|
Preamble
The Government of the United States of America, the
Government of Canada and the Government of the United
Mexican States:
CONVINCED of the importance of the conservation,
protection and enhancement of the environment in their
territories and the essential role of cooperation in these
areas in achieving sustainable development for the
well-being of present and future generations;
REAFFIRMING the sovereign right of States to exploit
their own resources pursuant to their own environmental and
development policies and their 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 the interrelationship of their
environments;
ACKNOWLEDGING the growing economic and social links
between them, including the North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA);
RECONFIRMING the importance of the environmental goals
and objectives of the NAFTA, including enhanced levels of
environmental protection;
EMPHASIZING the importance of public participation in
conserving, protecting and enhancing the environment;
NOTING the existence of differences in their respective
natural endowments, climatic and geographical conditions,
and economic, technological and infrastructural
capabilities;
REAFFIRMING the Stockholm Declaration on the Human
Environment of 1972 and the Rio Declaration on Environment
and Development of 1992;
RECALLING their tradition of environmental cooperation
and expressing their desire to support and build on
international environmental agreements and existing policies
and laws, in order to promote cooperation between them:
and
CONVINCED of the benefits to be derived from a framework,
including a Commission, to facilitate effective cooperation
on the conservation, protection and enhancement of the
environment in their territories;
HAVE AGREED AS FOLLOWS:
Part One — Objectives
Article 1: Objectives
The objectives of this Agreement are to:
(a) foster the protection and improvement of the
environment in the territories of the Parties for the
well-being of present and future generations;
(b) promote sustainable development based on cooperation
and mutually supportive environmental and economic
policies;
(c) increase cooperation between the Parties to better
conserve, protect, and enhance the environment, including
wild flora and fauna;
(d) support the environmental goals and objectives of the
NAFTA;
(e) avoid creating trade distortions or new trade
barriers; (f) strengthen cooperation on the development and
improvement of environmental laws, regulations, procedures,
policies and practices;
(g) enhance compliance with, and enforcement of,
environmental laws and regulations;
(h) promote transparency and public participation in the
development of environmental laws, regulations and
policies;
(i) promote economically efficient and effective
environmental measures; and
(j) promote pollution prevention policies and
practices.
Part Two — Obligations
Article 2: General Commitments
1. Each Party shall, with respect to its territory:
(a) periodically prepare and make publicly available
reports on the state of the environment;
(b) develop and review environmental emergency
preparedness measures;
(c) promote education in environmental matters, including
environmental law;
(d) further scientific research and technology
development in respect of environmental matters;
(e) assess, as appropriate, environmental impacts;
and
(f) promote the use of economic instruments for the
efficient achievement of environmental goals.
2. Each Party shall consider implementing in its law any
recommendation developed by the Council under Article
10(5)(b).
3. Each Party shall consider prohibiting the export to
the territories of the other Parties of a pesticide or toxic
substance whose use is prohibited within the Party's
territory. When a Party adopts a measure prohibiting or
severely restricting the use of a pesticide or toxic
substance in its territory, it shall notify the other
Parties of the measure, either directly or through an
appropriate international organization.
Article 3: Levels of Protection
Recognizing the right of each Party to establish its own
levels of domestic environmental protection and
environmental development policies and priorities, and to
adopt or modify accordingly its environmental laws and
regulations, each Party shall ensure that its laws and
regulations provide for high levels of environmental
protection and shall strive to continue to improve those
laws and regulations.
Article 4: Publication
1. Each Party shall ensure that its laws, regulations,
procedures and administrative rulings of general application
respecting any matter covered by this Agreement are promptly
published or otherwise made available in such a manner as to
enable interested persons and Parties to become acquainted
with them.
2. To the extent possible, each Party shall:
(a) publish in advance any such measure that it proposes
to adopt; and
(b) provide interested persons and Parties a reasonable
opportunity to comment on such proposed measures.
Article 5: Government Enforcement Action
1. With the aim of achieving high levels of environmental
protection and compliance with its environmental laws and
regulations, each Party shall effectively enforce its
environmental laws and regulations through appropriate
governmental action, subject to Article 37, such as:
(a) appointing and training inspectors;
(b) monitoring compliance and investigating suspected
violations, including through on-site inspections;
(c) seeking assurances of voluntary compliance and
compliance agreements;
(d) publicly releasing non-compliance information;
(e) issuing bulletins or other periodic statements on
enforcement procedures;
(f) promoting environmental audits;
(g) requiring record keeping and reporting;
(h) providing or encouraging mediation and arbitration
services;
(i) using licenses, permits or authorizations;
(j) initiating, in a timely manner, judicial,
quasi-judicial or administrative proceedings to seek
appropriate sanctions or remedies for violations of its
environmental laws and regulations;
(k) providing for search, seizure or detention; or
(l) issuing administrative orders, including orders of a
preventative, curative or emergency nature.
2. Each Party shall ensure that judicial, quasi-judicial
or administrative enforcement proceedings are available
under its law to sanction or remedy violations of its
environmental laws and regulations.
3. Sanctions and remedies provided for a violation of a
Party's environmental laws and regulations shall, as
appropriate:
(a) take into consideration the nature and gravity of the
violation, any economic benefit derived from the violation
by the violator, the economic condition of the violator, and
other relevant factors; and
(b) include compliance agreements, fines, imprisonment,
injunctions, the closure of facilities, and the cost of
containing or cleaning up pollution.
Article 6: Private Access to Remedies
1. Each Party shall ensure that interested persons may
request the Party's competent authorities to investigate
alleged violations of its environmental laws and regulations
and shall give such requests due consideration in accordance
with law.
2. Each Party shall ensure that persons with a legally
recognized interest under its law in a particular matter
have appropriate access to administrative, quasi-judicial or
judicial proceedings for the enforcement of the Party's
environmental laws and regulations.
3. Private access to remedies shall include rights, in
accordance with the Party's law, such as:
(a) to sue another person under that Party's jurisdiction
for damages;
(b) to seek sanctions or remedies such as monetary
penalties, emergency closures or orders to mitigate the
consequences of violations of its environmental laws and
regulations;
(c) to request the competent authorities to take
appropriate action to enforce that Party's environmental
laws and regulations in order to protect the environment or
to avoid environmental harm; or
(d) to seek injunctions where a person suffers, or may
suffer, loss, damage or injury as a result of conduct by
another person under that Party's jurisdiction contrary to
that Party's environmental laws and regulations or from
tortious conduct.
Article 7: Procedural Guarantees
1. Each Party shall ensure that its administrative,
quasi-judicial and judicial proceedings referred to in
Articles 5(2) and 6(2) are fair, open and equitable, and to
this end shall provide that such proceedings:
(a) comply with due process of law;
(b) are open to the public, except where the
administration of justice otherwise requires;
(c) entitle the parties to the proceedings to support or
defend their respective positions and to present information
or evidence; and
(d) are not unnecessarily complicated and do not entail
unreasonable charges or time limits or unwarranted
delays.
