pacific region, and in Latin America and the Caribbean, as well as at the global level. Similar downward trends are reported for other legacy organochlorines and for polychlorinated biphenyls and dioxin like compounds, although the rate of decline differs by region and by compound. Two caveats are essential. First, the composition of the participating countries changes between rounds, so apparent global trends can be influenced by which countries submitted samples. Analyses restricted to countries with repeated participation are more reliable and are the ones on which the strongest conclusions rest. Second, declining concentrations in milk do not mean that exposure has ended. They mean that the exposure of the current generation of mothers is lower than that of the previous generation, which is precisely what a successful phase out should produce. For the perfluorinated substances the picture is different. Measurements of perfluoroalkane acids in human milk collected under the monitoring plan show that these substances are present in populations across the world, including in countries with no known production, which confirms both their global distribution and the importance of monitoring media other than fat. 8.5 What effectiveness evaluation concluded The second effectiveness evaluation, welcomed by parties in 2023, reached a balanced judgement. It concluded that the Convention provides an effective and dynamic framework for regulating POPs across their life cycle, that concentrations of the initial POPs in air and in human populations have declined and continue to decline or remain at low levels, and that the mechanisms required by the treaty have been put in place with the notable exception of the compliance procedures. It also identified continuing obstacles to full implementation, and it emphasised that the evaluation itself is hampered by the limited data available from national reports and national implementation plans. That final point deserves attention from any student who wants to work in this field. A treaty that cannot obtain reliable information from its own members cannot rigorously evaluate itself. Improving national reporting is not administrative housekeeping. It is a scientific prerequisite for knowing whether the regime works. 9. Regional Perspectives 9.1 Africa Africa presents the sharpest contrast between legal commitment and practical capacity. Almost all African states are parties. Yet a recent critical review of twenty years of implementation across the continent reports elevated concentrations of some POPs, particularly polybrominated diphenyl ethers and polychlorinated biphenyls, with values that in some cases fall in the upper part of the global range. The review identifies waste management as the central weakness, together with limited analytical capacity, incomplete inventories, and outdated national plans. The mechanism behind these concentrations is well documented. Large volumes of used electrical and electronic equipment are exported to African countries, sometimes as functioning second hand goods and sometimes under that description when the goods are in fact waste. When the equipment fails it enters an informal recycling sector where plastics are burned to recover metals, releasing brominated and chlorinated compounds and generating dioxins and furans. The people who perform this work, and the communities that live nearby, receive an exposure that has no relationship to their own consumption of the products. Studies of eggs from free range chickens near such sites have been used as an inexpensive and effective indicator of local contamination, and the results are consistently alarming. 9.2 The Arctic The Arctic is the region where the scientific case for the Convention was first made and where the moral case remains strongest. Cold temperatures, long food chains, and the fat rich diets of both wildlife and people combine to concentrate globally transported chemicals in a region with almost no local sources. Long term Arctic monitoring, including measurements in air, in sediment, and in fish and marine mammals, has provided some of the most reliable time series in the world, and Arctic data have repeatedly been used to justify the listing of new substances, including the recent listing of chlorpyrifos. 9.3 Asia and the Pacific Asia is now the centre of global chemical production, and the region therefore matters more than any other for the future of the regime. Passive air sampling in Asia, Africa, Latin America, and the Pacific has provided comparable data across these regions for the first time, and it shows both the influence of local sources and the signature of long range transport. Rapid growth in electronics manufacturing, in textiles, and in plastics means that the reservoir of POPs in products in the region is growing even as production of the oldest POPs has ended. 9.4 Europe and North America Europe and North America benefit from the longest monitoring records, the most developed regulatory infrastructure, and the strongest enforcement. The European Union implements the Convention through its own regulation on persistent organic pollutants, which often moves faster than the treaty and sometimes sets stricter limits. The recent European process of consulting on the addition of chlorpyrifos, medium chain chlorinated paraffins, and long chain perfluorocarboxylic acids to its own regulation illustrates the usual pattern: a global decision is taken, and the regions with the strongest institutions convert it into binding domestic law within a year or two, while other regions take much longer. This asymmetry has an uncomfortable implication. If the strongest economies eliminate a chemical and the weakest do not, production may simply move. The literature on #regrettable_substitution and on the migration of hazardous production to jurisdictions with weaker enforcement suggests that this is not a hypothetical concern. 10. The Hard Problems 10.1 The recycling loophole Perhaps the most instructive failure of the regime concerns #brominated_flame_retardants. When polybrominated diphenyl ethers and hexabromocyclododecane were listed for elimination, the Conference of the Parties granted exemptions permitting the recycling of articles containing these substances, and permitting the use and disposal of the resulting recycled articles. The intention was to avoid destroying the economic value of plastic waste and to ease the transition. The consequence is that a chemical banned because it causes endocrine disruption and neurodevelopmental harm can legally be recycled into new plastic products. The evidence on where those plastics end up is disturbing. Analyses of children's toys and childcare products made from recycled plastic have repeatedly found legacy brominated flame retardants at measurable concentrations, in products purchased in many countries. A scoping review of this literature concluded that stricter content limits are needed under the Basel Convention, that both treaties should set safe limits for these chemicals in recycled plastics, and that contaminated recycled plastic should be excluded from children's products entirely. This is a case where two environmental goals collide. The #circular_economy asks us to recycle more. Chemical safety asks us to remove hazardous substances from circulation. Where a material contains a POP, these goals are incompatible, and the correct answer is that the chemical must leave the cycle even at the cost of the material. Recycling a persistent toxic substance is not circularity. It is the redistribution of a hazard into new hands, and frequently into the hands of children. 10.2 Fluorinated substances and the limits of a chemical by chemical approach The listing of perfluorooctane sulfonic acid, then perfluorooctanoic acid, then perfluorohexane sulfonic acid, then long chain perfluorocarboxylic acids, illustrates a structural weakness in the regime. #PFAS comprise thousands of substances. Regulating them one at a time, or even one subgroup at a time, invites substitution within the same family. Each listing takes years of committee work, and while it proceeds, industry may already have moved to a related compound that is not yet listed and about which even less is known. The 2025 listing of long chain perfluorocarboxylic acids as a group, together with their salts and their precursor compounds, represents an attempt to move toward a broader approach, since it covers a homologous series and the substances that transform into it. Whether the Convention can eventually address entire chemical classes, rather than individual substances, is one of the most important open questions in the field. The technical difficulties are also real. Fluorinated substances are water soluble rather than fat soluble, so the classic bioaccumulation criterion based on the octanol water partition coefficient does not describe them well. They bind to proteins rather than to fat. They require different analytical methods, different monitoring media, and different disposal technologies, because they are extremely difficult to destroy thermally. In several respects they do not fit the mental model on which the Convention was originally built, and the regime has been adapting to them ever since. 10.3 Unintentional production As shown by the air monitoring evidence, the by product POPs are the regime's weakest area. Open burning of waste, poorly controlled incineration, certain chlorine chemistry processes, metal production, and the burning of electronic waste all generate dioxins, furans, and related compounds. Controlling these releases requires industrial investment and functioning waste collection systems, which is exactly what the poorest parties lack. The obligation in Annex C is also framed more softly than the obligations in Annexes A and B, requiring continuing minimisation rather than prohibition, and this weaker legal form is reflected in weaker outcomes. 10.4 The compliance gap No compliance mechanism exists. Article 17 requires one, negotiations have continued for two decades, and the second effectiveness evaluation noted the omission explicitly. Without a compliance procedure, the treaty relies on reporting, on peer pressure, and on the willingness of parties to act. A regime built on those foundations can achieve a great deal, and the Stockholm Convention has, but it cannot compel a reluctant party to act, and it cannot easily distinguish a party that lacks capacity from a party that lacks will. 10.5 Data poverty The effectiveness evaluation is only as good as the data it receives. National reports are incomplete. Monitoring coverage is thin in exactly the regions where concentrations are most likely to be rising. Many newly listed substances have no baseline data at all, which means that when trends are eventually calculated there will be nothing to compare them with. Archiving of samples, so that stored material can be reanalysed for chemicals that were not of interest when the sample was taken, is one of the cheapest and most valuable investments available, and it is repeatedly recommended in the monitoring literature. 11. The Convention in the Wider System of Chemical Governance 11.1 The Basel, Rotterdam, and Stockholm cluster The three chemicals and waste treaties have held joint meetings of their Conferences of the Parties since 2013, and they share a secretariat function. The logic of this arrangement, often called the #synergies_process, is that the three treaties address different stages of the same problem. The Rotterdam Convention governs #prior_informed_consent for trade in certain hazardous chemicals and pesticides, so that an importing country receives information before a shipment arrives. The Stockholm Convention eliminates or restricts the worst substances. The Basel Convention governs the movement and environmentally sound management of the resulting wastes. For students this cluster is a good illustration of how international regimes interlock. It is also a good illustration of their limits. Coordination reduces duplication and saves money, but it does not by itself create enforcement capacity, and each treaty retains its own membership, its own decision procedures, and its own gaps. 11.2 Mercury and the Minamata precedent The Minamata Convention on Mercury, adopted more than a decade after Stockholm, borrowed heavily from its architecture, including national plans, technical annexes, and a financial mechanism, but it also included a compliance committee from the outset. The comparison is instructive. Later treaties learned from the omissions of earlier ones, and the absence of a compliance mechanism in the Stockholm Convention looks less like an oversight and more like a political choice that a subsequent generation of negotiators was unwilling to repeat. 11.3 Plastics The negotiation of a global instrument on #plastic_pollution is the most important development for the future of POPs policy. Plastics are the main carrier of many listed substances, including flame retardants, chlorinated paraffins, and ultraviolet stabilisers. Plastic debris can transport chemical additives across oceans, which is one of the arguments advanced in favour of the UV-328 listing. If a plastics instrument addresses chemical additives seriously, it could resolve some of the problems that the Stockholm Convention has struggled with, particularly the recycling of contaminated material. If it does not, it may simply move the problem into a new legal framework. 11.4 The science policy interface A final systemic issue concerns how scientific advice enters political decisions. The POPs Review Committee is a genuine scientific body, but its members are nominated by governments, and its recommendations can be modified by the Conference of the Parties, which frequently adds exemptions that the Committee did not propose. The public dispute among researchers described earlier in this article is, at bottom, a dispute about how this interface should operate: whether scientists should press for the broadest protective interpretation of the criteria, or whether they should exercise restraint in the interests of a regime that must remain implementable. There is no neutral answer to this question, and students should be wary of anyone who offers one. 12. Discussion 12.1 Is the Convention a success? Judged against the standard of most multilateral environmental agreements, the Stockholm Convention has performed well. Its near universal membership, its functioning scientific review body, its capacity to add new substances, its global monitoring system, and the measurable decline in the concentrations of legacy substances in air and in human milk together constitute a strong record. Few treaties can point to a fall of fifty to eighty per cent in the concentration of a regulated substance in the bodies of people across three continents. Judged against the standard of its own objective, which is to protect human health and the environment from persistent organic pollutants, the record is partial. The chemicals that were easiest to control have been controlled. The chemicals that remain are harder in every respect: they are formed unintentionally, or they exist in thousands of variants, or they are locked inside a stock of products that will take decades to reach the waste stream, or they are in commerce in countries that cannot afford to remove them. The most accurate summary is that the Convention has succeeded at the first half of its task and has not yet built the tools for the second half. 12.2 The three structural reforms most often proposed The recent literature converges on three reform priorities, and they are worth stating plainly. The first is #compliance. Adopting the procedures required by Article 17 would give the regime a way to identify, assist, and where necessary press parties that are not meeting their obligations, and would allow the treaty to distinguish clearly between inability and unwillingness. The second is #implementation_capacity. Financing, technical assistance, laboratory capacity, customs enforcement, and hazardous waste infrastructure are the practical bottleneck. The argument that the listing process should slow down in order to match capacity has been made seriously, but the more defensible response is to raise capacity rather than to lower ambition, because the chemicals will not wait for institutions to catch up. The third is a #class_based_approach to listing. Regulating chemicals one at a time in a market that can produce close analogues in months guarantees that the regulator will always be behind. Grouping substances by structure and by function, as the 2025 listing of a homologous series and its precursors begins to do, is the only strategy that can keep pace. 12.3 Implications for students and researchers Several research gaps are open and accessible. Monitoring in under sampled regions remains the single most valuable contribution that a new researcher can make, because the global picture is built from local data and there are large blank areas on the map. Work on the reservoir of POPs in products in use, sometimes called the in use stock, is scarce and important, because it determines future emissions. Studies of the composition of recycled plastics, particularly those used in children's products, connect directly to a live policy debate. Research on the destruction of fluorinated substances is urgently needed, because the world is now listing chemicals that it does not reliably know how to destroy. And there is room for serious social science on why national implementation plans succeed in some countries and fail in others, a question that chemistry alone cannot answer. 12.4 Limitations of this review This article synthesises published work and does not present new measurements. It relies on the peer reviewed record, which is unevenly distributed across regions and which under represents countries with limited research funding. It treats official documents as accurate accounts of what was decided, which is reasonable for legal facts but which cannot capture the informal politics of negotiation. And because the field is moving quickly, particularly with regard to fluorinated substances and to the plastics negotiations, some statements will require revision within a short period. 13. Conclusion The Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants was created because a class of chemicals had escaped the control of any single country. Substances made in one place were found in the bodies of people who lived somewhere else, in wildlife that had never encountered a factory, and in regions where nothing had ever been manufactured. The treaty responded with a coherent design: scientific criteria to identify the chemicals, three annexes to eliminate, restrict, and minimise them, national plans to implement the rules, and a global monitoring system to check whether the rules were working. After more than two decades the verdict is genuinely mixed, and it is important to state both halves of it. The concentrations of the original substances have fallen, sometimes dramatically, in air and in the milk of mothers on every continent that participates in the monitoring programme. That is a real achievement of international cooperation, and it should be taught as such. At the same time, unintentionally produced compounds have not declined and in some cases have risen, recycling exemptions have returned banned flame retardants to consumer products including children's toys, the fluorinated substances present a challenge that the original design of the treaty did not anticipate, national plans are frequently out of date, financing falls far short of need, and the compliance mechanism required by the treaty's own text has never been adopted. The lesson is not that the Convention has failed. The lesson is that listing a chemical is the beginning of the work rather than the end of it. A signature in Geneva does not remove a flame retardant from a sofa in Lagos, a transformer in Kyiv, or a toy in a market in Manila. That removal requires inventories, laboratories, customs officers, waste facilities, money, and time. The next twenty years of the Convention will be judged less by how many chemicals are added to the annexes and more by whether the parties build the unglamorous institutions that turn a listing into an actual reduction in exposure. For students entering this field, that is the most useful thing to understand. The chemistry of persistence is settled. The law is largely written. What remains unsolved is implementation, and implementation is where the next generation of work lies. Hashtags #Stockholm_Convention #Persistent_Organic_Pollutants #POPs #Chemical_Safety #Environmental_Law #Global_Governance #Toxicology #Public_Health #Environmental_Chemistry #Sustainable_Development #Hazardous_Waste #Environmental_Justice #Pollution_Control #Environmental_Policy #Research_For_Students References Abad, E., Abalos, M., and Fiedler, H. (2022). Air monitoring with passive samplers for dioxin-like persistent organic pollutants in developing countries (2017-2019). Chemosphere, 287, 131931. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2021.131931 Akinrinade, O. E., Agunbiade, F. O., Alani, R., and Ayejuyo, O. O. (2024). Implementation of the Stockholm Convention on persistent organic pollutants (POPs) in Africa: progress, challenges, and recommendations after 20 years. Environmental Science: Advances, 3(5), 623-634. https://doi.org/10.1039/D3VA00347G Camoiras Gonzalez, P., Sadia, M., Baabish, A., Sobhanei, S., and Fiedler, H. (2021). Air monitoring with passive samplers for perfluoroalkane substances in developing countries (2017-2019). Chemosphere, 282, 131069. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2021.131069 de Boer, J., van Dijk, R., Abalos, M., and Abad, E. (2023). Persistent organic pollutants in air from Asia, Africa, Latin America and the Pacific. Chemosphere, 324, 138271. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2023.138271 Drevenkar, V., and Mendas, G. (2023). Environmental monitoring and analysis of persistent organic pollutants. 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(2024). The Stockholm Convention at a crossroads: questionable nominations and inadequate compliance threaten its acceptance and utility. Environmental Science and Technology, 58(31), 13587-13593. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.4c06775 Wania, F., and McLachlan, M. S. (2025). Rebuttal to correspondence on The Stockholm Convention at a crossroads: questionable nominations and inadequate compliance threaten its acceptance and utility. Environmental Science and Technology, 59(29), 15571-15572. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.5c08190 White, K. B., Kalina, J., Scheringer, M., Pribylova, P., Kukucka, P., Kohoutek, J., Prokes, R., and Klanova, J. (2023). Spatial and temporal trends of persistent organic pollutants across Europe after 15 years of MONET passive air sampling. Environmental Science and Technology, 57(30). https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.3c00796 Secretariat of the Stockholm Convention. (2023). 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- Shared Responsibility in the International Trade of Hazardous Chemicals: A Critical Assessment of the Rotterdam Convention (1998) and Its Prior Informed Consent Procedure
The Rotterdam Convention on the Prior Informed Consent Procedure for Certain Hazardous Chemicals and Pesticides in International Trade, adopted in 1998 and in force since 2004, is the main global treaty built on the idea of shared responsibility between the countries that export dangerous substances and the countries that receive them. This article examines the legal design, institutional machinery, and practical performance of the Convention, with attention to what the treaty does well, where it stalls, and why. It argues that the Convention is better understood as an early warning and information system than as a control regime, because it does not ban anything: it gives an importing state the legal right to say yes, no, or yes with conditions, and it obliges the exporting state to respect that answer. The analysis draws on the treaty text, the decisions of the Conference of the Parties, the recommendations of the Chemical Review Committee, and recent peer reviewed evidence on trade flows, compliance, and governance interactions. Three findings stand out. First, the listing engine of the treaty has slowed almost to a halt because Annex III can only be amended by consensus, allowing a small number of producing and using states to block substances that the scientific body has already cleared, with chrysotile asbestos as the most visible case. Second, large scale trade continues in listed substances even where importing countries have refused them, which points to a compliance and enforcement gap rather than a drafting gap. Third, the Convention operates inside a wider ecosystem of rules and private standards that can either reinforce or quietly undermine it. The article closes with a set of reform options, including a qualified majority route for listing, an additional annex for blocked chemicals, tighter customs integration, and stronger capacity building for developing countries. The purpose is to give students a clear, evidence based map of a treaty that is often described in one sentence and rarely examined in depth. Keywords: prior informed consent; hazardous chemicals; pesticides; international environmental law; chemical governance; treaty effectiveness; shared responsibility 1. Introduction Every year, millions of tonnes of chemicals cross national borders. Most of them are useful. Some of them are dangerous enough that the country producing them has already decided its own farmers, factory workers, and citizens should not be exposed to them. The uncomfortable question that follows is simple: what happens when a substance that is banned at home is still sold abroad? The Rotterdam Convention is the world's formal answer to that question. It does not answer it by banning trade. It answers it by insisting that no country should receive a shipment of a listed dangerous substance without knowing what it is, what it does, and without having been given a real chance to refuse. The formal objective, stated in Article 1, is to promote shared responsibility and cooperative efforts among parties in the international trade of certain hazardous chemicals in order to protect human health and the environment from potential harm, and to contribute to their environmentally sound use, by facilitating information exchange about their characteristics, by providing for a national decision making process on their import and export, and by disseminating those decisions to all parties. That sentence contains the whole logic of the treaty. Information is the currency. Consent is the mechanism. Responsibility is split between the two ends of the transaction rather than being loaded entirely onto the weaker end. For students of environmental governance, the Convention is unusually instructive precisely because it is modest. It does not create a global regulator. It does not tell any country what to do inside its own territory. It respects sovereignty almost to a fault. What it creates is a procedure, and procedures can be studied, measured, and criticised in ways that grand declarations cannot. If a procedure is not working, the failure is visible in the record: in the notifications that were never sent, in the import responses that were never filed, in the chemicals that the scientific committee recommended and the political body refused to list, and in the trade statistics that show shipments arriving in countries that had already said no. This article has four aims. The first is descriptive: to explain, in plain language, what the Convention actually says and how its parts fit together. The second is analytical: to assess how well the PIC procedure has performed against its own objectives, using recent empirical evidence rather than official self description. The third is diagnostic: to identify the specific structural features, above all the consensus rule for listing, that explain the pattern of stalled decisions. The fourth is prescriptive: to set out the reform options that have been proposed by parties, scientists, and civil society, and to weigh them honestly, including their costs. The article is written for an academic student audience. Technical terms are explained on first use. Where the evidence is contested, that is said openly rather than smoothed over. 1.1 Why the topic matters now Three developments make this a live subject rather than a historical one. The first is the growing recognition that chemical pollution belongs alongside climate change and biodiversity loss as a systemic global risk. Researchers have argued that humanity is already operating outside the safe operating space of the planetary boundaries for novel entities, because the production and release of synthetic substances is expanding faster than the collective ability to assess and monitor them (Persson et al., 2022). The Lancet Commission update on pollution and health estimated that pollution in all its forms remains responsible for millions of premature deaths each year, with the burden concentrated in low and middle income countries (Fuller et al., 2022). Trade is one of the pathways by which that burden is distributed. The second is institutional. In 2023, states adopted the Global Framework on Chemicals, which sets a target of phasing out highly hazardous pesticides in agriculture by 2035 where risks are not managed and safer affordable alternatives exist (UNEP, 2023). An Intergovernmental Science Policy Panel on chemicals, waste, and pollution prevention has since been launched, answering a long standing call from the scientific community for a body comparable to the climate and biodiversity panels (Wang et al., 2021; Brack et al., 2022). The Rotterdam Convention now sits inside a busier and more ambitious architecture than the one it was born into, and its relative weakness is more visible as a result. The third is empirical. Until recently, almost nobody had tested whether the Convention actually changes trade behaviour. A study published in 2023 analysed tens of thousands of trade records from the UN Comtrade database and found that although the treaty appears to have had a positive effect for a majority of listed substances, very large volumes were still exported to countries that had formally refused to receive them (Zou et al., 2023). That is not a small footnote. It is direct evidence of non compliance with the core obligation of the treaty, and it reframes the debate from "is the design right" to "is anyone enforcing it". 1.2 Structure of the article Section 2 sets out the historical background, from voluntary guidelines to binding treaty. Section 3 states the research questions and describes the method. Section 4 analyses the legal architecture provision by provision. Section 5 examines the institutions. Section 6 assesses implementation and effectiveness. Section 7 dissects the listing deadlock. Section 8 examines illegal and non compliant trade. Section 9 places the Convention within the wider regime complex. Section 10 addresses equity, human rights, and #double_standards. Section 11 examines capacity constraints. Section 12 sets out reform options. Section 13 states limitations. Section 14 concludes. 2. Historical Background: From Voluntary Guidelines to a Binding Treaty 2.1 The problem that produced the treaty The Convention did not appear out of nowhere. It was the legal residue of about two decades of scandal, complaint, and negotiation. During the 1960s and 1970s, the global chemical industry expanded rapidly, and pesticides became central to agricultural intensification. As industrialised countries built their own regulatory systems, they began to ban or severely restrict substances found to be carcinogenic, neurotoxic, persistent, or acutely lethal. Those national bans, however, applied only within national borders. Production capacity did not disappear when a domestic market closed. It looked for new markets. The result was a pattern that came to be called the circle of poison, although the metaphor is imperfect. A pesticide prohibited in a wealthy country could still be manufactured there, exported to a poorer country with weaker regulation, sprayed by workers with little protective equipment and little information, and then return, as residue, on imported food. The people most exposed were farmworkers and rural communities in the Global South, who had the least access to the toxicological information that had justified the ban in the exporting country in the first place. Two features of that pattern are essential to understanding the treaty. The first is asymmetry of information. The exporting country knew why it had banned the substance. The importing country often did not. The second is asymmetry of capacity. Even a well informed importing state may lack the laboratories, inspectors, poison centres, and legal machinery to manage a hazardous substance safely. Consent without capacity is thin, and this criticism has never gone away. 2.2 The voluntary phase International institutions responded first with soft law. The Food and Agriculture Organization developed the International Code of Conduct on the Distribution and Use of Pesticides, and the United Nations Environment Programme developed the London Guidelines for the Exchange of Information on Chemicals in International Trade. In 1989, both instruments were amended to include a voluntary #Prior_Informed_Consent procedure, jointly operated by FAO and UNEP. The voluntary procedure established the basic vocabulary that the treaty later inherited: a list of covered chemicals, a #decision_guidance_document summarising the hazard and regulatory status of each one, and a national import decision communicated to exporting countries. It worked, but only partially. Participation was uneven, obligations were not binding, and there was no legal consequence for ignoring an importing country's refusal. By the mid 1990s, the consensus among states was that the voluntary scheme should be converted into a legally binding instrument. Negotiations were conducted under the joint sponsorship of FAO and UNEP, and the resulting text was adopted in Rotterdam on 10 September 1998. The Convention entered into force on 24 February 2004, after the required fiftieth ratification. The voluntary interim procedure was formally discontinued once the binding regime became operational. 2.3 What the drafters chose not to do It is worth pausing on the negotiating choices, because the limits of the Convention today are largely the limits chosen in 1998. The drafters did not create a prohibition regime. A chemical listed in #Annex_III is not banned; it is simply subject to the #PIC_procedure. Listing means that trade in that substance requires the informed and documented consent of the importing party. Nothing more. The drafters did not create an independent scientific assessment body with the power to evaluate substances on its own initiative. The #Chemical_Review_Committee reviews notifications submitted by parties. It does not conduct original risk assessment, and it is not a licensing authority. The drafters did not create a strong enforcement organ. There is no court, no inspectorate, no sanction. The treaty relies on national implementation, national customs systems, and reputational pressure. Finally, the drafters attached listing decisions to the #Conference_of_the_Parties acting, in practice, by consensus. That single procedural choice has shaped, and arguably crippled, the last two decades of the treaty's life. It is examined in detail in Section 7. These were not stupid choices. They were the price of getting exporting states, including large chemical producing economies, to accept any binding rules at all. The relevant scholarly question is not whether the drafters were naive, but whether the bargain they struck is still adequate to the problem in front of us. 3. Research Questions and Method 3.1 Research questions This article addresses four questions. RQ1. What legal obligations does the Convention actually impose, and on whom? RQ2. To what extent has the #PIC_procedure achieved its stated objective of protecting importing countries from unwanted shipments of #hazardous_chemicals? RQ3. What explains the persistent failure to list substances that the Convention's own scientific body has recommended? RQ4. What reforms are available, and what are their trade offs? 3.2 Method The study is a qualitative, doctrinal and analytical review. It combines three bodies of material. The first is primary legal material: the text of the Convention and its annexes, together with the decisions of the #Conference_of_the_Parties and the recommendations of the #Chemical_Review_Committee. This material establishes what the law says and how it has been applied. The second is empirical scholarship. The most important recent contribution is the analysis of #trade_data from the UN Comtrade database by Zou et al. (2023), which is, to date, the largest quantitative test of whether the Convention changes behaviour. Governance scholarship, notably Kinniburgh et al. (2023), supplies evidence on how #private_standards interact with the treaty's listing process. Environmental science literature supplies the context of #chemical_pollution as a systemic risk. The third is institutional and civil society reporting, used with care and identified as such: negotiation summaries, agency reports, and advocacy publications that document the politics of specific listing decisions. The method has an obvious limitation, stated here rather than buried later. It is a synthesis, not a new empirical study. It cannot resolve disputes about the size of trade flows or the exact health burden of particular substances. What it can do is organise existing evidence into a coherent assessment and identify where the evidence is thin. 3.3 A note on terminology Three terms recur and are easily confused. A notification of final regulatory action is a formal communication from a party stating that it has banned or severely restricted a chemical for health or environmental reasons, following a risk assessment. A decision guidance document is the summary prepared by the Chemical Review Committee and adopted by the Conference of the Parties, describing the hazards of a listed chemical and the regulatory actions taken against it. It is circulated to all parties so they can make an informed import decision. An import response is the answer a party gives regarding a listed chemical: consent to import, do not consent, or consent subject to specified conditions. It may also be an interim response. Once filed, other parties are obliged to respect it. Keeping these three apart is the single most useful thing a student can do when reading the primary documents. 4. The Legal Architecture of the Convention 4.1 Scope: what the treaty covers, and what it does not The Convention applies to two categories of substance: banned or severely restricted chemicals, and #severely_hazardous_pesticide_formulations. The first category includes both industrial chemicals and #pesticides that have been prohibited or heavily restricted by governmental regulatory action for health or environmental reasons. The second category is narrower and more specific: it covers pesticide formulations that cause severe health or environmental problems under the conditions of use actually found in a developing country or a country with an economy in transition. That second category deserves emphasis, because it embodies an important insight. A formulation may be perfectly manageable in a country with mechanised application, closed transfer systems, protective equipment, and functioning poison centres, and lethal in a country where it is decanted into unlabelled bottles and sprayed by hand in sandals. The hazard is not only chemical. It is contextual. The Convention is one of the few treaties that formally recognises this by allowing a developing country party to propose a formulation for listing based on lived experience of poisoning incidents rather than laboratory toxicology alone. The Convention explicitly excludes several categories: narcotic drugs and psychotropic substances, radioactive materials, wastes, chemical weapons, pharmaceuticals, chemicals used as food additives, food, and chemicals in quantities unlikely to affect human health or the environment when imported for research or analysis, or in personal quantities for personal use. Wastes are excluded because they are the domain of the #Basel_Convention. The boundary lines matter in practice, because a substance can slip between regimes. 4.2 The two gateways into Annex III Article 5 and Article 6 create the two routes by which a chemical can enter the PIC procedure. Under Article 5, a party that has taken final regulatory action to ban or severely restrict a chemical must notify the Secretariat. When the Secretariat has received notifications from at least two parties in two different "PIC regions" (the Convention divides the world into seven such regions), and when those notifications satisfy the criteria in Annex II, the chemical is referred to the Chemical Review Committee for evaluation and possible recommendation for listing. The Annex II criteria are the quiet gatekeeper of the whole system. A notification is not enough on its own. It must show, among other things, that the regulatory action was taken to protect human health or the environment, that it was based on a #risk_assessment involving conditions prevailing in the notifying country, and that it will lead to a significant decrease in the quantity used or the number of uses. Many notifications fail on the risk assessment requirement, particularly notifications from countries with limited technical infrastructure. That is a structural irony: the countries the Convention is most designed to help are the least able to trigger it. Under Article 6, a developing country party or a party with an economy in transition that is experiencing problems with a #severely_hazardous_pesticide_formulation under conditions of use in its territory may propose it for listing. The proposal must be supported by documentation of incidents. Annex IV sets out the criteria the Committee applies, including the reliability of the evidence and the likelihood that similar problems arise in other countries with comparable conditions. 4.3 Listing: Article 7 and the role of the Conference of the Parties Once the #Chemical_Review_Committee decides that a chemical satisfies the criteria, it prepares a draft #decision_guidance_document and forwards a recommendation to the #Conference_of_the_Parties. Article 7 provides that the Conference of the Parties decides whether to make the chemical subject to the #PIC_procedure and to adopt the decision guidance document. Article 22, paragraph 5, provides that annexes may be amended by the Conference of the Parties, and the rules of procedure have been applied so that decisions of substance are taken by consensus. In practice, this means that a single party can prevent a listing. This is the pivot on which the whole assessment of the treaty's effectiveness turns, and Section 7 examines it in full. 4.4 Import responses: Article 10 Article 10 is the operative heart of the Convention. Each party must implement appropriate legislative or administrative measures to ensure timely decisions on the import of chemicals listed in #Annex_III. For each listed chemical, a party must transmit to the Secretariat an #import_response, which may be a final decision (consent, non consent, or consent subject to conditions) or an interim response. Two obligations follow, and they are the obligations that make the Convention more than a newsletter. First, a party that decides not to consent to import, or to consent only under specified conditions, must simultaneously prohibit or restrict the import of that chemical from all sources and its domestic production for domestic use. This is the non discrimination requirement. A country cannot refuse imports from abroad while continuing to produce the same substance at home for its own market. The rule prevents the #PIC_procedure from being used as a disguised trade barrier, and it also gives the Convention a modest but real internal regulatory effect. Second, and most importantly, Article 11 provides that each exporting party must take appropriate measures to ensure that exporters within its jurisdiction comply with the import decisions communicated by importing parties. Where a party has not transmitted a response, or has transmitted an interim response that does not contain an interim decision, exporters must not export unless certain narrow conditions are met, such as explicit consent from the importing party or evidence that the chemical is registered or has been previously used in the importing country. This is the sense in which the treaty distributes responsibility. The importing state carries the duty to decide and to communicate. The exporting state carries the duty to make its own companies obey that decision. Neither duty works without the other. That is what #shared_responsibility means in operational terms, and it is the phrase that appears in the treaty's own objective. 