Preamble
Part I: Introduction
Article 1. Use of terms
Article 2. Objective
Article 3. Principles
Part II: General Provisions
Article 4. General obligations
Article 5. Obligations of
affected country Parties
Article 6. Obligations of
developed country Parties
Article 7. Priority for Africa
Article 8. Relationship with
other conventions
Part III: Action Programmes, Scientific and Technical
Cooperation and Supporting Measures
Section 1: Action programmes
Article 9. Basic approach
Article 10. National action programmes
Article 11. Subregional
and regional action programmes
Article 12. International cooperation
Article
13. Support for the elaboration and implementation of action programmes
Article
14. Coordination in the elaboration and implementation of action programmes
Article 15. Regional implementation
annexes
Section 2:
Scientific and technical cooperation
Article 16.
Information collection, analysis and exchange
Article 17. Research and development
Article
18. Transfer, acquisition, adaptation and development of technology
Section 3: Supporting measures
Article 19.
Capacity building, education and public awareness
Article 20. Financial resources
Article 21. Financial mechanisms
Part IV: Institutions
Article 22. Conference of the Parties
Article 23. Permanent Secretariat
Article 24. Committee on
Science and Technology
Article 25.
Networking of institutions, agencies and bodies
Part V: Procedures
Article 26. Communication of
information
Article 27.
Measures to resolve questions on implementation
Article 28. Settlement of disputes
Article 29. Status of annexes
Article 30. Amendments to the
Convention
Article 31. Adoption and
amendment of annexes
Article 32. Right to vote
Part VI: Final Provisions
Article 33. Signature
Article 34.
Ratification, acceptance, approval and accession
Article 35. Interim arrangements
Article 36. Entry into force
Article 37. Reservations
Article 38. Withdrawal
Article 39. Depositary
Article 40. Authentic texts
Annex I: Regional Implementation Annex for Africa
Annex II: Regional Implementation Annex for Asia
Annex III: Regional Implementation Annex for Latin America and the
Caribbean
Annex IV: Regional Implementation Annex for the Northern
Mediterranean 
The Parties to this Convention,
Affirming that human beings in affected or threatened areas are at the centre of
concerns to combat desertification and mitigate the effects of drought,
Reflecting the urgent concern of the international community, including States
and international organizations, about the adverse impacts of desertification and drought,
Aware that arid, semi-arid and dry sub-humid areas together account for a
significant proportion of the Earth's land area and are the habitat and source of
livelihood for a large segment of its population,
Acknowledging that desertification and drought are problems of global dimension
in that they affect all regions of the world and that joint action of the international
community is needed to combat desertification and/or mitigate the effects of drought,
Noting the high concentration of developing countries, notably the least
developed countries, among those experiencing serious drought and/or desertification, and
the particularly tragic consequences of these phenomena in Africa,
Noting also that desertification is caused by complex interactions among
physical, biological, political, social, cultural and economic factors,
Considering the impact of trade and relevant aspects of international economic
relations on the ability of affected countries to combat desertification adequately,
Conscious that sustainable economic growth, social development and poverty
eradication are priorities of affected developing countries, particularly in Africa, and
are essential to meeting sustainability objectives,
Mindful that desertification and drought affect sustainable development through
their interrelationships with important social problems such as poverty, poor health and
nutrition, lack of food security, and those arising from migration, displacement of
persons and demographic dynamics,
Appreciating the significance of the past efforts and experience of States and
international organizations in combating desertification and mitigating the effects of
drought, particularly in implementing the Plan of Action to Combat Desertification which
was adopted at the United Nations Conference on Desertification in 1977,
Realizing that, despite efforts in the past, progress in combating
desertification and mitigating the effects of drought has not met expectations and that a
new and more effective approach is needed at all levels within the framework of
sustainable development,
Recognizing the validity and relevance of decisions adopted at the United
Nations Conference on Environment and Development, particularly of Agenda 21 and its
chapter 12, which provide a basis for combating desertification,
Reaffirming in this light the commitments of developed countries as contained in
paragraph 13 of chapter 33 of Agenda 21,
Recalling General Assembly resolution 47/188, particularly the priority in it
prescribed for Africa, and all other relevant United Nations resolutions, decisions and
programmes on desertification and drought, as well as relevant declarations by African
countries and those from other regions,
Reaffirming the Rio Declaration on Environment and Development which states, in
its Principle 2, that 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 and developmental 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,
Recognizing that national Governments play a critical role in combating
desertification and mitigating the effects of drought and that progress in that respect
depends on local implementation of action programmes in affected areas,
Recognizing also the importance and necessity of international cooperation and
partnership in combating desertification and mitigating the effects of drought,
Recognizing further the importance of the provision to affected developing
countries, particularly in Africa, of effective means, inter alia substantial
financial resources, including new and additional funding, and access to technology,
without which it will be difficult for them to implement fully their commitments under
this Convention,
Expressing concern over the impact of desertification and drought on affected
countries in Central Asia and the Transcaucasus,
Stressing the important role played by women in regions affected by
desertification and/or drought, particularly in rural areas of developing countries, and
the importance of ensuring the full participation of both men and women at all levels in
programmes to combat desertification and mitigate the effects of drought,
Emphasizing the special role of non-governmental organizations and other major
groups in programmes to combat desertification and mitigate the effects of drought,
Bearing in mind the relationship between desertification and other environmental
problems of global dimension facing the international and national communities,
Bearing also in mind the contribution that combating desertification can make to
achieving the objectives of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, the
Convention on Biological Diversity and other related environmental conventions,
Believing that strategies to combat desertification and mitigate the effects of
drought will be most effective if they are based on sound systematic observation and
rigorous scientific knowledge and if they are continuously re-evaluated,
Recognizing the urgent need to improve the effectiveness and coordination of
international cooperation to facilitate the implementation of national plans and
priorities,
Determined to take appropriate action in combating desertification and
mitigating the effects of drought for the benefit of present and future generations,
Have agreed as follows:
Part I. Introduction
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For the purposes of this Convention:
(a) "desertification" means land degradation in arid, semi-arid and dry
sub-humid areas resulting from various factors, including climatic variations and human
activities;
(b) "combating desertification" includes activities which are part of the
integrated development of land in arid, semi-arid and dry sub-humid areas for sustainable
development which are aimed at:
(i) prevention and/or reduction of land degradation;
(ii) rehabilitation of partly degraded land; and
(iii) reclamation of desertified land;
(c) "drought" means the naturally occurring phenomenon that exists when
precipitation has been significantly below normal recorded levels, causing serious
hydrological imbalances that adversely affect land resource production systems;
(d) "mitigating the effects of drought" means activities related to the
prediction of drought and intended to reduce the vulnerability of society and natural
systems to drought as it relates to combating desertification;
(e) "land" means the terrestrial bio-productive system that comprises soil,
vegetation, other biota, and the ecological and hydrological processes that operate within
the system;
(f) "land degradation" means reduction or loss, in arid, semi-arid and dry
sub-humid areas, of the biological or economic productivity and complexity of rainfed
cropland, irrigated cropland, or range, pasture, forest and woodlands resulting from land
uses or from a process or combination of processes, including processes arising from human
activities and habitation patterns, such as:
(i) soil erosion caused by wind and/or water;
(ii) deterioration of the physical, chemical and biological or economic properties of
soil; and
(iii) long-term loss of natural vegetation;
(g) "arid, semi-arid and dry sub-humid areas" means areas, other than polar
and sub-polar regions, in which the ratio of annual precipitation to potential
evapotranspiration falls within the range from 0.05 to 0.65;
(h) "affected areas" means arid, semi-arid and/or dry sub-humid areas
affected or threatened by desertification;
(i) "affected countries" means countries whose lands include, in whole or in
part, affected areas;
(j) "regional economic integration organization" means an organization
constituted by sovereign States of a given region which has competence in respect of
matters governed by this Convention and has been duly authorized, in accordance with its
internal procedures, to sign, ratify, accept, approve or accede to this Convention;
(k) "developed country Parties" means developed country Parties and regional
economic integration organizations constituted by developed countries.
