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A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 137. Urges all States, in cooperation with the International Maritime Organization, to actively combat acts of piracy and armed robbery at sea, by adopting measures, inter alia, to assist in strengthening existing capacities through the training of seafarers, port personnel and law enforcement officials in the preventi... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 138. Calls upon States to ensure the effective implementation of international law applicable to the fight against piracy as enshrined in the Convention, invites them to take measures, in accordance with their domestic law, to facilitate, in accordance with international law, the capture and prosecution of persons susp... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 139. Invites all States, the International Maritime Organization, the International Labour Organization and other relevant international organizations and institutions to adopt or recommend, as appropriate, measures to protect the interests and well-being of seafarers, fishermen and passengers who have been held captiv... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 140. Takes note of the compendium of national laws against piracy, available on the website of the Division, and encourages the Division and the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime to continue to cooperate with the International Maritime Organization in order to assist Member States, if they so wish, in strengthen... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 141. Recognizes the continuation of national, bilateral and trilateral initiatives and the efforts of regional cooperation mechanisms to combat acts of piracy, including financing and facilitation, and armed robbery at sea, in accordance with international law, and calls upon States to immediately adopt, conclude and i... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 142. Expresses grave concern at the inhumane conditions in which hostages are held in captivity and the negative consequences for their families, calls for the immediate release of all persons taken hostage at sea, and stresses the importance of cooperation among Member States on the issue of hostage-taking at sea; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 144. Also welcomes recent successes in the fight against piracy and armed robbery off the coast of Somalia through global and regional efforts, which have led to a steady decrease in the number of attacks and diversions since 2011, remains deeply concerned in this regard at the threat posed by piracy and armed robbery ... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 145. Takes note of the continued efforts of the members of the Contact Group on Piracy off the Coast of Somalia since the adoption of Security Council resolution 1851 (2008) of 16 December 2008, including at the twenty-third plenary session of the Group, chaired by Kenya in December 2020, and welcomes the participation... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 146. Recognizes the primary responsibility of the Federal Government of Somalia for combating acts of piracy and armed robbery at sea off the coast of Somalia and the importance of achieving a comprehensive and lasting settlement of the Somali issue, and stresses the need to address the root causes of piracy and to ass... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 147. Takes note of the Guidelines of the International Maritime Organization to Facilitate the Investigation of Crimes of Piracy and Armed Robbery against Ships, the Revised Interim Guidelines for Owners, Operators and Masters of Ships on the Use of Privately Contracted Armed Security Personnel on Ships in the High-Ris... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 148. Notes with concern that the continued lack of capacity and the lack of domestic legislation to detain and prosecute suspected pirates after their capture have prevented more vigorous international action against pirates off the coast of Somalia; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 150. Takes note of the efforts of sea carriers to cooperate with States combating piracy off the coast of Somalia, including with regard to assistance to ships in that area, and recalls the adoption by the Assembly of the International Maritime Organization, on 30 November 2011, of resolution A.1044(27), entitled "Pira... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 152. Expresses deep concern at the continuing acts of piracy and armed robbery in the Gulf of Guinea, in particular acts of violence against innocent crew members, notes the adoption by the Security Council of resolutions 2018 (2011) of 31 October 2011 and 2039 (2012) of 29 February 2012 and the presidential statement ... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 153. Urges States to ensure the full implementation of resolution A.1069(28) on the prevention and suppression of piracy and armed robbery against ships and illicit maritime activities in the Gulf of Guinea, which was adopted on 29 November 2013 by the Assembly of the International Maritime Organization; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 154. Invites States that have not yet done so to become parties to the Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful Acts against the Safety of Maritime Navigation 75 and the Protocol for the Suppression of Unlawful Acts against the Safety of Fixed Platforms Located on the Continental Shelf 76 , and to consider becoming p... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 155. Invites States to effectively implement the International Code for the Security of Ships and Port Facilities and the amendments to the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea 79, and to work towards | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 156. Urges all States, in cooperation with the International Maritime Organization, to improve the protection of offshore installations by adopting measures to prevent, report and investigate acts of violence against offshore installations in accordance with international law, and by adopting national implementing legi... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 157. Stresses the progress made in regional cooperation, including the efforts of coastal States to enhance safety and security and better protect the environment in the Straits of Malacca and Singapore, notes that the Mechanism for Cooperation for the Safety of Navigation and Environmental Protection in the Straits of... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 158. Recognizes that certain acts of transnational organized crime threaten the legitimate use of the oceans and endanger human lives at sea, as well as the livelihoods and security of coastal populations; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 159. Notes that transnational organized crime is diverse and in some cases interlinked and that criminal organizations are able to adapt and benefit from the vulnerability of States, in particular coastal States and small island developing States in areas of transit, and calls upon States and relevant intergovernmental... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 160. Recognizes the importance of strengthening international cooperation at all levels in combating transnational organized crime, including trafficking in narcotic drugs and psychotropic substances covered by United Nations instruments against drug smuggling, as well as smuggling of migrants, trafficking in human bei... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 161. Encourages States to cooperate at the bilateral, regional and global levels to prevent, combat and eliminate trafficking in protected species of wild fauna and flora where such trafficking occurs by sea, including through the use, as appropriate, of applicable international legal instruments, such as the United Na... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 162. Notes with deep concern the recent increase in the smuggling of migrants by sea, which endangers human lives, stresses the need to find a solution in accordance with applicable international law, and calls upon States, acting at the national level or through relevant regional or global organizations, as appropriat... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 163. Requests States, in these circumstances, to take measures consistent with their international obligations in order to prevent and combat all forms of trafficking in human beings, to identify victims of trafficking, including among the flows of migrants, and to provide them with the protection and assistance they n... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 164. Invites States that have not yet done so to consider becoming parties to the Protocol against the Smuggling of Migrants by Land, Sea and Air 83, the Protocol against the Illicit Manufacturing of and Trafficking in Firearms, Their Parts and Components and Ammunition 84 and the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Puni... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 165. Invites States to guarantee freedom of navigation, safety of navigation, the right of transit passage, the right of archipelagic passage and the right of safe passage, in accordance with international law, in particular the Convention; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 166. Welcomes the work of the International Maritime Organization on the protection of strategic navigation corridors, in particular its work to enhance the safety, security and protection of the environment in the straits used for international navigation, and invites the Organization, riparian and user States to cont... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 168. Calls upon those States that have accepted the amendments to Regulation XI-1/6 of the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea of 1974 86 to apply the Code of International Standards and Recommended Practices for a Safety Investigation into a Marine Accident or Sea Well 87 , which took effect on 1 Ja... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 169. Takes note of International Maritime Organization resolution A.1091(28) of 4 December 2013 on guidelines for the safeguarding and collection of evidence following the allegation that a serious criminal offence has been committed on board a ship or after notification of a person missing on board and the moral and m... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 170. Notes the importance of the work of the International Hydrographic Organization, calls upon States that have not yet done so to consider becoming members of the International Hydrographic Organization, calls upon all members of the International Hydrographic Organization to study actively, in accordance with the r... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 171. Recognizes the importance of navigational warning services based on maritime weather data for the safety of ships and lives at sea and for the optimization of navigational routes, and takes note of the collaboration between the World Meteorological Organization, the International Hydrographic Organization and the ... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 172. Encourages States to continue to implement in all its aspects the Plan of Action on the Safety of the Transport of Radioactive Material, approved in March 2004 by the Board of Governors of the International Atomic Energy Agency; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 173. Also urges States to ensure the effective implementation of the International Maritime Dangerous Goods Code, the International Maritime Code for Solid Bulk Cargoes, the International Compendium of Rules for the Construction and Equipment of Ships Carrying Liquefied Gases in Bulk and the International Compendium of... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 175. Takes note, in the light of paragraph 174 above, of the potential impact of maritime accidents and sea fortunes on the environment and economies of coastal States, in particular in the transport of radioactive material, and stresses in this regard the importance of effective liability regimes; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 177. Requests States to take appropriate measures with regard to vessels flying their flag or registered with them to address the danger posed by wrecks and spilled or drifting cargoes to navigation and the marine environment; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 178. Also requests States to ensure that commanders of ships flying their flag take the measures required by applicable legislation 89 to assist persons in distress at sea, and urges them to act together and to take all necessary measures to ensure the effective implementation of the amendments to the International Con... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 179. Urges all States to cooperate with each other in the investigation of oil spills at sea, in accordance with applicable international law, including article 94 of the Convention, and to this end, when requested by the affected coastal State in the course of such investigations, to provide any information available ... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 180. Recognizes that all States must fulfil their responsibilities under international law, including the Convention, in the field of search and rescue, reaffirms the continuing need for the Maritime Organization to: | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 181. Takes note of the ongoing work of the International Maritime Organization, the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and other actors in the field of disembarkation of persons rescued at sea, stresses in this regard the need to implement all relevant and applicable international instruments a... