SR53 V1 REV Arab Republic of Egypt Safeguards Diagnostic Review For Piloting the Use of Egyptian Systems to Address Environmental Issues in the Proposed GEF-Financed Egypt Sustainable Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) Management Project (P116230) Equivalence and Acceptability Assessment Report DRAFT # 5 January 2014 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 5 BACKGROUND 12 POPS PROJECT DESCRIPTION 13 RATIONALE FOR CHOOSING POPS PROJECT FOR PILOTING 13 EQUIVALENCE ASSESSMENT 14 METHODOLOGY/PROCESS FOLLOWED IN DETERMINING EQUIVALENCE 14 WORLD BANK’S SAFEGUARDS POLICIES APPLICABLE TO THE PROPOSED PILOT 14 PROJECT GOVERNMENT OF EGYPT’S LAWS & REGULATIONS APPLICABLE TO THE 14 PROPOSED PILOT PROJECT THE OVERALL ENVIRONMENTAL LAW FRAMEWORK OF EGYPT 15 ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT 19 IMPLEMENTATION MANDATE 22 GAPS/DIFFERENCES 23 PROPOSED GAP FILLING MEASURES 23 ACCEPTABILITY ASSESSMENT 25 INTRODUCTION 25 METHODOLOGY 25 INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS AND MANDATES FOR POPS MANAGEMENT IN 26 EGYPT IMPLEMENTATION PRACTICES AND TRACK RECORDS 36 STRENGTHS AND WEAKNESSES OF THE INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS 49 GAP FILLING MEASURES AGREED WITH EEAA TO ACHIEVE THE EQUIVALENCE 53 AND ACCEPTABILITY MONITORING AND REPORTING 56 ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES OF EEAA AND THE WORLD BANK 56 PUBLIC CONSULTATION AND DISCLOSURE 57 ANNEXES 58 2 ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS BAT Best Available Techniques BEP Best Environmental Practice CAOA Central Agency for Organization and Administration CAP Compliance Action Plan CD Central Department CDEIEC Central Department for Environment inspection and Environment Compliance CEO Chief Executive Officer DDT Diochlorodiphenyltrichlorethane EEAA Egyptian Environmental Affairs Agency EHSIMS Egyptian Hazardous Substances Information and Management System EIA Environmental Impact Assessment EMU Environmental Management Unit EPAP Egypt Pollution Abatement Project EPF Environmental Protection Fund ESIAF Environmental and Social Impact Assessment Framework EU European Union FAO Food and Agriculture Organization (of the United Nations) FESMP Framework Environmental and Social Management Plan GDEC General Directorate of Environment Compliance GDEI General Directorate of Environmental Inspection GEF Global Environment Facility GOE Government of Egypt GHS Globally Harmonized System for Classification and Labeling of Chemicals GIS Geographic Information System HS Hazardous Substances HW Hazardous Waste MALR Ministry of Agriculture and Land Reclamation MEE Ministry of Electricity and Energy MHP Ministry of Health and Population MIT Ministry of Industry and Trade MOI Ministry of Interior MOP Ministry of Petroleum 3 MSEA Ministry of State for Environmental Affairs MW Municipal Waste MWRI Ministry of Water Resources and Irrigation NIP National Implementation Plan OP Operational Policy (of the Bank); Operational Program (of the GEF) OPs Obsolete Pesticides PCBs Polychlorinated biphenyls PCU Project Coordination Unit PIF Project Identification Form (of GEF) PMU Project Management Unit POPs Persistent Organic Pollutants PPSI Public Private Sector Industry RBO Regional Branch Office of EEAA SDR Safeguards Diagnostic Review TOR Terms of Reference USEPA United States Environmental Protection Agency NGO Non-Governmental Organization REACH Registration, Evaluation, Authorization and Restriction of Chemicals REMIP Regional Environmental Management Improvement Project SW Solid Waste Vice President: Inger Andersen Country Manager/Director: Hartwig Schafer Sector Director: Junaid Kamal Ahmad Sector Manager: Charles Cormier Team Leader: Alaa Ahmed Sarhan 4 Piloting the Use of Egyptian Systems to Address Environmental Issues in the Proposed GEF-Financed Egypt Sustainable POPs Management Project (P116230) Safeguards Diagnostic Review EXECUTIVE SUMMARY i. In December 2005, the World Bank prepared a Safeguards Diagnostic Review (SDR) for the Use of Country Systems (UCS) in the Egypt Pollution Abatement Project II (EPAP II, EG- 33433). Since then, the UCS was implemented in a satisfactory manner, although some actions were delayed in the implementation of some of the gap-filling measures that were identified and agreed upon between the World Bank and the Government of Egypt. The EPAP II is yet to be completed in August 31, 2013 and all of the agreed upon gap-filling measures are very likely to be met and further included in the Egypt Environmental Impact Assessment system. ii. As the use of the country system was applied in EPAP II to address hazardous and non- hazardous emissions from public and private sector entities, the POPs management project will address primarily the hazardous waste which is one of the sources of pollution and both hazardous emissions and waste are affecting public health. It will be therefore appropriate to subject the POPs management project to the same national system as both projects are financed by the World Bank and GEF with the same ministry. In this regards, EPAP II and POPs will mutually reinforce the use of the National EIA system in the World Bank and GEF- financed projects and will strengthen the Government of Egypt’s institutional capacity to deal with hazardous and non-hazardous pollution using the national system supplemented by the gaps filling measures identified in this SDR. iii. This operation will therefore be governed by OP 4.00 on “Piloting the Use of Borrower Systems to Address Environmental and Social Safeguard Issues in Bank-Supported Projects”. Therefore, in accordance with this Policy, the World Bank staff, in collaboration with EEAA staff, carried out equivalence and acceptability assessments of applicable Egyptian environmental systems, between September 2010 and May 2012. In doing so, they included all the findings and recommendations of the SDR prepared for the purpose of the EPAP II, including review of the implementation of the agreed upon gap-filling measures. iv. The Project Development Objective (PDO) is to demonstrate the improved management and disposal of targeted POPs stockpiles and PCBs in an environmentally sound manner. The Project consists of three components: a. Component 1: Management of Obsolete Pesticide Stocks (GEF allocation : US$ 2.69 million (totaling US$ 10.21 million, including GO : US$ 7.52 million) 1.1: Destruction of high-risk stocks and storage of pesticides 1.2: Development of an inventory and pesticides management strategy b. Component 2: Management of PCBs (GEF allocation US$ 3.12 million) (totalling US$ 9.93 million, including GOE : US$ 6.81 million) 2.1: Inventories and Sampling 2.2: Decontamination of Transformer Oils 5 c. Component 3: Institutional and Regulatory Strengthening and Project Management (GEF allocation : US$ 2.29 million) (totalling US$ 3.46 million, including GEO : US$ 1.17 million) 3.1: Institutional and Regulatory Strengthening 3.2: Establish and Maintain a Project Management Unit (PMU) v. The total project cost is US$ 23.6 million of which US$ 8.1 million is a GEF Grant and US$ 15.5 million is the contribution of the Government of Egypt. vi. The proposed POPs Project triggers two environmental safeguards policies: (i) Environmental Assessment, and (ii) Pest Management. The results of the equivalence assessment showed that the World Bank's EA policy and the Egyptian safeguards systems on EA and Pest Management, as amended through 2009, are nearly fully equivalent. The major gaps are to issue a regulation clarifying that all POPs sub-projects will be subjected to an EIA and prepare TORs or specific guidelines for such EIA. Also, the legal and regulatory framework should be brought into full consistency with the Stockholm Convention and other conventions applicable to POPs and to which Egypt is a party. These gaps can be implemented as part of overall Project implementation. vii. The acceptability assessment shows that significant progress has been made in strengthening the institutional framework related to the EIA process and to monitoring and enforcement. Since the last SDR of EPAP II, EEAA has reorganized and established two additional central departments namely the Central Department for Environmental Inspection & Environmental Compliance "CDEIEC” consisting of a general directorate for compliance and a general directorate for inspection; and the Central Department for the Protection and Improvement Industrial Environmental and Energy. Both departments are fully functional. viii. About 12 ministries and agencies will be associated with the POPs projects and all of them have expertise and staff in the fields related to hazardous waste. The new EIA guidelines of 2009 which now require public hearings and consultation for the projects classified as “C” (equivalent to category “A” of the World Bank) have provided a more prominent and participatory role for civil society. As a result, civil society has been increasingly involved in project implementation, in public debate and also in ensuring compliance with the environmental laws and increasingly vocal whenever public hearings/consultations on EIA has taken place. Similarly the media have contributed largely to this increased awareness and publish regularly the summary description of projects for which an EIA was approved by EEAA. There are also six NGOs which are working on raising awareness on health impacts and proper handling of pesticides and PCBs. ix. A review of a sample of EIA reports for projects financed by the Government and/or by International Financial Institutions showed a significant improvement in quality and comprehensiveness. The quality of projects in the category “B” (equivalent to Category “B” of the World Bank) for which a Form B should be submitted is however variable and does not include in many cases the preparation of a comprehensive environment management plan as required by the environmental guidelines of 2009. Disclosure of the executive summary of the EIA reports and of Forms B (with the exception of the EPAP II subprojects) is still lagging because of lack of resources, staff and inherent reluctance to disclose reports which may raise controversial discussions. 6 x. An additional monitoring instrument that was institutionalized by EEAA is the preparation of a compliance action plan whenever a polluting enterprise is not in compliance with the national standards but agreed to self-finance its pollution control investments instead of being prosecuted. This led to the establishment by EEAA of a general directorate for voluntary compliance which is assisted by the general directorate for industrial environment. xi. Despite such progress, there are still some weaknesses in the EIA system and in EEAA’s monitoring and enforcement. These are: (a) lack of knowledge related to POPs and PCBs and technologies for their management and disposal, (b) limited staff resources in the department of hazardous waste management, (c) limited inter-ministerial cooperation on hazardous waste management, (d) insufficient public communication and awareness raising on hazardous waste and in particular with POPs, and (e) lack of monitoring and enforcement for obsolete pesticides and PCBs .These weaknesses will be addressed in the components of the POPs project. xii. A preliminary hazardous waste and risk assessment was also conducted during project preparation in anticipation that two potential Intermediate Collection Centers for obsolete pesticides in the Nasiriya Hazardous Waste Center in the Alexandria Governorate and the El Saff Storage Site of Obsolete Pesticides in the Guizeh Governorate could be used. The revised design of the project will provide the international operators for collection, transport and disposal of POPs, with the choice to select the appropriate methods and technology and sites, which may not involve the use of these two facilities. However, for any sites selected by the international operators, a comprehensive An ESIA, including an in-depth risk assessment, will be conducted during project implementation xiii. The actions summarized in the following table will be implemented by EEAA to fill in the equivalence and acceptability gaps and sustain acceptability during the implementation of the POPs Project. The proposed timing of implementation for each of the following measures were made in accordance with the project implementation schedule Safeguards Gap-Filling Measures Gaps Actions to be taken Implementation Steps By Whom By When Weak 1. Include in the Project  Description in the Operational coordination Operational Manual a Manual of the roles and among EEAA description of the roles, responsibilities of the PMU, responsibilities, PMU Manager/ departments Environmental Management April 2014 coordinating Consultant involved in Department, CDEIEC and others mechanism, monitoring related to the EIA process and POPs and follow up for the compliance / inspection of establishing an inter- Obsolete Pesticides and PCBs sectoral system within EEAA for coordinating  Official decree issued by the EIA process with the PMU Manager; EEAA on the roles, compliance/inspection June 2014 responsibilities and coordination CEO of EEAA process. mechanisms Insufficient  Prepare TORs for a Compliance 2. Complete the legal and comprehensive study to with the regulatory frame work harmonize existing POPs-related for POPs management in legislation with requirements of PMU Manager May 2014 requirements compliance with the the Stockholm Convention as of the Stockholm Convention described in Annex 15 to this Stockholm SDR 7 Conventions  Contract a legal consultant December  Draft legal regulations for 2015 submissions to the Legal Council of the Government Lack of procedural 3. Develop general EIA  Review good international procedural guidelines to June 2014 Practices including FAO and PMU guidelines for include: (a) specific WHO POP projects criteria, processes and standards to be followed  Adapt sector guidelines to in the preparation and Egyptian conditions on review of EIA for POPs July 2014 pesticides, obsolete pesticides PMU sub-projects;(b) detailed and PCB-contaminated TOR for a equipment comprehensive EIA  Prepare TORs for POPs and October report for POPs EIA Department in checklist for reviewing EIA 2014 including hazardous risk EEAA reports in general assessment and (c) guidelines for  Approve and publish the environmental reviewers EEAA Board of September guidelines, TORs and checklist Directors 2014 on the website of EEAA Insufficient 4. Develop and provide knowledge on training to the EEAA staff, RBOs, sector October POPs and ministries and NGOs on  Design training program and PMU 2014 PCBs and the use and applications develop training materials contract of (a) the specific management guidelines and EIA TORs for POPs including PCBs; (b) self-  Organize and conduct training on TOR and monitoring and Bi annually monitoring and enforcement for EEAA staff and as of March inspection of POPs sires PMU RBO and in particular the staff 2015 including PCB- contaminated sites. that will be assigned to monitor the EMSP and Forms B Organize awareness  Organize and conduct public campaigns with local awareness campaigns in EEAA Department NGOs targeting the public collaboration with local NGOs Annually as of Hazardous Waste and particularly the Youth involved in the POPs of June 2015 Management Develop and provide  Organize and conduct training training to PMU on on contract management and monitoring and supervision award as well as monitoring and January 2015 PMU of contracts of PCBs supervision of contracts operators Weak 5. Ensure that existing  Update the content of the enforcement obsolete pesticides and environmental register by PMU April 2015 for PCBs PCB contaminated sites including questions on OPs and maintain an environment PCBs 8 register to be inspected  Conduct semiannual inspections annually by CDEIEC based on the EIA and the July 2015 using the format in environmental register for the and RBO and GDEI Annex 3 of the Executive major collection center sites for semiannually Regulations of Law 9 of which EIAs and Form B were thereafter 2009 prepared Lack of assessment of  TORs for the review of the EIA 6. Carry out every two the quality of years, a review of the reports prepared and consultant PMU May 2015 the ESIA selected quality of EIA reports reports and Forms B and introduce corrective measures for sustaining July 2015 the improved EIA  Report on the quality of the process PMU and January EIA reports and Form B 2017 xiv. EEAA will be responsible for the following actions: (a) Satisfactory implementation of gap filling actions set out above to achieve and sustain equivalency and acceptability; (b) Review and approval of the EIA reports submitted by international and Form B for site specific areas for treatment and disposal of obsolete pesticides and PCBs; (c) Disclosure of the EIA reports related to hazardous waste projects particularly those related to obsolete pesticides and PCBs in accordance with the EIA guidelines of 2009; and (d) Performance of annual spot checks and audits of a sample of subproject sites financed the POPs project for their compliance with the relevant Egyptian Laws and Regulations, and imposition of corrective actions to achieve compliance. xv. The World Bank will be responsible for the following actions: (a) Monitor the implementation of the gap filling measures that are applicable to the types of subprojects financed under the POPs project; (b) Review during the course of semi-annual supervisions the EIA reports and form B related to obsolete pesticides and PCBs; (c) Review the reports on inspection or compliance for all the subprojects to be financed by the Project; and (d) Bi-annual supervision of project implementation, including field visits to subprojects under implementation or commissioning or those completed. xvi. A public consultation meeting was held on June 13, 2012 and attended by 64 representatives from ministries (Environment, Electricity and Energy, Industry, Planning and International Cooperation), research institutes and universities, 3 media representatives as well 16 NGOs. The workshop was conducted in Arabic. The meeting was chaired by the acting Chief Executive Officer of the Egyptian Environment Affairs Agency (EEAA); a list of the issues raised and comments made by the attendees and reviewers, and remarks/responses to these comments in included as in Section XI to the SDR report. 9 Piloting the Use of Egyptian Systems to Address Environmental Issues in the Proposed GEF- Financed: Egypt Sustainable POPs Management Project (P116230) Safeguards Diagnostic Review Main Report I. BACKGROUND 1. This SDR builds on the Safeguards Diagnostic Review prepared for the Egypt Second Pollution Abatement Project (EPAP II) (Loan # 7372-EGT), which was discussed in a consultation workshop, disclosed by the World Bank, and endorsed by the Bank’s Board of Executive Directors on 23 March 2006. 2. In that case, the World Bank considered Egypt’s Environmental Assessment system to be nearly equivalent by fulfilling all of the Objectives and Operational Principles spelled out in Table A.1 of Operational Policy 4.00 (OP 4.00). To be fully equivalent, the World Bank and the Egyptian Government agreed on further actions to be implemented to fill identified gaps related to consultation, disclosure and specific aspects of the EIA process and content. The World Bank also assessed the acceptability of the Borrower’s implementation practices, track record, and institutional capacity. This assessment found that an appropriate level of acceptability existed and that additional strengthening of the human and technical capacity of the Egyptian Environmental Affairs Agency (EEAA) was needed to fulfill an unconditional acceptability. Strengthening actions were agreed upon and included into the Project design under a technical assistance component. 3. In order to develop the present SDR, the World Bank safeguards team has reviewed the progress made by the EEAA in fulfilling its obligations and implementing all actions to bring Egypt ’s EIA system to full equivalency and acceptability with the Objectives and Operational Principles detailed in Table A.1 of OP 4.00 with regard to EA. In addition, and because the Pest Management policy is triggered, an equivalency analysis and acceptability assessment was done on Egypt’s legal and regulatory framework applicable to pest management. 4. The strategic objective of the environmental policy in Egypt is to introduce and integrate environmental concerns relevant to protecting human health and managing natural resources into all national policies, plans, programs and projects of the national development plan. The medium-term objective is to preserve natural resources, biological diversity, and national heritage within a context of sustainable development. The short-term objective is to reduce current pollution levels, minimize health hazards and to improve the quality of life for citizens and residents in Egypt. 5. This document describes the scope, methodology, and findings of the equivalence and acceptability assessments carried out by World Bank staff in collaboration with EEAA officials with regard to both the EA and Pest Management Policies. In doing their due diligence, World Bank team considered the background of Egypt’s overall environmental policy and programs. The challenge of Egyptian environmental policy is to achieve a balance between the needs of a developing nation while protecting its natural and human environment. Environmental policy is coordinated by the Ministry of State for Environmental Affairs (MSEA) and EEAA; it is a product of a consultative process that involves all stakeholders: the public at large, NGOs, the private sector, government departments/ agencies and finally legislative bodies. 10 II. POPs PROJECT DESCRIPTION 6. The Project Development Objective (PDO) is to demonstrate the improved management and disposal of targeted POPs stockpiles and PCBs in an environmentally sound and cost efficient manner. 7. The Project consists of three major components as follows1: Component 1: Management of Obsolete Pesticide Stocks (GEF allocation : US$ 2.69 million (totaling US$ 10.21 million, including GO : US$ 7.52 million) 1.1: Destruction of high-risk stocks and storage of pesticides 1.2: Development of an inventory and pesticides management strategy Component 2: Management of PCBs (GEF allocation US$ 3.12 million) (totalling US$ 9.93 million, including GOE : US$ 6.81 million) 2.1: Inventories and Sampling 2.2: Decontamination of Transformer Oils Component 3: Institutional and Regulatory Strengthening and Project Management (GEF allocation : US$ 2.29 million) (totalling US$ 3.46 million, including GEO : US$ 1.17 million) 3.1: Institutional and Regulatory Strengthening 3.2: Establish and Maintain a Project Management Unit (PMU) RATIONALE FOR CHOOSING THE POPs PROJECT FOR USE OF COUNTRY SYSTEMS 8. Since 1995, the World Bank has been working on pollution management issues with the relevant agencies of the Egyptian Government; EPAP II is the latest of such projects. EPAP II deals with industrial pollution and has successfully assisted polluting enterprises to achieve compliance with national standards, which constituted important environmental and health risks. The experience acquired by EEAA and other stakeholders in dealing with pollution management and cleanup of polluted sites will certainly help them deal with POPs, including cleaning up POPs’ storage facilities, developing guidelines for hazardous waste management, and monitoring of POPs throughout their life cycle. 9. As the Use of the Country System was applied in EPAP II to address hazardous and non- hazardous emissions from public and private sector entities, the POPs management project will address primarily the hazardous waste which is one of the sources of pollution as both hazardous emissions and waste are affecting public health. It will therefore be appropriate to subject the POPs management project to the same national system as both projects are financed by the World Bank and GEF with the same ministry. In this regard, EPAP II and POPs will mutually reinforce the use of the National EIA system in the World Bank and GEF-Financed Projects and will strengthen the Government of Egypt’s institutional capacity to deal with hazardous and nonhazardous pollution using the national system supplemented by the gaps filling measures identified in this SDR report. Finally, the use and management of chemicals and pest management have been included in many agriculture projects supported by the World Bank and other donors, such as FAO, providing an incentive to pilot the use of the pest management legal and regulatory framework under the POPs Project, which will be dealing, inter alia, with stocks of obsolete pesticides used in agriculture. 1 Detailed description of the four Components is in Annex 1. 11 10. During project preparation, 18 sites were identified as storing obsolete pesticides. Three other sites were also noted to include transformers and capacitors contaminated by PCBs with a concentration higher than 50 ppm but the number of sites is probably higher. None of these sites were subject to an environmental assessment as many of them preceded the enactment of the Environmental Law #4 of 1994. The POPs project will not be able to finance the complete clean-up and disposal of all these sites. A final selection of the high risk stocks, based on a health risk assessment, will be carried out during project implementation on the basis of technical, financial, environmental and social criteria. III. EQUIVALENCE ASSESSMENT Methodology/Process Followed in Determining Equivalence 11. The equivalence assessment was carried out by a World Bank team in collaboration with relevant EEAA staff members. The methodology included a desk review of current in-force legislation and supporting mandatory guidelines, discussions with EEAA officials, and review of previous experience with EPAP II, which is being implemented by EEAA under the World Bank supervision. Annex 1 on Equivalence Assessment – Summary Matrix on Environmental Assessment and Pest Management, provides a comparison between respectively the EA and the Pest Management policy objectives and operational principles, as stated in Table A1 of OP 4.00, and requirements under Egyptian Law Number 4 of 1994 and its implementing regulations, all as amended through 2009. The World Bank team conducted a desk review of the applicable Egyptian legal and regulatory framework and held discussions with EEAA officials and other stakeholders involved in POPs during consultation sessions on the POPs project preparation. The list of key officials met during the equivalence (and later during acceptability) assessment is included in Annex 3. World Bank’s Safeguards Policies Applicable to the Proposed Pilot Project 12. As described above, the proposed POPs Project will be assisting the EEAA and other relevant agencies and private sector entities in their efforts to improve their overall environmental performance with respect of management, storage and disposal of POPs. These selected POPs stocks would be managed to prevent or reduce pollution and health risks and implement pollution control measures and actions air emission, wastewater discharge and indoor air pollution standards set under Egyptian Law #9 for 2009. Though the project investments should be environmentally beneficial and aimed to reduce the current pollution load and prevent hazards that could occur as consequence of inadequate storage, mismanagement or handling of POPs, they could also result in some adverse environmental impacts, if inappropriate design, construction and operational practices are followed. In order to address these potential adverse impacts, the World Bank Operational Policy (OP 4.01) on Environmental Assessment (EA) and the relevant guidelines are applicable to the proposed POPs project and its related activities and investments. 13. Because of the nature of chemicals and other stockpiles involved in the POPs, the Pest Management Operational Policy (OP 4.09) would also be triggered. The equivalence analysis was undertaken and completed to ensure that Egypt’s legal and regulatory framework for pest management covers adequately the objectives and operational principles defined in Table A.1 of OP 4.00. However, under the World Bank’s OP 4.09, a Pest Management Plan (PMP) would be required while the proposed POPs Project itself meets the requirement of a PMP, and there will be no need to require the preparation of a self-standing document. 12 14. Finally, the Proposed POPs Project does not trigger OP 4.12 as involuntary resettlements under the current formulation of the project (see para 80 below), the possibility of resettlement or displacement is remote. Government of Egypt’s Laws and Regulations Applicable to the Proposed Pilot Project 15. The POPs Project triggers all laws and regulations applicable to the handling, management, storage and disposal of Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) which include EIA-related laws and regulations and numerous legal instruments dealing with hazardous wastes, chemicals and pest management. In addition to its domestic legislation, Egypt is, as mandated by national Constitution and Law 4 of 1994 on Environmental Framework law, bound by international conventions, treaties and agreements to which it is a party2. The Overall Environmental Law Framework of Egypt 16. Egypt has a comprehensive Environmental Framework (Law No. 4 of 1994 dated February 03, 1994) which addresses the institutional arrangements and mandates for environmental management and protection as well as the substantives rules and principles governing among other items: a. land pollution control; b. materials and toxic waste; c. air pollution control; d. water pollution control; and e. penalties and the associated enforcement-related provisions. 17. The Law 4 of 1994 was further implemented through Decree No. 338 dated February 18, 1995 issuing the Executive Regulations of Environment Law No. 4 of 1994. Decree 338 has further clarified the roles of the various institutions involved in environmental management and protection and the processes to develop environmental norms, standards and regulations for water pollution control; air and atmospheric pollution including air quality monitoring; and hazardous substances. 18. The 1995 Decree 338 was later amended through Decree 495 of 2001, dated April 14, 2001 and a 2005 Prime Minister’s Decree 1741 which clarified provisions related to, among other provisions, EIA, oil pollution control, hazardous substances and waste and prohibited discharges. Law No. 4 was later amended by Law 9 of 2009 which included additional provisions on hazardous substances and wastes (Article 33)3, destruction of solid waste, clarification of procedural aspects of the EIA (Article 19-21), and certification by the Egyptian Environmental Assessment Agency (EEAA) of environmental consultants and consulting firms (Article 13). After the adoption of Law No. 9 of 2009, some provisions of the Decree 338 of 1995 as amended by Decree 1741 of 2005 are being reviewed and would be further modified and/or completed to align with Law No. 9 of 20094. 2 However, that does not mean that Egypt is required to adopt a specific law or add direct reference in the applicable legislation to international agreements, treaties and conventions to which it is a party. In this case, there are no references to the Stockholm Convention on POPs or the Basel Convention on transboundary movement of hazardous waste in Egyptian legislation and therefore a comprehensive review of the current applicable POPs-related legislation was necessary to identify any gaps and provide for gap-filling provisions and measures to ensure the legislation is consistent with the relevant international legal instrument. 3 Chapter 2 includes licensing, transportation, incineration, storage and requirements for land rehabilitation and decontamination 4 The preparation of a new Decree is still a work in progress 13 19. Other sectoral laws which may apply to the handling of pesticides and POPs include: (i) Law 38 of August 28, 1967, (ii) Law 59 on the Protection Against Risks of Ionizing Radiations and its implementing Regulations on Use of Ionized Radiations on Public Cleanliness, (iii) Law 53 of September 28, 1966 as amended by law 16 of 1993 on Agriculture, and (iv) Law 66 of August 14, 1974 as amended by Law 155 of 1999 on Road Safety. 20. Hazardous Waste Regulations. The World Bank’s team also considered Egypt’s Hazardous Waste Management Guidelines (2010), related manual for industries5 and other applicable laws and regulations in connection with pest management. Law No. 9 of 2009, which amended the 1994 law, included among other provisions additional provisions related to hazardous waste (Article 29-33), notably requirements for reclamation and soil decontamination (article 33), along with other provisions related to processes and timing of EIA and burning of solid waste (articles 19-21). However, to be operational and enforceable, these provisions require specific sector guidelines on hazardous wastes in general and on PCBs, obsolete pesticides, dioxins and furans which are proposed to be developed under the project (see Acceptability Assessment). 21. Pesticides-specific Regulations. Concerning pesticides, 2007 was a turning point when the Egyptian Government issued Order No. 90 on regulations related to requirements and conditions for the registration, registration’s renewal and use of agricultural pesticides in Egypt, dated January 22, 2007. These regulations were further amended through (i) Decree 630 of 2007 and later (ii) Decree 864 of 2008, and (iii) Decree 865, dated June 25, 2009. Decree 630, dated May 2007 amends Order No. 90 of 2007, mentioned above, and other previously enacted regulations and defines the active substances in authorized or prohibited agricultural pesticides. In addition, it includes provisions with respect to the following: i. The applicable regime takes into account the requirements of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) and/or the European Commission (EC) for the registration of pesticides in Egypt; ii. The National Commission on Pesticides could add new safe and important pesticide active substances for agricultural production to the List annexed to the Decree No. 30 of 2007; and, iii. The addition of copper compounds and 41 other active substances to the aforementioned List. 22. Decree 630 was amended by Decree 864 of 2008 to provide for the following: (i) add 16 active materials listed in articles 1 and 2 to Annex I of Decree 630 of 2007 on pesticides, which shall be allowed to be registered, imported, circulated and processed in Egypt; (ii) entrust the National Commission on Pesticides to issue temporary registration certificates for pesticides; (iii) delete carbofuran substance from the Annex I of Decree No.630 of 2007; (iv) delete the mark (+) before cyprodinil substance; and (v) allow the importation, registration, use, circulation and processing of buminal substance. 23. Finally, Decree 865 of 2009 has consolidated the existing provisions and laid down regulations for the registration, renewal of registration and use of agricultural pesticides in Egypt, and is further described in Annex 6. 24. In addition to this legal and regulatory framework, Egypt has adopted an integrated approach to pest management and developed an implementation program which has been piloted and implemented since 2001 in the major sectors of its agriculture with assistance from FAO and other 5 http://www.google.com./search?q=waste+law+%2B+Egypt&hl=en&gbv=2&prmd=ivns&ei=4aPDT6GONqrU6QHFsMDg Bw&start=20&sa=N 14 bilateral donors including Italy. Integrated Pest Management seeks to minimize the use of chemical pesticides and is now widely used in Egypt, notably because it is an integrated part of the promotion of export of agricultural products from Egypt to the USA and EU. IPM is now a policy and practice deeply rooted in the agriculture policy framework of Egypt. 