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Declaration of the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment |
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Declaration of the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment
The United Nations Conference on the Human Environment, having met at Stockholm from 5 to 16 June 1972,having considered the need for a common outlook and for common principles to inspire and guide the peoples of the world in the preservation and enhancement of the human environment,
Proclaims that:
1. Man is both creature and moulder of his
environment, which gives him physical sustenance and
affords him the opportunity for intellectual, moral,
social and spiritual growth. In the long and tortuous
evolution of the human race on this planet a stage has
been reached when, through the rapid acceleration of
science and technology, man has acquired the power to
transform his environment in countless ways and on an
unprecedented scale. Both aspects of man's environment,
the natural and the man-made, are essential to his
well-being and to the enjoyment of basic human rights
the right to life itself.
2. The protection and improvement of the human
environment is a major issue which affects the
well-being of peoples and economic development
throughout the world; it is the urgent desire of the
peoples of the whole world and the duty of all
Governments.
3. Man has constantly to sum up experience and go on
discovering, inventing, creating and advancing. In our
time, man's capability to transform his surroundings, if
used wisely, can bring to all peoples the benefits of
development and the opportunity to enhance the quality
of life. Wrongly or heedlessly applied, the same power
can do incalculable harm to human beings and the human
environment. We see around us growing evidence of
man-made harm in many regions of the earth: dangerous
levels of pollution in water, air, earth and living
beings; major and undesirable disturbances to the
ecological balance of the biosphere; destruction and
depletion of irreplaceable resources; and gross
deficiencies, harmful to the physical, mental and social
health of man, in the man-made environment, particularly
in the living and working environment.
4. In the developing countries most of the
environmental problems are caused by under-development.
Millions continue to live far below the minimum levels
required for a decent human existence, deprived of
adequate food and clothing, shelter and education,
health and sanitation. Therefore, the developing
countries must direct their efforts to development,
bearing in mind their priorities and the need to
safeguard and improve the environment. For the same
purpose, the industrialized countries should make
efforts to reduce the gap themselves and the developing
countries. In the industrialized countries,
environmental problems are generally related to
industrialization and technological development.
5. The natural growth of population continuously
presents problems for the preservation of the
environment, and adequate policies and measures should
be adopted, as appropriate, to face these problems. Of
all things in the world, people are the most precious.
It is the people that propel social progress, create
social wealth, develop science and technology and,
through their hard work, continuously transform the
human environment. Along with social progress and the
advance of production, science and technology, the
capability of man to improve the environment increases
with each passing day.
6. A point has been reached in history when we must
shape our actions throughout the world with a more
prudent care for their environmental consequences.
Through ignorance or indifference we can do massive and
irreversible harm to the earthly environment on which
our life and well being depend. Conversely, through
fuller knowledge and wiser action, we can achieve for
ourselves and our posterity a better life in an
environment more in keeping with human needs and hopes.
There are broad vistas for the enhancement of
environmental quality and the creation of a good life.
What is needed is an enthusiastic but calm state of mind
and intense but orderly work. For the purpose of
attaining freedom in the world of nature, man must use
knowledge to build, in collaboration with nature, a
better environment. To defend and improve the human
environment for present and future generations has
become an imperative goal for mankind-a goal to be
pursued together with, and in harmony with, the
established and fundamental goals of peace and of
worldwide economic and social development.
7. To achieve this environmental goal will demand the
acceptance of responsibility by citizens and communities
and by enterprises and institutions at every level, all
sharing equitably in common efforts. Individuals in all
walks of life as well as organizations in many fields,
by their values and the sum of their actions, will shape
the world environment of the future.
Local and national governments will bear the greatest
burden for large-scale environmental policy and action
within their jurisdictions. International cooperation is
also needed in order to raise resources to support the
developing countries in carrying out their
responsibilities in this field. A growing class of
environmental problems, because they are regional or
global in extent or because they affect the common
international realm, will require extensive cooperation
among nations and action by international organizations
in the common interest.
The Conference calls upon Governments and peoples to
exert common efforts for the preservation and
improvement of the human environment, for the benefit of
all the people and for their posterity.
Principles
States the common conviction that:
Principle 1
Man has the fundamental right to freedom, equality
and adequate conditions of life, in an environment of a
quality that permits a life of dignity and well-being,
and he bears a solemn responsibility to protect and
improve the environment for present and future
generations. In this respect, policies promoting or
perpetuating apartheid, racial segregation,
discrimination, colonial and other forms of oppression
and foreign domination stand condemned and must be
eliminated.
Principle 2
The natural resources of the earth, including the
air, water, land, flora and fauna and especially
representative samples of natural ecosystems, must be
safeguarded for the benefit of present and future
generations through careful planning or management, as
appropriate.
Principle 3
The capacity of the earth to produce vital renewable
resources must be maintained and, wherever practicable,
restored or improved.
Principle 4
Man has a special responsibility to safeguard and
wisely manage the heritage of wildlife and its habitat,
which are now gravely imperilled by a combination of
adverse factors. Nature conservation, including
wildlife, must therefore receive importance in planning
for economic development.
Principle 5
The non-renewable resources of the earth must be
employed in such a way as to guard against the danger of
their future exhaustion and to ensure that benefits from
such employment are shared by all mankind.