2. Each Party shall provide that final decisions on the
merits of the case in such proceedings are:
(a) in writing and preferably state the reasons on which
the decisions are based;
(b) made available without undue delay to the parties to
the proceedings and, consistent with its law, to the public;
and
(c) based on information or evidence in respect of which
the parties were offered the opportunity to be heard.
3. Each Party shall provide, as appropriate, that parties
to such proceedings have the right, in accordance with its
law, to seek review and, where warranted, correction of
final decisions issued in such proceedings.
4. Each Party shall ensure that tribunals that conduct or
review such proceedings are impartial and independent and do
not have any substantial interest in the outcome of the
matter.
Part Three — Commission for Environmental
Cooperation
Article 8: The Commission
1. The Parties hereby establish the Commission for
Environmental Cooperation.
2. The Commission shall comprise a Council, a Secretariat
and a Joint Public Advisory Committee.
Section A: The Council
Article 9: Council Structure and Procedures
1. The Council shall comprise cabinet-level or equivalent
representatives of the Parties, or their designees.
2. The Council shall establish its rules and
procedures.
3. The Council shall convene:
(a) at least once a year in regular session; and
(b) in special session at the request of any Party.
Regular sessions shall be chaired successively by each
Party.
4. The Council shall hold public meetings in the course
of all regular sessions. Other meetings held in the course
of regular or
special sessions shall be public where the Council so
decides.
5. The Council may:
(a) establish, and assign responsibilities to, ad hoc or
standing committees, working groups or expert groups;
(b) seek the advice of non-governmental organizations or
persons, including independent experts; and
(c) take such other action in the exercise of its
functions as the Parties may agree.
6. All decisions and recommendations of the Council shall
be taken by consensus, except as the Council may otherwise
decide or as otherwise provided in this Agreement.
7. All decisions and recommendations of the Council shall
be made public, except as the Council may otherwise decide
or as otherwise provided in this Agreement.
Article 10: Council Functions
1. The Council shall be the governing body of the
Commission and shall:
(a) serve as a forum for the discussion of environmental
matters within the scope of this Agreement;
(b) oversee the implementation and develop
recommendations on the further elaboration of this Agreement
and, to this end, the Council shall, within four years after
the date of entry into force of this Agreement, review its
operation and effectiveness in the light of experience;
(c) oversee the Secretariat;
(d) address questions and differences that may arise
between the Parties regarding the interpretation or
application of this Agreement;
(e) approve the annual program and budget of the
Commission; and
(f) promote and facilitate cooperation between the
Parties with respect to environmental matters.
2. The Council may consider, and develop recommendations
regarding:
(a) comparability of techniques and methodologies for
data gathering and analysis, data management and electronic
data communications on matters covered by this
Agreement;
(b) pollution prevention techniques and strategies;
(c) approaches and common indicators for reporting on the
state of the environment;
(d) the use of economic instruments for the pursuit of
domestic and internationally agreed environmental
objectives;
(e) scientific research and technology development in
respect of environmental matters; (f) promotion of public
awareness regarding the environment;
(g) transboundary and border environmental issues, such
as the long-range transport of air and marine
pollutants;
(h) exotic species that may be harmful;
(i) the conservation and protection of wild flora and
fauna and their habitat, and specially protected natural
areas;
(j) the protection of endangered and threatened
species;
(k) environmental emergency preparedness and response
activities;
(l) environmental matters as they relate to economic
development;
(m) the environmental implications of goods throughout
their life cycles;
(n) human resource training and development in the
environmental field;
(o) the exchange of environmental scientists and
officials;
(p) approaches to environmental compliance and
enforcement;
(q) ecologically sensitive national accounts;
(r) eco-labelling; and
(s) other matters as it may decide.
3. The Council shall strengthen cooperation on the
development and continuing improvement of environmental laws
and regulations, including by:
(a) promoting the exchange of information on criteria and
methodologies used in establishing domestic environmental
standards; and
(b) without reducing levels of environmental protection,
establishing a process for developing recommendations on
greater compatibility of environmental technical
regulations, standards and conformity assessment procedures
in a manner consistent with the NAFTA.
4. The Council shall encourage:
(a) effective enforcement by each Party of its
environmental laws and regulations;
(b) compliance with those laws and regulations; and
(c) technical cooperation between the Parties.
5. The Council shall promote and, as appropriate, develop
recommendations regarding:
(a) public access to information concerning the
environment that is held by public authorities of each
Party, including information on hazardous materials and
activities in its communities, and opportunity to
participate in decision-making processes related to such
public access; and
(b) appropriate limits for specific pollutants, taking
into account differences in ecosystems.
6. The Council shall cooperate with the NAFTA Free Trade
Commission to achieve the environmental goals and objectives
of the NAFTA by:
(a) acting as a point of inquiry and receipt for comments
from non-governmental organizations and persons concerning
those goals and objectives;
(b) providing assistance in consultations under Article
1114 of the NAFTA where a Party considers that another Party
is waiving or derogating from, or offering to waive or
otherwise derogate from, an environmental measure as an
encouragement to establish, acquire, expand or retain an
investment of an investor, with a view to avoiding any such
encouragement;
(c) contributing to the prevention or resolution of
environment-related trade disputes by:
(i) seeking to avoid disputes between the
Parties,
(ii) making recommendations to the Free Trade
Commission with respect to the avoidance of such
disputes, and
(iii) identifying experts able to provide information
or technical advice to NAFTA committees, working groups
and other NAFTA bodies;
(d) considering on an ongoing basis the environmental
effects of the NAFTA; and
(e) otherwise assisting the Free Trade Commission in
environment-related matters.
7. Recognizing the significant bilateral nature of many
transboundary environmental issues, the Council shall, with
a view to agreement between the Parties pursuant to this
Article within three years on obligations, consider and
develop recommendations with respect to:
a) assessing the environmental impact of proposed
projects subject to decisions by a competent government
authority and likely to cause significant adverse
transboundary effects, including a full evaluation of
comments provided by other Parties and persons of other
Parties;
b) notification, provision of relevant information and
consultation between Parties with respect to such projects;
and
c) mitigation of the potential adverse effects of such
projects.
8. The Council shall encourage the establishment by each
Party of appropriate administrative procedures pursuant to
its environmental laws to permit another Party to seek the
reduction, elimination or mitigation of transboundary
pollution on a reciprocal basis.