4.5 Export notification: Article 12 Article 12 covers chemicals that are banned or severely restricted by an exporting party but that are not (or not yet) listed in Annex III. Before the first export of such a chemical in each calendar year, the exporting party must provide an #export_notification to the importing party, containing the information specified in Annex V: identity of the substance, the regulatory action and the reasons for it, hazard classification, precautionary measures, and a summary of physical and chemical properties. Article 12 is underrated. It extends the reach of the treaty far beyond the small list in Annex III, because it applies to every chemical banned or severely restricted domestically by an exporting party. In principle, an importing country receives advance warning about a much larger universe of substances than the Annex III list suggests. In practice, the quality and use of export notifications varies enormously, and there is no obligation on the importing party to respond, nor any obligation on the exporter to stop. 4.6 Labelling, safety information, and Article 13 Article 13 requires parties to ensure that chemicals subject to the PIC procedure, and chemicals banned or severely restricted domestically, are subject to #labelling requirements that make hazard information available, and that a #safety_data_sheet following an internationally recognised format is sent to each importer. Labels must be legible and information must accompany the shipment. These requirements sound bureaucratic. They are, in fact, the point at which the treaty touches a person: the person who opens the container. 4.7 Information exchange and the right to know Article 14 requires parties to facilitate exchange of scientific, technical, economic, and legal information about chemicals within the scope of the Convention, including toxicological, ecotoxicological, and safety information. Article 14 also protects certain confidential business information, but expressly excludes safety data and #decision_guidance_document content from confidentiality protection. Health and safety information cannot be treated as a trade secret. This is a small provision with a large normative charge: it establishes something close to a #right_to_information in the context of chemical trade. 4.8 National implementation and enforcement Article 15 requires each party to establish national infrastructures and institutions for effective implementation, including a #designated_national_authority, and to ensure, within its capabilities, that the public has appropriate access to information on chemical handling, accident management, and safer alternatives. Article 15 also requires parties to ensure that their exporters comply, which in domestic legal terms means passing implementing legislation with penalties. The European Union implements the Convention through Regulation 649/2012 concerning the export and import of hazardous chemicals, which goes further than the treaty in some respects: it applies export notification and explicit consent requirements to a broader list, and it prohibits the export of certain substances entirely. That divergence is important for students of comparative regulation, because it shows that a party can build a stronger regime on top of the multilateral floor. It also, uncomfortably, shows the limits of doing so, since the European Union has continued to permit exports of pesticides banned for use on European farms, a point examined in Section 10. 4.9 Dispute settlement, non compliance, and the missing mechanism Article 20 provides for dispute settlement by negotiation, and, if parties accept it, by arbitration or submission to the International Court of Justice. Article 17 requires the Conference of the Parties to develop procedures and institutional mechanisms for determining #non_compliance and treatment of parties found in non compliance. Article 17 is one of the great unfinished sentences of international environmental law. For many years, the parties failed to agree a #compliance_mechanism, largely because a group of states resisted any body with the power to make findings against them. The absence of a functioning compliance mechanism is not a technicality. It means that when the trade data show shipments arriving in countries that refused them, there is no institutional home for that finding. It goes into a research paper instead of into a treaty body. 5. The Institutional Machinery 5.1 The Conference of the Parties The #Conference_of_the_Parties is the supreme decision making body. It adopts listings, adopts decision guidance documents, reviews implementation, and directs the work programme. It meets biennially, and since 2011 it has met back to back with the Conferences of the Parties to the #Basel_Convention and the #Stockholm_Convention, a joint arrangement usually described as the #BRS_synergies process. The synergies arrangement was designed to save money, reduce the reporting burden on small delegations, and encourage coherent decision making across the chemicals and waste cluster. It largely succeeds at the first two. Whether it produces genuinely joined up policy is more debatable, since each treaty retains its own membership, its own annexes, and its own decision rules. 5.2 The Chemical Review Committee The #Chemical_Review_Committee is a subsidiary body of government designated experts. Its function is to review notifications of #final_regulatory_action and proposals for #severely_hazardous_pesticide_formulations against the criteria in Annexes II and IV, and to recommend listing where the criteria are met. Two features of the Committee are frequently misunderstood. First, it does not conduct independent scientific assessment of a substance. It evaluates whether the notifications submitted by parties meet the treaty's criteria. It is closer to a procedural and evidentiary filter than to a scientific panel in the sense of a national regulatory agency. Second, its recommendations are not self executing. The Committee can recommend, and the Conference of the Parties can refuse. This gap between the scientific recommendation and the political decision is where the treaty's credibility is being lost, as Section 7 shows. 5.3 The Secretariat and the designated national authorities The Secretariat is jointly provided by UNEP and FAO. It receives notifications, verifies that they contain the required information, circulates decision guidance documents, publishes import responses, and supports the Committee and the Conference of the Parties. It has no investigative power. At national level, every party must nominate one or more #designated_national_authority. This is the practical hinge of the whole system. The designated national authority is where the treaty either functions or dies. It receives the decision guidance documents, coordinates the domestic process for producing an #import_response, communicates with the Secretariat, and, ideally, talks to the #customs_authorities who actually see the containers. That last relationship is the weakest link in most countries. Implementation of the Convention typically sits with an environment or agriculture ministry, while border control sits with a customs administration operating on tariff codes rather than treaty annexes. The evidence discussed in the next sections suggests that this institutional gap, more than any defect of drafting, explains a large part of the compliance problem. 6. Implementation and Effectiveness 6.1 Formal measures of success By formal measures, the Convention is a success. It has near universal membership, with more than 160 parties. Its annex now covers dozens of chemicals, including asbestos in several forms, a long list of organochlorine and organophosphate pesticides, industrial chemicals such as certain brominated flame retardants and tributyltin compounds, and a small number of severely hazardous pesticide formulations. Decision guidance documents have been produced and circulated. Regional workshops have been held. National authorities have been designated in most countries. If the objective is measured as "did states create the procedure and join it", the answer is yes. 6.2 The problem with formal measures Formal measures are not effectiveness. In treaty analysis, it is useful to distinguish three levels: output (rules and institutions created), outcome (behaviour changed), and impact (the underlying problem reduced). The Convention scores well on output. The interesting questions are about outcome and impact. Three outcome indicators matter. The first is the completeness of #import_responses. A listed chemical is only protected if importing parties actually file responses. Where responses are missing, the Convention's default rules are weaker and exporters have more room to act. Response rates have improved over time but have never been complete, and missing responses are concentrated among parties with the least administrative capacity, which is to say the parties with the most to lose. The second is compliance by exporters with the responses that have been filed. This is examined below. The third is the responsiveness of the listing process to new evidence. That is examined in Section 7. 6.3 The Comtrade evidence The most significant empirical study of the treaty's outcome level performance analysed 66,156 trade records from the #UN_Comtrade database covering 46 of the chemicals listed under the Convention (Zou et al., 2023). The findings are worth stating carefully, because they are frequently reported in a one sided way. On the positive side, the authors found that for more than 70 per cent of the listed chemicals, the Convention appears to have played a positive role. Listing is associated with reduced trade for most substances. The treaty is not decorative. On the negative side, the same study found that at least 64.5 megatonnes of listed chemicals were traded between 2004 and 2019, and that trade inconsistent with the Convention was widespread, amounting to tens of thousands of records and tens of megatonnes. In other words, substantial volumes were exported to countries that had formally declined to receive them. The authors treat their estimate as conservative, since smuggling and black market flows are not captured in official statistics. They also note that large scale trade continues in some notorious substances, including tetraethyl and tetramethyl lead. Two implications follow. First, the Convention's core promise, that an importing country's refusal will be respected, is being broken at scale. This is a failure of #monitoring_and_enforcement, not of drafting. Article 11 is clear. The problem is that nobody is checking. Second, the explanation is at least partly institutional. Where treaty implementation sits in an environment ministry and trade is supervised by customs, and where neither has resources to cross check consignments against import responses, non compliance is not so much a decision as a default. This is a solvable problem, and Section 12 returns to it. 6.4 What effectiveness would look like It is worth being explicit about the counterfactual. If the Convention were working as intended, we would expect to see: near complete filing of import responses; export notifications routinely issued and acknowledged; customs systems able to flag Annex III substances at the border; national poison centres reporting declining incidents of acute #pesticide_poisoning associated with listed formulations; and trade records showing essentially no shipments into refusing countries. None of those conditions currently holds in full. Some hold partially. The honest conclusion is that the Convention has produced a real but incomplete outcome effect, and that its impact on the underlying burden of harm is largely unmeasured. 7. The Listing Deadlock: Consensus as a Structural Fault 7.1 How the deadlock works The Convention's listing procedure was designed as a relay. The #Chemical_Review_Committee assesses notifications and hands a recommendation to the #Conference_of_the_Parties, which lists the chemical in #Annex_III. In the treaty's own logic, the political body was expected to endorse what the technical body had already verified, because listing carries no ban and imposes no economic penalty. It merely triggers #information_exchange and a right of refusal. That expectation has not survived contact with reality. Because listing decisions are taken by consensus, a single objecting party can stop a recommendation indefinitely. Objecting parties are typically producers or heavy users of the substance in question, and their objection does not have to be scientific in any meaningful sense. It only has to be persistent. The result is a mismatch that has become the defining feature of the treaty: a scientific body that says yes and a political body that cannot say anything at all. 7.2 Chrysotile asbestos The clearest case is #chrysotile_asbestos, sometimes called white asbestos. Every other form of asbestos is listed under the Convention. Chrysotile is not, despite the fact that the Chemical Review Committee first recommended listing in 2006. The scientific position is not seriously contested in the wider health community. There is no established safe level of exposure to asbestos; it causes mesothelioma and cancers of the lung, larynx, and ovary, and is associated with other cancers and with asbestosis. Dozens of countries have banned it outright. Estimates of asbestos related deaths run into the hundreds of thousands annually when occupational cancers and respiratory disease are counted together. Nevertheless, at successive Conferences of the Parties, a small group of producing and using states has blocked the listing. The objections have generally taken two forms: that the chemical can be handled safely under controlled conditions, and that the scientific evidence relied upon is not current. Industry associations representing the chrysotile sector have supported those objections at the meetings. Proponents of listing, including many developed and developing country parties, trade unions, and civil society organisations, have repeatedly pointed out that listing would not ban the substance at all. It would only require that an importing country be told what it is receiving and be allowed to say no. That is the heart of the scandal, and students should sit with it for a moment. The blocking states are not defending a right to trade. They are defending a right to trade without the recipient being informed. 7.3 Paraquat, acetochlor, and the widening backlog Chrysotile is the most famous case but no longer the only one. A backlog of substances recommended by the Committee has accumulated on the agenda of successive Conferences of the Parties. #Paraquat, a herbicide of high acute toxicity that has been associated with a very high case fatality rate in poisoning incidents and that has been banned in many jurisdictions, has been a repeated subject of Committee attention; the Committee concluded in 2024 that notifications concerning paraquat met the criteria for listing. Acetochlor, a herbicide, has been contested at successive meetings, with opponents arguing continued agronomic need and with an industry organisation arguing that listing would stigmatise the substance. Proponents responded, as they always must, that listing is not a ban and that #information_exchange does not restrict anyone's right to use a chemical they have chosen to accept. At the twelfth Conference of the Parties in 2025, the parties agreed to list carbosulfan, a pesticide, and fenthion ultra low volume formulations as a severely hazardous pesticide formulation. They could not agree to list several other substances, including #mercury, #methyl_bromide, and #chlorpyrifos. Several chemicals therefore remain on the agenda, almost all of them pesticides, none of them subject to the #PIC_procedure. The pattern is now stable and predictable: the Committee recommends, a handful of parties object, the item is deferred, and the cycle repeats two years later. Each cycle consumes negotiating capital, conference time, and the credibility of the institution. 7.4 The Annex VIII proposal Parties have not been passive about this. A proposal has been advanced to add a new annex, sometimes discussed as #Annex_VIII, which would provide a home for chemicals that the #Chemical_Review_Committee has recommended but that the Conference of the Parties has failed to list because of the absence of consensus. The logic is elegant. Rather than attempting to overturn the consensus rule, which the blocking states would themselves have to consent to, the proposal would create a parallel track. Chemicals in the new annex would be subject to information exchange obligations among the parties that choose to apply them, so that states willing to act together could do so without waiting for unanimity. Independent human rights experts have publicly urged parties to adopt the amendment, arguing that the failure to list chemicals recommended by the treaty's own scientific body undermines the Convention's purpose. The proposal has not been adopted. It faces the obvious structural objection that an amendment to the Convention is itself subject to demanding procedural requirements, and the political objection that it would create a two speed treaty. Both objections have force. Neither is as serious as the alternative, which is a treaty whose annex has become effectively frozen for the substances that matter most. 7.5 Interpreting the deadlock Three interpretations of the deadlock are worth distinguishing, because they lead to different reforms. The procedural interpretation holds that the problem is the #consensus_rule itself. Fix the voting rule, and the backlog clears. This is the most common view and the most direct, but it faces a chicken and egg problem: changing the rule requires the agreement of the parties who benefit from it. The economic interpretation holds that the problem is the concentrated economic interest of a small number of producing states and firms, set against the diffuse interest of many importing states. Listing imposes a concrete reputational and commercial cost on the producer and delivers a diffuse benefit to the importer. Concentrated interests reliably beat diffuse ones in consensus institutions. This explanation predicts that even majority voting would produce fierce resistance and possibly withdrawal. The regime interaction interpretation is the least intuitive and the most interesting. Kinniburgh et al. (2023) show that private agricultural standard setting bodies have used the Convention's list of pesticides as a reference point for their own lists of prohibited substances. In effect, being listed under the Convention can trigger exclusion from private supply chains and voluntary certification schemes. The consequence is that listing, which in treaty terms carries no trade restriction at all, acquires real commercial consequences through the back door of #private_standards. Producing states and firms therefore resist listing more strongly than the treaty's own text would justify. The authors describe this as a confounding interaction: two governance systems with broadly aligned goals produce, together, a worse outcome than either would alone. This third interpretation should trouble anyone who assumes that stacking private sustainability standards on top of public regulation is automatically progressive. It suggests that a private standard can harden a public bottleneck. It is also the most policy relevant finding in the recent literature, because it implies that reformers who want to unblock the treaty may need to address how the list is used outside the treaty, not only how it is amended inside it. 8. Illegal and Non Compliant Trade 8.1 Defining the categories Three categories should be kept apart. Non compliant trade is trade that breaches the Convention: exporting a listed chemical to a party that has filed a non consent #import_response, or exporting where no response exists and none of the exceptions in Article 11 applies. #Illegal_trade in the domestic law sense is trade that breaches the implementing law of the exporting or importing state. Because Article 15 requires parties to legislate, most non compliant trade should also be illegal somewhere. Smuggling is deliberate concealment, including mislabelling of shipments and misuse of tariff codes. It does not appear in official trade statistics at all. The Comtrade analysis captures the first two categories imperfectly and the third not at all, which is why its authors describe their estimates as conservative (Zou et al., 2023). 8.2 Why non compliance happens Several mechanisms operate simultaneously. Institutional separation. The treaty is implemented by environment or agriculture ministries. Shipments are cleared by #customs_authorities working from harmonised system tariff codes. Unless the two systems are linked, a customs officer has no operational way of knowing that a consignment is a listed chemical destined for a country that has refused it. Code granularity. Many chemicals do not have a dedicated tariff code. They are aggregated into broad categories. A substance can therefore cross a border legally, under a code that reveals nothing about its identity, without anyone lying. Resource scarcity. Testing a consignment costs money. Many national laboratories cannot verify chemical identity at scale. Weak deterrence. Because there is no functioning international #compliance_mechanism and few domestic prosecutions, the expected cost of non compliance is close to zero. Missing responses. Where a party has never filed an import response, the default position is more permissive, and the burden shifts to a set of exceptions that are easy to invoke and hard to police. 8.3 The equity dimension of non compliance Non compliance is not evenly distributed in its effects. The regions most affected by receiving unwanted shipments include parts of Asia, the Middle East and North Africa, and Latin America. These are, broadly, the regions with the least capacity to manage the substances safely once they arrive, which is precisely the situation the Convention was written to prevent. This is what turns a technical compliance problem into a question of #environmental_justice. A treaty premised on #shared_responsibility fails asymmetrically: when it breaks, the costs land on the party that was supposed to be protected. 9. The Convention in the Wider Regime Complex 9.1 Basel, Stockholm, Minamata The Rotterdam Convention is one of a cluster of instruments. The #Basel_Convention (1989) governs transboundary movements of hazardous wastes and also operates a prior informed consent procedure, extended in recent years to plastic waste and to electrical and electronic waste. The conceptual overlap is deliberate: both treaties assume that a country has a right to know and to refuse. The #Stockholm_Convention (2001) addresses persistent organic pollutants and, unlike Rotterdam, does restrict and eliminate. A substance can be listed under Rotterdam because two countries have banned it, and later listed under Stockholm because it meets the criteria of persistence, bioaccumulation, long range transport, and adverse effects. Rotterdam is, in this sense, an early warning system that can feed into a control regime. The #Minamata_Convention (2013) addresses mercury across its life cycle. The failure of the Rotterdam Conference of the Parties to agree on listing mercury illustrates how the treaties can diverge even where the same substance is at issue. Together, Basel, Rotterdam, and Stockholm are administered through shared arrangements under the #BRS_synergies process, which delivers administrative efficiency and joint conferences. Students should be careful, however, not to confuse administrative synergy with substantive coherence. The three treaties still have different memberships, different obligations, and different decision rules. 9.2 The Global Framework on Chemicals In 2023, the fifth International Conference on Chemicals Management adopted the #Global_Framework_on_Chemicals, replacing the earlier Strategic Approach to International Chemicals Management. The Framework is voluntary but ambitious, built around strategic objectives and twenty eight targets. Among them are targets to prevent the #illegal_trade and trafficking of chemicals and waste, to work towards notifying, regulating, or prohibiting the export of chemicals that a government has prohibited nationally, and to phase out #highly_hazardous_pesticides in agriculture by 2035 where risks are unmanaged and safer affordable alternatives exist (UNEP, 2023). Two of those targets speak directly to the weaknesses identified above. The target on illegal trade addresses the enforcement gap. The target on export of nationally prohibited chemicals addresses the #double_standards problem that the Rotterdam Convention deliberately declined to solve in 1998. The Framework has no binding force, but it establishes a normative benchmark against which parties can be measured, and it signals that the political centre of gravity has moved. 9.3 The science policy interface For years, chemicals governance lacked an equivalent to the intergovernmental panels that serve climate and biodiversity policy. Scientists argued forcefully that this was a structural gap and called for a dedicated global #science_policy_interface body (Wang et al., 2021), a call endorsed widely across the environmental science community (Brack et al., 2022). An intergovernmental science policy panel on chemicals, waste, and pollution prevention has since been established. Its early meetings have been procedurally difficult, which is normal for a new body, and its practical influence remains to be seen. For the Rotterdam Convention specifically, a credible science policy panel could matter a great deal. One of the rhetorical moves used by blocking states is to question the currency or adequacy of the scientific evidence. An authoritative, independent, and periodically updated global assessment would make that move considerably harder to sustain in public. 9.4 Trade law A recurring anxiety in the literature is whether measures taken under the Convention could conflict with #WTO_law. In practice, the risk is low, for the reason that runs through this entire article: the Convention does not ban anything. Its obligations are procedural and non discriminatory. The requirement in Article 10 that a party refusing imports must also prohibit domestic production for domestic use is precisely the kind of provision that forecloses a claim of disguised protectionism. The Convention was drafted, in part, by people watching the trade regime out of the corner of their eye, and it shows. The deeper point is that this caution came at a price. A treaty designed to be unimpeachable under #trade_restrictions rules is also a treaty that gave up, in advance, the instruments that would have made it powerful. 10. Equity, Human Rights, and the Problem of Double Standards 10.1 The unfinished business of 1998 The Convention rests on a moral premise that is easy to state and awkward to defend: that it is acceptable to export a substance you have banned at home, provided the recipient is informed and agrees. Defenders of that premise make two arguments. The first is respect for #sovereignty. It is not for a wealthy exporting state to decide what an independent country may lawfully import. Paternalism has a poor record in development policy. The second is contextual: a pesticide banned in a temperate country may be genuinely useful in a tropical one facing different pests, and blanket prohibition would remove tools from farmers who have alternatives neither available nor affordable. Critics answer that consent is only meaningful when it is informed, free, and backed by capacity. An importing country may formally consent while lacking poison centres, protective equipment, enforcement inspectors, and the laboratory infrastructure to detect misuse. Consent under those conditions is a signature, not a safeguard. Critics also observe that the entities pressing for import are frequently commercial actors within the importing country rather than the exposed population, so that the state's consent may not reflect the interests of the people who will breathe the substance. 10.2 The European example The tension is visible in the practice of the jurisdiction with the strongest chemicals law. The European Union implements the Convention through Regulation 649/2012 and goes beyond it in scope. It has nonetheless continued to authorise the export of pesticides that are banned for use on European farms. Civil society organisations and independent journalists have documented substantial volumes of such exports, predominantly to low and middle income countries, and have argued that the practice constitutes a #double_standards regime that externalises harm (Public interest reporting summarised in CIEL, 2023; PAN Europe, 2024; Swedwatch, 2025). The European Commission signalled in 2020, under its chemicals strategy, an intention to legislate to prevent the manufacture for export of chemicals banned in the Union; as of the time of writing, the legislative proposal had not been delivered, and the delay itself has become a subject of controversy. France has adopted national legislation prohibiting the manufacture, storage, and export of certain banned pesticides. Whatever one concludes about the merits, the example is analytically useful. It demonstrates that the Rotterdam Convention sets a floor, not a ceiling; that parties may build stronger regimes; and that even the parties most committed to chemical safety have found it politically difficult to close the export loophole that the Convention leaves open. 10.3 Human rights framing Independent human rights experts have argued that the failure to list recommended chemicals engages the rights to life, to health, to safe working conditions, to information, and to a clean, healthy, and sustainable environment. That framing changes the register of the debate. It reframes the refusal to list a carcinogen not as a technical disagreement about annexes but as a decision with identifiable victims: the roofing worker cutting a chrysotile sheet without a respirator, the farmworker mixing a concentrate without gloves. The framing has limits. Human rights bodies cannot amend Annex III. But it supplies the vocabulary in which the deadlock can be described honestly, and it links the Convention to the broader movement recognising a right to a healthy environment. 10.4 The colonial residue Some scholars and advocates go further and characterise the export of substances banned at home as a continuation of colonial patterns of extraction and dumping. That claim is contested, and it should be presented as an argument rather than a finding. But it is not merely rhetorical. The geography of the trade, from historic industrial centres to former colonies and low income economies, and the distribution of exposure, concentrated among rural and #occupational_exposure populations in the #Global_South, give the argument empirical purchase. Students should engage with it rather than dismiss it, while also noting that some of the states most resistant to listing today are not Western at all, which complicates any simple North South narrative. 11. Capacity: The Silent Determinant 11.1 Why capacity is the binding constraint Almost every failure described in this article routes back through capacity. A country cannot submit a notification of #final_regulatory_action that satisfies Annex II if it cannot conduct a #risk_assessment based on conditions prevailing in its territory. A country cannot file a considered #import_response if the #designated_national_authority has one overworked official and no budget. A country cannot detect a non compliant shipment if its #customs_authorities cannot identify the substance. A country cannot document a #severely_hazardous_pesticide_formulation under Article 6 if it has no poison centre collecting incident data. This is the deepest irony of the treaty. The procedure was designed to protect states with limited regulatory capacity, but using the procedure requires regulatory capacity. Article 16 obliges parties to cooperate in promoting #technical_assistance, with particular attention to the needs of #developing_countries, and considerable assistance has in fact been delivered through regional workshops, regional centres, and donor funded projects. It has not been sufficient. 11.2 What effective capacity building would involve Three priorities emerge from the analysis above. Poison centres and incident surveillance. Without incident data, Article 6 is a dead letter and the health burden of #pesticide_poisoning remains invisible in the policy process. Acute pesticide poisoning remains a significant public health problem concentrated in low and middle income countries, with organophosphate compounds prominent among the substances involved (Han et al., 2025). The Global Framework on Chemicals includes a target on universal access to poison centres, which is the correct instinct. Customs integration. Import responses must be encoded into the systems that customs officers actually use, so that a listed substance destined for a refusing country generates an alert without any officer needing to have read the treaty. Regulatory drafting and enforcement support. Article 15 requires implementing legislation. Model laws, drafting assistance, and support for prosecution are unglamorous and effective. 11.3 Alternatives, not just prohibitions There is a further point that students of agricultural policy will recognise. Telling a farmer that a cheap, effective, and highly toxic product is now restricted, without offering an affordable alternative, is not a policy. It is an instruction to break the law. The Global Framework's target on #highly_hazardous_pesticides is explicitly conditioned on the availability of safer and affordable alternatives, and any credible strategy must invest in integrated pest management, biological control, and agronomic support alongside restriction. Otherwise, restriction simply pushes trade into the informal channels that no treaty can see. 12. Reform Options The following options are set out with their strongest supporting argument and their strongest objection. They are not mutually exclusive. 12.1 Replace consensus with qualified majority voting for Annex III Argument for. Listing carries no ban. It requires only that an importing country be informed and permitted to decide. Allowing one party to veto that is indefensible. A three quarters majority, applied only after consensus has been genuinely attempted, would restore the treaty's listing engine. Objection. The amendment itself would require the agreement of the parties currently exercising the veto. Attempts to change the decision rule have already failed. Moreover, a majority rule could provoke withdrawal by producing states, leaving the treaty stronger on paper and weaker in coverage. 12.2 Adopt a new annex for recommended but unlisted chemicals Argument for. The #Annex_VIII proposal sidesteps the veto rather than confronting it. Chemicals recommended by the #Chemical_Review_Committee but blocked at the Conference of the Parties would be placed in a separate annex, with information exchange obligations applying among willing parties. Countries that want the protection of the #PIC_procedure for chrysotile asbestos or paraquat could obtain it without waiting for unanimity. Objection. It creates a two tier treaty and may entrench rather than resolve the underlying conflict. It also requires an amendment, with its own procedural hurdles. 12.3 Build a real compliance mechanism Argument for. Article 17 requires one. Two decades of empirical evidence now show that non compliance is widespread. A committee with the power to receive submissions, review implementation, and publish findings would give the treaty a memory and a mirror. Objection. The same states that block listings have blocked compliance machinery, for the same reasons. 12.4 Integrate the Convention into customs systems Argument for. This is the highest return, lowest politics reform available. Assigning dedicated tariff codes to listed substances, linking #import_responses to national customs databases, and training border officials would convert an obligation on paper into a control at the point where the container actually moves. It requires no amendment and no vote. Objection. It costs money and requires coordination between ministries that often do not speak to each other. It also depends on the accuracy of declarations, and will not catch deliberate mislabelling. 12.5 Close the export loophole at national level Argument for. Exporting parties can simply prohibit the export of substances they have banned domestically, as France has done for certain pesticides and as the European Union has repeatedly promised to do. This addresses the #double_standards problem directly and does not require anyone else's consent. Objection. Unilateral export bans may simply relocate production to jurisdictions with weaker rules, leaving importing countries exposed while removing the exporting state's leverage and visibility over the trade. This displacement argument is frequently made by industry, and it is not baseless, although it is also convenient. 12.6 Improve the quality and use of export notifications Argument for. Article 12 already extends to every chemical banned or severely restricted by an exporting party, a far larger universe than Annex III. Making notifications machine readable, publicly accessible, and routed to both environment ministries and customs authorities would deliver much of the treaty's promise without any amendment at all. Objection. Notification without a right to refuse is weaker than the PIC procedure, and there is a risk that improving Article 12 becomes an excuse for not fixing Article 7. 12.7 Address the private standards interaction Argument for. If listing is resisted partly because private certification schemes convert a listing into a de facto market exclusion (Kinniburgh et al., 2023), then dialogue between the treaty bodies and standard setters could reduce the perceived stakes of listing and unblock the process. Objection. Private bodies are not parties to the Convention and cannot be instructed. Asking them to loosen their criteria in order to make a public treaty function is a strange remedy, and arguably the wrong one. 12.8 Strengthen the science policy interface Argument for. An authoritative global assessment body would make it harder to sustain claims that the evidence on a substance such as chrysotile asbestos is unsettled. Objection. The blocking states are not, in most cases, actually confused about the science. They are protecting an industry. Better science will not, on its own, change that. 13. Limitations of This Study Four limitations should be acknowledged. First, this is a synthesis of existing legal and empirical scholarship rather than an original empirical investigation. Where the underlying data are contested, this article inherits that uncertainty. Second, trade data are imperfect. Customs statistics contain misclassifications, gaps, and mirror discrepancies between reported exports and reported imports. Estimates of non compliant trade should therefore be treated as orders of magnitude, not precise measurements. Third, health burden estimates in the pesticide field are contested. At least one prominent global estimate of unintentional acute pesticide poisoning has been subject to methodological criticism and subsequent retraction, which is itself a reminder that advocacy and evidence must be kept apart. This article therefore avoids relying on any single headline figure. Fourth, the politics of individual listing decisions are reconstructed largely from negotiation reporting rather than from archival sources, and the motives attributed to blocking states are inferences. 14. Conclusion The Rotterdam Convention is a treaty of a particular kind: procedural, modest, and honest about what it cannot do. It does not ban a single substance. It asserts that a country has the right to know what is being sent to it, the right to refuse, and the right to have that refusal respected. Those are not small claims. In 1998 they were hard won. The assessment offered here is mixed and, I think, defensible in both directions. On the positive side, the Convention created a functioning global information exchange system where none existed. It gave importing states a legal basis for refusal that they did not previously have. It generated decision guidance documents that put toxicological information into the hands of authorities who could not have produced it themselves. Empirical analysis suggests that for most listed chemicals the treaty is associated with reduced trade (Zou et al., 2023). It embedded the principle of shared responsibility into the law of chemical trade, and that principle has since travelled into the Global Framework on Chemicals and into human rights discourse. On the negative side, the failures are structural rather than incidental. The consensus rule has frozen Annex III for the substances that matter most, so that a scientific recommendation to list chrysotile asbestos made in 2006 remains unimplemented two decades later. Non compliance with import decisions is widespread, and there is no compliance mechanism to register it. The treaty's benefits accrue disproportionately to states with the administrative capacity to use it, which inverts its original purpose. And the export of substances banned at home remains lawful, so the moral problem that produced the treaty has been procedurally managed rather than solved. What follows for students of international environmental law is a lesson about institutional design that generalises well beyond chemicals. A treaty is not merely a set of commitments. It is a machine with an input (evidence), a decision rule (consensus or majority), an output (a listing), and an enforcement pathway (customs, courts, compliance bodies). If any one of those components fails, the machine stops, and the elegance of the remaining components is irrelevant. The Rotterdam Convention has a good input, a broken decision rule, a frozen output, and an absent enforcement pathway. Diagnosing it correctly means resisting the temptation to blame the treaty's ambition, which was always deliberately limited, and looking instead at the two or three specific joints where it seizes. The most encouraging observation is that the highest value reforms are not the most politically difficult ones. Integrating import responses into national customs systems, improving export notification practice, resourcing designated national authorities and poison centres, and closing export loopholes at national level all lie within the power of individual states and require nobody's veto to be overcome. The listing deadlock deserves the attention it receives, but a treaty can also be strengthened from below while the argument at the top continues. The Convention is a first line of defence, and a first line of defence should not be mistaken for a wall. Whether it becomes something stronger depends less on new legal text than on whether states are willing to make the text they already have actually operate. That is a less exciting conclusion than a call for a new treaty. It is also, on the evidence, the right one. References Brack, W., Barcelo Culleres, D., Boxall, A. B. A., Budzinski, H., Castiglioni, S., Covaci, A., Dulio, V., Escher, B. I., Fantke, P., Kandie, F., Fatta Kassinos, D., Hernandez, F. J., Hilscherova, K., Hollender, J., Hollert, H., Jahnke, A., Kasprzyk Hordern, B., Khan, S. J., Kortenkamp, A., ... Zuccato, E. (2022). One planet: one health. A call to support the initiative on a global science policy body on chemicals and waste. Environmental Sciences Europe, 34, Article 21. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12302-022-00602-6 Center for International Environmental Law. (2023). A toxic double standard: Analyzing the legality of the export of banned pesticides. CIEL. Cousins, I. T., Johansson, J. H., Salter, M. 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Regulation and Governance, 17(2), 425-448. https://doi.org/10.1111/rego.12463 Pesticide Action Network Europe. (2024). EU pesticides export ban: Economic costs and beneficial effects. PAN Europe. Persson, L., Carney Almroth, B. M., Collins, C. D., Cornell, S., de Wit, C. A., Diamond, M. L., Fantke, P., Hassellov, M., MacLeod, M., Ryberg, M. W., Sogaard Jorgensen, P., Villarrubia Gomez, P., Wang, Z., & Hauschild, M. Z. (2022). Outside the safe operating space of the planetary boundary for novel entities. Environmental Science and Technology, 56(3), 1510-1521. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.1c04158 Secretariat of the Rotterdam Convention. (2023). Rotterdam Convention on the Prior Informed Consent Procedure for Certain Hazardous Chemicals and Pesticides in International Trade: Text and annexes (revised in 2023). United Nations Environment Programme and Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Swedwatch. (2025). 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- Fifty Years of Regulating the Wildlife Trade: A Critical Review of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (1973) and Its Capacity
