Commission for Environmental Cooperation

















Commission for Environmental Cooperation

Logo of the Commission for Environmental Cooperation
Abbreviation
CEC
CCA
CCE
Formation
1994
Headquarters
393 St-Jacques St. W., bur. 200
Location

  • Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Membership

 Canada
 Mexico
 United States
Executive Director

César Rafael Chávez
Website
cec.org

The Commission for Environmental Cooperation (CEC; Spanish: Comisión para la Cooperación Ambiental; French: Commission de coopération environnementale) was established by Canada, Mexico, and the United States to implement the North American Agreement on Environmental Cooperation (NAAEC), the environmental side accord to the North American Free Trade Agreement. The CEC's mission is to facilitate cooperation and public participation to foster conservation, protection and enhancement of the North American environment for the benefit of present and future generations, in the context of increasing economic, trade and social links among Canada, Mexico and the United States.




Contents





  • 1 Origins and structure

    • 1.1 CEC Council


    • 1.2 Secretariat


    • 1.3 Joint Public Advisory Committee



  • 2 Cooperative Work Program

    • 2.1 2017–2018 Operational Plan


    • 2.2 North American Partnership for Environmental Community Action


    • 2.3 Tools and Resources

      • 2.3.1 Virtual Library


      • 2.3.2 Pollutant Release and Transfer Register


      • 2.3.3 North American Environmental Atlas




  • 3 Submissions on Enforcement Matters


  • 4 Independent Secretariat reports


  • 5 References


  • 6 External links




Origins and structure


The Commission for Environmental Cooperation was created in 1994 by Canada, Mexico and the United States, under the NAAEC. The NAAEC was implemented in parallel to the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and complements the environmental provisions of NAFTA. It signified a commitment that liberalization of trade and economic growth in North America would be accompanied by collaboration and continuous improvement in the environmental protection provided by each of the three signatory countries. In part, the NAAEC was driven by the desire of the United States to mitigate public concern about the impact of trade liberalization on environmental protection in the three countries, particularly Mexico.


The CEC is the first international environmental organization created in parallel with a trade agreement and is the sole organization with a mandate to monitor and report upon the impact of trade on the environment of North America.


The CEC is composed of the Council, the Secretariat and the Joint Public Advisory Committee.



CEC Council


The Council is the CEC's governing body and is composed of the highest-level federal environmental authorities from Canada, Mexico, and the United States: the Canadian Minister of Environment and Climate Change, the Mexican Secretary of Environment and Natural Resources (Semarnat), and the Administrator of the US Environmental Protection Agency.


The Council meets at least once a year, including with the public, to set the CEC's overall direction, including its budget and activities. It assigns responsibilities, if needed, to committees, working groups or expert groups, as may be required to fulfill its mandate.














CEC Council Members
Country
Representative
Title

 Canada

Catherine McKenna

Minister of Environment and Climate Change

 Mexico

Rafael Pacchiano Alamán

Secretary of Environment and Natural Resources

 United States

Scott Pruitt

Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency


Secretariat


The CEC Secretariat is headquartered in Montreal and has a liaison office in Mexico City. The Secretariat implements several projects under the operational plan authorized by the Council; develops independent Secretariat reports on North American environmental issues, and processes submissions on enforcement matters.



Joint Public Advisory Committee


The Joint Public Advisory Committee (JPAC) is composed of fifteen citizens (five from each country). JPAC advises the Council on any matter within the scope of the North American Agreement on Environmental Cooperation and serves as a source of information for the CEC Secretariat.


As a group of volunteer citizens, JPAC is a microcosm of the public: independent individuals who contribute diverse but rich institutional experience and cultural perspectives.


In addition, in 2015 the CEC established a Roster of Experts on Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) whose mandate it is to identify opportunities to apply TEK to the CEC’s operations and policy recommendations. This is an innovative mechanism and the first traditional ecological knowledge panel to be named to a trilateral organization such as the CEC. In July 2017, the group was re-christened the "TEK Expert Group" and now reports directly to the CEC Council.




















JPAC Members

 Canada

 Mexico

 United States

Pauline Browes

Paola Hernández Villalvazo

Jerilyn López Mendoza

Meredith Adler

David Martínez Biro

Octaviana V. Trujillo

Dean Jacobs

Adriana Nelly Correa Sandoval

Felicia Marcus

Sabaa Khan

Gustavo Alanís-Ortega

Robert W. Varney


Bárbara Hernández Ramírez


Cooperative Work Program


The CEC's cooperative agenda is defined through the Strategic Plan. The current CEC Strategic Plan 2015–2020 identifies three areas of priority action for the CEC: Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation, Green Growth, and Sustainable Communities and Ecosystems.


Two-year Operational Plans present how the goals and objectives of the Strategic Plan will be implemented through project activities and key initiatives, and specify the budget for the Commission. Operational Plans are updated biennially.



2017–2018 Operational Plan


Some key initiatives in the 2017–2018 Operational Plan include:


• Position ISO 50001 and the Superior Energy Performance program (SEP) as key mechanisms for reducing greenhouse gas emissions and improving energy efficiency of the industrial and commercial sectors in North America.


• Reduce pollution from marine litter by promoting trilateral, intergovernmental coordination to effectively prevent and reduce land-based sources of litter from entering the marine environment.