9. The Council shall consider and, as appropriate,
develop recommendations on the provision by a Party, on a
reciprocal basis, of access to and rights and remedies
before its courts and administrative agencies for persons in
another Party's territory who have suffered or are likely to
suffer damage or injury caused by pollution originating in
its territory as if the damage or injury were suffered in
its territory.
Section B: The Secretariat
Article 11: Secretariat Structure and Procedures
1. The Secretariat shall be headed by an Executive
Director, who shall be chosen by the Council for a
three-year term, which may be renewed by the Council for one
additional three-year term. The position of Executive
Director shall rotate consecutively between nationals of
each Party. The Council may remove the Executive Director
solely for cause.
2. The Executive Director shall appoint and supervise the
staff of the Secretariat, regulate their powers and duties
and fix their remuneration in accordance with general
standards to be established by the Council. The general
standards shall provide that:
(a) staff shall be appointed and retained, and their
conditions of employment shall be determined, strictly on
the basis of efficiency, competence and integrity;
(b) in appointing staff, the Executive Director shall
take into account lists of candidates prepared by the
Parties and by the Joint Public Advisory Committee;
(c) due regard shall be paid to the importance of
recruiting an equitable proportion of the professional staff
from among the nationals of each Party; and
(d) the Executive Director shall inform the Council of
all appointments.
3. The Council may decide, by a two-thirds vote, to
reject any appointment that does not meet the general
standards. Any such decision shall be made and held in
confidence.
4. In the performance of their duties, the Executive
Director and the staff shall not seek or receive
instructions from any government or any other authority
external to the Council. Each Party shall respect the
international character of the responsibilities of the
Executive Director and the staff and shall not seek to
influence them in the discharge of their
responsibilities.
5. The Secretariat shall provide technical,
administrative and operational support to the Council and to
committees and groups established by the Council, and such
other support as the Council may direct.
6. The Executive Director shall submit for the approval
of the Council the annual program and budget of the
Commission, including provision for proposed cooperative
activities and for the Secretariat to respond to
contingencies.
7. The Secretariat shall, as appropriate, provide the
Parties and the public information on where they may receive
technical advice and expertise with respect to environmental
matters.
8. The Secretariat shall safeguard:
(a) from disclosure information it receives that could
identify a non-governmental organization or person making a
submission if the person or organization so requests or the
Secretariat otherwise considers it appropriate; and
(b) from public disclosure any information it receives
from any non-governmental organization or person where the
information is designated by that non-governmental
organization or person as confidential or proprietary.
Article 12: Annual Report of the Commission
1. The Secretariat shall prepare an annual report of the
Commission in accordance with instructions from the Council.
The Secretariat shall submit a draft of the report for
review by the Council. The final report shall be released
publicly.
2. The report shall cover:
(a) activities and expenses of the Commission during the
previous year;
(b) the approved program and budget of the Commission for
the subsequent year;
(c) the actions taken by each Party in connection with
its obligations under this Agreement, including data on the
Party's environmental enforcement activities;
(d) relevant views and information submitted by
non-governmental organizations and persons, including
summary data regarding submissions, and any other relevant
information the Council deems appropriate;
(e) recommendations made on any matter within the scope
of this Agreement; and
(f) any other matter that the Council instructs the
Secretariat to include.
3. The report shall periodically address the state of the
environment in the territories of the Parties.
Article 13: Secretariat Reports
1. The Secretariat may prepare a report for the Council
on any matter within the scope of the annual program. Should
the Secretariat wish to prepare a report on any other
environmental matter related to the cooperative functions of
this Agreement, it shall notify the Council and may proceed
unless, within 30 days of such notification, the Council
objects by a two-thirds vote to the preparation of the
report. Such other environmental matters shall not include
issues related to whether a Party has failed to enforce its
environmental laws and regulations. Where the Secretariat
does not have specific expertise in the matter under review,
it shall obtain the assistance of one or more independent
experts of recognized experience in the matter to assist in
the preparation of the report.
2. In preparing such a report, the Secretariat may draw
upon any relevant technical, scientific or other
information, including information:
(a) that is publicly available;
(b) submitted by interested non-governmental
organizations and persons;
(c) submitted by the Joint Public Advisory Committee;
(d) furnished by a Party;
(e) gathered through public consultations, such as
conferences, seminars and symposia; or
(f) developed by the Secretariat, or by independent
experts engaged pursuant to paragraph 1.
3. The Secretariat shall submit its report to the
Council, which shall make it publicly available, normally
within 60 days following its submission, unless the Council
otherwise decides.
Article 14: Submissions on Enforcement Matters
1. The Secretariat may consider a submission from any
non-governmental organization or person asserting that a
Party is failing to effectively enforce its environmental
law, if the Secretariat finds that the submission:
(a) is in writing in a language designated by that Party
in a notification to the Secretariat;
(b) clearly identifies the person or organization making
the submission;
(c) provides sufficient information to allow the
Secretariat to review the submission, including any
documentary evidence on which the submission may be
based;
(d) appears to be aimed at promoting enforcement rather
than at harassing industry;
(e) indicates that the matter has been communicated in
writing to the relevant authorities of the Party and
indicates the Party's response, if any; and
(f) is filed by a person or organization residing or
established in the territory of a Party.
2. Where the Secretariat determines that a submission
meets the criteria set out in paragraph 1, the Secretariat
shall determine whether the submission merits requesting a
response from the Party. In deciding whether to request a
response, the Secretariat shall be guided by whether: (a)
the submission alleges harm to the person or organization
making the submission;
(b) the submission, alone or in combination with other
submissions, raises matters whose further study in this
process would advance the goals of this Agreement;
(c) private remedies available under the Party's law have
been pursued; and
(d) the submission is drawn exclusively from mass media
reports.
Where the Secretariat makes such a request, it shall
forward to the Party a copy of the submission and any
supporting information provided with the submission.
3. The Party shall advise the Secretariat within 30 days
or, in exceptional circumstances and on notification to the
Secretariat, within 60 days of delivery of the request:
(a) whether the matter is the subject of a pending
judicial or administrative proceeding, in which case the
Secretariat shall proceed no further; and
(b) of any other information that the Party wishes to
submit, such as
i) whether the matter was previously the subject
of a judicial or administrative proceeding, and
ii) whether private remedies in connection with the
matter are available to the person or organization making
the submission and whether they have been pursued.
Article 15: Factual Record
1. If the Secretariat considers that the submission, in
the light of any response provided by the Party, warrants
developing a factual record, the Secretariat shall so inform
the Council and provide its reasons.
2. The Secretariat shall prepare a factual record if the
Council, by a two-thirds vote, instructs it to do so.
3. The preparation of a factual record by the Secretariat
pursuant to this Article shall be without prejudice to any
further steps that may be taken with respect to any
submission.