25. Archeological Resources: Egypt is a land where archeological remains and physical cultural resources are spread all over the country. It has one of the most advance legal frameworks dealing with archeological finds and protection. Its EIA system provides for assessment of any impact on potential archeological site. Although POPs known sites are not located on or close to officials, experts and neighboring communities to establish and verify that any POPs site under the Project is not of archaeological interest. In the event, however, that remains being found any activity will cease and the advice of the Supreme Council of Antiquities would be sought. Appropriate measures would be put in place to protect and/or excavate the remains, including the following procedures: (i) where possible, remains will be protected in-situ; (ii) where identified remains cannot be protected, an excavation of the indicated area will be undertaken prior to the commencement of construction activities to record and remove vulnerable remains and features; (iii) any finds of archaeological, historic or cultural significance will be given to the Supreme Council of Antiquities; and, (v) preparation of a Chance Finds Procedure which lays out the steps to be taken if archaeological, historical or cultural remains or finds are discovered during any construction activities. The procedures will clearly set out how the construction team will be briefed so that they are aware of what to look out for and the actions which must be taken should a potential find be uncovered. The incorporation of these precautionary measures into the construction program will ensure that all potential remains of significance are recorded and are accorded the required protection where considered necessary. This is a remote hypothesis that might materialize only if the upgrading of the El Saff facility will be retained as the only option and an access road constructed or the existing access road widened. 26. International Conventions and agreements: Egypt participates in the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) and has ratified and or adhered to international environmental conventions with relevance to the POPs issue including: (i) the Convention for the Protection of the Ozone Layer (Vienna Convention) and its Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer (Montreal Protocol), (ii) the Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movement of Hazardous Wastes and their Disposal (Basel Convention) and (iii) the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants. As a matter of policy, Egypt supports an approach of coordinated/integrated implementation of the Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm Conventions, although it is yet to ratify the Rotterdam Convention6. More specifically, after ratifying the Stockholm Convention7, Egypt has taken initial steps to implement it. Since ratification: (a) a coordination mechanism was established; (b) a review of the findings on POPs pesticide assessment was carried out; (c) a general schematic approach has been agreed with NSC and other relevant NGOs and educational authorities on issues of raising public awareness; (d) national training workshops and field visits on inventory of obsolete pesticides, PCBs, dioxins and furans were organized; 6 Egypt signed the Basel Convention (BC) on the control of transboundary movements of hazardous waste in March, 1989 and ratified it in January, 1993. It has signed in May, 2002 and ratified in May 2003 the Stockholm Convention of the elimination or/and removal of the Persistent Organic Pollutants. Based on information gathered by the World Bank team, Egypt is preparing to adhere to the Rotterdam Convention on the prior informed consent procedure for certain hazardous chemicals and pesticides in international trade which is in force since February 24, 2004. 7 The Stockholm Convention was signed by Egypt on May 17, 2002 and ratified on May 2, 2003 15 (e) international training workshops on definition of PCBs, chemical and physical properties of PCBs, handling and storage of PCBs, were organized; (f) a review of the information on the production, use, imports and exports of the POPs listed in Annex A of the Convention (excluding PCBs) was made; (g) the information on stockpiles and waste containing POPs pesticides was gathered in different ways and a substantial quantity was moved to and is stored at El-Saff city8; (h) a list of selected companies, which have transformers and capacitors containing PCBs, was obtained; (i) safety measures and guidelines for the decontamination of electrical equipment containing PCBs were established; and equipment (condensers and transformers) that contain PCBs were isolated from food and will be subject to further inventory and mitigation and safety measures before they will be disposed of. 27. Like any other country which is party to the Convention, Egypt is reporting on implementation of the SC to the relevant International Secretariat and participating in the Conferences of the Parties. The implementation of all of the SC provisions will take time (to prepare full review of existing legal and regulatory framework, consult on potential amendments and effect appropriate changes to the legal and regulatory framework. On substance, there is no violation or non compliance with any of the major SC provisions and where full compliance is not yet achieved, the Government is working towards achieving it. A plan and ToRs will be drafted and a study conducted to prepare relevant legal and regulatory instruments to align country’s domestic legislation with SC Convention during project implementation. Environmental Impact Assessment 28. In the discussion between the World Bank team and the EEAA, it was clarified that, on the basis of existing laws and regulations, each prospective POPs-related sub-project must comply with the applicable air emission and wastewater discharge standards and Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) requirements, prescribed in Law 4-1994 (as amended through Law 9 of July 2009 and all of its applicable implementing regulations and guidelines including applicable emission/discharge standards. The SDR prepared for EPAP II found the EIA system of Egypt acceptable subject to filling some gaps which were clearly identified and have since been filled by the Government of Egypt as planned under the EPAP II Project. 29. It is worth mentioning that, as agreed upon in the SDR for the EPAP II, including the agreed gap-filling measures, the 2009 EIA regulations modifying the then existing EIA procedural and sector guidelines of 1995 were issued in December 2009 and are effective. The new EIA regulations include: (a) a revised Form “B”; (b) a detailed description of the EIA report for category “C”9 projects including: i. an analysis of alternatives ( section 6-4-2-7 of the EIA regulations); ii. use, as reference, of the Bank’s Pollution Prevention and Abatement Handbook (PPAH) (page 27 of EIA regulations); iii. requirement for public consultation during scoping and after the preparation of the draft EIA report (section 6.4.3 of the EIA regulations); 8 This storage site was visited by the Bank team and was not found up to the standards of storage sites for POPs. No EIA was done on the site before it was selected as storage site. Under the project, the site would be subjected to an environmental and social impact assessment which would establish whether the site is suitable for future POPs management activities and define the needed mitigation and safety measures that would need to be applied. 9 Category “C” are projects with substantive and significant impacts 16 iv. disclosure of the EIA report on the EEAA website (section 7 page 36 of the EIA guidelines); and v. detailed description of the EMP with associated budget and timing prepared by the proponents (sections 6.4.2.8 page 30 of the EIA regulations) 30. The current screening Forms for B and C category projects provide good instruments for screening POPs related subprojects. However, EEAA is advised to further review existing forms to include items specifically related to POPs and Hazardous substances to ensure they are fully covered by proponents. In addition to the existing forms, it is necessary for EEAA to develop and adopt Sector Guidelines (mainly by adapting existing ones issued in 2009) to include specific criteria, processes and standards to be followed in the preparation, review of EIA for POPs projects including hazard risk assessment and guidelines for reviewers. These Guidelines and related checklist will be disclosed on the EEAA website. 31. All these modifications were part of the gap filling measures described in the SDR of EPAP II. A supervision mission of June 2011 as well as the acceptability assessment carried out by the Bank and described below has confirmed that the above changes are in effect. On that basis, it can be concluded that the Egypt’s EIA system is now fully consistent with the Objectives and Operational principles of Table A.1 of OP 4.0010. However, on the very specific issue of POPs, the EIA system as applied for the purpose of POPs-related sub projects, must also ensure that the Egypt’ system be brought to compliance with the Stockholm Convention. Under the Project, a Policy and Legal Framework for POPs Management sub-component (Component 1.1) will assist the Government to further develop the legal and regulatory framework for POPs to bring it into compliance with the Stockholm Convention (see above). One of the gap filling measures is that the draft legal regulations for full compliance, which will be prepared under this project, will be submitted to the Legal Council of the Government by December 2014. However, the project has no direct influence on the timing of the approval of the legal actions beyond the approval of the Legal Council which should be followed up by the approval of the Cabinet. It is expected that the PMU will follow up on the extent of Egypt’s compliance with Stockholm Convention. 32. EIA Review and Approval Procedures: The contents and procedures for review and approval of an EIA are described in Law 4-1994 as amended through 2009. The EIA, carried out by the project developer, is to be approved by the respective Competent Administrative Authority 11 (CAA) or the licensing authority. A CAA cannot issue the license to construct unless the proponent The CAAs could either be the Governorate within which the project is proposed or a relevant agency or sector ministry (e.g. MEE for power production, which is the main agency involved in PCBs, or MALR involved with obsolete pesticides). The CAA will not issue the license to construct unless the operator provides all the necessary permits from the relevant ministries and organizations, which would include a letter of approval by EEAA on either the EIA report or Form B (see section on environmental approval in the acceptability assessment). The letter of EEAA approval is signed by the Chief Executive Officer of the EEAA and the CAA cannot circumvent the EEAA approval as the revised Environment Protection Law of 2009 makes it mandatory that an EIA be prepared and approved by the Ministry of the Environment prior to the start up of the project. Although the EIA procedural guidelines include a general description of CAAs for different projects, discussions with EEAA staff confirmed that this issue is not straightforward and open to interpretation, and that the selection of the CAA seems to be ad hoc and done on a case by case basis. For example, in Alexandria, the CAA may be the Alexandria Governorate, the Ministry of Investment (if the project site falls within a designated free zone), or the Council of Borg El-Arab city, which is under the 10 See Annex 12 to this SDR on the “Status of the Gap-Filling Measures Agreed upon under the EPAP II Project” 11 See Articles 19 to 22 of Law 4 for 1994 for details about CAA’s roles and responsibilities. 17 Ministry of Housing (if the project site is contained within the designated industrial city). In most cases, the terms CAA and “licensing authority/agency” are used interchangeabl y. When the Governorate is the CAA (the case for most – if not all – of the POPs sub-projects), then the Environmental Management Unit (EMU) which exists in each district, will act as CAA on behalf of the Governorate in environmental matters. The CAA is responsible for advising the project developer on EIA screening and on the permitting and licensing requirements for the project. 33. In accordance with the classification of the projects in Annex 1 of the EIA guidelines, all projects related to hazardous emission or waste are screened under Category “C” (which would be “A” under the Bank’s OP 4.01 classification for EA purposes. Also as part of the Environment and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA) Report, a risk assessment and emergency plan is required for each project in which the site could pose, inter alia, risks to surrounding populations. As stated in the Acceptability Assessment, an international operator will be selected through a two stage bidding process to collect, transport, temporarily store, and dispose on-site or export the POPs. The ESIAs12 will be carried out after project implementation by the international operators of PCBs and obsolete pesticides, in accordance with the guidelines for Egyptian EIA and the accompanying sectoral guidelines for establishments that need full EIA. Moreover, for each site for the management or disposal of obsolete pesticides or PCBs, a Form “B” will be prepared. For sub-projects under Category “B”, a more detailed screening form (known as Form “B”)13 would be submitted by the project proponent. Form “B” has a comprehensive checklist which addresses all environmental aspects of the project and requires an environmental analysis and environmental management plans (EMP) to mitigate any adverse impacts. In selected cases, EEAA, after reviewing the Form “B”, could ask the proponent to carry out a “scoped EIA,” depending on the nature and magnitude of potential impacts. In many respects, projects under current categories “B” and “C” must answer the same or similar questions about the potential impacts of their projects and include many identical requirements. EEAA has developed a series of guidelines on hazardous waste licensing, permitting and other requirements related to classification and coding, on-site storage selection, handling, transportation, treatment and disposal, and recycling requirements. These guidelines were developed in accordance with the law No. 4 of 1994 as amended through 2009 and its executive regulations of 2009. These guidelines are being further reviewed to include specific requirements for POPs and PCBs. 34. The Competent Administrative Authority (CAA) or the licensing authority is required to send a copy of the EIA report prepared by the project proponent to EEAA14 for its review and approval. The CAA is responsible for not only conveying EEAA’s opinion and comments (approval or rejection) but also responsible for verifying the implementation of EEAA’s recommendations (see Article 20 of Law Number 4 of 1994). 12 According to the current in force legislation and guidelines, an EIA is required to include information on: (a) Description and nature of Project; (b) project title and proponent; (c) location of the project with an outline of the major elements of the surrounding environment which might be affected (Form B and EIA Guidelines require the proponent to submit a map of the area); (d) outline of the Planning and Implementation Program, (e) analysis of any activities involved in the construction/operation which may result in the following: (i) gaseous emissions, (ii) dust, (iii) odor, (iv) noisy operations, (v) night time operations, (vi) liquid effluents/discharges, (vii) traffic generation, (viii) waste and/or by-products generated, (ix) storage/disposal of hazardous goods, (x) disposal of spoiled materials, (xi) visual impact, (xii) risk of accidents resulting in pollution or hazard; (xiii) possible interactions with other projects which should be considered, and (xiv) transboundary impacts (mentioned in Form B to be filled for Category B Project) and in sectoral guidelines for Category C Project; and (xv) environmental protection measures incorporated in the design and any further environmental implications, including monitoring, beneficial/adverse effects, short-term/long-term effects, secondary/induced effects, cumulative effects, magnitude and distribution of effects, ability to mitigate adverse environmental consequences via application of the best practical means and best practical environment 13 See Footnote 12 above 14 See Chapter 2 of Law 4-1994 for details about EEAA’s roles and responsibilities 18 35. The above described legal and regulatory framework for POPs management, although fairly well-developed and adequate for addressing the many challenges of POPs management is not consistently applied and enforced. The Acceptability Analysis shows clearly that additional actions are needed to make this legal and regulatory framework effective and include (among other measures) the following: (a) the obligation of periodic registration; (b) surveillance and monitoring of POPs- related sites and staff working on handling POPs; (c) the obligation of POPs site and holders to maintain records on nature, quantities, sources, locations, treatment models and transportation models; as well as (d) the existence of a specific manual to prepare and implement EIAs. Implementation Mandate 36. EEAA will be the main agency implementing the Project, but other agencies from the Ministry of Agriculture and Land Reclamation (MALR), Ministry of Electricity and Energy (MEE) and Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI) and private sector companies will also be involved in selected activities. However, it must be mentioned other agencies and ministries do have part of the overall mandate to govern portions of the POPs life cycle, from source to disposal, environmental impact and health monitoring, transportation, trading and handling in Egypt. In addition to those above listed (EEAA, MALR, MEE and MTI), agencies and ministries include: the (i) Ministry of Health and Population (MHP), (ii) Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research (MHESR), (iii) Ministry of Manpower and Immigration (MMI), (iv) Ministry of Housing Utilities and Urban Communities (MHUUC), (v) Ministry of Water Resources and Irrigation (MWRI), (vi) Ministry of Petroleum (MP), (vii) Civil Defense Authority (CDA), (viii) Ministry of Interior, (ix) Ministry of Information, (x) Customs Authority (CA), (xi) General Organization for Control of Export and Import (GOCEI), and (xii) General Organization for Investment and Free Zones (GOIFZ). Their mandates are further described in the Acceptability Chapter below. 37. The mandate of EEAA in connection to POPs is as follows: EEAA is the national authority responsible for issuing rules, procedures and standards to conform to regional and international conventions related to the environment and to prepare the necessary draft laws and decrees required for the implementation of such conventions. This mandate is relevant to the Stockholm Convention and the Basel Convention both of which are binding on Egypt. Other EEAA mandates relate directly or indirectly to POPs including: (i) preparing studies on the state of the environment, and formulating national plans and projects for the protection of the environment; (ii) issuing environmental criteria, conditions, procedures and standards to which project proponents and establishments must adhere, before implementing their respective project and during operation, (iii) conducting compliance monitoring activities and enforcing environmental legislation; (iv) setting pollution control standards and procedures, including safety standards for the management of hazardous materials and chemicals; (v) gathering and disseminating national and international information on environmental conditions and changes on a periodic basis, in cooperation with relevant and competent agencies; (vi) preparing environmental contingency plans (Article 25 of the 1994 Law No. 4) and coordinating with the competent bodies in the preparation of programs to address environmental disasters; (vii) preparing and implementing environmental training plans and programs, including public awareness programs and activities; and (viii) providing economic and other incentives for the prevention of pollution, including implementing pilot projects for the preservation of natural resources, the protection of the environment from pollution, and other plans and activities to protect the country from the spread of hazardous substances and wastes. 38. More specifically, for hazardous substances, EEAA has the mandate to develop and/or contribute to the national policy for chemicals management including: (i) control of hazardous substances (HS) at the various stages of their life cycle, to be regulated by adequate legal instruments; 19 (ii) harmonized classification and labeling of chemicals; (iii) inventory of hazardous substances in Egypt; (iv) a national plan for the prevention of illegally imported HS; and (v) environmentally safe and sound methods for reduction and control of chemical risks, including possible development of non-toxic alternatives. All the above mandates are highly relevant to POPs management and could not be effectively implemented without close and efficient coordination and collaboration efforts with all other agencies, ministries and stakeholders at large. Gaps/Differences 39. The World Bank's EA policy and the Egyptian safeguards systems on EA and Pest Management, as amended in 2009, are nearly fully equivalent. For the purposes of the POPs Project, it will be important for EEAA to issue a regulation clarifying that all POPs sub-projects will be subjected to an EIA and to prepare TORs, Manual or specific Guidelines for such EIA15 to be prepared and implemented. Also, it is important that the legal and regulatory framework be brought in full consistency with the Stockholm Convention and other conventions applicable to POPs and to which Egypt is a party. These gaps can be implemented as part of the overall Project implementation. Proposed Gap Filling Measures 40. EEAA is committed to address the above mentioned gaps by further developing and adopting all needed regulations to harmonize the current legal framework related to POPs and implement the provisions of the Stockholm Convention and other international conventions and agreements related to POPs and to which Egypt is party. Also EEAA is committed to further developing EIA procedural guidelines for POPs related sub-projects, including sample Terms of References for project proponents and EIA consultants in 2012. Subsequently, the existing sectoral guidelines (initially targeting those sectors which are likely to be supported by POPs) will also be revised to reflect: (i) inclusion in the new procedural guidelines of requirements for analysis of social impacts; and, (ii) the obligation to comply with environmental and safety standards, which will be based on international good practice, as expressed in the FAO Guidelines on POPs pesticides, UNEP Standards on PCBs and/or the World Bank Group’s 2007 EHS. 41. Specifically, EEAA shall: a. Review Egypt’s legal and regulatory framework applicable to POPs, with a view to harmonizing it with the Stockholm Convention provision, to which Egypt is a party16. b. Develop TORs for EIAs for all types of POPs projects17 and ensure that all POPs sub-projects will be required to comply with all applicable environmental and safety standards. Such standards are to be included in the TORs for EIAs for POPs projects; c. Clarify the requirement to analyze social impacts as part of the EIA process for POPs projects; it is important that EIA and environmental audits for POPs sub-projects include in their terms of reference the need to analyze social impacts – especially when POPs storage, 15 In order to meet Bank requirements, it will be important that such EIAs also include social aspects. However, such social aspects are beyond the scope of this SDR. 16 See Annex 15 on Bringing Egypt Legal and Regulatory Framework for POPs management to compliance with the Stockholm Convention. 17 Including, but not limited to: safeguarding of pesticides; disposal of pesticides; remediation of pesticide storage sites; safeguarding PCBs stocks and off-line equipment; destruction of high-concentration PCB stocks and PCB-contaminated equipment; decontamination of other contaminated equipment; and, remediation of PCB-contaminated sites. 20 handling and or disposal facilities are located close to urban or inhabited areas as well as the health and safety of the workers and the local residents which may be exposed; and d. Review and develop screening criteria defined in Form B in order to take into account the specific features and potential impacts and risks of POPs-related activities (i.e. handling, transportation, storage, disposal or destruction). 21 IV. ACCEPTABILITY ASSESSMENT Introduction 42. The purpose of the acceptability assessment is to confirm that the institutional capacities and implementation arrangements, practices as well as track record of competent Egyptian institutions in addressing POPs-related environmental safeguard issues in the proposed Bank-supported POPs Project are acceptable and meet the requirements stated in the Bank Policy OP/BP 4.00. This assessment will fulfill the objective of the Acceptability part of the SDR as its covers the institutional capacity; processes and procedures; outputs; and outcomes. The scope of the assessment will, however, be limited to reviewing the capacity, implementing practices, track records and outcomes achieved by the following organizations responsible for POPs management activities, with a focus on the EEAA.  National Level: the EEAA organization, its Environmental Management Department, Central Department for Environmental Inspection & Environmental Compliance "CDEIEC”, the Central Department for the Protection and Improvement of Industrial Environmental and Energy, and the Department of Citizens’ Services;  Regional Level: EEAA RBOs of West Delta (Alexandria) and Greater Cairo (Guizeh and Qalyubiya,) and Suez;  Local Level: The EMUs of the participating Governorates (Alexandria and Qalyubiya); and  Project Level: The proposed PMU Methodology 43. The Acceptability Assessment applied (whenever appropriate) the four-component methodology18 that has evolved through the SDR process during the implementation of the UCS pilot program. To assess relevant institutional capacity, the assessment drew on primary sources, including external and internal reports prepared by EEAA and its advisors and consultants as well as meetings with senior staff in sector ministries of Petroleum, Electricity and Energy, Health, Industry and Agriculture and Land Reclamation. These reports as well as the results of the meetings provided valuable insights into EEAA’s institutional capacity to: (a) govern and monitor environmental assessment processes, outputs and outcomes; and (b) to enforce environmental laws, regulations and standards to avoid, minimize, mitigate and compensate for adverse environmental impacts resulting from development projects subject to EIA or to EEAA control and monitoring. 44. To assess the effectiveness of implementing processes and procedures, the SDR reviewed official procedural and guidance documents describing the appropriate conduct of the environmental assessment and management process in Egypt, with particular attention to the various stages of the environmental assessment process, including the screening and scoping phases, EIA preparation and follow up and monitoring, public consultation and disclosure, culminating in the environmental approval on the part of the EEAA. As noted above, the findings with respect to specific aspects of the Egyptian legal and regulatory framework on EIA and responsible implementing agencies, such as EEAA, have already been subject to a SDR and public consultations as part of the EPAP II Project. Those findings have been updated as necessary and reflected in the current draft SDR, especially to assess the degree of compliance with the required gap-filling measures agreed upon under the EPAP II. The primary focus of the current draft SDR is EEAA and other agencies’ policies and practices dealing with POPs. 18 These components include: institutional capacity; processes and procedures; outputs; and outcomes. 22 V. INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS AND MANDATES FOR POPs MANAGEMENT IN EGYPT 45. As mentioned above, several agencies and ministries have mandates related to POPs. Several ministries have mandates to deal with POPs cycle, from source to disposal, environmental impacts and health monitoring. However, EEAA clearly appears to be the leading agency for the POPs environmental management purpose. EEAA will have (in accordance with Law 4 of 2004 and Law 9 of 2009) the ultimate responsibility to review and approve the environment assessment reports as well as to inspect and ensure full compliance with rules, regulations, and standards. EEAA has established contact and coordinates its compliance and monitoring functions with each of the ministries below as appropriate. Furthermore, under the POPs management project, a POPs Project Steering Committee (PPSC) will be established. Membership would include the EEAA CEO as Chair, with three members from EEAA, two from both the Ministry of Agriculture and Land Reclamation and Ministry of Electricity and Energy as well as one NGO representative. The committee can call on experts from the ministries described below or from universities and research institutes whenever the need arises. The PPSC would meet every three months. A simplified description of the mandates and responsibilities of each ministry is as follows:  Ministry of State for Environmental Affairs (MSEA) / The Egyptian Environmental Affairs Agency (EEAA): 46. The Environmental Protection Law 4 of 1994 provided new mandates for the Egyptian Environmental Affairs Agency. Given its coordinating and horizontal role among all ministries, EEAA was put under the responsibility of the Council of Ministers and a Minister of State was nominated to oversee the work of the agency and to chair EEAA’s Board of Directors. The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the Agency is nominated by the Council of Ministers upon the recommendation of the Minister of State, and has a First Undersecretary rank. The CEO oversees the day-to-day management of the agency and ensures that the policies and guidelines provided by the Board are implemented. 47. EEAA’s major functions are described in Table 1 below: 23 Table 1: Major Functions of MSEA19 Preparation of draft legislation and decrees relevant to fulfilling the objectives of the Agency and consideration of proposed legislation that is related to the protection of the environment. Preparation of studies related to the state of the environment of the country, and formulation of the national plan for the protection of the environment. This would include environmental protection projects and their estimated budgets as well as the environmental maps of urban areas and areas planned to be developed. In addition, it shall set the necessary norms that need to be followed when planning and developing new areas as well as targeted norms for old areas. Establishment of norms and conditions to be complied with by owners of projects and establishments before the start of construction and during the operation of these projects. Compilation of a list of agencies and national institutes as well as qualified individuals who could contribute to the preparation and execution of environmental protection programs, and the preparation and implementation of the projects and studies undertaken by the Agency. Carrying out of field follow-up of compliance to norms and conditions to be followed by agencies and establishments. Also, it shall undertake the procedures stated in the law against those who violate these norms and conditions. Establishment of necessary norms and standards to assure compliance with the permissible limits of pollutants and to ensure that these norms and standards are followed. Collection and publication of national and international information related to the environment on a periodical basis in cooperation with information centres of other agencies. It shall evaluate and utilize this updated information in environmental management and planning. Setting of principles and measures for environmental impact assessment of projects. Preparation of the Environmental Contingency Plan in the manner stated in Article 25 of Law 4 and coordination with the competent agencies for the preparation of programs for confronting environmental disasters. Following up the implementation stages of International Conventions concerned with the environment. Suggesting an economic mechanism, which encourages the observation of pollution prevention procedures 48. The official organization chart of the Ministry of State for Environmental Affairs (MSEA) is provided in Figure 1 below. It includes the following central departments of the Egyptian Environmental Affairs Agency (EEAA) that are involved with the POPs project (the Project). 19 www.eeaa.gov.eg 24 Figure 1: General Organization of the MSEA20 20 The organizational structure is based off an approved reorganization by the Central Agency for Organization and Management in September 2011. 25 49. The Environment Management Sector includes both the EIA Department and the Hazardous Substance and Waste Management Department are presented in Figure 2 below. Figure 2: Organization of the Environment Management Sector21 21 The organizational structure is based off an approved reorganization by the Central Agency for Organization and Management in July 2009. 26 50. The EIA Department of EEAA, which is responsible for review and approval of EIA reports and Form “B” has a total of 26 technical staff in Cairo, of which 16 are technical staff and 10 are non-technical staff. The capacity of the EIA department at EEAA is adequate considering that now all EIA (Category “C” projects corresponding to Category “A” projects of the World Bank) reports should be reviewed by national universities or research institutes before being formally approved by EEAA. The EIA department staff administratively process all projects for screening and scoping. It participates also in the review of the EIA reports, but focus mainly on those projects that should submit Form B pertaining to Category “B” and corresponding also to the Category “B” projects of the World Bank. In 2002, the EIA department delegated the review of Form “A” projects (corresponding to Category “C” projects of the World Bank) to the RBOs. The EIA department has processed in 2011, 3937 environment reports in categories B and C ( corresponding to category “B” and “A” of the World Bank respectively), with projects in the industrial sectors being the most predominant, as shown in the figure below. Figure 3: Distribution of Projects among Sectors22 3000 2500 2000 1500 1000 500 0 51. The review of all these projects represents a heavy workload on the staff, which is not only affecting the quality of the review but also affecting the work-life balance of the dedicated EIA staff. There is no allocated budget for the review of the EIA reports and any request for contracting the consultants to review the EIA report and/or Form B is made on an ad hoc basis and financed from the Environmental Protection Fund (EPF). Although, Law 9 of 2009 (which amended Law 4 of 1994) requires that EEAA provide its decision within 30 days from the EIA submission; otherwise, the EIA is implicitly approved. The EIA department has estimated that it takes an average of 20-22 days23 to review an EIA report. However, the EIA department usually requires additional information before the 30 day deadline in order to extend for another 30 day period until the review is completed. No EIA was approved by default because EEAA has not replied within the 30 day period. At present, there is no specific TOR for the EIA, and therefore there is no limit for requesting additional information which is based on the personal judgments of the reviewer – and could delay the EIA decision-making process. 