The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, signed in Washington in 1973 and in force since 1975, is the main global legal instrument used to make sure that cross border commerce in wild animals and plants does not push species towards extinction. This article reviews the origins, legal design, working practice, achievements and weaknesses of the treaty, drawing on peer reviewed research published mainly between 2021 and 2026. The review explains how the three Appendices work, how permits and non detriment findings are supposed to control trade, and how the compliance machinery of the Convention responds when a member State fails to meet its obligations. It then examines the evidence on effectiveness. The record is mixed. Some listed species, such as the vicuna and certain crocodilians, have recovered under regulated and community linked trade. Others, including pangolins, several shark species, tropical timber species and many reptiles used in the pet trade, continue to decline despite listing. The article identifies six structural problems: weak national legislation in a large share of member States, limited scientific capacity to produce credible non detriment findings, politicised listing debates, the exclusion of purely domestic markets from the treaty, the risk that captive breeding claims are used to launder wild caught specimens, and poor data quality in annual trade reporting. It also considers newer pressures, including online commerce, growing volumes of trade in plants and marine species, and the link between wildlife markets and public health. The article closes with a set of practical reform proposals aimed at students, researchers and policy makers who wish to understand why a treaty with almost universal membership still struggles to deliver conservation outcomes on the ground. Keywords: wildlife trade regulation, endangered species, international environmental law, biodiversity governance, treaty compliance, sustainable use, wildlife trafficking 1. Introduction International trade in wild animals and plants is old, large and legal for the most part. People buy and sell timber, fish, ornamental plants, medicinal roots, live reptiles, corals, leather, caviar and thousands of other products that begin their journey in a forest, a river or an ocean. Much of this commerce supports rural incomes and national economies. Some of it, however, removes animals and plants from the wild faster than their populations can replace themselves. When this happens across borders, no single government can solve the problem alone. An exporting country may have strong protection laws, but if a rich consumer market on another continent keeps paying high prices, the incentive to harvest illegally remains. This is the basic collective action problem that the #Convention_on_International_Trade_in_Endangered_Species was created to solve. #CITES is a multilateral environmental agreement adopted in Washington on 3 March 1973 and brought into force on 1 July 1975. Its purpose is stated plainly in its preamble and its operational articles: to ensure that #international_wildlife_trade does not threaten the survival of wild species. It does not try to stop trade. It tries to keep trade inside limits that wild populations can absorb. With 185 Parties, made up of 184 States and the European Union, it is one of the most widely joined conservation treaties in existence, and it now regulates commerce in more than 40,900 species of animals and plants. The scale of the problem the treaty addresses has grown rather than shrunk. Research published in the last five years suggests that thousands of species are affected by trade pressure. Challender and colleagues, working with data from the IUCN Red List, identified more than two thousand species that are likely to be threatened by international commerce, a figure that includes many species not currently listed in the CITES Appendices. Other analyses have documented species that have been driven to local or complete extinction partly because of harvesting for trade. A group of scientists writing in 2021 issued what they called a warning to humanity about illegal or unsustainable trade in wild species, arguing that the combined effect of legal and illegal offtake is one of the leading direct drivers of #biodiversity_loss, alongside habitat conversion and climate change. The Intergovernmental Science Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services reached a similar conclusion in its 2022 assessment of the #sustainable_use of wild species, noting that around fifty thousand wild species are used by people worldwide and that a substantial share of that use is not managed sustainably. Against this background, the effectiveness of CITES matters a great deal. If the treaty works, it protects both species and the livelihoods that depend on them. If it does not, then a great deal of diplomatic effort, national administration and donor money is being spent on a system that produces paperwork rather than protection. The academic debate on this question has been unusually sharp. Some economists have found statistical evidence that listing does slow declines when enforcement is adequate. Some conservation biologists argue that listing decisions are made without proper thought about what will happen afterwards. Some criminologists and lawyers argue that the treaty is too polite: it does not require Parties to criminalise violations, it allows countries to opt out of listings through reservations, and its strongest sanction, the recommendation to suspend trade, is applied unevenly. This article has four aims. First, it explains how the treaty is built and how it is meant to work, in language that undergraduate and postgraduate students can follow without a background in law. Second, it summarises what recent research says about whether the treaty achieves its stated goal. Third, it sets out the structural weaknesses that limit performance, separating problems that are caused by the treaty text itself from problems that are caused by how member States implement it. Fourth, it proposes reforms that are politically realistic rather than merely desirable. The article is organised as follows. Section 2 describes the review method. Section 3 traces the origins of the Convention. Section 4 sets out its legal architecture. Section 5 explains how the system operates in daily practice. Section 6 reviews the evidence on outcomes, using species case studies. Section 7 analyses structural weaknesses. Section 8 places the treaty in the wider system of global biodiversity governance. Section 9 examines emerging pressures, including online commerce and disease risk. Section 10 discusses the twentieth meeting of the Conference of the Parties, held in Samarkand in late 2025, which marked the fiftieth year since entry into force. Sections 11 to 15 present the discussion, recommendations, limitations, research agenda and conclusion. 2. Materials and Methods This article is an integrative narrative review. It does not present new field data. Instead, it brings together three bodies of material. The first body is the primary legal material: the text of the Convention itself, the Resolutions and Decisions adopted by the #Conference_of_the_Parties, and the reports of the treaty bodies. These sources define what Parties are legally required to do, and they are the benchmark against which implementation is judged. The second body is peer reviewed scholarship published between 2021 and 2026 in conservation science, environmental law, economics and criminology. Priority was given to work that tests claims empirically or that analyses the treaty as an institution rather than simply describing it. Search terms combined the name of the Convention with concepts such as compliance, effectiveness, listing, non detriment finding, trafficking and sustainable use. Papers were included when they addressed the operation or outcomes of the treaty directly. Papers that used the treaty only as background were excluded. The third body is the grey literature produced by intergovernmental bodies, including the trade and crime reports issued by the Secretariat and by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. These reports are not peer reviewed, and they are used with caution, mainly for descriptive statistics on seizures and trade volumes that are not available elsewhere. The analysis proceeds in two steps. First, it maps the formal design of the regime: what the treaty asks Parties to do. Second, it compares that design with observed behaviour: what Parties actually do. The gap between the two is treated as the central analytical object of the article. This approach follows the distinction, common in the international law literature, between implementation, which is the transposition of treaty obligations into national law, compliance, which is the degree to which a Party actually follows those obligations, and effectiveness, which is whether the treaty produces the outcome it was designed to produce. A Party can implement without complying, and #treaty_implementation can be complete while a treaty still fails to be effective if its design does not match the problem. A limitation of the method should be stated at the outset. Because the review is narrative rather than systematic, it cannot claim to have captured every relevant study, and the selection of case studies reflects the availability of published evidence rather than a random sample of listed taxa. Charismatic mammals are heavily studied; plants, invertebrates and fish are not. This bias in the literature is itself a finding, and it is discussed in Section 7. 3. Historical Origins of the Convention 3.1 The road to Washington The idea of a treaty on wildlife commerce did not appear suddenly in 1973. It grew out of decades of concern about the fur, feather and skin trades, which had already emptied large areas of their most valuable animals. In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the plume trade for hat decoration devastated bird colonies. Commercial hunting of whales, seals and fur bearing mammals produced repeated cycles of boom and collapse. Regional agreements were tried, but they covered limited areas and limited species. The direct ancestor of the modern treaty is a resolution passed by members of the International Union for Conservation of Nature in 1963, which called for an international convention on the regulation of export, transit and import of rare or threatened wildlife and their products. Drafting took a decade. The text was finalised at a plenipotentiary conference in Washington, District of Columbia, in March 1973, and eighty States signed it. It entered into force on 1 July 1975 after the tenth instrument of ratification was deposited. 3.2 The compromise at the heart of the treaty The Convention that emerged from Washington reflects a compromise between two views that still divide the membership fifty years later. One view holds that trade in threatened wildlife is inherently dangerous and should be prohibited where a species is at risk. On this view, the correct response to declining populations is a ban, because bans remove the commercial incentive to harvest and send a clear signal to consumers. The other view holds that regulated commerce can finance conservation, give #local_communities a reason to tolerate and protect wildlife, and reduce the pressure to convert habitat to farmland. On this view, a ban simply pushes trade underground, removes legal income from the people who live with wildlife, and hands the market to criminals. The treaty does not choose between these positions. It contains both. Appendix I embodies the prohibitionist logic, since commercial trade in wild taken specimens of Appendix I species is not allowed. Appendix II embodies the regulated use logic, since trade is permitted provided it is shown not to be detrimental to the survival of the species. This deliberate ambiguity is the source of much of the treaty's political durability. It is also the source of the #polarisation that now troubles it, as Section 7 explains. 3.3 What the treaty does not cover Three exclusions matter and are often misunderstood by students. First, the treaty regulates trade across international borders only. A purely #domestic_market, however large and however damaging, falls outside its reach. A country may lawfully permit its citizens to buy and sell a species inside its own territory even while its export is tightly controlled. Second, the treaty regulates trade, not habitat. Loss of forest, drainage of wetlands and conversion of grassland are the largest drivers of extinction risk for most taxa, and the Convention says nothing about them. Third, the treaty regulates species, not welfare. It contains provisions on the preparation and shipment of live specimens, but it is not an animal welfare instrument, and its rules are not designed to reduce suffering during capture and transport. Recent criminological work has argued that this omission is significant, because the harms of the trade include the treatment of individual animals as well as the depletion of populations. 4. The Legal Architecture of the Convention 4.1 The three Appendices The core of the system is a graded list. Species are placed in one of three Appendices according to how much protection they need, and the level of the Appendix determines what documents a trader must obtain. #Appendix_I includes species threatened with extinction which are or may be affected by trade. Commercial international trade in specimens taken from the wild is prohibited. Trade for non commercial purposes, such as scientific exchange, is possible but requires both an export permit from the exporting State and an import permit from the importing State. The import permit may be granted only if the importing authority is satisfied that the specimen will not be used for primarily commercial purposes and that the recipient is suitably equipped to house and care for it. Around one thousand species sit in this Appendix, including the great apes, tigers, most rhinoceroses, sea turtles and, since 2016, all eight species of pangolin. #Appendix_II includes species that are not necessarily threatened with extinction now but may become so unless trade is closely controlled. It also includes so called look alike species, which resemble listed species so closely that customs officers cannot reliably tell them apart. Commercial trade is allowed, but an #export_permit is required, and the permit may be issued only after a #Scientific_Authority in the exporting country has made a finding that the export will not be detrimental to the survival of the species. This is the famous #non_detriment_finding, and it is the scientific heart of the whole treaty. The overwhelming majority of listed taxa, roughly thirty nine thousand of them, sit in Appendix II, and most of these are plants. #Appendix_III includes species that a single Party has chosen to protect within its own jurisdiction and for which it asks other Parties for help in controlling trade. Listing here does not require a vote of the membership. It is a unilateral act. Trade requires an export permit from the listing State and a certificate of origin from others. Appendix III is the least used and least studied of the three, although recent work suggests it is an underexploited tool that a range State can deploy quickly, without waiting for the consensus needed for Appendices I and II. 4.2 Amending the Appendices Species are added to or removed from Appendices I and II by the Conference of the Parties, which meets roughly every three years. Any Party may submit a proposal. Proposals are assessed against biological and trade criteria set out in a Resolution, and they are adopted if two thirds of the Parties present and voting agree. Many proposals are agreed by consensus, but contested ones go to a vote, and secret ballots are sometimes used. This procedure has an important consequence. Listing is a political decision informed by science, not a scientific decision ratified by politics. #Range_States, consumer States, regional blocs and observer organisations all lobby. A proposal supported by good data can fail, and a proposal with weak data can succeed, if the diplomatic arithmetic favours it. Understanding this is essential to understanding why the treaty performs as it does. 4.3 National institutions Every Party must designate at least one #Management_Authority and at least one Scientific Authority. The Management Authority is the administrative body. It issues and receives permits, keeps records, communicates with the Secretariat and submits annual reports. It is usually located in an environment ministry, sometimes in a forestry or fisheries department. The Scientific Authority is the advisory body. Its central task is to advise whether a proposed export will harm the survival of the species. In well resourced countries it is a government research institute or a panel of academics. In many countries it is a single overworked official with no budget for population surveys. This division of labour looks neat on paper. In practice, the quality of a Party's Scientific Authority is one of the strongest predictors of whether its permits mean anything. 4.4 The treaty bodies At the international level the Convention is served by a Secretariat, based in Geneva and administered under the United Nations Environment Programme. The Secretariat is not a police force. It has no power to inspect, arrest or fine. Its functions are to service meetings, circulate notifications, provide technical assistance, and report to the Parties on implementation problems. Between meetings of the Conference of the Parties, a #Standing_Committee provides policy guidance and oversees the budget. Two scientific bodies, the Animals Committee and the Plants Committee, provide technical advice, review trade in particular taxa and develop guidance on non detriment findings. Enforcement cooperation is supported by the International Consortium on Combating Wildlife Crime, which brings together the Secretariat, the International Criminal Police Organization, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, the World Bank and the World Customs Organization. The Consortium, usually abbreviated as #ICCWC, provides training, analytical tools and support for national #enforcement agencies, but it does not itself enforce anything. 4.5 Reservations Article XXIII allows a Party, when a species is listed, to enter a #reservation. A Party with a reservation is treated as a non Party in respect of that species, which means the listing does not bind it. The reservation system was included to make the treaty acceptable to trading States that would otherwise have refused to join. It has been used for commercially important taxa, including certain sharks, and it creates an obvious weakness: a listing can be adopted by two thirds of the membership and then be ignored by the very States that dominate the trade. 4.6 The compliance machinery The treaty text contains almost nothing on compliance. What exists today has been built up through Resolutions rather than by amending the Convention. Three tools matter. The #National_Legislation_Project assesses whether each Party has laws that meet four basic requirements: designating the authorities, prohibiting trade in violation of the Convention, penalising such trade, and allowing confiscation of illegally traded specimens. Parties whose legislation is judged inadequate can be subject to pressure and eventually to trade suspension. The #Review_of_Significant_Trade examines Appendix II species whose trade levels suggest that exports may not be sustainable. The Animals or Plants Committee selects species of concern, asks the range State to justify its non detriment findings, and if the response is unsatisfactory recommends action. The #trade_suspension is the strongest sanction available. The Standing Committee may recommend that other Parties refuse to accept trade in some or all listed species from a non compliant Party. Because the recommendation is followed by most Parties in practice, it functions as a form of collective economic pressure. It is used relatively often, mostly against smaller and poorer States, which has led to accusations of bias in the application of the #compliance_mechanism. 5. How the System Works in Practice 5.1 The life of a permit Consider a legal shipment of an Appendix II reptile destined for the #pet_trade, moving from a range State to a European dealer. The exporter applies to the Management Authority. The Management Authority asks the Scientific Authority whether the export will be detrimental to the species. The Scientific Authority, in principle, looks at the population status, the harvest level, the annual #quota and the effect of previous exports. If it advises that the export is not detrimental, and if the Management Authority is satisfied that the animal was obtained legally, an export permit is issued. On arrival, the importing State inspects the shipment and the paperwork, and records the import. Both States then report the transaction in their annual reports, and the data enter the #CITES_Trade_Database. Every step of that chain can fail. The Scientific Authority may have no population data and may simply approve the export. The legal acquisition finding may rest on a declaration by the trader. The importing State may not inspect. The annual reports may be late, incomplete or inconsistent, so that the exporter records a thousand animals and the importer records four hundred. Research using the trade database routinely finds such mismatches, and they make it difficult to know how much trade is actually happening. 5.2 The non detriment finding as a bottleneck The non detriment finding is where science is supposed to enter the system, and it is where the system is weakest. Making a defensible finding requires knowledge of population size, reproductive rate, harvest offtake and the effect of other pressures such as habitat loss. For a well studied crocodile population in a country with a functioning wildlife agency, this is achievable. For a tree species with a wide range and no inventory, or for a sea cucumber fishery with no stock assessment, it is not. The result is that many findings are made on the basis of expert judgement, precedent or nothing at all. Guidance has improved, and the scientific committees have developed frameworks that allow findings to be made under uncertainty using a precautionary approach. Findings can also be made under uncertainty by applying a #precautionary_approach. But guidance does not create capacity. A country without funds for field surveys will not produce a rigorous finding merely because a guidance document exists. 5.3 Legal acquisition findings A second, less discussed requirement is that the specimen must have been obtained in accordance with the laws of the exporting State. This is the legal acquisition finding. It sounds simple and is often extremely difficult, particularly for products that pass through several hands before export, for timber harvested in areas with contested tenure, and for marine species caught on the high seas. Recent work in the conservation policy literature has drawn attention to the legal uncertainty that surrounds these findings and has argued that clarifying them would improve outcomes for both wildlife and the people who depend on it. 5.4 Reporting and data Parties must submit annual reports on their trade. Compliance with this obligation is imperfect. Reports are frequently late, and the level of detail varies. The trade database that results is still the single best source of information on the legal wildlife trade anywhere in the world, and it has been used in dozens of published analyses. But researchers who use it must handle its limitations carefully: it records permits issued as well as, in some cases, actual trade; units of measurement are inconsistent; and it says nothing about the illegal trade, which by definition leaves no permits behind. 6. Evidence on Effectiveness 6.1 The difficulty of measuring success Before reviewing cases, a methodological point must be made. Proving that a treaty caused a change in a wild population is hard. Populations change for many reasons. Listing often happens precisely because a species is already declining, so a simple before and after comparison will make listing look harmful. Data on population trends are patchy for most listed taxa. Serious evaluations therefore need counterfactual reasoning, and few studies manage it well. Economists have made progress by exploiting variation in enforcement capacity across countries and finding that regulation reduces decline where enforcement is genuinely present, which is an important result: it suggests that the rules can work but only if someone is actually applying them. 6.2 Cases that suggest the system can work The vicuna. The #vicuna, a wild South American camelid whose fine wool is highly valuable, was reduced to a few thousand animals by the late 1960s. It was placed in Appendix I. Populations recovered under strict protection, and selected populations were later moved to Appendix II with annotations allowing trade in wool sheared from live animals. Andean communities now earn income from shearing, and they have an economic reason to protect the herds. The case is regularly cited as evidence that a graded, adaptive listing combined with #community_based_conservation can deliver both recovery and livelihoods. Crocodilians. Several crocodile and alligator populations that were heavily hunted for skins have recovered and have been moved from Appendix I to Appendix II, sometimes with ranching or captive breeding programmes that supply the leather industry legally. Again, the mechanism is not the ban alone but the combination of protection, controlled harvest and a legal market that outcompetes the illegal one. Some plant successes. Regulated trade in certain orchids, cacti and aloes, supported by artificial propagation, has reduced pressure on wild populations, although enforcement remains difficult because seedlings and cuttings are hard to identify. 6.3 Cases that show the limits of the system #Pangolins. All eight species were moved to Appendix I in 2016, which prohibited commercial international trade. Seizure data since then show that trafficking in scales and meat has continued at large volumes, driven by demand for traditional medicine and bushmeat. The listing raised the legal status of the animals but did not by itself dismantle the trafficking networks, reduce demand or improve protection on the ground. The pangolin case is the clearest demonstration that a listing is an input, not an outcome. #African_elephant and the #ivory_trade. Elephants have been the most politically divisive taxon in the history of the Convention. The species was listed in Appendix I in 1989, after which reported poaching fell sharply for a period. Some southern African populations were later transferred to Appendix II, and limited one off sales of stockpiled ivory were permitted. Whether those sales stimulated demand and poaching, or relieved pressure by supplying the market legally, remains contested. What is not contested is that the disagreement has become entrenched. Southern African range States argue that their well managed populations are being punished for the failures of others, and some have threatened to leave the Convention. Cheung and colleagues, writing in 2025, drew an explicit comparison with the departure of Japan from the International Whaling Commission and warned that the same loss of decidability could damage CITES if the Convention cannot accommodate States whose populations are genuinely recovering. #Sharks_and_rays. Marine species were long treated as outside the comfort zone of the Convention, partly because fisheries management was seen as the business of regional fisheries bodies. That has changed. Large numbers of sharks and rays have been listed in Appendix II, and at the 2025 meeting Parties went further, moving oceanic whitetip sharks, whale sharks and all manta and devil rays into Appendix I, which prohibits commercial international trade in them. The listings are ambitious. The implementation problem is severe: identifying fins and meat to species level at a port requires expertise or genetic tools that many States do not have. Timber and #rosewood. Tropical timber species, especially rosewoods in the genus Dalbergia, dominate the modern #timber_trade and have been listed in Appendix II in response to a surge in demand for luxury furniture. The trade is enormous in volume terms, and the enforcement burden that listings place on customs services is heavy. Timber is also where the look alike problem bites hardest, since sawn boards of different species are almost impossible to distinguish visually. The #totoaba and the #vaquita. The totoaba, a large fish endemic to the Gulf of California, is listed in Appendix I, and its swim bladder is trafficked for use in traditional medicine. The gillnets used to catch it also drown the vaquita, a small porpoise now reduced to a handful of individuals. The Standing Committee recommended a suspension of trade in listed species with Mexico in 2022 to force stronger action. The case shows the compliance machinery being used seriously against a middle income State, and it also shows the limits of that machinery: the vaquita remains on the edge of extinction. 6.4 What the pattern suggests Taken together, the cases point to a consistent conclusion. Listing changes the legal status of a species and the paperwork required to move it. Whether it changes the fate of the species depends on what happens next: whether the range State can protect the population, whether the consumer State suppresses demand and inspects imports, whether communities have an alternative income, and whether enforcement agencies can identify the specimen at a border. The treaty controls the first step and has almost no control over the rest. Challender and colleagues made exactly this argument in 2025 when they proposed a formal theory of change for the Convention, noting that the treaty has never clearly specified how listing decisions are supposed to translate into conservation outcomes, and that without such a chain of reasoning it is impossible to say whether the instrument is working. 7. Structural Weaknesses 7.1 Weak national legislation The most basic weakness is that a large minority of Parties do not have laws capable of implementing the Convention. Analysis by Wyatt found that a substantial proportion of Parties lacked legislation that prohibits violations, and a quarter had laws that prohibited them only partially. Data reported in the Convention's own legislation project point in the same direction: in late 2023, around forty per cent of Parties, concentrated in Africa and Asia, still did not have legislation meeting the basic requirements, decades after joining. This matters more than any listing debate. A treaty obligation that has not been converted into a national offence is not enforceable against a trafficker. A prosecutor cannot charge a person with breaching a treaty. She can only charge them with breaching a statute. 7.2 Capacity for scientific findings As noted, the non detriment finding is the mechanism through which sustainability is meant to be guaranteed. In many exporting States, the scientific capacity to make such findings does not exist. The consequence is that permits are issued that carry no real assurance. Trade then appears legal in the database while being biologically unsustainable in the field. This is why the distinction between legal and sustainable is so important, and why studies that treat the volume of legal trade as evidence of good governance are misleading. 7.3 Politicisation and polarisation Listing decisions are votes, and votes are political. Two blocs have hardened over time. One favours strict protection and sees commercial use of charismatic species as unacceptable. The other favours regulated sustainable use and sees protectionist listings as an imposition by wealthy States on poorer range States that bear the costs of living with wildlife. The dispute is sharpest over elephants and rhinoceroses. Recent scholarship has warned that this #polarisation threatens the legitimacy of the institution itself, since a bloc that consistently loses votes has little reason to remain, and a Convention that loses its major range States loses its purpose. There is a related problem of evidence. Several authors have argued that the wildlife trade debate is distorted by the mischaracterisation of trade in policy discussions, for example by treating all trade as illegal, all illegal trade as organised crime, or all use as harmful. Overstating the problem may attract funding and headlines, but it produces bad policy, because instruments are chosen without a clear diagnosis of what is actually driving decline. 7.4 The domestic market gap Because the treaty covers only international movement, a country can ban exports while allowing a thriving internal market that draws animals out of the wild. Domestic markets also provide cover for laundering, since a specimen that enters the legal domestic chain can be exported later with documents that appear valid. Parties have adopted Resolutions urging the closure of domestic ivory markets, but such measures are recommendations, not obligations, and they depend on national political will. 7.5 Captive breeding, ranching and laundering Specimens declared as products of #captive_breeding are subject to lighter controls than wild caught ones. This creates an incentive to declare wild caught animals as captive bred. Investigations have documented facilities that claim to breed species which are difficult or impossible to breed in commercial quantities, and export volumes that exceed any plausible reproductive output. The #laundering problem is a direct product of the treaty's own architecture: by creating a lower cost legal channel, it created an arbitrage opportunity. Better inspection of breeding facilities, and greater use of forensic testing to verify origin, are the obvious answers, and both require money. 7.6 Unlisted species and the trade in the shadows CITES regulates about forty thousand species. Human beings use tens of thousands more. A great deal of harmful trade takes place in species that are not listed at all, and therefore not monitored. Work on Australian reptiles and amphibians, for example, has documented substantial international trade in species that fall entirely outside the Convention's reporting system, so that the scale of the trade is invisible to regulators. Listing criteria are conservative and require evidence of trade impact, which creates a chicken and egg problem: a species cannot be listed until there is evidence of harm, but the data needed to demonstrate harm are collected mainly for listed species. 7.7 Enforcement, corruption and organised crime The #illegal_wildlife_trade is served by #organised_crime networks that also move drugs, weapons and people. Enforcement agencies in many range and transit States are underfunded, and #corruption at ports, in permit offices and in the judiciary undermines the paper system directly. A forged permit and a bribed inspector defeat the most elegant treaty design. The Convention has responded by strengthening cooperation with police and customs bodies and by adopting decisions on #wildlife_trafficking linked to the internet, on #illicit_financial_flows and on corruption. These are welcome, but the Convention itself remains an instrument with no enforcement arm. 8. CITES within the Wider System of Biodiversity Governance 8.1 Relationship with the Convention on Biological Diversity The #Convention_on_Biological_Diversity, adopted in 1992, is the framework treaty for biodiversity as a whole. It covers conservation, sustainable use and the fair sharing of benefits from genetic resources. CITES is narrower and older, but it is one of the few instruments in the biodiversity field with teeth, because it regulates a specific, observable activity at a specific point, the border. The #Kunming_Montreal_Global_Biodiversity_Framework, agreed in 2022, gives CITES a clear role. Its Target 5 calls for the use, harvesting and trade of wild species to be sustainable, safe and legal, and to reduce the risk of pathogen spillover. Target 9 addresses the sustainable management of wild species for the benefit of people. The Convention is, in effect, the main delivery mechanism for the international trade element of these targets, and this connection is now used to justify requests for stronger implementation and funding. 8.2 Relationship with fisheries and forestry bodies The expansion of the Appendices into commercially exploited #marine_species and timber has brought the Convention into contact, and sometimes into tension, with regional fisheries management organisations and forest certification systems. Some States argue that fisheries should be managed by fisheries bodies and that a wildlife treaty is not the right forum. Others argue that regional bodies have failed to prevent overfishing of sharks and that trade measures are the only tool with real bite. The dispute is unlikely to be resolved, but the practical answer has been to develop cooperation and shared data rather than to police the boundary. 8.3 Wildlife trade and public health The coronavirus pandemic focused attention on the possibility that wildlife markets and trade chains facilitate the spillover of #zoonotic_disease from animals to people. Some commentators called for blanket bans on wild animal trade. Conservationists warned, in a widely cited comment, that such bans could have serious negative consequences: they would remove food and income from millions of people, would push commerce underground, and would not target the specific conditions under which spillover actually occurs. The lesson relevant to CITES is that the treaty is a trade regulation instrument, not a public health instrument, and that using it as a substitute for biosecurity policy would be a category error. It can, however, contribute to a #One_Health approach by improving traceability and reducing the volume of unregulated, unsanitary trade. 8.4 Trade law Trade restrictions adopted for environmental reasons can collide with the rules of the world trading system. In practice, the near universal membership of CITES has protected it from serious challenge, and measures taken under a multilateral environmental agreement have generally been treated as legitimate. But the point matters for reform proposals: unilateral import bans by wealthy States, imposed outside the treaty framework, are more vulnerable to legal challenge than collective measures adopted within it. 9. Emerging Pressures and New Tools 9.1 The internet as a marketplace Wildlife is now sold on general marketplaces, social media platforms and encrypted messaging services. #Online_wildlife_trade removes the need for a physical shop, allows sellers to reach buyers on other continents instantly, and makes detection much harder for enforcement agencies that were designed to inspect markets and ports. Advertisements can use code words, private groups and disappearing posts. The Convention has adopted decisions on wildlife crime linked to the internet, and platforms have joined voluntary coalitions to remove listings. Research suggests, however, that removal is a slow game of whack a mole unless the underlying demand is addressed. 9.2 Forensic science and identification Many enforcement failures are identification failures. An officer cannot seize what she cannot recognise. #Wildlife_forensics offers real progress: DNA barcoding can assign a shark fin or a timber sample to a species, isotope analysis can indicate geographic origin, and morphological databases can support rapid field identification. These tools are expensive and require laboratory infrastructure, which most range and transit States lack. Building regional forensic capacity is one of the highest value investments available in this field. 