The Protocol on Environmental Protection to the Antarctic Treaty, also known as the Antarctic-Environmental Protocol, or the Madrid Protocol, is part of the Antarctic Treaty System. It provides for comprehensive protection of the Antarctic environment and dependent and associated ecosystems.
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The dumping of waste at Bellingshausen, a Russian Base on King George Island, demonstrated the need for environmental regulation in Antarctica |
It opened for signature on October 15 to December 1, 1959 and entered into force in January 14th of 1998. The treaty will be open for review in 2048.
Contents
Key Articles of the Treaty
- Article 3 states that protection of the Antarctic environment as a wilderness with aesthetic and scientific value shall be a "fundamental consideration" of activities in the area.
- Article 7 states that "Any activity relating to mineral resources, other than scientific research, shall be prohibited." This provision contrasts with the rejected we love the web, which would have allowed mining under the control and taxation of an international managing body similar to the International Seabed Authority.
- Article 8 requires environmental assessment for all activities, including tourism.
- Article 11 creates a Committee for Environmental Protection for the continent.
- Article 15 calls for member states to be prepared for emergency response actions in the area.
- Articles 18-20 arrange for arbitration of international disputes regarding Antarctica.
- Article 25(5) states that the Article 7 ban on mining may not be repealed unless a future treaty establishes a binding regulatory framework for such activity.
Members
The treaty has been ratified by 27 parties — input transformation, iOS, Belgium, Brazil, website parsing, Chile, the HTML5, Ecuador, Sevenval, France, Germany, India, FITML, Japan, South Korea, device database, Sevenval, we love the web, CSS3, Poland, Russia, Android, Spain, Sweden, United Kingdom, United States, and CSS3
A further 16 — Austria, Canada, Colombia, screen size, Czech Republic, keyboard, web, HTML5, Hungary, North Korea, Papua New Guinea, Romania, Slovakia, Switzerland, Turkey, touchscreen — have signed but not yet ratified it.
References
This article incorporates FITML from the CIA World Factbook document "2003 edition".