4. In preparing a factual record, the Secretariat shall
consider any information furnished by a Party and may
consider any relevant technical, scientific or other
information:
(a) that is publicly available:
(b) submitted by interested non-governmental
organizations or persons:
(c) submitted by the Joint Public Advisory Committee;
or
(d) developed by the Secretariat or by independent
experts.
5. The Secretariat shall submit a draft factual record to
the Council. Any Party may provide comments on the accuracy
of the draft within 45 days thereafter.
6. The Secretariat shall incorporate, as appropriate, any
such comments in the final factual record and submit it to
the Council.
7. The Council may, by a two-thirds vote, make the final
factual record publicly available, normally within 60 days
following its submission.
Section C: Advisory Committees
Article 16: Joint Public Advisory Committee
1. The Joint Public Advisory Committee shall comprise 15
members, unless the Council otherwise decides. Each Party
or, if the Party so decides, its National Advisory Committee
convened under Article 17, shall appoint an equal number of
members.
2. The Council shall establish the rules of procedure for
the Joint Public Advisory Committee, which shall choose its
own chair.
3. The Joint Public Advisory Committee shall convene at
least once a year at the time of the regular session of the
Council and at such other times as the Council, or the
Committee's chair with the consent of a majority of its
members, may decide.
4. The Joint Public Advisory Committee may provide advice
to the Council on any matter within the scope of this
Agreement, including on any documents provided to it under
paragraph 6, and on the implementation and further
elaboration of this Agreement, and may perform such other
functions as the Council may direct.
5. The Joint Public Advisory Committee may provide
relevant technical, scientific or other information to the
Secretariat, including for purposes of developing a factual
record under Article 15. The Secretariat shall forward to
the Council copies of any such information.
6. The Secretariat shall provide to the Joint Public
Advisory Committee at the time they are submitted to the
Council copies of the proposed annual program and budget of
the Commission, the draft annual report, and any report the
Secretariat prepares pursuant to Article 13.
7. The Council may, by a two-thirds vote, make a factual
record available to the Joint Public Advisory Committee.
Article 17: National Advisory Committees
Each Party may convene a national advisory committee,
comprising members of its public, including representatives
of non-governmental organizations and persons, to advise it
on the implementation and further elaboration of this
Agreement.
Article 18: Governmental Committees
Each Party may convene a governmental committee, which
may comprise or include representatives of federal and state
or provincial governments, to advise it on the
implementation and further elaboration of this
Agreement.
Section D: Official Languages
Article 19: Official Languages
The official languages of the Commission shall be
English, French and Spanish. All annual reports under
Article 12, reports submitted to the Council under Article
13, factual records submitted to the Council under Article
15(6) and panel reports under Part Five shall be available
in each official language at the time they are made public.
The Council shall establish rules and procedures regarding
interpretation and translation.
Part Four — Cooperation and Provision of
Information
Article 20: Cooperation
1. The Parties shall at all times endeavor to agree on
the interpretation and application of this Agreement, and
shall make every attempt through cooperation and
consultations to resolve any matter that might affect its
operation.
2. To the maximum extent possible, each Party shall
notify any other Party with an interest in the matter of any
proposed or actual environmental measure that the Party
considers might materially affect the operation of this
Agreement or otherwise substantially affect that other
Party's interests under this Agreement.
3. On request of any other Party, a Party shall promptly
provide information and respond to questions pertaining to
any such actual or proposed environmental measure, whether
or not that other Party has been previously notified of that
measure.
4. Any Party may notify any other Party of, and provide
to that Party, any credible information regarding possible
violations of its environmental law, specific and sufficient
to allow the other Party to inquire into the matter. The
notified Party shall take appropriate steps in accordance
with its law to so inquire and to respond to the other
Party.
Article 21: Provision of Information
1. On request of the Council or the Secretariat, each
Party shall, in accordance with its law, provide such
information as the Council or the Secretariat may require,
including:
(a) promptly making available any information in its
possession required for the preparation of a report or
factual record, including compliance and enforcement data:
and
(b) taking all reasonable steps to make available any
other such information requested.
2. If a Party considers that a request for information
from the Secretariat is excessive or otherwise unduly
burdensome, it may so notify the Council. The Secretariat
shall revise the scope of its request to comply with any
limitations established by the Council by a two-thirds
vote.
3. If a Party does not make available information
requested by the Secretariat, as may be limited pursuant to
paragraph 2, it shall promptly advise the Secretariat of its
reasons in writing.
Part Five — Consultation and Resolution of
Disputes
Article 22: Consultations
1. Any Party may request in writing consultations with
any other Party regarding whether there has been a
persistent pattern of failure by that other Party to
effectively enforce its environmental law.
2. The requesting Party shall deliver the request to the
other Parties and to the Secretariat.
3. Unless the Council otherwise provides in its rules and
procedures established under Article 9(2), a third Party
that considers it has a substantial interest in the matter
shall be entitled to participate in the consultations on
delivery of written notice to the other Parties and to the
Secretariat.
4. The consulting Parties shall make every attempt to
arrive at a mutually satisfactory resolution of the matter
through consultations under this Article.
Article 23: Initiation of Procedures
1. If the consulting Parties fail to resolve the matter
pursuant to Article 22 within 60 days of delivery of a
request for consultations, or such other period as the
consulting Parties may agree, any such Party may request in
writing a special session of the Council.
2. The requesting Party shall state in the request the
matter complained of and shall deliver the request to the
other Parties and to the Secretariat.
3. Unless it decides otherwise, the Council shall convene
within 20 days of delivery of the request and shall endeavor
to resolve the dispute promptly.
4. The Council may:
(a) call on such technical advisers or create such
working groups or expert groups as it deems necessary,
(b) have recourse to good offices, conciliation,
mediation or such other dispute resolution procedures,
or
(c) make recommendations,
as may assist the consulting Parties to reach a mutually
satisfactory resolution of the dispute. Any such
recommendations shall be made public if the Council, by a
two-thirds vote, so decides.
5. Where the Council decides that a matter is more
properly covered by another agreement or arrangement to
which the consulting Parties are party, it shall refer the
matter to those Parties for appropriate action in accordance
with such other agreement or arrangement.
Article 24: Request for an Arbitral Panel
1. If the matter has not been resolved within 60 days
after the Council has convened pursuant to Article 23, the
Council shall, on the written request of any consulting
Party and by a two-thirds vote, convene an arbitral panel to
consider the matter where the alleged persistent pattern of
failure by the Party complained against to effectively
enforce its environmental law relates to a situation
involving workplaces, firms, companies or sectors that
produce goods or provide services:
(a) traded between the territories of the Parties; or
(b) that compete, in the territory of the Party
complained against, with goods or services produced or
provided by persons of another Party.