9.3 Data science and automated detection Machine learning is being applied to detect wildlife advertisements in online marketplaces, to classify seizure records, and to identify species in images. Parties at the most recent Conference discussed the integration of #artificial_intelligence into wildlife monitoring. The promise is real, but so is the risk of overpromising. Automated detection produces leads, not prosecutions, and a lead is useless without an agency able to act on it. 9.4 Traceability systems Electronic permitting and traceability from source to consumer would remove much of the space in which fraud currently operates. Progress has been made on electronic permits, and specific systems exist for particular commodities such as caviar, where labelling requirements were strengthened in 2025. Extending #traceability to timber and fisheries products is technically demanding and commercially contested, but it is the direction in which credible regulation must move. 10. The Fiftieth Anniversary and the Twentieth Conference of the Parties The twentieth meeting of the Conference of the Parties, commonly referred to as #CoP20, took place in #Samarkand, Uzbekistan, from 24 November to 5 December 2025, the first such meeting held in Central Asia, and it marked fifty years since entry into force. Nearly three and a half thousand participants attended, including government delegations from more than one hundred and sixty Parties. Parties reviewed around fifty proposals to amend the Appendices, adopted more than three hundred and fifty decisions, and held forty five votes. The next meeting is scheduled for Panama in 2028. The outcomes of that meeting illustrate the character of the institution rather well. On the protective side, Parties adopted strong new listings for marine species, moving oceanic whitetip sharks, whale sharks and all manta and devil rays to Appendix I. Galapagos land iguanas and the marine iguana were also moved to Appendix I, as was the okapi. Parties recognised two distinct species of African elephant, strengthened labelling requirements for caviar, and adopted new resolutions on jaguars and on eels. Decisions were taken on wildlife crime linked to the internet, on illicit financial flows and on corruption, and the role of the enforcement consortium was reaffirmed. On the permissive side, Parties agreed to allow international commercial trade in #saiga_antelope horn from Kazakhstan under quotas and monitoring, a decision welcomed by those who see it as a reward for a genuine recovery and criticised by those who fear it will create cover for illegal supply from other range States. The Guadalupe fur seal was downlisted from Appendix I to Appendix II following improvements in its status. A proposal to list anguillid eels in Appendix II was rejected, which disappointed those who argue that juvenile eels of different species cannot be told apart and that trafficking will continue without a listing. Read together, these outcomes show a Convention that is neither captured by protectionists nor by trading interests. It is a negotiating forum in which both logics are alive, and in which decisions can move in opposite directions within the same fortnight. Students should resist the temptation to describe the treaty as either a success or a failure. It is a machine for making contested collective decisions under uncertainty, and its output reflects the balance of forces among its members. 11. Discussion 11.1 A treaty that regulates the wrong end of the chain The deepest structural point in the recent literature is that the Convention acts at the border, while the causes of overexploitation lie at the source and at the point of consumption. At the source, #overexploitation happens because people need income, because enforcement is absent, or because the resource is open access. At the destination, people buy because a product is fashionable, medicinally valued or a status symbol. A permit requirement at the border does nothing about either. It can raise the cost of illegal supply, but only if the border is actually policed. This explains the pattern in the case evidence. Where the treaty has been paired with source side management, as with the vicuna and crocodilians, results have been good. Where a listing has been used as a substitute for source side management, as with pangolins, results have been poor. The instrument is necessary but not sufficient, and treating it as sufficient has been a persistent error of conservation advocacy. 11.2 The need for an explicit theory of change The proposal by Challender and colleagues for a formal #theory_of_change deserves particular attention from students, because it reframes the entire debate about effectiveness. Their argument is that the Convention has never specified the causal chain that connects a listing decision to a change in a wild population. Without that chain, Parties cannot design listings intelligently, cannot identify the accompanying measures a listing needs in order to work, and cannot evaluate whether it worked. Adopting an explicit theory of change would force Parties to ask, before voting, what exactly is expected to happen after adoption, who is expected to do it, and how the result will be measured. That is a modest procedural reform, grounded in #evidence_based_policy, with potentially large consequences. 11.3 Legitimacy as a conservation resource The second theme running through recent scholarship is #legitimacy. A treaty with no enforcement arm depends on voluntary compliance, and voluntary compliance depends on Parties believing that the system is fair. When range States in southern Africa feel that their conservation success is punished, when poorer Parties observe that trade suspensions fall mainly on them, and when communities that live with wildlife find that their interests are not represented in listing debates, the belief in fairness erodes. The warning drawn from the whaling regime is apt: institutions do not usually collapse because the science changes. They collapse because members stop accepting the legitimacy of the decisions. This suggests that the socio economic dimension of listing decisions is not a distraction from conservation but a precondition for it. Proposals to require that listing documents address social and economic consequences, including effects on #livelihoods and on #indigenous_peoples, should be read in this light. 11.4 Legality is not sustainability A third theme, which students should carry into any exam answer on this topic, is that legality and sustainability are different things. A permitted export can be biologically ruinous if the non detriment finding behind it was fictional. An unpermitted harvest by a community that has managed a resource for generations may be entirely sustainable. The treaty measures legality, and the databases it produces measure legality. Confusing the two produces the false comfort that trade under permit is safe trade. 12. Policy Recommendations The following recommendations follow from the analysis. They are ordered from the most feasible to the most demanding. 1. Close the legislation gap first. No other reform will produce as much benefit per dollar as helping the forty per cent of Parties without adequate laws to enact them. This is a #capacity_building problem, not a diplomatic one, and it is solvable with money and legal drafting support. 2. Fund the science. Non detriment findings are the load bearing wall of the Convention. A dedicated international fund for population assessment in exporting States, tied to specific high volume taxa, would improve the quality of permits directly. Regional Scientific Authorities, sharing expertise across neighbouring countries, would spread the cost. 3. Require an implementation plan with every listing proposal. A proposal should state what the listing is expected to achieve, what accompanying measures the range State will take, what assistance it needs, and how success will be assessed after three and six years. This operationalises the theory of change argument. 4. Make listing proposals address social and economic effects. Amending the standard format for proposals to include the consequences for local livelihoods would improve both the quality of decisions and the perceived fairness of the process. 5. Invest in identification and forensics at regional level. Shared laboratories, reference collections and rapid field guides would convert ambitious listings, especially for sharks and timber, into enforceable ones. 6. Apply the compliance mechanism consistently. If trade suspensions are used against poor States and not against powerful ones with equivalent failings, the mechanism loses moral authority. Publishing clear criteria, and applying them without regard to the size of the economy involved, would strengthen the institution. 7. Improve reporting and make the data usable. Standardised units, timely submission, and reconciliation of exporter and importer records would transform the trade database from a rough indicator into a genuine monitoring tool. 8. Address demand, not only supply. Trade measures alone cannot defeat a strong preference. Sustained #demand_reduction work in consumer markets, based on evidence about why people buy, is a necessary complement to listing. 9. Engage communities as partners rather than as obstacles. Where local people gain from wildlife, wildlife survives. Where they lose, it does not. This is not sentiment. It is the pattern in the evidence. 10. Protect the unity of the Convention. A treaty that loses its major range States would be worse than no treaty at all, because it would preserve the appearance of regulation without the substance. Accommodating genuine conservation success with carefully designed and monitored downlistings is the price of keeping the institution whole. 13. Limitations of this Review Three limitations should be acknowledged. First, as noted in the method, this is a narrative review. It synthesises evidence but does not weight studies systematically, and it may under represent work published outside English language journals. A great deal of relevant analysis exists in Spanish, Portuguese, French, Chinese and Bahasa Indonesia. Second, the evidence base itself is uneven. Mammals and birds dominate the literature. Plants make up the large majority of listed taxa but a small minority of published studies. Invertebrates and fishes are studied even less. Conclusions about the treaty drawn mainly from elephants and pangolins may not hold for orchids and sea cucumbers. Third, evaluations of effectiveness are constrained by the counterfactual problem described in Section 6. Statements about what would have happened without the Convention are, in most cases, informed judgements rather than measured findings. 14. A Research Agenda Five questions are open and would repay work by graduate students. First, what happens to populations after a listing, once other variables are controlled? Systematic post listing evaluation across many taxa, using consistent methods, remains rare. Second, how are non detriment findings actually made? Ethnographic and administrative research inside Scientific Authorities would reveal how much science is really involved, and where the practical constraints lie. Third, how large is the trade in unlisted species, and how much harm does it do? The work on Australian herpetofauna suggests the answer is: larger than anyone assumes. Fourth, does the compliance mechanism discriminate? A quantitative analysis of trade suspensions, controlling for the severity of the violation and the economic size of the Party, would settle a long standing accusation one way or the other. Fifth, do downlistings that permit regulated trade increase or decrease pressure on wild populations? The saiga decision of 2025 offers a natural experiment that should be studied carefully over the coming decade. 15. Conclusion Fifty years after it entered into force, the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora remains the only global instrument dedicated to keeping commerce in wild animals and plants within limits that species can survive. Its membership is nearly universal, its Appendices cover more than forty thousand species, and its decisions carry real legal weight in the customs halls and courtrooms of its Parties. These are not small achievements for an agreement written before most of the current human population was born. Yet the treaty is being asked to do work it was not designed to do. It regulates a border crossing, while extinction is driven by what happens in the forest and in the shopping street. It relies on a scientific judgement, the non detriment finding, that many of its members lack the means to make. It depends on national laws that a large minority of its members have never passed. And it must hold together a membership that disagrees, honestly and deeply, about whether commercial use of wildlife is part of the solution or part of the problem. The way forward is not a new treaty. It is a more honest and better resourced version of this one: legislation in every Party, science behind every permit, an explicit statement of what each listing is meant to achieve, forensic capacity at every major port, consistent application of sanctions, and a serious effort to ensure that the people who live alongside wild species have reason to want them to survive. None of that is glamorous. All of it is achievable. Whether the Parties choose to do it will determine whether the next fifty years of #wildlife_trade_governance are remembered as a period in which the world learned to trade in wild species without destroying them, or as the period in which it did not. Hashtags #CITES_1973 #wildlife_trade_convention #endangered_species_protection #international_environmental_law #biodiversity_conservation #CITES_appendices #wildlife_trafficking_prevention #sustainable_wildlife_trade #conservation_policy #species_survival #trade_and_extinction #global_biodiversity_governance References Andersson, A. A., Tilley, H. B., Lau, W., Dudgeon, D., Bonebrake, T. C., and Dingle, C. (2021). CITES and beyond: illuminating twenty years of global, legal wildlife trade. Global Ecology and Conservation, 26, e01455. Cardoso, P., Amponsah-Mensah, K., Barreiros, J. P., Bouhuys, J., Cheung, H., Davies, A., Kumschick, S., Longhorn, S. J., Martinez-Munoz, C. A., Morcatty, T. Q., Peters, G., Ripple, W. J., Rivera-Tellez, E., Stringham, O. C., Toomes, A., Tricorache, P., and Fukushima, C. S. (2021). Scientists' warning to humanity on illegal or unsustainable wildlife trade. Biological Conservation, 263, 109341. Challender, D. W. S., Brockington, D., Hinsley, A., Hoffmann, M., Kolby, J. E., Masse, F., Natusch, D. J. D., Oldfield, T. E. E., Outhwaite, W., Sas-Rolfes, M., and Milner-Gulland, E. J. (2022a). Mischaracterizing wildlife trade and its impacts may mislead policy processes. Conservation Letters, 15(1), e12832. Challender, D. W. S., Brockington, D., Hinsley, A., Hoffmann, M., Kolby, J. E., Masse, F., Natusch, D. J. D., Oldfield, T. E. E., Sas-Rolfes, M., and Milner-Gulland, E. J. (2022b). Accurate characterization of wildlife trade and policy instruments: reply to D'Cruze et al. and Frank and Wilcove. Conservation Letters, 15(1), e12870. Challender, D. W. S., Cremona, P. J., Malsch, K., Robinson, J. E., Pavitt, A. T., Scott, J., Hoffmann, R., Joolia, A., Oldfield, T. E. E., Jenkins, R. K. B., Conde, D. A., Hilton-Taylor, C., and Hoffmann, M. (2023). Identifying species likely threatened by international trade on the IUCN Red List can inform CITES trade measures. Nature Ecology and Evolution, 7(8), 1211-1220. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-023-02115-8 Challender, D. W. S., Sas-Rolfes, M., Broad, S., and Milner-Gulland, E. J. (2025). A theory of change to improve conservation outcomes through CITES. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, 13, 1425267. https://doi.org/10.3389/fevo.2025.1425267 Chekunov, S., Stringham, O. C., Toomes, A., Prowse, T. A. A., and Cassey, P. (2024). The scale of unregulated international trade in Australian reptiles and amphibians. Conservation Biology, 38(5), e14355. Cheung, H., Challender, D. W. S., Anagnostou, M., Braczkowski, A. R., Di Marco, M., Hinsley, A., Kubo, T., Possingham, H. P., Song, A. Y., Takashina, N., Wang, Y., and Biggs, D. (2025). Protect the integrity of CITES: lessons from Japan's IWC withdrawal to keep polarization from tearing CITES apart. Conservation Letters, 18(2), e13099. https://doi.org/10.1111/conl.13099 Choo, S. W., Platto, S., and Challender, D. W. S. (2022). Helping to save pangolins from extinction. Conservation Letters, 15(3), e12871. CITES Secretariat (2022). World Wildlife Trade Report 2022. CITES Secretariat, Geneva. Convention on Biological Diversity (2022). Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, Decision 15/4 of the Conference of the Parties. Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity, Montreal. Cooney, R., Challender, D. W. S., Broad, S., Roe, D., and Natusch, D. J. D. (2021). Think before you act: improving the conservation outcomes of CITES listing decisions. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, 9, 1-6. Fukushima, C. S., Tricorache, P., Toomes, A., Stringham, O. C., Rivera-Tellez, E., Ripple, W. J., Peters, G., Orenstein, R. I., Morcatty, T. Q., Longhorn, S. J., Kumschick, S., Duffy, R., Davies, A., Cheung, H., Bouhuys, J., Barreiros, J. P., Amponsah-Mensah, K., and Cardoso, P. (2021). Challenges and perspectives on tackling illegal or unsustainable wildlife trade. Biological Conservation, 263, 109342. Hughes, A. C. (2021). Wildlife trade. Current Biology, 31(19), R1218-R1224. Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (2022). Thematic Assessment Report on the Sustainable Use of Wild Species. IPBES Secretariat, Bonn. Marsh, S. M. E., Hoffmann, M., Burgess, N. D., Brooks, T. M., Challender, D. W. S., Cremona, P. J., Hilton-Taylor, C., de Micheaux, F. L., Lichtenstein, G., Roe, D., and Bohm, M. (2022). Prevalence of sustainable and unsustainable use of wild species inferred from the IUCN Red List. Conservation Biology, 36(2). Morton, O., Scheffers, B. R., Haugaasen, T., and Edwards, D. P. (2021). Impacts of wildlife trade on terrestrial biodiversity. Nature Ecology and Evolution, 5, 540-548. Natali, M. (2023). Le droit international face au trafic illegal de biodiversite sauvage. Editions juridiques, Paris. Roe, D., and Lee, T. M. (2021). Possible negative consequences of a wildlife trade ban. Nature Sustainability, 4, 5-6. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (2024). World Wildlife Crime Report 2024: Trafficking in Protected Species. United Nations, Vienna. Wyatt, T. (2021). Is CITES Protecting Wildlife? Assessing Implementation and Compliance. Routledge, London. Wyatt, T., Maher, J., Allen, D., Clarke, N., and Rook, D. (2022). The welfare of wildlife: an interdisciplinary analysis of harm in the legal and illegal wildlife trades and possible ways forward. Crime, Law and Social Change, 77, 69-89.
- The Ramsar Convention on Wetlands (1971) as a Framework for National Action and International Cooperation in the Conservation and Wise Use of Wetlands: A Critical Review of 5 Decades of Implementation
The Convention on Wetlands, adopted in the Iranian city of Ramsar on 2 February 1971 and in force since 21 December 1975, is the oldest of the modern multilateral environmental agreements and the only global treaty devoted to a single ecosystem type. This article reviews the origins, legal design, institutional machinery, and measurable performance of the treaty across more than fifty years of operation. It draws on peer reviewed literature published mainly between 2021 and 2026, on the official record of the Conference of the Contracting Parties, and on the Global Wetland Outlook 2025 released at the fifteenth meeting of the Conference of the Contracting Parties in Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe. The review is organised around the three pillars of the treaty: the #wise_use of all wetlands within national territory, the designation and management of Wetlands of International Importance, and #international_cooperation on shared wetland systems and shared species. Evidence indicates that the treaty has been remarkably successful as an instrument of recognition and diplomacy. It has attracted 172 Contracting Parties, built the largest network of internationally recognised protected sites on the planet, and generated a rich body of technical guidance on wetland inventory, assessment, and management. Evidence on ecological outcomes is far less encouraging. Global wetland extent continues to contract, the ecological condition of a large share of remaining wetlands is deteriorating, and a substantial proportion of listed sites are reported to be in decline. The article argues that the gap between designation and effective management is the central problem of the regime. It identifies five structural weaknesses: the absence of binding compliance mechanisms, chronic underfunding of the Secretariat and of national implementation, uneven and often outdated national wetland inventories, a listing process that rewards political convenience more than ecological need, and a persistent failure to embed the rights and knowledge of local and Indigenous communities in wetland governance. The article closes by proposing a research and policy agenda built around outcome based reporting, earth observation supported monitoring, restoration finance, and the integration of wetland targets into national biodiversity and climate planning. Keywords: Convention on Wetlands; wise use; Wetlands of International Importance; Montreux Record; ecological character; wetland governance; multilateral environmental agreements; ecosystem services 1. Introduction Wetlands occupy a small fraction of the Earth's land surface, yet they carry an outsized share of the planet's ecological work. They store and purify water, recharge aquifers, buffer coasts and river valleys against floods and storms, lock away enormous stocks of soil carbon, feed hundreds of millions of people, and support a density of biological life that is matched by very few other habitats. They are also, in most parts of the world, the ecosystems that have been drained, filled, ploughed, dammed, polluted, and built over with the least public resistance. For most of recorded history the swamp, the marsh, the bog, and the floodplain were regarded as wasteland, as sources of disease, and as land waiting to be improved. The vocabulary of drainage and reclamation is still embedded in the planning laws of many countries. The #Ramsar_Convention was the first serious international attempt to reverse that cultural and legal default. Signed on 2 February 1971 in the Caspian coastal town of Ramsar in Iran, and entering into force on 21 December 1975, the treaty is formally titled the Convention on Wetlands of International Importance especially as Waterfowl Habitat. It is normally referred to today simply as the Convention on Wetlands. It is the oldest of the modern intergovernmental conservation agreements, older than the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, older than the World Heritage Convention, and considerably older than the Convention on Biological Diversity and the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. It is also, uniquely, an agreement that addresses one habitat type rather than a species group, a trade in goods, or an atmospheric problem. The mission statement of the treaty, as refined by successive meetings of the Conference of the Contracting Parties, commits governments to the conservation and #wise_use of all wetlands through local and national actions and through international cooperation, as a contribution to sustainable development. Two features of that formulation deserve attention at the outset. First, the treaty does not confine itself to a list of special places. It reaches, at least in principle, every wetland inside the territory of every Contracting Party. Second, it does not adopt a preservationist logic. It accepts that people live in, from, and around wetlands, and it seeks to regulate the terms of that relationship rather than to suspend it. Five decades later, the record is genuinely difficult to summarise in a single sentence. On one side of the ledger, the treaty now has 172 Contracting Parties, which is close to ninety per cent of the membership of the United Nations. It has produced the largest network of internationally recognised protected sites in existence, with more than 2,500 designated wetlands covering roughly 253 million hectares. It has generated an extensive body of technical handbooks, resolutions, and guidance that national agencies across six regions draw upon. It has anchored the annual observance of #World_Wetlands_Day, created a #Wetland_City_Accreditation scheme, and supplied a common technical vocabulary, notably the concept of #ecological_character, that has migrated into domestic legislation in many jurisdictions. On the other side of the ledger, wetlands have continued to disappear during precisely the period in which international attention has been focused on them. Reconstructions of long term land use change estimate that around 3.4 million square kilometres of inland wetlands were lost between 1700 and 2020, a net loss on the order of one fifth of the global inland wetland area, with the fastest destruction occurring in the middle of the twentieth century (Fluet-Chouinard et al., 2023). The Global Wetland Outlook 2025, produced by the Convention's own Scientific and Technical Review Panel and launched immediately before the fifteenth Conference of the Contracting Parties, reports that some 411 million hectares of wetland have been lost since 1970, a decline of roughly 22 per cent, and warns that up to a fifth of the remaining stock could vanish by 2050 if present trends persist. The same assessment records that around a quarter of remaining wetlands are in poor ecological condition, and that even inside the designated Ramsar network, which is often described as the gold standard of wetland commitment, roughly one site in eight is reported to be in declining condition. This is the paradox that motivates the present article. A treaty that is almost universally ratified, technically sophisticated, and institutionally mature presides over an ecosystem type that is still being lost faster than most terrestrial biomes. Scholars have used strong language to describe the situation. Bridgewater and Kim (2021) diagnose a case of institutional drift, in which the treaty has accumulated resolutions, programmes, and thematic commitments without a corresponding evolution in its capacity to change behaviour on the ground. Kingsford et al. (2021) document systematic biases in the geographic and typological distribution of the site network and argue for a shift toward explicit adaptive management. Joshi et al. (2021) argue that the treaty's guidance on #wise_use has remained technocratic and has tended to depoliticise conflicts over water and land that are, in reality, deeply political. 1.1 Aim and research questions This article offers a structured, evidence based review of the Ramsar Convention as a framework for #national_action and #international_cooperation. It is written for advanced undergraduate and postgraduate students in environmental science, environmental law, geography, and public policy, and it is deliberately written in plain language while retaining the structure and referencing conventions of a peer reviewed journal article. The review addresses five questions. What are the historical, legal, and conceptual foundations of the treaty, and how have they evolved through amendment and through resolutions of the Conference of the Contracting Parties? How do the three pillars of the treaty operate in practice, and what obligations do they actually place on states? What does the available evidence say about the ecological and socio economic performance of the regime? Where are the principal implementation gaps, and what explains them? What reforms and research directions are most likely to close the distance between the treaty's stated ambition and observed outcomes? 1.2 Structure of the article Section 2 sets out the review method and its limits. Section 3 traces the historical origins and legal architecture of the treaty. Section 4 examines the three pillars in detail. Section 5 describes the institutional machinery. Section 6 sets out the ecological and economic rationale for wetland conservation. Section 7 summarises the global status and trend evidence. Section 8 presents comparative national implementation evidence. Section 9 examines synergies with other international regimes. Section 10 offers a critical assessment. Section 11 discusses emerging frontiers, including earth observation, restoration finance, and urban wetlands. Section 12 discusses pathways forward. Section 13 states limitations, and Section 14 concludes. 2. Materials and Methods 2.1 Design This study is a structured narrative review with a comparative policy analysis component. A narrative design was chosen rather than a systematic review protocol because the object of study is a legal and institutional regime rather than a discrete intervention with comparable outcome measures. The questions posed cannot be answered by pooling effect sizes. They require the integration of legal texts, official reports, ecological data, and critical scholarship. 2.2 Sources Three categories of material were used. The first category is the primary legal and institutional record. This includes the text of the Convention as adopted in 1971 and as amended by the Paris Protocol of 1982 and the Regina Amendments of 1987, the resolutions and recommendations adopted by the Conference of the Contracting Parties from its first meeting in 1980 through to its fifteenth meeting in 2025, the strategic plans of the Convention, and the technical guidance issued through the Ramsar handbook series. The second category is the official assessment literature, principally the Global Wetland Outlook series, the National Reports submitted by Contracting Parties in each triennium, and the data held in the Ramsar Sites Information Service. The third category is the peer reviewed scientific and legal literature. Priority was given to work published between 2021 and 2026, in order to capture the state of scholarship in the period surrounding the fiftieth anniversary of the treaty and the adoption of the Kunming Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework. Searches were run in multidisciplinary and subject specific bibliographic databases using combinations of the terms Ramsar, Convention on Wetlands, wise use, wetland governance, ecological character, Montreux Record, wetland restoration, and wetland ecosystem services. Reference lists of retrieved articles were followed backwards to identify additional relevant work. 2.3 Inclusion and appraisal Studies were included if they addressed the design, implementation, effectiveness, or critique of the Convention, or if they provided quantitative evidence on the extent, condition, or value of wetlands at a scale relevant to the treaty. Descriptive site studies were included where they illustrated a general implementation problem, such as management effectiveness, listing bias, or conflict between conservation and livelihoods. Grey literature was used only where it was produced by the Convention itself or by its International Organisation Partners, and it was treated as evidence of institutional position rather than as independent empirical verification. 2.4 Analytical framework The analysis is organised using a simple three level framework that is common in the study of multilateral environmental agreements. The first level is output, meaning the rules, guidance, and institutions the regime produces. The second level is outcome, meaning the observable changes in the behaviour of states, agencies, and resource users. The third level is impact, meaning the measurable change in the condition of the ecosystem the regime is intended to protect. A recurring finding of the study is that the Convention performs strongly at the level of output, unevenly at the level of outcome, and poorly at the level of impact. 2.5 Limits of the method The review is not exhaustive. It privileges English language scholarship, which is likely to under represent research from francophone Africa, from Latin America, and from parts of Asia. It also relies in part on self reported national data, whose quality is known to vary. These limits are revisited in Section 13. 3. Historical Origins and Legal Architecture 3.1 The road to Ramsar The intellectual origins of the treaty lie in ornithology rather than in ecosystem science. During the 1960s, waterbird specialists working through the International Waterfowl Research Bureau, the International Union for Conservation of Nature, and the International Council for Bird Preservation became increasingly alarmed by the drainage of European wetlands and the consequent collapse of #waterbird populations along migratory flyways. Because migratory birds cross borders, no single state could protect them by acting alone. The logic of the problem forced the logic of the solution: a treaty. A sequence of technical conferences held between 1962 and 1970, including meetings at Saint Andrews, Noordwijk, and Espoo, produced successive drafts of an agreement. The final negotiating conference was hosted by Iran, and the treaty was signed at Ramsar on 2 February 1971. Seven states had ratified by the time it entered into force on 21 December 1975. The original title, which referred to wetlands of international importance especially as waterfowl habitat, preserves the ornithological origin of the initiative. That origin has proved to be both an asset and a constraint. It gave the treaty a clear, measurable, and politically saleable purpose at a moment when the concept of an ecosystem service did not yet exist in policy language. It also left the regime with a legal text whose criteria and obligations were written for a narrower purpose than the one the treaty now claims. Much of the subsequent history of the Convention consists of the Conference of the Contracting Parties stretching a bird focused text to cover water security, climate regulation, poverty reduction, urban planning, and human rights, without ever reopening the treaty text itself. 3.2 The text and its amendments The Convention is a short instrument. Its operative provisions occupy a handful of articles. Article 1 defines wetlands with deliberate breadth, covering areas of marsh, fen, peatland, or water, whether natural or artificial, permanent or temporary, with water that is static or flowing, fresh, brackish, or salt, including areas of marine water whose depth at low tide does not exceed six metres. This definition is one of the treaty's most consequential outputs. It is broad enough to include rivers, lakes, deltas, floodplains, rice paddies, reservoirs, salt pans, mangroves, seagrass beds, coral reefs, oases, and peat bogs. It is the reason the regime can speak to almost every domain of water and land policy. Article 2 obliges each Contracting Party to designate at least one wetland for inclusion in the List of Wetlands of International Importance, and states that sites should be selected on account of their international significance in ecological, botanical, zoological, limnological, or hydrological terms. Article 3 contains the core substantive duty. Parties are to formulate and implement their planning so as to promote the conservation of listed sites and, as far as possible, the #wise_use of all wetlands in their territory. Article 3.2 adds a duty of notification: a Party must inform the Secretariat if the #ecological_character of a listed site has changed, is changing, or is likely to change as a result of technological developments, pollution, or other human interference. Article 4 requires Parties to promote the conservation of wetlands and waterfowl through nature reserves and to compensate for any loss of wetland resources if a site is deleted or restricted, as far as possible by creating additional nature reserves. Article 5 addresses #international_cooperation, particularly where a wetland extends over the territories of more than one Party or where a water system is shared. Articles 6 to 12 deal with institutional and procedural matters, including the Conference of the Contracting Parties, the continuing bureau duties, and the depositary functions. Two amendments have been adopted. The Paris Protocol of 1982 introduced a procedure for amending the treaty and established authentic language versions. The Regina Amendments, adopted in 1987 and in force from 1994, gave the Conference of the Contracting Parties a formal legal basis, established a standing committee, and created a budget mechanism funded by contributions from Parties. Together these amendments transformed a light diplomatic arrangement into a functioning institution with a permanent Secretariat and a triennial policy cycle. 3.3 The character of the obligations It is essential for students to grasp the legal quality of what Parties actually promise. The Convention is a #framework_convention. It sets direction and creates institutions, but it does not impose precise, quantified, enforceable duties. The obligations are drafted with qualifiers such as "as far as possible" and "shall promote". There is no compliance committee, no dispute settlement machinery of any practical significance, no sanction for degradation of a listed site, and no penalty for failing to submit a national report. This does not mean the Convention has no legal force. As Gardner and colleagues have shown in the legal literature synthesised by Gell et al. (2023), the influence of the regime on domestic law depends heavily on whether a given state follows a monist or a dualist approach to international law. In monist systems, treaty obligations and even resolutions may operate directly within the domestic legal order. In dualist systems, implementing legislation is required, and the practical effect of the treaty depends entirely on whether the legislature acts. In many jurisdictions the Convention has been the explicit trigger for domestic wetland statutes and rules, and courts in several countries have cited Ramsar designation when reviewing development consents. What the treaty supplies is legitimacy, vocabulary, and a hook for domestic litigation and advocacy. What it does not supply is coercion. Rattan et al. (2021) summarise the resulting design as a regime that addresses wetland degradation through three mutually reinforcing pillars rather than through prohibition. That design decision, taken in 1971 and never reversed, explains a great deal of what follows. 4. The Three Pillars 4.1 Pillar one: the wise use of all wetlands The concept of #wise_use is the intellectual heart of the treaty and its most original contribution to environmental law. It appeared in the 1971 text without definition, and it took the Conference of the Contracting Parties several decades to give it operational content. The definition adopted at the ninth meeting of the Conference in 2005 frames wise use as the maintenance of the #ecological_character of a wetland, achieved through the implementation of ecosystem approaches, within the context of sustainable development. Ecological character is itself defined as the combination of the ecosystem components, processes, and benefits or services that characterise the wetland at a given point in time. Three implications follow. First, wise use is not preservation. A wetland that supports fisheries, rice cultivation, reed harvesting, grazing, or tourism can be wisely used provided that its defining components and processes are maintained. Second, wise use applies to every wetland in the territory of a Party, not only to designated sites. This is the most far reaching and the most widely ignored obligation in the treaty. Third, wise use is inherently a judgement about acceptable change, and therefore a judgement about who decides, on what evidence, and in whose interest. The Convention has produced an extensive toolkit to support the concept, including guidance on national wetland policies, wetland inventory, rapid assessment, environmental impact assessment, water allocation, and the management planning cycle. The toolkit is technically respectable. Its weakness is that it presumes an administrative capacity, a data base, and a political willingness that many Parties do not possess. The critical literature has been sharp on this point. Joshi et al. (2021), reviewing the Convention's obligations, resolutions, and guidelines through a political ecology lens, argue that the framing of socio ecological relations in the guidance is generic and technocratic, that it obscures the power imbalances which determine who captures the benefits of a wetland and who bears the costs of its protection, and that poverty, cultural significance, and gender equality entered the guidance late and remain peripheral. Their conclusion is that unless wetland governance is repoliticised, that is, unless the guidance acknowledges that wetland conflicts are conflicts about power over water and land, changes in policy will remain rhetorical. 4.2 Pillar two: the List of Wetlands of International Importance The second pillar is the visible face of the treaty. On accession, each Party must designate at least one wetland for the #Ramsar_List, and Parties are encouraged to add sites over time. As of 2026 the List contains more than 2,500 sites, in the territories of all 172 Parties, covering approximately 253 million hectares, an area larger than most countries. The first site to be designated was the Cobourg Peninsula in Australia, listed in 1974. The United Kingdom has designated the largest number of sites, followed by Mexico. Brazil has the largest area under designation, and several countries including Bolivia, Canada, Chad, the Congo, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo have each designated more than 100,000 square kilometres. A wetland qualifies for listing if it meets at least one of nine criteria, grouped under two headings. Group A contains a single criterion. Criterion 1 covers sites that contain a representative, rare, or unique example of a natural or near natural wetland type within the relevant biogeographic region. Group B contains eight criteria based on species and ecological communities. Criteria 2, 3, and 4 concern the conservation of biological diversity, covering respectively vulnerable and endangered species or threatened ecological communities, populations important for maintaining the biological diversity of a region, and sites that support species at a critical stage of their life cycle or offer refuge in adverse conditions. Criteria 5 and 6 are specific to #waterbird populations: a site qualifies if it regularly supports 20,000 or more waterbirds, or if it regularly supports one per cent of the individuals in a population of one species or subspecies. Criteria 7 and 8 are specific to fish, covering the representation of indigenous fish subspecies, species, or families, and the role of the site as a spawning ground, nursery, or migration path. Criterion 9 extends the one per cent rule to wetland dependent non avian animal species. The one per cent rule embodied in Criterion 6 remains the single most used entry route to the List, which is a direct legacy of the treaty's ornithological origins. Designation is a national act. The Party completes a #Ramsar_Information_Sheet, describing the site's boundaries, hydrology, biota, uses, threats, and management arrangements, and lodges it with the Ramsar Sites Information Service. Designation does not create a protected area under international law, and it does not transfer any authority over the site to the Secretariat or to any other Party. The site remains under the sovereignty and management of the state. What designation creates is a reputational commitment and an international expectation that #ecological_character will be maintained. Kingsford et al. (2021) analysed the resulting network and found that it is biased. Certain wetland types, certain regions, and certain political circumstances are over represented, while others, including many inland and arid zone systems and many wetlands in states with weak conservation agencies, are under represented. Sites are frequently chosen because they are already protected, already popular, or politically uncontroversial, rather than because they are the most ecologically significant or the most threatened. The authors call for the network to be assembled with explicit attention to representativeness, connectivity, and ecosystem dynamics, and for an adaptive management framework that links the maintenance of ecological processes to the drivers of change. 