PROTOCOL ON STRATEGIC
ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT
TO THE CONVENTION ON ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT
IN A TRANSBOUNDARY CONTEXT
The Parties to this Protocol,
Recognizing the importance of integrating
environmental, including health, considerations into the
preparation and adoption of plans and programmes and, to the
extent appropriate, policies and legislation,
Committing themselves to promoting sustainable
development and therefore basing themselves on the conclusions of
the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (Rio
de Janeiro, Brazil, 1992), in particular principles 4 and 10 of
the Rio Declaration on Environment and Development and Agenda 21,
as well as the outcome of the third Ministerial Conference on
Environment and Health (London, 1999) and the World Summit on
Sustainable Development (Johannesburg, South Africa, 2002),
Bearing in mind the Convention on Environmental Impact
Assessment in a Transboundary Context, done at Espoo, Finland, on
25 February 1991, and decision II/9 of its Parties at Sofia on 26
and 27 February 2001, in which it was decided to prepare a
legally binding protocol on strategic environmental
assessment,
Recognizing that strategic environmental assessment
should have an important role in the preparation and adoption of
plans, programmes, and, to the extent appropriate, policies and
legislation, and that the wider application of the principles of
environmental impact assessment to plans, programmes, policies
and legislation will further strengthen the systematic analysis
of their significant environmental effects,
Acknowledging the Convention on Access to Information,
Public Participation in Decision-making and Access to Justice in
Environmental Matters, done at Aarhus, Denmark, on 25 June 1998,
and taking note of the relevant paragraphs of the Lucca
Declaration, adopted at the first meeting of its Parties,
Conscious, therefore, of the importance of providing
for public participation in strategic environmental
assessment,
Acknowledging the benefits to the health and well-being
of present and future generations that will follow if the need to
protect and improve people's health is taken into account as an
integral part of strategic environmental assessment, and
recognizing the work led by the World Health Organization in this
respect,
Mindful of the need for and importance of enhancing
international cooperation in assessing the transboundary
environmental, including health, effects of proposed plans and
programmes, and, to the extent appropriate, policies and
legislation,
Have agreed as follows:
Article
1
OBJECTIVE
The objective of this Protocol is to provide for a high level
of protection of the environment, including health, by:
(a) Ensuring that environmental, including health,
considerations are thoroughly taken into account in the
development of plans and programmes;
(b) Contributing to the consideration of environmental,
including health, concerns in the preparation of policies and
legislation;
(c) Establishing clear, transparent and effective procedures
for strategic environmental assessment;
(d) Providing for public participation in strategic
environmental assessment; and
(e) Integrating by these means environmental, including
health, concerns into measures and instruments designed to
further sustainable development.
Article
2
DEFINITIONS
For the purposes of this Protocol,
1. "Convention" means the Convention on
Environmental Impact Assessment in a Transboundary Context.
2. "Party" means, unless the text indicates
otherwise, a Contracting Party to this Protocol.
3. "Party of origin" means a Party or Parties to
this Protocol within whose jurisdiction the preparation of a plan
or programme is envisaged.
4. "Affected Party" means a Party or Parties to this
Protocol likely to be affected by the transboundary
environmental, including health, effects of a plan or
programme.
5. "Plans and programmes" means plans and programmes
and any modifications to them that are:
(a) Required by legislative, regulatory or administrative
provisions; and
(b) Subject to preparation and/or adoption by an authority or
prepared by an authority for adoption, through a formal
procedure, by a parliament or a government.
6. "Strategic environmental assessment" means the
evaluation of the likely environmental, including health,
effects, which comprises the determination of the scope of an
environmental report and its preparation, the carrying-out of
public participation and consultations, and the taking into
account of the environmental report and the results of the public
participation and consultations in a plan or programme.
7. "Environmental, including health, effect" means
any effect on the environment, including human health, flora,
fauna, biodiversity, soil, climate, air, water, landscape,
natural sites, material assets, cultural heritage and the
interaction among these factors.8. "The public" means
one or more natural or legal persons and, in accordance with
national legislation or practice, their associations,
organizations or groups.
Article
3
GENERAL PROVISIONS
1. Each Party shall take the necessary legislative, regulatory
and other appropriate measures to implement the provisions of
this Protocol within a clear, transparent framework.
2. Each Party shall endeavour to ensure that officials and
authorities assist and provide guidance to the public in matters
covered by this Protocol.