1. The objective of this Convention is to combat desertification and mitigate the
effects of drought in countries experiencing serious drought and/or desertification,
particularly in Africa, through effective action at all levels, supported by international
cooperation and partnership arrangements, in the framework of an integrated approach which
is consistent with Agenda 21, with a view to contributing to the achievement of
sustainable development in affected areas.
2. Achieving this objective will involve long-term integrated strategies that focus
simultaneously, in affected areas, on improved productivity of land, and the
rehabilitation, conservation and sustainable management of land and water resources,
leading to improved living conditions, in particular at the community level.
In order to achieve the objective of this Convention and to implement its provisions,
the Parties shall be guided, inter alia, by the following:
(a) the Parties should ensure that decisions on the design and implementation of
programmes to combat desertification and/or mitigate the effects of drought are taken with
the participation of populations and local communities and that an enabling environment is
created at higher levels to facilitate action at national and local levels;
(b) the Parties should, in a spirit of international solidarity and partnership,
improve cooperation and coordination at subregional, regional and international levels,
and better focus financial, human, organizational and technical resources where they are
needed;
(c) the Parties should develop, in a spirit of partnership, cooperation among all
levels of government, communities, non-governmental organizations and landholders to
establish a better understanding of the nature and value of land and scarce water
resources in affected areas and to work towards their sustainable use; and
(d) the Parties should take into full consideration the special needs and circumstances
of affected developing country Parties, particularly the least developed among them.
Part II. General Provisions
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1. The Parties shall implement their obligations under this Convention, individually or
jointly, either through existing or prospective bilateral and multilateral arrangements or
a combination thereof, as appropriate, emphasizing the need to coordinate efforts and
develop a coherent long-term strategy at all levels.
2. In pursuing the objective of this Convention, the Parties shall:
(a) adopt an integrated approach addressing the physical, biological and socio-economic
aspects of the processes of desertification and drought;
(b) give due attention, within the relevant international and regional bodies, to the
situation of affected developing country Parties with regard to international trade,
marketing arrangements and debt with a view to establishing an enabling international
economic environment conducive to the promotion of sustainable development;
(c) integrate strategies for poverty eradication into efforts to combat desertification
and mitigate the effects of drought;
(d) promote cooperation among affected country Parties in the fields of environmental
protection and the conservation of land and water resources, as they relate to
desertification and drought;
(e) strengthen subregional, regional and international cooperation;
(f) cooperate within relevant intergovernmental organizations;
(g) determine institutional mechanisms, if appropriate, keeping in mind the need to
avoid duplication; and
(h) promote the use of existing bilateral and multilateral financial mechanisms and
arrangements that mobilize and channel substantial financial resources to affected
developing country Parties in combating desertification and mitigating the effects of
drought.
3. Affected developing country Parties are eligible for assistance in the
implementation of the Convention.
In addition to their obligations pursuant to article 4, affected country Parties
undertake to:
(a) give due priority to combating desertification and mitigating the effects of
drought, and allocate adequate resources in accordance with their circumstances and
capabilities;
(b) establish strategies and priorities, within the framework of sustainable
development plans and/or policies, to combat desertification and mitigate the effects of
drought;
(c) address the underlying causes of desertification and pay special attention to the
socio- economic factors contributing to desertification processes;
(d) promote awareness and facilitate the participation of local populations,
particularly women and youth, with the support of non-governmental organizations, in
efforts to combat desertification and mitigate the effects of drought; and
(e) provide an enabling environment by strengthening, as appropriate, relevant existing
legislation and, where they do not exist, enacting new laws and establishing long-term
policies and action programmes.
In addition to their general obligations pursuant to article 4, developed country
Parties undertake to:
(a) actively support, as agreed, individually or jointly, the efforts of affected
developing country Parties, particularly those in Africa, and the least developed
countries, to combat desertification and mitigate the effects of drought;
(b) provide substantial financial resources and other forms of support to assist
affected developing country Parties, particularly those in Africa, effectively to develop
and implement their own long-term plans and strategies to combat desertification and
mitigate the effects of drought;
(c) promote the mobilization of new and additional funding pursuant to article 20,
paragraph 2 (b);
(d) encourage the mobilization of funding from the private sector and other
non-governmental sources; and
(e) promote and facilitate access by affected country Parties, particularly affected
developing country Parties, to appropriate technology, knowledge and know-how.
In implementing this Convention, the Parties shall give priority to affected African
country Parties, in the light of the particular situation prevailing in that region, while
not neglecting affected developing country Parties in other regions.