4.3 The Montreux Record and the Ramsar Advisory Mission The treaty contains two instruments for dealing with sites in trouble. The #Montreux_Record, established in 1990, is a register of listed sites where changes in ecological character have occurred, are occurring, or are likely to occur as a result of technological development, pollution, or other human interference. A site is added to the Record only with the consent of the Party concerned. That consent requirement is the central weakness of the mechanism. A government that does not wish to be embarrassed simply declines. The result is that the Record has never come close to listing every site whose condition is deteriorating, and its size bears little relationship to the true scale of degradation across the network. Where it has been used with goodwill, however, the Record has functioned as intended. The classic example is Chilika Lake in India, a large brackish lagoon added to the Record in 1993 following siltation and shrinkage of its sea mouth. A programme of hydrological restoration and catchment management followed, and the site was removed from the Record in 2002. That case is routinely cited in the literature as a demonstration that the mechanism can drive a national restoration programme when a government chooses to treat listing as a call to action rather than as a reprimand. The second instrument is the #Ramsar_Advisory_Mission, a technical assistance procedure under which experts visit a site at the request of the Party and provide advice. It is cooperative, non adversarial, and dependent on invitation. Like the Record, it works when the government wants it to work. 4.4 Pillar three: international cooperation The third pillar recognises that wetlands do not respect political boundaries. Rivers cross borders, aquifers underlie several states, deltas receive sediment from catchments thousands of kilometres upstream, and migratory birds link breeding grounds, staging posts, and wintering sites across continents. The Convention promotes cooperation through several mechanisms. Transboundary Ramsar Sites allow two or more Parties to manage a shared wetland under a common framework. #Ramsar_Regional_Initiatives provide platforms for cooperation among neighbouring states with shared wetland types, such as the Mediterranean Wetlands Initiative, the Indo Burma Ramsar Regional Initiative, and, more recently, the Southern African Ramsar Regional Initiative launched around the fifteenth Conference of the Parties. Flyway level cooperation links the Convention to the Agreement on the Conservation of African Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds and to the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species. A Small Grants Fund and a Wetlands for the Future fund provide modest financial support, principally to developing country Parties. The cooperation pillar is the least studied of the three and, arguably, the one with the greatest untapped potential. Water diplomacy, upstream downstream negotiation, and joint catchment planning are precisely the arenas in which wetland outcomes are determined, and they are arenas in which the Convention has historically been a marginal actor compared with river basin organisations and bilateral treaties. 5. Institutional Machinery 5.1 The Conference of the Contracting Parties The Conference of the Contracting Parties is the governing body. It meets ordinarily every three years. It reviews implementation, adopts resolutions, approves the budget, receives reports from subsidiary bodies, and sets the strategic direction of the regime. Its resolutions are not binding in the strict sense, but they carry substantial normative weight, and they are the mechanism through which the meaning of the 1971 text has been continuously updated. The fifteenth meeting, held in Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe, from 23 to 31 July 2025, illustrates both the reach and the limits of the process. Around three thousand delegates attended under the theme of protecting wetlands for our common future. Twenty eight resolutions were adopted. They included a new Strategic Plan for the period 2025 to 2034, built around four goals and eighteen targets; a resolution on equitable governance and the recognition of wetlands as protected areas and as other effective area based conservation measures; resolutions on wetland restoration, on the strengthening of national action for waterbird flyways, on the establishment of a global waterbird estimates partnership, on urban wetlands, on traditional knowledge, and on youth engagement. Parties also adopted the #Victoria_Falls_Declaration, a high level political statement calling for increased ambition, resource mobilisation, and investment in wetland conservation and restoration. Wetland City Accreditation certificates were awarded to thirty one cities across sixteen countries. Panama was accepted as host of the sixteenth Conference in 2028. The same meeting also demonstrates the financial reality of the regime. Parties agreed a core budget increase of 4.1 per cent, bringing the total core budget for the triennium to approximately 15.5 million Swiss francs. That figure is worth pausing on. It is the entire core budget of the only global treaty devoted to wetlands, for three years, across 172 countries. It is smaller than the annual operating budget of many individual national parks. No breakthrough on long term financing was achieved, and the proposal for a dedicated global wetland restoration fund remained a subject of discussion rather than a funded reality. 5.2 The Standing Committee and the Secretariat Between meetings of the Conference, the Standing Committee exercises decision making authority. It is composed of Parties elected on the basis of regional representation, together with the host of the previous and next Conference. It oversees the budget, the work programme, and the preparation of the next Conference. The Secretariat is based in Gland, Switzerland, and is hosted at the headquarters of the International Union for Conservation of Nature. It is small. It performs the functions of a treaty secretariat: servicing meetings, maintaining the Ramsar Sites Information Service, coordinating regional advisory work, managing communications, and supporting Parties in preparing designations and national reports. It has no inspectorate and no enforcement capacity. 5.3 The Scientific and Technical Review Panel The #Scientific_and_Technical_Review_Panel provides scientific and technical advice to the Conference and to the Standing Committee. It produces briefing notes, technical reports, and the Global Wetland Outlook series. It is the principal channel through which peer reviewed science enters the treaty process, and its influence on the vocabulary of the regime, particularly in relation to ecological character, ecosystem services, and restoration, has been considerable. 5.4 International Organisation Partners and the CEPA programme Six International Organisation Partners support the Convention formally: BirdLife International, the International Union for Conservation of Nature, the International Water Management Institute, Wetlands International, WWF, and the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust. They contribute technical expertise, field capacity, and advocacy, and they carry a substantial share of the practical implementation burden in countries where state capacity is thin. The programme on Communication, Capacity building, Education, Participation and Awareness, generally abbreviated as #CEPA, is the treaty's public engagement arm. Its most visible product is World Wetlands Day, observed each 2 February, which has become a fixture in the environmental calendar of schools, municipalities, and conservation agencies worldwide. CEPA is inexpensive, popular, and, in a regime with no enforcement powers, more important than it might first appear: reputational and normative influence is one of the few levers the Convention actually holds. 6. The Ecological and Socio Economic Rationale 6.1 Wetland functions and ecosystem services The case for the treaty rests on the disproportionate contribution of wetlands to human wellbeing and to biosphere function. It is useful to organise that contribution using the standard classification of #ecosystem_services. Provisioning services include fresh water for drinking, irrigation, and industry; fish and shellfish, which supply the primary animal protein for a very large share of the population of Asia and Africa; rice, which is grown in what are functionally managed wetlands and which feeds more people than any other crop; reeds, papyrus, timber, medicinal plants, and grazing. Regulating services include flood attenuation, in which floodplains and coastal marshes absorb and slow water that would otherwise arrive as a destructive pulse; coastal protection, in which mangroves and salt marshes dissipate wave energy and reduce storm surge; water purification, in which wetland sediments and vegetation trap sediment, retain nutrients, and break down organic pollutants; groundwater recharge; and climate regulation. The climate function is especially significant. #Peatlands cover a small share of the land surface but hold a stock of soil carbon comparable to that of the world's forests, and their drainage converts them from a sink to a substantial source of greenhouse gases. Coastal #blue_carbon systems, principally mangroves, salt marshes, and seagrasses, sequester carbon in sediment at rates per unit area that exceed those of terrestrial forests. Supporting services include the maintenance of nutrient cycles, sediment retention, and the provision of habitat. Wetlands are strongly disproportionate in their biodiversity contribution. Inland waters occupy a very small fraction of the surface of the planet yet host a large share of described vertebrate species, and freshwater biodiversity has declined faster than terrestrial or marine biodiversity over recent decades. Cultural services include recreation, tourism, aesthetic value, education, scientific research, and spiritual and religious significance. For many Indigenous and local communities the wetland is not a resource but a place with identity, ancestry, and law attached to it. The Convention has only recently begun to give this dimension serious attention, with resolutions at the fifteenth Conference addressing traditional knowledge and equitable governance explicitly. 6.2 The economics of wetlands Economic valuation has become a central tool of wetland advocacy, on the reasoning that ecosystems which appear to cost nothing will be treated as though they are worth nothing. Studies applying total economic valuation to individual Ramsar sites consistently find annual values that are large relative to the cost of managing the site, and they consistently find that a substantial portion of value lies in non market categories: regulating services, option value, and existence value. The Global Wetland Outlook 2025 develops this line of argument at the global scale, concluding that current rates of wetland loss and current levels of underinvestment are both economically and ecologically unsustainable, and that the contribution of wetlands is not reflected in policy, planning, or finance. Two cautions are necessary, and students should hold both. The first is technical. Benefit transfer, in which values estimated at one site are applied to another, is convenient but fragile. Meta analytical work on wetland valuation shows wide dispersion of estimates and limited explanatory power, which means that headline global figures should be treated as indicative of magnitude rather than as precise accounting. The second is political. Joshi et al. (2021) warn that an exclusively economic framing can itself become a technology of depoliticisation. If a wetland is valued at a certain number of dollars per hectare per year, then in principle it can be traded away for a development that generates a larger number. Valuation is a useful argument in a policy debate. It is a dangerous substitute for one. 7. Global Status and Trends 7.1 Extent Estimating wetland extent is genuinely difficult. Wetlands are seasonal, they are spectrally ambiguous in satellite imagery, they grade continuously into dry land, and national inventories are inconsistent where they exist at all. Historical baselines are worse. The most rigorous reconstruction to date combined national and subnational drainage records, land use maps, and simulated wetland extents to estimate loss through conversion to seven human land uses between 1700 and 2020 (Fluet-Chouinard et al., 2023). The study estimates a loss of about 3.4 million square kilometres of inland wetland, a net loss of roughly 21 per cent of global inland wetland area, driven principally by conversion to cropland. Importantly, that figure is lower than earlier estimates, which had extrapolated from regions of unusually severe loss. Loss has been concentrated in Europe, the United States, and China, and it accelerated sharply in the middle of the twentieth century. The Global Wetland Outlook 2025 reports a loss of approximately 411 million hectares since 1970, equivalent to about 22 per cent of wetland area, and projects that up to a fifth of the remaining wetland stock could be lost by 2050 under current trajectories. These two figures answer different questions and use different baselines, and students should be careful not to conflate them. The first is a three century reconstruction of inland wetland conversion. The second is a fifty five year assessment covering a broader wetland definition. The convergence on a loss of roughly one fifth to one quarter, however, is striking, and it is the single most important empirical fact about the subject. 7.2 Condition Extent is only half the story. A wetland that survives on a map may be functionally dead. The Outlook 2025 reports that approximately a quarter of remaining wetlands are in poor ecological condition and that the proportion is rising, with deterioration reported across Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean, and increasingly in Europe and North America. Most damning for the regime, the same assessment reports that around 12 per cent of designated Ramsar Sites are in declining ecological condition. This is the empirical centre of the article's argument. Designation is not management. A site can be listed, celebrated, printed on a stamp, and still be dying. 7.3 Drivers The drivers of wetland loss and degradation are well characterised and remarkably consistent across regions. Agricultural conversion and drainage remain the dominant historical and contemporary driver. Water abstraction and flow regulation, including dams, diversions, and groundwater over extraction, dry wetlands from the inside by removing the hydrological regime that defines them. Urban expansion and infrastructure eliminate peri urban wetlands, which are often the ones providing the most flood regulation value to the largest number of people. Pollution, particularly nutrient loading from fertiliser and untreated sewage, drives eutrophication and hypoxia. Aquaculture conversion, especially of mangroves and coastal lagoons, has transformed large areas of tropical coast. Invasive alien species restructure wetland food webs and choke open water. Resource extraction, including peat cutting, sand mining, and hydrocarbon development, removes the substrate itself. Climate change acts as a threat multiplier, altering precipitation regimes, increasing evaporative demand, raising sea levels, and shifting the phenology on which migratory species depend. Two features of this list deserve emphasis. First, almost every driver originates outside the wetland, usually in the catchment and usually in a sector, such as agriculture, energy, or housing, that is governed by a ministry with no wetland mandate. Second, almost every driver is a policy choice. Wetlands are not lost by accident. They are lost because a subsidy, a permit, a plan, or a price made losing them rational for someone. 8. National Implementation: Comparative Evidence The treaty operates through national action, and the most instructive evidence about it comes from national and site level studies. This section synthesises comparative material from several regions. 8.1 India: rapid designation, contested management India acceded to the Convention on 1 February 1982 and designated Chilika Lake in Odisha and Keoladeo National Park in Rajasthan as its first sites. Progress was slow for three decades. It then accelerated dramatically, and by 2026 India had designated around one hundred sites, placing it among the leading countries globally by number of designations. The Indian case is valuable precisely because it decouples designation from outcome so clearly. Biswas et al. (2022), in a bibliometric and analytical review of Indian Ramsar sites, document both the rapid growth of the network and the persistent research and management deficits attached to it: incomplete inventories, weak baseline data, and limited integration between the Ramsar designation and the domestic regulatory instrument, the Wetlands Conservation and Management Rules of 2017. Studies of individual sites reinforce the point. Work on Kolleru Lake documents the systematic conversion of a large coastal wetland into aquaculture ponds over several decades, with measurable trade offs among ecosystem services, notwithstanding the site's international status. The Chilika story, however, shows the other side. A site placed on the Montreux Record in 1993 became the subject of a sustained hydrological restoration effort and was removed from the Record in 2002. The difference between Chilika and Kolleru is not the treaty. It is domestic political attention, institutional ownership, and money. 8.2 China: designation, monitoring, and the pressure of development Mao et al. (2021) used remote sensing to assess the dynamics of Chinese Ramsar sites, documenting wetland change, quantifying anthropogenic threats, and drawing out implications for the Sustainable Development Goals. The study is important methodologically as well as substantively, because it demonstrates that satellite based monitoring can produce consistent, independent, and repeatable assessments of listed sites at national scale. It thereby offers a partial escape from the regime's dependence on self reported national data. It also documents that designation coexists with substantial ongoing pressure from land conversion, water infrastructure, and urban expansion. 8.3 Nepal: the management effectiveness gap made visible Thapa and Lindner (2023) applied the Ramsar Management Effectiveness Tracking Tool to the Jagadishpur Reservoir Ramsar Site in Nepal, a listed wetland that does not sit inside a nationally designated protected area. Converted to the standard reporting scale, overall management effectiveness scored 0.27 out of 1, a value the authors describe as inadequate and as requiring significant intervention by government with support from conservation partners. This finding deserves to be read carefully, because it isolates the exact failure this article is concerned with. The site is listed. It is internationally recognised. It has an information sheet lodged with the Secretariat. And it is not effectively managed. The authors note that sites lying outside the national protected area system tend to be neglected by the very agencies formally responsible for them. 8.4 Iceland: a high capacity state, a modest record The Icelandic case, examined in a 2025 evaluation of progress toward implementation of the Convention, is a corrective to the assumption that implementation failure is a problem of poor countries. Iceland is wealthy, administratively capable, and highly literate in environmental policy. The evaluation nonetheless documents inconsistent and declining wetland restoration rates, action deadlines that passed without published analysis of outcomes, and continuing tension between wetland protection and energy development. Capacity, in other words, is necessary but nowhere near sufficient. Political priority is the binding constraint. 8.5 Peru and the Andean wetlands: inventory as the first obstacle Romero-Mariscal et al. (2023) conducted a national survey and diagnosis of Peruvian wetlands and identified the fundamental prerequisite that many national programmes lack: a reliable, current, and spatially explicit #wetland_inventory. Without an inventory, a state cannot know what it has, cannot measure what it is losing, cannot prioritise what to designate, and cannot report meaningfully to the Convention. The absence of adequate inventories in a substantial number of Parties is one of the quietest and most consequential implementation failures in the regime. 8.6 Africa: cooperation, livelihoods, and the political economy of the catchment The African evidence base emphasises the inseparability of wetland conservation from rural livelihoods. Wetlands in the Sahel, the Zambezi basin, the Congo basin, and the East African lakes are working landscapes supporting fisheries, flood recession agriculture, grazing, and water supply for very large populations. Conservation that ignores these dependencies is neither just nor durable. The launch of the Southern African Ramsar Regional Initiative around the fifteenth Conference of the Parties, together with the emphasis in the Victoria Falls Declaration on resource mobilisation, reflects a growing recognition that African wetland conservation is a question of development finance as much as of ecology. 8.7 Synthesis of the comparative evidence Four generalisations emerge. First, the rate of designation is a poor predictor of ecological outcome. Countries with many sites do not necessarily have healthier wetlands. Second, the decisive variable is the strength of the domestic institution that owns the site, and whether that institution has budget, staff, legal authority over the catchment, and political cover. Third, the interface between the Ramsar designation and domestic law is frequently weak. Where designation has no operative consequence in the domestic permitting system, it is a label. Fourth, sites that fall outside the national protected area system are structurally disadvantaged, because no agency has an unambiguous mandate for them. 9. International Cooperation and Regime Synergies 9.1 Relations with the biodiversity regime The Convention on Wetlands predates the Convention on Biological Diversity by two decades, and the relationship between them has been productive but occasionally awkward. The Convention on Wetlands functions in practice as the lead implementation partner for wetlands within the broader biodiversity architecture. The adoption of the #Kunming_Montreal_Global_Biodiversity_Framework in 2022 changed the strategic environment considerably. Its target on restoration, which calls for effective restoration to be under way on a large share of degraded ecosystems, and its target on area based conservation, which calls for the effective conservation and management of thirty per cent of terrestrial, inland water, and coastal and marine areas, both bear directly on wetlands. The Ramsar network and the concept of other effective area based conservation measures are the obvious vehicles. Resolutions adopted at the fifteenth Conference explicitly sought to align Ramsar action with the Framework and to integrate wetland targets into national biodiversity strategies and action plans. This alignment is an opportunity and a risk. The opportunity is that wetlands gain access to the political attention and the finance flowing toward the biodiversity framework. The risk is what Bridgewater and Kim (2021) identify as drift: that a small, poorly funded treaty with a narrow original mandate becomes a service provider to larger regimes, adds obligations faster than it adds capacity, and loses the distinctive focus that justified its independent existence. 9.2 Relations with the climate regime The climate connection is now the strongest argument available to wetland advocates, and it cuts in both directions. Wetlands are a mitigation asset, because peatlands and coastal blue carbon systems store carbon at globally significant scale and release it when drained. They are also an adaptation asset, because floodplains, mangroves, and marshes reduce the damage caused by the hydrological extremes that climate change is intensifying. And they are a climate victim, because altered precipitation, higher evaporative demand, and sea level rise are transforming wetland hydrology directly. The practical policy implication, repeatedly emphasised at the fifteenth Conference, is that wetlands should be written explicitly into nationally determined contributions and national adaptation plans. Doing so is the most plausible route by which wetland conservation gains access to climate finance at a scale that the Convention's own budget can never approach. 9.3 Relations with the migratory species regime The link between the Convention and the agreements governing migratory species is the oldest and most natural in the system, given the treaty's ornithological origins. The Agreement on the Conservation of African Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds depends on the Ramsar network for the site level protection of flyway staging posts, and the resolutions adopted at the fifteenth Conference on waterbird flyways and on a global waterbird estimates partnership reaffirm and strengthen that dependence. Flyway conservation is one of the few areas in which the Convention's original design is precisely fit for the problem it faces. 9.4 Wetlands and the Sustainable Development Goals Wetlands are directly implicated in the Sustainable Development Goals, most obviously in the goal on clean water and sanitation, which includes a target on protecting and restoring water related ecosystems and an associated indicator on the change in the extent of water related ecosystems over time. They are also implicated in the goals on zero hunger, on sustainable cities, on climate action, on life below water, and on life on land. The Convention has repeatedly identified this linkage as strategically important, and the fifteenth Conference considered a report on how the treaty could further strengthen its contribution to the 2030 Agenda. The practical problem is data. Reporting on the extent of water related ecosystems requires exactly the inventory and monitoring capacity that many Parties lack, which returns the argument to Section 8.5. 10. Critical Assessment 10.1 What the Convention has achieved An honest assessment must begin with the achievements, because they are real. The treaty invented and institutionalised the idea that a wetland is an asset rather than a wasteland. That change in the default cultural and legal framing is its single greatest accomplishment, and it is invisible precisely because it has been so thoroughly absorbed. It produced a broad, functional legal definition of a wetland that has been adopted into domestic law across dozens of jurisdictions. It built the largest network of internationally recognised sites on the planet, and in doing so it created a constituency, a data set, and a reference point. It created and refined the concepts of #wise_use and #ecological_character, which are now standard analytical tools, and it produced technical guidance of genuine quality on inventory, assessment, and management planning. It has been institutionally durable, surviving fifty five years, five continents of political turbulence, and the arrival of much larger and better funded environmental regimes. And through the #CEPA programme, World Wetlands Day, and the Wetland City Accreditation scheme, it has done more than most treaties to make its subject matter publicly visible. 10.2 The five structural weaknesses Against that, five weaknesses recur throughout the evidence. The first is the absence of compliance machinery. The treaty has no inspectorate, no sanction, and no independent verification. The Montreux Record, its only naming instrument, requires the consent of the state being named. Article 3.2 obliges Parties to report changes in ecological character, but nothing follows if they do not. Compliance is, in the end, voluntary, and the evidence suggests that voluntary compliance is partial. The second is finance. A core budget of the order of fifteen million Swiss francs for a triennium, across 172 Parties, cannot fund monitoring, cannot fund restoration, and cannot fund enforcement. It can fund meetings, a small Secretariat, and guidance documents. The Convention is therefore structurally dependent on the budgets of national agencies and the goodwill of partner organisations. The failure of the fifteenth Conference to secure a breakthrough on long term financing, despite adopting an ambitious ten year strategic plan, is the clearest available illustration of the mismatch between ambition and means. The third is the designation and management gap. This is the finding that the article has returned to repeatedly. A listed site is a promise, not a protection. Management effectiveness assessments, where they have been conducted, frequently return inadequate scores (Thapa and Lindner, 2023), and the Convention's own assessment records that a significant fraction of listed sites are in declining condition. Kingsford et al. (2021) add that the network is not even assembled optimally: it is biased by region, by wetland type, and by political convenience. The fourth is data. National reporting is self assessed, inconsistently completed, and rarely independently verified. Many Parties lack a current national wetland inventory (Romero-Mariscal et al., 2023). A regime that cannot see the condition of its own subject matter cannot manage it, and cannot be held to account for failing to. The fifth is the depoliticisation of wetland conflict. Joshi et al. (2021) argue that the Convention's guidance treats wetland management as a technical optimisation problem when it is in fact a contest over water, land, and livelihoods, in which some actors hold far more power than others. Communities that depend most directly on a wetland are frequently the least represented in decisions about it, and the costs of conservation, in the form of lost access, are borne disproportionately by them. Recent resolutions on equitable governance, traditional knowledge, and youth engagement are a partial and welcome response, but they are recent, and they are resolutions. 10.3 Institutional drift Bridgewater and Kim (2021) offer the most influential structural diagnosis in the recent literature. Their argument is that the Convention has undergone institutional drift: it has expanded its thematic scope enormously, from waterfowl habitat to water security, climate, poverty, health, and urban planning, while its founding text, its funding, and its instruments have remained essentially unchanged. The result is an organisation whose formal remit has outgrown its institutional capability. Resolutions accumulate; capability does not. Their framing, of maladaptation and drift rather than simple failure, is analytically useful because it directs attention to the treaty's design rather than to the sincerity of its members. An alternative reading is possible, and students should consider it. It may be that the Convention was never intended to be, and cannot be, an enforcement body, and that judging it by the metric of global wetland extent is a category error. On this reading, the Convention is a norm generating and coordination institution, and its proper performance metric is whether wetlands are better recognised, better understood, and better represented in domestic policy than they would otherwise have been. By that measure it has done well. The counter argument, which this article finds more persuasive, is that a treaty whose stated mission is the conservation and wise use of all wetlands cannot indefinitely be excused from the question of whether wetlands are being conserved. 11. Emerging Frontiers 11.1 Earth observation and independent monitoring The most important technical development for the regime is the maturation of satellite based #remote_sensing. Freely available imagery archives, improved surface water products, radar sensors that see through cloud, and machine learning classification now make it possible to monitor wetland extent, inundation dynamics, and vegetation condition at national and global scale, repeatedly, cheaply, and independently of the state being assessed. Mao et al. (2021) demonstrate the approach across an entire national Ramsar network. The institutional implication is considerable. Independent monitoring would allow the Convention to escape its dependence on self reported data, would allow the Montreux Record to be populated on the basis of evidence rather than consent, and would make outcome based reporting feasible for the first time. It would also be politically explosive, which is precisely why it has not happened. 11.2 Restoration and the finance gap The strategic centre of gravity has shifted from protection to restoration, driven by the global restoration target in the biodiversity framework and by the recognition that the remaining stock of intact wetlands is insufficient to deliver the services societies now require. Restoration of peatlands, floodplains, and coastal wetlands is technically feasible and, in many settings, economically attractive when regulating services are counted. The obstacle is money. Restoration at the scale implied by international targets requires investment on a scale that has never been mobilised. Proposals for a dedicated global wetland restoration fund were discussed at the fifteenth Conference without resolution. The realistic sources of finance are climate finance, particularly for peatland and blue carbon systems, biodiversity finance under the Kunming Montreal framework, sovereign and municipal budgets that treat wetlands as flood infrastructure, and private investment in carbon and resilience. Each of these depends on the wetland community learning to speak the language of the sector that holds the money, which is a communication problem as much as a scientific one. 11.3 Urban wetlands and the Wetland City Accreditation Urban and peri urban wetlands are disappearing faster than any other category, and they are the wetlands whose regulating services matter most to the greatest number of people. They absorb urban floodwater, moderate the urban heat island, treat wastewater, and provide the only accessible nature for a large share of the world's population. The #Wetland_City_Accreditation scheme, in which cities are voluntarily recognised for safeguarding their wetlands, is one of the Convention's more inventive recent instruments, and thirty one further cities across sixteen countries were accredited at the fifteenth Conference. The scheme is unfunded and reputational, but it operates at the level of government, the municipality, where land use decisions are actually taken. Its potential is greater than its current profile suggests. 11.4 Indigenous knowledge, equity, and rights based conservation The resolutions adopted at the fifteenth Conference on equitable governance, on traditional knowledge, and on the recognition of other effective area based conservation measures mark a real, if belated, shift toward rights based conservation. The evidence base supporting that shift is now substantial across conservation science generally: territories under the stewardship of Indigenous peoples and local communities frequently sustain ecological condition at least as well as formally protected areas, and often better. For the Convention, the practical questions are whether local governance arrangements will be recognised as legitimate management for the purposes of the treaty, whether communities will have decision making authority rather than consultative status, and whether the benefits of designation will accrue to those who bear its costs. These are the questions Joshi et al. (2021) raised, and the treaty has now, at least formally, accepted that they must be answered. 11.5 Climate driven regime shifts and the problem of the moving baseline A final frontier is conceptual rather than technical. #Ecological_character, the pivot of the entire wise use framework, is defined at a point in time. Climate change makes that definition unstable. If precipitation regimes shift, if sea level rises, if evaporative demand increases, then the components and processes that characterised a wetland at the moment of designation may become unattainable, and management aimed at restoring them may be futile. Work on the natural regeneration of wetlands under climate change points toward an alternative logic, in which management supports the capacity of a system to reorganise rather than attempting to hold it in a historical state. Translating that ecological insight into the legal architecture of a treaty that obliges Parties to maintain ecological character is one of the most difficult and least resolved problems facing the regime. 12. Discussion: Pathways Forward The evidence assembled here supports a single overarching conclusion. The Ramsar Convention is a strong framework for recognition and a weak framework for delivery. Its outputs are excellent. Its impacts are not. Closing that gap does not require a new treaty, which would in any case be politically unobtainable. It requires a set of changes that are, individually, modest, and collectively, transformative. Shift reporting from effort to outcome. National Reports currently document activity. They should document condition. A small set of standardised indicators, applied to every listed site, covering extent, inundation regime, ecological condition, key species, and management effectiveness, would convert the reporting cycle from an exercise in narrative to an instrument of accountability. Make monitoring independent. Earth observation now permits consistent, repeatable assessment of listed sites without reliance on the assessed Party. Institutionalising a satellite based condition assessment for the entire network, published openly, would be the single most consequential reform available, and it is technically feasible today. Reform the Montreux Record. A register that requires the consent of the state being registered cannot function as an early warning system. Listing on the basis of independent evidence, with a right of reply, would restore its purpose. Fund the regime properly, and fund it from outside its own budget. The Convention will never be financed adequately from Party contributions. Its realistic path to scale is to make wetlands eligible, visible, and bankable within climate finance, biodiversity finance, disaster risk reduction budgets, and municipal water infrastructure spending. That requires the Convention to invest in the translation of wetland benefits into the metrics those sectors already use. Close the inventory gap. A programme of technical support to complete national wetland inventories in Parties that lack them would repay itself many times over, because every other function of the regime, from designation to reporting to restoration prioritisation, depends on it. Prioritise sites by need rather than by convenience. Kingsford et al. (2021) provide the analytical basis for a network assembled according to representativeness, connectivity, and threat, rather than according to what is already protected and politically easy. Take the third pillar seriously. International cooperation remains the least developed pillar. Wetland outcomes are determined in catchments, and catchments cross borders. The Convention should position itself as a participant in water diplomacy and basin governance rather than as an observer of it. Repoliticise wise use. Following Joshi et al. (2021), the guidance should acknowledge openly that wetland decisions distribute costs and benefits unequally, and should require that the people who bear the costs have authority in the decision. A realistic assessment must acknowledge that most of these reforms threaten the sovereignty sensitivities that made the treaty acceptable in 1971. That is the central political difficulty of the regime, and no amount of technical sophistication dissolves it. 13. Limitations Four limitations qualify the conclusions of this review. First, the review is narrative rather than systematic, and while inclusion decisions have been made transparently, they were not governed by a pre registered protocol. Second, the literature searched was predominantly in English, which under represents scholarship from several regions that are central to the subject. Third, several of the key quantitative claims, particularly those concerning the condition of listed sites and the proportion of wetlands in poor condition, derive from the Convention's own assessment processes and ultimately rest in part on self reported national data. They should be read as the best available estimates, not as independently verified measurements. This limitation is itself one of the findings of the article. Fourth, the international policy environment is moving quickly. The Strategic Plan for 2025 to 2034 has only recently entered its implementation phase, and it is too early to evaluate it. This article assesses a regime in transition. 14. Conclusion The Convention on Wetlands, adopted at Ramsar in 1971, remains the only global treaty devoted to a single ecosystem type, and it retains the distinction of being the first of the modern multilateral environmental agreements. Across five and a half decades it has assembled 172 Contracting Parties, listed more than 2,500 Wetlands of International Importance covering approximately 253 million hectares, and constructed a conceptual and technical apparatus, organised around #wise_use and #ecological_character, that has reshaped how governments, courts, and scientists think about marshes, rivers, peatlands, and coasts. Judged as an instrument of recognition, coordination, and norm creation, the treaty has been a success. Judged as an instrument for halting the loss of wetlands, it has not. Global wetland extent has continued to contract, roughly a quarter of remaining wetlands are in poor ecological condition, and a significant fraction of the treaty's own flagship sites are reported to be in decline. Designation, as the evidence from Nepal, India, Iceland, and elsewhere shows with uncomfortable clarity, is not management. The reasons are structural rather than accidental. The regime has no compliance machinery, negligible finance, incomplete data, a listing process biased toward the convenient, and a body of guidance that treats deeply political conflicts over water and land as technical problems. Some scholars describe the result as institutional drift, in which the treaty's ambitions have outgrown its instruments. None of this argues for abandoning the Convention. It argues for finishing it. The tools that would close the gap between designation and delivery are now available: independent earth observation monitoring, outcome based reporting, restoration finance drawn from the climate and biodiversity regimes, completed national inventories, network design based on ecological need, and governance that gives real authority to the communities who live with wetlands rather than merely consulting them. Each of these is achievable within the existing legal framework. What is required is not a new treaty but the political decision to allow the existing one to be measured, funded, and obeyed. The fifteenth Conference of the Contracting Parties, meeting at Victoria Falls in 2025 under the theme of protecting wetlands for our common future, adopted a strategic plan running to 2034 and a declaration calling for exactly this shift in ambition. Whether the decade that follows is remembered as the moment the regime finally turned the curve, or as one more triennium of resolutions passed and wetlands drained, will not be determined by the text of the treaty. It will be determined by what happens in catchments, ministries, municipalities, and budgets, in the 172 countries that have promised, for more than fifty years, to look after the wettest and most valuable ground they own. Acknowledgements The author acknowledges the scholarship of the wetland science and environmental law communities whose published work is cited below, and the technical outputs of the Scientific and Technical Review Panel of the Convention on Wetlands. Funding This review received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial, or not for profit sectors. Declaration of Competing Interest The author declares no competing interests. Data Availability No new data were generated. All sources are cited in the reference list. References Biswas, R. M., Nag, S., Halder, S., and Kumar, R. P. (2022). Assessment of wetland potential and bibliometric review: a critical analysis of the Ramsar sites of India. Bulletin of the National Research Centre, 46(1), 59. https://doi.org/10.1186/s42269-022-00740-0 Bridgewater, P., and Kim, R. E. (2021). 50 years on, w(h)ither the Ramsar Convention? A case of institutional drift. Biodiversity and Conservation, 30(14), 3919-3937. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10531-021-02281-w Fluet-Chouinard, E., Stocker, B. D., Zhang, Z., Malhotra, A., Melton, J. R., Poulter, B., Kaplan, J. O., Klein Goldewijk, K., Siebert, S., Minayeva, T., Hugelius, G., Joosten, H., Barthelmes, A., Prigent, C., Aires, F., Hoyt, A. M., Davidson, N., Finlayson, C. M., Lehner, B., Jackson, R. B., and McIntyre, P. B. (2023). Extensive global wetland loss over the past three centuries. Nature, 614(7947), 281-286. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-022-05572-6 Gell, P. A., Finlayson, C. M., and Davidson, N. C. (2023). An introduction to the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands. In P. A. Gell, N. C. Davidson, and C. M. Finlayson (Eds.), Ramsar Wetlands: Values, Assessment, Management (pp. 1-36). Elsevier. https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-817803-4.00018-8 Joshi, D., Gallant, B., Hakhu, A., De Silva, S., McDougall, C., Dubois, M., and Arulingam, I. (2021). Ramsar Convention and the wise use of wetlands: rethinking inclusion. Ecological Restoration, 39(1-2), 36-44. https://doi.org/10.3368/er.39.01-02.36 Kingsford, R. T., Bino, G., Finlayson, C. M., Falster, D., Fitzsimons, J. A., Gawlik, D. E., Murray, N. J., Grillas, P., Gardner, R. C., Regan, T. J., Roux, D. J., and Thomas, R. F. (2021). Ramsar wetlands of international importance: improving conservation outcomes. Frontiers in Environmental Science, 9, 643367. https://doi.org/10.3389/fenvs.2021.643367 Mao, D., Wang, Z., Wang, Y., Choi, C. Y., Jia, M., Jackson, M. V., and Fuller, R. A. (2021). Remote observations in China's Ramsar sites: wetland dynamics, anthropogenic threats, and implications for sustainable development goals. Journal of Remote Sensing, 2021, 9849343. https://doi.org/10.34133/2021/9849343 Rattan, R., Sharma, B., Kumar, R., Saigal, V., and Shukla, S. (2021). Ramsar Convention. In S. Sharma and P. Singh (Eds.), Wetlands Conservation: Current Challenges and Future Strategies (pp. 21-38). Wiley. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781119692621.ch2 Romero-Mariscal, G., Garcia-Chevesich, P. A., Morales-Paredes, L., Arenazas-Rodriguez, A., Ticona-Quea, J., Vanzin, G., and Sharp, J. O. (2023). Peruvian wetlands: national survey, diagnosis, and further steps toward their protection. Sustainability, 15(10), 8255. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15108255 Thapa, K., and Lindner, A. (2023). Beyond protected areas: assessing management effectiveness of a Ramsar site in Nepal. Diversity, 15(5), 593. https://doi.org/10.3390/d15050593 Zivec, P., Balcombe, S. R., McBroom, J., Sheldon, F., and Capon, S. J. (2023). Natural regeneration of wetlands under climate change. Frontiers in Environmental Science, 11, 989214. https://doi.org/10.3389/fenvs.2023.989214 Convention on Wetlands. (2025). Global Wetland Outlook 2025: Valuing, Conserving, Restoring and Financing Wetlands. Secretariat of the Convention on Wetlands, Gland, Switzerland. Convention on Wetlands. (2025). Resolutions of the 15th Meeting of the Conference of the Contracting Parties, Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe, 23-31 July 2025. Secretariat of the Convention on Wetlands, Gland, Switzerland. Convention on Wetlands. (2025). Strategic Plan of the Convention on Wetlands 2025-2034. Secretariat of the Convention on Wetlands, Gland, Switzerland. #Ramsar_Convention_1971 #Convention_on_Wetlands #Wetland_Conservation #Wise_Use_Of_Wetlands #Wetlands_Of_International_Importance #Ramsar_Sites #Ecological_Character #Wetland_Governance #Multilateral_Environmental_Agreements #International_Environmental_Law #Global_Wetland_Outlook #Wetland_Restoration #Wetland_Ecosystem_Services #World_Wetlands_Day #Environmental_Policy_Studies