2. A third Party that considers it has a substantial
interest in the matter shall be entitled to join as a
complaining Party on delivery of written notice of its
intention to participate to the disputing Parties and the
Secretariat. The notice shall be delivered at the earliest
possible time, and in any event no later than seven days
after the date of the vote of the Council to convene a
panel.
3. Unless otherwise agreed by the disputing Parties, the
panel shall be established and perform its functions in a
manner consistent with the provisions of this Part.
Article 25: Roster
1. The Council shall establish and maintain a roster of
up to 45 individuals who are willing and able to serve as
panelists. The roster members shall be appointed by
consensus for terms of three years, and may be
reappointed.
2. Roster members shall:
(a) have expertise or experience in environmental law or
its enforcement, or in the resolution of disputes arising
under international agreements, or other relevant
scientific, technical or professional expertise or
experience;
(b) be chosen strictly on the basis of objectivity,
reliability and sound judgment;
(c) be independent of, and not be affiliated with or take
instructions from, any Party, the Secretariat or the Joint
Public Advisory Committee; and
(d) comply with a code of conduct to be established by
the Council.
Article 26: Qualifications of Panelists
1. All panelists shall meet the qualifications set out in
Article 25(2).
2. Individuals may not serve as panelists for a dispute
in which:
(a) they have participated pursuant to Article 23(4);
or
(b) they have, or a person or organization with which
they are affiliated has, an interest, as set out in the code
of conduct established under Article 25(2)(d).
Article 27: Panel Selection
1. Where there are two disputing Parties, the following
procedures shall apply:
(a) The panel shall comprise five members.
(b) The disputing Parties shall endeavor to agree on the
chair of the panel within 15 days after the Council votes to
convene the panel. If the disputing Parties are unable to
agree on the chair within this period, the disputing Party
chosen by lot shall select within five days a chair who is
not a citizen of that Party.
(c) Within 15 days of selection of the chair, each
disputing Party shall select two panelists who are citizens
of the other disputing Party.
(d) If a disputing Party fails to select its panelists
within such period, such panelists shall be selected by lot
from among the roster members who are citizens of the other
disputing Party.
2. Where there are more than two disputing Parties, the
following procedures shall apply:
(a) The panel shall comprise five members.
(b) The disputing Parties shall endeavor to agree on the
chair of the panel within 15 days after the Council votes to
convene the panel. If the disputing Parties are unable to
agree on the chair within this period, the Party or Parties
on the side of the dispute chosen by lot shall select within
10 days a chair who is not a citizen of such Party or
Parties.
(c) Within 30 days of selection of the chair, the Party
complained against shall select two panelists, one of whom
is a citizen of a complaining Party, and the other of whom
is a citizen of another complaining Party. The complaining
Parties shall select two panelists who are citizens of the
Party complained against.
(d) If any disputing Party fails to select a panelist
within such period, such panelist shall be selected by lot
in accordance with the citizenship criteria of subparagraph
(c).
3. Panelists shall normally be selected from the roster.
Any disputing Party may exercise a peremptory challenge
against any individual not on the roster who is proposed as
a panelist by a disputing Party within 30 days after the
individual has been proposed.
4. If a disputing Party believes that a panelist is in
violation of the code of conduct, the disputing Parties
shall consult and, if they agree, the panelist shall be
removed and a new panelist shall be selected in accordance
with this Article.
Article 28: Rules of Procedure
1. The Council shall establish Model Rules of Procedure.
The procedures shall provide:
(a) a right to at least one hearing before the panel;
(b) the opportunity to make initial and rebuttal written
submissions; and
(c) that no panel may disclose which panelists are
associated with majority or minority opinions.
2. Unless the disputing Parties otherwise agree, panels
convened under this Part shall be established and conduct
their proceedings in accordance with the Model Rules of
Procedure.
3. Unless the disputing Parties otherwise agree within 20
days after the Council votes to convene the panel, the terms
of reference shall be:
"To examine, in light of the relevant provisions of the
Agreement, including those contained in Part Five, whether
there has been a persistent pattern of failure by the Party
complained against to effectively enforce its environmental
law, and to make findings, determinations and
recommendations in accordance with Article 31(2)."
Article 29: Third Party Participation
A Party that is not a disputing Party, on delivery of a
written notice to the disputing Parties and to the
Secretariat, shall be entitled to attend all hearings, to
make written and oral submissions to the panel and to
receive written submissions of the disputing Parties.
Article 30: Role of Experts
On request of a disputing Party, or on its own
initiative, the panel may seek information and technical
advice from any person or body that it deems appropriate,
provided that the disputing Parties so agree and subject to
such terms and conditions as such Parties may agree.
Article 31: Initial Report
1. Unless the disputing Parties otherwise agree, the
panel shall base its report on the submissions and arguments
of the Parties and on any information before it pursuant to
Article 30.
2. Unless the disputing Parties otherwise agree, the
panel shall, within 180 days after the last panelist is
selected, present to the disputing Parties an initial report
containing: (a) findings of fact:
(b) its determination as to whether there has been a
persistent pattern of failure by the Party complained
against to effectively enforce its environmental law, or any
other determination requested in the terms of reference;
and
(c) in the event the panel makes an affirmative
determination under subparagraph (b), its recommendations,
if any, for the resolution of the dispute, which normally
shall be that the Party complained against adopt and
implement an action plan sufficient to remedy the pattern of
non-enforcement.
3. Panelists may furnish separate opinions on matters not
unanimously agreed.
4. A disputing Party may submit written comments to the
panel on its initial report within 30 days of presentation
of the report.
5. In such an event, and after considering such written
comments, the panel, on its own initiative or on the request
of any disputing Party, may:
(a) request the views of any participating Party;
(b) reconsider its report; and
(c) make any further examination that it considers
appropriate.
Article 32: Final Report
1. The panel shall present to the disputing Parties a
final report, including any separate opinions on matters not
unanimously agreed, within 60 days of presentation of the
initial report, unless the disputing Parties otherwise
agree.
2. The disputing Parties shall transmit to the Council
the final report of the panel, as well as any written views
that a disputing Party desires to be appended, on a
confidential basis within 15 days after it is presented to
them.
3. The final report of the panel shall be published five
days after it is transmitted to the Council.
Article 33: Implementation of Final Report
If, in its final report, a panel determines that there
has been a persistent pattern of failure by the Party
complained against to effectively enforce its environmental
law, the disputing Parties may agree on a mutually
satisfactory action plan, which normally shall conform with
the determinations and recommendations of the panel. The
disputing Parties shall promptly notify the Secretariat and
the Council of any agreed resolution of the dispute.