1. The Parties shall encourage the coordination of activities carried out under this
Convention and, if they are Parties to them, under other relevant international
agreements, particularly the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and the
Convention on Biological Diversity, in order to derive maximum benefit from activities
under each agreement while avoiding duplication of effort. The Parties shall encourage the
conduct of joint programmes, particularly in the fields of research, training, systematic
observation and information collection and exchange, to the extent that such activities
may contribute to achieving the objectives of the agreements concerned.
2. The provisions of this Convention shall not affect the rights and obligations of any
Party deriving from a bilateral, regional or international agreement into which it has
entered prior to the entry into force of this Convention for it.
Part III. Action Programmes, Scientific and Technical
Cooperation and Supporting Measures
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1. In carrying out their obligations pursuant to article 5, affected developing country
Parties and any other affected country Party in the framework of its regional
implementation annex or, otherwise, that has notified the Permanent Secretariat in writing
of its intention to prepare a national action programme, shall, as appropriate, prepare,
make public and implement national action programmes, utilizing and building, to the
extent possible, on existing relevant successful plans and programmes, and subregional and
regional action programmes, as the central element of the strategy to combat
desertification and mitigate the effects of drought. Such programmes shall be updated
through a continuing participatory process on the basis of lessons from field action, as
well as the results of research. The preparation of national action programmes shall be
closely interlinked with other efforts to formulate national policies for sustainable
development.
2. In the provision by developed country Parties of different forms of assistance under
the terms of article 6, priority shall be given to supporting, as agreed, national,
subregional and regional action programmes of affected developing country Parties,
particularly those in Africa, either directly or through relevant multilateral
organizations or both.
3. The Parties shall encourage organs, funds and programmes of the United Nations
system and other relevant intergovernmental organizations, academic institutions, the
scientific community and non-governmental organizations in a position to cooperate, in
accordance with their mandates and capabilities, to support the elaboration,
implementation and follow-up of action programmes.
1. The purpose of national action programmes is to identify the factors contributing to
desertification and practical measures necessary to combat desertification and mitigate
the effects of drought.
2. National action programmes shall specify the respective roles of government, local
communities and land users and the resources available and needed. They shall, inter
alia:
(a) incorporate long-term strategies to combat desertification and mitigate the effects
of drought, emphasize implementation and be integrated with national policies for
sustainable development;
(b) allow for modifications to be made in response to changing circumstances and be
sufficiently flexible at the local level to cope with different socio-economic, biological
and geo-physical conditions;
(c) give particular attention to the implementation of preventive measures for lands
that are not yet degraded or which are only slightly degraded;
(d) enhance national climatological, meteorological and hydrological capabilities and
the means to provide for drought early warning;
(e) promote policies and strengthen institutional frameworks which develop cooperation
and coordination, in a spirit of partnership, between the donor community, governments at
all levels, local populations and community groups, and facilitate access by local
populations to appropriate information and technology;
(f) provide for effective participation at the local, national and regional levels of
non- governmental organizations and local populations, both women and men, particularly
resource users, including farmers and pastoralists and their representative organizations,
in policy planning, decision-making, and implementation and review of national action
programmes; and
(g) require regular review of, and progress reports on, their implementation.
3. National action programmes may include, inter alia, some or all of the
following measures to prepare for and mitigate the effects of drought:
(a) establishment and/or strengthening, as appropriate, of early warning systems,
including local and national facilities and joint systems at the subregional and regional
levels, and mechanisms for assisting environmentally displaced persons;
(b) strengthening of drought preparedness and management, including drought contingency
plans at the local, national, subregional and regional levels, which take into
consideration seasonal to interannual climate predictions;
(c) establishment and/or strengthening, as appropriate, of food security systems,
including storage and marketing facilities, particularly in rural areas;
(d) establishment of alternative livelihood projects that could provide incomes in
drought prone areas; and
(e) development of sustainable irrigation programmes for both crops and livestock.
4. Taking into account the circumstances and requirements specific to each affected
country Party, national action programmes include, as appropriate, inter alia,
measures in some or all of the following priority fields as they relate to combating
desertification and mitigating the effects of drought in affected areas and to their
populations: promotion of alternative livelihoods and improvement of national economic
environments with a view to strengthening programmes aimed at the eradication of poverty
and at ensuring food security; demographic dynamics; sustainable management of natural
resources; sustainable agricultural practices; development and efficient use of various
energy sources; institutional and legal frameworks; strengthening of capabilities for
assessment and systematic observation, including hydrological and meteorological services,
and capacity building, education and public awareness.
Affected country Parties shall consult and cooperate to prepare, as appropriate, in
accordance with relevant regional implementation annexes, subregional and/or regional
action programmes to harmonize, complement and increase the efficiency of national
programmes. The provisions of article 10 shall apply mutatis mutandis to
subregional and regional programmes. Such cooperation may include agreed joint programmes
for the sustainable management of transboundary natural resources, scientific and
technical cooperation, and strengthening of relevant institutions.
Affected country Parties, in collaboration with other Parties and the international
community, should cooperate to ensure the promotion of an enabling international
environment in the implementation of the Convention. Such cooperation should also cover
fields of technology transfer as well as scientific research and development, information
collection and dissemination and financial resources.
1. Measures to support action programmes pursuant to article 9 include, inter alia:
(a) financial cooperation to provide predictability for action programmes, allowing for
necessary long-term planning;
(b) elaboration and use of cooperation mechanisms which better enable support at the
local level, including action through non-governmental organizations, in order to promote
the replicability of successful pilot programme activities where relevant;
(c) increased flexibility in project design, funding and implementation in keeping with
the experimental, iterative approach indicated for participatory action at the local
community level; and
(d) as appropriate, administrative and budgetary procedures that increase the
efficiency of cooperation and of support programmes.
2. In providing such support to affected developing country Parties, priority shall be
given to African country Parties and to least developed country Parties.
1. The Parties shall work closely together, directly and through relevant
intergovernmental organizations, in the elaboration and implementation of action
programmes.
2. The Parties shall develop operational mechanisms, particularly at the national and
field levels, to ensure the fullest possible coordination among developed country Parties,
developing country Parties and relevant intergovernmental and non-governmental
organizations, in order to avoid duplication, harmonize interventions and approaches, and
maximize the impact of assistance. In affected developing country Parties, priority will
be given to coordinating activities related to international cooperation in order to
maximize the efficient use of resources, to ensure responsive assistance, and to
facilitate the implementation of national action programmes and priorities under this
Convention.
