United
Nations Environment Programme
Ozone
Secretariat
Press Release - Ozone Day 1999
Press Release
SG/SM/7114
UNEP/43
Secretary-General Urges Individuals, Offices, Industries to do all
they can to be 'Ozone-Friendly'
Kofi Annan Says World Community Has Risen Enthusiastically To Challenge of
Protecting Ozone Layer, Stresses Need for Continued Effort
Following is the text of the message of Secretary-General Kofi Annan for the
occasion of the International Day for the Preservation of the Ozone Layer, which
will be observed on 16 September: The global effort to "Save Our Sky"
from ozone- depleting substances is working.
The 1985 Vienna Convention for the Protection of the Ozone Layer and the 1987
Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer have spearheaded
a transition away from chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) and other ozone-depleting
chemicals. Indeed, the transition has occurred more rapidly than many thought
possible, even as the controls called for under the treaties have been made
steadily stricter.
The industrialized countries have phased out most of their production and consumption
of the most widely used ozone-depleting substances and provided more than $950
million to the fund established by the Protocol to assist developing countries
in their phase-out activities. The Global Environment Facility, operated jointly
by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), the United Nations Development
Programme (UNDP) and the World Bank, has disbursed more than $130 million to
the Russian Federation and the countries of Central and Eastern Europe.
According to the most recent scientific assessment carried out by an international
panel of experts under the aegis of the treaty, the level of ozone-depleting
gases in the stratosphere will soon peak. Assuming the Montreal Protocol is
implemented fully, the ozone layer will recover and return to normal by the
middle of the next century.
This is a major achievement for the international community, showing how governments
and industries, working with the United Nations, can cooperate to ward off a
global threat. But this is no time for complacency. Twenty countries have yet
to ratify the ozone treaties, and many
more have not ratified important amendments to the Protocol. Some countries
are having difficulty complying. Illegal trade in CFCs has increased. The phase-out
in the developing countries only just began, on 1 July. And the adverse impact
of global warming on the stratosphere, which contains the ozone layer, is only
beginning to draw attention. The threat to life on earth remains. Millions of
cases of skin cancer and eye cataracts are among the dangers that lie in our
path if we do not sustain our momentum.
Alternative ozone-friendly technologies and products are now available throughout
the world. I urge every individual, office and industry to review their homes
and premises and do all they can to be ozone-friendly. United Nations offices
are taking significant steps in this regard and UNEP has issued guidelines outlining
a variety of measures that could be taken.
The world community has risen enthusiastically to the challenge of protecting
the ozone layer since the problem was first diagnosed. Let us continue these
efforts -- and let us be inspired by this example as we tackle the other pressing