52. Recently the Environment Management Sector has established a Directorate for the Technical Office consisting of one coordinator. Its function is to follow up on the EIA mitigating measures during the construction phase of projects with the assistance from other technical 22 Mahmoud Ahmed Shawki, Presentation of the National EIA System, SDR consultation meeting, June 2012 23 Mahmoud Ahmed Shawki, Presentation of the National EIA System, SDR consultation meeting, June 2012 27 departments. Follow-up of the mitigating measures during the operation phase is supposed to be carried out by the Central Department for Environmental Inspection & Environmental Compliance (CDEIEC) (see below). In the POPs project, the international operator will provide in its semiannual reports to the PMU (see the PMU section below), the status of the implementation of the EMSP. Such a progress report will be verified by the two technical specialists of the PMU who would report the results to the Directorate of the Technical Office for further actions to be taken in case of non compliance. In addition, the environment specialist from the World Bank team will review the EIA reports as well as the implementation of the ESMP as part of the Bank responsibility under this SDR. 53. The Hazardous Substances and Waste Management Department consists of two general directorates divided further into 3 directorates under the General Directorate of Waste and 2 directorates under the Substances and Hazardous Waste General Directorate as shown in Figure 4 below24. The department functions and responsibilities are to: (i) prepare strategies and plans on waste management, (ii) provide support to sector ministries, and governorates on issues related to municipal, industrial and hazardous waste, (iii) provide scientific views related to chemical substances to national authorities and in particular the custom authorities, (iv) review the Materials Safety Data Sheet, and act as focal points for the Stockholm, Rotterdam and Basel Conventions to ensure their compliance. The staff of the General Directorates of Substances and Hazardous Waste is limited to 5 staff but are also assisted by 14 staff from the RBOs. The General Directorate on Hazardous Waste and Substances will be responsible for the implementation of the POPs project but would be strengthened with the establishment of a PMU (see below) and the provision of capacity building and training. The EU -financed “Twinning” Project has reviewed the overall organization of the Department and has recommended a reorganization of this department into one General Directorate of Waste which includes hazardous and non-hazardous waste and one General Directorate for Chemical Substances. The POPs project will first assess the proposed organizational structure and will provide necessary technical support and training in case reorganization is approved by EEAA. 54. The Central Department for the Protection and Improvement of Industry, Environment and Energy includes: Industrial Technical Support & Foreign Projects which manages the EPAP II25 through its project management unit as well as the KfW- financed project: Private and Public Sectors Industry (PPSI) as shown in Figure 4. The objective of the general directorate is to: (a) enhance the environmental performance of industry; and (b) benefit from and sustain activities undertaken by the donor-funded projects. As a result of EPAP I and II, this General Directorate has 13 fully qualified technical and procurement staff trained. It has established its industrial pollution control policy, developed information system on polluting enterprises participating in the projects, assist the polluting enterprises in the development of compliance action plan, provide support to the procurement of equipment for projects, and conduct supervision on projects to be financed under the EPAP II and PPSI. The PMU of POPs project would benefit from the experience and the technical support of this General Directorate. 24 K. Stepper, Report on Organization Aspects of HW, HS and W, EU Twinning project, 2010 25 The EPAP II is co financed by EIB, AfD, JICA, Finland and the World Bank at a level of US$ 185 million equivalent 28 Figure 4: Organization of the Central Department for the Protection and Improvement Industry, Environment and Energy26 26 The organizational structure is based off an approved reorganization by the Central Agency for Organization and Management in July 2009. 29 55. The Central Department for Environmental Inspection & Environmental Compliance (CDEIEC) was previously the Central Inspection Department and as shown in Figure 5. The CDEIEC includes now two General Directorates: (i) the General Directorate for Environmental Compliance (GDEC) which is composed of 7 staff and is responsible for reviewing and following up on Compliance Actions Plans (CAP), which is now considered by virtue of Article 22 of Law 9 of 2009, to be the instrument for improving the overall environmental performance of a polluting enterprise; and for enabling the enterprise to move towards compliance with the Egyptian environmental regulations; and (ii) the General Department for Environmental Inspection (GDEI) which is composed of 18 staff and is responsible for inspecting polluting enterprises, reviewing and verifying the environmental register, imposing fines and taking non-compliant industries to court. Also, as a result of Law 9 of 2009, the environmental police were combined with the waterways police at the Ministry of Interior. The police works in close collaboration with CDEIEC on inspection, prosecution and implementation of court orders regarding violations. 30 Figure 5: Organization of the Central Department for Environmental Inspection & Environmental Compliance (CDEIEC)27 27 The organizational structure is based off an approved reorganization by the Central Agency for Organization and Management in July 2009. 31 56. The Department of Citizens Services. This department reports directly to the CEO of EEAA, and is the first interface between the citizen and the EEAA administration. The department consists of 9 staff and maintains a hot line (8050 and 8051). Its function is to field complaints, receive grievances and inquiries, prepare a report on the complaint/inquiry, forward them to the office of the CEO, and follow up on the results and decisions of complaints/inquiries with the different office of EEAA. In 2010, the Department received about 7270 complaints, of which 3025 were resolved and the remaining were under investigation. The Department also answers inquiries about the status of the EIA or Form B reports. They receive about 10-25 inquiries / day regarding the status of the EIA review. The Department maintains an electronic registry of complaints, the EIAs under inquiry or requiring additional information, as well as approved and rejected EIAs. 57. The Regional Branch Offices (RBOs) were formed by a ministerial decree in 1995 to represent EEAA at the regional level. The responsibilities of the RBOs as stated in the ministerial decree includes: (a) following up with the Governorate implementation of the national plan for protecting the environment; (b) supervising the environmental monitoring network at the Governorate level while obtaining data and information from these networks and reporting them to the EEAA Head Office; (c) following up on the enforcement of Law 4 of 1994 and Law 9 of 2009 and its Executive Regulations at the Governorate level; (d) implementing decisions made by the head of EEAA concerning environmental protection and assuming EEAA role and purposes at the Governorate level; and (e) raising environmental awareness and coordinating public and Governorate environmental unit efforts, in accordance with EEAA plan in that respects. 58. Currently, 11 RBOs exist. Each covers several governorates in Egypt. RBOs are located in Cairo, Alexandria, Suez, Assuit, Aswan, Tanta, El Dakahlia, Hurghada as well as three recently established RBOs at New Valley, El Sharkeya, and El Fayoum. At least three RBOs are expected to be involved in the POPs project (e.g. Cairo, Alexandria and Suez) as they will have a critical role in overseeing the activities of the POPs project and in monitoring the air, water and soil qualities related to the treatment and disposal of these POPs jointly with CDEIEC. The West Delta RBO which includes Alexandria, Beheira, and Matrouh Governorates, will carry out its environment management activities related to the El Nasreya Hazardous Waste Treatment Center (HWTC). The RBO of Greater Cairo which covers Cairo, Guizeh and Qalyoubieh will also be involved as the El Saff Storage Site which is located in the Eastern border to El Saff city in the Guizeh Governorate as well as the PCB storage facility in Shoubrah El Kheima situated in the Qaloyoubieh governorate. The RBO of Suez would be involved in case the POPs project would treat the 220 tons situated in El Adabia port in Suez. 59. The RBOs have similar structure as the EEAA with the exception of international partnering. They include: (1) environmental management, (2) environmental quality assurance, (3) environmental monitoring and testing, (4) environmental information dissemination and awareness raising, (5) handling citizen complaints as well as (6) legal affairs, amongst other activities. The total number of staff in the Cairo, Alexandria and Suez RBOs are 35, 51 and 24 respectively. The RBOs have their own laboratories and carry out monitoring and enforcement. The RBO staff received extensive training from the different programs financed by the international donors including the training and capacity building provided under EPAP I. Six of the 11 RBOs (Cairo, Alexandria, Tanta, Mansoura, Suez, Assiut and Aswan) each have two hazardous waste management specialists trained by the European Community financed “Twinning” project. 60. The Project Management Unit (PMU) will be managed on a part time basis by a National Project Director selected from the EEAA senior staff which will report directly to the EEAA CEO (see Figure 6). The National Project Director will have the following responsibilities: (a) appointment and performance evaluation of all PMU staff; (b) oversight of all project activities; (c) approval and 32 signature of quarterly and annual project reports; (d) signature of disbursement applications and (e) approval of procurement decisions. Under the Director, an experienced Project Manager will be hired on a competitive basis and will be financed from the project. The Project Manager will be working full-time and will have the following responsibilities: (a) day-to-day management of PMU staff; (b) ensuring the quality and timeliness of all project activities; (c) preparing quarterly and annual reports and disbursement applications and (d) chairing the bid award committee. The hazardous waste specialists will be in charge of (a) reviewing the technical and environmental eligibility of the POPs sub-projects; (b) providing technical support to the participating agencies of the project and reviewing technical reports; (c) ensuring due diligence on the environmental and social safeguards based on the gap filling measures in the SDR; (d) liaising with the relevant departments of EEAA (and in particular with the EIA department as well as with the RBOs of Greater Cairo, Alexandria and Suez) so as to ensure proper coordination and exchange of information. The PMU will also include two technical specialists (one for PCB and the other for obsolete pesticides), a financial specialist and a procurement specialist. The financial specialist will be in charge of the overall financial consolidation and reporting aspects in coordination with the EEAA financial department. The procurement specialist will ensure that procurement is carried out by eligible companies in a manner appropriate and consistent with World Bank’s procurement guidelines. The detailed procedures for project management would be included in a Project Manual, covering such topics as: job descriptions; decision-making procedures; procurement; financial management; implementation of safeguards measures; monitoring and evaluation; and, reporting. Figure 6: Proposed Organization of the PMU 61. The Ministry of Electricity and Energy (MEE) would establish a Project Coordination Unit (PCU). The PCU of the MEE will be attached to the General Directorate for Technical Follow up and will report directly to the First Undersecretary for planning and management. The PMU will assume the management of the activities for the MALR until a decision is reached by MALR concerning the rehabilitation of El Saff Storage (see below). The Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI) would establish a Focal Point, to liaise with the PMU on all implementation matters, especially Sub-Component 1.4, and to manage some project activities delegated to those ministries, for example, inventorying and testing of transformers for PCB contamination. 33 62. The Ministry of Agriculture and Land Reclamation (MALR) provides services to farmers in animal and crop production and also administers the fertilizers and pesticides regulations, to control the importation and use of fertilizers and pesticides through different departments, to prevent plant diseases and pests from inside and outside the country. The Agricultural Pesticide Committee (APC) (see www.apc.gov.eg) is composed of an 18 member committee, and four sub-committees is the legal arm and authorized institution of the Ministry of Agriculture and Land Reclamation for the registration, importation, manufacturing, and distribution of all pesticides in Egypt. In order to register for a specific pesticide, the importer or manufacturer will have to provide as part of the protocol document required by Decree 622/2008, laboratory testing and impact of this pesticides in health and environment. The Ministerial Decree 90/2007 specifies in Article 1 that no pesticide can be registered in Egypt unless it is registered with WHO, and FAO and their environment and health impacts have been approved by USEPA or the European Commission. Also, the Central Agricultural Pesticides Laboratory (CAPL) belonging to the Agricultural Research Center (ARC) conducts chemicals and toxicity analyses of the active ingredients and verifies the chemical materials date sheet of each pesticide before being released by the Customs Authority. Furthermore, it regulates the establishment of standards for withholding registration and the usage restrictions on agricultural chemicals from an environmental conservation viewpoint and sets up regulations and standards regarding the prevention of soil contamination. Although APC is responsible for all aspects related to pesticides, the safe disposal of the obsolete pesticides (POPs and non-POPs) is neither their responsibility nor the responsibility of the ARC as these POPs do not belong to the MALR, but originated from different factories or installation and the MALR responsibility was to provide a temporary storage site as these POPs have not been adhered in accordance with the FAO guidelines. This will be mitigated in the Project28. 63. Ministry of Health and Population (MHP) is involved in chemical safety through its directorates and centers. The General Directorate of Occupational Health has a unit for chemical safety and keeps a register of hazardous chemicals. The Occupational Health Department “Chemical Safety Unit” supports the safe handling of chemicals throughout the whole process (importation, transportation, storage, use and waste management). The General Directorate of Environmental Health supervises hazardous materials and hazardous wastes generated by health establishments and licenses clinical waste disposal. The Directorate conducts the air-monitoring network, does water analyses as appropriate and approves chemicals used for water treatment. The General Directorate of Food Control (a) sets limits for food additives and food contaminants, (b) inspects and analyses imported and locally produced foods and those on the market for safety, and (c) investigates food poisoning outbreaks. The Directorate of Central Laboratories does laboratory analyses for water, food and biological fluids to help implement various legislation of the MOHP and other agencies. The Research Institute of Medical Entomology carries out laboratory and field research to examine the efficacy of pesticides and provide information important for registration of pesticides used for public health and household purposes, while the General Organization for Health Insurance carries out periodic medical examinations for workers exposed to hazardous chemicals. 64. The Ministry of Electricity and Energy (MEE) has established a Central Directorate for Environmental Affairs at the Egyptian Electricity Holding Company (EEHC) (see also www.egelec.com) which coordinates, monitors, follows up and provides technical support to the General Directorates of Environmental Affairs established in the 16 distribution companies. The Central Directorate is composed of six staff that is familiar with the World Bank environmental policies and guidelines. The PCU for Component 3 of the project would be formed in the Central Directorate for Environmental Affairs of EEHC. There are no specific environmental guidelines for 28 Legal issues will be addressed in 1.1, inventory and disposal in 2.2 and 2.2 and policy to avoid future stockpiles in 2.3. 34 the power sector through EPAP II, as part of the gap filing measures, prepared sector guidelines for the power sector. There are no guidelines for handling or disposal of PCBs. EEHC has requested that during project implementation capacity building and technical assistance be provided on PCBs. There is also a company, Power Generation Engineering and Services Company, owned by EEHC (at 49% and by Bechtel at 51%) that could prepare an EIA in the power sector. 65. The Ministry of Petroleum (MOP) is the owner of the Egyptian General Petroleum Corporation (EGPC) and the Egyptian Gas Holding Company for Gas (EGas). Each has established a Department of Environment and Safety for oil and gas respectively. The Environment Department at EGPC is composed of 10 oil specialists who are responsible for coordinating and monitoring the environment and safety requirements for companies in oil exploration and production. This department is the counterpart of EEAA in all aspects regarding the EIA inspection and compliance action plan process. The department reviews and maintains a quality control for all EIA reports prepared by companies prior to their submission to EEAA and also follows up on the inspections that EEAA performs in the oil and gas exploration fields. The Petroleum Trading Services Company (PETROTRADE) is the only company responsible of collecting used oils and recycling it for re-use. PETROTRADE has stopped collecting and recycling PCB-contaminated oil. However, PETROTRADE has no kits for testing incoming used oils for PCB contamination. Moreover, in the absence of clear legislation prohibiting the use of PCB-contaminated oil, some of these oils were previously sold to cosmetic manufacturers because of the mistaken public impression that “electrical oil” has beneficial properties. 66. The Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI) oversees the Industrial Development Authority (IDA)29 (which has established a Central Department for Environmental Protection in charge of ensuring that all environment and safety requirements are met before providing the environment register, review and approval of the list of chemicals before their release from customs and ensure that decrees related to hazardous chemicals (Decrees 88/1998 and 851/2006) and hazardous waste (Decree 165/2002) are complied with. There are no specific guidelines or Egyptian standards for the release of dioxin and furans. 67. Ministry of Water Resources and Irrigation (MWRI) is mandated to control and manage all fresh water resources in Egypt, including surface and subsurface water. The Ministry is also responsible for providing all other sectors with their needs of good quality fresh water in due time. It also implements legislation to protect the Nile River and waterways from pollution with all kinds of wastes. Law 4/1994 refers to Law 48 of 1982 for pollution control of Egypt’s water resources, in collaboration with other concerned Ministries. Law 12 of 1984 is the law governing the management and operation of the irrigation and drainage systems in Egypt. Permits may be issued for the disposal of treated liquid wastes provided certain standards are observed. The MWRI issues standards after consultation with the Minister of Health. Regular inspections of the wastes disposed of in the waterways are carried out with the assistance from the Environment and Waterways Police and the MOHP in order to control the disposal and treatment of industrial wastewater. Furthermore, it formulates standards and regulations regarding prevention of groundwater contamination. 68. The Ministry of Interior (MOI). MOI sets and approves plans for emergency actions, trains personnel, inspects sites suspected to have a potential risk and co-operates with other agencies in case of emergency. It also regulates matters related to treatment of obsolete pesticides which may have explosive risks. MOI issues a list of hazardous substances that are under its control. The Environmental Police is now part of the General Directorate for Police for waterways which enforces inter alia the law on the Nile and principally Law 48/1982, and the Environment Police General 29 www.ida.gov.eg 35 Directorate which is responsible for enforcing the environment laws 4 and 9 and their Executive Regulations.  The Civil Defense Authority (CDA). The CDA is part of MOI and is responsible for reviewing the design and implementation of the buildings interiors where hazardous substances may be produced or stored. It ensures that buildings and installations conform to the engineering standards to be observed for each type of such substances, as determined by a decree issued by the Minister of Housing (upon consultation with EEAA) according to which these buildings are subject to periodic inspections. Furthermore, it sets up emergency plans to deal with any potential accidents which may occur during the production, storage, transportation or handling of such substances, provided the plan is reviewed and approved by the licensing authority after consulting the EEAA. 69. The Ministry of Finance (MOF) includes the Customs Authority and the General Organization for Control of Export and Import. These organizations ensure that all imported chemicals comply with specifications after receiving the necessary clearances from EEAA, the MTI and the MALR as appropriate. The custom authorities withheld in Adabya Port, 200 tons of pesticides imported by a private sector company, and they became subsequently obsolete pesticides but still stored in containers on the compound of the Port. The disposal of these pesticides of their storage could be considered as part of the Project subject to the approval of the Project Steering Committee and the PMU. 70. Ministry of Manpower and Immigration is responsible for the administration and enforcement of Law No.12 of 2003 and its related decrees concerning labor and industrial safety protection of industrial working environment. The Factories Inspectorate Department has a specialized wing on Occupational Safety and Health, acting to enforce this law. This legislation is aimed at protecting workers against occupational accidents and diseases. The department carries out systematic inspections of all premises covered by the Factories Act (i.e., factories, construction sites, and general engineering construction workers). The inspectors assess the risks of the exposure to workers from chemicals and physical hazards and also biological, physiological, mechanical and psychological hazards. Also, it regulates matters related to ensuring standards and measures to prevent health impairments to workers (working environment) due to chemical substances. 71. The Environment Management Units (EMUs) operate at the local level, and exist in each of the 26 Governorates according to Prime Ministerial decree in 6/5/1981. The organization and operations of the EMUs vary across these Governorates. Under the existing institutional framework, the EMUs represent the primary local authority on environmental issues and, in many cases, operate as the executing agencies for EEAA’s environmental policies and programs. In Alexandria, the Governor Decree number 183 in 2004 called for establishing one EMU in each of the six districts in Alexandria plus Borg El-Arab city. It is staffed with about 15 people for the six districts in Alexandria plus Borg El-Arab. In Qalyubiya Governorate, the EMU was formed in 1988. Currently, it is staffed with 13 people including the head of the EMU office. In Suez, the EMUs received technical and financial support from international donors such as DANIDA and the Government of Finland. 72. The Civil Society. Before the revolution of January 2011, Egypt had more than 270 NGOs actively participating in the environmental arena, on issues ranging from public awareness and environmental education to waste collection and community self-help programs. This number has increased but no official figures are yet available. The new EIA guidelines of 2009 which now require public hearings and consultation for the projects classified as “C” given a more prominent and participatory role of the civil society. Civil society has been increasingly involved in project implementation, in public debate and also in ensuring compliance with the environmental laws and is 36 vocal whenever public hearings/consultations on EIAs have taken place. Similarly the media has contributed largely to this increased awareness and to change in behavior. The number of newspapers has greatly increased and most of them carry reports on environmental activities, and do not hesitate to bring to the public any major violations undertaken by the State or by the private sector. TV stations often provide clips on the status of the environment in poor areas. The Egyptian press regularly publishes summaries of EIA reports, as approved by the MSEA as well as the conditions under which the EIA reports were approved.30  One NGO is known to have focused its attention on OPs and PCBs. The Day Hospital Institute for Development and Rehabilitation (www.dayhospl.org) provides workshops, awareness, communications and materials on hazardous chemicals and waste and in particular POPs and PCBs. All these activities are financed by the GEF Small Grants Program (GEF SGP), UNIDO, the European Commission, and Japan. The Day Hospital also works with six other local NGOs in Cairo, Alexandria and Beni Soueif on environmental awareness for PCB and POPs. These NGOs, under the leadership of the Day Hospital Institute, should be involved in the preparation and implementation of the project especially during the consultation process of the UCS. Another nonprofit organization, Crop Life Egypt, which is affiliated with Crop Life International31 whose headquarters are in Brussels, consists of a federation of 18 pesticides manufacturing companies and is managed by a Board of seven members. Crop Life proposes to provide awareness campaigns, offer training for disposal of pesticides and stock storage as well provide international experts in pesticides. VI. IMPLEMENTATION PRACTICES AND TRACK RECORDS A. Procedures and Guidelines 73. In response to the gap filling measures in the SDR of EPAP II, EEAA revised completely its EIA guidelines which were officially published in January 2009 as Guidelines of Principles and Procedures32 for Environment Impact Assessment. The major features of the revised guidelines33 include:  Clear criteria for categorization and illustrative lists for guidance for Categories “A”, “B”, and “C”. In addition to the criteria of the nature of the project in terms of types of inputs, outputs energy and resources consumption. One additional criterion was added which is related to the screening into the three levels of severity of the project namely highest, medium and lowest severity. These are fully explained in the EIA guidelines.  A definition of special cases of projects, projects in sensitive areas or belonging to a larger development or expansion.  The requirements that Category “C” projects be prepared by independent consultants or firms, and that the name of consultants should also be included in projects for Category “B” projects, as well as their role.  An Executive Summary for Category “C” project is mandatory and should be made available to stakeholders before disclosure and public consultation. 30 Some examples are herein provided: El Ahram Evening Newspaper,March 12, 2012 related to the polyethylene project, El Goumhouria Newspaper, December 12.2010 on the fourth line of the Underground metro, El Shourouk, Newspaper, on the environmental rehabilitation of Kima 31 www.croplife.org 32 http://www.eeaa.gov.eg/arabic/main/guides/English_EIA_guidelines.pdf 33 Y. Sherif , EIA Review of EPAPII Sub-projects within the Context of Piloting of the World Bank Use of Country System, Environics, December 2010 37  Additional details in the project description including quantification of environmental aspects.  A detailed analysis of the baseline with provision of physical, biological and social characteristics.  An in-depth analysis of environmental and social impacts is required for projects in Categories “B” and “C”, and an in-depth analysis is required for cumulative impacts for Category “C” projects.  The analysis of alternatives is mandatory and is required for Category “B” and “C” projects and should be part of the consultation process.  A detailed description of the Environment Management Plan (EMP) which consists now of a mitigation plan, a monitoring plan and institutional needs for EMP implementation for the facility, as well as the cost estimated for EMP implementation.  Detailed procedures that should be followed for the scoping consultation and EIA consultation of Category “C” projects. The announcement of public consultation on the draft EIA should be made 15 days before the meeting and the EIA summary should be made available during the meeting.  The Executive Summary for Category “C” project would be available to all stakeholders, and after the EIA approval the Executive Summary will be posted in the EEAA website. B. Assessment of the Application of the EIA guidelines of 2009 74. A rapid assessment was conducted on the extent of the application of these guidelines, using also a sample of EIA reports and Form B. The results were as follows: (a) The quality of the EIA reports for Category “C” projects has substantially improved and the contents follow the outline set forth in these guidelines. The quality also depends on the experience, skills and familiarity of national consulting / international firms with the EIA standards procedures such as the World Bank, the EC and EIB. For projects financed by international organizations (such as the World Bank Cairo Airport Project), the EIB/AfD financed study on Phase III of Cairo Metro line 34 include detailed analysis of the impacts, scoping phase, and detailed descriptions of the Environment and Social Management Plan (EMSP) . Also involuntary resettlement policy of EIB was used and applied in the case of the Metro Line. Also, for projects that are not financed by International Financing Institutions such as the EIA report prepared35 on behalf of the Industrial Power Group for the construction and operation of an integrated Hazardous Waste Management Facility in the 10th of Ramadan City as well as the EIA report on the Marsa Allam Airport36 are very comprehensive, and fulfill all the requirements of the EIA guidelines with the exception of providing cost for the EMP and the public disclosure of the EIA summary. All the EIA reports which were examined, included a section on the public consultation and provided a detailed record the issues raised and responses provided. (b) In accordance with the guidelines, public hearing on Category “C” projects have systematically taken place for more than 30 projects37 in 2010 improving therefore the participation of the stakeholders in the EIA process. 34 Environment Quality International 35 EcoConServ, January 2009 36 Egyptian Consulting Group June 2011 37 EEAA Annual Report 2010 38 (c) The contents of the Form B of projects in Category “B” and not financed by EPAP II are not always consistent with the EIA guidelines of January 2009 and more specifically with respect to the impact analysis, costs related to the EMPs and preparation of EMP and disclosure of these forms. For example, Form B for the Production38 of 30000 Magnesuim Oxide Sheets by the Egyptian –Saudi Dar Company for Trading and Marketing lack an adequate project description and impact analysis. Similarly Form B for the Exploration well in West Kalabsha in the Western Desert provides a good description of the mitigating measures with no cost associated with these measures39. The Form B for the EPAP II financed projects were revised including the EMP to conform to the January 2009 guidelines. These forms were also disclosed in the MSEA website40. The major reason is that the EIA department did not disclose all the Form B or the Executive Summary due to the fact that human resources and time were limited and a system of disclosure for all these projects had yet to be established. (d) The EIA review process has still some deficiencies: i. There are no standard TORs to enable proponents to prepare for the scoping as well as for the EIA reports in all the sectors. The EIA Department has prepared sector guidelines, but not specific TORs for the following sectors: power, cement, fertilizers, textile, petrochemicals, land reclamation, ports and harbors, wastewater, industrial cities, medical products, urban development and land reclamation. These sector guidelines are available on the website of the Ministry (http://www.eeaa.gov.eg). No specific guidelines or TORs were prepared for hazardous waste and specifically for POPs including PCBs; ii. EIA reviewers review the projects based on their field of specialization, personal experience and judgment. Standard TOR for the reviewers to conduct the review and checklist or methodology for the review of the EIA report is not yet available; iii. The certification of the national consultants for conducting environmental services as required by law #9 of 2009 was initiated but not completed. Meanwhile, the EIA department continues to rely on a request made by the former Minister of State for Environmental Affairs to contract the services of selected national universities and their centers to review the EIA for the sectors of infrastructure and Industry only. The reason for the selection of the universities is that they have a large pool of expertise in the specialization required in the EIA reports. Furthermore, in case an EIA report is rejected or is challenged by the proponent of the project, EEAA could call upon these universities to defend their review. The following universities were contracted in 2011 to review 91 projects in Category “C”: Cairo University, Ain-Shams University, Alexandria University, Suez Canal University and the National Research Center and the University of New Valley. The selection of these universities are based on the expertise required in the EIA and available in these institutes to review the EIA report in a particular field as well as the geographic location of the project itself (e.g., an EIA for an industrial project in Alexandria will be reviewed by Alexandria University). EEAA sends to these institutions a letter requesting them to review the EIA. The content of the reports prepared by these universities are technical and engineering in nature but does not follow any TOR. Subsequent to the review conducted by these universities and centers, the EIA department which include experienced staff in chemical engineering, energy, water and wastewater, and coastal zone management conducts also a review of the same EIA reports and would also provide additional comments which are all summarized in the 38 Energy Research Center , Cairo University, 2012 39 Environment and Petroleum Services Company, March 2012 40 http://www.eeaa.gov.eg/arabic/main/eia.asp 39 letter of approval/ disapproval that is signed by the EEAA Chief Executive Officer (CEO). EEAA remains responsible and accountable for the decision it reaches concerning approval/disapproval of the EIA reports. As part of the gap-filling measures, the EIA Department, in full collaboration with the PMU, will develop (a) the ESIA TOR for the PCBs and Obsolete Pesticides; (b) TOR for the review of the ESIA in case of outsourcing; (c) guidelines for the ESIA reviewers for assessing the ESIA reports; and, (d) training on developing TORs and on the ESIA review guidelines. (e) The follow-up, supervision and monitoring of the EIA reports, EMPs or Form B are still lagging. The EIA Department is required to monitor the implementation of the EMP during the construction phase and has established a one person office to coordinate the process. However, such follow-up is slow. The follow-up of the EMP during the operation phase (which should be followed by the General Directorate for Environmental Compliance) is still limited. 75. In summary: based on the above observations and on similar assessment that EPAP II carried out on application of the new EIA system in its projects41, the EIA guidelines of 2009 are not fully operational. Their application is in a transitional phase and will be gradually implemented. The acceptability assessment will highlight in its gap-filling sections the major requirements to be met in the Project to allow proper implementation of such system. C. EIA Procedures related to the POPs Project 76. As discussed in the equivalence assessment section, there are 18 specific sites of obsolete pesticides (OP) which are described in Annex 2 of the report and could be a candidate for the treatment and disposal. Based on the available data and the site visits conducted by the consulting firm Tauw42, the total amount of obsolete and POPs pesticides ranges between 2,250 and 4,600 tons. From this amount, the amount for POPs pesticides ranges from 250 to 1,500 tons. A POPs site can have one or more sources of contamination. For instance, a site can have a contaminated storage building with a stockpile of POPs pesticides, buried pesticides at the back of this storage building and a hotspot of spilled pesticides in front of an off/on loading platform. This is a site with multiple sources of contaminants. Each source requires a different approach of assessment and cleanup. The different categories of POPs sites are presented in Table 2 below. 