Elements for incorporation in action programmes shall be selected and adapted to the
socio- economic, geographical and climatic factors applicable to affected country Parties
or regions, as well as to their level of development. Guidelines for the preparation of
action programmes and their exact focus and content for particular subregions and regions
are set out in the regional implementation annexes.
The Parties agree, according to their respective capabilities, to integrate and
coordinate the collection, analysis and exchange of relevant short term and long term data
and information to ensure systematic observation of land degradation in affected areas and
to understand better and assess the processes and effects of drought and desertification.
This would help accomplish, inter alia, early warning and advance planning for
periods of adverse climatic variation in a form suited for practical application by users
at all levels, including especially local populations. To this end, they shall, as
appropriate:
(a) facilitate and strengthen the functioning of the global network of institutions and
facilities for the collection, analysis and exchange of information, as well as for
systematic observation at all levels, which shall, inter alia:
(i) aim to use compatible standards and systems;
(ii) encompass relevant data and stations, including in remote areas;
(iii) use and disseminate modern technology for data collection, transmission and
assessment on land degradation; and
(iv) link national, subregional and regional data and information centres more closely
with global information sources;
(b) ensure that the collection, analysis and exchange of information address the needs
of local communities and those of decision makers, with a view to resolving specific
problems, and that local communities are involved in these activities;
(c) support and further develop bilateral and multilateral programmes and projects
aimed at defining, conducting, assessing and financing the collection, analysis and
exchange of data and information, including, inter alia, integrated sets of
physical, biological, social and economic indicators;
(d) make full use of the expertise of competent intergovernmental and non-governmental
organizations, particularly to disseminate relevant information and experiences among
target groups in different regions;
(e) give full weight to the collection, analysis and exchange of socio-economic data,
and their integration with physical and biological data;
(f) exchange and make fully, openly and promptly available information from all
publicly available sources relevant to combating desertification and mitigating the
effects of drought; and
(g) subject to their respective national legislation and/or policies, exchange
information on local and traditional knowledge, ensuring adequate protection for it and
providing appropriate return from the benefits derived from it, on an equitable basis and
on mutually agreed terms, to the local populations concerned.
1. The Parties undertake, according to their respective capabilities, to promote
technical and scientific cooperation in the fields of combating desertification and
mitigating the effects of drought through appropriate national, subregional, regional and
international institutions. To this end, they shall support research activities that:
(a) contribute to increased knowledge of the processes leading to desertification and
drought and the impact of, and distinction between, causal factors, both natural and
human, with a view to combating desertification and mitigating the effects of drought, and
achieving improved productivity as well as sustainable use and management of resources;
(b) respond to well defined objectives, address the specific needs of local populations
and lead to the identification and implementation of solutions that improve the living
standards of people in affected areas;
(c) protect, integrate, enhance and validate traditional and local knowledge, know-how
and practices, ensuring, subject to their respective national legislation and/or policies,
that the owners of that knowledge will directly benefit on an equitable basis and on
mutually agreed terms from any commercial utilization of it or from any technological
development derived from that knowledge;
(d) develop and strengthen national, subregional and regional research capabilities in
affected developing country Parties, particularly in Africa, including the development of
local skills and the strengthening of appropriate capacities, especially in countries with
a weak research base, giving particular attention to multidisciplinary and participative
socio- economic research;
(e) take into account, where relevant, the relationship between poverty, migration
caused by environmental factors, and desertification;
(f) promote the conduct of joint research programmes between national, subregional,
regional and international research organizations, in both the public and private sectors,
for the development of improved, affordable and accessible technologies for sustainable
development through effective participation of local populations and communities; and
(g) enhance the availability of water resources in affected areas, by means of, inter
alia, cloud-seeding.
2. Research priorities for particular regions and subregions, reflecting different
local conditions, should be included in action programmes. The Conference of the Parties
shall review research priorities periodically on the advice of the Committee on Science
and Technology.
1. The Parties undertake, as mutually agreed and in accordance with their respective
national legislation and/or policies, to promote, finance and/or facilitate the financing
of the transfer, acquisition, adaptation and development of environmentally sound,
economically viable and socially acceptable technologies relevant to combating
desertification and/or mitigating the effects of drought, with a view to contributing to
the achievement of sustainable development in affected areas. Such cooperation shall be
conducted bilaterally or multilaterally, as appropriate, making full use of the expertise
of intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations. The Parties shall, in particular:
(a) fully utilize relevant existing national, subregional, regional and international
information systems and clearing-houses for the dissemination of information on available
technologies, their sources, their environmental risks and the broad terms under which
they may be acquired;
(b) facilitate access, in particular by affected developing country Parties, on
favourable terms, including on concessional and preferential terms, as mutually agreed,
taking into account the need to protect intellectual property rights, to technologies most
suitable to practical application for specific needs of local populations, paying special
attention to the social, cultural, economic and environmental impact of such technology;
(c) facilitate technology cooperation among affected country Parties through financial
assistance or other appropriate means;
(d) extend technology cooperation with affected developing country Parties, including,
where relevant, joint ventures, especially to sectors which foster alternative
livelihoods; and
(e) take appropriate measures to create domestic market conditions and incentives,
fiscal or otherwise, conducive to the development, transfer, acquisition and adaptation of
suitable technology, knowledge, know-how and practices, including measures to ensure
adequate and effective protection of intellectual property rights.
2. The Parties shall, according to their respective capabilities, and subject to their
respective national legislation and/or policies, protect, promote and use in particular
relevant traditional and local technology, knowledge, know-how and practices and, to that
end, they undertake to:
(a) make inventories of such technology, knowledge, know-how and practices and their
potential uses with the participation of local populations, and disseminate such
information, where appropriate, in cooperation with relevant intergovernmental and
non-governmental organizations;
(b) ensure that such technology, knowledge, know-how and practices are adequately
protected and that local populations benefit directly, on an equitable basis and as
mutually agreed, from any commercial utilization of them or from any technological
development derived therefrom;
(c) encourage and actively support the improvement and dissemination of such
technology, knowledge, know-how and practices or of the development of new technology
based on them; and
(d) facilitate, as appropriate, the adaptation of such technology, knowledge, know-how
and practices to wide use and integrate them with modern technology, as appropriate.