Article 34: Review of Implementation
1. If, in its final report, a panel determines that there
has been a persistent pattern of failure by the Party
complained against to effectively enforce its environmental
law, and:
(a) the disputing Parties have not agreed on an action
plan under Article 33 within 60 days of the date of the
final report, or
(b) the disputing Parties cannot agree on whether the
Party complained against is fully implementing
(i) an action plan agreed under Article 33,
(ii) an action plan deemed to have been established by
a panel under paragraph 2, or
(iii) an action plan approved or established by a
panel under paragraph 4, any disputing Party may request
that the panel be reconvened. The requesting Party shall
deliver the request in writing to the other Parties and
to the Secretariat. The Council shall reconvene the panel
on delivery of the request to the Secretariat.
2. No Party may make a request under paragraph 1(a)
earlier than 60 days, or later than 120 days, after the date
of the final report. If the disputing Parties have not
agreed to an action plan and if no request was made under
paragraph 1(a), the last action plan, if any, submitted by
the Party complained against to the complaining Party or
Parties within 60 days of the date of the final report, or
such other period as the disputing Parties may agree, shall
be deemed to have been established by the panel 120 days
after the date of the final report.
3. A request under paragraph 1(b) may be made no earlier
than 180 days after an action plan has been:
(a) agreed under Article 33;
(b) deemed to have been established by a panel under
paragraph 2; or
(c) approved or established by a panel under paragraph
4;
and only during the term of any such action plan.
4. Where a panel has been reconvened under paragraph
1(a), it:
(a) shall determine whether any action plan proposed by
the Party complained against is sufficient to remedy the
pattern of non-enforcement and
(i) if so, shall approve the plan, or
(ii) if not, shall establish such a plan consistent
with the law of the Party complained against, and
(b) may, where warranted, impose a monetary enforcement
assessment in accordance with Annex 34, within 90 days after
the panel has been reconvened or such other period as the
disputing Parties may agree.
5. Where a panel has been reconvened under paragraph
1(b), it shall determine either that:
(a) the Party complained against is fully implementing
the action plan, in which case the panel may not impose a
monetary enforcement assessment, or
(b) the Party complained against is not fully
implementing the action plan, in which case the panel shall
impose a monetary enforcement assessment in accordance with
Annex 34,
within 60 days after it has been reconvened or such other
period as the disputing Parties may agree.
6. A panel reconvened under this Article shall provide
that the Party complained against shall fully implement any
action plan referred to in paragraph 4(a)(ii) or 5(b), and
pay any monetary enforcement assessment imposed under
paragraph 4(b) or 5(b), and any such provision shall be
final.
Article 35: Further Proceeding
A complaining Party may, at any time beginning 180 days
after a panel determination under Article 34(5)(b), request
in writing that a panel be reconvened to determine whether
the Party complained against is fully implementing the
action plan. On delivery of the request to the other Parties
and the Secretariat, the Council shall reconvene the panel.
The panel shall make the determination within 60 days after
it has been reconvened or such other period as the disputing
Parties may agree.
Article 36: Suspension of Benefits
1. Subject to Annex 36A, where a Party fails to pay a
monetary enforcement assessment within 180 days after it is
imposed by a panel:
(a) under Article 34(4)(b), or
(b) under Article 34(5)(b), except where benefits may be
suspended under paragraph 2(a),
any complaining Party or Parties may suspend, in
accordance with Annex 36B, the application to the Party
complained against of NAFTA benefits in an amount no greater
than that sufficient to collect the monetary enforcement
assessment.
2. Subject to Annex 36A, where a panel has made a
determination under Article 34(5)(b) and the panel:
(a) has previously imposed a monetary enforcement
assessment under Article 34(4)(b) or established an action
plan under Article 34(4)(a)(ii); or
(b) has subsequently determined under Article 35 that a
Party is not fully implementing an action plan;
the complaining Party or Parties may, in accordance with
Annex 36B, suspend annually the application to the Party
complained against of NAFTA benefits in an amount no greater
than the monetary enforcement assessment imposed by the
panel under Article 34(5)(b).
3. Where more than one complaining Party suspends
benefits under paragraph 1 or 2, the combined suspension
shall be no greater than the amount of the monetary
enforcement assessment.
4. Where a Party has suspended benefits under paragraph 1
or 2, the Council shall, on the delivery of a written
request by the Party complained against to the other Parties
and the Secretariat, reconvene the panel to determine
whether the monetary enforcement assessment has been paid or
collected, or whether the Party complained against is fully
implementing the action plan, as the case may be. The panel
shall submit its report within 45 days after it has been
reconvened. If the panel determines that the assessment has
been paid or collected, or that the Party complained against
is fully implementing the action plan, the suspension of
benefits under paragraph 1 or 2, as the case may be, shall
be terminated.
5. On the written request of the Party complained
against, delivered to the other Parties and the Secretariat,
the Council shall reconvene the panel to determine whether
the suspension of benefits by the complaining Party or
Parties pursuant to paragraph 1 or 2 is manifestly
excessive. Within 45 days of the request, the panel shall
present a report to the disputing Parties containing its
determination.
Part Six — General Provisions
Article 37: Enforcement Principle
Nothing in this Agreement shall be construed to empower a
Party's authorities to undertake environmental law
enforcement activities in the territory of another
Party.
Article 38: Private Rights
No Party may provide for a right of action under its law
against any other Party on the ground that another Party has
acted in a manner inconsistent with this Agreement.
Article 39: Protection of Information
1. Nothing in this Agreement shall be construed to
require a Party to make available or allow access to
information:
(a) the disclosure of which would impede its
environmental law enforcement; or
(b) that is protected from disclosure by its law
governing business or proprietary information, personal
privacy or the confidentiality of governmental decision
making.
2. If a Party provides confidential or proprietary
information to another Party, the Council, the Secretariat
or the Joint Public Advisory Committee, the recipient shall
treat the information on the same basis as the Party
providing the information.
3. Confidential or proprietary information provided by a
Party to a panel under this Agreement shall be treated in
accordance with the rules of procedure established under
Article 28.
Article 40: Relation to Other Environmental
Agreements
Nothing in this Agreement shall be construed to affect
the existing rights and obligations of the Parties under
other international environmental agreements, including
conservation agreements, to which such Parties are
party.
Article 41: Extent of Obligations
Annex 41 applies to the Parties specified in that
Annex.
Article 42: National Security
Nothing in this Agreement shall be construed:
(a) to require any Party to make available or provide
access to information the disclosure of which it determines
to be contrary to its essential security interests; or
(b) to prevent any Party from taking any actions that it
considers necessary for the protection of its essential
security interests relating to
(i) arms, ammunition and implements of war, or
(ii) the implementation of national policies or
international agreements respecting the non-proliferation
of nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive
devices.
Article 43: Funding of the Commission
Each Party shall contribute an equal share of the annual
budget of the Commission, subject to the availability of
appropriated funds in accordance with the Party's legal
procedures. No Party shall be obligated to pay more than any
other Party in respect of an annual budget.