77. The approach integrates different assessment tools for different site categories such as: the FAO Pesticides Stockpile Management System (PSMS) for the inventory of POPs pesticides stockpiles and the World Bank POPs toolkit for assessing soil and groundwater contaminated with POPs pesticides. Table 2: Site Characterization43 Categories of POPs sites Characterization of site category 1. Site with POPs POPs pesticides that can be reclaimed and repacked 2. Site with buried POPs POPs pesticides are buried in a pit 3. Site with contaminated Storage building, varying from completely closed to tumble buildings down, contaminated with POPs pesticides 41 Y. Sherif, EIA Review of EPAPII Sub-projects within the Context of Piloting of the World Bank Use of Country Systems, Environics, December 2010. 42 Tauw Final Report: Sustainable POPs Management Project: Project Preparation Studies, October 2011. 43 Ibid 40 Categories of POPs sites Characterization of site category 4. Site with hot spots in top soil Spilled POPs pesticides heavily contaminated the topsoil, the hotspot 5. Site with POP contaminated Spilled pesticides are dispersed in the soil and/ or groundwater soil and or groundwater 78. All these different site categories have specific characteristics and the strategy for the preliminary site assessment and site assessment must be adapted to the category. Also the used technique to clean up and remediate a site depends on the category of the site. It is mentioned that a site, where pesticides are/were handled¸ can consist of one or more of these categories. Each site category and phase needs a different approach and, if available, a set of specific tools. 79. Concerning the PCB-contaminated equipment, it was estimated that there are a minimum of 7,000 transformers containing more than 8,400 tons of PCB contaminated oil (>50ppm). In addition, a widespread dispersion of diluted PCB contaminated oil with concentration <50ppm is also available. The inventory data showed however significant discrepancies and lack of reporting on where the figures have originated or what percentage of coverage they represent44. There are, however, 200 tons of PCB contaminated-equipment with a concentration more than 500-5000ppm, which will be treated by MEDPOL. There are also 3 storage centers belonging to MEE namely one storage center in Shoubra El Kheima, in Qalyoubieh governorate and two storage center centers in El Nasr City (Cairo Governorate) – one of which is for the maintenance of the transformers. There is also a storage area in El Tebbin which includes about 20 tons of pure PCBs (concentration of more than 5000 ppm) belonging to the Ministry of Industry. The sampling and testing of oil were not comprehensive, representative and cross-contamination was not considered. For verification, extended sampling and testing is required. Data on the situation in the private sector are lacking. It is concluded that the available inventory data are by far insufficient to develop a PCB clean-up campaign. During project implementation, a detailed survey will be conducted in Component 2 of the project, on the sites agreed upon with the Ministry of Electricity and Energy and the Ministry of Trade and Industry. 80. Nevertheless, none of the POPs sites were subject to an environmental assessment. In accordance with Annex 6 of the national EIA guidelines of 2009, pesticides manufacturing and formulation plants as well as plants engaged in pesticides packaging and mixing processes as well as hazardous wastes treatment or disposal facilities such as PCBs are placed in Category “C” – thereby requiring an environmental impact assessment. The following EIA procedures will be followed in agreement with the EIA department. (a) Soon after effectiveness, the PMU will issue for each of the components of Obsolete Pesticides (OPs) and PCBs, a tender under a two stage International Competitive Bidding (ICB) procedure for contracting the services of an international operator to be responsible for survey of the sites containing PCB and OPs, the collection, transport, and temporary collection center and treatment of OPs and PCBs respectively45. The bidder will describe (a) the sites which include the OPs or PCBs; (b) the methods of collection; (c) the type of transport; (d) the type of the intermediate collection center (ICC) (if any); and, (e) the technologies to be used for the treatment and disposal of the POs and PCBs. 44 NIP (2005), the JICA report (2008), the CSD report (2010) 45 See the a description of the two stage bidding procedure in http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/PROJECTS/PROCUREMENT/0,,contentMDK:20062796~pa gePK:84269~piPK:84286~theSitePK:84266,00.html 41 (b) The operator which is the successful bidder will be required in its contract to prepare the ESIA on the basis of the survey of a group of sites that it will choose for treatment and disposal and the identification of the intermediate collection center if any after receiving approval from the steering committee and before starting the collection of the POs or PCBs. Each ESIA for a site or group of sites of OPs and PCBs, will include the preparation of the risk assessment and emergency plan in accordance with the EIA guidelines for Category “C” projects including consultation and disclosure. The ESIA will be approved by the EIA department of EEAA and the World Bank. D. Preliminary hazardous waste and risk assessment 81. During project preparation, a preliminary hazardous waste and risk assessment was conducted by the Consultant Tauw, on two potential sites that could be candidate by the operator for Intermediate Collection Center (ICC) for POPs. An ICC should provide safe and sound storage of the repacked POPs prior to their destruction. These two sites are: (a) The Nasreya Hazardous Waste Center (b) The El Saff Storage site of Obsolete Pesticides During the World Bank mission for the discussion and consultation on the SDR, which took place from June 10-14, 2012, it was determined that El Nasreya Hazardous Waste Center could be considered as a potential ICC subject to the review by the international operator which will be tasked with the responsibility of conducting ESIAs in accordance with the national regulations and following measures acceptable to the Bank. However, the El Saff storage site will not be considered as an ICC as the facility is situated within a densely populated area and could threaten the health of the local people and their livestock. In addition, this storage is closed and does not receive any more pesticides. However, the rehabilitation of the storage site (which will be financed under Component 3 of the project) will be limited to mitigating measures just to prevent further degradation, and as outlined below but will further be defined during project implementation after a detailed risk assessment will be undertaken. El Nasreya Hazardous Waste Center 82. NHCW is situated in Al Nasreya (between 50-60 kilometers south east of Burg El-Arab district, in the Alexandria Governorate). The Center includes a hazardous landfill with a capacity of 40,000 tons and a surface of 14,000 m2, a physical-chemical treatment plant for inorganic liquid hazardous waste, a solidification unit, and storage units for organic and inorganic wastes. Two small incinerators were recently installed and are used for now as a pilot operation for the disposal of solid organic hazardous wastes (primarily pharmaceutical wastes). The site is totally fenced off. Illegal housing and a mosque are situated outside the fence and along the road adjacent to the site. These were built after the establishment of the Center. Egyptian law forbids the displacement of any occupants and especially the displacement of a mosque. As stated in para 80 above, the operator will have a choice to select an ICC which may not be Nasreya Center. The Consultant report has recommended widening the road in case Nasreya will be selected as an ICC. Subsequent discussions with EEAA concluded that the project would not finance any extension or widening of roads. 83. A brief summary of the preliminary hazardous waste and risk assessment is provided in Annex 5 with recommendations of the appropriate mitigating measures required. The objective was 42 to assess the threat posed by the site to human health and the environment, to eliminate from further consideration those sites that pose no significant threat to public health or the environment; determine if there is any potential need for removal action; set priorities for further investigation; and gather existing data to facilitate later evaluation of the release. Such preliminary assessments are included in the Tauw Consultant report and will be shared with the bidders, but could be further elaborated during the preparation of detailed ESIA by the operator (s). 84. The PMU will also share with the operator an EIA report on the site selection of Inorganic Industrial Hazardous Waste Landfill for Alexandria, which was prepared in 2001 by the Institute of Graduate Studies and Research of Alexandria University using the EIA guidelines of 1996. The landfill facility was co-financed by the Government of Finland at a level of LE 20 million and is now operational. The report examined 6 sites and carried a detailed base line survey and impact analysis as well as developed the general mitigation and monitoring measures that were not site-specific. A public hearing was organized concerning the choice of the sites and the selection was made to construct the hazardous waste center in El Nasreya. The EIA report for the site selection was considered to be the EIA report for the NHWC. However, no specific Environment Management Plan (EMP) was prepared for this Center. Another EIA report was prepared in 2011 by the same Institute for the establishment of hazardous waste of mercury fluorescent lamps which is financed by the Korean Government. 85. The EIA report determined that the project will not have a negative impact of the environment although the report is silent on the cumulative impacts resulting from the hazardous landfill site and physical and chemical treatment plant. The EIA report prepared an EMP in which the monitoring plan did not include any cost as well a very general institutional plan. The EIA report requires that a social assessment be conducted on a yearly basis without providing any justification on the reason for undertaking such an assessment. The El Saff Storage Site of Obsolete Pesticides (OPs) 86. El Saff area lies in the eastern side of the River Nile, between El Saff town in the south and El-Tebbin in the north. It belongs to Gizah Governorate. The El Saff canal crosses the area of study, and has a length of about 52 km. The storage unit is located inside the granary (170 m x 90 m) of the Credit Development Bank, at a limited locality called Zerzarh. 87. The following corrective actions (among others to be identified during the full-scale health risk assessment) were recommended by Tauw: (a) POPs pesticides should be stored safely, preferably in dedicated areas away from other materials and wastes. (b) Storage sites should be re-designed to prevent the release of POPs to the environment by any route. (c) Some basic principles of safe storage of wastes consisting of, or contaminated with, POPs are as follows: i. Storage rooms, buildings and containers should be located and maintained in conditions that will minimize volatilization, including cool temperatures, reflective roofs and sidings, as well as the construction of a shaded location, etc. ii. A dedicated building and containers should be in good condition and made of hard plastic or metal, and with wood, fiberboard, drywall, plaster or insulation. iii. Storage sites should have fire alarm systems. iv. Liquid wastes should be placed in containment trays or a curbed, leak proof area. 43 v. Contaminated solids should be stored in sealed containers such as barrels or pails, steel waste containers or in specially constructed trays or containers. vi. A complete inventory of wastes in the storage site should be undertaken and kept up to date as waste is added or disposed of. vii. The outside of the storage site should be labeled as a hazard. viii. The site should be subjected to routine inspection for leaks, degradation of container materials, vandalism, integrity of fire alarms and fire suppression systems as well as general status of the site. ix. Emergency response plans should be in place for all POPs in use, in storage, and in transport. E. Existing Guidelines on Hazardous Waste 88. EEAA has developed a series of guidelines in English and Arabic with the assistance of USAID-financed Egypt Environmental Policy Program (EEPP). They include guidelines on hazardous waste systems, licensing requirements, permitting and regulations, classification and coding, on site storage and handling, transportation treatment and disposal, and recycling. These guidelines were developed to comply with the Law 4 of 1994. Now that Law 4 was amended with Law 9 of 2009 and the executive regulations of 2009 are in force, these guidelines should be updated and replaced by specific guidelines to be developed for obsolete pesticides and PCBs and based on the (a) the World Bank Pollution Prevention and Abatement Handbook46 as required in the national EIA guidelines of 2009, (b) The World Bank Pest Management Tools and Methods47 for Integrated Pest Management as well as the IFC health and Safety guidelines48 on pesticides. Also, the Environment Management Tool Kit for obsolete pesticides prepared by the FAO49 would provide the necessary guidelines for the selection, management of collection centres as well as the rapid environment assessment and the transport requirement for obsolete pesticides. On the other hand, the training manual50 for the preparation of the National Plan for PCB contaminated-equipment, could serve as an important guide for developing the sector guidelines and TORs for PCB disposal and treatment. F. Environmental Approvals 89. An environmental permit for construction is not explicitly regulated by Law 4 of 199451. A letter of approval for Form B or Form A is considered by the licensing authority as an environmental permit for construction. 90. The approval letter has no specific time validity and such permit is always valid but, can be rescinded only if the operator does not proceed with construction within time limits fixed in the license. 46 www.miga.org/documents/PesticidesFormulation.pdf - 2006-01-10 47 http://go.worldbank.org/AE4NQV7FA0, and http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/TOPICS/EXTARD/EXTPESTMGMT/0,,contentMDK:20634165~menuP K:1608601~pagePK:64168445~piPK:64168309~theSitePK:584320,00.html 48 http://search.worldbank.org/all?qterm=IFC+health+and+Safety+Guidelines&intitle=&as_sitesearch=&as_filetype=&os=1 00 49 FAO Pesticides Disposal Series 50 Training Manual for the preparation of a national Environmentally Sound Management plan for PCBs and PCB-contaminated equipment in the framework of the implementation of the Basel Convention March 2003 51 Industrial Pollution Control Policies in Egypt, EcoConCerv.DHV, and FCG, July 2010 44 91. Law 4, however, explicitly concerns the permit to operate. It states that “All industries that need an operation permit under Law 21 of 1958 (on industry organization and promotion) or the Law 55 of 1977 (concerning the installation and operation of thermal machines and boilers) need to apply for an environmental license and have to carry out an Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) prior to operation or modification.” The environmental license to operate is in fact the same letter of approval that EEEA issues after the EIA or Form B is approved. Such a letter consists of: (a) general statement requesting that the proponent comply with the content of Form B without specifying the mitigating and monitoring measures that are included in the ESMP and (b) specific requirements related to compliance with standards and appropriate installation to control pollution. G. Compliance Monitoring 92. The Central Department for Environmental Inspection & Environmental Compliance (CDEIEC), the EIA Department of EEAA, and the relevant RBO are collectively responsible for monitoring the compliance on the EIA reports or Form B. The General Directorate for Environmental Compliance (GDEC) is responsible for reviewing, and following-up on compliance actions plans (CAP) (see Paragraph 97 below), whereas the General Directorate for Environmental Inspection (GDEI) is responsible for inspecting polluting enterprises, reviewing and verifying the environmental register, imposing fines and taking non-compliant industries to court. CDEIEC has been supported in terms of capacity building by several donors’ projects, such as the Egyptian Environmental Policy Program (EEPP), EPAP I, and EPAP II. CDEIEC has also published guidelines for an environment register, as well as guidelines52 for hazardous waste, medical waste (autoclaving and incineration). In the same context, EPAP II has prepared a very comprehensive hazardous waste inspection manual in English and Arabic and has provided on the job training to CDEIEC and the RBOs on the use of this inspection manual. It is expected that during project implementation, the PCB and OP manual will be based on the inspection manual as well as on the FAO, World Bank and IFC guidelines as stated above. 93. To facilitate the process of monitoring the EIA Department, at the end of each year, the CDEIEC and RBOs will be provided with a list of new establishments for which letters of approval for EIA reports or Forms B have been provided. Such a list will enable the GDEI and the respective RBO to prepare their compliance and inspection plans. Furthermore, copies of EEAA letters of approval will be routinely shared with the Competent Administrative Authorities (CAA) as well with the national press to improve disclosure to other interested parties. 94. Essentially, the CDEIEC and particularly GDEI will take the lead and coordinates with others to prevent any redundancy or duplication with the RBOs. The GDEI sets inspection policies and is responsible for inspection planning, coordination, and has the authority to inspect any industrial establishments in Egypt – with or without being accompanied by the relevant RBO. GDEI is usually mobilized for large polluters or in response to a major public outcry about environmental violations, mostly from large industries which may be publicly owned and operated. 95. Annual and quarterly inspection plans are prepared by the CDEIEC. Annual inspection plans are also prepared at the RBO and sent to CDEIEC for review, modification, and approval so as to maximize synergy and avoid duplications. 96. There are three monitoring instruments for environmental inspections: (a) online monitoring; (b) self-monitoring; and (c) the compliance action plan (CAP): 52 http://www.eeaa.gov.eg/arabic/main/inspection.asp 45 (a) An online monitoring system in real-time was established in 2006 in the cement industry53. Dust emissions from 16 cement companies are being continuously monitored at an interval of 30 minutes as these companies contribute to a large share of dust emissions especially in Greater Cairo. The online monitoring has been effective in enabling the cement companies to comply with the national standards and to improve their performance. An online monitoring system was also planned to be installed in 2010 in the fertilizer production facilities, however, such a system has yet to be implemented and is likely to be delayed as a result of the post-revolution circumstances that slowed down the production and working conditions in these industries. EEAA also plans to introduce online monitoring in the power sector, and studies were also initiated for this purpose. (b) Self-Monitoring is required under Law 4 of 1994 and reiterated in Law 9 of 2009. The instrument for self-monitoring is the environmental register that should be prepared by each establishment and kept for at least 10 years, as stipulated by Article 22 (1) of Law 9 of 2009. The format and content54 of the environmental register were revised in the Annex 3 of the Executive Regulations of 2009 so as to include also a requirement for a yearly estimation of pollution loads for air, drainage and waste (see Annex 8). During periodic inspection, the GDEI reviews the environmental register and in case of lack of compliance and/or false reporting by the establishment, EEAA could take the following actions55: i. In case the violation represents an imminent danger to the population, EEAA requests the Governor or the Competent Administrative Authority (CAA) to close the establishment until the imminent danger is removed. ii. In case the violation is not an imminent danger, but requires more time to be rectified, the polluting enterprise requests, and is usually granted another sixty days to achieve compliance. In case the violation still persists after re-inspection, EEAA can file a suit for compensation damage, close the unit that is polluting or close the establishment. EEAA also sends the file to the prosecutor general for a legal verdict. In accordance with the administrative law, any of the two parties could require reconciliation before the prosecutor general would pursue the court case. iii. In case the polluting enterprise agrees to the reconciliation, the proponent pays a fine and is asked by the CDEEC to prepare a compliance action plan for depollution over a period of time (CAP, see below) which is negotiated between the two parties and is formally approved. Once approved, the court case is suspended and the CAP is monitored regularly by CDEEC. In case of non-compliance with the plan, the court case is resumed and a verdict is pronounced by a judge. (c) The Compliance Action Plan (CAP) was piloted in EPAP I, made fully operational in EPAP II and now extended to polluting enterprises that are breaching Article 22 (1) of Law 9 of 2009. The CAP is considered by EEAA as an alternative for legal procedures and heavy fines for enterprises that show commitment to control pollution in their establishments. EPAP II has developed detailed CAP guidelines56 that were used for the 24 sub-projects that under implementation. In addition, 82 CAPs were prepared and approved in 201057 by GDEC for enterprises that are not financed by EPAP II. 97. There are still some deficiencies regarding the environmental register and the CAPs: 53 MSEA Report , 2007, p. 42-45). 54 http://www.eeaa.gov.eg/arabic/main/inspection.asp 55 Industrial Pollution Control Policies in Egypt, EcoConCerv.DHV, and FCG, July 2010 56 S. Massoud: Practical Compliance Action Plan Guidelines, EPAP II 57 MSEA Annual Report of 2010: www.eeaa.gov.eg 46 (a) The environmental register does not include yet an estimate of the pollution loads as required now in Law 9 of 2009, because EEAA did not establish the methodology for estimating the carrying capacity over an air shed as required by the law and the revised executive regulations of 2009 do not contain a table of permissible values of loads and qualitative loads of pollutants to the productive units in different industries. (b) The content of the CAP used by EPAP II is different from the one required by GDEC. The CAP is more elaborate in EPAP II. It provides a description of the project, an estimate of emissions and technologies, as well as a plan of investments with detailed schedule. The CAP prepared by polluting enterprises (other than those financed under EPAP II) is limited to a table which reflects the necessary investments with the technology used, their costs, and a detailed implementation schedule. Such difference between the content of the two CAPs is expected since the CAP is financed from EPAP II funds and is a requirement for the polluting enterprise to obtain a combination of loan and grant to control pollution58. On the other hand, the CAP requested by GDEC is self- financed by the polluting enterprise and therefore is limited to the preparation of a table as the environment register completes the CAP content in terms of project description and emissions measurements. These are also issues related to expertise and sufficient resources for each polluting establishment to prepare a CAP that is costly especially for heavy industries. (c) At present, an installation or enterprise that manufactures, stores, packages, or imports pesticides does not report the amount of POPs in the environmental register. Also transformers or capacitors contaminated with PCBs are also not reported during inspection. As a gap-filling measure, it was agreed that the environmental register will include reporting on POPs and PCBs after that the CDEIEC staff received from the Project appropriate training. The environmental register will be prepared by the respective establishment that would benefit from the POPs project, on the basis of the risk assessment report that will be financed under Component 3 of the project. The PMU will ensure that such an establishment prepare its environmental register and will submit it for GDEC approval as a requirement for financing the treatment and disposal of POPs on their sites. H. Track Record of Inspections 98. Table 3 summarizes the number of inspections conducted by CDEEC and the RBO during the year of 2010. Fines from environmental violations are also presented in Table 4 and amounted to L.E. 45.6 million (US$ 7.8 million) for 2010. These fines are included as revenues in the Environmental Protection Fund’s budget. Table 3: The Number of Inspections carried out by the GDEI and the RBOs during 201059 58 EPAP II provides for each qualified polluting enterprise. through the National Bank of Egypt a loan in the amount of 80% of the pollution control investments and 20% grant on condition that EEAA certify that the polluting enterprise has installed the equipment and reduced pollution to acceptable levels 59 EPAP II Aide Memoire, January 2011 47 Items RBOs Central Inspection Unit 1/1/10 -31/12/10 1/1/10-31/12/10 Inspected establishments 2981 1315 Complying establishments 576 326 Requests to comply 141 18 Requests for 60 days grace - - period Referred for possible 1914 971 prosecution Establishments for which 151 - court decision was issued* 99. In addition the fines collected from industrial facilities and other sources during the year 2010 amounted to L.E. 45.6 million (US$7.8 million equivalent) and were deposited in the Environmental Protection Fund (EPF) account by the end of 2010 as presented in Table 4. Table 4: Fines collected and deposited in EPF account by the end of 201060 Month Collected Fines, LE Month Collected Fines, LE January 26,934,529 July 1,816,865 February 4,010,306 August 2,797,313 March 1,208,775 September 951,584 April 979,266 October 907,635 May 2,023,662 November 1,376,653 June 1,504,294 December 1,116,946 Total 45,627,828 . I. Local Mechanism for Redressing Grievances 100. A positive and unprecedented aspect of the Environment Protection Law 4 of 1994 is that it allows any citizen and/or any organization to report and challenge at court any violator of this law including sector ministries and governorates. In the case of EIA reviews, the revised environmental regulations have established the following appeal system: The project proponent has the right to 60 EEAA legal department 48 appeal in writing on the results of the EIA61 within 30 days from the date of notification. A Permanent Review Committee is established by decree from the Minister in Charge of Environmental Affairs and consists of a Counselor from the State Council, an EEAA representative, a representative from the Competent Administrative Authority (CAA), three independent experts to be nominated by the CEO of EEAA and a representative of the proponent. The proponent submits all the necessary technical and legal documents to the Committee for their review. The Permanent Review Committee is convened by the CEO of EEAA, within 15 days62 of receipt of all the documents from the proponent who is allowed to attend the meeting, but will not have the right to vote. A decision is reached by a simple majority among committee members. The decision reached by the Committee is final. In case the decision is further challenged by the proponent, it is referred to the administrative court for a verdict VII. Strength and Weaknesses of the Institutional Arrangements. A. Strengths 101. New Expectations after the Revolution. Since the last preparation of the Safeguards Diagnostic Review for EPAP II, there has been substantial change in the socio-economic conditions of Egypt as a result of its Revolution in January 2011 which has shaken Egyptian society to its deepest roots. Even before the revolution, there has been also substantial improvement of the legislation by enacting Law 9 of 2009 to amend Law 4 of 1994, establishing new Executive Regulations, providing substantive modifications in EIA guidelines and reorganizing and expanding new departments (in particular, strengthening the monitoring and enforcement functions). 102. Above all, the call for democracy, equity and justice ranks high among the virtues of Egyptian society. What was hidden before by the old regime in terms of poor environmental conditions, poor health and lack of hygiene is being surfaced in the press, and the media and shown on TV and could not be tolerated once the socio-economic situation will improve. The role of civil society is becoming vibrant and influential. The media and the press have been more forceful for pressing the Government to improve the environmental conditions of Egypt’s citizens and especially for the poor and disadvantaged. NGOs are now more listened to by the Government and are being active in the field. Public opinion is now beginning to influence the policy formulation process and to help create a significant responsible behavioral change towards the environment. One major outcome is that despite the Government tight economic situation, the Ministry of Planning and International Cooperation has agreed to allocate counterpart funds for co-financing the POPs project in the amount of US$ 15.0 million over 5 years stressing the need to address the impacts generated by hazardous chemicals and wastes. 103. Revamping of the EIA regulations. The environmental Laws 4 and 9 and their executive regulations are considered above all other laws regarding the environmental aspects, and therefore provide some transparency on how establishments should implement the regulations63. Law 9 of 2009 has now given the responsibility to EEAA to regulate emission loads in addition to emission concentrations, therefore aiming a policy to control and reduce pollution for each establishment (Article 5). It also requires that national consultants providing environmental services be certified (Article 13, 1). It requires that an EIA be prepared prior to commencement of implementation of the project (Article 19, 1); emphasize the need for every establishment to maintain an environmental register reflecting the pollution loads (Article 22, 1); prohibit the burning of municipal waste and solid waste (Article 37, 2); and requires that any polluter compensate for the environmental damage 61 Law 4/1994: Article 21 and Article 14 of the Executive Regulations (ERs). 62 Law 4/1994: Article 21 and Articles 15, 16 of the ERs 63 Industrial Pollution Control in Egypt, Environment Strengthening of the EEAA to improve its environmental policies formulation and environment management capabilities, EcoConServ, DHV and Finish Consulting Group, November 2009, 49 (Article 1, Section 28, 1). Similarly, the Executive Regulations of Law 9 provided additional requirements for the EIA. The screening of projects is more transparent with the expansion of the positive lists with thresholds. Forms A and B were revised and expanded; the EMP consists of three components with cost associated for mitigating, monitoring and institutional measures; public hearing is mandatory for projects in Category “C” requiring an EIA report; and disclosure of Form B and the Executive Summary on the website of the Ministry is also required. All modifications have contributed to the improvement of the effectiveness of the EIA system. This led to an increase of applications from proponent to seek approval of Form B or the EIA report as a permit to obtain a license from the CAA to construct and operate. 104. The expansion/reorganization of the EEAA Departments is one of the indications that the Ministry of State of the Environment is committed to the improvement of the environment. The Central Inspection Department has been reorganized into a Sector Department with specific functions and responsibilities whereas it consists of two General Directorates. The EEAA has also established a new Sector Department for the Protection and Improvement of Industrial Environmental and Energy to support the industry in improving their environmental performance on a voluntary basis. These two departments were understaffed. Now they are functional and working. Furthermore, there has been a constructive coordination between the three sector departments namely environment management, industrial environment and environmental inspection and environmental compliance on agreeing on projects that would be eligible for EPAP II or PPSI financing. Such coordination is expected to be replicated in the POPs projects as the three departments will be involved in project implementation. 105. Establishment of Environment Units in Sector Ministries. The sector ministries that will be participating in the POPs project have a unit on environment management issues as well as the technical expertise to address the hazardous issues within their competencies. The POPs project will enable them to improve their technical and management capacity in the field of PCB management or obsolete pesticides in a coordinated manner. The RBOs have also been strengthened with provision of technical assistance and support. Their numbers have increased from 8 to 11, covering all the 26 governorates of Egypt, and three of the RBOs (Cairo, Alexandria and Suez) will be strengthened through technical assistance and training on technologies for handling and disposing POPs as well on monitoring and enforcement. B. Weaknesses 106. Despite the improvement in the legal and institutional framework, there are a number of challenges that should be addressed. Although they cannot all be resolved through the POPs project, there is a clear indication that the decision makers are fully aware of them, but would like to resolve them on a gradual basis, taking into consideration the current post revolution economic and social constraints prevailing in Egypt. (a) Lack of knowledge. The results of the preliminary stakeholder analysis64 carried out during the preparation of the project showed a lack of technical knowledge on POPs and PCB, a weak technical and managerial capacity to solve the problems of PCB and POPs due to the lack of experience and insufficient training, and a weak enforcement of the law. Groups at risk are not protected. Component 2 of the project will include a program to raise awareness and strengthen its position in political decision making in Egypt in order to convince stakeholders that there is an urgent need to solve POPs problems and implement the Stockholm Convention. 