1. The Parties recognize the significance of capacity building -- that is to say,
institution building, training and development of relevant local and national capacities
-- in efforts to combat desertification and mitigate the effects of drought. They shall
promote, as appropriate, capacity- building:
(a) through the full participation at all levels of local people, particularly at the
local level, especially women and youth, with the cooperation of non-governmental and
local organizations;
(b) by strengthening training and research capacity at the national level in the field
of desertification and drought;
(c) by establishing and/or strengthening support and extension services to disseminate
relevant technology methods and techniques more effectively, and by training field agents
and members of rural organizations in participatory approaches for the conservation and
sustainable use of natural resources;
(d) by fostering the use and dissemination of the knowledge, know-how and practices of
local people in technical cooperation programmes, wherever possible;
(e) by adapting, where necessary, relevant environmentally sound technology and
traditional methods of agriculture and pastoralism to modern socio-economic conditions;
(f) by providing appropriate training and technology in the use of alternative energy
sources, particularly renewable energy resources, aimed particularly at reducing
dependence on wood for fuel;
(g) through cooperation, as mutually agreed, to strengthen the capacity of affected
developing country Parties to develop and implement programmes in the field of collection,
analysis and exchange of information pursuant to article 16;
(h) through innovative ways of promoting alternative livelihoods, including training in
new skills;
(i) by training of decision makers, managers, and personnel who are responsible for the
collection and analysis of data for the dissemination and use of early warning information
on drought conditions and for food production;
(j) through more effective operation of existing national institutions and legal
frameworks and, where necessary, creation of new ones, along with strengthening of
strategic planning and management; and
(k) by means of exchange visitor programmes to enhance capacity building in affected
country Parties through a long-term, interactive process of learning and study.
2. Affected developing country Parties shall conduct, in cooperation with other Parties
and competent intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations, as appropriate, an
interdisciplinary review of available capacity and facilities at the local and national
levels, and the potential for strengthening them.
3. The Parties shall cooperate with each other and through competent intergovernmental
organizations, as well as with non-governmental organizations, in undertaking and
supporting public awareness and educational programmes in both affected and, where
relevant, unaffected country Parties to promote understanding of the causes and effects of
desertification and drought and of the importance of meeting the objective of this
Convention. To that end, they shall:
(a) organize awareness campaigns for the general public;
(b) promote, on a permanent basis, access by the public to relevant information, and
wide public participation in education and awareness activities;
(c) encourage the establishment of associations that contribute to public awareness;
(d) develop and exchange educational and public awareness material, where possible in
local languages, exchange and second experts to train personnel of affected developing
country Parties in carrying out relevant education and awareness programmes, and fully
utilize relevant educational material available in competent international bodies;
(e) assess educational needs in affected areas, elaborate appropriate school curricula
and expand, as needed, educational and adult literacy programmes and opportunities for
all, in particular for girls and women, on the identification, conservation and
sustainable use and management of the natural resources of affected areas; and
(f) develop interdisciplinary participatory programmes integrating desertification and
drought awareness into educational systems and in non-formal, adult, distance and
practical educational programmes.
4. The Conference of the Parties shall establish and/or strengthen networks of regional
education and training centres to combat desertification and mitigate the effects of
drought. These networks shall be coordinated by an institution created or designated for
that purpose, in order to train scientific, technical and management personnel and to
strengthen existing institutions responsible for education and training in affected
country Parties, where appropriate, with a view to harmonizing programmes and to
organizing exchanges of experience among them. These networks shall cooperate closely with
relevant intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations to avoid duplication of
effort.
1. Given the central importance of financing to the achievement of the objective of the
Convention, the Parties, taking into account their capabilities, shall make every effort
to ensure that adequate financial resources are available for programmes to combat
desertification and mitigate the effects of drought.
2. In this connection, developed country Parties, while giving priority to affected
African country Parties without neglecting affected developing country Parties in other
regions, in accordance with article 7, undertake to:
(a) mobilize substantial financial resources, including grants and concessional loans,
in order to support the implementation of programmes to combat desertification and
mitigate the effects of drought;
(b) promote the mobilization of adequate, timely and predictable financial resources,
including new and additional funding from the Global Environment Facility of the agreed
incremental costs of those activities concerning desertification that relate to its four
focal areas, in conformity with the relevant provisions of the Instrument establishing the
Global Environment Facility;
(c) facilitate through international cooperation the transfer of technology, knowledge
and know-how; and
(d) explore, in cooperation with affected developing country Parties, innovative
methods and incentives for mobilizing and channelling resources, including those of
foundations, non- governmental organizations and other private sector entities,
particularly debt swaps and other innovative means which increase financing by reducing
the external debt burden of affected developing country Parties, particularly those in
Africa.
3. Affected developing country Parties, taking into account their capabilities,
undertake to mobilize adequate financial resources for the implementation of their
national action programmes.
4. In mobilizing financial resources, the Parties shall seek full use and continued
qualitative improvement of all national, bilateral and multilateral funding sources and
mechanisms, using consortia, joint programmes and parallel financing, and shall seek to
involve private sector funding sources and mechanisms, including those of non-governmental
organizations. To this end, the Parties shall fully utilize the operational mechanisms
developed pursuant to article 14.
5. In order to mobilize the financial resources necessary for affected developing
country Parties to combat desertification and mitigate the effects of drought, the Parties
shall:
(a) rationalize and strengthen the management of resources already allocated for
combating desertification and mitigating the effects of drought by using them more
effectively and efficiently, assessing their successes and shortcomings, removing
hindrances to their effective use and, where necessary, reorienting programmes in light of
the integrated long- term approach adopted pursuant to this Convention;
(b) give due priority and attention within the governing bodies of multilateral
financial institutions, facilities and funds, including regional development banks and
funds, to supporting affected developing country Parties, particularly those in Africa, in
activities which advance implementation of the Convention, notably action programmes they
undertake in the framework of regional implementation annexes; and
(c) examine ways in which regional and subregional cooperation can be strengthened to
support efforts undertaken at the national level.
6. Other Parties are encouraged to provide, on a voluntary basis, knowledge, know-how
and techniques related to desertification and/or financial resources to affected
developing country Parties.
7. The full implementation by affected developing country Parties, particularly those
in Africa, of their obligations under the Convention will be greatly assisted by the
fulfilment by developed country Parties of their obligations under the Convention,
including in particular those regarding financial resources and transfer of technology. In
fulfilling their obligations, developed country Parties should take fully into account
that economic and social development and poverty eradication are the first priorities of
affected developing country Parties, particularly those in Africa.