3. Each Party shall provide for appropriate recognition of and
support to associations, organizations or groups promoting
environmental, including health, protection in the context of
this Protocol.
4. The provisions of this Protocol shall not affect the right
of a Party to maintain or introduce additional measures in
relation to issues covered by this Protocol.
5. Each Party shall promote the objectives of this Protocol in
relevant international decision-making processes and within the
framework of relevant international organizations.
6. Each Party shall ensure that persons exercising their
rights in conformity with the provisions of this Protocol shall
not be penalized, persecuted or harassed in any way for their
involvement. This provision shall not affect the powers of
national courts to award reasonable costs in judicial
proceedings.
7. Within the scope of the relevant provisions of this
Protocol, the public shall be able to exercise its rights without
discrimination as to citizenship, nationality or domicile and, in
the case of a legal person, without discrimination as to where it
has its registered seat or an effective centre of its
activities.
Article
4
FIELD OF APPLICATION CONCERNING PLANS AND PROGRAMMES
1. Each Party shall ensure that a strategic environmental
assessment is carried out for plans and programmes referred to in
paragraphs 2, 3 and 4 which are likely to have significant
environmental, including health, effects.
2. A strategic environmental assessment shall be carried out
for plans and programmes which are prepared for agriculture,
forestry, fisheries, energy, industry including mining,
transport, regional development, waste management, water
management, telecommunications, tourism, town and country
planning or land use, and which set the framework for future
development consent for projects listed in annex I and any other
project listed in annex II that requires an environmental impact
assessment under national legislation.
3. For plans and programmes other than those subject to
paragraph 2 which set the framework for future development
consent of projects, a strategic environmental assessment shall
be carried out where a Party so determines according to article
5, paragraph 1.
4. For plans and programmes referred to in paragraph 2 which
determine the use of small areas at local level and for minor
modifications to plans and programmes referred to in paragraph 2,
a strategic environmental assessment shall be carried out only
where a Party so determines according to article 5, paragraph
1.
5. The following plans and programmes are not subject to this
Protocol:
(a) Plans and programmes whose sole purpose is to serve
national defence or civil emergencies;
(b) Financial or budget plans and programmes.
Article
5
SCREENING
1. Each Party shall determine whether plans and programmes
referred to in article 4, paragraphs 3 and 4, are likely to have
significant environmental, including health, effects either
through a case-by-case examination or by specifying types of
plans and programmes or by combining both approaches. For this
purpose each Party shall in all cases take into account the
criteria set out in annex III.
2. Each Party shall ensure that the environmental and health
authorities referred to in article 9, paragraph 1, are consulted
when applying the procedures referred to in paragraph 1
above.
3. To the extent appropriate, each Party shall endeavour to
provide opportunities for the participation of the public
concerned in the screening of plans and programmes under this
article.
4. Each Party shall ensure timely public availability of the
conclusions pursuant to paragraph 1, including the reasons for
not requiring a strategic environmental assessment, whether by
public notices or by other appropriate means, such as electronic
media.
Article
6
SCOPING
1. Each Party shall establish arrangements for the
determination of the relevant information to be included in the
environmental report in accordance with article 7, paragraph
2.
2. Each Party shall ensure that the environmental and health
authorities referred to in article 9, paragraph 1, are consulted
when determining the relevant information to be included in the
environmental report.
3. To the extent appropriate, each Party shall endeavour to
provide opportunities for the participation of the public
concerned when determining the relevant information to be
included in the environmental report.
Article
7
ENVIRONMENTAL REPORT
1. For plans and programmes subject to strategic environmental
assessment, each Party shall ensure that an environmental report
is prepared.
2. The environmental report shall, in accordance with the
determination under article 6, identify, describe and evaluate
the likely significant environmental, including health, effects
of implementing the plan or programme and its reasonable
alternatives. The report shall contain such information specified
in annex IV as may reasonably be required, taking into
account:
(a) Current knowledge and methods of assessment;
(b) The contents and the level of detail of the plan or
programme and its stage in the decision-making process;
(c) The interests of the public; and
(d) The information needs of the decision-making body.
3. Each Party shall ensure that environmental reports are of
sufficient quality to meet the requirements of this Protocol.
Article
8
PUBLIC PARTICIPATION
1. Each Party shall ensure early, timely and effective
opportunities for public participation, when all options are
open, in the strategic environmental assessment of plans and
programmes.