- Governing the Drylands: A Critical Review of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (1994) and Its Evolving Response to Desertification, Land Degradation and Drought
The United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD), adopted in Paris on 17 June 1994 and entered into force on 26 December 1996, is the only legally binding international agreement that links environment, development and sustainable land management. It focuses on the arid, semi-arid and dry sub-humid zones, collectively known as the drylands, where soil, water and vegetation are under constant stress from both climate and human pressure. This article reviews the origins, legal architecture, scientific foundations, implementation record and future prospects of the Convention. It traces the shift from the original bottom-up, action-programme model of the 1990s to the target-driven model built around Land Degradation Neutrality (LDN) and Sustainable Development Goal target 15.3. It examines the three sub-indicators used for global reporting, namely trends in land cover, land productivity and soil organic carbon stocks, and discusses their strengths and weaknesses. Regional experience is compared through the African Great Green Wall, China's Three-North Shelterbelt Programme, and drought policy in Central Asia and the Middle East. The article then analyses the outcomes of the sixteenth Conference of the Parties held in Riyadh in December 2024, including the Riyadh Global Drought Resilience Partnership and the failure to agree on a binding drought instrument. Evidence from recent scientific assessments shows that around 77.6 per cent of Earth's land experienced drier conditions in the three decades to 2020 compared with the previous thirty years, and that drylands now cover roughly 40.6 per cent of the ice-free land surface. The review concludes that the Convention has succeeded as a norm-setting and knowledge-generating body but remains weak in finance, enforcement and monitoring at local scale. Six priorities for research and policy are proposed, covering indicator reform, land tenure security, drought governance, blended finance, integration with the climate and biodiversity regimes, and the systematic use of local and Indigenous knowledge. Keywords: desertification; drylands; land degradation neutrality; drought governance; sustainable land management; multilateral environmental agreements; Sustainable Development Goal 15.3; soil organic carbon 1. Introduction Land is finite. It is also the surface on which almost all food, fibre, timber and freshwater supply systems depend. When land loses its ability to produce, the consequences are not only ecological but also economic, social and political. The problem is sharpest in the world's #drylands, the belt of #arid, #semi_arid and #dry_sub_humid regions that stretch across northern and southern Africa, the Middle East, Central and South Asia, parts of China, the interior of Australia, the western Americas and the Mediterranean rim. The international community gave this problem a name and a legal home in 1994. The United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification, usually shortened to #UNCCD, was adopted in Paris on 17 June 1994 and entered into force on 26 December 1996. It currently has 197 Parties, which includes every United Nations member state that has ratified it plus the European Union. It is the youngest of the three treaties that emerged from the 1992 #Rio_Earth_Summit process, the other two being the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Convention on Biological Diversity. Together these three are usually called the #Rio_Conventions. The UNCCD is unusual among environmental treaties in three ways. First, its subject matter is not a global commons such as the atmosphere or the high seas, but soil, which is almost always under national and often private control. Second, its founding text explicitly links environmental protection to poverty reduction and rural development, rather than treating them as separate agendas. Third, its original design placed a very strong emphasis on participation from below, requiring affected countries to build #National_Action_Programmes with the involvement of the very communities whose land was degrading. Thirty years on, the record is mixed. The Convention has kept the issue of #land_degradation on the international agenda, produced a globally agreed measurement framework, and generated a target that now sits inside the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. Yet the physical trend has not been reversed. A 2024 assessment prepared for the Convention's Science-Policy Interface concluded that some 77.6 per cent of Earth's land experienced drier conditions during the three decades to 2020 relative to the previous three decades, and that drylands expanded by about 4.3 million square kilometres, so that they now cover roughly 40.6 per cent of the planet's land area excluding Antarctica (Vicente-Serrano et al., 2024b). Between 2015 and 2019 the world was losing at least 100 million hectares of healthy and productive land each year. This article has four aims. It sets out what the Convention actually says and how its institutions work, in language accessible to students who are new to environmental law and policy. It explains the science of dryland classification and degradation that the Convention rests on. It evaluates implementation, using regional cases and the most recent Conference of the Parties. Finally, it identifies where the regime is failing and what a realistic reform agenda might look like. The remainder of the paper is organised as follows. Section 2 describes the review method. Section 3 covers the historical and legal origins of the treaty. Section 4 explains dryland science and the concept of #desertification. Section 5 sets out the institutional architecture. Section 6 traces the shift to #Land_Degradation_Neutrality. Section 7 examines monitoring and indicators. Section 8 compares regional implementation. Section 9 analyses #drought governance and the Riyadh Conference of the Parties. Section 10 addresses finance. Section 11 discusses the social dimensions. Section 12 considers synergies with the climate and biodiversity regimes. Section 13 offers a critical assessment, and Section 14 sets out a research and policy agenda before the conclusion in Section 15. 2. Method This paper is a structured narrative review rather than a systematic review in the strict Cochrane or PRISMA sense. That choice reflects the nature of the subject. The literature on the Convention spans international law, political science, soil science, remote sensing, agricultural economics and development studies, and no single database captures it adequately. Three bodies of material were used. The first is the primary legal and institutional material: the text of the Convention itself, its five regional implementation annexes, and the decisions of the Conference of the Parties, in particular decision 3/COP.12 of 2015, which adopted the definition of Land Degradation Neutrality, and the decisions taken at the sixteenth session held in Riyadh in December 2024. The second is the peer-reviewed scientific literature published mainly between 2021 and 2026. Searches were run in Scopus and Web of Science using combinations of the terms desertification, drylands, land degradation neutrality, aridity, sustainable land management, drought policy and UNCCD. Priority was given to review articles, global assessments and studies that evaluate policy outcomes rather than describe local field trials. The third is the grey literature produced by the Convention's own Science-Policy Interface and by the Global Land Outlook series, together with independent conference reporting. Studies were included when they addressed the Convention directly, when they provided global or regional evidence on the state of drylands, or when they evaluated a major restoration programme. Studies were excluded when they were purely technical without a policy dimension, or when they duplicated findings already covered by a more recent synthesis. Because the article is written for a student readership, technical concepts are explained on first use, and quantitative claims are attributed to the source that produced them. Two limitations should be stated openly. First, the review is weighted towards English-language sources, which under-represents work published in Arabic, Chinese, French, Russian and Spanish on regions where #desertification is most severe. Second, evaluation of policy effectiveness in this field is genuinely difficult, because the counterfactual, that is, what the land would have looked like without intervention, is rarely observable. Claims about what the Convention has or has not achieved should therefore be read as informed judgements, not as measured effects. 3. Historical and Legal Origins 3.1 From the Sahel drought to Nairobi The modern international concern with #desertification begins with the catastrophic Sahelian drought of the late 1960s and early 1970s. Hundreds of thousands of people died, livestock herds collapsed, and images of advancing sand entered the global media. In response, the United Nations convened the Conference on Desertification in Nairobi in 1977, which produced a Plan of Action to Combat Desertification. That plan largely failed. It was under-funded, it was implemented in a top-down manner through national bureaucracies, and it rested on a scientific model that turned out to be wrong. The dominant image at the time was of the #Sahara advancing southward like a tide, and the natural response to a tide is a wall. Much of the effort therefore went into tree-planting barriers, which frequently died. Later satellite work showed that the southern edge of the Sahara does not advance in a simple line but expands and contracts with rainfall, and that the more serious process is a patchy, human-driven loss of soil productivity around settlements, water points and cultivated fields. The failure of the Nairobi plan is important because it shaped the Convention that followed. The drafters of 1994 were determined to avoid the same mistakes. 3.2 Rio 1992 and the negotiation of the Convention At the 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development in Rio de Janeiro, African states pressed hard for a treaty on desertification. Industrialised countries were less enthusiastic, seeing the issue as a development problem rather than a global environmental one. The compromise was Chapter 12 of #Agenda_21, which called for an international convention, and the General Assembly duly established a negotiating committee in late 1992. Negotiations ran through 1993 and the first half of 1994. The text was adopted on 17 June 1994, a date now observed annually as the World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought. The Convention entered into force on 26 December 1996, ninety days after the fiftieth ratification. The first #Conference_of_the_Parties met in Rome in 1997, and the permanent secretariat was established in Bonn. 3.3 What the Convention actually says Article 1 provides the definitions that structure everything else. #Desertification is defined as land degradation in arid, semi-arid and dry sub-humid areas resulting from various factors, including climatic variations and human activities. Land degradation is defined as a reduction or loss of the biological or economic productivity of rainfed cropland, irrigated cropland, or range, pasture, forest and woodland, arising from land use or from processes such as soil erosion, deterioration of soil properties, and long-term loss of natural vegetation. Two features of this definition deserve attention. First, it is geographically bounded: degradation in a humid tropical forest is not desertification under the treaty, however serious it may be. Second, it is explicitly dual-causal: it names both climate and human activity, which allowed states with very different views on responsibility to sign. Article 2 sets the objective, which is to combat desertification and mitigate the effects of drought in affected countries, particularly in Africa, through effective action at all levels, supported by international cooperation and partnership arrangements, in the framework of an integrated approach consistent with Agenda 21, with a view to contributing to the achievement of sustainable development in affected areas. Articles 9 to 11 create the core implementation tool, the National Action Programme, along with subregional and #Regional_Action_Programmes. Article 10 requires that these programmes be developed with the effective participation of non-governmental organisations and of local populations, including women and youth. This participatory requirement is one of the Convention's genuine innovations. Article 24 establishes the #Committee_on_Science_and_Technology, and Article 21 addresses financial mechanisms, creating the #Global_Mechanism, a body designed not to disburse money itself but to mobilise and channel it. 3.4 The regional implementation annexes The Convention is unusual in having regional annexes that form an integral part of the treaty. There are five: Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean, the Northern Mediterranean, and Central and Eastern Europe, the last of which was added at the start of the 2000s. Each annex adapts the general obligations to regional conditions. The Africa annex is the most detailed and most demanding, reflecting the political bargain that produced the treaty. This annex structure means that the UNCCD is, in practice, five partly different regimes operating under one legal roof. That flexibility is a strength, but it also fragments implementation and makes global comparison difficult. 4. The Science of Drylands and Desertification 4.1 Defining a dryland The Convention does not leave the meaning of dryland to intuition. It uses the #aridity_index, defined as the ratio of mean annual precipitation to mean annual potential evapotranspiration. Potential evapotranspiration is the amount of water that would evaporate from soil and transpire from plants if water were freely available. The ratio therefore captures water supply relative to atmospheric water demand. The standard thresholds are as follows. Hyper-arid areas have a ratio below 0.05. Arid areas fall between 0.05 and 0.20. Semi-arid areas fall between 0.20 and 0.50. Dry sub-humid areas fall between 0.50 and 0.65. The Convention covers the arid, semi-arid and dry sub-humid classes. Hyper-arid deserts such as the core Sahara are deliberately excluded, on the logic that a true desert cannot be desertified. This exclusion has been questioned in recent literature, since hyper-arid margins are also under pressure and their populations are growing. Drylands are not empty. They support around two billion people, a large share of the world's cultivated systems and roughly half of global livestock. Recent syntheses put drylands at approximately 45 per cent of the terrestrial land surface when hyper-arid zones are included, supporting close to 40 per cent of the global population (Coleine et al., 2024). The Convention's 2024 aridity assessment, which uses a slightly different accounting, reports drylands at 40.6 per cent of land area excluding Antarctica, home to about 2.3 billion people, with worst-case projections of up to five billion dryland residents by the end of the century (Vicente-Serrano et al., 2024b). 4.2 Aridity, drought and desertification are not the same thing Students frequently confuse three terms, and so, at times, do policy documents. Aridity is a long-term climatic condition. A place is arid because, on average, evaporative demand exceeds rainfall. Aridity is permanent in human timescales and is not a disaster in itself. Ecosystems adapt to it. Drought is a temporary deviation from normal water availability. It can occur in a wet region as well as a dry one. It is an event, with a beginning and an end, although its effects can persist for years. Desertification, as used by the Convention, is the persistent loss of the land's biological or economic productivity within a dryland. It is a process, and unlike drought it is not self-correcting. Confusing these three has real consequences. If policymakers treat #desertification as a drought problem, they invest in emergency relief rather than in the long-term management of soil and vegetation. If they treat it as an aridity problem, they may conclude that nothing can be done because the climate cannot be changed. The Convention's framing insists that the process is at least partly driven by land use, and that it is therefore reversible. 4.3 The physical and biological mechanisms Several interacting mechanisms drive degradation in drylands. Vegetation loss is usually the trigger. #Overgrazing by livestock, #deforestation for fuelwood and charcoal, and the expansion of cropping into marginal rangeland all remove the plant cover that protects soil from wind and rain. Once cover is lost, #soil_erosion accelerates. In drylands, wind erosion is often the dominant pathway. Fine particles are lifted and transported, sometimes across continents, contributing to #sand_and_dust_storms that damage health, infrastructure and crops far from the source area. Soil chemistry then deteriorates. #Soil_organic_carbon, which binds soil particles, holds water and supplies nutrients, is lost first. Field evidence from Central Asia shows the scale of this effect: a transect survey across roughly 1,000 kilometres of the Amu Darya River Basin found that desertified sites had about 52 per cent less soil organic carbon than sites under natural vegetation, along with reduced nutrient availability, higher sand content and lower plant species richness (Zhang et al., 2025). #Salinization is a distinct pathway, driven mainly by irrigation without adequate drainage. Water applied to fields evaporates and leaves dissolved salts behind. Over decades, salts accumulate until crops fail. The Aral Sea basin is the most cited case, but the process affects irrigated land from Pakistan to Egypt to the western United States. Below ground, the microbial communities that underpin nutrient cycling and soil structure are also affected. Dryland soils host highly specialised microbial assemblages and biological soil crusts, and there is now good evidence that these communities are being reshaped by both #climate_change and land-use pressure, with consequences for the #ecosystem_services on which restoration depends (Coleine et al., 2024). 4.4 The human drivers It is tempting to present degradation as a technical failure of land management. The more accurate account is that it is usually a rational response to bad incentives. A pastoralist who has no secure claim to a grazing area has no reason to rest it. A farmer with a one-year lease will not plant trees that mature in fifteen. A household with no access to credit will sell its livestock during a drought at the worst possible moment, and will then clear more land to recover. Insecure #land_tenure, absent credit, weak extension services, subsidies that favour expansion over intensification, and conflict all push individuals towards choices that degrade land even when they know better. A recent global review of desertification control identified precisely this cluster of constraints, listing poor policy and low public awareness, institutional gaps, social and cultural barriers, limited access to credit and modern technology, absence of standardised methods, and inconsistent estimates of the extent of desertification as the main obstacles to effective action (Ahmed et al., 2024). Notably, the same review argues that the Convention has not met its land restoration goals, a judgement that is uncomfortable but widely shared in the recent literature. 5. Institutional Architecture 5.1 The Conference of the Parties The #Conference_of_the_Parties is the supreme decision-making body. It met annually until 2001 and biennially thereafter. Recent sessions include COP14 in New Delhi in 2019, COP15 in Abidjan in 2022, COP16 in Riyadh in December 2024, and COP17, scheduled for Mongolia in 2026. The Conference adopts decisions by consensus. This is both the source of the Convention's legitimacy and the source of its weakness. Consensus means that no state can be bound against its will, which encourages participation, but it also means that a small number of reluctant Parties can block any strong measure. The failure at Riyadh to agree on a legally binding drought instrument is the clearest recent illustration. 5.2 The Secretariat and the Global Mechanism The Secretariat, based in Bonn, services the Conference, compiles reports and coordinates the Convention's public work. It is small relative to the climate secretariat, and its core budget is modest. The #Global_Mechanism was created to mobilise finance. It does not hold a fund of its own. Instead it helps countries build investment plans, package projects and connect with donors and, more recently, with private investors through initiatives such as Business4Land. Critics have long argued that a body which cannot disburse money has limited leverage over states that need money. The #Global_Environment_Facility serves as the Convention's financial mechanism, with land degradation established as a dedicated focal area in the early 2000s. Even so, the sums involved are small compared with the estimated need. 5.3 Review and science bodies The Committee for the Review of the Implementation of the Convention, usually abbreviated to CRIC, examines national reports. Reporting is done through the Performance Review and Assessment of Implementation System, known as #PRAIS, an online platform through which countries submit indicator data on a four-year cycle. The #Committee_on_Science_and_Technology advises the Conference. For many years it was criticised as ineffective and politicised, and in 2013 the eleventh Conference of the Parties responded by creating the #Science_Policy_Interface, a small standing body of scientists and government-nominated experts tasked with producing policy-relevant syntheses. The Science-Policy Interface has become the Convention's most productive scientific organ, and its 2024 report on global aridity trends is the most influential document it has yet produced. Scholarship on global environmental governance has begun to treat the Interface as an interesting case of how expert advice does, or does not, translate into intergovernmental decisions (Velander and De Donà, 2024). 5.4 Strategy frameworks The Convention has operated under two successive strategies. The Ten-Year Strategic Plan covered 2008 to 2018 and introduced results-based management. The current 2018 to 2030 Strategic Framework aligns the Convention with the Sustainable Development Goals and places #Land_Degradation_Neutrality at its centre. An independent midterm evaluation of the Framework was reviewed by Parties in 2023, and its findings fed into the Riyadh negotiations. 6. From Combating Desertification to Land Degradation Neutrality 6.1 Why a new concept was needed By around 2010, the Convention faced an awkward situation. It had a treaty, a secretariat, and a set of national action programmes, but it had no measurable goal. The phrase "combat desertification" cannot be audited. Parties could report activity without reporting outcomes, and donors had no way of knowing whether their money achieved anything. The response, championed by the then Executive Secretary in the run-up to the 2012 Rio+20 Conference, was the idea of a land degradation neutral world. The concept was formally defined by the Convention at COP12 in Ankara in 2015 and simultaneously written into the 2030 Agenda as target 15.3 of Sustainable Development Goal 15. 6.2 What neutrality means Land Degradation Neutrality is defined as a state whereby the amount and quality of land resources necessary to support ecosystem functions and services and to enhance food security remain stable or increase within specified temporal and spatial scales and ecosystems. The logic is one of balance. Some degradation is unavoidable, because societies build roads, expand cities and open mines. Neutrality does not forbid this. It requires that any unavoidable loss be counterbalanced by an equivalent gain elsewhere within the same land type and the same national accounting period. The result should be no net loss. The operational hierarchy is usually summarised as avoid, reduce, reverse. First, avoid new degradation by protecting land that is still healthy, because prevention is far cheaper than repair. Second, reduce ongoing degradation through #sustainable_land_management on land that is already under pressure. Third, reverse past degradation through #restoration and rehabilitation. The order matters: a country that plants trees while allowing healthy rangeland to be ploughed has not achieved neutrality. By the Convention's own count, more than 130 of its 197 Parties have set voluntary national LDN targets, and more than 100 participate in the associated target-setting initiative. These are #voluntary_targets, not binding commitments, which is a critical legal point. 6.3 The scholarly reception Academic assessment of neutrality has been broadly supportive of the concept but critical of its implementation. A bibliometric and thematic review of the LDN literature published between 2013 and 2021 found rapid growth in the number of studies, heavy reliance on the three standard indicators, and a striking lack of research on the drivers of neutrality and on future projections (Feng et al., 2022). The same review emphasised that neutrality is a dynamic balance, not a static condition, and that it involves real trade-offs with other Sustainable Development Goals. Expanding restored area can reduce the land available for food production, which pushes against the goal of zero hunger, and can constrain economic activity, which pushes against the goal of decent work and growth. Three further criticisms recur. The first is the fungibility problem. Neutrality assumes that a hectare lost in one place can be compensated by a hectare gained in another. Ecologically this is questionable. A drained wetland and a replanted hillside are not equivalent, and the ecosystem services they supply are not interchangeable. Socially it is worse: the people who lose land are rarely the people who gain it. The second is the baseline problem. Neutrality is measured against a baseline, usually derived from data around 2000 to 2015. A country that had already degraded most of its land before that baseline is rewarded, because it has little left to lose. A country that has conserved its land faces a stricter constraint. This creates a perverse incentive that mirrors well-known problems in climate policy. The third is the scale problem. Neutrality is assessed at national level. A nation can be neutral in aggregate while particular districts collapse. Since degradation is experienced locally, national neutrality can coexist with local catastrophe. None of these objections is fatal. All of them, however, mean that neutrality should be treated as a policy framing device rather than as a scientifically exact accounting rule. 7. Monitoring, Indicators and the Measurement Problem 7.1 The three sub-indicators Progress under target 15.3 is measured through indicator 15.3.1, the proportion of land that is degraded over total land area. The Convention is the custodian agency for this indicator and has published detailed methodological guidance for its calculation (Sims et al., 2021). The indicator is built from three sub-indicators. Trends in #land_cover use satellite-derived classifications to detect conversions between categories such as forest, grassland, cropland, wetland, artificial surface and bare land. Certain transitions are treated as degradation, for example the conversion of forest or grassland to bare ground or to artificial surfaces. Trends in #land_productivity use time series of vegetation indices, most commonly the normalised difference vegetation index, as a proxy for net primary productivity. Declines beyond a statistical threshold are flagged. Trends in carbon stocks are represented, at present, by #soil_organic_carbon stocks in the topsoil. Because direct measurement across whole countries is impractical, most reporting estimates soil carbon change indirectly from land cover change using standard coefficients. The three sub-indicators are combined using a rule known as #one_out_all_out. If any one sub-indicator shows significant negative change, the area is counted as degraded. The rule is deliberately conservative, on the reasoning that it is safer to over-detect degradation than to miss it. 7.2 Strengths of the system The framework has three real virtues. It is global, applying the same logic to every country. It is largely free of cost to the reporting country, because default global datasets and open tools are provided, and small administrations can produce a report without a national satellite programme. And it is transparent, because the underlying data and methods are published. Open-source tools have made this practical. National teams increasingly use cloud-based #remote_sensing platforms to compute the sub-indicators, which has substantially lowered the technical barrier to reporting. 7.3 Weaknesses of the system The weaknesses are equally real. Vegetation greenness is a weak proxy for land health. A rangeland invaded by an unpalatable woody shrub may appear greener on a satellite image while being useless to the herders who depend on it. Conversely, a well-managed rangeland grazed at a sustainable intensity may appear less green than an ungrazed one. Greenness measures photosynthesis, not value. Soil carbon is rarely measured directly. Because most countries derive it from land cover, the sub-indicator is not truly independent, and genuine improvements in soil management within an unchanged land cover class are largely invisible. The one-out-all-out rule interacts badly with noisy data. Satellite time series contain artefacts, and rainfall variability alone can produce apparent productivity declines in a dry decade that reverse in a wet one. Distinguishing a real degradation trend from climate-driven fluctuation remains difficult. Spatial resolution is coarse relative to the scale at which land is managed. Default global products cannot resolve the field or the village. Degradation processes such as gully formation, nutrient mining and the loss of specific useful species can therefore proceed undetected. Finally, and most importantly, the indicator measures state and trend but says nothing about causation, equity or governance. It cannot tell a policymaker why land is degrading or who is bearing the cost. The consequence is that reported figures on the extent of #land_degradation vary widely between assessments. Recent syntheses have identified this inconsistency in estimates as itself a barrier to effective action, because it undermines the credibility of the policy case (Ahmed et al., 2024; Islam et al., 2025). 8. Regional Implementation: Four Cases 8.1 Africa and the Great Green Wall The #Great_Green_Wall is the most visible dryland restoration initiative in the world. Launched by the African Union in 2007, it originally aimed at a band of trees running roughly 8,000 kilometres across the #Sahel from Senegal to Djibouti. The concept quickly evolved. Rather than a literal wall of trees, which the ecological evidence did not support, the initiative was redefined as a mosaic of restored and productive landscapes. The headline target is the restoration of 100 million hectares of degraded land by 2030, together with the creation of ten million jobs and the sequestration of substantial quantities of carbon. The initiative has become closely linked to the Convention, which supports it through the Great Green Wall Accelerator, launched in 2021 after a pledge of around USD 19 billion at the One Planet Summit. Assessment of results is contested, and students should understand why. There are three different kinds of evidence, and they do not agree. The first is programme reporting. Governments and agencies report hectares under restoration. These figures are large but often reflect area treated rather than area durably improved. The second is remote sensing. A satellite-based assessment of the Great Green Wall region reported an increasing trend in mean vegetation index over the past two decades and evidence that desert margins are retreating in parts of the corridor, despite a slightly decreasing precipitation trend (Deng et al., 2024). This is genuinely encouraging, although attribution is difficult, because regional greening in the Sahel has multiple causes, including recovery from the great droughts, changed land use and carbon dioxide fertilisation. The third is site-level and social science evidence, which is far more sceptical. Detailed work in Senegal, one of the most committed implementing countries, has found that the great majority of planted sites show no greening beyond what would have occurred naturally, and that the main documented benefits to rural communities are periodic wage employment and social services rather than durable ecological gain. The broader critique is that pledges made at the global level have not translated into local socio-ecological change, and that only a small fraction of the restoration target has been achieved. Independent commentary has repeatedly noted that progress has been slow, constrained by insufficient and unpredictable finance, weak cross-border coordination, political instability and insecurity across large parts of the Sahel, and limited community ownership. The Great Green Wall therefore illustrates the central lesson of this article. Political ambition and financial pledges are necessary but not sufficient. Without secure #land_tenure, functioning local institutions, and long-term maintenance finance, planted trees die and restored land degrades again. 8.2 China and the Three-North Shelterbelt Programme China offers the contrasting case. The #Three_North_Shelterbelt Programme, launched in 1978 and planned to run to 2050, covers thirteen provinces across northern, northwestern and northeastern #China, an area of some four million square kilometres. Its original aim was to raise forest cover in the programme area from around five per cent to roughly fifteen per cent. The scale of implementation is without parallel. Long-term evaluations using multi-source remote sensing and ecosystem service modelling report broad improvement across four decades: vegetation cover has increased, soil erosion risk has declined, and wind erosion control, soil conservation and water conservation services have generally strengthened across much of the region. Government reporting indicates that national forest cover has risen substantially since the mid-twentieth century and that the area of desertified land has begun to contract. The programme is nevertheless instructive about limits as well as achievements. Three criticisms recur in the scientific literature. Water is the binding constraint. Planting trees in semi-arid land increases transpiration. Where planting density exceeds what local rainfall can support, trees draw down soil moisture and groundwater, may die in later drought years, and can reduce downstream water availability. Research on China's Loess Plateau has shown that revegetation there is approaching the limits of sustainable water supply. Species choice matters. Early phases relied heavily on fast-growing monocultures, which are vulnerable to pests and provide limited habitat value. Later phases have shifted towards native shrubs, grasses and mixed plantings, and towards enclosure and natural regeneration rather than planting. Governance context matters. The Chinese model rests on centralised planning, sustained state finance over decades, and the capacity to enforce grazing bans and land-use zoning. Most Convention Parties do not have any of these. Attempts to transplant the model without the institutional conditions that make it work are unlikely to succeed, which is one reason the earlier framing of the Great Green Wall as an African version of the Chinese wall proved misleading. 8.3 Central Asia and the legacy of irrigation Central Asia presents the salinization pathway in its most severe form. Large-scale cotton irrigation from the Amu Darya and Syr Darya rivers, developed in the Soviet period, diverted so much water that the Aral Sea largely disappeared, exposing a saline seabed that is now a major source of dust. Downstream, poor drainage has salinised extensive irrigated areas. The field evidence cited earlier from the Amu Darya basin, showing roughly half the soil organic carbon lost at desertified sites relative to natural vegetation, illustrates how deep the biophysical damage runs (Zhang et al., 2025). The Convention has responded regionally, including through a strategy for drought risk management and mitigation in Central Asia for the period 2021 to 2030, but the underlying problem is transboundary water allocation, which lies outside the treaty's competence. 8.4 The Middle East and North Africa The Middle East and North Africa region combines high #water_scarcity, rapid population growth, heavy dependence on food imports and, in several countries, armed conflict. It is also the region where the Convention held its first Conference of the Parties in 2024, in Riyadh. Two features distinguish the region. The first is the prominence of #sand_and_dust_storms, which impose large health and economic costs and cross borders freely, making them a natural subject for regional cooperation. A regional initiative on sand and dust storms was launched at Riyadh. The second is the availability, in the Gulf states, of significant public finance, which has begun to alter the political economy of the Convention. The pledges announced at Riyadh, discussed in the next section, came disproportionately from regional institutions. 9. Drought Governance and the Riyadh Conference of the Parties 9.1 Drought as the Convention's growing agenda Although the Convention's title refers to desertification, its full name includes the mitigation of the effects of #drought, and several articles address it directly. For most of the treaty's history, drought was a secondary theme. That has changed. The reasons are straightforward. Drought events have become more frequent and more intense, with the Convention reporting an increase of close to 30 per cent in frequency and intensity since 2000. Drought is among the costliest and deadliest of natural hazards, and its impacts fall hardest on the poorest countries. Above all, drought is politically legible in a way that slow soil degradation is not: it produces visible emergencies that governments must answer for. The policy argument advanced by the Convention is a shift from reactive crisis response to proactive #drought_preparedness. In practice this means national drought plans, #early_warning_systems, drought risk financing arranged before the event rather than after it, and land and water management that builds #resilience in advance. 