1. The Conference of the Parties shall promote the availability of financial mechanisms
and shall encourage such mechanisms to seek to maximize the availability of funding for
affected developing country Parties, particularly those in Africa, to implement the
Convention. To this end, the Conference of the Parties shall consider for adoption inter
alia approaches and policies that:
(a) facilitate the provision of necessary funding at the national, subregional,
regional and global levels for activities pursuant to relevant provisions of the
Convention;
(b) promote multiple-source funding approaches, mechanisms and arrangements and their
assessment, consistent with article 20;
(c) provide on a regular basis, to interested Parties and relevant intergovernmental
and non- governmental organizations, information on available sources of funds and on
funding patterns in order to facilitate coordination among them;
(d) facilitate the establishment, as appropriate, of mechanisms, such as national
desertification funds, including those involving the participation of non-governmental
organizations, to channel financial resources rapidly and efficiently to the local level
in affected developing country Parties; and
(e) strengthen existing funds and financial mechanisms at the subregional and regional
levels, particularly in Africa, to support more effectively the implementation of the
Convention.
2. The Conference of the Parties shall also encourage the provision, through various
mechanisms within the United Nations system and through multilateral financial
institutions, of support at the national, subregional and regional levels to activities
that enable developing country Parties to meet their obligations under the Convention.
3. Affected developing country Parties shall utilize, and where necessary, establish
and/or strengthen, national coordinating mechanisms, integrated in national development
programmes, that would ensure the efficient use of all available financial resources. They
shall also utilize participatory processes involving non-governmental organizations, local
groups and the private sector, in raising funds, in elaborating as well as implementing
programmes and in assuring access to funding by groups at the local level. These actions
can be enhanced by improved coordination and flexible programming on the part of those
providing assistance.
4. In order to increase the effectiveness and efficiency of existing financial
mechanisms, a Global Mechanism to promote actions leading to the mobilization and
channelling of substantial financial resources, including for the transfer of technology,
on a grant basis, and/or on concessional or other terms, to affected developing country
Parties, is hereby established. This Global Mechanism shall function under the authority
and guidance of the Conference of the Parties and be accountable to it.
5. The Conference of the Parties shall identify, at its first ordinary session, an
organization to house the Global Mechanism. The Conference of the Parties and the
organization it has identified shall agree upon modalities for this Global Mechanism to
ensure inter alia that such Mechanism:
(a) identifies and draws up an inventory of relevant bilateral and multilateral
cooperation programmes that are available to implement the Convention;
(b) provides advice, on request, to Parties on innovative methods of financing and
sources of financial assistance and on improving the coordination of cooperation
activities at the national level;
(c) provides interested Parties and relevant intergovernmental and non-governmental
organizations with information on available sources of funds and on funding patterns in
order to facilitate coordination among them; and
(d) reports to the Conference of the Parties, beginning at its second ordinary session,
on its activities.
6. The Conference of the Parties shall, at its first session, make appropriate
arrangements with the organization it has identified to house the Global Mechanism for the
administrative operations of such Mechanism, drawing to the extent possible on existing
budgetary and human resources.
7. The Conference of the Parties shall, at its third ordinary session, review the
policies, operational modalities and activities of the Global Mechanism accountable to it
pursuant to paragraph 4, taking into account the provisions of article 7. On the basis of
this review, it shall consider and take appropriate action.
Part IV. Institutions
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1. A Conference of the Parties is hereby established.
2. The Conference of the Parties is the supreme body of the Convention. It shall make,
within its mandate, the decisions necessary to promote its effective implementation. In
particular, it shall:
(a) regularly review the implementation of the Convention and the functioning of its
institutional arrangements in the light of the experience gained at the national,
subregional, regional and international levels and on the basis of the evolution of
scientific and technological knowledge;
(b) promote and facilitate the exchange of information on measures adopted by the
Parties, and determine the form and timetable for transmitting the information to be
submitted pursuant to article 26, review the reports and make recommendations on them;
(c) establish such subsidiary bodies as are deemed necessary for the implementation of
the Convention;
(d) review reports submitted by its subsidiary bodies and provide guidance to them;
(e) agree upon and adopt, by consensus, rules of procedure and financial rules for
itself and any subsidiary bodies;
(f) adopt amendments to the Convention pursuant to articles 30 and 31;
(g) approve a programme and budget for its activities, including those of its
subsidiary bodies, and undertake necessary arrangements for their financing;
(h) as appropriate, seek the cooperation of, and utilize the services of and
information provided by, competent bodies or agencies, whether national or international,
intergovernmental or non-governmental;
(i) promote and strengthen the relationship with other relevant conventions while
avoiding duplication of effort; and
(j) exercise such other functions as may be necessary for the achievement of the
objective of the Convention.
3. The Conference of the Parties shall, at its first session, adopt its own rules of
procedure, by consensus, which shall include decision-making procedures for matters not
already covered by decision-making procedures stipulated in the Convention. Such
procedures may include specified majorities required for the adoption of particular
decisions.
4. The first session of the Conference of the Parties shall be convened by the interim
secretariat referred to in article 35 and shall take place not later than one year after
the date of entry into force of the Convention. Unless otherwise decided by the Conference
of the Parties, the second, third and fourth ordinary sessions shall be held yearly, and
thereafter, ordinary sessions shall be held every two years.
5. Extraordinary sessions of the Conference of the Parties shall be held at such other
times as may be decided either by the Conference of the Parties in ordinary session or at
the written request of any Party, provided that, within three months of the request being
communicated to the Parties by the Permanent Secretariat, it is supported by at least one
third of the Parties.
6. At each ordinary session, the Conference of the Parties shall elect a Bureau. The
structure and functions of the Bureau shall be determined in the rules of procedure. In
appointing the Bureau, due regard shall be paid to the need to ensure equitable
geographical distribution and adequate representation of affected country Parties,
particularly those in Africa.
7. The United Nations, its specialized agencies and any State member thereof or
observers thereto not Party to the Convention, may be represented at sessions of the
Conference of the Parties as observers. Any body or agency, whether national or
international, governmental or non-governmental, which is qualified in matters covered by
the Convention, and which has informed the Permanent Secretariat of its wish to be
represented at a session of the Conference of the Parties as an observer, may be so
admitted unless at least one
third of the Parties present object. The admission and participation of observers shall
be subject to the rules of procedure adopted by the Conference of the Parties.
8. The Conference of the Parties may request competent national and international
organizations which have relevant expertise to provide it with information relevant to
article 16, paragraph (g), article 17, paragraph 1 (c) and article 18, paragraph 2(b).