2. Each Party, using electronic media or other appropriate
means, shall ensure the timely public availability of the draft
plan or programme and the environmental report.
3. Each Party shall ensure that the public concerned,
including relevant non-governmental organizations, is identified
for the purposes of paragraphs 1 and 4.
4. Each Party shall ensure that the public referred to in
paragraph 3 has the opportunity to express its opinion on the
draft plan or programme and the environmental report within a
reasonable time frame.
5. Each Party shall ensure that the detailed arrangements for
informing the public and consulting the public concerned are
determined and made publicly available. For this purpose, each
Party shall take into account to the extent appropriate the
elements listed in annex V.
Article
9
CONSULTATION WITH ENVIRONMENTAL AND HEALTH AUTHORITIES
1. Each Party shall designate the authorities to be consulted
which, by reason of their specific environmental or health
responsibilities, are likely to be concerned by the
environmental, including health, effects of the implementation of
the plan or programme.
2. The draft plan or programme and the environmental report
shall be made available to the authorities referred to in
paragraph 1.
3. Each Party shall ensure that the authorities referred to in
paragraph 1 are given, in an early, timely and effective manner,
the opportunity to express their opinion on the draft plan or
programme and the environmental report.
4. Each Party shall determine the detailed arrangements for
informing and consulting the environmental and health authorities
referred to in paragraph 1.
Article
10
TRANSBOUNDARY CONSULTATIONS
1. Where a Party of origin considers that the implementation
of a plan or programme is likely to have significant
transboundary environmental, including health, effects or where a
Party likely to be significantly affected so requests, the Party
of origin shall as early as possible before the adoption of the
plan or programme notify the affected Party.
2. This notification shall contain, inter alia:
(a) The draft plan or programme and the environmental report
including information on its possible transboundary
environmental, including health, effects; and
(b) Information regarding the decision-making procedure,
including an indication of a reasonable time schedule for the
transmission of comments.
3. The affected Party shall, within the time specified in the
notification, indicate to the Party of origin whether it wishes
to enter into consultations before the adoption of the plan or
programme and, if it so indicates, the Parties concerned shall
enter into consultations concerning the likely transboundary
environmental, including health, effects of implementing the plan
or programme and the measures envisaged to prevent, reduce or
mitigate adverse effects.
4. Where such consultations take place, the Parties concerned
shall agree on detailed arrangements to ensure that the public
concerned and the authorities referred to in article 9, paragraph
1, in the affected Party are informed and given an opportunity to
forward their opinion on the draft plan or programme and the
environmental report within a reasonable time frame.
Article
11
DECISION
1. Each Party shall ensure that when a plan or programme is
adopted due account is taken of:
(a) The conclusions of the environmental report;
(b) The measures to prevent, reduce or mitigate the adverse
effects identified in the environmental report; and
(c) The comments received in accordance with articles 8 to
10.
2. Each Party shall ensure that, when a plan or programme is
adopted, the public, the authorities referred to in article 9,
paragraph 1, and the Parties consulted according to article 10
are informed, and that the plan or programme is made available to
them together with a statement summarizing how the environmental,
including health, considerations have been integrated into it,
how the comments received in accordance with articles 8 to 10
have been taken into account and the reasons for adopting it in
the light of the reasonable alternatives considered.
Article
12
MONITORING
1. Each Party shall monitor the significant environmental,
including health, effects of the implementation of the plans and
programmes, adopted under article 11 in order, inter alia, to
identify, at an early stage, unforeseen adverse effects and to be
able to undertake appropriate remedial action.
2. The results of the monitoring undertaken shall be made
available, in accordance with national legislation, to the
authorities referred to in article 9, paragraph 1, and to the
public.
Article
13
POLICIES AND LEGISLATION
1. Each Party shall endeavour to ensure that environmental,
including health, concerns are considered and integrated to the
extent appropriate in the preparation of its proposals for
policies and legislation that are likely to have significant
effects on the environment, including health.
2. In applying paragraph 1, each Party shall consider the
appropriate principles and elements of this Protocol.
3. Each Party shall determine, where appropriate, the
practical arrangements for the consideration and integration of
environmental, including health, concerns in accordance with
paragraph 1, taking into account the need for transparency in
decision-making.
4. Each Party shall report to the Meeting of the Parties to
the Convention serving as the Meeting of the Parties to this
Protocol on its application of this article.