64 Tauw Group, October 2011 50 (b) Limited Staff. One of the major constraints is the lack of staff related to the Directorate General for EIA, and the Directorate General for Hazardous Waste and Substances. Both directorates are severely understaffed and are working in under duress. The EIA department lacks computer facilities to process their work. The EIA reports and Form B are processed manually and are still stored in a storage room and on shelves without any retrieval system. Although the EIA department requires an electronic copy, there is no database or electronic filing system of all these documents. Also, the substances and hazardous waste general directorate staff is limited to 5 technical staff and cannot implement all the requirements of the Stockholm Convention. Together with the sector ministries (health, agriculture, industry and petroleum) they lack training on the secure storage of pesticides, developing and implementing sustainable strategies for future pesticides management, workshops with the basics of sound PCB management, development of knowledge, increased awareness of stakeholders and management of the requirements of the Stockholm, Rotterdam and Basel Conventions. A comprehensive training program (both technical and managerial) is included in Component 2 of the Project. It includes sound management of PCB and pesticides, secure storage of pesticides, best environment practice and best available technology for treatment and disposal of POPs and PCBs. (c) Limited Inter-Ministerial Cooperation. Given the number of ministries that are involved in the POPs projects, the relation of these ministries is complex and unclear. A stakeholder analysis was conducted during the preparation of the project and it was determined that the multitude of responsibilities necessitates a high degree of inter-agency coordination and cooperation65 for effective management of this project; yet, with the exception of the Agriculture Pesticide Committee, few formal mechanisms for such coordination exists. (d) In order to strengthen such collaboration, the overall project coordination would be the responsibility of the GEF National Steering Committee (GNSC), which was established some years ago to oversee all GEF projects in Egypt. For the purposes of the project, the GNSC would be strengthened by the addition of policy makers from the cooperating ministries, as well as the National Project Director and Project Manager. The GNSC would meet quarterly to review project progress, approve annual work programs and budgets, and to resolve any inter-ministerial disputes. A sub-committee of the GNSC, the POPs Project Sub-Committee (PPSC), would also be formed. It would be chaired by the National Project Director and would have working level representatives of the Cooperating Ministries, the Project Director and Project Manager. The PPSC would meet monthly to oversee day-to-day project implementation matters and, approve the selection of the sub-projects and oversee the implementation of the different project components. At the operational level, there will be a Project Management Unit (PMU) at EEAA and two Project Coordination Units (PMU) one at the Ministry of Agriculture and Land Reclamation and the other at the Ministry of Electricity and Energy. The PMUs will work together for the selection, design and implementation of the sub-projects that will be financed. They will also receive training and capacity building in their respective fields. (e) Insufficient Public Participation and Awareness Raising on POPs and PCBs. These have not been given sufficient attention by the government with the exception of the awareness activities implemented by a dedicated NGO, Day Hospital Institute for Development and Rehabilitation. Yet, public participation and involvement of the project affected people (principally the farmers and workers handling pesticides) are essential in every POPs project. Until now, EEAA does not have a communications strategy on hazardous waste, and its 65 Tauw Group, October 2011 51 impacts on health to convince and strengthen its position in political decision making in Egypt in order to convince stakeholders that there is an urgent need to solve POPs problems. Stakeholder participation and awareness raising are expected to increase at two levels: at the level of the EIA system as all sub-projects to be selected will be subject to an EIA for which public consultation and disclosure are required by the national EIA system; and at the level of the implementation of components as the Project will assist in developing a long-term Pesticide Management Strategy using a participatory approach which, inter alia, will include a communications strategy. The Project will also finance a dedicated sub-component on Public Awareness and Participation with the objective to develop and maintain a system for informing stakeholders of the nature and dangers of POPs (and other hazardous substances), and for inviting public participation in decision-making related to such substances. (f) Shortcomings in monitoring and enforcement. Despite the significant improvement in monitoring and enforcement since the last SDR of 2005, there are still weaknesses inherent into the system itself. This is no specific or written strategy on environmental compliance and enforcement. PCBs and POPs are not being inspected, though a private sector trader was sentenced for 5 years in jail because he was transporting PCB-contaminated oil from the fertilizer plant Kima in Aswan to be sold in the market66. The preparation of annual inspection plans appears in some instances random and based on certain aspects such as risks from large industries, complaints from citizens, magnitude of violation from large industries67. The POPs Project will replicate the system of coordination successfully implemented in EPAP II whereby the PMU of EPAP II meet regularly with the cooperation between GDEIEC, the EIA Department to plan ahead the preparation and review of the EIA as well as the inspection and compliance activities. EPAP II subprojects classified as Category “B” projects requiring the preparation of form B. EPAP II staff are fully familiar with the content of CAP which have similar requirements as Category “C” projects. The PMU will certainly benefit from the experience of EPAP II staff in meeting the requirements of the national EIA system in Egypt. Furthermore, the hazardous waste management strategy that will be developed during the project will include specific actions for reinforcing the application of the law regarding hazardous waste and in particular the OPs and PCBs. VIII. GAP-FILLING MEASURES AGREED WITH EEAA TO ACHIEVE THE EQUIVALENCE AND ACCEPTABILITY 107. The following actions will be taken by EEAA to fill in the gaps and sustain the equivalence and acceptability during the implementation of the POPs Project: Gaps Actions to be taken Implementation Steps By Whom By When Weak coordination 1. Include in the Operational - Description in the -PMU April 2014 among EEAA Manual of the Project a description Operational Manual of the Manager/ departments involved in of the roles, responsibilities, roles and responsibilities of Consultant POPs coordinating mechanism, the PMU, Environmental monitoring and follow up for Management Department, establishing an inter-sectoral system CDEIEC and others related to within EEAA for coordinating the the EIA process and the EIA process with the compliance / inspection of compliance/inspection process Obsolete Pesticides and PCBs 66 CDEI private communication, May 2012 67 Industrial Pollution Control in Egypt, Environment Strengthening of the EEAA to improve its environmental policies formulation and environment management capabilities, EcoConServ, DHV and Finish Consulting Group, November 2009 52 - Official decree issued by EEAA on the roles, June 2014 responsibilities and -PMU coordination mechanisms Manager; CEO of EEAA Insufficient Compliance 2. Complete the legal and regulatory - Prepare TORs for a PMU May 2014 with the requirements frame work for POPs management comprehensive study to Manager of the Stockholm in compliance with the Stockholm harmonize existing POPs- Conventions Convention related legislation with . requirements of the Stockholm Convention as described in Annex 15 to this SDR - Contract a legal consultant December - Draft legal regulations for 2015 submissions to the Legal Council of the Government Lack of procedural 3. Develop general EIA procedural - Review good international -PMU June 2014 guidelines for POP guidelines to include: (a) specific Practices including FAO and projects criteria, processes and standards to WHO be followed in the preparation and - Adapt sector guidelines to -PMU July 2014 review of EIA for POPs sub- Egyptian conditions on projects;(b) detailed TOR for a pesticides, obsolete pesticides comprehensive EIA report for POPs and PCB-contaminated including hazardous risk assessment equipment October and (c) guidelines for environmental - Prepare TORs for POPs and EIA 2014 reviewers checklist for reviewing EIA Department reports in general in EEAA - Approve and publish the September guidelines, TORs and checklist EEAA Board 2014 on the website of EEAA of Directors Insufficient knowledge 4. Develop and provide training to - Design training program and - PMU October of POPs and PCBs and the EEAA staff, RBOs, sector develop training materials 2014 contract management ministries and NGOs on the use and - Organize and conduct training -PMU applications of (a) the specific on TOR and monitoring and Bi annually guidelines and EIA TORs for POPs enforcement for EEAA staff and as of March including PCBs; (b) self- monitoring RBO and in particular the staff 2015 and inspection of POPs sites that will be assigned to monitor including PCB-contaminated sites. the EMSP and Forms B Organize awareness campaigns - Organize and conduct public EEAA with local NGOs targeting the awareness campaigns in Department Annually as public and particularly the Youth- collaboration with local NGOs of Hazardous of June Develop and provide training to involved in the POPs Waste 2015 PMU on monitoring and supervision - Organize and conduct training Management of contracts of PCBs operators on contract management and award as well as monitoring PMU January and supervision of contracts 2015 Weak enforcement for 5. Ensure that existing obsolete -Update the content of the -PMU April 2015 PCBs pesticides and PCB contaminated environmental register by sites maintain an environment including questions on OPs register to be inspected annually and PCBs by CDEIEC using the format in - Conduct semiannual RBO and July 2015 Annex 3 of the Executive inspections based on the EIA GDEI and Regulations of Law 9 of 2009 and the environmental register semiannually for the major collection center thereafter 53 sites for which EIAs and Form B were prepared Lack of assessment of 6. Carry out every two years, a - TORs for the review of the PMU May 2015 the quality of the ESIA review of the quality of EIA reports EIA reports prepared and reports and Forms B and introduce consultant selected July 2015, corrective measures for sustaining - Report on the quality of the PMU and the improved EIA process EIA reports and Form B January 2017 IX. MONITORING AND REPORTING 108. As part of its reporting to the World Bank, the PMU will prepare the following report to be incorporated as appropriate in the annual progress report of the Project with a focus on the following key elements: (a) Implementation status of the above gap-filling measures; (b) Progress made in the implementation of the environment and social management plan to be part of Form ‘B’ for sites considered to be Intermediate Collection Centers of Obsolete Pesticides and PCBs; (c) Status report on: i. Disclosure of EIA summary reports and Forms ‘B’ to be prepared for Intermediate Collection Centers of obsolete pesticides and PCBs. ii. Environment registers for Intermediate Collection Centers of Obsolete Pesticides and PCBs. iii. Number of inspections carried out by CDEIEC on hazardous waste projects. (d) The reports on quality of the EIA reports and Forms B pertaining to hazardous waste projects and in particular those related to pesticides and PCBs. X. ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES OF EEAA AND THE WORLD BANK 109. EEAA will be responsible for the following actions: (a) Satisfactory implementation of gap filling actions set out above to achieve and sustain equivalency and acceptability; (b) Review and approval of the EIA reports related to the Intermediate Collection Centers and Form B for site specific areas for treatment and disposal of Obsolete Pesticides and PCBs; (c) Disclosure of the Executive Summary of the EIA reports related to hazardous waste projects and in particular those related to Obsolete Pesticides and PCBs; and (d) Performance of annual spot checks and audits of a sample subprojects financed the POPs project for their compliance with the relevant Egyptian Laws and Regulations, and with 54 health and safety of the workers and the residents living nearby the storage sites and imposition of corrective actions to achieve compliance. 110. The World Bank is responsible for the following actions: (a) Monitor the implementation of the gap filling measures that are applicable to the types of subprojects financed under the POPs project; (b) Review during the first 18 months of project implementation the EIA reports and Form B related to obsolete pesticides and PCBs; (c) Review the reports on inspection or compliance for all the subprojects to be financed by the Project; (d) Bi-annual supervision of project implementation, including field visits to subprojects under construction or commissioning or those completed; and (e) Agreement on remedial actions to be taken by EEAA to achieve compliance and sustain equivalence and acceptability of Egyptian EIA system for the Project. XI. PUBLIC CONSULTATION AND DISCLOSURE 111. A public consultation meeting was held on June 13, 2012 and attended by 64 representatives from ministries (Environment, Energy and Electricity, Industry, International Cooperation), research institutes and universities, 3 media representatives as well as 16 NGOs. The workshop was conducted in Arabic. The meeting was chaired by the acting Chief Executive Officer of the Egyptian Environment Affairs Agency (EEAA). A list of attendees is attached in Annex 5. Relevant section Issues Raised Remarks /Responses in the SDR The first draft of the SDR was already posted on the EEAA Additional time is required to review the website. A two week period 1 The SDR report report. will be further provided to communicate the remarks electronically. The GEF budget of US$ 8.1 million includes a technical The project budget will be totally assistance component of about Use of allocated to technical assistance and no 2 US$ 2.2 million (about 10 Consultants funds would be provided for treatment percent of the project cost) and and disposal of POPs. the balance will be for training, treatment, and disposal of PCBs The major differences were: (i) on the analysis of alternatives What are the major difference between which, for the Egyptian system, 3 Equivalence the Egyptian EIA system and the Bank is limited to site and technical environment assessment policy? alternatives, instead of alternatives on inputs, outputs, 55 demand and cost effectiveness; (ii) the content of the Environment and Social Management Plan which, under the national EIA system, weighs heavily toward the environment impacts and not social impacts; and, ( iii) a lack of disclosure of the executive summary as required in the national EIA guidelines of 2009 The report does not include the Ministry The revised report will include of Manpower as one of the ministries the Ministry of Manpower. The Inclusion of involved in work safety and in role and responsibilities of the 4 Ministry of occupational health related to POPs and Ministry of Health, particularly Manpower PCBs. Also the presentation did not the role of the General mention the role of the Ministry of Directorate of Occupational Health. Health. In anticipation of the participation in the Best efforts will be made to POPs project, the Ministry of Electricity Storage issues of complete the appraisal of the and Energy issued a circular prohibiting PCB- project before August 2012 and all power plants and substations to contaminated oil consideration will be given for 5 dispose of the used oil contaminated at the Ministry of revising the time schedule of with PCBs. This has created a serious Electricity and implementation to address the storage problem that can only be solved Energy storage issue during the first year unless the project implementation is expedited. The purchase of an incinerator El Saff storage of Proposal to purchase an incinerator for cannot be justified from 6 pesticides the disposal of the pesticides in El Saff. technical, financial, social and environmental points of view. The storage facility is already closed and the POPs project will There is little information on the amount, finance specific mitigating El Saff storage of 7 composition and types of pesticides and measures to prevent further pesticides such facility should be closed safely. deterioration of the stored materials and degradation of the site. As a result of the gap filling measures under the SDR for EPAP II, EEAA has institutionalized public hearings Consultations should be made in public for projects classified as category places to enable the citizens to provide Public C. During the acceptability 8 their comments, in view of the new Consultation assessment, the World Bank spirit of partnership, especially after the th team verified that some revolution of January 25 , 2011 consultations take place in public places such as for the third phase of the metro line, public hearings took place in a mosque and at an 56 engineering club. Consultations will also take place on the ESIA in public places (to the extent possible) for any subprojects under the POPs Management Project. The first component of the Enforcement of the law is weak, as project will include training and district attorneys and judges are not special reference will be made in 9 Enforcement trained on environmental law and it the project document that such would be preferable to have outside training would also involve expertise to evaluate such cases. judges and lawyers. The steering committee of the Follow up on A tripartite committee composed of project will include a 10 enforcement and EEAA, an NGO and the operator will be representative of the NGOs to compliance established to follow up on the project. follow up on the project. The gap filing measure No. 4 related to the development and provision of training and proposed the following The Project will develop under modifications : (i) participation of the Component 1 the enhancement NGOs in the training programs organized of national capacity, which by the project; (ii) organization of public includes training and awareness Gap filling awareness campaigns by provision of campaigns, and that Component 11 measures materials, brochures and equipment 2 will develop a long-term related to pesticides and other hazardous pesticide management strategy, substances; (iii) target the youth in the which will take into account the awareness campaigns in schools; (iv) NGOs’ proposed ideas. strengthening the NGOs network involved in hazardous waste and pesticides. 57 ANNEXES Annex 1: Detailed Description of the Project Components Background The Project Development Objective is to demonstrate the improved management and disposal of targeted POPs stockpiles and PCBs in an environmentally sound manner. POPs are chemical substances that persist in the environment, bio-accumulate through the food web, and pose a risk of causing adverse effects to human health and the environment. They are considered highly toxic, causing birth defects as well as potential damage to the immune, respiratory, and reproductive systems. Women and children are noted to be especially vulnerable. Twelve POPs -- known as the “Dirty Dozen” -- include nine pesticides (DDT being the best known), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs)68 as well as dioxins and furans (D/Fs).69 And as POPs can be transported through the environment to regions where they have never been used or produced, the international community has called for urgent global action. The Stockholm Convention (SC) is the United Nations treaty negotiated to eliminate POPs. Under the Convention, countries commit to reduce and / or eliminate the production, use, and / or release of the 12 POPs. The Government of Egypt (GOE) ratified the Stockholm Convention for controlling the emissions of POPs in May 2002 and has drafted its National Implementation Plan (NIP) in accordance with the provisions of the Convention. The NIP was submitted to the Stockholm Convention on March 16, 2006.70 Egypt’s POPs priorities, as outlined in the NIP, include: (1) the management and environmentally sound disposal of PCBs and obsolete pesticides; (2) action plans to address unintentional releases of D/Fs, (3) institutional and regulatory strengthening measures as well as (4) awareness building and stakeholder involvement activities. To help achieve such goals, the Egyptian Environmental Affairs Agency (EEAA) requested the Bank prepare a GEF project that would focus on the following critical areas: - Institutional and regulatory strengthening measures for POPs management - Management of obsolete pesticide stocks - Sound management and disposal of PCBs Based on this request, the Bank prepared a Project Identification Form (PIF), which was approved by the GEF Council in June 2009 and included in GEF’s work program. A GEF Project Preparation Grant (PPG) was issued and used to upgrade inventories, compare technical options for POPs management and disposal, propose institutional strengthening measures and develop project cost estimates. This Project Preparation Study was completed in October 2011. The current database for the proposed project is relatively extensive, especially for pesticides. An initial PCB inventory was completed in and around Cairo by the Japanese International Cooperation Agency (JICA). An initial evaluation showed that dioxin and furan emissions are high, particularly from industries in the region around Cairo, as well as from the open burning of waste in uncontrolled landfills and hospital waste incineration activities. More recently, in 2009, the Bank, through 68 PCBs were developed for their low conductivity and volatility and high thermal stability and were widely used as dielectrics in power transformers and capacitors, as well as for other industrial purposes. 69 Dioxins and furans (D/Fs) are also referred to as Unintentional POPs (UPOPs). D/Fs are byproducts, oftentimes generated from the production of herbicides, pesticides and paper – amongst other activities. D/Fs can also be produced when certain products are burned. 70 Between May 2009 and May 2011, the Stockholm Convention added ten additional chemicals (referred to as “new POPs) to the orig inal twelve, which include pesticides, industrial chemicals and by-products. 58 financing from a Canadian trust fund, prepared an inventory, which built upon the previous work and prepared a more detailed and complete inventory. The proposed Project Design includes components to support the environmentally-safe management and disposal of POPs; policy and legal development; capacity building as well as technical components related to project management. For pesticides and PCBs, the project design is aimed at substantially reducing the incidence of such chemicals, as well as demonstrating sound techniques for future POPs management and disposal; for dioxins and furans, project work is limited to enabling activities (i.e. development of a national strategy and action plan; associated legislation and regulations for improving inventories, managing emissions from selected industries, and monitoring D/F levels in food and feed). A detailed description of Project Components can be found in the following section. Component 1: Management of Obsolete Pesticide Stocks (GEF allocation: US$ 2.69 million) (totaling US$ 10.21 million, including GOE: US$ 7.52 million) Activities under this Component will directly support the PDO in the inventorization, storage and destruction of high risk stocks of pesticides, and will provide hands-on experience and expertise for sustainable management of wastes and thereby build long-term capacity of EEAA and MALR staff. This component has the following two sub-components. Sub-component 1.1: Destruction of High-Risk Stocks and Storage of Pesticides: Of the total 2,250 to 4,600 tons of obsolete pesticides stockpile, it is estimated that up-to 1,500 tons are POPs pesticides and up to 3,100 tons are other obsolete pesticides. Of these, about 1,000 tons are currently stored in unsafe and unsound conditions. This subcomponent will support demonstration projects for disposal of 700 tons of identified stocks of POPs and other high-risk obsolete pesticides. Additionally it will support the safeguarding of about 2,000 tons for storage for future disposal, as and when funds become available. Based on a detailed risk assessment undertaken during the project preparation study, it has been determined that the disposal of the stockpiles at Al-Adabeya port and El-Saff comprise the highest risk and will be financed under this sub-component. The sub-component will finance the re- packaging and export to an international disposal facility. Details of these 2 sites are provided below: a. The Al-Adabeya port storage facility was built in 1975 and dedicated for the storage of dry bulk. It is estimated that about 220 tons of Lindane, a POPs pesticide, has been stored at the port since 1998. The Lindane is packed in 25 kg plastic bags supported by a heavy paper outer wrapping and stored in 10 standard containers. The activity for disposal of the stockpiles at Al-Adabeya Port will commence immediately upon Board approval of the project. b. The El Saff storage facility has about 444 tons of pesticides, which comprises of 6.5 tons of POPs (including 3.9 tons of DDT (Dichlorodiphenyl trichloroethane), 1.9 tons of Lindane). The site has been in use for many years and shows clear signs of spillage of chemicals and leakage, from corroded or otherwise damaged and/or overturned containers. Over the years, the neighborhood has become more populated and the site is surrounded by dense residential areas at a distance less than 100 m. Additionally, the storage site also contains a granary of food stocks next to the these obsolete stockpiles. 59 The sub-component will finance preliminary site assessments with stockpiles during Year 1, supplemented by assessments of Egypt’s seven pesticide factories and a random sample of the approximately 12,000 pesticide traders for any stored products. All data collected will be included in the POPs Inventory and Tracking System (Component 3) and a detailed list of priority POPs pesticides stockpiles would be maintained. Sites rated as high or medium risk will be subjected to more detailed site assessments and the development of action plans. While each existing stockpile storage site will be examined as a potential secure storage facility, it is probable that none may be found suitable, for environmental and/or social reasons. In such a case, a new suitable site or sites71, located far away from habitation will be identified by MALR. If found suitable from environmental and social aspects, this sub-component will finance the construction of a storage facility and the re-packaged pesticides moved there and safeguarded in accordance with best international practice. This activity will be undertaken in year 3. The MALR’s Central Agricultural Pesticides Laboratory will have a small but important backup role under the project, mainly to identify any unlabeled products uncovered and to analyze soil samples. The laboratory is reasonably well equipped as it does routine testing for the registration of agricultural chemicals; however the sub-component will finance minor technical upgrading, as needed. Subcomponent 1.2: Development of an Inventory and Pesticides Management Strategy: A long-term Pesticide Management Strategy will be developed, based on regional and international best practices and will include proposed legal and regulatory changes, institutional needs and staff development. Although the Safeguards Diagnostic Report (detailed in Annex 6) found that the existing strategies, policy statements, laws and regulations for pesticides management are generally satisfactory, this sub-component will review the effectiveness of existing laws and regional and international best practice72 with respect to obsolete pesticides to prevent future accumulation of such stocks. The FAO Environmental Management Toolkit for Obsolete Pesticides and related guidelines will be reviewed and adapted for use in Egypt and used as a manual for training staff. An inventory of existing known stockpiles will be maintained, with information compiled in sub- component 1.1. Component 2: Management of PCBs GEF:US$ 3.12 million (totaling US$ 9.93 million, including GOE: US$ 6.81 million) Activities under this Component will directly support the PDO in the management of PCBs and PCB related equipment, and will provide hands-on experience and expertise and thereby contribute to building long-term capacity of EEAA and MOEE/EEHC staff. This component will be managed by MOEE/EEHC and has two sub-components. Sub-Component 2.1: Inventories and Sampling Egypt has about 20,000 – 40,000 transformers contaminated by PCBs at a level above 50 parts per million (ppm), which is the ultimate threshold specified in Annex A of the Stockholm Convention and needs to be targeted for immediate action by Party countries. Egypt has received funds under a parallel GEF project, MEDPOL, which will target and dispose high-concentration PCBs. The SPMP 71 The PPS suggests that two SSFs would be needed to avoid excessive travel distances; however, this assumption needs to be reviewed for cost-effectiveness. 72 FAO ’International Code of Conduct on the Distribution and Use of Pesticides is a principal requirement 60 therefore focuses on decontaminating/dechlorinating low-concentration stocks of PCBs. The cut-off for this project has been taken as 50ppm, as required by the Stockholm Convention, until such time that Egypt establishes its own national threshold based on international standards. EEHC will be responsible for the sampling activity, starting with off-line equipment, then the on-line sub-station equipment and finally the distribution transformers. Transformers above the 50 ppm cutoff will be taken out of service and sent/stored for decontamination (Component 2.2). Instruments for sampling to measure the level of PCBs, chemicals, computers and vehicles will be financed under the project. It is expected that more than 90,000 transformers will be tested over the project period. This sub-component will also support a technical study on the costs and benefits of technical options for PCB elimination and recycling of oils and other materials will further inform better decision-making and guide the detailed project planning. EEHC will identify five sites (at existing EEHC sub-stations/repair shops) as potential Collection Centers (CCs) for PCBs. If these are found to be suitable with regard to environmental and social requirements, the project will finance the construction of specially-equipped buildings for temporary storage and decontamination of contaminated transformers. The project will also support risk assessments for all transformer repair shops and any suspected sites of PCB spills or leakage. Training and action plans to prevent further cross-contamination will be developed. Routine testing of transformer oils will be done by EEHC staff using the test kits to be procured under the project. Laboratory support might be needed for samples exceeding the upper limit of the test kit (2,000 ppm) and for soil testing. For such cases, the MALR’s Central Laboratory for Residue Analysis of Pesticides and Heavy Metals in Foods73 could have a backup role under the project. As this laboratory routinely does testing for trace contaminants, it is generally well equipped but a small allowance has been made under the project for any upgrading needs for this project. Alternatively, EEAA’s laboratory, which has gas chromatography capacity, would handle such analyses. Sub-Component 2.2 Decontamination of Transformer Oils Dechlorination of PCB contaminated oil is often a cost-effective local solution where there is sufficient volume of contaminated oil, as is the case in Egypt. The project will support the procurement of appropriate technology that is cost-effective for EEHC - which could include a dechlorination unit and a Fuller’s Earth facility of suitable size to purify the oil for re -use. In Years 2 through 5 of the project, EEHC would use its decontamination equipment to process as many as feasible of the identified contaminated transformers and to recycle oils and other materials74. It will be ensured that the equipment to be procured can be utilized and/or retrofitted to address concentrations below 50 ppm, or upto the national threshold when established. During the course of the project, an estimated 1,000 tons of PCB-contaminated oil would be targeted at a minimum. Remaining decontamination needs after project closing would be continued with GOE funding and the staff trained under the project. Component 3: Institutional and Regulatory Strengthening and Project Management: GEF US$ 2.29 million (totaling US$ 3.46 million, including GOE US$ 1.17 million) 73 Different to the laboratory mentioned in Para. 15 but both are under MALR’s Agricultural Research Center, which will manage Component 1 of the project. 74 The potential proceeds from such sales have not yet been estimated but would partly offset the cost of this component. 61 Subcomponent 3.1: Institutional and Regulatory Strengthening GOE’s current legal and regulatory framework for hazardous wastes in general and POPs in particular will be reviewed to identify potential gaps in the Egyptian system. Guidelines consistent with regional and international good practices will be developed and adopted. This is to be done through a phased program for strengthening hazardous wastes management at EEAA and the cooperating ministries - Ministry of Agriculture and Land Reclamation (MALR) and Ministry of Electricity and Energy (MOEE) for long term POPs management. A Capacity Development Plan for POPs Management for each ministry / agency will be developed by the end of the first project year. The sub-component will assess the existence and/or requirement of country specific standards such as remedial target values for contaminants in soil, groundwater, sludge and surface water based on risk. This will allow selection of remedial strategies to be based on risk reduction, the environmental merits and on cost, underscored by a legal basis. Particular attention will be given to developing effective enforcement mechanisms along with review of intra- and inter-agency coordination mechanisms and strengthening measures. The sub-component will also support the design and delivery of a comprehensive training program for EEAA and the cooperating ministries in the areas of POPs management and associated hazardous wastes and hazardous substances management. An anlytical roadmap for continued and long-term monitoring of decontaminated PCB equipment and sites will be developed. The sub-component will also support the development and implementation of a public awareness strategy for informing stakeholders of the nature and dangers of POPs (and other hazardous substances), as well as the planned project activities, and for inviting public participation in decision- making. Mechanisms will be developed for ensuring stakeholder participation in all project activities. Subcomponent 3.2: Establish and Maintain a Project Management Unit (PMU): As the national Executing Agency for the project, EEAA will be principally responsible for project implementation and a Project Management Unit (PMU) has been established to supervise project implementation. A senior manager in the waste management division of EEAA has been selected as the National Project Director and will report directly to the Chief Executive Officer of EEAA on project matters. The National Project Director will be supported by a Project Manager and fiduciary, administrative and procurement and technical staff and consultants. A POPs Project Steering Committee (PPSC) will be formed to guide project implementation and maintain inter-ministerial cooperation. It would be chaired by the CEO of EEAA and include representatives of EEAA and other Cooperating ministries, in particular MALR and MOEE/EEHC. The GEF National Steering Committee (GNSC) will provide oversight and will integrate policymakers from the MALR, MOEE, MTI and other Ministries and agencies relevant to the overall GEF program in Egypt. This sub-component will support EEAA in enhancing the existing system of inventorying and tracking hazardous substances and POPs (from generation to ultimate disposal) to a comprehensive one based on regional and international best practice examples. Attention will be given to making available the necessary monitoring and data processing equipment, software, staffing and training and also addressing the needs for sustaining the system after project closure and will examine the feasibility of expanding the system to a full-fledged Pollutant Release and Transfer Register for hazardous and other wastes. The PMU will develop a system for monitoring project performance indicators (including needs for field monitoring and data processing). Staff in EEAA and the Cooperating Ministries will be trained to produce data needed for quarterly project reporting. 