1. A Permanent Secretariat is hereby established.
2. The functions of the Permanent Secretariat shall be:
(a) to make arrangements for sessions of the Conference of the Parties and its
subsidiary bodies established under the Convention and to provide them with services as
required;
(b) to compile and transmit reports submitted to it;
(c) to facilitate assistance to affected developing country Parties, on request,
particularly those in Africa, in the compilation and communication of information required
under the Convention;
(d) to coordinate its activities with the secretariats of other relevant international
bodies and conventions;
(e) to enter, under the guidance of the Conference of the Parties, into such
administrative and contractual arrangements as may be required for the effective discharge
of its functions;
(f) to prepare reports on the execution of its functions under this Convention and
present them to the Conference of the Parties; and
(g) to perform such other secretariat functions as may be determined by the Conference
of the Parties.
3. The Conference of the Parties, at its first session, shall designate a Permanent
Secretariat and make arrangements for its functioning.
1. A Committee on Science and Technology is hereby established as a subsidiary body of
the Conference of the Parties to provide it with information and advice on scientific and
technological matters relating to combating desertification and mitigating the effects of
drought. The Committee shall meet in conjunction with the ordinary sessions of the
Conference of the Parties and shall be multidisciplinary and open to the participation of
all Parties. It shall be composed of government representatives competent in the relevant
fields of expertise. The Conference of the Parties shall decide, at its first session, on
the terms of reference of the Committee.
2. The Conference of the Parties shall establish and maintain a roster of independent
experts with expertise and experience in the relevant fields. The roster shall be based on
nominations received in writing from the Parties, taking into account the need for a
multidisciplinary approach and broad geographical representation.
3. The Conference of the Parties may, as necessary, appoint ad hoc panels to provide
it, through the Committee, with information and advice on specific issues regarding the
state of the art in fields of science and technology relevant to combating desertification
and mitigating the effects of drought. These panels shall be composed of experts whose
names are taken from the roster, taking into account the need for a multidisciplinary
approach and broad geographical representation. These experts shall have scientific
backgrounds and field experience and shall be appointed by the Conference of the Parties
on the recommendation of the Committee. The Conference of the Parties shall decide on the
terms of reference and the modalities of work of these panels.
1. The Committee on Science and Technology shall, under the supervision of the
Conference of the Parties, make provision for the undertaking of a survey and evaluation
of the relevant existing networks, institutions, agencies and bodies willing to become
units of a network. Such a network shall support the implementation of the Convention.
2. On the basis of the results of the survey and evaluation referred to in paragraph 1,
the Committee on Science and Technology shall make recommendations to the Conference of
the Parties on ways and means to facilitate and strengthen networking of the units at the
local, national and other levels, with a view to ensuring that the thematic needs set out
in articles 16 to 19 are addressed.
3. Taking into account these recommendations, the Conference of the Parties shall:
(a) identify those national, subregional, regional and international units that are
most appropriate for networking, and recommend operational procedures, and a time frame,
for them; and
(b) identify the units best suited to facilitating and strengthening such networking at
all levels.
Part V. Procedures
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1. Each Party shall communicate to the Conference of the Parties for consideration at
its ordinary sessions, through the Permanent Secretariat, reports on the measures which it
has taken for the implementation of the Convention. The Conference of the Parties shall
determine the timetable for submission and the format of such reports.
2. Affected country Parties shall provide a description of the strategies established
pursuant to article 5 and of any relevant information on their implementation.
3. Affected country Parties which implement action programmes pursuant to articles 9 to
15 shall provide a detailed description of the programmes and of their implementation.
4. Any group of affected country Parties may make a joint communication on measures
taken at the subregional and/or regional levels in the framework of action programmes.
5. Developed country Parties shall report on measures taken to assist in the
preparation and implementation of action programmes, including information on the
financial resources they have provided, or are providing, under the Convention.
6. Information communicated pursuant to paragraphs 1 to 4 shall be transmitted by the
Permanent Secretariat as soon as possible to the Conference of the Parties and to any
relevant subsidiary body.
7. The Conference of the Parties shall facilitate the provision to affected developing
countries, particularly those in Africa, on request, of technical and financial support in
compiling and communicating information in accordance with this article, as well as
identifying the technical and financial needs associated with action programmes.
The Conference of the Parties shall consider and adopt procedures and institutional
mechanisms for the resolution of questions that may arise with regard to the
implementation of the Convention.
1. Parties shall settle any dispute between them concerning the interpretation or
application of the Convention through negotiation or other peaceful means of their own
choice.
2. When ratifying, accepting, approving, or acceding to the Convention, or at any time
thereafter, a Party which is not a regional economic integration organization may declare
in a written instrument submitted to the Depositary that, in respect of any dispute
concerning the interpretation or application of the Convention, it recognizes one or both
of the following means of dispute settlement as compulsory in relation to any Party
accepting the same obligation:
(a) arbitration in accordance with procedures adopted by the Conference of the Parties
in an annex as soon as practicable;
(b) submission of the dispute to the International Court of Justice.
3. A Party which is a regional economic integration organization may make a declaration
with like effect in relation to arbitration in accordance with the procedure referred to
in paragraph 2 (a).
4. A declaration made pursuant to paragraph 2 shall remain in force until it expires in
accordance with its terms or until three months after written notice of its revocation has
been deposited with the Depositary.
5. The expiry of a declaration, a notice of revocation or a new declaration shall not
in any way affect proceedings pending before an arbitral tribunal or the International
Court of Justice unless the Parties to the dispute otherwise agree.
6. If the Parties to a dispute have not accepted the same or any procedure pursuant to
paragraph 2 and if they have not been able to settle their dispute within twelve months
following notification by one Party to another that a dispute exists between them, the
dispute shall be submitted to conciliation at the request of any Party to the dispute, in
accordance with procedures adopted by the Conference of the Parties in an annex as soon as
practicable.
1. Annexes form an integral part of the Convention and, unless expressly provided
otherwise, a reference to the Convention also constitutes a reference to its annexes.
2. The Parties shall interpret the provisions of the annexes in a manner that is in
conformity with their rights and obligations under the articles of this Convention.
1. Any Party may propose amendments to the Convention.
2. Amendments to the Convention shall be adopted at an ordinary session of the
Conference of the Parties. The text of any proposed amendment shall be communicated to the
Parties by the Permanent Secretariat at least six months before the meeting at which it is
proposed for adoption. The Permanent Secretariat shall also communicate proposed
amendments to the signatories to the Convention.