Article
14
THE MEETING OF THE PARTIES TO THE CONVENTION SERVING AS THE
MEETING OF THE PARTIES TO THE PROTOCOL
1. The Meeting of the Parties to the Convention shall serve as
the Meeting of the Parties to this Protocol. The first meeting of
the Parties to the Convention serving as the Meeting of the
Parties to this Protocol shall be convened not later than one
year after the date of entry into force of this Protocol, and in
conjunction with a meeting of the Parties to the Convention, if a
meeting of the latter is scheduled within that period. Subsequent
meetings of the Parties to the Convention serving as the Meeting
of the Parties to this Protocol shall be held in conjunction with
meetings of the Parties to the Convention, unless otherwise
decided by the Meeting of the Parties to the Convention serving
as the Meeting of the Parties to this Protocol.
2. Parties to the Convention which are not Parties to this
Protocol may participate as observers in the proceedings of any
session of the Meeting of the Parties to the Convention serving
as the Meeting of the Parties to this Protocol. When the Meeting
of the Parties to the Convention serves as the Meeting of the
Parties to this Protocol, decisions under this Protocol shall be
taken only by the Parties to this Protocol.
3. When the Meeting of the Parties to the Convention serves as
the Meeting of the Parties to this Protocol, any member of the
Bureau of the Meeting of the Parties representing a Party to the
Convention that is not, at that time, a Party to this Protocol
shall be replaced by another member to be elected by and from
amongst the Parties to this Protocol.
4. The Meeting of the Parties to the Convention serving as the
Meeting of the Parties to this Protocol shall keep under regular
review the implementation of this Protocol and, for this purpose,
shall:
(a) Review policies for and methodological approaches to
strategic environmental assessment with a view to further
improving the procedures provided for under this Protocol;
(b) Exchange information regarding experience gained in
strategic environmental assessment and in the implementation of
this Protocol;
(c) Seek, where appropriate, the services and cooperation of
competent bodies having expertise pertinent to the achievement of
the purposes of this Protocol;
(d) Establish such subsidiary bodies as it considers necessary
for the implementation of this Protocol;
(e) Where necessary, consider and adopt proposals for
amendments to this Protocol;
(f) Consider and undertake any additional action, including
action to be carried out jointly under this Protocol and the
Convention, that may be required for the achievement of the
purposes of this Protocol.
5. The rules of procedure of the Meeting of the Parties to the
Convention shall be applied mutatis mutandis under this Protocol,
except as may otherwise be decided by consensus by the Meeting of
the Parties serving as the Meeting of the Parties to this
Protocol.
6. At its first meeting, the Meeting of the Parties to the
Convention serving as the Meeting of the Parties to this Protocol
shall consider and adopt the modalities for applying the
procedure for the review of compliance with the Convention to
this Protocol.
7. Each Party shall, at intervals to be determined by the
Meeting of the Parties to the Convention serving as the Meeting
of the Parties to this Protocol, report to the Meeting of the
Parties to the Convention serving as the Meeting of the Parties
to the Protocol on measures that it has taken to implement the
Protocol.
Article
15
RELATIONSHIP TO OTHER INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENTS
The relevant provisions of this Protocol shall apply without
prejudice to the UNECE Conventions on Environmental Impact
Assessment in a Transboundary Context and on Access to
Information, Public Participation in Decision-making and Access
to Justice in Environmental Matters.
Article
16
RIGHT TO VOTE
1. Except as provided for in paragraph 2 below, each Party to
this Protocol shall have one vote.
2. Regional economic integration organizations, in matters
within their competence, shall exercise their right to vote with
a number of votes equal to the number of their member States
which are Parties to this Protocol. Such organizations shall not
exercise their right to vote if their member States exercise
theirs, and vice versa.
Article
17
SECRETARIAT
The secretariat established by article 13 of the Convention
shall serve as the secretariat of this Protocol and article 13,
paragraphs (a) to (c), of the Convention on the functions of the
secretariat shall apply mutatis mutandis to this Protocol.
Article
18
ANNEXES
The annexes to this Protocol shall constitute an integral part
thereof.
Article
19
AMENDMENTS TO THE PROTOCOL
1. Any Party may propose amendments to this Protocol.
2. Subject to paragraph 3, the procedure for proposing,
adopting and the entry into force of amendments to the Convention
laid down in paragraphs 2 to 5 of article 14 of the Convention
shall apply, mutatis mutandis, to amendments to this
Protocol.