Principle 6
The discharge of toxic substances or of other
substances and the release of heat, in such quantities
or concentrations as to exceed the capacity of the
environment to render them harmless, must be halted in
order to ensure that serious or irreversible damage is
not inflicted upon ecosystems. The just struggle of the
peoples of ill countries against pollution should be
supported.
Principle 7
States shall take all possible steps to prevent
pollution of the seas by substances that are liable to
create hazards to human health, to harm living resources
and marine life, to damage amenities or to interfere
with other legitimate uses of the sea.
Principle 8
Economic and social development is essential for
ensuring a favorable living and working environment for
man and for creating conditions on earth that are
necessary for the improvement of the quality of life.
Principle 9
Environmental deficiencies generated by the
conditions of under-development and natural disasters
pose grave problems and can best be remedied by
accelerated development through the transfer of
substantial quantities of financial and technological
assistance as a supplement to the domestic effort of the
developing countries and such timely assistance as may
be required.
Principle 10
For the developing countries, stability of prices and
adequate earnings for primary commodities and raw
materials are essential to environmental management,
since economic factors as well as ecological processes
must be taken into account.
Principle 11
The environmental policies of all States should
enhance and not adversely affect the present or future
development potential of developing countries, nor
should they hamper the attainment
of better living conditions for all, and appropriate
steps should be taken by States and international
organizations with a view to reaching agreement on
meeting the possible national and international economic
consequences resulting from the application of
environmental measures.
Principle 12
Resources should be made available to preserve and
improve the environment, taking into account the
circumstances and particular requirements of developing
countries and any costs which may emanate- from their
incorporating environmental safeguards into their
development planning and the need for making available
to them, upon their request, additional international
technical and financial assistance for this purpose.
Principle 13
In order to achieve a more rational management of
resources and thus to improve the environment, States
should adopt an integrated and coordinated approach to
their development planning so as to ensure that
development is compatible with the need to protect and
improve environment for the benefit of their population.
Principle 14
Rational planning constitutes an essential tool for
reconciling any conflict between the needs of
development and the need to protect and improve the
environment.
Principle 15
Planning must be applied to human settlements and
urbanization with a view to avoiding adverse effects on
the environment and obtaining maximum social, economic
and environmental benefits for all. In this respect
projects which arc designed for colonialist and racist
domination must be abandoned.
Principle 16
Demographic policies which are without prejudice to
basic human rights and which are deemed appropriate by
Governments concerned should be applied in those regions
where the rate of population growth or excessive
population concentrations are likely to have adverse
effects on the environment of the human environment and
impede development.
Principle 17
Appropriate national institutions must be entrusted
with the task of planning, managing or controlling the 9
environmental resources of States with a view to
enhancing environmental quality.
Principle 18
Science and technology, as part of their contribution
to economic and social development, must be applied to
the identification, avoidance and control of
environmental risks and the solution of environmental
problems and for the common good of mankind.
Principle 19
Education in environmental matters, for the younger
generation as well as adults, giving due consideration
to the underprivileged, is essential in order to broaden
the basis for an enlightened opinion and responsible
conduct by individuals, enterprises and communities in
protecting and improving the environment in its full
human dimension. It is also essential that mass media of
communications avoid contributing to the deterioration
of the environment, but, on the contrary, disseminates
information of an educational nature on the need to
project and improve the environment in order to enable
mal to develop in every respect.
Principle 20
Scientific research and development in the context of
environmental problems, both national and multinational,
must be promoted in all countries, especially the
developing countries. In this connection, the free flow
of up-to-date scientific information and transfer of
experience must be supported and assisted, to facilitate
the solution of environmental problems; environmental
technologies should be made available to developing
countries on terms which would encourage their wide
dissemination without constituting an economic burden on
the developing countries.
Principle 21
States have, in accordance with the Charter of the
United Nations and the principles of international law,
the sovereign right to exploit their own resources
pursuant to their own environmental policies, and the
responsibility to ensure that activities within their
jurisdiction or control do not cause damage to the
environment of other States or of areas beyond the
limits of national jurisdiction.
Principle 22
States shall cooperate to develop further the
international law regarding liability and compensation
for the victims of pollution and other environmental
damage caused by activities within the jurisdiction or
control of such States to areas beyond their
jurisdiction.
Principle 23
Without prejudice to such criteria as may be agreed
upon by the international community, or to standards
which will have to be determined nationally, it will be
essential in all cases to consider the systems of values
prevailing in each country, and the extent of the
applicability of standards which are valid for the most
advanced countries but which may be inappropriate and of
unwarranted social cost for the developing countries.
Principle 24
International matters concerning the protection and
improvement of the environment should be handled in a
cooperative spirit by all countries, big and small, on
an equal footing.
Cooperation through multilateral or bilateral
arrangements or other appropriate means is essential to
effectively control, prevent, reduce and eliminate
adverse environmental effects resulting from activities
conducted in all spheres, in such a way that due account
is taken of the sovereignty and interests of all States.
Principle 25
States shall ensure that international organizations
play a coordinated, efficient and dynamic role for the
protection and improvement of the environment.
Principle 26
Man and his environment must be spared the effects of
nuclear weapons and all other means of mass destruction.
States must strive to reach prompt agreement, in the
relevant international organs, on the elimination and
complete destruction of such weapons.
21st plenary meeting
16 June 1972
Chapter 11
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