62 Project Cost Table GEF GOE % Project cost Project Components Financing Financing Financing (US$ Mil) 1. Management of Obsolete Pesticides 2.69 7.52 43.3 10.21 2. Management of PCBs 3.12 6.81 42.1 9.93 3. Institutional and Regulatory 2.29 1.17 14.7 3.46 Strengthening and Project Management Total Project Costs 8.10 15.5 100 23.6 Front-End Fees Total Financing Required Annex 2: Sites of Obsolete Pesticides that are candidates for the project Tonnes Total Tonnes POPs* # Location OPs* tonnes Assumptions** Min Max Min Max Min Max 1 ICC El-Saff, Giza*** Information CSD report is 6 480 344 444 350 924 used for the minimum quantities 2 Petroleum institute Nasr city, 149 149 149 149 Information CSD report Cairo 3 MIWR 6-7 sites 60 70 60 70 Information CSD report 4 El Behira – Damanhour 1 1 1 1 Information CSD report 5 Dammeitta – Dammeitta 4 4 4 4 Information CSD report 6 MoA Bathim, Giza 30-40 kg/dr 3 5 3 5 0 -200 drum um 7 Agricultural bank of Credit and Information CSD report 1,032 1,032 1,032 1,032 Development, Cairo 8 Noueba Port, South Sinai, near 7 1 140 Ton Sharm-El-Sheik 12 140 12 140 containers container nes 20 tonnes 9 Suez, Adabaya Port*** >6 220 220 220 220 containers 10 Alexandria Port 12 1container 240 Ton 120 120 120 120 240 240 containers 20 tonnes nes 6 6 containers containers POPs OPs Pesticides factories 11 Kafr El-Zayat factory (Gharbia - To estimate the quantities of POPs 0 100 0 100 0 200 Kafr El-Zayat) still present at these 7 factories the 63 factory management should be consulted 12 El-Nasr Co. (Abo-Rawash - 6th From information gathered by one 0 100 0 100 0 200 of October, Giza of our local team expert Dr. Saad 13 Framchem (Abo Rawash,6th of and Dr. Zidan it is concluded that October, Giza) these factories don not probably 0 100 0 100 0 200 retain any obsolete pesticides stocks 14 El-Watanya Company 0 100 0 100 0 200 Because as mentioned in table 5.2 15 El- Helb (Domyata Governarate) our experiences teaches that (former) production sites almost always include hotspots of highly contaminated soil or contaminated 0 100 0 100 0 200 material, we have included in the estimate of the maximum an average of 100 tonnes of POPs and 100 tonnes of OPs 16 Adwia Company, Al Abour, 0 100 0 100 0 200 Cairo 17 Oil and Chemicals Company, 0 100 0 100 0 200 Hawamdia, Giza 18 12,000 traders 0 0 300 600 300 600 Because POPs are banned since 19 Private 1996 is assumed that all stocks of 0 0 0 0 0 0 POPs are long sold and used but there could be still remains of OPs Total 363 1,667 2,009 3,119 2,371 4,786 Roundup total 260 1,700 2,000 3,100 2,400 4,800 64 65 Annex 3: Equivalence Analyses Summary Matrix on Environmental Assessment Bank Policy (OP Government of Egypt’s Equivalent Requirements 4.00) Requirements System improvements that Objectives and Operational would be undertaken by the (Objective and Principles as stated in GOE’s Egypt’s corresponding laws, Gaps and differences between OP Government of Egypt during corresponding laws, rules, rules, regulations, procedures, 4.00 and GOE’s requirements. Operational implementation of the project Principles) regulations, procedures, and and sectoral guidelines. activities sectoral guidelines. Law No. 4 of 1994, Prime Minister’s Decree No. 338 of 1995 The expressed long-term objective of Issuing the Executive Regulations Law 4 of 1994 and its further of the Environment Law amendments is to ensure sustainable promulgated by Law 4-1994 and economic development that meets the Guidelines and procedural Objective: To help present needs without compromising guidelines for Egyptian No gaps ensure the future generations’ ability to meet Environmental Impact Assessment, environmental and their own needs. issued by EEAA (December 2009 Social impacts were not specifically social soundness and and enforced since July 1, 2009). mentioned in Law No. 4 of 1994. Ensure that Sectoral Guidelines sustainability of EIA is defined as in important However, for its implementation, for EIA for POPs hazardous investment projects. instrument to that end an constitute a Beside the above, Egypt has other EEAA has adopted Guidelines with waste storage sites include To support integration tool in the integrated environmental relevant sectoral laws of interest mandatory procedural and sectoral reference to assessment of social of environmental and management approach. The purpose that contribute to the reinforcement guidelines75 and some of them impacts. social aspects of of EIA is to ensure the protection of EIA including but not limited to include socio-economic and cultural projects into the and conservation of the environment Law No.102 of 1983 on Protected issues. decision- making and natural resources, including Areas, Law No.124 of 1983 on process. human health and safety aspects, Fisheries and Aquatic Life, Law against uncontrolled development. No. 53 of 1966 on Agriculture, Law No. 48 of 1982 on Protection of the Nile Against Pollution, and the Law No. 117 of 1983 on Protection of Antiquities. 75 Sectoral guidelines provide examples on developing project-specific TORs for environmental assessment. 66 Bank Policy (OP Government of Egypt’s Equivalent Requirements 4.00) Requirements System improvements that Objectives and Operational would be undertaken by the (Objective and Principles as stated in GOE’s Egypt’s corresponding laws, Gaps and differences between OP Government of Egypt during corresponding laws, rules, rules, regulations, procedures, 4.00 and GOE’s requirements. Operational implementation of the project Principles) regulations, procedures, and and sectoral guidelines. activities sectoral guidelines. A screening process is in place and Operational consists of three categories: (a) Principles: projects that require the preparation of a full EIA (Category C - Black); 1. Use a screening (b) projects that require only a process for each summary description of the project, proposed project, as its impacts and appropriate Current guidelines for Projects early as possible, to mitigation measures (Category B - under Categories B and C do determine the Grey); (c) projects that do not By January 2012 EAA shall adopt mention the need to characterize appropriate extent and require an EIA (Category A - Procedural Guidelines including and take into account the existence type of environmental White). rules, processes and standards to or use of hazardous substances and assessment (EA) so be applied to EIA for POPs- chemicals in Projects in order to that appropriate EEAA reviews all Category C (Form Gap related subproject. EEAA shall classify them and decide on the studies are undertaken A) and B (Form B) projects for their develop specific detailed ToRs scope of the required EIA (Article proportional to potential impacts and determines the for the preparation of EIA 10 of the Executive Regulations and potential risks and to need for an EIA or a limited including hazardous risk 2006 Procedural Guidelines as direct, and, as environmental analysis. assessment and guidelines for revised in 2009 (page 14). relevant, indirect, reviewers of EIA. cumulative, and The screening forms to submit to associated impacts. EEAA, adopted in 2006 and revised Use sectoral or in 2009, include comprehensive regional requirements to assess potential environmental cumulative and associated impacts, assessment when use of regional and sectoral EAs and appropriate. specific information on cleaner production etc 67 Bank Policy (OP Government of Egypt’s Equivalent Requirements 4.00) Requirements System improvements that Objectives and Operational would be undertaken by the (Objective and Principles as stated in GOE’s Egypt’s corresponding laws, Gaps and differences between OP Government of Egypt during corresponding laws, rules, rules, regulations, procedures, 4.00 and GOE’s requirements. Operational implementation of the project Principles) regulations, procedures, and and sectoral guidelines. activities sectoral guidelines. Category B and C projects are required to assess impacts on human health, physical, biological, socio- Form B and sectoral guidelines. economic and physical cultural 2. Assess potential resources and transboundary emissions. Egypt is signatory to numerous impacts of the international conventions on proposed project on environmental matters related to physical, biological, Selection of sites for future Landfills biodiversity, wetlands, climate socio-economic and for hazardous wastes including POPs change etc., and Law 4, 2004 and physical cultural shall be subject to full EIA in its amendments mandate No significant gaps None resources, including compliance with the 2009 Guidelines compliance with international transboundary and on Principles and procedures for EIA conventions including those dealing global concerns, and which conforms with the with impacts of global concerns. potential impacts on requirements under this Operational human health and Principle. Sectoral guidelines mandate safety. compliance with relevant Safety measures are mandated by conventions. Article 57of the Regulations to the 1994 Law. 68 Bank Policy (OP Government of Egypt’s Equivalent Requirements 4.00) Requirements System improvements that Objectives and Operational would be undertaken by the (Objective and Principles as stated in GOE’s Egypt’s corresponding laws, Gaps and differences between OP Government of Egypt during corresponding laws, rules, rules, regulations, procedures, 4.00 and GOE’s requirements. Operational implementation of the project Principles) regulations, procedures, and and sectoral guidelines. activities sectoral guidelines. 3. Assess the Sectoral guidelines and generic adequacy of the See Principle Operational 1 above TORs for EIA prepared by EEAA There is no substantial inconsistency applicable legal and on Guidelines and ToRs for EIA oblige project developers to describe between the provisions of the institutional related to POPs-Subprojects and and assess the applicable legal and Convention of Stockholm and the framework, including institutional framework and comply applicable law in force in Egypt. Any applicable Mandatory sectoral guidelines and A study will be undertaken by with international conventions inconsistency will be filled through international sample TORs prepared by EEAA EEAA to assess the current legal ratified by Egypt. This assessment is the Guidelines and EIA on the environmental refer to applicable legal and and regulatory framework necessary to ensure the proposed conduct and content of the EIA and agreements, and regulatory frameworks including applicable to POPs and identify project will be in compliance with all definition of appropriate mitigation. confirm that they international conventions to which provisions to be adopted to update legal and regulatory requirements. Therefore this gap will not affect the provide that the Egypt is a party. the domestic legal framework and However, the legal framework Project activities. cooperating to further bring it to compliance applicable to POPs seems not to be government does not with international Conventions fully consistent with the finance project and agreement ratified by Egypt requirements of the Stockholm activities that would appropriate. Convention to which Egypt is Party contravene them. 69 Bank Policy (OP Government of Egypt’s Equivalent Requirements 4.00) Requirements System improvements that Objectives and Operational would be undertaken by the (Objective and Principles as stated in GOE’s Egypt’s corresponding laws, Gaps and differences between OP Government of Egypt during corresponding laws, rules, rules, regulations, procedures, 4.00 and GOE’s requirements. Operational implementation of the project Principles) regulations, procedures, and and sectoral guidelines. activities sectoral guidelines. 4. Provide for assessment of feasible investment, technical, and siting alternatives, including the “no action” alternative, The “no project” alternative must be 2009 Amendment to Law 4 of 1994 potential impacts, considered under the EIA for all feasibility of Category C and B projects. The other 2009 Guidelines on Principles and mitigating these points listed under principle 4 are No significant gaps Procedures for EIA impacts, their capital referred to in varying degrees of and recurrent costs, detail in the sectoral guidelines. Sectoral guidelines and sample their suitability under TORs prepared by EEAA. local conditions, and their institutional, training and monitoring requirements associated with them. 70 Bank Policy (OP Government of Egypt’s Equivalent Requirements 4.00) Requirements System improvements that Objectives and Operational would be undertaken by the (Objective and Principles as stated in GOE’s Egypt’s corresponding laws, Gaps and differences between OP Government of Egypt during corresponding laws, rules, rules, regulations, procedures, 4.00 and GOE’s requirements. Operational implementation of the project Principles) regulations, procedures, and and sectoral guidelines. activities sectoral guidelines. No reference to PPAH guidelines in the Law No. 4 of 1994 or in the complementary Executive Regulations. Emissions, wastewater discharge, However, EEAA in its regular noise and indoor air pollution practice refers to the PPAH and 5. Where applicable to standards are defined in the some other emissions standards the type of project Executive Regulations for Law No. 4 such as those enacted and applied being supported, of 1994. within EU. normally apply the Pollution Prevention The 2009 Guidelines for Principles Sectoral guidelines have been and Abatement and Procedures for EIA and various prepared by EEAA. Also, No gap None Handbook (PPAH). other instruments refers explicitly to monitoring is provided for under Justify deviations emission standards recognized and the EIA Guidelines, including when alternatives to applied by the EU and the US-EPA performance indicators to measures set forth in as reference to be followed in “demonstrate the sustainability of the PPAH are various sectors. the project.” Parameters and selected. indicators recommended to be included in the monitoring system include: (a) quality of water, (b) noise and air quality, (c) relevant health indicators, (d) waste management and (e) complaints received if any. 71 Bank Policy (OP Government of Egypt’s Equivalent Requirements 4.00) Requirements System improvements that Objectives and Operational would be undertaken by the (Objective and Principles as stated in GOE’s Egypt’s corresponding laws, Gaps and differences between OP Government of Egypt during corresponding laws, rules, rules, regulations, procedures, 4.00 and GOE’s requirements. Operational implementation of the project Principles) regulations, procedures, and and sectoral guidelines. activities sectoral guidelines. 6. Prevent and, where not possible to prevent, at least minimize, or compensate for The EIA emphasizes both positive adverse project and negative impacts with major impacts and enhance focus on the mitigating measures for positive impacts Review Sectoral Guidelines for addressing negative impact. through hazardous wastes storages, As mentioned under the environmental including POPs to ensure they Egyptian EIA procedural guidelines Moderate gap Operational principle 1 above, the management and require the proponent to provide a require the development of an EMP. Guidelines will be issued by planning that includes budget, staffing and monitoring However, no specific requirements January 2013 the proposed capacity to implement the EMP. are given in the guidelines for EMP mitigation measures, implementation arrangements such monitoring, as budget or the staffing of the institutional capacity implementing agency. development and training measures, an implementation schedule, and cost estimates. 72 Bank Policy (OP Government of Egypt’s Equivalent Requirements 4.00) Requirements System improvements that Objectives and Operational would be undertaken by the (Objective and Principles as stated in GOE’s Egypt’s corresponding laws, Gaps and differences between OP Government of Egypt during corresponding laws, rules, rules, regulations, procedures, 4.00 and GOE’s requirements. Operational implementation of the project Principles) regulations, procedures, and and sectoral guidelines. activities sectoral guidelines. 7. Involve stakeholders, including project- affected groups and local non- The environmental legislation governmental provides for NGOs to be represented organizations, as early in the Board of the EEAA and the as possible, in the sectoral guidelines and TORs for preparation process EIA require proponent to hold public and ensure that their 2009 Amendments to the Law 4, consultations with all interested views and concerns 1994 and the 2009 Guidelines for No significant gaps None and/or affected parties. The 2009 are made known to principles and procedures for EIA. Guidelines for principles and decision makers and procedures for EIA requires the taken into account. consultation process and outcome to Continue be fully documented as part of the consultations EIA Report. throughout project implementation as necessary to address EA-related issues that affect them. 73 Bank Policy (OP Government of Egypt’s Equivalent Requirements 4.00) Requirements System improvements that Objectives and Operational would be undertaken by the (Objective and Principles as stated in GOE’s Egypt’s corresponding laws, Gaps and differences between OP Government of Egypt during corresponding laws, rules, rules, regulations, procedures, 4.00 and GOE’s requirements. Operational implementation of the project Principles) regulations, procedures, and and sectoral guidelines. activities sectoral guidelines. 8. Use independent Although there is no explicit expertise in the reference to “Independent Advisory preparation of EA Panel” of experts in the Law 4 and It is a common practice to use where appropriate. its 1995 Implementing Decree, independent consultants and experts Use independent article 13 of said decree states that By December 2012, the to prepare EIAs. advisory panels EEAA may “resort to any experts Gap : EIA for Landfills processing, Implementation Manual of the during preparation whose names are included in a list to handling or storage facilities for project shall describe in details The EEAA uses the services of and implementation of be issued by the EEAA according to hazardous wastes including POPs the roles, mandates of each external experts to review EIA, projects that are the criteria set by the EEAA's Board does not include use of independent institution involved in EIA including international experts to highly risky or of Directors, so that such experts advisory panels review, compliance monitoring review EIAs for large and complex contentious or that may give their opinions on the and coordination mechanism. projects and to advise on the involve serious and assessment of the environmental clearance process. multi-dimensional impact of an establishment intended environmental and/or to be constructed and for which a social concerns. permit is being requested” 9. Provide measures to link the There is no such specific environmental requirement. However, sectoral EIA No significant gaps. assessment process guidelines require that proponent and findings with must provide analysis of alternatives None As decided under the EPAP II, this None. studies of economic, including the no-action alternative gap can easily be addressed by financial, institutional, and EEAA has the mandate to ensuring early conduct of EIA. social and technical review consistency of EIA and other analyses of a project design features. proposed project. 10. Provide for application of the Under Law No. 4 of 1994 and its principles in this table Executive Regulations, CAA and Not applicable as there is no FI to sub-projects under EEAA are required to screen and No significant gap None Category. investment and review all sub-projects for their financial intermediary potential impacts. activities. 74 Bank Policy (OP Government of Egypt’s Equivalent Requirements 4.00) Requirements System improvements that Objectives and Operational would be undertaken by the (Objective and Principles as stated in GOE’s Egypt’s corresponding laws, Gaps and differences between OP Government of Egypt during corresponding laws, rules, rules, regulations, procedures, 4.00 and GOE’s requirements. Operational implementation of the project Principles) regulations, procedures, and and sectoral guidelines. activities sectoral guidelines. 11. Disclose draft EA in a timely manner, EEAA is requiring since 2009 before appraisal mandatory disclosure in the EIA formally begins, in an procedural Guidelines and sectoral 2009 Manual on ‘Principles and accessible place and No significant gap guidelines that were already issued. Procedures for EIA’ in a form and EIA reports and Form B will be language disclosed. understandable to key stakeholders. 75 Summary Matrix on Pest Management Bank Policy (OP/BP 4.00) Requirements Egypt’s Equivalent Requirements Gaps and differences Remarks and System between OP/BP 4.00 and improvements to be Objectives and Operational Principles as Mauritius’ corresponding Egypt’s requirements undertaken by (Objective and Operational Principles) stated in Mauritius’ corresponding laws, laws, rules, regulations, Mauritius before rules, regulations, procedures procedures implementation of the project activities Egypt has a substantial amount of laws and regulations dealing with dangerous chemicals control and pesticides, administered respectively by the Ministry of Objective: To minimize and manage the Health and Populations, Ministry of Law 4-94 as amended to environmental and health risks associated Agriculture, Ministry of Industry, Ministry of date and numerous decrees There are no laws requiring with pesticide use and promote and support None Health and the EEAA This legal framework and regulations (see above IPM/IVM. safe, effective, and environmentally sound applies the “Integrated Pest Management” as note) pest management. first line of defense against risks associated with use of pesticides in agriculture. It complies with standards established by FAO/WHO, EU and US-EPA. Legal provisions to be added FAO/WHO Codex Operational Principles: Alimentarius, Vol 2.B Pesticides Residus. 2nd 1. Promote use of demand driven, Although there are no laws requiring IPM, in Edition Rome 2000 ecologically based biological or practice, this type of pest management is the disseminated in Egypt There are no laws requiring environmental pest management practices “first line of defense” adopted in Egypt and through the Ministry of IPM/IVM however, it is (Integrated Pest Management [IPM] in is being implemented consistently in various Agriculture and the now an established policy None agricultural projects and Integrated Vector sub-sectors of agriculture Ministry of Health. and practice to implement Management [IVM] in public health the IPM for all agriculture projects) and reduce reliance on synthetic In practice, pesticide management is a Ministry of Agriculture IPM sector. chemical pesticides. Include assessment of required component in the EA. program Implementation pest management issues, impacts and risks Manual (see Main in the EA process. Equivalence analysis Paragraph 23 Footnote 7 the analysis of this policy and practice) 76 Under applicable laws and regulations, it is required that any person who imports, exports, manufactures, sells, distributes or 2. Procure pesticides contingent on an otherwise handles, in the course of a business assessment of the nature and degree of activity, a dangerous chemical, shall ensure associated risks, taking into account the that the dangerous chemical marketed is proposed use and intended users. Do not provided with a safety data sheet when procure formulated products that are in delivered to a user. It includes pesticides in Resolution 3059 None WHO Classes IA and IB, or formulations of the definition of a “dangerous chemical.” products in Class II unless there are The laws and regulations also provide that no restrictions that are likely to deny use or person shall place on the local market a access to lay personnel and others without dangerous chemical which can be substituted training or proper equipment by a less harmful or less dangerous chemical. Products classified by WHO as highly hazardous are prohibited. According to applicable laws and regulations every person who imports, exports, manufactures, sells, stores, distributes or trades in any chemical substance shall ensure that the chemical substance is classified and labeled in accordance with the classification and labeling requirements specified in the 3. Follow the recommendations and Resolutions 3059. Furthermore, that minimum standards as described in the Resolution provides that no person shall United Nations Food and Agriculture import, export, manufacture, sell or distribute Organization (FAO) International Code of any dangerous chemical unless it is packaged Conduct on the Distribution and Use of in accordance with requirements set out in The Ministry of Agro Pesticides (Rome, 2003) and procure only See relevant Annexes in the Resolution. The Resolution states that Industry specifically refers None pesticides that are manufactured, labeled, Resolution 3059 where there are no national standard in force to FAO/WHO standards handled, stored, applied and disposed of for packing, containers and tanks, relevant according to acceptable standards as internationally recognized standards, described in FAO Pesticide Guidelines on recommendations or norms should be Storage, Labeling, and Disposal (Rome, referred to. Reference is made to US and EU 1985). standards. In practice, the Agriculture Ministry regularly monitors the pesticide residue levels in fresh vegetables and fruits produced locally. The maximum residue levels are within the WHO/FAO Codex Alimentarius 77 norms. No formal provisions in laws and regulations. However, within the Ministry of Agriculture, the offices in charge of extension are assisting agriculture producers No provisions in Egypt 4. Support policy reform and institutional and operators with advisory services Laws and Regulations, but capacity development to (a) enhance including training to ensure implementation policy documents and implementation of IPM- and IVM-based of IPM and decrease reliance on chemicals. programs in agriculture No gap in substance None pest management, and (b) regulate and IPM training programs are regularly refer to WHO, FAO, US- monitor the distribution and use of implemented; and EPA and EU standards as pesticides. Monitoring is done on regular basis on mandatory. pesticides residues in all agricultural products including fresh vegetables to ensure that WHO/FAO, US-EPA and EU standards are met. 5. Disclose draft mitigation plan in a timely Ministry of Industry’s website and Ministry manner, before appraisal formally begins, in of Agriculture’s website and other an accessible place and in a form and Government and non Governmental websites No provisions None language that are understandable to key disclose relevant information about pest stakeholders. management including IPM. Equivalence Analysis Summary Matrix on Environmental Assessment Bank Policy (OP Government of Egypt’s Equivalent Requirements Gaps and differences System improvements that would be undertaken 78 4.00) Requirements Objectives and Egypt’s corresponding laws, rules, between OP 4.00 and by the Government of Egypt during Operational Principles regulations, procedures, and sectoral GOE’s requirements. implementation of the project activities (Objective and as stated in GOE’s guidelines. Operational corresponding laws, Principles) rules, regulations, procedures, and sectoral guidelines. Objective: To help The expressed long- Law No. 4 of 1994, Prime Minister’s No gaps. Ensure that Sectoral Guidelines for EIA for POPs ensure the term objective of Law 4 Decree No. 338 of 1995 Issuing the hazardous waste torage sites include reference to environmental and of 1994 and its further Executive Regulations of the Social impacts were not assessment of social impacts. social soundness and amendments is to Environment Law promulgated by Law specifically mentioned in sustainability of ensure sustainable 4-1994 and the Guidelines and Law No. 4 of 1994. investment projects. economic development procedural guidelines for Egyptian However, for its To support that meets present needs Environmental Impact Assessment, implementation, EEAA has integration of without compromising issued by EEAA (December 2009 and adopted Guidelines with environmental and future generations’ enforced since July 1, 2009). mandatory procedural and social aspects of ability to meet their sectoral guidelines76 and projects into the own needs. Beside the above, Egypt has other some of them include decision- making relevant sectoral laws of interest that socio-economic and process. EIA is defined as an contribute to the reinforcement of EIA cultural issues. important instrument to including but not limited to Law that end and constitute a No.102 of 1983 on Protected Areas, tool in the integrated Law No.124 of 1983 on Fisheries and environmental Aquatic Life, Law No. 53 of 1966 on management approach. Agriculture, Law No. 48 of 1982 on The purpose of EIA is Protection of the Nile Against to ensure the protection Pollution, and the Law No. 117 of 1983 and conservation of the on Protection of Antiquities. environment and natural resources, including human health and safety aspects, against uncontrolled development. 76 Sectoral guidelines provide examples on developing project-specific TORs for environmental assessment. 79 Bank Policy (OP Government of Egypt’s Equivalent Requirements Gaps and differences System improvements that would be undertaken 4.00) Requirements between OP 4.00 and by the Government of Egypt during Objectives and Egypt’s corresponding laws, rules, GOE’s requirements. implementation of the project activities Operational Principles regulations, procedures, and sectoral (Objective and as stated in GOE’s guidelines. Operational corresponding laws, Principles) rules, regulations, procedures, and sectoral guidelines. Operational A screening process is Current guidelines for Projects under Gap. By January 2012 EAA shall adopt Procedural Principles: in place and consists of Categories B and C do mention the Guidelines including rules, processes and standards to three categories: (a) need to characterize and take into be applied to EIA for POPs-related subproject. EEAA 1. Use a screening projects that require the account the existence or use of shall develop specific detailed ToRs for the process for each preparation of a full hazardous substances and chemicals in preparation of EIA including hazardous risk proposed project, as EIA (Category C - Projects in order to classify them and assessment and guidelines for reviewers of EIA. early as possible, to Black); (b) projects that decide on the scope of the required EIA determine the require only a summary (Article 10 of the Executive appropriate extent description of the Regulations and 2006 Procedural and type of project, its impacts and Guidelines as revised in 2009 (page environmental appropriate mitigation 14). assessment (EA) so measures (Category B - that appropriate Grey); (c) projects that studies are do not require an EIA undertaken (Category A - White). proportional to potential risks and to EEAA reviews all direct, and, as Category C (Form A) relevant, indirect, and B (Form B) cumulative, and projects for their associated impacts. potential impacts and Use sectoral or determines the need for regional an EIA or a limited environmental environmental analysis. assessment when appropriate. The screening forms to submit to EEAA, adopted in 2006 and revised in 2009, include comprehensive requirements to assess potential cumulative and associated impacts, use of regional and 80 sectoral EAs and specific information on Bank Policy (OP Government of Egypt’s Equivalent Requirements Gaps and differences System improvements that would be undertaken 4.00) Requirements between OP 4.00 and by the Government of Egypt during Objectives and Egypt’s corresponding laws, rules, GOE’s requirements. implementation of the project activities Operational Principles regulations, procedures, and sectoral (Objective and as stated in GOE’s guidelines. Operational corresponding laws, Principles) rules, regulations, procedures, and sectoral guidelines. 2. Assess potential Category B and C Form B and sectoral guidelines. No significant gaps. None impacts of the projects are required to proposed project on assess impacts on Egypt is signatory to numerous physical, biological, human health, physical, international conventions on socio-economic and biological, socio- environmental matters related to physical cultural economic and physical biodiversity, wetlands, climate change resources, including cultural resources and etc., and Law 4, 2004 and its transboundary and transboundary amendments mandate compliance with global concerns, and emissions. international conventions including potential impacts on those those dealing with impacts of human health and Selection of sites for global concerns. safety. future Landfills for hazardous wastes Sectoral guidelines mandate including POPs shall be compliance with relevant conventions. subject to full EIA in compliance with the 2009 Guidelines on Principles and procedures for EIA which conforms with the requirements under this Operational Principle. Safety measures are mandated by Article 57of the Regulations to the 1994 Law. 81 Bank Policy (OP Government of Egypt’s Equivalent Requirements Gaps and differences System improvements that would be undertaken 4.00) Requirements between OP 4.00 and by the Government of Egypt during Objectives and Egypt’s corresponding laws, rules, GOE’s requirements. implementation of the project activities Operational Principles regulations, procedures, and sectoral (Objective and as stated in GOE’s guidelines. Operational corresponding laws, Principles) rules, regulations, procedures, and sectoral guidelines. 3. Assess the Sectoral guidelines and Mandatory sectoral guidelines and There is no substantial See Principle Operational 1 above on Guidelines and adequacy of the generic TORs for EIA sample TORs prepared by EEAA refer inconsistency between the ToRs for EIA related to POPs-Subprojects and applicable legal and prepared by EEAA to applicable legal and regulatory provisions of the institutional oblige project frameworks including international Convention of Stockholm A study will be undertaken by EEAA to assess the framework, including developers to describe conventions to which Egypt is a party. and the applicable law in current legal and regulatory framework applicable to applicable and assess the force in Egypt. Any POPs and identify provisions to be adopted to update international applicable legal and inconsistency will be filled the domestic legal framework and to further bring it to environmental institutional framework through the Guidelines and compliance with international Conventions and agreements, and and comply with EIA on the conduct and agreement ratified by Egypt appropriate. confirm that they international content of the EIA and provide that the conventions ratified by definition of appropriate cooperating Egypt. This assessment mitigation. Therefore this government does not is necessary to ensure gap will not affect the finance project the proposed project Project activities. activities that would will be in compliance contravene them. with all legal and regulatory requirements. However, the legal framework applicable to POPs seems not to be fully consistent with the requirements of the Stockholm Convention to which Egypt is Party 82 Bank Policy (OP Government of Egypt’s Equivalent Requirements Gaps and differences System improvements that would be undertaken 4.00) Requirements between OP 4.00 and by the Government of Egypt during Objectives and Egypt’s corresponding laws, rules, GOE’s requirements. implementation of the project activities Operational Principles regulations, procedures, and sectoral (Objective and as stated in GOE’s guidelines. Operational corresponding laws, Principles) rules, regulations, procedures, and sectoral guidelines. 4. Provide for The “no project” 2009 amendment to Law 4 of 1994 No significant gaps. assessment of alternative must be feasible investment, considered under the 2009 Guidelines on Principles and technical, and siting EIA for all Category C Procedures for EIA alternatives, and B projects. The including the “no other points listed under Sectoral guidelines and sample TORs action” alternative, principle 4 are referred prepared by EEAA. potential impacts, to in varying degrees of feasibility of detail in the sectoral mitigating these guidelines. impacts, their capital and recurrent costs, their suitability under local conditions, and their institutional, training and monitoring requirements associated with them. 83 Bank Policy (OP Government of Egypt’s Equivalent Requirements Gaps and differences System improvements that would be undertaken 4.00) Requirements between OP 4.00 and by the Government of Egypt during Objectives and Egypt’s corresponding laws, rules, GOE’s requirements. implementation of the project activities Operational Principles regulations, procedures, and sectoral (Objective and as stated in GOE’s guidelines. Operational corresponding laws, Principles) rules, regulations, procedures, and sectoral guidelines. 