3. For the purpose of this Protocol, the three fourths of the
Parties required for an amendment to enter into force for Parties
having ratified, approved or accepted it, shall be calculated on
the basis of the number of Parties at the time of the adoption of
the amendment.
Article
20
SETTLEMENT OF DISPUTES
The provisions on the settlement of disputes of article 15 of
the Convention shall apply mutatis mutandis to this Protocol.
Article
21
SIGNATURE
This Protocol shall be open for signature at Kiev (Ukraine)
from 21 to 23 May 2003 and thereafter at United Nations
Headquarters in New York until 31 December 2003, by States
members of the Economic Commission for Europe as well as States
having consultative status with the Economic Commission for
Europe pursuant to paragraphs 8 and 11 of Economic and Social
Council resolution 36 (IV) of 28 March 1947, and by regional
economic integration organizations constituted by sovereign
States members of the Economic Commission for Europe to which
their member States have transferred competence over matters
governed by this Protocol, including the competence to enter into
treaties in respect of these matters.
Article
22
DEPOSITARY
The Secretary-General of the United Nations shall act as the
Depositary of this Protocol.
Article
23
RATIFICATION, ACCEPTANCE, APPROVAL AND ACCESSION
1. This Protocol shall be subject to ratification, acceptance
or approval by signatory States and regional economic integration
organizations referred to in article 21.
2. This Protocol shall be open for accession as from 1 January
2004 by the States and regional economic integration
organizations referred to in article 21.
3. Any other State, not referred to in paragraph 2 above, that
is a Member of the United Nations may accede to the Protocol upon
approval by the Meeting of the Parties to the Convention serving
as the Meeting of the Parties to the Protocol.
4. Any regional economic integration organization referred to
in article 21 which becomes a Party to this Protocol without any
of its member States being a Party shall be bound by all the
obligations under this Protocol. If one or more of such an
organization's member States is a Party to this Protocol, the
organization and its member States shall decide on their
respective responsibilities for the performance of their
obligations under this Protocol. In such cases, the organization
and its member States shall not be entitled to exercise rights
under this Protocol concurrently.
5. In their instruments of ratification, acceptance, approval
or accession, the regional economic integration organizations
referred to in article 21 shall declare the extent of their
competence with respect to the matters governed by this Protocol.
These organizations shall also inform the Depositary of any
relevant modification to the extent of their competence.
Article
24
ENTRY INTO FORCE
1. This Protocol shall enter into force on the ninetieth day
after the date of deposit of the sixteenth instrument of
ratification, acceptance, approval or accession.
2. For the purposes of paragraph 1 above, any instrument
deposited by a regional economic integration organization
referred to in article 21 shall not be counted as additional to
those deposited by States members of such an organization.
3. For each State or regional economic integration
organization referred to in article 21 which ratifies, accepts or
approves this Protocol or accedes thereto after the deposit of
the sixteenth instrument of ratification, acceptance, approval or
accession, the Protocol shall enter into force on the ninetieth
day after the date of deposit by such State or organization of
its instrument of ratification, acceptance, approval or
accession.
4. This Protocol shall apply to plans, programmes, policies
and legislation for which the first formal preparatory act is
subsequent to the date on which this Protocol enters into force.
Where the Party under whose jurisdiction the preparation of a
plan, programme, policy or legislation is envisaged is one for
which paragraph 3 applies, this Protocol shall apply to plans,
programmes, policies and legislation for which the first formal
preparatory act is subsequent to the date on which this Protocol
comes into force for that Party.
Article
25
WITHDRAWAL
At any time after four years from the date on which this
Protocol has come into force with respect to a Party, that Party
may withdraw from the Protocol by giving written notification to
the Depositary. Any such withdrawal shall take effect on the
ninetieth day after the date of its receipt by the Depositary.
Any such withdrawal shall not affect the application of articles
5 to 9, 11 and 13 with respect to a strategic environmental
assessment under this Protocol which has already been started, or
the application of article 10 with respect to a notification or
request which has already been made, before such withdrawal takes
effect.
Article
26
AUTHENTIC TEXTS
The original of this Protocol, of which the English, French
and Russian texts are equally authentic, shall be deposited with
the Secretary-General of the United Nations.
In witness whereof the undersigned, being duly authorized
thereto, have signed this Protocol.
Done at Kiev (Ukraine), this twenty-first day of May, two
thousand and three.