9.2 What happened at Riyadh The sixteenth Conference of the Parties met in Riyadh from 2 to 13 December 2024, coinciding with the Convention's thirtieth anniversary. It was the largest session in the treaty's history, with more than 20,000 participants from close to 200 countries, and the first UNCCD Conference held in the Middle East and North Africa region. The central negotiating question was whether to create a global drought regime, and if so whether it should be a legally binding protocol or a non-binding framework. Developing countries, and the African Group in particular, pushed for a binding instrument. A number of developed countries and several major economies resisted, preferring a voluntary framework. After two weeks of negotiation, Parties could not agree. The question was deferred to #COP17 in Mongolia in 2026. This is the clearest evidence available of the Convention's structural weakness. On the single issue where the political and scientific case for stronger law was strongest, consensus decision-making produced deadlock. The session was not a failure in every respect. Parties adopted a political declaration and 39 decisions, covering rangelands and pastoralism, land tenure, gender, sand and dust storms, science-policy interaction and private-sector engagement. The most concrete outcome was the launch of the #Riyadh_Global_Drought_Resilience_Partnership, announced by the host government, which attracted pledges reported at more than USD 12 billion, including a very large commitment from the Arab Coordination Group. The Partnership is designed to shift the response to drought from crisis management to long-term resilience, and it targets the most drought-vulnerable countries. Its secretariat is hosted by the Convention in Bonn, and a United Nations multi-partner trust fund acts as trustee. Other Riyadh outcomes included the Riyadh Action Agenda, organised around land restoration, drought resilience and agrifood systems; further funding for the Great Green Wall from European donors; a commitment to mobilise the private sector through Business4Land; and the launch of tools such as an international drought resilience observatory. 9.3 Interpreting the outcome Two readings are possible, and students should be able to argue both. The optimistic reading is that Riyadh was a turning point in resourcing. Pledges of this magnitude had never previously been associated with the Convention, and the creation of a standing partnership with a secretariat and a trust fund gives drought policy an institutional home it lacked. The sceptical reading is that pledges are not disbursements, that a voluntary partnership is exactly the kind of instrument that has under-delivered in the past, and that the refusal to negotiate binding obligations means that states retain full discretion over whether to act. Given the Convention's own estimate that at least USD 2.6 trillion in total investment is needed by 2030 to restore more than one billion hectares of degraded land and build drought resilience, USD 12 billion in pledges, however welcome, does not close the gap. 10. Finance 10.1 The size of the gap The financial arithmetic of the Convention is stark. Against a stated requirement of roughly USD 2.6 trillion by 2030, actual flows dedicated to land restoration and drought resilience are a small fraction. The Global Environment Facility allocation to land degradation across a four-year replenishment cycle is measured in hundreds of millions of dollars, not trillions. The gap has three causes. First, land degradation lacks a single, tradable global commodity comparable to the tonne of carbon dioxide. Climate finance grew in part because carbon created a unit of account. Soil health has no equivalent. Second, restoration returns are long, uncertain and largely non-monetary. A restored watershed produces cleaner water, less flooding and more biodiversity, but usually no revenue stream that an investor can capture. Third, the countries with the greatest need have the least fiscal space, the highest borrowing costs and, in many cases, the weakest project pipelines. 10.2 Emerging instruments Several approaches are being tried. The Convention has actively courted private capital through Business4Land and through the promotion of the LDN Fund, an impact investment vehicle. Uptake has been modest. Carbon markets are increasingly presented as a route to funding dryland restoration, since restored soils and vegetation sequester carbon. The potential is real, but the risks are significant: soil #carbon_sequestration in drylands is slow and reversible, measurement is expensive, and poorly designed carbon projects have a documented record of displacing local land users. Debt-for-nature and debt-for-climate swaps have been proposed for heavily indebted dryland states, but the transaction costs are high and the amounts so far small. The most promising route, arguably, is not new finance at all but the redirection of existing agricultural subsidies. Global agricultural support is measured in hundreds of billions of dollars annually, much of it structured in ways that encourage expansion, water overuse and monoculture. Reforming that support so that it rewards #sustainable_land_management would dwarf anything the Convention can raise through voluntary pledges. This, however, requires domestic political decisions that lie well beyond the treaty's reach. 11. Social Dimensions: Tenure, Gender, Livelihoods and Conflict 11.1 Land tenure There is now broad agreement in the literature that secure tenure is a precondition for restoration. People invest in land they expect to keep. In much of the dryland world, tenure is insecure, overlapping or informal. Customary rights, particularly the mobile grazing rights of pastoral communities, are frequently unrecognised in statutory law, which treats rangeland as vacant or state land available for allocation. The Convention has moved on this issue, and land tenure was a substantive item at Riyadh, informed by the Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure. Progress remains slow because tenure reform touches the core of domestic political power. 11.2 Gender Women in dryland communities are typically responsible for collecting water and fuelwood, for much of the labour in food production, and for household food security. They are simultaneously the least likely to hold formal land rights. Degradation therefore increases women's labour burden while giving them the least authority over land-use decisions and the least access to credit and extension. The Convention adopted a Gender Action Plan in 2017 and has pursued campaigns linking women's land rights to restoration outcomes. The evidence that #gender_equality in land rights improves restoration outcomes is reasonably strong, but implementation depends on national law. 11.3 Pastoralism and rangelands #Rangelands cover a very large share of the dryland surface, and #pastoralism is often the most efficient use of land that is too dry or too variable for reliable cropping. Mobility is not backwardness; it is a rational strategy for exploiting patchy and unpredictable forage. Policy has often failed to recognise this. Sedentarisation programmes, the enclosure of grazing land for cropping, and the fragmentation of migration routes have all reduced the flexibility on which pastoral systems depend, with the result that livestock concentrate in smaller areas and degrade them. The Convention's growing attention to rangelands, reinforced at Riyadh and connected to the designation of an international year focused on rangelands and pastoralists, is a welcome correction. 11.4 Migration and conflict The relationship between degradation, #migration and conflict is frequently oversimplified. Popular accounts present a direct chain from drought to displacement to violence. The academic evidence supports a more careful statement. Environmental stress is best understood as a threat multiplier. It interacts with weak governance, existing grievances, competition over resources and the availability of weapons. Degradation rarely causes conflict by itself, and most people affected by degradation do not migrate internationally; they move short distances, often to cities, or they diversify into non-farm work. For the Convention, the practical implication is that land restoration should be treated as one component of a broader resilience and #poverty reduction agenda, not as a security intervention. Framing it as counter-terrorism, as has sometimes been done with the Great Green Wall, distorts priorities and risks militarising land policy. 12. Synergies with the Climate and Biodiversity Regimes The three Rio Conventions address problems that are physically inseparable but institutionally separate. Land is a large carbon store. Degradation releases carbon; restoration sequesters it. Restoration therefore contributes directly to the objectives of the #UNFCCC, and land-based measures appear in a large share of countries' nationally determined contributions. Conversely, climate change intensifies aridity and drought, worsening the problem the UNCCD exists to address. Recent global evidence indicates that the accumulation of multiple global change stressors reduces soil carbon worldwide, which strengthens the case for treating land and climate policy together (Sáez-Sandino et al., 2024). Land is also habitat. Degradation is among the largest drivers of #biodiversity loss, and restoration is central to the targets of the #Convention_on_Biological_Diversity, including the commitment to restore a substantial share of degraded ecosystems by 2030. The Convention has explicitly argued that Land Degradation Neutrality can serve biodiversity objectives as well as land objectives. Despite this, coordination remains limited. The three treaties have separate secretariats, separate reporting cycles, separate funding streams and separate national focal points, often in different ministries. Countries therefore report similar information three times in incompatible formats. The Rio Trio initiative launched around COP16 is intended to improve alignment, and joint work programmes exist, but the deeper problem is structural: each convention has its own membership, mandate and negotiating politics, and none is willing to subordinate itself to the others. For students, this is a general lesson about international environmental law. Problems are systemic; institutions are sectoral. The gap between the two is where implementation fails. There is also a risk of perverse interaction. Climate mitigation policies that promote large-scale afforestation or bioenergy plantations can, if poorly sited, consume water, displace pastoralists and reduce biodiversity in drylands. #Nature_based_solutions are not automatically benign, and the Convention has an important role in insisting that climate-driven land interventions do not degrade the very systems they claim to protect. 13. Critical Assessment 13.1 What the Convention has achieved Four achievements are defensible. It established desertification as a legitimate international issue with a permanent institutional home, which was not obvious in 1992. It produced an agreed definition, an agreed measurement framework and an agreed global target through indicator 15.3.1 and SDG target 15.3. Before this, countries could not even agree on how much land was degraded. It has generated authoritative scientific synthesis through the Science-Policy Interface, most notably the 2024 aridity assessment, which for the first time documented the global drying trend with a defensible methodology (Vicente-Serrano et al., 2024b). It embedded #participation and the involvement of local populations in its founding text at a time when most environmental treaties dealt only with states. 13.2 Where it has failed Five failures are equally defensible. The trend has not been reversed. Land continues to degrade, drylands continue to expand, and the 2030 neutrality target will not be met globally. The Convention has no compliance mechanism. There is no non-compliance procedure, no penalty, no dispute settlement in practice. Obligations are procedural, requiring countries to prepare programmes and submit reports, not substantive. Finance has never approached need, and the Global Mechanism has never had the leverage its designers imagined. Reporting is weak. National reports are incomplete, late and of variable quality, and the indicator framework, as discussed, cannot detect the forms of degradation that matter most at local scale. The Convention's core concept has drifted. Beginning as a treaty about drylands, it now speaks the language of land degradation everywhere, which broadens its relevance but dilutes its distinctiveness and puts it into competition with the climate and biodiversity regimes for attention and money. 13.3 The underlying problem The deepest difficulty is that #desertification is not primarily an international problem. It is a domestic problem with international consequences. Ozone depletion could be solved by an international treaty because the emitting industries were few and substitutes existed. Land degradation is produced by the daily decisions of hundreds of millions of farmers and herders operating under national laws, national markets and national incentive structures. A treaty can supply norms, methods, money and legitimacy. It cannot supply secure tenure, functioning extension services, rural credit or the political will to reform agricultural subsidies. Those are national tasks. Judged as a treaty, the Convention has done reasonably well. Judged by the state of the world's drylands, the international system as a whole has not. 14. Research and Policy Agenda Six priorities emerge from this review. Reform the indicators. The current three sub-indicators are a reasonable global compromise but a poor management tool. Research should develop complementary measures of land health that capture soil biological function, species composition, water-holding capacity and the value of land to its users, and that can be applied at scales relevant to management. Recent work on integrating soil microbial and biological crust indicators into degradation assessment points in a useful direction (Coleine et al., 2024). Alongside this, sub-national reporting should be encouraged so that national neutrality does not mask local collapse. Make tenure the entry point. Restoration projects should not be funded unless tenure arrangements are clear and the people who will maintain the land have a secure and recognised interest in it. This should become a condition of finance rather than an aspiration in a decision text. Complete the drought regime. COP17 should deliver, at minimum, a binding framework requiring every Party to maintain a national drought plan, an early warning system and a pre-arranged financing mechanism. If a full protocol is politically impossible, a framework with mandatory procedural obligations and transparent review would still represent progress over the present position. Redirect existing finance. Rather than seeking new pledges, the Convention should focus its advocacy on the reform of agricultural support so that public money stops rewarding practices that degrade land. This is where the largest available sums sit. Integrate genuinely with the climate and biodiversity regimes. A common national reporting platform across the three Rio Conventions, with shared spatial data and a single national land focal point, would reduce burden and improve coherence. It would also make trade-offs visible, which is the first step to managing them. Take local knowledge seriously. Dryland communities have managed variability for centuries through mobility, water harvesting, agroforestry, seed diversity and rules for common property. #Farmer_managed_natural_regeneration, in which farmers protect and prune naturally occurring tree stumps and seedlings rather than planting nursery seedlings, has produced some of the most durable and cheapest regreening in the Sahel. #Agroforestry, #water_harvesting through simple earthworks, and grazing rotation are all low-cost and locally adapted. Integrating this #indigenous_knowledge with scientific monitoring is repeatedly identified in the recent literature as one of the most promising directions available (Ahmed et al., 2024; Islam et al., 2025). Beyond these six, several open scientific questions deserve attention. The attribution of Sahelian greening between climate recovery, carbon dioxide fertilisation and management remains unsettled. The water limits of large-scale afforestation in semi-arid zones are not well quantified outside China. The permanence of soil carbon gains in drylands under a warming climate is uncertain. And the socio-economic evaluation of restoration programmes, as opposed to their biophysical evaluation, is still remarkably thin. 15. Conclusion The United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification was created because a group of mainly African states insisted, against considerable resistance, that the slow ruin of dryland soils deserved the same standing in international law as climate change and biodiversity loss. Three decades later, that insistence looks prescient. The most recent global assessment shows that three-quarters of the Earth's land has become drier, that drylands have expanded by an area larger than a third of India, and that the number of people living in them is rising steeply. The Convention's contribution has been real but bounded. It has produced definitions, a measurement framework, a global target and an increasingly credible scientific voice. It has not produced enforcement, adequate finance, or a reversal of the trend. Its central innovation, Land Degradation Neutrality, is a useful organising idea and a flawed accounting rule. Its most significant recent moment, the Riyadh Conference of the Parties, delivered substantial pledges but no binding law on drought. The honest conclusion is that the Convention is necessary but not sufficient. Drylands will be saved, if they are saved, by national policy: by giving herders and farmers secure rights to the land they work, by removing subsidies that pay people to degrade it, by investing in the unglamorous business of extension, credit and local institutions, and by treating water as the scarce resource it is. The Convention's proper role is to supply the norms, the methods, the money and the pressure that make those national decisions more likely. For the student of environmental governance, the UNCCD is therefore an unusually instructive case. It shows what international law can do, which is to define a problem, create a shared language for it and keep it on the agenda. It also shows, with unusual clarity, what international law cannot do on its own. Hashtags #UNCCD_1994 #CombatDesertification #DrylandsGovernance #LandDegradationNeutrality #SDG_15_3 #DrylandRestoration #DroughtResilience #SustainableLandManagement #SoilHealth #AridZoneManagement #DesertificationResearch #RioConventions #LandRestoration #EnvironmentalGovernance #ClimateAndLand References Ahmed, Z., Gui, D., Abd-Elmabod, S. K., Murtaza, G., and Ali, S. (2024). An overview of global desertification control efforts: Key challenges and overarching solutions. Soil Use and Management, 40(4), e13154. https://doi.org/10.1111/sum.13154 Blicharska, M., Haddad, F., Riccardi, T., and Smithers, R. J. (2025). Global presumed drylands: Drivers, pressures, state, impacts, responses. Journal of Environmental Planning and Management, 68(14), 3411-3438. Coleine, C., Delgado-Baquerizo, M., DiRuggiero, J., Guirado, E., Harfouche, A. L., Perez-Fernandez, C., Singh, B. K., Selbmann, L., and Egidi, E. (2024). Dryland microbiomes reveal community adaptations to desertification and climate change. The ISME Journal, 18(1), wrae056. https://doi.org/10.1093/ismejo/wrae056 Deng, A., Hao, X., and Qu, J. J. (2024). A preliminary assessment of land restoration progress in the Great Green Wall Initiative region using satellite remote sensing measurements. Remote Sensing, 16(23), 4461. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs16234461 Feng, S., Zhao, W., Zhan, T., Yan, Y., and Pereira, P. (2022). Land degradation neutrality: A review of progress and perspectives. Ecological Indicators, 144, 109530. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2022.109530 Islam, W., Zeng, F., Siddiqui, J. A., Zhihao, Z., Du, Y., Zhang, Y., Alshaharni, M. O., and Khan, K. A. (2025). Combating desertification: Comprehensive strategies, challenges, and future directions for sustainable solutions. Biological Reviews, 100(4), 1594. Sáez-Sandino, T., Maestre, F. T., Berdugo, M., Gallardo, A., Plaza, C., García-Palacios, P., Guirado, E., Zhou, G., Mueller, C. W., Tedersoo, L., Crowther, T. W., and Delgado-Baquerizo, M. (2024). Increasing numbers of global change stressors reduce soil carbon worldwide. Nature Climate Change, 14, 740-745. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-024-02019-w Sims, N. C., Newnham, G. J., England, J. R., Guerschman, J., Cox, S. J. D., Roxburgh, S. H., Viscarra Rossel, R. A., Fritz, S., and Wheeler, I. (2021). Good Practice Guidance. SDG Indicator 15.3.1, Proportion of Land That Is Degraded Over Total Land Area, Version 2.0. United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification, Bonn. United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (2022). Global Land Outlook, Second Edition: Land Restoration for Recovery and Resilience. UNCCD Secretariat, Bonn. Velander, S., and De Donà, M. (2024). Leveraging windows of opportunity for expertise to matter in global environmental governance: Insights from the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification. Frontiers in Climate, 5, 1325030. https://doi.org/10.3389/fclim.2023.1325030 Vicente-Serrano, S. M., Pricope, N. G., Toreti, A., Morán-Tejeda, E., Spinoni, J., Ocampo-Melgar, A., Archer, E., Diedhiou, A., Mesbahzadeh, T., Ravindranath, N. H., Pulwarty, R. S., and Alibakhshi, S. (2024a). The United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification report on rising aridity trends globally and associated biological and agricultural implications. Global Change Biology, 30(12), e70009. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.70009 Vicente-Serrano, S. M., Pricope, N. G., Toreti, A., Morán-Tejeda, E., Spinoni, J., Ocampo-Melgar, A., Archer, E., Diedhiou, A., Mesbahzadeh, T., Ravindranath, N. H., Pulwarty, R. S., and Alibakhshi, S. (2024b). The Global Threat of Drying Lands: Regional and Global Aridity Trends and Future Projections. A Report of the Science-Policy Interface. United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification, Bonn. Zhang, P., He, M., Wang, J., Huang, L., Yang, H., Song, G., Zhao, J., and Li, X. (2025). Desertification reduces organic carbon content and nutrient availability in dryland soils: Evidence from a survey in the Amu Darya River Basin. Land Degradation and Development, 36(4), 1181-1194. https://doi.org/10.1002/ldr.5420
- Fair and Equitable Sharing of Benefits from the Utilization of Genetic Resources: A Critical Review of the Nagoya Protocol (2010), Its Implementation Record, and the Digital Sequence Information Turn
The Nagoya Protocol on Access to Genetic Resources and the Fair and Equitable Sharing of Benefits Arising from their Utilization was adopted in 2010 and entered into force on 12 October 2014. It is the main legal instrument that turns the third objective of the Convention on Biological Diversity into concrete obligations. This article reviews the origins, legal design, national implementation, and practical effects of the #Nagoya_Protocol, and asks a simple question: after more than a decade in force, has the Protocol delivered fairness for the countries and communities that host the world's #biodiversity? The study uses a doctrinal and narrative review method. It reads the text of the Protocol alongside peer reviewed studies published mainly between 2020 and 2026, and it examines national laws, sectoral case studies, and recent treaty developments. The findings are mixed. On the positive side, the Protocol has created a global norm of #sovereign_rights over #genetic_resources, has produced more than one hundred national access laws, and has given #Indigenous_peoples and #local_communities a formal seat in decisions about their knowledge. On the negative side, monetary flows to provider countries remain small and poorly documented, #transaction_costs are high for small research groups, and the bilateral model built on #prior_informed_consent and #mutually_agreed_terms fits physical samples far better than it fits data. The rise of #digital_sequence_information exposed this weakness. The response has been a shift toward multilateral solutions: the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, Decision 16/2 of the sixteenth Conference of the Parties, and the launch of the Cali Fund in February 2025. The article argues that the Protocol should now be understood as one node in a wider regime complex that also includes the plant treaty, the WHO Pandemic Agreement, the high seas biodiversity agreement, and the 2024 WIPO treaty on patent disclosure. The article closes with recommendations for policymakers, research institutions, and students, and with a research agenda for measuring whether benefit sharing is actually reaching the people it was designed to reach. Keywords: Nagoya Protocol; access and benefit sharing; genetic resources; traditional knowledge; digital sequence information; Cali Fund; biodiversity governance; international environmental law 1. Introduction Biological diversity is not spread evenly across the planet. A small number of countries, most of them in the tropics and most of them low or middle income, hold a very large share of the world's species. The scientific and industrial capacity to turn that diversity into medicines, crops, enzymes, cosmetics, and diagnostic tools is concentrated somewhere else, mostly in high income countries. For most of the twentieth century this imbalance produced a one way flow. Plants, microbes, insects, and human knowledge about them moved out of biodiversity rich regions. Patents, products, and profits accumulated elsewhere. Very little came back. Critics gave this pattern a name, #biopiracy, and the word stuck because it captured something real. The #Convention_on_Biological_Diversity, opened for signature at the Rio Earth Summit in 1992, tried to change the logic. It did two things at once. It confirmed that States have sovereign rights over the natural resources within their territory, and it declared that the fair and equitable sharing of benefits arising from the use of genetic resources is one of the three objectives of the Convention, standing beside #conservation and #sustainable_use. In principle this was a bargain. Provider countries would open the door to researchers and companies. Users would share what came out of the research. In practice the bargain was written in general language and left almost everything to national law. Twenty years of frustration followed. The #Nagoya_Protocol is the attempt to make the bargain operational. It was adopted at the tenth Conference of the Parties to the Convention, held in Nagoya, Aichi Prefecture, Japan, in October 2010. It entered into force on 12 October 2014, ninety days after the fiftieth ratification. Today it has been ratified by more than one hundred and forty Parties, and it has driven the adoption of well over one hundred national #access_and_benefit_sharing laws around the world. The Protocol has a simple architecture. Access to genetic resources requires the #prior_informed_consent of the providing country unless that country decides otherwise. The terms of use, including what benefits will be shared and how, are set out in a contract known as #mutually_agreed_terms. Countries in which users are based must take measures to make sure that resources used inside their borders were obtained lawfully. This is the compliance pillar, and it is the genuine innovation of the Protocol, because before 2010 a provider country that had been wronged had almost no way to reach a user in a foreign jurisdiction. More than ten years of practice have produced a large body of experience, and the experience is uncomfortable. Some of the discomfort comes from users. Taxonomists, microbiologists, plant breeders, and small biotechnology firms report that the paperwork is heavy, that national rules are unclear, and that a project which crosses several borders can require several separate permits, each with its own timeline. Some of the discomfort comes from providers. Regulators in biodiversity rich countries report that they are still waiting for the benefits, that they cannot see what happens to a sample once it leaves the country, and that the arrival of #bioinformatics has made the whole physical permit system look outdated. When a researcher can download a genome from a public database and never touch a plant, what exactly is the permit controlling? That last question is the heart of the current debate. #digital_sequence_information, usually shortened to DSI, is the term used in the Convention process for the data derived from genetic material, including nucleotide sequences and, depending on the definition adopted, related data. Digital sequences are copied, combined, and reused at almost zero cost. Modern biology depends on open #public_databases. Trying to force a bilateral permit system onto that reality risks either paralysing science or being simply ignored. Parties to the Convention accepted this at their fifteenth Conference in December 2022, and agreed in Decision 15/9 to build a #multilateral_mechanism, including a global fund. Two years later, at the sixteenth Conference in Cali, Colombia, that decision was operationalised. The #Cali_Fund was launched in Rome in February 2025. This article has four aims. First, to explain the Protocol clearly and accurately, in language a student can follow, without losing legal precision. Second, to review what the recent literature says about how the Protocol has actually worked in practice across several sectors. Third, to place the Protocol inside the wider set of treaties that now govern genetic resources, because reading the Protocol alone gives a misleading picture. Fourth, to assess honestly whether the promise of #equity has been met, and to suggest what would have to change for it to be met. The article is written for a student and early career research audience. It follows a structure familiar from journal articles: background, literature review, method, findings organised thematically, discussion, limitations, and conclusion. Where the law is contested, the article says so rather than pretending there is agreement. 2. Background and Historical Development 2.1 The era of common heritage Before 1992, plant and microbial genetic material was widely treated as a common heritage of humankind. In practical terms this meant free access. Collectors, botanical gardens, agricultural research centres, and pharmaceutical companies gathered material more or less at will. The moral language of common heritage sounded generous. The economic effect was not. Free access ran in one direction, from the biodiverse South to the industrial North, while the products of that access were enclosed by #intellectual_property rights and sold back at commercial prices. Several well known episodes shaped the political mood. A patent dispute over the use of the neem tree, another over turmeric for wound healing, and long running arguments about a plant used by the San peoples of southern Africa as an appetite suppressant, all became symbols of #misappropriation. Whether every case was legally a theft is debatable. Politically the cases did their work. They convinced governments in the Global South that free access without return was not neutral, and that a legal correction was needed. A second set of examples came from microbiology. Heat stable enzymes isolated from microorganisms in hot springs became central to the polymerase chain reaction and therefore to the whole of modern molecular biology, generating extraordinary commercial value with no benefit returning to the place the organism came from. Cases like this made the point that value does not depend on the size or charisma of an organism. A bacterium in a mud pool can be worth more than a forest of timber. 2.2 The Convention on Biological Diversity, 1992 The Convention replaced common heritage with #sovereign_rights. Article 3 confirms that States have the sovereign right to exploit their own resources according to their own environmental policies. Article 15 states that the authority to determine access to genetic resources rests with national governments and is subject to national legislation, that access shall be on mutually agreed terms, and that it shall be subject to prior informed consent unless the Party decides otherwise. Article 8(j) commits Parties, subject to their national law, to respect and maintain the knowledge and practices of Indigenous and local communities, to promote their wider application with the approval and involvement of those communities, and to encourage the equitable sharing of the benefits. These provisions were a diplomatic achievement and a drafting problem. They set a direction, but they created no procedure. There was no way of proving where a sample came from. There was no obligation on the country where a user was based to check anything. A provider country could pass a strict law, and a user in another country could ignore it with almost no legal risk. The result, for most of the 1990s, was a legal regime that changed the rhetoric of #bioprospecting without changing the flows. 2.3 The Bonn Guidelines and the road to Nagoya In 2002 the Parties adopted the Bonn Guidelines on Access to Genetic Resources and Fair and Equitable Sharing of the Benefits Arising out of their Utilization. The Guidelines were voluntary. They were useful as a template for drafting #national_legislation and contracts, and they introduced vocabulary that survives to this day, including the idea of a national focal point and a competent national authority. But being voluntary was precisely the problem the developing country coalition wanted to solve. Later that year, at the World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg, governments called for negotiation of an international regime on benefit sharing. The mandate was formalised, and negotiations ran for the rest of the decade, driven by a group of megadiverse countries. The negotiations were slow and bitter. The main fault lines are still visible in the final text. Providers wanted the Protocol to cover derivatives and to apply retroactively to material collected before the Convention. Users wanted narrow scope, clear temporal limits, and above all #legal_certainty. Providers wanted strong compliance measures in user countries, including a #patent_disclosure requirement. Users resisted anything that touched patent law. Providers wanted the Protocol to cover pathogens like everything else. Public health agencies warned that a permit requirement in the middle of an outbreak could cost lives. 2.4 Adoption, entry into force, and structure The compromise text was adopted on 29 October 2010. It is short, thirty six articles and an annex, and it is deliberately flexible. It entered into force on 12 October 2014. The annex is important and often overlooked: it lists examples of #monetary_benefits, such as access fees, milestone payments, royalties, licence fees, and research funding, and #non_monetary_benefits, such as sharing of research results, collaboration in scientific research and development programmes, participation in product development, #technology_transfer, institutional #capacity_building, and training. The inclusion of a long non monetary list matters, because in practice most benefits that flow under #ABS agreements are non monetary, and because a purely financial reading of the Protocol misses much of what is actually happening on the ground. 3. Literature Review The scholarship on the Protocol can be grouped into five streams, and it is worth separating them because they often talk past one another. The first stream is doctrinal and legal. It analyses the meaning of terms such as utilization, derivative, and country of origin, and it examines how national laws translate the Protocol into enforceable rules. Edited volumes that compare domestic implementation across many jurisdictions belong here, and they show a striking degree of divergence. The Protocol permits flexibility, and Parties have used it, with the result that the same research project can face very different obligations depending on which border it crosses. The second stream is the user side literature, written mainly by scientists and by institutions that hold biological collections. It is largely critical, though rarely hostile to the aims of the Protocol. Studies of non commercial biodiversity research argue that researchers frequently do not know that the rules apply to them, that university administrations are unprepared, and that the risk of accidental non compliance is high. Work on microbial resources documents years of uncertainty in a single European jurisdiction about whether cultivated microorganisms even fall inside the scope of the national regime, and shows how that uncertainty froze collaborations. Studies in the coffee sector show that #prior_informed_consent can be slow to obtain in countries with limited administrative capacity, and that the burden falls hardest on small firms and individual researchers rather than on the multinationals the rules were aimed at. Work in animal health argues that the Protocol was drafted with plants and bioprospecting in mind and that its application to pathogens is a poor fit with the way veterinary and public health laboratories actually operate. A study of the Australian situation shows how a system that is voluntary or fragmented at the national level pushes the real gatekeeping role onto herbaria, journals, and funding bodies. The third stream is the provider side and equity literature. It insists that the user side complaints, whatever their merit, cannot be allowed to reset the terms of a bargain that has not yet delivered. Analyses of implementation in Brazil show that domestic debate is shaped less by international obligations than by contests between agribusiness, bioeconomy advocates, environmental agencies, and traditional communities. Work with Indigenous scholars and communities argues that formal legal consent procedures can coexist with real inequality if the community has no independent legal advice, no ability to monitor what happens downstream, and no bargaining power. A detailed account of a maize project in Oaxaca, involving Indigenous farmers and a commercial partner, has become a reference point in this debate precisely because it shows how contested the meaning of a fair agreement can be even when the formal steps are followed. The fourth stream is the DSI literature, and it is the most active. One group of scientists has argued forcefully that treating sequence data as if it were a physical sample would break open science without generating meaningful revenue, and that the provider and user categories collapse once data are combined across dozens of countries in a single analysis. Another group, often closer to provider country positions, argues that if data can substitute for material then leaving data outside the regime empties the third objective of content. The convergence, reflected in influential contributions in the general science literature, has been toward a multilateral, decoupled model in which access to data stays open and benefit sharing happens through a fund rather than through case by case contracts. This is, broadly, the model that Parties adopted. The fifth stream connects ABS to public health. The COVID-19 pandemic sharpened it. Scholars examined whether ABS rules slowed the sharing of pathogen samples and sequences, and whether the vaccine inequity of 2020 and 2021 was in part a failure of benefit sharing. The adoption of the WHO Pandemic Agreement in May 2025, with its Pathogen Access and Benefit-Sharing system, has produced a rapidly growing literature on how that system relates to the Protocol and to the new multilateral mechanism for sequence data. The gap this article addresses is integration. Most studies look at one sector or one instrument. Students and early career researchers need a single account that connects the legal architecture, the implementation evidence, and the treaty developments of the last three years. 4. Materials and Methods This is a qualitative, desk based study combining doctrinal legal analysis with a narrative literature review. The primary legal materials are the text of the Convention on Biological Diversity, the text of the Nagoya Protocol and its annex, and the relevant decisions of the Conference of the Parties, in particular Decision 15/9 on digital sequence information adopted in 2022 and Decision 16/2 adopted in 2024, together with the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework and its Target 13. Regional and national instruments are used as illustrations rather than as a comprehensive survey, with attention to the European Union regulation on user compliance, and to the domestic regimes of Brazil, India, South Africa, Kenya, Japan, France, and Australia. Related instruments are read alongside the Protocol: the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture, the WHO Pandemic Agreement of 2025, the 2023 agreement on marine biodiversity of areas beyond national jurisdiction, and the WIPO Treaty on Intellectual Property, Genetic Resources and Associated Traditional Knowledge adopted in 2024. The secondary literature was identified through searches of scholarly databases using combinations of the terms Nagoya Protocol, access and benefit sharing, genetic resources, digital sequence information, traditional knowledge, and benefit sharing. Priority was given to peer reviewed work published from 2020 onward, so that the analysis reflects the post pandemic and post Cali landscape rather than the optimism of the Protocol's first years. Older sources are cited only where they are foundational. Analysis proceeded in three steps. First, the obligations of the Protocol were mapped article by article into three functional pillars: access, benefit sharing, and compliance. Second, findings from the empirical and sectoral literature were coded against those pillars, so that a complaint about permit delays could be located precisely in the access pillar rather than being treated as a general objection to the treaty. Third, the recent treaty developments were assessed for the direction of travel, specifically whether they reinforce the bilateral model or move away from it. Two limitations of the method should be stated at the outset. There is no reliable global dataset on how much money has actually been transferred under ABS agreements, because most agreements are confidential, so any claim about the scale of benefit flows is necessarily inferential. And the doctrinal method cannot measure whether communities feel they have been treated fairly. Ethnographic and participatory research is better suited to that question, and this article draws on such work rather than substituting for it. 5. The Legal Architecture of the Protocol 5.1 Scope: what counts as utilization The Protocol applies to genetic resources within the scope of Article 15 of the Convention and to the benefits arising from their #utilization. Utilization is defined as conducting research and development on the genetic or biochemical composition of genetic resources, including through the application of biotechnology. The definition also brings in #derivatives, defined as naturally occurring biochemical compounds resulting from the genetic expression or metabolism of biological resources, even if they do not contain functional units of heredity. This wording rewards close reading. Three points matter for students. First, the trigger is research and development on genetic or biochemical composition, not mere possession or trade. Exporting a container of coffee beans as a commodity is not utilization. Sequencing the coffee plant's genome to find drought tolerance genes is. The same physical object can be inside or outside the regime depending on what you do with it. Second, derivatives are mentioned in the definitions but the operative articles are drafted around genetic resources, and Parties have read the relationship between the two differently. Some national laws explicitly cover derivatives and extracts. Others do not. This is one of the main sources of #legal_certainty problems for industry, particularly in the #cosmetics_industry, which works constantly with plant extracts. Third, the Protocol is generally understood not to apply retroactively to material accessed before it entered into force for the Party concerned, although the treatment of continuing use of old collections is a live and unresolved argument, and some national laws take a broader view. 5.2 The access pillar Article 6 sets out the access rule. Where a Party requires it, access to genetic resources requires the #prior_informed_consent of the Party providing the resource, being the country of origin or a Party that acquired the resource in accordance with the Convention. Crucially, a Party is not obliged to require prior informed consent. Some countries have chosen open access, and the Protocol respects that choice. This is often misunderstood. The Protocol does not impose permits on the world. It imposes a duty of clarity: if you require a permit, say so clearly, publish the rules, designate a #competent_national_authority and a #national_focal_point, and decide within a reasonable time. Article 6 also requires Parties, in accordance with domestic law, to take measures so that the prior informed consent or approval and involvement of Indigenous and local communities is obtained where those communities have the established right to grant access. Article 7 does the same for #traditional_knowledge associated with genetic resources. Article 5 pairs the access rule with the benefit sharing rule. Benefits arising from utilization, and from subsequent applications and commercialisation, must be shared in a fair and equitable way with the providing Party, upon #mutually_agreed_terms. The Protocol also asks Parties to create conditions that promote and encourage research contributing to conservation and sustainable use, including through simplified access measures for non commercial research. Article 8 is the flexibility article. It invites Parties to pay due regard to emergencies threatening human, animal or plant health, and to consider the importance of genetic resources for food and agriculture. In practice, Article 8 has been under used. Very few Parties have built genuinely simplified pathways for academic taxonomy or for outbreak response, and this omission explains a great deal of the friction described in the user side literature. 