5. Where applicable Emissions, wastewater No reference to PPAH guidelines in the No gaps None. to the type of project discharge, noise and Law No. 4 of 1994 or in the being supported, indoor air pollution complementary Executive Regulations. normally apply the standards are defined in Pollution Prevention the Executive However, EEAA in its regular practice and Abatement Regulations for Law refers to the PPAH and some other Handbook (PPAH). No. 4 of 1994. emissions standards such as those Justify deviations enacted and applied within EU. when alternatives to The 2009 Guidelines measures set forth in for Principles and Sectoral guidelines have been prepared the PPAH are Procedures for EIA and by EEAA. Also, monitoring is provided selected. various other for under the EIA Guidelines, including instruments refer performance indicators to “demonstrate explicitly to emission the sustainability of the project.” standards recognized Parameters and indicators and applied by the EU recommended to be included in the and the US-EPA as monitoring system include: (a) quality reference to be followed of water, (b) noise and air quality, (c) in various sectors. relevant health indicators, (d) waste management and (e) complaints received if any. 84 Bank Policy (OP Government of Egypt’s Equivalent Requirements Gaps and differences System improvements that would be undertaken 4.00) Requirements between OP 4.00 and by the Government of Egypt during Objectives and Egypt’s corresponding laws, rules, GOE’s requirements. implementation of the project activities Operational Principles regulations, procedures, and sectoral (Objective and as stated in GOE’s guidelines. Operational corresponding laws, Principles) rules, regulations, procedures, and sectoral guidelines. 6. Prevent and, where The EIA emphasizes Review Sectoral Guidelines for Moderate gap. As mentioned under the Operational principle 1 not possible to both positive and hazardous wastes storages, including above, the Guidelines will be issued by January 2013 prevent, at least negative impacts with POPs to ensure they require the minimize, or major focus on the proponent to provide a budget, staffing compensate for mitigating measures for and monitoring capacity to implement adverse project addressing negative the EMP. impacts and enhance impact. positive impacts through Egyptian EIA environmental procedural guidelines management and require the development planning that of an EMP. However, includes the proposed no specific mitigation measures, requirements are given monitoring, in the guidelines for institutional capacity EMP implementation development and arrangements such as training measures, an budget or the staffing of implementation the implementing schedule, and cost agency. estimates. 85 Bank Policy (OP Government of Egypt’s Equivalent Requirements Gaps and differences System improvements that would be undertaken 4.00) Requirements between OP 4.00 and by the Government of Egypt during Objectives and Egypt’s corresponding laws, rules, GOE’s requirements. implementation of the project activities Operational Principles regulations, procedures, and sectoral (Objective and as stated in GOE’s guidelines. Operational corresponding laws, Principles) rules, regulations, procedures, and sectoral guidelines. 7. Involve The environmental 2009 Amendments to the Law 4, 1994 No significant gaps. None stakeholders, legislation provides for and the 2009 Guidelines for principles including project- NGOs to be represented and procedures for EIA. . affected groups and in the Board of the local non- EEAA and the sectoral governmental guidelines and TORs organizations, as for EIA require early as possible, in proponent to hold the preparation public consultations process and ensure with all interested that their views and and/or affected parties. concerns are made The 2009 Guidelines known to decision for principles and makers and taken procedures for EIA into account. requires the Continue consultation process consultations and outcome to be fully throughout project documented as part of implementation as the EIA Report. necessary to address EA-related issues that affect them. 86 Bank Policy (OP Government of Egypt’s Equivalent Requirements Gaps and differences System improvements that would be undertaken 4.00) Requirements between OP 4.00 and by the Government of Egypt during Objectives and Egypt’s corresponding laws, rules, GOE’s requirements. implementation of the project activities Operational Principles regulations, procedures, and sectoral (Objective and as stated in GOE’s guidelines. Operational corresponding laws, Principles) rules, regulations, procedures, and sectoral guidelines. 8. Use independent It is a common practice Although there is no explicit reference Gaps: EIA for Landfills By December 2012, the Implementation Manual of expertise in the to use independent to “Independent Advisory Panel” of processing, handling or the project shall describe in details the roles, mandates preparation of EA consultants and experts experts in the Law 4 and its 1995 storage facilities for of each institution involved in EIA review, where appropriate. to prepare EIAs. Implementing Decree, article 13 of said hazardous wastes including compliance monitoring and coordination mechanism . Use independent decree states that EEAA may “resort to POPs does not include use advisory panels The EEAA uses the any experts whose names are included in of independent advisory during preparation services of external a list to be issued by the EEAA panels and implementation experts to review EIA, according to the criteria set by the of projects that are including international EEAA's Board of Directors, so that such highly risky or experts to review EIAs experts may give their opinions on the contentious or that for large and complex assessment of the environmental impact involve serious and projects and to advise of an establishment intended to be multi-dimensional on the clearance constructed and for which a permit is environmental and/or process. being requested” social concerns. 9. Provide measures There is no such None No significant gaps. None. to link the specific requirement. environmental However, sectoral EIA As decided under the assessment process guidelines require that EPAP II, this gap can and findings with proponent must provide easily be addressed by studies of economic, analysis of alternatives ensuring early conduct of financial, including the no-action EIA. institutional, social alternative and EEAA and technical has the mandate to analyses of a review consistency of proposed project. EIA and other project design features. 87 Bank Policy (OP Government of Egypt’s Equivalent Requirements Gaps and differences System improvements that would be undertaken 4.00) Requirements between OP 4.00 and by the Government of Egypt during Objectives and Egypt’s corresponding laws, rules, GOE’s requirements. implementation of the project activities Operational Principles regulations, procedures, and sectoral (Objective and as stated in GOE’s guidelines. Operational corresponding laws, Principles) rules, regulations, procedures, and sectoral guidelines. 10. Provide for Not applicable as there Under Law No. 4 of 1994 and its No significant gap. None. application of the is no FI Category. Executive Regulations, CAA and principles in this EEAA are required to screen and table to sub-projects review all sub-projects for their under investment and potential impacts. financial intermediary activities. 11. Disclose draft EA EEAA is requiring 2009 Manual on ‘Principles and No significant gap in a timely manner, since 2009 mandatory Procedures for EIA’ before appraisal disclosure in the EIA formally begins, in procedural Guidelines an accessible place and sectoral guidelines and in a form and that were already language issued. EIA reports and understandable to Form B will be key stakeholders. disclosed. 88 Equivalence Analysis Summary Matrix on Pest Management Summary Matrix on Pest Management Bank Policy (OP/BP Egypt’s Equivalent Requirements Gaps and differences between Remarks and System improvements 4.00) Requirements OP/BP 4.00 and Egypt’s to be undertaken by Mauritius before Objectives and Operational Mauritius’ corresponding requirements implementation of the project Principles as stated in laws, rules, regulations, activities (Objective and Mauritius’ corresponding procedures Operational laws, rules, regulations, Principles) procedures Objective: To Egypt has a substantial amount Law 4-94 as amended to date There are no laws requiring None minimize and of laws and regulations dealing and numerous decrees and IPM/IVM. manage the with dangerous chemicals regulations (see above note) environmental and control and pesticides, health risks administered respectively by the associated with Ministry of Health and pesticide use and Populations, Ministry of promote and support Agriculture, Ministry of safe, effective, and Industry, Ministry of Health and environmentally the EEAA This legal framework sound pest applies the “Integrated Pest management. Management” as first line of defense against risks associated with use of pesticides in agriculture. It complies with standards established by FAO/WHO, EU and US-EPA. Operational Although there are no laws Legal provisions to be added There are no laws requiring None Principles: requiring IPM, in practice, this IPM/IVM however, it is now an type of pest management is the FAO/WHO Codex established policy and practice 1. Promote use of “first line of defense” adopted in Alimentarius, Vol 2.B to implement the IPM for all demand driven, Egypt and is being implemented Pesticides Residus. 2nd agriculture sector. ecologically based consistently in various sub- Edition Rome 2000 biological or sectors of agriculture disseminated in Egypt through environmental pest the Ministry of Agriculture management In practice, pesticide and the Ministry of Health. 89 practices (Integrated management is a required Pest Management component in the EA, Ministry of Agriculture IPM [IPM] in agricultural program Implementation projects and Manual (see Main Integrated Vector Equivalence analysis Management [IVM] Paragraph 23 Footnote 7 the in public health analysis of this policy and projects) and reduce practice) reliance on synthetic chemical pesticides. Include assessment of pest management issues, impacts and risks in the EA process. 2. Procure pesticides Under applicable laws and Resolution 3059 None contingent on an regulations, it is required that assessment of the any person who imports, exports, nature and degree of manufactures, sells, distributes associated risks, or otherwise handles, in the taking into account course of a business activity, a the proposed use and dangerous chemical, shall ensure intended users. Do that the dangerous chemical not procure marketed is provided with a formulated products safety data sheet when delivered that are in WHO to a user. It includes pesticides Classes IA and IB, or in the definition of a “dangerous formulations of chemical.” The laws and products in Class II regulations also provide that no unless there are person shall place on the local restrictions that are market a dangerous chemical likely to deny use or which can be substituted by a access to lay less harmful or less dangerous personnel and others chemical. without training or proper equipment Products classified by WHO as highly hazardous are prohibited. 3. Follow the According to applicable laws and See relevant Annexes in The Ministry of Agro Industry None recommendations and regulations, every person who Resolution 3059 specifically refers to FAO/WHO minimum standards imports, exports, manufactures, standards 90 as described in the sells, stores, distributes or trades United Nations Food in any chemical substance shall and Agriculture ensure that the chemical Organization (FAO) substance is classified and International Code of labeled in accordance with the Conduct on the classification and labeling Distribution and Use requirements specified in the of Pesticides (Rome, Resolutions 3059. Furthermore, 2003) and procure that Resolution provides that no only pesticides that person shall import, export, are manufactured, manufacture, sell or distribute labeled, handled, any dangerous chemical unless it stored, applied and is packaged in accordance with disposed of according requirements set out in the to acceptable Resolution. The Resolution standards as states that where there are no described in FAO national standard in force for Pesticide Guidelines packing, containers and tanks, on Storage, Labeling, relevant internationally and Disposal (Rome, recognized standards, 1985). recommendations or norms should be referred to. Reference is made to US and EU standards In practice, the Agriculture Ministry regularly monitors the pesticide residue levels in fresh vegetables and fruits produced locally. The maximum residue levels are within the WHO/FAO Codex Alimentarius norms. 4. Support policy No formal provisions in laws and No provisions in Egypt Laws No gap in substance None reform and regulations. However, within the and Regulations, but policy institutional capacity Ministry of Agriculture, the documents and programs in development to (a) offices in charge of extension are agriculture refer to WHO, enhance assisting agriculture producers FAO, US-EPA and EU implementation of and operators with advisory standards as mandatory. IPM- and IVM-based services including training to pest management, ensure implementation of IPM and (b) regulate and and decrease reliance on monitor the chemicals. IPM training 91 distribution and use programs are regularly of pesticides. implemented; and Monitoring is done on regular basis on pesticides residues in all agricultural products including fresh vegetables to ensure that WHO/FAO, US-EPA and EU standards are met. 5. Disclose draft Ministry of Industry’s website No provisions None mitigation plan in a and Ministry of Agriculture’s timely manner, website and other Government before appraisal and non-Governmental websites formally begins, in an disclose relevant information accessible place and about pest management in a form and including IPM. language that are understandable to key stakeholders. 92 Annex 4 Description of the Decree 865 i. Adopts the criteria and standards issued by the World Health Organization (WHO), Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), their Joint Meeting on Pesticide Residues (JMPR) and the International Authority for Research on Cancer (IARC) for the valuation and assessment of toxicity of pesticides, as well as adopts the recommendations of the United States Environment Protection Agency (USEPA), European Commission (EC), PIC and POPs regarding the definition of authorized pesticides to be registered, used and circulated (Article 1); ii. Entrusts the Agricultural Pesticides Commission to study and valuate all pesticides used in Egypt in order to verify the compatibility with regulations and standards provided for in Article 3; and iii. Mandates the aforementioned Commission to define the allowed and prohibited pesticides in Egypt (Article 4). 22. Other regulations of interest to POPs pesticides include: a. Decree No. 411 of 1995 establishing the Sub-Committee on Domestic Pesticides, dated November 01, 1995 which describes the mandate of the Sub-Committee to study and examine registers, in particular for poisonous and toxicity level as well as active materials and residues; b. Decree No. 3209 of 2003 on pesticides dated September 9, 2003, dealing with reports and standards of the Environment Protection Agency of USA (EPA) which shall be taken in consideration for the valuation of carcinogenic effects of pesticides related to the registration, use, preparation, circulation and testing, in accordance with Law on the protection of food quality of 1996 (article 1). All Decrees incompatible with this Decree are now abrogated (article 2). c. Ministerial Decree No. 89 of 2001 concerning the analysis of pesticides residues and the heavy elements in food, dated January 22, 2001; d. Decree No. 165 of 2002 prohibiting the importation of dangerous and hazardous substances and waste listed in the attached annexes, dated September 5, 2002. This Decree stipulates that: i. import of dangerous and hazardous substances and waste listed in its attached Annex 1 shall be prohibited (article 1); ii. an Industrial Register must authorize the use, storage, transport, circulation and recycling of these substances (article 2); iii. the circulation and transport of these substances outside the designated facilities must be authorized by the Industrial Control Department (article 3); and iv. the revision and updating of the list of hazardous substances and waste shall be carried out every two years (article 4); e. Decree No. 1445 of 2003 dated February 26, 2003, defining the hazardous substances and prohibiting their handling, import and trade which provides that: i. the substances listed in the attached list are to be considered hazardous waste and their import, commerce and circulation shall be prohibited (article 1); and ii. the treatment of the aforementioned substances shall be executed according to the requirements and conditions established by the Ministry of Environment; 93 f. Decree No. 3059 dated December 30, 2004 on agricultural pesticides repeals Decree No. 3209 of 2003 on pesticides77. It forms a comprehensive set of regulations and has 13 Annexes, providing that: i. production, preparation, refilling, importation, circulation and trade of agricultural pesticides, without prior registration with the Ministry of Agriculture and Land Reclamation according to the rules, requirements and measures provided for in this Decree, shall be prohibited (article 1); ii. the registration of pesticides shall comply with regulations issued by FAO and WHO (article 2); and iii. the application form shall require the following information: (1) registration and utilization certificates of the country of origin; (2) High Quality Certificate from the industry; (3) pesticide analysis methods; (4) studies concerning the risks to public health; (5) enclosure of 20 copies of the Technical Bulletin; (6) a study of poisoning and toxicity to the environment and mammals (article 3); the Registration Certificate shall be approved and issued by the National Commission on Pesticides after the approval by the Ministry of Agriculture and Land Reclamation (article 6); (7) the Secretary of the Commission shall adopt the pesticide’s label (article 7); (8) the Registration Certificate is valid for 3 years, renewable (article 8); (9) requirements and conditions for the revocation of the registration of pesticides are given (article 11); (10) the packages used for pesticides shall be hermetic and vacuum-sealed (article 18); (11) trade in Pesticides of High Risk without a special authorization from the National Commission on Pesticides shall be prohibited (article 20); (12) the transport of pesticides shall be carried out by suitable means compatible with technical and environmental requirements and conditions (article 29); However, the Bank team was not able to gather information about the standards applied to the acceptable level of pesticides in soils and sludge. Ministry of Agriculture staff said informally that EU and FAO standards are applied as far as residual pesticides and dioxins and furans in food products are concerned. Such standards are to be enforced in order to facilitate foodstuff export to European countries and the USA. 77 It goes without saying that proper and effective implementation and enforcement of this Resolution, along with the other Resolutions listed in this Section will help reduce the amount of POPs and associated risks. 94 Annex 5 Preliminary Risk Assessment of Potential Intermediate Collection Centers The Nasreya Hazardous Waste Center (NHWC) 1. NHCW is situated in Al Nasreya situated a 50-60 Kms , south east of Burg El-Arab district, in the Alexandria Governorate. It is surrounded, from the eastern side, by a charity house (House of orphans) at a distance of 1 km, and a school at a distance of 1.5 km. In the western side, there are some illegal houses at a distance of 500 m. Towards the south east side, there are illegal buildings (such as a mosque, building encroachments, etc. at a distance of 30 m. From the north, there is a paved road and open undeveloped land (desert). The site is surrounded by fence from all sides with a length of 500 meters and a width of 300 meters. The site also has two gates, one of them for emergency only. 2. The Nasreya Hazardous Waste Treatment Centre (www.nasreya.com) has been managed entirely by the Governorate of Alexandria. The Center operates as self sufficient revenue generating an annual profit of L.E. 1.2 million in 2009 and is operated by 14 engineers trained in hazardous waste under the leadership of an active director. The Center includes a hazardous landfill with a capacity of 40,000 tons and a surface of 14,000 m2, a physical-chemical treatment plant for inorganic liquid hazardous waste, a solidification unit, and storage units for organic and inorganic wastes. Two small incinerators were recently installed and are used for now as a pilot operation for the disposal of solid organic hazardous wastes (primarily pharmaceutical wastes). However, the total quantity of incinerated hazardous wastes generated is relatively small. Each incinerator is equipped with a two- stage combustion system including an afterburner to destroy potential contaminants of concern to control the emissions. The stack height is approximately 6 meters from the ground, which complies with the regulatory requirement of at least 3 meters above the building structure. The incinerator is located at the farthest southeastern corner of the facility near the fence line. Locating the incinerator in this position ensures that any emissions from the incinerator exit the facility to the south, which is the downwind direction. Since there are no known receptors in this direction, within at least for 5 km from the facility, this condition ensures that there is no potential adverse impact on any receptors in and around the facility. 3. A rapid visit by the World Bank team in September 2010 indicated that the management of the landfill, the use of the testing laboratory as well as the storage of inorganic waste in the vicinity of the two small incinerators should be substantially improved (see pictures below). Subsequent to the World Bank visit, the RBO and CDEIEC undertook periodic inspection of the Center, however, in the absence of an EMSP or the environmental register, it is not possible to improve the management of the Center. 4. During project preparation, a preliminary hazardous waste risk assessment was conducted by the Tauw Consultant78 to the project. It included a study on the topography, land use, climate, geologic setting, hydrology, soil properties, site characteristics, issues and risks and proposed mitigating measures. The overall result of such assessment showed that there are no adverse environmental impacts from the facility. All wastes treated in the treatment units are stored and handled within the boundary of the facility. 78 Boudewijn Fokke, Preliminary Hazard Assessment for Nasreya HWTC Alexandria Governorate, Egypt, TAUW report, 31 August 2011 Reference N004-4740948BFF-beb-V01-NL 95 5. However, the preliminary risk assessment recommended that the Center could be be considered as an Intermediate Collection Center (ICC) for obsolete pesticides provided that the following actions be implemented as part of the comprehensive risk assessment that will be conducted as part of a comprehensive ESIA that will be prepared by the operator. a) The recently illegally built houses and mosque nearby the Nasreya Hazardous Waste Treatment Centre should be taken into account when carrying out the ESIA. ; b) Air and soil monitoring should be undertaken to address air and soil pollutions in and around the landfill; c) Organic air emissions from hazardous waste tanks, surface impoundments, and containers should be controlled from risks posed by volatile organic compounds; d) A Health and Safety Program (HSP) should be developed for the landfill site, taking into consideration the specific needs of the workers and the community surrounding the Center. The HSP must address the safety for each equipment as well as the overall safety of workers; e) Visitors must not be allowed in areas where their health and safety may be compromised f) Use of goggles, masks, hard hats, and protective clothing, and using selective inhalators should be provided for all workers. Proper equipment design and recommended safety procedures must be followed. Regular health and safety training procedures, as required for the overall hazardous waste facility, if followed, should be adequate for the operating personnel at the stabilization area; and g) The medical records, environmental record and accident record should be made available on the site. Pictures from the Site Picture 1; Storage of Plastic Jerks Picture 2: Storage of tires Figure 3: Small incinerator with no gas treatment 96 Figure 4: Waste storage Figure 5 Sink in the laboratory 97 6. El Saff area lies in the eastern side of the River Nile, between El Saff town in the south and El-Tebbin in the north. It belongs to Gizah Governorate. El-Saff canal crosses the area of study, it has a length about 52 Km. The storage is located inside the granary (170 m x 90 m) of the Credit Development Bank, at a limited locality called Zerzarh. The storage (40 m x 25 m) which lies at the south-eastern corner of the granary has an area of 1,000 square meters and a height of 10 meters. The floor is made of concrete. The store has four doors (two on the northern side while the others on the southern side of the store). It has high openings (in the walls and over the ceiling) for comprehensive ventilation. The granary is bordered to the north and west by residential areas which are vulnerable, at a distance less than 100 m. The site is bordered in the northern and eastern sides by a building for mills, mountainous area, and many brick kilns. 7. In the past, El Saff pesticide store was away from residential areas which have expanded with population growth and urbanization. Therefore, the pesticide store containing obsolete stocks is situated inside densely populated area and could threaten the health of the local people and their livestock. 8. The major environmental issues in el El Saff as identified by the Consultant Tauw in an annex to the report are79: a) Soil contamination: Soil analysis conducted in three soil samples around El-Saff storage site revealed a high concentration in herbicide Ametryn (main pesticide stored in El-Saff) with a concentration of 128 ppm at 20 cms soil depth in sample 3. Ametryn is not a POP however since the soil contamination is in the same direction of the groundwater flow and that the Nile is considered as a drain for groundwater aquifer, the site is considered to be a hotspot of high potential hazard. The high concentration of this pesticide is caused probably by the poor handling in terms of loss during storage or transportation, during partial repacking or conditioning for test and poor condition of storage inside the storage site. Also, sulfur which is mainly used in fungicides, was also detected with a concentration of 459 ppm at a soil depth of 15 cms in sample #2. b) Potential Air Contamination: Potential emissions from the storage site can cause air contamination, affecting the whole food potentially can contaminate food (like eggs, milk, fish or cheese). c) Potential Health and Water Quality Issues. Until now, no health related issues have been identified due to the presence of obsolete pesticides in water resources. However, as the concrete and clay shields of the site will further deteriorate over time, the amount of pesticides in the soil and thus in the waters is expected to increase. Consequently, the water quality of ground and surface waters should be monitored. d) Lack of Emergency Response: There is no any emergency response plan for the storage site. 9. The preliminary assessment concluded that El Saff Storage Site requires a more detailed hazard assessment program. Such assessment will be part of the comprehensive EIA that will be conducted as part of component 3 of the project. Tauw Consultants recommended that El Saff be considered suitable for the temporary storage of repacked obsolete and POPs pesticides on condition that the pesticides are repacked in an environmentally acceptable manner and the site is managed 79 Boudewijn Fokke , Preliminary Hazard Assessment for El Saff Storage site Gizah Governorate, Egypt, 31 August 2011,Reference N003-4740948BFF-beb-V01-NL 98 adequately. The following corrective actions (among others to be identified during the full-scale EIA and risk assessment) were recommended: (a) POPs pesticides should be stored safely, preferably in dedicated areas away from other materials and wastes (b) Storage Site should be re-designed to prevent the release of POPs to the environment by any route. (c) Some basic principles of safe storage of wastes consisting of, or contaminated with, POPs are as follows:  Storage rooms, buildings and containers should be located and maintained in conditions that will minimize volatilization, including cool temperatures, reflective roofs and sidings, a the construction of a shaded location, etc.  In warmer climate, the storage site should be maintained under negative pressure and a ventilation system should be established with carbon filtration of exhaust gases to mitigate the potential hazard for those who work at the site and those living and working in the vicinity of the site. (d) Dedicated building and containers should be in good condition and made of hard plastic or metal, and with wood, fiberboard, drywall, plaster or insulation (e) Storage sites should have fire alarm systems (f) Liquid wastes should be placed in containment trays or a curbed, leak proof area (g) Contaminated solids should be stored in sealed containers such as barrels or pails, steel waste containers or in specially constructed trays or containers. (h) A complete inventory of wastes in the storage site should be undertaken and kept up to date as waste is added or disposed of (i) The outside of the storage site should be labeled as a hazard (j) The site should be subjected to routine inspection for leaks, degradation of container materials, vandalism, integrity of fire alarms and fire suppression systems and general status of the site (k) Emergency response plans should be in place for all POPs in use, in storage, and in transport 99 Annex 6 Issues Raised/Comments at the Public Consultation Workshop Held on June 12, 2012 1. The Mission participated in the consultation workshop of the Safeguard Diagnostic Review (SDR) which took place on June 13, 2102 at the Cairo House and was chaired by Ms. Fatma Abou El Shouk, Acting CEO of EEAA. The meeting was attended by 64 representatives from ministries (Environment, Electricity and Energy, Industry, International Cooperation), research institutes and universities, and three media representatives, as well as 16 NGOs (a copy of the Agenda and the List of Attendees are attached in Annex 4 and Annex 5 respectively). The workshop was conducted in Arabic, with Power Points provided in English. It consisted of two presentations by EEAA staff: an overview of the POPs situation in Egypt; and, the project description, as well as a review of the Egyptian EIA system, followed by a session for question and answers. The Bank made a presentation on the draft SDR (a copy is attached in Annex 6), which was followed by discussions and clarifications. (a) Review of the report: The meeting requested that more time be provided to review the report and provide comments. It was clarified that the draft SDR and its Arabic executive summary is on the web site of the EEAA, and a further two weeks will be provided to enable all readers to provide their comments. (b) Use of consultants: One participant expressed concern that the project budget would be entirely allocated to consultants and that there will not be sufficient funds for treatment and disposal of POPs, as was the case in many projects that were implemented in Alexandria. The Bank team clarified that the GEF budget of US$ 8.1 million includes a technical assistance component of about US$ 2.3 million (about 10 percent of the project cost) and the balance will be for training, treatment, and disposal of PCBs. (c) Equivalence Assessment: Clarification was requested on the major difference between the Egyptian EIA system and the Bank environment assessment policy. The Bank team replied that the major differences were: (i) on the analysis of alternatives which, for the Egyptian system, is limited to site and technical alternatives, instead of alternatives on inputs, output, demand and cost effectiveness; (ii) the content of the Environment and Social Management Plan which, under the national EIA system, weighs heavily toward environmental rather than social impacts; and, (iii) a lack, in practice, of disclosure of the executive summary (which is a required action as per the National EIA Guidelines of 2009). (d) Acceptability Assessment: The report does not include the Ministry of Manpower as one of the ministries involved in work safety and in occupational health related to POPs and PCBs. Also the presentation did not mention the role of the Ministry of Health. The Bank team replied that the revised report will include the Ministry of Manpower. However, the report does describe the role and responsibilities of the Ministry of Health – particularly the role of the General Directorate of Occupational Health. The Bank team also clarified that the POPs Project Steering Committee will include representatives of these ministries to ensure cooperation and coordination among sector ministries in the POPs management. (e) MEE Concern: The representative of the Ministry of Electricity and Energy commented that, in anticipation of their participation in the project, the Ministry had already sent a general circular to all their power and distribution plants to stop any disposal of used oil from their transformers and capacitors. This has created a storage problem issue and therefore the implementation of the project should be speeded up, so as to dispose properly of these used oils. 100 The Bank team replied that best efforts will be made to complete the appraisal of the project before August 2012. Consideration will also be given to revise the time schedule to address these storage issues during the first year of project implementation. (f) Al Saff Storage Facility for Obsolete Pesticides (OPs): Two different issues were raised: (i) the need to purchase an incinerator to be installed within the facility to incinerate the pesticides. The Bank team replied that the purchase of an incinerator cannot be justified from technical, financial, social and environmental points of view; and, (ii) there is little information on the amount, composition and types of pesticides and such a facility should be safely closed down. The team replied that the storage facility is already closed and the POPs Project will finance specific mitigating measures to prevent further deterioration of the stored materials and degradation of the site. (g) Public Consultation: One participant stated that such consultations should be made in public places to enable the citizens to provide their comments, in view of the new spirit of partnership, especially after the revolution of January 25th, 2011. An EEAA representative replied that the new EIA guidelines of 2009 require public hearings and sets forth the procedures for such consultations. Such public hearings are taking place and EEAA has in fact stopped a project in carbon black because of the opposition of four or five stakeholders. The Bank team also replied that, as a result of the gap filling measures under the SDR for EPAP II, EEAA has institutionalized public hearings for projects classified as Category C (corresponding to projects classified as Category A under the World Bank EA policy). The Bank team also mentioned that, in the EA report of the third phase of the metro line, public hearings took place in a mosque and at an engineering club. The team assured the audience that consultations will also take place on the ESIAs in public places (to the extent possible) for all subprojects under the POPs Management Project. (h) Enforcement: One participant expressed concern that enforcement of the law is weak, as district attorneys and judges are not trained on environmental law and it would be preferable to have outside expertise to evaluate such cases. An EEAA representative clarified that three workshops had already been held for judges and prosecutors, and in fact all violations are referred to the economic tribunal and not to the administrative tribunal. The Bank team also clarified that first component of the project will include training and special reference will be made in the project document that such training would also involve judges, lawyers and prosecutors. (i) Follow up on enforcement and compliance: One NGO participant referred to the Bank presentation, in which it was stated that the private contractors for the collection and disposal of PCBs (or obsolete pesticides) would prepare the EIA and would be responsible for implementing the mitigating measures. The participant requested that a tripartite committee composed of EEAA, the NGO and the operator be established to follow up on the project. The WB team indicated that the steering committee will include a representative of the NGOs to follow up on the project. (j) Gap Filling Measures: Many NGOs representatives referred to the gap filing measure No. 4, related to the development and provision of training and proposed the following modifications: (i) participation of the NGOs in the training programs organized by the project; (ii) organization of public awareness campaigns by provision of materials, brochures and equipment related to pesticides and other hazardous substances; (iii) targeting youth in the awareness campaigns in schools; (iv) strengthening the NGOs network involved in hazardous waste and pesticides. An EEAA representative indicted that information on PCBs and POPs is already on the EEAA 101 website and that it would be ready to provide additional support to NGOs in this regard. The Bank team also clarified that the Project will develop under Component 1 the enhancement of national capacity, which includes training and awareness campaigns, and that Component 2 will develop a long-terms pesticide management strategy, which will take into account the NGOs’ proposed ideas. 