Annex
I
LIST OF PROJECTS AS REFERRED TO IN ARTICLE 4, PARAGRAPH 2
1. Crude oil refineries (excluding undertakings manufacturing
only lubricants from crude oil) and installations for the
gasification and liquefaction of 500 metric tons or more of coal
or bituminous shale per day.
2. Thermal power stations and other combustion installations
with a heat output of 300 megawatts or more and nuclear power
stations and other nuclear reactors (except research
installations for the production and conversion of fissionable
and fertile materials, whose maximum power does not exceed 1
kilowatt continuous thermal load).
3. Installations solely designed for the production or
enrichment of nuclear fuels, for the reprocessing of irradiated
nuclear fuels or for the storage, disposal and processing of
radioactive waste.
4. Major installations for the initial smelting of cast-iron
and steel and for the production of non-ferrous metals.
5. Installations for the extraction of asbestos and for the
processing and transformation of asbestos and products containing
asbestos: for asbestos-cement products, with an annual production
of more than 20,000 metric tons of finished product; for friction
material, with an annual production of more than 50 metric tons
of finished product; and for other asbestos utilization of more
than 200 metric tons per year.
6. Integrated chemical installations.
7. Construction of motorways, express roads*/ and lines for
long-distance railway traffic and of airports**/ with a basic
runway length of 2,100 metres or more.
8. Large-diameter oil and gas pipelines.
9. Trading ports and also inland waterways and ports for
inland-waterway traffic which permit the passage of vessels of
over 1,350 metric tons.
10. Waste-disposal installations for the incineration,
chemical treatment or landfill of toxic and dangerous wastes.
11. Large dams and reservoirs.
12. Groundwater abstraction activities in cases where the
annual volume of water to be abstracted amounts to 10 million
cubic metres or more.
13. Pulp and paper manufacturing of 200 air-dried metric tons
or more per day.
14. Major mining, on-site extraction and processing of metal
ores or coal.
15. Offshore hydrocarbon production.
16. Major storage facilities for petroleum, petrochemical and
chemical products.
17. Deforestation of large areas.
*/ For the purposes of this Protocol:
- "Motorway" means a road specially designed and
built for motor traffic, which does not serve properties
bordering on it, and which:
(a) Is provided, except at special points or temporarily, with
separate carriageways for the two directions of traffic,
separated from each other by a dividing strip not intended for
traffic or, exceptionally, by other means;
(b) Does not cross at level with any road, railway or tramway
track, or footpath; and
(c) Is specially sign posted as a motorway.
- "Express road" means a road reserved for motor
traffic accessible only from interchanges or controlled junctions
and on which, in particular, stopping and parking are prohibited
on the running carriageway(s).
**/ For the purposes of this Protocol, "airport"
means an airport which complies with the definition in the 1944
Chicago Convention setting up the International Civil Aviation
Organization (annex 14).
Annex
II
ANY OTHER PROJECTS REFERRED TO IN ARTICLE 4, PARAGRAPH 2
1. Projects for the restructuring of rural land holdings.
2. Projects for the use of uncultivated land or semi-natural
areas for intensive agricultural purposes.
3. Water management projects for agriculture, including
irrigation and land drainage projects.
4. Intensive livestock installations (including poultry).
5. Initial afforestation and deforestation for the purposes of
conversion to another type of land use.
6. Intensive fish farming.
7. Nuclear power stations and other nuclear reactors*/
including the dismantling or decommissioning of such power
stations or reactors (except research installations for the
production and conversion of fissionable and fertile materials
whose maximum power does not exceed 1 kilowatt continuous thermal
load), as far as not included in annex I.
8. Construction of overhead electrical power lines with a
voltage of 220 kilovolts or more and a length of 15 kilometres or
more and other projects for the transmission of electrical energy
by overhead cables.
9. Industrial installations for the production of electricity,
steam and hot water.
10. Industrial installations for carrying gas, steam and hot
water.
11. Surface storage of fossil fuels and natural gas.
12. Underground storage of combustible gases.
13. Industrial briquetting of coal and lignite.
14. Installations for hydroelectric energy production.
15. Installations for the harnessing of wind power for energy
production (wind farms).
16. Installations, as far as not included in annex I,
designed:
- For the production or enrichment of nuclear fuel;
- For the processing of irradiated nuclear fuel;
- For the final disposal of irradiated nuclear fuel;
- Solely for the final disposal of radioactive waste;
- Solely for the storage (planned for more than 10 years) of
irradiated nuclear fuels in a different site than the production
site; or
- For the processing and storage of radioactive waste.