Article 44: Privileges and Immunities
The Executive Director and staff of the Secretariat shall
enjoy in the territory of each Party such privileges and
immunities as are necessary for the exercise of their
functions.
Article 45: Definitions
1. For purposes of this Agreement:
A Party has not failed to "effectively enforce its
environmental law" or to comply with Article 5(1) in a
particular case where the action or inaction in question by
agencies or officials of that Party:
(a) reflects a reasonable exercise of their discretion in
respect of investigatory, prosecutorial, regulatory or
compliance matters; or
(b) results from bona fide decisions to allocate
resources to enforcement in respect of other environmental
matters determined to have higher priorities;
"non-governmental organization" means any scientific,
professional, business, non-profit, or public interest
organization or association which is neither affilated with,
nor under the direction of, a government;
"persistent pattern" means a sustained or recurring
course of action or inaction beginning after the date of
entry into force of this Agreement;
"province" means a province of Canada, and includes the
Yukon Territory and the Northwest Territories and their
successors; and
"territory" means for a Party the territory of that Party
as set out in Annex 45.
2. For purposes of Article 14(1) and Part Five:
(a) "environmental law" means any statute or regulation
of a Party, or provision thereof, the primary purpose of
which is the protection of the environment, or the
prevention of a danger to human life or health, through
(i) the prevention, abatement or control of the
release, discharge, or emission of pollutants or
environmental contaminants,
(ii) the control of environmentally hazardous or toxic
chemicals, substances, materials and wastes, and the
dissemination of information related thereto, or
(iii) the protection of wild flora or fauna, including
endangered species, their habitat, and specially
protected natural areas
in the Party's territory, but does not include any
statute or regulation, or provision thereof, directly
related to worker safety or health.
(b) For greater certainty, the term "environmental law"
does not include any statute or regulation, or provision
thereof, the primary purpose of which is managing the
commercial harvest or exploitation, or subsistence or
aboriginal harvesting, of natural resources.
(c) The primary purpose of a particular statutory or
regulatory provision for purposes of subparagraphs (a) and
(b) shall be determined by reference to its primary purpose,
rather than to the primary purpose of the statute or
regulation of which it is part.
3. For purposes of Article 14(3), "judicial or
administrative proceeding" means:
(a) a domestic judicial, quasi-judicial or administrative
action pursued by the Party in a timely fashion and in
accordance with its law. Such actions comprise: mediation;
arbitration; the process of issuing a license, permit, or
authorization; seeking an assurance of voluntary compliance
or a compliance agreement; seeking sanctions or remedies in
an administrative or judicial forum; and the process of
issuing an administrative order; and
(b) an international dispute resolution proceeding to
which the Party is party.
Part Seven — Final Provisions
Article 46: Annexes
The Annexes to this Agreement constitute an integral part
of the Agreement.
Article 47: Entry into Force
This Agreement shall enter into force on January 1, 1994,
immediately after entry into force of the NAFTA, on an
exchange of written notifications certifying the completion
of necessary legal procedures.
Article 48: Amendments
1. The Parties may agree on any modification of or
addition to this Agreement.
2. When so agreed, and approved in accordance with the
applicable legal procedures of each Party, a modification or
addition shall constitute an integral part of this
Agreement.
Article 49: Accession
Any country or group of countries may accede to this
Agreement subject to such terms and conditions as may be
agreed between such country or countries and the Council and
following approval in accordance with the applicable legal
procedures of each country.
Article 50: Withdrawal
A Party may withdraw from this Agreement six months after
it provides written notice of withdrawal to the other
Parties. If a Party withdraws, the Agreement shall remain in
force for the remaining Parties.
Article 51: Authentic Texts
The English, French, and Spanish texts of this Agreement
are equally authentic.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the undersigned, being duly
authorized by the respective Governments, have signed this
Agreement.
DONE in triplicate at
Washington, D.C., on the 9th day and the 14th day of
September 1993, Ottawa, on the 12 day and the 14th day of
September 1993, Mexico, D.F., on the 8th day and the 14th
day of September 1993.
FAIT en trois exemplaires a
Washington, D.C., le 9 iemc jour et le 14 iemc jour de
septembre 1993, Ottawa, le 12 iemc jour et le 14 iemc jour
de septembre 1993, Mexico, D.F., le 8 iemc jour et le 14
iemc jour de septembre 1993.
HECHO en tres originales en
Washington, D.C., a los 9 dias y a los 14 dias de
septiembre 1993, Ottawa, a los 12 dias y a los 14 dias de
septiembre 1993, Mexico, D.F., a los 8 dias y a los 14 dias
de septiembre 1993.
FOR THE GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
POUR LE GOUVERNEMENT DES ETATS-UNIS D'AMERIQUE
POR EL GOBIERNO DE LOS ESTADOS UNIDOS DE AMERICA
FOR THE GOVERNMENT OF CANADA
POUR LE GOUVERNEMENT DU CANADA
POR EL GOBIERNO DE CANADA
FOR THE GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED MEXICAN STATES
POUR LE GOUVERNEMENT DES ETATS-UNIS MEXICAINS
POR EL GOBIERNO DE LOS ESTADOS UNIDOS MEXICANOS
Annex 34 — Monetary Enforcement
Assessments
1. For the first year after the date of entry into force
of this Agreement, any monetary enforcement assessment shall
be no greater than 20 million dollars (U.S.) or its
equivalent in the currency of the Party complained against.
Thereafter, any monetary enforcement assessment shall be no
greater than .007 percent of total trade in goods between
the Parties during the most recent year for which data are
available.
2. In determining the amount of the assessment, the panel
shall take into account:
(a) the pervasiveness and duration of the Party's
persistent pattern of failure to effectively enforce its
environmental law;
(b) the level of enforcement that could reasonably be
expected of a Party given its resource constraints;
(c) the reasons, if any, provided by the Party for not
fully implementing an action plan;
(d) efforts made by the Party to begin remedying the
pattern of non-enforcement after the final report of the
panel; and
(e) any other relevant factors.
3. All monetary enforcement assessments shall be paid in
the currency of the Party complained against into a fund
established in the name of the Commission by the Council and
shall be expended at the direction of the Council to improve
or enhance the environment or environmental law enforcement
in the Party complained against, consistent with its
law.
Annex36— Canadian Domestic Enforcement and
Collection
1. For the purposes of this Annex, "panel determination"
means:
(a) a determination by a panel under Article 34(4)(b) or
5(b) that provides that Canada shall pay a monetary
enforcement assessment; and
(b) a determination by a panel under Article 34(5)(b)
that provides that Canada shall fully implement an action
plan where the panel:
(i) has previously established an action plan
under Article 34(4)(a)(ii) or imposed a monetary
enforcement assessment under Article 34(4)(b); or
(ii) has subsequently determined under Article 35 that
Canada is not fully implementing an action plan.