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 182. Invites States to implement the revised Guidelines on Preventing the Access of Illegal Passengers and Sharing of Responsibilities to ensure the satisfactory resolution of cases of clandestine boarding, adopted by the Maritime Safety Committee of the International Maritime Organization in its resolution MSC.448(99)... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 183. Calls upon States to continue to work together on a comprehensive approach to international migration and development issues, including through dialogue on all aspects of international migration and development; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 184. Also calls upon States to take measures to protect undersea fibre optic cables and to address all matters relating to such cables in accordance with international law as codified by the Convention; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 185. Encourages further dialogue and cooperation among States and relevant regional and global organizations, through workshops and seminars on the protection and maintenance of fibre optic submarine cables, with a view to ensuring the safety of this vital means of communication; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 186. Calls upon States to adopt, in accordance with international law as codified by the Convention, laws and regulations relating to the deliberate break-up or degradation of submarine cables or pipelines on the high seas by vessels flying their flag or persons under their jurisdiction; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 188. Reaffirms that flag States, port States and coastal States are all responsible for the effective implementation and enforcement of international instruments guaranteeing maritime safety and security in accordance with international law, in particular the Convention, and that flag States have a primary responsibili... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 189. Urges flag States that do not have a functional maritime administration or an appropriate legal framework to create and, where appropriate, strengthen the technical, legislative and law enforcement capacity necessary for the effective implementation, implementation and enforcement of their obligations under intern... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 191. Recognizes that the international maritime transport standards and norms adopted by the International Maritime Organization in the field of maritime safety, navigation efficiency and the prevention and control of marine pollution, together with the best practices of maritime carriers, have resulted in a significan... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 192. Notes that, since January 2016, audits under the Audit Programme of States Members of the International Maritime Organization have become binding under nine mandatory instruments of the Organization, and that these audits are conducted in accordance with the framework document and procedures of the Audit Programme... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 193. Calls upon States and relevant international organizations and bodies to ensure the effective implementation of the provisions of the International Code of Rules for Ships Exploited in Polar Waters, adopted by the International Maritime Organization in accordance with the International Convention for the Safety of... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 194. Takes note of the ongoing work of the International Maritime Organization in the area of passenger ship safety, and encourages States and relevant international organizations and bodies to continue to support activities, including technical cooperation, aimed at enhancing the safety of passenger ships; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 195. Recognizes that maritime safety can also be improved if the port State exercises effective control, regional mechanisms are strengthened, coordination and cooperation between them is strengthened, transparency is enhanced and information exchange is increased through the widespread use of systems | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | Invites flag States to take appropriate measures to obtain or maintain the approval of intergovernmental mechanisms responsible for monitoring their compliance with their obligations and to verify, where appropriate, that they have successfully passed port State controls on a regular basis in order to improve the quali... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 199. Calls upon States to implement the 2030 Agenda, including Goal 14, the conservation and sustainable use of oceans, seas and marine resources for sustainable development, and recalls that the goals and targets are integrated and interrelated; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 201. Recalls the commitment of States in the document "The future we want" to protect and regenerate the health, productivity and resilience of oceans and marine ecosystems, to maintain their biodiversity by ensuring their conservation and sustainable use for present and future generations, and to effectively apply an ... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 202. Reaffirms paragraph 119 of its resolution 61/222 of 20 December 2006 on ecosystem approaches and oceans, including the proposed elements of such an approach, ways and conditions for its implementation and, in this regard: | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | (a) Notes that the continued deterioration of the environment in many parts of the world and the increasing number of competing demands call for urgent response and priority setting in management interventions aimed at preserving ecosystem integrity;
(b) Notes also that ecosystem approaches to ocean management should f... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 203. Encourages relevant bodies and bodies that have not yet done so to adopt an ecosystem approach within their mandates, as appropriate, in order to address impacts on marine ecosystems; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 204. Notes that, in paragraph 6 of resolution 2/10 of 27 May 2016, adopted at its second session, the United Nations Environment Assembly requested the United Nations Environment Programme to intensify its work, inter alia, through its Regional Seas Programme, in order to assist countries and regions in implementing an... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 205. Encourages States to consider continuing, where appropriate, directly or through relevant international organizations and in accordance with international law, including the Convention, the development and implementation of environmental impact assessment processes for planned activities under their jurisdiction o... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 206. Notes with concern the impact of climate change on the oceans and the cryosphere, to which low-lying islands, in particular small island developing States, coastal and coastal populations are particularly exposed; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 207. Takes note with concern of the conclusions of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in its successive reports, and recalls in this regard, inter alia, its special report entitled The Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate, as well as the summary for policymakers, approved by the Intergovernmental Panel... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 208. Recognizes the importance of a better understanding of the effects of climate change on the seas and oceans, and recalls that, in the document "The future we want", States noted that sea-level rise and coastal erosion pose significant threats to many coastal regions and islands, particularly in developing countrie... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 209. Takes note of the conclusions contained in the reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, including its special report on global warming of 1.5 °C, that small islands, low coastal areas and deltas will be more exposed to the risks associated with sea-level rise if warming increases; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 210. Also takes note of the decision of the International Law Commission at its seventy-first session to include the item entitled "Elevation of the sea level in international law" in its programme of work, as well as the work of the open-ended study group in this regard; 103 | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 212. Notes the holding of the eighteenth meeting of the Informal Consultative Process in 2017 on the theme "The effects of climate change on the oceans", at which delegations discussed, inter alia, the environmental, social and economic impacts of climate change on the oceans and with which all States are taking action... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 213. Welcomes the adoption of the Paris Agreement 106 and its early entry into force on 4 November 2016, invites all Parties to implement it fully, calls upon Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change 107 that have not yet done so to deposit their instruments of ratification, acceptance, appr... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 214. Also welcomes, in this regard, the holding in Glasgow, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, from 31 October to 13 November 2021, the twenty-sixth session of the Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, the sixteenth session of the Conference of the Pa... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 215. Notes with concern the serious impact on coastal populations of extreme weather events, such as tropical cyclones and associated storm surges, and calls upon United Nations entities and related organizations, including the World Meteorological Organization and the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission, with t... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 216. Notes with concern that the acidity of the oceans has increased by approximately 30 per cent since the beginning of the industrial era 112 and that the continuing acidification of the world's waters at an alarming rate has a wide range of implications, and urges States to address seriously the causes of ocean acid... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 217. Recalls that, in the document "The future we want", States recommended supporting initiatives to combat the phenomenon of ocean acidification and the impact of climate change on marine and coastal resources and ecosystems, and in this regard reaffirmed the need for cooperation to prevent the continuation of this p... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 219. Takes note of the work of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, notes with concern its findings on ocean acidification, its major risks to marine ecosystems, including polar ecosystems, coral reefs, plankton and other organisms with limestone or shell exoskeletals, such as crustaceans, and the adverse imp... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 220. Encourages States, acting separately or in collaboration with relevant international organizations and bodies, to develop their scientific activities to better understand the effects of climate change on the marine environment and its biological diversity, to support continued efforts to coordinate scientific work... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 221. Recognizes that the blue carbon sinks of some coastal ecosystems, such as mangroves, coastal marshes and marine grasses, play a crucial role in adapting to and mitigating climate change through carbon sequestration, and are instrumental in enhancing the resilience of coastal ecosystems to ocean acidification, note... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 222. Recalls that, in the document "The future we want", States noted with concern that the health of the oceans and marine biodiversity are being compromised by marine pollution, including by the presence of mainly plastic wastes, persistent organic pollutants, heavy metals and nitrogen compounds released from various... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 223. Calls upon States to act, in accordance with their commitment in the document "The future we want", in support of scientific data, to significantly reduce marine litter by 2025 in order to limit damage to coastal and marine environments; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 224. Takes note of the discussions held in 2016 at the seventeenth meeting of the Informal Consultative Process on waste at sea, including plastics and microplastics, during which it was stressed, inter alia, that the problem had increased considerably since the consideration of marine litter at the sixth meeting of th... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | Calls upon States to further develop partnerships with the professional community and civil society to enhance understanding of the extent of the impacts of marine litter on marine biodiversity, health and productivity, as well as the economic losses they cause, and to consider, in cooperation with other States, the pr... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 234. Welcomes the work of the members of the Group of 20 under the Osaka Blue Ocean Vision initiative to eliminate additional pollution of the seas by plastic waste by 2050, and urges other members of the international community to share this vision; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 235. Calls upon States that have not yet done so to accede to international agreements to preserve the marine environment and its biological resources and to protect them from the introduction of harmful aquatic organisms and pathogens, marine pollution from all sources, including the dumping of wastes and other materi... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 236. Recalls that, in the document "The future we want", States took note of the serious threat posed by invasive alien species to marine resources and ecosystems and committed themselves to putting in place measures to prevent their introduction and to manage their negative environmental consequences, including measur... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 237. Calls upon States that have not yet done so to consider ratifying the International Convention for the Control and Management of Ballast Water and Sediments of Ships of 2004 119, and also encourages them to consider implementing the Guidelines for the Control and Management of Biological Landfilling of Ships with ... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 238. Takes note of the efforts of the International Maritime Organization to prevent pollution from ships, including the designation of special zones under the 1973 International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships, as amended by the 1978 Protocol thereto, as amended from time to time 120, welcomes th... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 239. Notes that the global ceiling of 0.50 per cent for the sulphur content of fuel oil provided for in annex VI to the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships entered into force on 1 January 2020, encourages States that have not yet done so to become parties to the 1997 Protocol (annex VI -... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 240. Takes note of the ongoing work of the International Maritime Organization and the resolution on the policies and practices of the Organization regarding the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions from ships 123 , and notes in this regard that the Organization has adopted an initial strategy for the reduction of gre... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 241. Urges States to cooperate with a view to remedying the shortage of port facilities for receiving waste, in accordance with the plan of action developed for this purpose by the International Maritime Organization; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 242. Encourages States that have not yet done so to consider ratifying or acceding to the 2009 Hong Kong International Convention for the Safe and Environmentally Sound Recycling of Ships 126 in order to accelerate its entry into force; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 243. Encourages the Parties to the Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and Their Disposal 127 and the International Maritime Organization to continue to cooperate with regard to rules for the prevention of pollution from ships; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 244. Notes that the Basel Convention contributes to the management of hazardous wastes and other types of wastes within its scope, including their transboundary movement and disposal, for the protection of the marine environment, also notes in this regard that the amendments to annexes II, VIII and IX to the Basel Conv... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 245. Notes with concern the serious environmental consequences of oil spills or pollution events involving harmful and potentially dangerous substances, urges States to cooperate in accordance with international law, either directly or through relevant international institutions, and to share best practices in the prot... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 247. Calls upon States that have not yet done so to consider ratifying or acceding to the 1990 International Convention on Oil Pollution Preparedness, Control and Cooperation 128 and the 2000 Protocol on the Preparation, Response and Cooperation in Respect of Pollution Events by Harmful and Potentially Hazardous Substa... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 248. Encourages States to consider becoming parties to the 2010 Protocol to the 1996 International Convention on Liability and Compensation for Damage Associated with the Carriage by Sea of Harmful and Potentially Hazardous Substances 129; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 249. Recognizes that most of the pollution burden of the oceans originates from land-based activities and affects the most productive areas of the marine environment, and calls upon States to implement as a matter of priority the Global Programme of Action for the Protection of the Marine Environment from Land-based Ac... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 250. Welcomes the continued implementation by States, the United Nations Environment Programme and regional organizations of the Global Programme of Action for the Protection of the Marine Environment from Land-based Activities, and encourages them to place greater emphasis on the link between freshwater, coastal zone ... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 251. Expresses concern at the increase in dead (hypoxic) areas and the proliferation of toxin algae in the oceans due to eutrophication fuelled by runoff of fertilizers to watercourses, sewage discharges and the presence of reactive nitrogen from the combustion of fossil fuels, which seriously affect the functioning of... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 252. Calls upon States that have not yet done so to take the necessary measures at the national level as soon as possible to fulfil the obligations under the Minamata Convention on Mercury upon ratification and thereafter to ratify, accept, approve or accede to the Minamata Convention; 131 | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 253. Calls upon all States to ensure that urban and coastal development projects and related polderization activities are carried out in a responsible manner and in such a way as to protect habitats and the marine environment and to mitigate the adverse effects of such activities; | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 254. Encourages States that have not yet done so to accede to the 1996 Protocol to the 1972 Convention on the Prevention of Marine Pollution from Dumping of Wastes and Other Materials (the London Protocol); | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | 255. Recalls the resolution adopted by the thirtieth Consultative Meeting of the Contracting Parties to the 1972 Convention on the Prevention of Marine Pollution from Dumping of Wastes and Other Materials (the London Convention) and the Third Meeting of the Contracting Parties to the London Protocol, held from 27 to 31... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | Recalls that, in the document "The future we want", States stressed their concern about the possible environmental consequences of ocean fertilization and recalled the relevant decisions of relevant intergovernmental entities, and expressed their determination to continue to address this issue with utmost caution, in t... | operative |
A-RES-76-72-fr-parsed | Reaffirms its central role in the conservation and sustainable use of marine biodiversity in areas outside national jurisdiction;
Takes note of the work carried out by States and relevant intergovernmental organizations and bodies within the framework of the Ad Hoc Open-ended Informal Working Group on the Conservation ... | operative |
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