17. Quarries, open cast mining and peat extraction, as far as
not included in annex I.
18. Underground mining, as far as not included in annex I.
19. Extraction of minerals by marine or fluvial dredging.
20. Deep drillings (in particular geothermal drilling,
drilling for the storage of nuclear waste material, drilling for
water supplies), with the exception of drillings for
investigating the stability of the soil.
21. Surface industrial installations for the extraction of
coal, petroleum, natural gas and ores, as well as bituminous
shale.
22. Integrated works for the initial smelting of cast iron and
steel, as far as not included in annex I.
23. Installations for the production of pig iron or steel
(primary or secondary fusion) including continuous casting.
24. Installations for the processing of ferrous metals
(hot-rolling mills, smitheries with hammers, application of
protective fused metal coats).
25. Ferrous metal foundries.
26. Installations for the production of non-ferrous crude
metals from ore, concentrates or secondary raw materials by
metallurgical, chemical or electrolytic processes, as far as not
included in annex I.
27. Installations for the smelting, including the alloyage, of
non-ferrous metals excluding precious metals, including recovered
products (refining, foundry casting, etc.), as far as not
included in annex I.
28. Installations for surface treatment of metals and plastic
materials using an electrolytic or chemical process.
29. Manufacture and assembly of motor vehicles and manufacture
of motor-vehicle engines.
30. Shipyards.
31. Installations for the construction and repair of
aircraft.
32. Manufacture of railway equipment.
33. Swaging by explosives.
34. Installations for the roasting and sintering of metallic
ores.
35. Coke ovens (dry coal distillation).
36. Installations for the manufacture of cement.
37. Installations for the manufacture of glass including glass
fibre.
38. Installations for smelting mineral substances including
the production of mineral fibres.
39. Manufacture of ceramic products by burning, in particular
roofing tiles, bricks, refractory bricks, tiles, stoneware or
porcelain.
40. Installations for the production of chemicals or treatment
of intermediate products, as far as not included in annex I.
41. Production of pesticides and pharmaceutical products,
paint and varnishes, elastomers and peroxides.
42. Installations for the storage of petroleum, petrochemical,
or chemical products, as far as not included in annex I.
43. Manufacture of vegetable and animal oils and fats.
44. Packing and canning of animal and vegetable products.
45. Manufacture of dairy products.
46. Brewing and malting.
47. Confectionery and syrup manufacture.
48. Installations for the slaughter of animals.
49. Industrial starch manufacturing installations.
50. Fish-meal and fish-oil factories.
51. Sugar factories.
52. Industrial plants for the production of pulp, paper and
board, as far as not included in annex I.
53. Plants for the pre treatment or dyeing of fibres or
textiles.
54. Plants for the tanning of hides and skins.
55. Cellulose-processing and production installations.
56. Manufacture and treatment of elastomer-based products.
57. Installations for the manufacture of artificial mineral
fibres.
58. Installations for the recovery or destruction of explosive
substances.
59. Installations for the production of asbestos and the
manufacture of asbestos products, as far as not included in annex
I.
60. Knackers' yards.
61. Test benches for engines, turbines or reactors.
62. Permanent racing and test tracks for motorized
vehicles.
63. Pipelines for transport of gas or oil, as far as not
included in annex I.
64. Pipelines for transport of chemicals with a diameter of
more than 800 mm and a length of more than 40 km.
65. Construction of railways and intermodal transhipment
facilities, and of intermodal terminals, as far as not included
in annex I.
66. Construction of tramways, elevated and underground
railways, suspended lines or similar lines of a particular type
used exclusively or mainly for passenger transport.
67. Construction of roads, including realignment and/or
widening of any existing road, as far as not included in annex
I.
68. Construction of harbours and port installations, including
fishing harbours, as far as not included in annex I.
69. Construction of inland waterways and ports for
inland-waterway traffic, as far as not included in annex I.
70. Trading ports, piers for loading and unloading connected
to land and outside ports, as far as not included in annex I.
71. Canalization and flood-relief works.
72. Construction of airports**/ and airfields, as far as not
included in annex I.
73. Waste-disposal installations (including landfill), as far
as not included in annex I.
74. Installations for the incineration or chemical treatment
of non-hazardous waste.