2. Canada shall adopt and maintain procedures that
provide that:
(a) subject to subparagraph (b), the Commission, at the
request of a complaining Party, may in its own name file in
a court of competent jurisdiction a certified copy of a
panel determination;
(b) the Commission may file in court a panel
determination that is a panel determination described in
paragraph 1(a) only if Canada has failed to comply with the
determination within 180 days of when the determination was
made;
(c) when filed, the panel determination, for purposes of
enforcement, shall become an order of the court;
(d) the Commission may take proceedings for enforcement
of a panel determination that is made an order of the court,
in that court, against the person against whom the panel
determination is addressed in accordance with paragraph 6 of
Annex 41;
(e) proceedings to enforce a panel determination that has
been made an order of the court shall be conducted by way of
summary proceedings;
(f) in proceedings to enforce a panel determination that
is a panel determination described in paragraph 1(b) and
that has been made an order of the court, the court shall
promptly refer any question of fact or any question of
interpretation of the panel determination to the panel that
made the panel determination, and the decision of the panel
shall be binding on the court;
(g) a panel determination that has been made an order of
the court shall not be subject to domestic review or appeal;
and
(h) an order made by the court in proceedings to enforce
a panel determination that has been made an order of the
court shall not be subject to review or appeal.
3. Where Canada is the Party complained against, the
procedures adopted and maintained by Canada under this Annex
shall apply and the procedures set out in Article 36 shall
not apply.
4. Any change by Canada to the procedures adopted and
maintained by Canada under this Annex that have the effect
of undermining the provisions of this Annex shall be
considered a breach of this Agreement.
Annex 36B — Suspension of Benefits
1. Where a complaining Party suspends NAFTA tariff
benefits in accordance with this Agreement, the Party may
increase the rates of duty on originating goods of the Party
complained against to levels not to exceed the lesser
of:
(a) the rate that was applicable to those goods
immediately prior to the date of entry into force of the
NAFTA, and
(b) the Most-Favored-Nation rate applicable to those
goods on the date the Party suspends such benefits,
and such increase may be applied only for such time as is
necessary to collect, through such increase, the monetary
enforcement assessment.
2. In considering what tariff or other benefits to
suspend pursuant to Article 36(1) or (2):
(a) a complaining Party shall first seek to suspend
benefits in the same sector or sectors as that in respect of
which there has been a persistent pattern of failure by the
Party complained against to effectively enforce its
environmental law; and
(b) a complaining Party that considers it is not
practicable or effective to suspend benefits in the same
sector or sectors may suspend benefits in other sectors.
Annex 41 — Extent of Obligations
1. On the date of signature of this Agreement, or of the
exchange of written notifications under Article 47, Canada
shall set out in a declaration a list of any provinces for
which Canada is to be bound in respect of matters within
their jurisdiction. The declaration shall be effective on
delivery to the other Parties, and shall carry no
implication as to the internal distribution of powers within
Canada. Canada shall notify the other Parties six months in
advance of any modification to its declaration.
2. When considering whether to instruct the Secretariat
to prepare a factual record pursuant to Article 15, the
Council shall take into account whether the submission was
made by a non-governmental organization or enterprise
incorporated or otherwise organized under the laws of a
province included in the declaration made under paragraph
1.
3. Canada may not request consultations under Article 22
or a Council meeting under Article 23 or request the
establishment of a panel or join as a complaining Party
under Article 24 against another Party at the instance, or
primarily for the benefit, of any government of a province
not included in the declaration made under paragraph 1.
4. Canada may not request a Council meeting under Article
23, or request the establishment of a panel or join as a
complaining Party under Article 24 concerning whether there
has been a persistent pattern of failure by another Party to
effectively enforce its environmental law, unless Canada
states in writing that the matter would be under federal
jurisdiction if it were to arise within the territory of
Canada, or:
(a) Canada states in writing that the matter would be
under provincial jurisdiction if it were to arise within the
territory of Canada; and
(b) the provinces included in the declaration account for
at least 55 percent of Canada's Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
for the most recent year in which data are available,
and
(c) where the matter concerns a specific industry or
sector, at least 55 percent of total Canadian production in
that industry or sector is accounted for by the provinces
included in the declaration for the most recent year in
which data are available.
5. No other Party may request a Council meeting under
Article 23 or request the establishment of a panel or join
as a complaining Party under Article 24 concerning whether
there has been a persistent failure to effectively enforce
an environmental law of a province unless that province is
included in the declaration made under paragraph 1 and the
requirements of subparagraphs 4(b) and (c) have been
met.
6. Canada shall, no later than the date on which an
arbitral panel is convened pursuant to Article 24 respecting
a matter within the scope of paragraph 5 of this Annex,
notify in writing the complaining Parties and the
Secretariat of whether any monetary enforcement assessment
or action plan imposed by a panel under Article 34(4) or
34(5) against Canada shall be addressed to Her Majesty in
right of Canada or Her Majesty in right of the province
concerned.
7. Canada shall use its best efforts to make this
Agreement applicable to as many of its provinces as
possible.
8. Two years after the date of entry into force of this
Agreement, the Council shall review the operation of this
Annex and, in particular, shall consider whether the Parties
should amend the thresholds established in paragraph 4.
Annex 45 — Country-Specific Definitions
For purposes of this Agreement:
"territory" means:
(a) with respect to Canada, the territory to which its
customs laws apply, including any areas beyond the
territorial seas of Canada within which, in accordance with
international law and its domestic law, Canada may exercise
rights with respect to the seabed and subsoil and their
natural resources;
(b) with respect to Mexico,
(i) the states of the Federation and the Federal
District,
(ii) the islands, including the reefs and keys, in
adjacent seas,
(iii) the islands of Guadalupe and Revillagigedo
situated in the Pacific Ocean,
(iv) the continental shelf and the submarine shelf of
such islands, keys and reefs,
(v) the waters of the territorial seas, in accordance
with international law, and its interior maritime
waters,
(vi) the space located above the national territory,
in accordance with international law, and
(vii) any areas beyond the territorial seas of Mexico
within which, in accordance with international law,
including the United Nations Convention on the Law of the
Sea, and its domestic law, Mexico may exercise rights
with respect to the seabed and subsoil and their natural
resources; and
(c) with respect to the United States,
(i) the customs territory of the United States,
which includes the 50 states, the District of Columbia
and Puerto Rico,
(ii) the foreign trade zones located in the United
States and Puerto Rico, and
(iii) any areas beyond the territorial seas of the
United States within which, in accordance with
international law and its domestic law, the United States
may exercise rights with respect to the seabed and
subsoil and their natural resources.
|