• Effectively measure food loss and waste in the North American food chain, calculate its environmental and socioeconomic impacts, and provide tools and education to prevent and reduce loss and its impacts on food security, the economy, and the environment in North America.


• Advance science and actions to conserve the monarch butterfly and other pollinators by strengthening trinational cooperation and knowledge.


Past CEC Operational Plans have undertaken work in the following areas (some of these are continuing into 2017-2018):


• Serving as a catalyst for international cooperation to conserve North American ecosystems and migratory species—from grasslands to marine seascapes, from birds to monarch butterflies—that transcend political boundaries.


• Sponsoring cooperative, trinational action to reduce the risk of toxic substances to human health and the environment, including action for the abatement of hazardous chemicals such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), mercury, lead, dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) and dioxins from our environment. The CEC has also done work to reduce pollutant emissions at border crossings and monitor the transboundary transport of persistent organic pollutants.


• Raising the bar on environmental enforcement by aiding the three countries in their enforcement of national and international laws and agreements regulating national or transboundary shipment of endangered or protected species.


• Preventing pollution havens by aiding the three countries in their enforcement of national and international laws and agreements regulating the transboundary movement of hazardous waste.



North American Partnership for Environmental Community Action


In 2010, the CEC established a grant program, the North American Partnership for Environmental Community Action (NAPECA) to support communities in their efforts to address environmental problems locally. NAPECA is intended to support a flexible and diverse set of project types that will improve access to resources provided by the Parties through the CEC for smaller, more hands-on organizations and that build partnerships at the community level with a focus on sustainable communities and urban initiatives.



Tools and Resources



Virtual Library


The CEC’s online publications library provides the public with easy access to its large body of published work on environmental policy and research in North America.



Pollutant Release and Transfer Register


The North American PRTR Project involves the compilation and dissemination of information on the sources, amounts and handling of toxic substances released or transferred by over 35,000 industrial facilities in Canada, the United States, and Mexico, based on data reported to the pollutant release and transfer register (PRTR) of each country. The main products of this project are Taking Stock Online: a website featuring information and a searchable database of integrated, North American PRTR data and the annual Taking Stock report.


The Taking Stock Online tool allows the user to explore information on pollution from industrial facilities across North America. Summary charts and customized queries can be created and the analysis results downloaded in a variety of formats, including kml files for viewing through Google Earth.



North American Environmental Atlas


Created through the cooperation of three national agency partners, the North American Environmental Atlas combines harmonized data from Canada, Mexico and the United States to allow for a continental and regional perspective on environmental issues that cross boundaries. The Atlas continues to grow in breadth and depth as more thematic maps are created through the work of the Commission for Environmental Cooperation (CEC) and its partners. Scientists and map makers from Natural Resources Canada, the United States Geological Survey, Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Geografía, and other agencies in each country produced the information contained in the Atlas. The collection of viewable maps, data, and downloadable map files is available online without cost.



Submissions on Enforcement Matters


Articles 14 and 15 of the NAAEC provide a mechanism whereby any nongovernmental organization or person residing or established in North America can file a submission asserting that a Party to the Agreement is failing to effectively enforce its environmental law. The process is informed by the Guidelines for Submissions on Enforcement Matters under Articles 14 and 15 of the NAAEC. The process may lead to the development and publication of a detailed report, called a factual record, researched and written by independent experts. Past submissions have resulted in improved environmental protection, law and policy changes, and increased budgets for enforcement.


Here is a list of factual records published since 1996:
















































Factual Records
Year

Wetlands in Manzanillo
2016

Sumidero Canyon II
2015

Coal-fired Power Plants
2014

Ex Hacienda El Hospital II and III
2014

Environmental Pollution in Hermosillo II
2014

Lake Chapala II
2013

Quebec Automobiles
2012

Montreal Technoparc
2008

ALCA-Iztapalapa II
2008

Ontario Logging I and Ontario Logging II
2007

Pulp and Paper
2006

Tarahumara
2006

Molymex II
2004

Río Magdalena
2003

BC Mining
2003

Oldman River II
2003

BC Logging
2003

Aquanova
2003

Migratory Birds
2003

Metales y Derivados
2002

BC Hydro
2000

Cozumel
1998


Independent Secretariat reports


Under NAAEC Article 13, the CEC Secretariat may develop independent reports on any matter within the scope of the annual program and present them to the three Parties and the general public. These reports may address issues that are not covered by biennial operational plans and have the potential to inform future work of the CEC. Since 1994, the CEC Secretariat has published the following reports:




















Article 13 Reports
Year

Hazardous Trade? An Examination of US-generated Spent Lead-Acid Battery Exports and Secondary Lead Recycling in Canada, Mexico, and the United States
2013

Destination Sustainability: Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Freight Transportation in North America
2011

Green Building in North America
2008

Maize and Biodiversity: The Effects of Transgenic Maize in Mexico
2004

Environmental Challenges and Opportunities of the Evolving North American Electricity Market
2002

Ribbon of Life: An Agenda for Preserving Transboundary Migratory Bird Habitat on the Upper San Pedro River
1999

Continental Pollutant Pathways: An Agenda for Cooperation to Address Long-Range Transport of Air Pollution in North America
1997

The Death of Migratory Birds at the Silva Reservoir
1995


References





External links


  • Official website

  • Submissions on Enforcement Matters

  • Joint Public Advisory Committee






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