3. The Parties shall make every effort to reach agreement on any proposed amendment to
the Convention by consensus. If all efforts at consensus have been exhausted and no
agreement reached, the amendment shall, as a last resort, be adopted by a two-thirds
majority vote of the Parties present and voting at the meeting. The adopted amendment
shall be communicated by the Permanent Secretariat to the Depositary, who shall circulate
it to all Parties for their ratification, acceptance, approval or accession.
4. Instruments of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession in respect of an
amendment shall be deposited with the Depositary. An amendment adopted pursuant to
paragraph 3 shall enter into force for those Parties having accepted it on the ninetieth
day after the date of receipt by the Depositary of an instrument of ratification,
acceptance, approval or accession by at least two thirds of the Parties to the Convention
which were Parties at the time of the adoption of the amendment.
5. The amendment shall enter into force for any other Party on the ninetieth day after
the date on which that Party deposits with the Depositary its instrument of ratification,
acceptance or approval of, or accession to the said amendment.
6. For the purposes of this article and article 31, "Parties present and
voting" means Parties present and casting an affirmative or negative vote.
1. Any additional annex to the Convention and any amendment to an annex shall be
proposed and adopted in accordance with the procedure for amendment of the Convention set
forth in article 30, provided that, in adopting an additional regional implementation
annex or amendment to any regional implementation annex, the majority provided for in that
article shall include a two-thirds majority vote of the Parties of the region concerned
present and voting. The adoption or amendment of an annex shall be communicated by the
Depositary to all Parties.
2. An annex, other than an additional regional implementation annex, or an amendment to
an annex, other than an amendment to any regional implementation annex, that has been
adopted in accordance with paragraph 1, shall enter into force for all Parties to the
Convention six months after the date of communication by the Depositary to such Parties of
the adoption of such annex or amendment, except for those Parties that have notified the
Depositary in writing within that period of their non- acceptance of such annex or
amendment. Such annex or amendment shall enter into force for Parties which withdraw their
notification of non-acceptance on the ninetieth day after the date on which withdrawal of
such notification has been received by the Depositary.
3. An additional regional implementation annex or amendment to any regional
implementation annex that has been adopted in accordance with paragraph 1, shall enter
into force for all Parties to the Convention six months after the date of the
communication by the Depositary to such Parties of the adoption of such annex or
amendment, except with respect to:
(a) any Party that has notified the Depositary in writing, within such six month
period, of its non-acceptance of that additional regional implementation annex or of the
amendment to the regional implementation annex, in which case such annex or amendment
shall enter into force for Parties which withdraw their notification of non-acceptance on
the ninetieth day after the date on which withdrawal of such notification has been
received by the Depositary; and
(b) any Party that has made a declaration with respect to additional regional
implementation annexes or amendments to regional implementation annexes in accordance with
article 34, paragraph 4, in which case any such annex or amendment shall enter into force
for such a Party on the ninetieth day after the date of deposit with the Depositary of its
instrument of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession with respect to such annex
or amendment.
4. If the adoption of an annex or an amendment to an annex involves an amendment to the
Convention, that annex or amendment to an annex shall not enter into force until such time
as the amendment to the Convention enters into force.
1. Except as provided for in paragraph 2, each Party to the Convention 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 that are Parties to the Convention. Such an organization shall not exercise
its right to vote if any of its member States exercises its right, and vice versa.
Part VI. Final Provisions
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This Convention shall be opened for signature at Paris, on 14-15 October 1994, by
States Members of the United Nations or any of its specialized agencies or that are
Parties to the Statute of the International Court of Justice and by regional economic
integration organizations. It shall remain open for signature, thereafter, at the United
Nations Headquarters in New York until 13 October 1995.
1. The Convention shall be subject to ratification, acceptance, approval or accession
by States and by regional economic integration organizations. It shall be open for
accession from the day after the date on which the Convention is closed for signature.
Instruments of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession shall be deposited with the
Depositary.
2. Any regional economic integration organization which becomes a Party to the
Convention without any of its member States being a Party to the Convention shall be bound
by all the obligations under the Convention. Where one or more member States of such an
organization are also Party to the Convention, the organization and its member States
shall decide on their respective responsibilities for the performance of their obligations
under the Convention. In such cases, the organization and the member States shall not be
entitled to exercise rights under the Convention concurrently.
3. In their instruments of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession, regional
economic integration organizations shall declare the extent of their competence with
respect to the matters governed by the Convention. They shall also promptly inform the
Depositary, who shall in turn inform the Parties, of any substantial modification in the
extent of their competence.
4. In its instrument of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession, any Party may
declare that, with respect to it, any additional regional implementation annex or any
amendment to any regional implementation annex shall enter into force only upon the
deposit of its instrument of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession with respect
thereto.
The secretariat functions referred to in article 23 will be carried out on an interim
basis by the secretariat established by the General Assembly of the United Nations in its
resolution 47/188 of 22 December 1992, until the completion of the first session of the
Conference of the Parties.
1. The Convention shall enter into force on the ninetieth day after the date of deposit
of the fiftieth instrument of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession.
2. For each State or regional economic integration organization ratifying, accepting,
approving or acceding to the Convention after the deposit of the fiftieth instrument of
ratification, acceptance, approval or accession, the Convention shall enter into force on
the ninetieth day after the date of deposit by such State or regional economic integration
organization of its instrument of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession.
3. For the purposes of paragraphs 1 and 2, any instrument deposited by a regional
economic integration organization shall not be counted as additional to those deposited by
States members of the organization.
No reservations may be made to this Convention.
1. At any time after three years from the date on which the Convention has entered into
force for a Party, that Party may withdraw from the Convention by giving written
notification to the Depositary.
2. Any such withdrawal shall take effect upon expiry of one year from the date of
receipt by the Depositary of the notification of withdrawal, or on such later date as may
be specified in the notification of withdrawal.
The Secretary-General of the United Nations shall be the Depositary of the Convention.
The original of the present Convention, of which the Arabic, Chinese, English, French,
Russian and Spanish texts are equally authentic, shall be deposited with the
Secretary-General of the United Nations.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF the undersigned, being duly authorized to that effect, have signed
the present Convention.
DONE AT Paris, this 17th day of June one thousand nine hundred and ninety-four.