5.3 The compliance pillar This is the part of the Protocol that had no real predecessor. Article 15 requires each Party to take appropriate, effective and proportionate measures to ensure that genetic resources used within its jurisdiction were accessed in accordance with prior informed consent and that mutually agreed terms were established, as required by the domestic legislation of the other Party. Article 16 does the same for traditional knowledge. Article 17 requires Parties to monitor and enhance transparency about #utilization, in particular by designating one or more #checkpoints that collect or receive relevant information about prior informed consent, the source of the resource, and mutually agreed terms. Two tools support this. The #ABS_Clearing_House is an information platform where Parties publish their laws, their authorities, and their permits. And when a Party publishes an access permit to the Clearing House, that permit becomes an #internationally_recognized_certificate_of_compliance, which serves as evidence in other jurisdictions that the material was lawfully obtained. In theory a researcher can hand that certificate to a checkpoint in a user country and demonstrate legality in a single step. Articles 18 and 27 complete the picture. Parties must encourage users and providers to include dispute settlement provisions in their contracts, must ensure that their courts are available for claims arising under mutually agreed terms, and must consider whether foreign judgments and arbitral awards can be enforced. Article 30 provides for cooperative procedures to promote compliance with the Protocol itself, and a compliance committee operates under it, with a mandate that is facilitative rather than punitive. 5.4 Article 4 and Article 10: the doors left open Two provisions have become far more important than they looked in 2010. Article 4 concerns the relationship with other international agreements. It says the Protocol does not affect the rights and obligations of a Party under existing agreements, except where their exercise would cause serious damage to biological diversity, and that it does not prevent Parties from developing other relevant international agreements, provided these are supportive of the Convention's objectives. Article 4.4 then provides that where a specialised international ABS instrument applies to a specific genetic resource, and is consistent with and does not run counter to the objectives of the Convention and the Protocol, the Protocol does not apply for the Party or Parties to that specialised instrument in respect of that resource. In short, Article 4.4 is the legal gateway through which sector specific regimes, such as those for plant genetic resources for food and agriculture or for pathogens with pandemic potential, can take priority. Everything now happening in the negotiation of the WHO pathogen system depends on this article. Article 10 asks Parties to consider the need for a global multilateral benefit sharing mechanism to address benefit sharing in transboundary situations, or where it is not possible to grant or obtain prior informed consent. For many years Article 10 went nowhere. Parties treated the situations it describes as rare exceptions. The sequence data debate has changed that. The mechanism that Parties eventually adopted for #digital_sequence_information under the Convention, and the fund attached to it, look very much like the multilateral solution Article 10 anticipated, even though it was formally built under the Convention rather than under the Protocol. 6. Traditional Knowledge, Indigenous Peoples, and Local Communities The Protocol is the first binding international instrument to give traditional knowledge holders a defined role in access decisions, and this is a genuine achievement. Articles 5.5, 6.2, 7, 12, and 16 together create a package: benefits arising from the use of traditional knowledge associated with genetic resources shall be shared with the holders of that knowledge; access to such knowledge requires their prior informed consent or approval and involvement; and Parties shall, in implementing the Protocol, take into consideration the #customary_law, community protocols, and procedures of these communities. Article 12 deserves particular attention from students because it is unusually respectful of legal pluralism. It asks Parties to support the development by communities themselves of #community_protocols, of minimum requirements for mutually agreed terms, and of model contractual clauses. A community protocol is a document, written by the community, that sets out who speaks for the community, how consent is given, what the community expects, and what is not for sale. Where such protocols exist and are recognised by national law, they shift the negotiation from an informal encounter between a company lawyer and a village to a process with rules the community itself wrote. The gap between this design and practice remains large, for reasons the literature identifies consistently. The first problem is recognition. The Protocol's obligations toward communities are qualified by the phrase in accordance with domestic law. Where a State does not recognise Indigenous peoples or does not recognise their rights over resources on their lands, the Protocol's community provisions have little to bite on. The instrument delegates the hardest question, who counts as a rights holder, back to the very governments whose record on that question is often the problem. The second problem is capacity. Negotiating a benefit sharing contract with a well resourced firm requires legal advice, an understanding of intellectual property, and an ability to value something whose commercial potential nobody yet knows. Very few communities have this. Where independent legal support has been provided, the terms obtained have been markedly better. The third problem is monitoring. A community may sign an agreement and then have no way of learning whether a product ever reached the market, or whether the sequence taken from its territory ended up in a database and then in a patent filed on another continent. This is why #traceability and #provenance have become central technical topics in the field, and why proposals for digital labels and notices attached to sequence records, developed with Indigenous data governance experts, have attracted serious attention. The connection between #biocultural_rights and #data_governance is now one of the most important frontiers in this area. The fourth problem is representation in the international process itself. Indigenous participation in Convention negotiations has grown, and the 2024 Cali decisions were widely welcomed for giving Indigenous peoples and local communities an explicit role, including a commitment that half the resources of the new fund should be allocated to them. Whether allocation on paper becomes money in community hands is the question that will define the credibility of the whole system in the next decade. 7. National and Regional Implementation The Protocol is a framework. It only works if it is turned into law at home. This section sketches how different jurisdictions have done so, and what the divergence means. 7.1 The European Union: compliance without access The European Union implemented the Protocol through a regulation on compliance measures for users, adopted in 2014. The design is asymmetric and instructive. The regulation says almost nothing about access to genetic resources in Europe, leaving that to member States, most of which have not introduced permit requirements. What it does is impose a #due_diligence obligation on users within the Union: they must seek, keep, and transfer to subsequent users the information relevant to access and benefit sharing, they must declare due diligence at defined checkpoints, namely at the point of receiving research funding and at the stage of final development of a product, and they must retain records for twenty years. Two features of the European approach are worth noting. First, it makes the university and the research funder into enforcement agents, which is why compliance offices in European institutions have become the main channel through which ordinary scientists encounter the Protocol at all. Second, its scope is limited to resources accessed after the Protocol entered into force and only from countries that have ABS legislation in place and have made the relevant information available. That limitation is legally sensible and politically contested, because it means a provider country with weak administrative capacity gets weaker protection in Europe than one with a well organised legal system. 7.2 Brazil Brazil replaced its old provisional measure with a law in 2015. The system moved away from prior authorisation toward electronic registration of access, with benefit sharing due at the point of commercialisation of a finished product, generally calculated on net revenue, with reductions and exemptions for small enterprises and for certain agricultural products. A national fund receives payments, and a share is directed to traditional communities. Recent qualitative research on the Brazilian debate shows that the arguments are less about the treaty text than about competing visions of the country's #bioeconomy, with agribusiness, industry, environmental agencies, and traditional communities all pulling in different directions. The lesson for students is that a national ABS law is never only an environmental law. It is industrial policy, Indigenous policy, and trade policy at the same time. 7.3 India India legislated early, with a biodiversity law adopted in 2002, before the Protocol existed, and built an institutional structure with a national authority, State boards, and local committees. It has been among the more active jurisdictions in demanding benefit sharing and in challenging patents based on Indian genetic resources and traditional knowledge, and it maintains a digital library of traditional medical knowledge used to defeat patent applications by showing prior art. In 2023 the law was amended, in part to reduce the compliance burden on domestic industry, particularly for practitioners of traditional medicine and for cultivated medicinal plants. Critics argued that the amendments weakened protection and reduced the role of local committees. Supporters argued that the previous regime had discouraged domestic investment without producing meaningful returns to communities. The Indian experience is a good example of the central policy tension of the entire field: strictness protects rights in principle and can suppress the activity that would generate benefits in practice. 7.4 South Africa and Kenya South Africa integrated ABS into its biodiversity legislation and its permit regulations. The country is closely associated with the best known benefit sharing agreements involving Indigenous communities, arising from a plant traditionally used as an appetite suppressant, and with agreements involving an indigenous tea and a plant based cosmetic oil. These cases are studied everywhere because they show both the promise and the fragility of the model. Benefits did flow. The amounts were modest, the negotiations were long, and the eventual commercial success of the products was uncertain. Kenya operates through a permit system under its environmental authority and its national museums, and Kenyan researchers have contributed prominently to the argument that the Protocol's design tends to burden African scientists more than it empowers them, because African institutions are frequently users as well as providers, and a rule aimed at a multinational company also lands on a regional agricultural research institute with no legal department. 7.5 Japan, Australia, and the United States Japan, the host of the negotiations, chose an implementation with a light touch: guidelines, a reporting requirement, and no access permit system. Australia has a fragmented regime, with the federal law applying to Commonwealth areas and States varying in their approach, so that in many contexts compliance is effectively voluntary. Recent analysis of the Australian situation makes the important point that where the State does not act as gatekeeper, other institutions, herbaria, journals, and funders, end up performing that role through their own policies, which produces inconsistency and shifts responsibility onto individuals. The United States is not a Party to the Convention and therefore not to the Protocol. This is significant, because a large share of the world's genomic research and biotechnology industry sits outside the treaty's compliance net. It does not mean that American researchers are free of obligations. Provider country law still applies at the point of collection, and contracts still bind. It does mean that the Protocol's compliance pillar has a very large hole in it. 7.6 What the divergence adds up to Read together, these regimes share the Protocol's language and diverge in almost everything that matters operationally: whether a permit is needed, whether derivatives are covered, whether data are covered, what triggers a benefit sharing obligation, how long approval takes, and what happens if you get it wrong. For a multi country research consortium this is not a minor irritation. It is the single most frequently reported barrier in the literature, and it falls hardest on the researchers least able to absorb it: postgraduate students, small teams, and institutions in the Global South. 8. Sectoral Evidence: How the Protocol Works in Practice 8.1 Non commercial biodiversity research and taxonomy Field biologists and taxonomists were not the intended targets of the Protocol, but they are among the most affected. Studies aimed at mammalogists and other collections based researchers document a pattern: low awareness, institutions without expertise, permits that do not anticipate deposit of specimens in foreign museums, and legacy collections whose provenance documentation is incomplete. A specimen collected in 1975, held in a European museum, and sequenced in 2025 raises questions that the Protocol answers only ambiguously. The consequences are not only administrative. Uncertainty produces avoidance. Researchers choose to work in countries with simpler rules, which means that the countries with the strictest laws can end up being studied the least, precisely the opposite of what a treaty meant to encourage research contributing to conservation should achieve. There is a real risk that the Protocol has increased the cost of documenting biodiversity in the places where documentation matters most. 8.2 Microbial collections and culture collections Microbiology has been a case study in ambiguity. In one major European jurisdiction, cultivated microorganisms were temporarily excluded from ABS obligations for a period of years, the exclusion then lapsed, and researchers spent a further period unsure whether a strain grown in culture was inside or outside the regime, until national authorities clarified that microorganisms placed in a culture medium fall under a domesticated and cultivated species scheme and are outside the procedure. That such a basic question could take years to answer, in a country with strong administrative capacity, tells us something important: the problem is not the bad faith of regulators but the difficulty of applying a framework designed around discrete natural samples to organisms that are cultured, exchanged, deposited, and redistributed routinely. #culture_collections sit at the centre of this, since their entire purpose is to receive material and pass it on. 8.3 Plant genetic resources, genebanks, and food security Agriculture has a partial escape hatch. The International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture, adopted in 2001, created a #multilateral_system for a list of crops and forages that account for a large share of global food supply. Access under that system uses a #standard_material_transfer_agreement rather than case by case negotiation, and users pay into a benefit sharing fund when they commercialise a product that incorporates material from the system and restrict its availability for further research. This is a multilateral model, and Article 4.4 of the Protocol allows it to operate as a specialised instrument. But the boundary is messy. Crops outside the annex, wild relatives, and material collected outside the multilateral system fall back under the Protocol. #genebanks report real difficulty in tracking which rules apply to which accession, and this problem multiplies when sequence data are involved, because a genebank may hold physical material under one regime while the sequence derived from it circulates under another, or under none. Given the pressure on #food_security from climate change, the cost of getting this wrong is high. 8.4 Pathogens, animal health, and outbreak response The Protocol's application to pathogens has been criticised sharply from within the public health community. Pathogens meet the definition of genetic resources. Applying the standard model to them means that a veterinary laboratory receiving a virus isolate from another country during an outbreak may need consent and a contract before it can characterise the strain, and that a reference laboratory may need permission before sharing an isolate with a vaccine developer. Delay in that setting is not an administrative inconvenience. Article 8(b) of the Protocol asks Parties to pay due regard to present or imminent emergencies threatening health, but the provision is soft and few Parties have built the fast track it envisages. Scholars in animal health have argued that this is a systematic blind spot: the negotiations focused on plants and on bioprospecting, and the veterinary sector, which routinely moves samples across borders under time pressure, was barely represented. At the same time, the equity concern behind the provider position is real and was proved during COVID-19. Countries that shared samples and sequences promptly watched vaccines produced from that sharing go to the highest bidder. Any solution that asks the Global South to keep sharing must offer something in return, which is exactly the bargain the WHO system now attempts. 8.5 Commercial sectors: coffee, cosmetics, and pharmaceuticals Sectoral analysis in the coffee industry shows the practical texture of compliance. Coffee breeding relies on wild relatives and landraces from a handful of countries. Obtaining consent takes time; requirements differ; and the entities most exposed are small research groups and specialty firms rather than the large traders whose business is in commodity beans and therefore outside the scope of utilization. In cosmetics, the definitional problem of #derivatives is acute, because the industry works with extracts and isolated compounds, and the answer to whether an extract is inside the regime can differ from one country to the next. Pharmaceutical research presents a different picture. Large firms have largely retreated from natural product screening of the classical kind, for scientific and economic reasons that predate the Protocol. The result is an awkward irony. The regime was designed to capture value from an industry that has partly moved on. Where the value now sits, in sequence databases, computational design, and enzyme engineering, is precisely where the bilateral model has the weakest grip. 9. The Digital Sequence Information Turn 9.1 Why sequence data broke the model The bilateral model assumes a traceable object, a single provider, and a negotiable transaction. Sequence data satisfy none of these assumptions. Data are non rival. Copying costs nothing and does not deprive the original holder. Data are recombinant: a single machine learning model or comparative study may draw on hundreds of thousands of records from dozens of countries, so identifying which provider contributed what share of the value is not merely difficult but conceptually incoherent. Data are already public: the major #sequence_databases operate on open access and are mirrored across continents, and the norm of open deposit is embedded in publication requirements. And data can substitute for material: once a sequence is known, a gene can be synthesised without any physical sample, so a country can be completely bypassed. Studies examining the actual structure of public sequence databases have shown that the provider and user categories, which the Protocol treats as stable and opposed, do not describe reality well. Many countries are both. Scientific work in the biodiversity rich world depends heavily on open access to sequences produced elsewhere, so a restrictive data regime would harm the very researchers it is meant to serve. This finding, that #open_science is not simply a Northern interest, has been important in shifting the debate. The counter argument remains strong. If sequence data can replace material, then a rule that governs material but not data will be avoided rather than obeyed. To leave data outside benefit sharing is to promise equity and then design a system in which the promise cannot be kept. That argument won politically, but it won in a form that does not attempt to control access. 9.2 From Kunming-Montreal to Cali At the fifteenth Conference of the Parties in December 2022, alongside the adoption of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, Parties agreed in Decision 15/9 to establish a multilateral mechanism for benefit sharing from the use of digital sequence information, including a global fund, and set out principles to guide it. Those principles are worth learning because they define the design constraints: the solution should be efficient, feasible and practical; it should generate more benefits than costs; it should be effective; it should provide certainty and legal clarity for providers and users; it should not hinder research and innovation; it should be consistent with open access to data; it should be compatible with international legal obligations; it should be mutually supportive of other ABS instruments; and it should take into account the rights of Indigenous peoples and local communities. Target 13 of the Framework put benefit sharing into the quantitative era. It requires Parties to take measures to ensure fair and equitable sharing of benefits from genetic resources, from digital sequence information, and from associated traditional knowledge, and to facilitate a significant increase in the benefits shared by 2030. The word significant creates a measurement problem that nobody has yet solved, since most benefit sharing is non monetary and confidential, and developing indicators for non monetary benefits is now an active research area. At the sixteenth Conference of the Parties, held in Cali, Colombia, in October and November 2024, Parties adopted Decision 16/2, which operationalised the mechanism and created the #Cali_Fund. The Fund was formally launched in Rome in February 2025 during the resumed session of the Conference. 9.3 How the Cali Fund is meant to work The design decouples access from benefit sharing. Access to sequence data remains open. Benefit sharing is a payment made by companies that benefit commercially from the use of such data, made into a global fund rather than to a particular country. Contributions are expected from sectors that depend commercially on sequence data, including pharmaceuticals, biotechnology, plant and animal breeding, agricultural biotechnology, laboratory equipment used for sequencing, and information and data processing services related to sequence data. The decision sets out indicative contribution rates, expressed as small percentages of profits or of revenue, with the level calibrated to the size of the company and the degree to which its business depends on such data, and it exempts smaller companies. Crucially, contributions are indicative rather than legally mandatory under the decision itself, which is the central weakness that critics on the provider side immediately identified and which industry associations, for their part, have welcomed. Half of the Fund's resources are to be allocated to Indigenous peoples and local communities, in recognition of their role as custodians of biodiversity, and the Fund is intended to support the objectives of the Convention, including conservation. Governance runs through a steering committee, with United Nations agencies serving as trustee and administrator. Further details, including refinement of contribution rates and the scope of covered sectors, were left for consideration in the run up to the seventeenth Conference of the Parties, and the effectiveness of the mechanism is to be reviewed at the eighteenth. 9.4 Assessment The mechanism deserves credit for realism. It protects open access, which is what science needed. It creates a channel for money, which is what provider countries needed. It gives Indigenous peoples an unusually direct claim on the resources, which is what the equity argument demanded. Its weakness is equally clear. A voluntary payment from firms that face no penalty for declining is a fragile foundation for a system meant to redistribute the gains of the global bioeconomy. The Fund's credibility depends on whether the first contributions arrive, whether they arrive at a scale that is more than symbolic, and whether they can be disbursed to communities without being absorbed by administration. If contributions stall, provider countries will conclude, with reason, that they gave up leverage over data and received nothing, and they will respond by tightening national law on physical material, which will hurt exactly the researchers who lobbied for the open access solution. The next few years are therefore a test not only of a fund but of the good faith of the whole regime. 10. The Wider Regime Complex Reading the Protocol in isolation now produces a false picture. Four other instruments shape the field. 10.1 The plant treaty As described above, the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture runs a multilateral system for major food crops, with standardised transfer terms and a benefit sharing fund. It has been operating for two decades and offers a sobering precedent for the Cali Fund, because the money that has flowed into its benefit sharing fund from mandatory user payments has been very modest, and most of what it distributes has come from donors. The lesson is that designing a payment obligation is easier than collecting revenue from it. 10.2 The WHO Pandemic Agreement and the PABS system The World Health Assembly adopted the WHO Pandemic Agreement on 20 May 2025. At its centre is Article 12, which establishes a #PABS system: rapid sharing of pathogen samples and their genetic sequence data in exchange for guaranteed access to pandemic related health products, with participating manufacturers expected to make a defined share of their real time production available to the WHO, split between donation and affordable supply. The operational details were too contentious to settle in the main text and were deferred to a separate annex, being negotiated in an intergovernmental working group, with the intention of presenting it to the World Health Assembly. The Agreement cannot open for signature and ratification until that annex is adopted, which means the entire instrument is currently waiting on the benefit sharing details, a striking demonstration of how central this issue has become. The legal relationship with the Protocol runs through Article 4.4. Article 12 of the Pandemic Agreement provides that the PABS system shall be consistent with, and not run counter to, the objectives of the Convention and the Protocol, language chosen deliberately to position PABS as a specialised instrument that would take priority for pathogens with pandemic potential. If that recognition holds, the overlap between the Convention's data mechanism and the WHO's pathogen system can be managed. If it does not, a company using a pathogen sequence could face claims under two regimes at once, a prospect that scholars have flagged as a serious risk to both #public_health and legal coherence. 10.3 The high seas biodiversity agreement The agreement on the conservation and sustainable use of marine biological diversity of areas beyond national jurisdiction, adopted in 2023, addresses #marine_genetic_resources in the two thirds of the ocean that belong to no State. It cannot use the Protocol's model, because there is no provider country to give consent. It therefore adopts notification, traceability, and a multilateral approach to benefits, with a strong emphasis on non monetary benefits such as capacity building and technology transfer. Together with the Cali Fund, it confirms the direction of travel: away from bilateral contracts and toward multilateral funds and open data with downstream payment. 10.4 The WIPO treaty on patent disclosure In May 2024, after more than two decades of negotiation, WIPO member States adopted a treaty on intellectual property, genetic resources and associated traditional knowledge. Its core provision is a mandatory disclosure requirement: where a claimed invention is based on genetic resources, the applicant must disclose the country of origin or, if that is unknown, the source; where the invention is based on associated traditional knowledge, the applicant must disclose the Indigenous peoples or local community that provided it, or the source. Contracting parties must provide an opportunity to correct a failure to disclose, and sanctions are envisaged, though the treaty avoids requiring revocation of a granted patent for a disclosure failure alone. It enters into force three months after fifteen instruments of ratification or accession have been deposited. This is directly relevant to the Protocol, because it addresses the gap that provider countries complained about from the beginning: the patent office as a #checkpoint. The disclosure duty does not by itself deliver benefit sharing, and its practical effect will depend on how many major patent granting jurisdictions ratify it. But it improves #traceability at the point where value is captured, and it strengthens the evidential position of any provider country or community that later wants to challenge a patent or claim a share of benefits. 11. Discussion 11.1 Has the Protocol delivered fairness? The honest answer is that it has changed the rules more than it has changed the flows. On the normative side, the achievement is real and should not be dismissed. The idea that genetic resources are the sovereign property of States and that their use creates obligations toward provider countries and communities is now the global default. More than one hundred national laws exist. Indigenous consent has been written into a binding treaty. Patent applicants may soon have to say where their material came from. Thirty years ago, none of this was true. On the distributive side, the evidence for success is thin. There is no public global accounting of benefit flows, because agreements are confidential, and this opacity is itself a finding. A regime whose central purpose is fair sharing cannot demonstrate what it has shared. The available case evidence points to modest monetary amounts, long negotiations, and a heavy dependence on the commercial success of products that mostly do not succeed. Non monetary benefits, training, joint publication, equipment, and capacity building, appear more frequently and matter more than the literature's focus on royalties suggests, but they are also the benefits most easily promised and least easily verified. 11.2 The transaction cost problem The most consistent empirical finding across sectors is that compliance cost falls disproportionately on the least powerful actors. A multinational can absorb a two year permit negotiation; a doctoral student cannot. A firm with a legal department can navigate contradictory definitions of derivative across six jurisdictions; a national agricultural institute in a low income country cannot. Because ABS obligations attach to the act of research rather than to the size of the actor, the regime taxes science more efficiently than it taxes commerce. This is close to the opposite of its intent, and it is the strongest argument for the simplified procedures for non commercial research that Article 8(a) already invites Parties to adopt, and which remain the Protocol's most under used provision. 11.3 Bilateral logic versus multilateral reality The deeper problem is conceptual. The bilateral model assumes that value can be traced back to a discrete origin. Modern biology does not work that way. Value emerges from comparison across many organisms and many countries, from computational analysis, and from accumulated public data. In that world, asking which country contributed the value is like asking which brick holds up the wall. Every recent development points away from the bilateral model: the multilateral system of the plant treaty, the multilateral design of the high seas agreement, the pathogen system under the WHO, and the Cali Fund. The Protocol's bilateral core is therefore being quietly surrounded. It will continue to govern the classic case, a company collecting a specific plant in a specific country for a specific product, and that case still matters. But the centre of gravity is moving toward funds, standard terms, and open data with downstream contribution. 11.4 The unresolved equity question Multilateral funds solve a technical problem and create a political one. Under a bilateral contract, a provider country negotiates and knows what it gets. Under a fund, it contributes its biodiversity to a common pool and receives an allocation decided by a committee. Whether that feels like justice depends entirely on whether the fund is filled and whether the allocation is fair and transparent. This is why the voluntary nature of contributions to the Cali Fund is not a technical detail. It is the crux. If firms do not pay, the Global South will have traded a weak but real bilateral leverage for a strong but empty multilateral promise. If firms do pay, at a meaningful scale, and if half of the money genuinely reaches Indigenous peoples and local communities, then the Protocol's original objective may be closer to realisation through the fund than it ever was through contracts. 11.5 Does benefit sharing conserve biodiversity? One assumption underlies the whole regime and deserves more scrutiny than it usually gets. The Convention presumes that sharing benefits will create incentives to conserve. The empirical support for that presumption is weak. Benefit sharing is a transfer; conservation is a land use outcome; the causal chain between them is long and easily broken. Money received by a national treasury does not protect a forest. Money received by a community may, but only if the community's rights over the land are secure and the benefit is conditional on continued stewardship. A serious research agenda on ABS should therefore include impact evaluation, and at present almost none exists. If the Cali Fund is to justify itself, it will need to show not only that money moved but that something on the ground changed. 12. Recommendations 12.1 For Parties and policymakers Use the flexibility that already exists. Article 8(a) permits simplified access for non commercial research. Very few Parties have built it. A clearly defined academic pathway, with a rapid decision, a standard contract, a change of intent clause requiring renegotiation if the research turns commercial, and a duty to deposit specimens and data in the country of origin, would remove most of the friction described in the user side literature without weakening the regime against commercial actors. Clarify definitions and publish them. The single cheapest improvement any Party can make is to state plainly, on the ABS Clearing-House, whether derivatives are covered, whether sequence data are covered, what triggers a benefit sharing obligation, and how long a decision takes. Uncertainty deters lawful users far more effectively than it deters bad actors. Invest in the compliance pillar, not only the access pillar. Provider countries have concentrated on controlling the front door. The Protocol's real innovation is at the back door, in user country checkpoints. Ratifying and implementing the WIPO disclosure treaty, and making patent offices and research funders into functioning checkpoints, will do more for benefit sharing than another layer of permit requirements. Make contributions to the Cali Fund real. Whether through national law, procurement conditions, listing requirements, or corporate due diligence legislation, the indicative rates need a domestic legal hook. A global fund financed by goodwill will not survive its first economic downturn. 12.2 For research institutions Institutions, not individual scientists, should carry the compliance load. A functioning research office should maintain a register of collected material and its permits, hold documentation for the required retention period, provide model agreements, and train staff and students before fieldwork rather than after. Museums and #culture_collections should record provenance in a form that survives the retirement of the person who collected the sample, since the legacy collection problem is fundamentally a documentation problem. Journals and funders should ask for evidence of lawful access as a routine part of submission and grant reporting. This is already happening informally; making it explicit and consistent is fairer than leaving it to chance and to reviewer discretion. 12.3 For Indigenous peoples and local communities The literature is consistent about what improves outcomes: written #community_protocols recognised in national law; independent legal advice funded by someone other than the counterparty; benefit terms that include upfront and milestone payments rather than only royalties on hypothetical products; and clauses that address data and sequences explicitly, not only physical samples. A contract that is silent on sequence data in 2026 has left the most valuable part of the transaction unregulated. 12.4 For students and early career researchers Three practical rules. Check the ABS status of every country you plan to work in before you write the proposal, not after the fieldwork. Assume the rules apply to you even if your work is non commercial and even if you are only handling a sequence someone else deposited, and then verify. And write benefit sharing into the project design rather than treating it as a legal formality: co-authorship, training, deposit of duplicates in the country of origin, and returning results in a usable form to the community are all benefits under the Protocol's annex, they cost little, and they are the part of the regime that reliably works. 13. Limitations of This Study This article is a desk based review and inherits the weaknesses of the underlying evidence. Confidential contracts mean that any statement about the scale of benefit flows is inferential. The sectoral literature is skewed toward user perspectives, because scientists publish and communities frequently do not, so the balance of complaints in the published record is not necessarily the balance of harms in the world. The national implementation section is illustrative rather than exhaustive, and each jurisdiction discussed deserves its own study. Finally, the field is moving quickly. The Cali Fund is new, the pathogen annex is unfinished, and the WIPO treaty is not yet in force. Any assessment written now is a snapshot, and readers should check the current status of these instruments before relying on the account given here. 14. Conclusion The Nagoya Protocol was built to correct a historical injustice with a contractual instrument. It gave the world a workable vocabulary, prior informed consent, mutually agreed terms, checkpoints, certificates of compliance, and it gave provider countries something they had never had: a claim that could in principle be enforced abroad. That is not a small achievement, and the Protocol should be judged as an important step rather than as a failure. But the instrument was designed for a world of physical samples and identifiable origins, and biology left that world behind. The bilateral bargain cannot cope with data that are copied freely, combined across dozens of jurisdictions, and used without ever touching an organism. The response of the international community has been to build around the Protocol rather than inside it: a multilateral mechanism and a global fund for sequence data, a specialised system for pathogens, a multilateral regime for the high seas, and a disclosure duty in patent law. The Protocol is becoming one component of a regime complex rather than the whole answer. Whether the new architecture delivers what the old one promised now depends on a small number of concrete tests. Will companies actually contribute to the Cali Fund, and at a scale that is more than symbolic? Will half of those resources genuinely reach Indigenous peoples and local communities, rather than dissolving into administration? Will the pathogen annex be agreed, so that the Pandemic Agreement can enter into force before the next outbreak rather than after it? Will major patent jurisdictions ratify the disclosure treaty? And will anyone measure whether any of this improves the state of biodiversity on the ground? The third objective of the Convention has never been mainly a legal problem. It is a question about power, and about whether those who hold the world's biological wealth will ever be treated as partners rather than as suppliers. The Protocol made that question answerable. It did not answer it. The next decade will. 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