75. Storage of scrap iron, including scrap vehicles.
76. Sludge deposition sites.
77. Groundwater abstraction or artificial groundwater
recharge, as far as not included in annex I.
78. Works for the transfer of water resources between river
basins.
79. Waste-water treatment plants.
80. Dams and other installations designed for the holding-back
or for the long-term or permanent storage of water, as far as not
included in annex I.
81. Coastal work to combat erosion and maritime works capable
of altering the coast through the construction, for example, of
dykes, moles, jetties and other sea defence works, excluding the
maintenance and reconstruction of such works.
82. Installations of long-distance aqueducts.
83. Ski runs, ski lifts and cable cars and associated
developments.
84. Marinas.
85. Holiday villages and hotel complexes outside urban areas
and associated developments.
86. Permanent campsites and caravan sites.
87. Theme parks.
88. Industrial estate development projects.
89. Urban development projects, including the construction of
shopping centres and car parks.
90. Reclamation of land from the sea.
*/ For the purposes of this Protocol, nuclear power stations
and other nuclear reactors cease to be such an installation when
all nuclear fuel and other radioactively contaminated elements
have been removed permanently from the installation site.
**/ For the purposes of this Protocol, "airport" means
an airport which complies with the definition in the 1944 Chicago
Convention setting up the International Civil Aviation
Organization (annex 14).
Annex
III
CRITERIA FOR DETERMINING OF THE LIKELY SIGNIFICANTENVIRONMENTAL,
INCLUDING HEALTH, EFFECTS REFERRED TO IN ARTICLE 5, PARAGRAPH
1
1. The relevance of the plan or programme to the integration
of environmental, including health, considerations in particular
with a view to promoting sustainable development.
2. The degree to which the plan or programme sets a framework
for projects and other activities, either with regard to
location, nature, size and operating conditions or by allocating
resources.
3. The degree to which the plan or programme influences other
plans and programmes including those in a hierarchy.
4. Environmental, including health, problems relevant to the
plan or programme.
5. The nature of the environmental, including health, effects
such as probability, duration, frequency, reversibility,
magnitude and extent (such as geographical area or size of
population likely to be affected).
6. The risks to the environment, including health.
7. The transboundary nature of effects.
8. The degree to which the plan or programme will affect
valuable or vulnerable areas including landscapes with a
recognized national or international protection status.
Annex
IV
INFORMATION REFERRED TO IN ARTICLE 7, PARAGRAPH 2
1. The contents and the main objectives of the plan or
programme and its link with other plans or programmes.
2. The relevant aspects of the current state of the
environment, including health, and the likely evolution thereof
should the plan or programme not be implemented.
3. The characteristics of the environment, including health,
in areas likely to be significantly affected.
4. The environmental, including health, problems which are
relevant to the plan or programme.
5. The environmental, including health, objectives established
at international, national and other levels which are relevant to
the plan or programme, and the ways in which these objectives and
other environmental, including health, considerations have been
taken into account during its preparation.
6. The likely significant environmental, including health,
effects*/ as defined in article 2, paragraph 7.
7. Measures to prevent, reduce or mitigate any significant
adverse effects on the environment, including health, which may
result from the implementation of the plan or programme.
8. An outline of the reasons for selecting the alternatives
dealt with and a description of how the assessment was undertaken
including difficulties encountered in providing the information
to be included such as technical deficiencies or lack of
knowledge.
9. Measures envisaged for monitoring environmental, including
health, effects of the implementation of the plan or
programme.
10. The likely significant transboundary environmental,
including health, effects.
11. A non-technical summary of the information provided.
*/ These effects should include secondary, cumulative,
synergistic, short-, medium- and long-term, permanent and
temporary, positive and negative effects.
Annex
V
INFORMATION REFERRED TO IN ARTICLE 8, PARAGRAPH 5
1. The proposed plan or programme and its nature.
2. The authority responsible for its adoption.
3. The envisaged procedure, including:
(a) The commencement of the procedure;
(b) The opportunities for the public to participate;
(c) The time and venue of any envisaged public hearing;
(d) The authority from which relevant information can be
obtained and where the relevant information has been deposited
for examination by the public;
(e) The authority to which comments or questions can be
submitted and the time schedule for the transmittal of comments
or questions; and
(f) What environmental, including health, information relevant
to the proposed plan or programme is available.
4. Whether the plan or programme is likely to be subject to a
transboundary assessment procedure.