102 Annex 7 List of Key Officials Met Name Title Contact Information Egypt Environmental Affairs Agency (EEAA) Dr. Fatma Abou Shouk Head of the Environmental Management Phone: 202-2525-6475 Sector and Acting CEO, EEAA Email: faboushouk@mailcity.com Ms. Yasmine Fouad GEF Unit Director Phone: 2-010-1555-292 Email: gefunitegypt@gmail.com Eng. Elham Refaat Abdel Aziz Director of Hazardous Substances Phone: 010-918-3010 Director Email: emorefaat@yahoo.com Elhamaziz73@yahoo.com Ms. Hoda Omar International Relations Officer and GEF Phone: 012-335-2319 Officer Email: gefunitegypt@gmail.com Mr. Tarek Salah GEF Officer Phone: 010-117-0070 Email: tarek_slah@yahoo.com Mr. Mohamed Nabil Badran Environmental Researcher Phone: 010-084-04648 Sustainable Development Dept. Email: Environmental Management Sector Mohamed_n.badran@yahoo.com Mr. Mahmoud El Nady Environmental Researcher Phone: 0100-364-0547 Sustainable Development Dept. Email: Environmental Management Sector alnady.mahmoud86@gmail.com Dr, Raouf Okasha Advisor to EEAA on PCBs Phone: 0122-447-8445 Ministry of Electricity and Energy (MEE) Eng. Mohamed Mousa Omran First Under Secretary of State for Phone: 202-2261-6305 Research, Planning and Authorities 010-168-9868 Follow-Up Email: momran@moee-tmo.gov.eg Eng. Mostafa Ibrahim Khamis Under Secretary of State for Authorities Phone: 202-2401-7845 Follow-Up Email: mostafa.i.khamis@hotmail.com Eng. Ahmed Mohamed General Manager for Technical Follow- Phone: 202-22616523 Mehina Up Email: ahmed.moee@gmail.com United Nations Environment Programme Ms. Johanna Suikkanen Associate Programme Officer, Division Phone: 33-1-44-37-19-84 of Technology, Industry and Economics Email: Johanna.suikkanen@unep.org Ministry of Industry and Foreign Trade, Egypt National Cleaner Production Center Ms. Doaa Mahmoud Tawfek Cleaner production specialist Phone: 201-22-333-8032 Email: dtawfik@encpc.org Federation of Egyptian Industries Eng. Adel Mohamed Taha Chemical and wood sectors coordinator, Phone: 202-2390-4603 Environmental Compliance Office and Email: ataha@eco-fei.net Sustainable Development Egyptian NGOs Mr. Said Abdella Board Member, Crop Life, Egypt Phone: 202-3582-8088 Email: saidabdella@croplife-eg.com Dr. Wafaa Menecy Chair, Environmental Pioneers Phone: 002-033-23-8100 Organization Email: wafaa_menecy@hotmail.com Eng. Anan Helal Consumer Protection Society Email: ananhelel@ymail.com 103 Annex 8 Model Environmental Register (Appeared in Annex 3 of the Executive Regulations of Law 4) 1. Name and address of establishment 2. Name and job title of person in charge of filling in the Register. 3. Period covered by the current data. 4. Type of activity and nature of raw materials and production during the corresponding time period. 5. Laws governing the establishment. 6. Special conditions set by the EEAA for the establishment. 7. Statement of the types of emissions, the rates of discharge (per hour/ day/ month/ year), and method of disposal thereof. 7/1 - Gaseous 7/2 - Liquid 7/3 - Solid 7/4 - Others 8. Rates at which tests are conducted on each type of emission emanating from the establishment. 8/1 Random samples [experimental] * Date, time and place of each sample. * Rate of sample collection. * Indicators requiring to be measured (daily/ weekly/ monthly). 8/2 Samples of compound wastes * Date and time of sample collection. * Places of mixing and percentages of mixture in the compound sample. * Indicators requiring to be measured (daily/ weekly/ monthly). 9. Extracted materials after treatment processes. 10. Extent of efficiency of treatment method. 11. Date and signature of officer in charge. 104 Annex 9 List of Attendees to the Public Consultation Meeting Held in Cairo on June 13, 2012 Safeguards Diagnostic Review For Piloting the Use of Egyptian Systems to Address Environmental Issues in the Proposed GEF-Financed Egypt: Sustainable Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) Management Project (P116230) Equivalence and Acceptability Assessment Report Cairo House Wednesday 13 June 2012 NO Name Position Tel. E-mail A) Professors 1. Ahmed El Professor at the 01125384944 Aghorab21@yahoo.com Ghorab National Research Center 2. Dr.Nabeil Professor, Faculty of 01060701032 Agric-nabilss@hotmail.com Mahfouz Agriculture, Cairo Ibraheim University 3. Dr .Mohamed Professor at the 01005417272 hamzamsa@yahoo.com Sameir Amein faculty of Science- Ein Shams University 4. Samya Kabani Professor of 01004026344 Selkabbany5@yahoo.com pesticides, Faculty of Agriculture 5. Al Sayed Researcher at the 01222159878 emhkhater@gmail.com Mohamed National Research Helmy khater Center 6. Dr.Magda Ebeid Institute of 01222711467 Magda_ebeid@yahoo.com, Environmental Magda_ebeid@hotmail.com Studies and Research 7. Dr.Wassim underground water 01116184983 waseemmostafa@yahoo.com Mostafa Kamal Research Institute 8. Gihad Ahmed Professor of 23638045 gehadaboelata@yahoo.com Abou El Ata environmental occupational medicine - Faculty of Medicine, El Kasr El 105 NO Name Position Tel. E-mail Einy B) CSOs 9. Dr.Wafaa Chair of 01005130918 Wafaa_menecy@hotmail.com Menesy Environmental Pioneers 10. Saeid Mohamed Crop Life 01001364080 Said_abdella@hotmail.com Mohamed Abdelleh 11. Anan Roshdy Chairman of Ein 0122342835 ananhelal@gmail.com Helal Masr Association for Consumer Protection and Environment 12. Medhat Mourees Association for 0122342835 ananhelal@gmail.com Mekhaeil Consumer Protection and Environment 13. Raouf Okasha Hospitals Day 01224478445 roufokasha@yahoo.com Association 14. Mahmoud Secretary of Youth, 01111603605 Hoka7775@gmail.com Ibraheil Mansheyet Nasser 01276662088 Association for Youth 15. Sameir Secretary of the 01224337512 Samerkahmoud81@yahoo.com Mahmoud Abdel Young Women Baky Muslim 16. Mahmoud Nile Youth 01006406268 Mohamed Association Mohamed 17. Samer El Mufty Samer El Mufty 01006846845 samermufty@yahoo.com environmental forum – El Sawi Water Wheal “NGO” 18. Mariam Mikhail Association Voice of 01222881600 Mariam-mikhail@hotmail.com rizk Masr el kadima 19. Islam salah el Salam el saeyd 01209030400 drwafaaaref@yahoo.com din Association 20. Randa yassin Public relations - 01227232077 Ra-m.h.r@yahoo.com abd el fatah Charity moderation Association 21. Ekbal El Future Eve 01000028880 Hfd_96@yahoo.com Samalouty, Prof. Association chairman Hfd96@hotmail.com 22. Dr.Sanaa El Al Thanaa 045-2567245 Althanaa821@yahoo.com Sayed Mostafa Community development and environmental protection Association 23. Nabil Ismail Member of Al 045-2567245 Althanaa821@yahoo.com 106 NO Name Position Tel. E-mail Amer Thanaa Association 24. Conslt.Mohamed the Board of 01115098999 Mohamed Abdel Directors Chairman – Moneim Fawaz El Afoa Egyptian Association C) Others 25. Dr.Manal Samy Environmental 01005504944 M5samyfarag@gmail.com Ahmed Farag Researcher, EEAA Alexandria 26. Ahmed Momen Environmental 01018883028 Deserteagel55@yahoo.com Saad Researcher, EEAA Alexandria 27. Samar Mohamed Programs Director 01144035816 Maresho_11211@yahoo.com El Shenawy 28. Adel Mohamed Center for 01001199595 ataha@eco-fec.net Taha Environmental Commitment, Union of Egyptian Industries 29. Wael Tahawy Journalist- Al 01009996466 waelkamthawy@yahoo.com Dostour 30. Fateen Soliman Journalist- Nile 01007983411 31. Mohamed Environmental 01144755034 Mohamed Affairs Researcher, Mohamed Ali Ministry of Environment 32. Chemist .Elham General Manager, 01009183010 emorefaat@yahoo.com Refaat Abdel Environmental Aziz Development Department 33. Dr.Alaa Sarhan World Bank 34. Dr.Sherif Arif 35. Khaled Bio-energy Financial 01225077074 khaled@egyptbiomass.com Mohamed and Administrative Roshdy Manager 36. Shereif Ibraheim Networks Engineer 01006911897 sheriff@smres.org 37. Chemist Institute for Studies 01117864949 E2rc@thewayout.net .Hossam Ahmed of mineral identification 38. Hanan Ibraheim EEAA 01005248369 shawky@link.net Shawky 39. Nahla Refat Sakr Researcher, Ministry 01111456724 msakr@mic.gov.eg of International Cooperation 40. Dr.Mohsen Director of the 01227215897 Hamed Beheiry Laboratory Oil, Company of South 107 NO Name Position Tel. E-mail Cairo Electricity Distribution 41. Mohamed EEAA 01007181159 Mohamedfaro76@hotmail.com Farouk Amein 42. Enaam Megahed EEAA- Cairo Branch 01153026657 enaambakr@gmail.com Bakr 43. Dr.Mahmoud Director of the 01003066922 mshawky1953@yahoo.com Shawky Central Administration to assess the environmental impact 44. Hekmat Abdel General Directorate 01096530435 Hekmat_seleem@yahoo.com Rahman Seleim of Environmental Studies - Electricity Holding Company, 45. Mohamed Nabil Environmental 01008404648 Mohamed_n.badran@yahoo.com Badran Development Department 46. Chemist. Hoda General Manager of 03-5571761 Hali_ea@yahoo.com Aly El Sayed Environmental 01002249988 Moussa Management 47. Lobna Saad Environmental 01000779544 Lobnasaad14@yahoo.com Mohamed Aly Affairs Second Researcher- Greater Cairo Branch 48. Mohamed Abou Environmental 01276908112 Shama Affairs Researcher- Greater Cairo Branch 49. Shaimaa Tarek General Authority 01143306795 Shaimaa.tarek07@yahoo.com Khamiss for Industrial Development – chemical Specialist 50. Eng.Ahmed General Manager of 01226646944 Ahmed.moee@gmail.com Mohamed Abdel Environmental Hamid Mehina Monitoring – Ministry of electricity 51. Eng.Ahmed Environmental 236130129 Environment.ida@gmail.com Taha Specialist - General Industrial Development Authority 52. Khaled Mubarak Journalist – Al 01221345024 Khaled.mubarak@yahoo.com Ahram news paper 53. Eng.Maysoun EPAP II 01110015565 Maysounali2@gmail.com Nabil 54. Reham Galal Economic 01288951488 rgalal@mic.gov.eg Researcher - MOPIC 108 NO Name Position Tel. E-mail 55. Moataz Yousef Chemist - Electricity 01007652151 Moataz_yousef91@yahoo.com Ahmed Holding Company, Egypt 56. Soha Abdo Abd GEF unit – EEAA 01016173502 gefunitegypt@gmail.com El Rihim 57. Yasser Industry Unit – 01001110867 Ya13673@yahoo.com Mohamed El EEAA Saed Askar 58. Kawthar hefni Head of The central 01003364159 Kawthar @hotmail.com department of environmental crises and disasters 59. Dina Youssef Environment Affairs 01115744483 dinaaboelezz@yahoo.com Ahmed Specialist - environmental media Department Cairo airport 60. Johanna UNEP – Associate Johanna.suikkanen@unep.org Suikkanen programme officer 61. Doaa Mahmoud Cleaner production 01223338032 Eng.doaatawfek@yahoo.com Tawfik specialist – ENCPC 62. Ghada abd el Environment Affairs 01004366277 Ghada.soliman75@yahoo.com hafiz Specialist - Cairo Airport Company 63. Mahmoud El Environmental 01003640547 Alnady.mahmoud86@gmail.com Nady Affairs researcher – EEAA 64. Dr. Ezzat Lewis Head, Climate 01222181424 eztlws@yahoo.com Change Central Department & NOU Focal Point to: MP / UNFCCC / IPCC & DNA Coordinator – EEAA 65. Dr. Emad Adly National Coordinator 01222130678 aoye@link.net GEF/SGP- Cairo 66. Hoda Omar GEF unit officer 01223352319 gefunitegypt@gmail.com 67. Ms.Yasmine GEF Unit Director 01001555992 gefunitegypt@gmail.com Fouad 109 Annex 10 The Agenda for the Public Consultation Meeting Held in Cairo on June 13, 2012 110 Public Consultation Workshop Safeguards Diagnostic Review For Piloting the Use of Egyptian Systems to Address Environmental Issues in Egypt Sustainable Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) Management Project Financed by GEF Equivalence and Acceptability Assessment Report Cairo House Wednesday 13 June 2012 10:00 – 01:30 Opening Remarks 01:30 – 01:40 Dr. Fatma Abou el Shouk- Director of Environmental Management Sector - EEAA Dr. Alaa Sarhan – Senior Environmental Economist - MENA / IBRD 01:40 – 00:00 Overview of POPS status in Egypt & Overview of Sustainable POPs Management project ( GEF/IBRD ) 11:00 – 11:15 Overview of EIA system in Egypt 11:15 - 10:30 Over view of The Safeguards Diagnostic Review (Part 1 Equivalence Assessment) 10:30 - 12:00 `Coffee Break 12:00 – 01:30 Over view of The Safeguards Diagnostic Review (Part 2) Acceptability Assessment 12:30 – 13:00 Discussion and comments 13:00 – 13:15 How to harmonize the national EIA system with the EIA in World bank ( The gap filling measures ) 13:15 – 14:30 Discussion 14:30 -- 15:30 Lunch 111 Annex 11 Letter of No Objection to Disclose the Report by EEAA 112 Annex 12 Status of the Gap-Filling Measures Agreed Upon under the EPAP II Project 1. As requested in the actions for the UCS and in the MTR, the PMU subcontracted an Egyptian consulting firm, Environics, to undertake a review of the quality of the forms B (equivalent to category B project in accordance with the World Bank’s Operational Policy on environmental assessment, OP 4.01) in EPAP II subprojects, comment on their completeness with respect to the new EIA guidelines, and recommend corrective measures to sustain the improved EIA process. The draft report which was presented during the mission showed that: a) All Form B EIAs for the EPAP II sub-projects submitted after July 2009 (the effective date of the new EIA guidelines) should include an environment management plan (EMP) and self-monitoring plan. b) Forms as well as EIA approval have been posted on the EEAA website c) The new EIA system is not fully operational but gradual implementation has been witnessed in a transition phase d) The new EIA system needs to be publicized so that all operators and investors are aware of such system e) A number of recommendations regarding the need to prepare specific TOR for environment reviews, the use of sector guidelines, and the strengthening of the EIA department should be implemented. 2. The co-financiers expressed concern about the delay in the application of the EIA component of the UCS system. The mission met with Dr. Fatma Abou Shok, undersecretary for environment management, to discuss this matter and urge the MSEA to comply with the UCS system as agreed upon. It was agreed that, irrespective of the new executive regulations, the new environmental guidelines should be applicable to all EPAP II sub-projects. In this regard the following actions were agreed upon and the co-financiers recommended the PMU to oversee the implementation and report to the Bank on a bi-monthly basis:  All new EPAP applications should use the new Form A or Form B as per the new EIA system.  All EPAP applications for approval since July 2009 should amend the EMP to conform to the new EIA guidelines.  Within one week the following activities related to the UCS should be implemented: 1) the old Form A and B should be removed from the EEAA website and will be replaced by the new forms; 2) official notification will be issued by EEAA to all the RBOs and EMUs informing them that the new EIA guidelines (issued January 2009) are in full force and with no further delays. . 3. The schedule of actions for ensuring the sustainability of the UCS system is as follows: 113 Actions to be taken By Whom Status as of June 2010 1. Sustain the progress made and continue to improve the EIA process. a. Review of the EIA form B was carried out by an independent consultant and a. Carry out annual review of the quality of EIA, specific recommendations were made Forms A and B approved and introduce to improve the quality (see above), as corrective measures for sustaining the well as measures for ensuring improved EIA process; sustainability. The PMU will follow on the recommendations and will report bi- monthly to the Bank on the status of progress of these recommendation EIA Department of EEAA, assisted by b. Four workshops are being conducted a team of annually by EEAA in co-operation with b. Train a core group of EIA trainers (local EIA independent the NGO Union for training of trainers consultants and EIA reviewers at EEAA); and consultants and a (Universities and consultants) in May core group of 2009, Nov. 2009, Feb.2010, and May trainers. 2010. c. Train EEAA, RBO, EMU and EPF staff, c. EPAP II has conducted 3 workshops in NGOs, EIA consultants and reviewers, media, Cairo, Alex & Aswan to introduce the sector ministries, and participating banks. new EIA guidelines since the last supervision mission. 114 Actions to be taken By Whom Status as of June 2010 2. Introduce public environmental performance ratings to promote voluntary compliance by polluting a. - The consortium DHV/PLACENTER industries. and ECOCONSERVE is still working CID and Industrial on the finalization of PROPER a. Introduce, on a pilot basis, a Program for Unit of EEAA, and Pollution Control Evaluation and Rating respective RBOs (PROPER) in Alexandria and Qalubiya; and - The testing phase has been implemented in 14 companies in 6th of October governorate. - A training workshop was held in last February to train Cairo and Alex RBOs on how to apply PROPER in the hot spots. b. - A pilot phase also has been b. Evaluate the experience and extend the implemented in 17 companies in program to other similar ‘hot spot’ areas. 6th of October governorate. - EPAP II has prepared a large workshop to introduce PROPER to the different industries, NGOs, media, and consultants on 2 June, 2010. - The final Consultant report is to be submitted by the consultant in June 2010 3. Improve compliance monitoring. a. Two training workshops have been conducted through EPAP II to train a. Train CID, RBO, and EMU staff on CID and Industrial CID, RBO, and PMU staff on providing guidance to industries in Unit of EEAA, and providing guidance to industries in preparation of CAPs; and respective RBOs. preparation of CAPs b. Develop a database on compliance status b. The Consortium has designed the on: (i) maintenance of environmental proposed database by modifying registers, as mandated under Law 4-1994, the existing module of Egyptian by industries participating in EPAP II; (ii) Regional Environmental implementation of agreed CAPs; and (iii) Management Information System monitoring actions taken against those who (EREMIS). are not in compliance Five cases are being applied through EREMIS and the results will be available by June 2010. 115 Annex 13 Bringing the Egyptian Legal and Regulatory Framework to Compliance with the Stockholm Convention The national obligations to comply with the Stockholm Convention is mandated by the Constitution of Egypt which obliges the Government to give full effect to international conventions and agreements ratified by the President of the Republic after approval of the Parliament. The Convention includes the following required actions from the Government of Egypt as Party to the Convention: 1- Categorizing substances in accordance with the annexes of the convention. Annex (A): Aldrin, Chlordan, Dieldrin, Endrin, Hexachlorobenzene, Heptachlor, Mirex, Toxaphene, PCBs. Annex (B): DDT. Annex (C): Chlorinated Dioxins ،Chlorinated Furans ،Hexachlorobenzene. 2- Activities related to reduction of intentional releases from production and use. i. Legal and administrative actions should be taken in order to eliminate the production, use, export and import of chemical substances listed in annex (A) of the convention and to reduce production and use of the others listed in annex (B) of the convention. ii. Encouragement of the use of the best available techniques and the best environmental practices. iii. Any chemical substance listed in annexes (A) or (B) is not to be imported except for the following cases: a. For the purpose of sound elimination from the environment. b. For a purpose allowed to any state that is a party in the convention. 3- A record of specified exemptions: According to Stockholm Convention requirements: There should be a record of specified parties that have exceptional exemptions according to the Convention. This record should include a list of the specified exemptions and another of the expiry dates for each of the specified exemptions. 4- Taking actions to reduce or eliminate unintentional releases from the production of the POPs: According to Stockholm Convention requirements: i. Setting a work plan as a part of the national implementation plan within two years from the date of putting the convention in force. This work plan should include the convention in force including the following: ii. An assessment of present and expected releases. iii. An assessment of the efficacy of the laws and policies related to the management of releases. iv. Development of strategies to fulfill the required obligations in addition to encouraging learning, awareness and training on such strategies. v. Presentation of those strategies and their success in fulfilling obligations in reports presented every five years according to the items of the Convention. 116 vi. Preparation of an agenda for the implementation of the work plan that includes strategies and specified actions. vii. Development and usage of alternative substances and products to prevent the formation and release of the chemicals under annex (C), taking into consideration the general instructions concerning actions related to the prevention and reduction of releases under annex (C) of the Convention. viii. Encourage of use of the best available techniques and the best environmental practices. 5- Actions for reduction or elimination of releases from stored substances and residuals: According to Stockholm Convention requirements: i. The state should develop some strategies suitable for defining the following: (a) storage of chemicals or substances that contain chemicals listed in annex (A) or (B) or (c); (b) products and used materials and wastes that are consisting or have become contaminated with any of the chemicals listed in any of the annexes (A), (B) or (C); (c) the state should also manage stores, as needed, in a safe way that is environmentally sound; and (d) suitable actions should be taken, when such products and substances turn into wastes, in the following ways: a. They are to be handled, collected, transported and stored in an environmentally sound way. b. They are to be eliminated in an environmentally sound way. c. They are not to be transported across international borders unless related guiding rules, criteria and principles are taken into consideration. ii. Seeking to develop suitable strategies to define the areas contaminated with the chemicals under annexes (A), (B) or (C). 6- Listing Chemicals in Annexes (A), (B) and (C): According to Stockholm Convention requirements: Suggestions are to be presented to the Convention Secretariat to list one or more chemicals in annexes (A), (B) or (C). The suggestions should include data about the substance, its persistence degree, its biological accumulation, the possibility of its long- term environmental transportation and its hazardous impact. The Secretariat, then, being convinced of the suggested substance, presents it to the Committee for discussing POPs. 7- Information Exchange: According to Stockholm Convention requirements: i. The State is required to allow information exchange on the following: (a) Reducing or eliminating the production, use, releases from POPs. (b) Alternatives for the POPs including information about their hazards and their socio-economic costs. (c) Defining a national connecting centre to exchange such information. ii. The Secretariat takes the role of directing information exchange about the POPs, including the information presented by the parties, international governmental organizations and non – governmental organizations. 8- In the field of media, of education and awareness of the public: According to Stockholm Convention requirements must be met for the following items: 117 i- Increasing awareness of leading authorities and decision makers concerning POPs. ii- Making information about POPs available to the public through different means. iii- Raising awareness especially of woman and child, on POPs and their health and environmental effects. iv- Having the public share in the process of managing POPs with their hazardous effect on public health and the environment, and giving them the opportunity to participate in implementing the items of the convention at national level. v- Training workers, chemists, women, employees and administrators on how to deal with POPs. vi- Exchanging educational and awareness materials of the public about the POPs and their alternatives on both international and national levels. vii- Giving the public the opportunity to gain information about POPs and their alternatives and establishing special information centers on both regional and national levels. viii- Setting a record of releasing and transporting the POPs for the purpose of collecting and publishing information about average annual quantities of the chemicals referred to in the Convention that are released and are to be eliminated. 9- In the fields of research, development and monitoring: According to Stockholm Convention requirements: Encouraging researches on POPs and their alternatives and also on the following: i- Their sources and releases to the environment, their levels, direction and transfer. ii- Their effect on human health and the environment. iii - Their social, economic and cultural effects. iv- Means of reducing or eliminating their releases. Using a methodology for the process of encompassing the sources releasing POPs and for the analytic means of measuring the level of releases. This methodology includes: a- Encouraging the national and international efforts to support national capacities to carry out scientific researches and to encourage analyses and data exchange. b- Encouraging researches aimed at reducing the effects of POPs on reproductive health and making them available to the public. 10- In the field of technical support: According to Stockholm Convention requirements: States that are parties of the Convention are required to co-operate in the following: 118 i- Providing technical support for building, developing and strengthening the state capacities to fulfill its obligations. ii- Establishing regional centers for building capacities and exchanging technology. 11- In the field of resources and financial mechanisms: According to Stockholm Convention requirements: i- States are required to have new extra financial mechanisms to face extra costs of implementation actions through defining mechanisms required to provide consistent adequate financial resources, that are managed by responsible inter- national entities that monitor and assess the use of such. The National Implementation Plan (NIP) for Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) – Egypt 2005, resources and present regular reports to the conference on the consistency and adequacy of the funds for the connected activities of implementation this Convention. ii- The State is required to provide financial support and financial resources, within limits of potentials, for national activities working on the fulfillment of the objectives of the convention. 12- Presenting reports: According to Stockholm Convention requirements: Periodical reports are presented, (in a form that is determined by the conference of the parties on its first meeting), to the conference of the parties on: i. Actions taken for the implementation of Convention obligations. ii. The efficacy of such actions in fulfilling the objectives of the Convention. iii. The Secretariat is to be provided with the following: a. Statistic data about the total quantities of the production, imports and exports of each of the chemicals stated in Annexes (A) and (B) or about a reasonable estimation of such data. b. A list of the States, to the most practical limit, from which each of the substances had been imported and other states to which each had been exported. 13- Efficiency assessment: According to Stockholm Convention requirements: i. The conference of the parties is to make an assessment of the convention four years after starting to put it in force. This assessment is made regularly later on as decided by the conference of the parties. ii. The conference of the parties is to be provided with comparative monitoring data about chemicals in annexes (A), (B) and (C) and about its transfer, regionally and internationally, to the environment. These arrangements: (a) Should be made regionally, wherever possible, according to financial and technical capacities using programs and mechanisms as much as possible. (b) The conference of the parties is to be provided with reports on the results of monitoring activities on a regional and an international basis and within limited periods that are decided by the conference of the parties. 14- Non-compliance: 119 According to Stockholm Convention requirements: The conference of the parties, as practically early as possible, takes proper actions to define whether there is a case of non-compliance to of the convention measures and to deal with states that are parties and are proven not to be complying. 15- Measures under Annex (A) to the Convention: – Elimination: According to Stockholm Convention requirements: a. Any quantities of a chemical substance, in the form of manufactured substances, that had been used earlier before starting to carry take action to participate in the, is not to be listed under the annex, unless the responsible party had already told the secretariat that a certain type of chemicals was still being used. b. The Secretariat is to be informed if any of the chemical substances of the annex was being produced or used in manufacturing of other products within a closed system of a specified location in a way that is not expected to affect humans or the environment greatly. This is not to be considered a specified exemption. c. Use of PCBs compounds found in electrical instruments (Such as transformers and condensers and others that contain quantities of liquid substances) is to be stopped by 2025. d. Measures for eliminating the use of PCBs compounds are taken according to the following priorities : (a) Exerting consistent efforts to define and to stop using instruments that contain more than 10% of PCBs compounds and of quantities that exceed 5 litres. (b) Exerting consistent efforts to define and to stop using instruments containing PCBs compounds with a concentration that exceeds 0.005% and quantities that exceed 0.05% litres. (c) Reduction and control of the cases of exposure to the hazards caused by PCBs compounds according to the following measures: i. Using such compounds only in tight and sound instruments or in areas where hazards release to the environment can be reduced to the minimum level and treated fast. ii. Not using these compounds in areas related to the production or preparation of foods or feedstuffs. iii. Taking all the possible measures for protection from electrical faults that could lead to breaking out of fire in residential areas with schools and hospitals. In addition, instruments should be checked regularly for leakage possibilities. iv. Not exporting or importing instruments containing PCBs compounds except for the purpose of environmentally sound management of wastes. v. Not allowing the reuse of liquids containing PCBs compounds that exceed a concentration of 0.005% in other instruments except for maintenance and repair purposes. vi. Exerting efforts needed to manage liquids, containing compounds of PCBs and equipment contaminated with these compounds or containing them it in a concentration that exceeds 0.005%, in an environmentally sound way. This is to be achieved as early as possible and before year 2028. e. The State is required to present a report to the Conference of the Parties on the progress gained in the process of eliminating PCBs compounds every five years to be considered by the conference of the parties when necessary. 16- Measures under Annex (B) to the Convention: 120 – Restriction: According to Stockholm Convention requirements: i. Any quantities of a chemical substance, in the form of manufactured substances, that had had been used earlier before starting to take action to participate in the convention, is not to be listed under the annex; unless the responsible party had already told the secretariat that a certain type of chemicals was still being used. ii. The Secretariat is to be informed if the DDT substance was being produced or used in manufacturing of other products within a closed system of a specified location. This information should include the following: a. Information about the total production and use of this substance, or at least a probable estimation of such information. b. Information about the nature of the closed system of a specified location, including the quantity of any pollutant that does not turn into the preliminary substance of the POPS in the final product. iii. The Secretariat is to make such information available both to the conference of the parties and to the public. a. The kind of production and use is to be terminated after ten years, unless the concerned party presented a new notification to the secretariat. b. The kind of production or use is not to be considered of the exemplary nature. c. Production and use of DDT is to be prevented except for the parties that inform the Secretariat about it. Accordingly, a record of the DDT should be kept available to the public. iv. Each State has to keep the production and use of DDT limited to fighting disease carriers, according to the recommendations and guiding principles of the international health organization concerning DDT. This is to be applied in case the state had no available, effective safe, local alternatives of a proper cost. v. In case a state that is not listed on the record of DDT needed to fight disease carriers, the secretariat is to be notified as early as possible in order to add that state to the list. Meanwhile, the international health organization is to be notified too. vi. Each state using DDT has to give the secretariat and the (WHO) information every three years about the quantity used, the conditions of the use in relation to the strategy of that state fighting diseases. This is to be achieved in a form decided by the conference of the parties in consultation with the (WHO). vii. Each state uses DDT is required to set a working plan as part of the implementation plan. The plan should include the following: a. Working out organizing mechanisms to guarantee the reduction of the use of DDT to fighting disease carriers. b. Developing alternative products and proper means and strategies, including strategies for the management of fighting, to guarantee the consistent efficacy of such alternatives. c. Taking actions to support health care and to reduce infected cases with disease. d. Every state, according to its potential, is required to support research and development of alternative, safe chemicals and other products, following methods and strategies of the states using DDT that match with the circumstances of such a state. This is to be achieved for the purpose of relieving human and economic burdens that could result from the spread of a disease. In this respect, Egypt has banned the production, import and use of the chemicals according to the following laws and decrees (Decree of the Ministry of 121 Agriculture no 53-1966 and its amendments, Decree of the Ministry of Agriculture no 60- 1986 that bans the use of pesticides included in the chemical under annexes (A) and (B), Decree of the Ministry of Agriculture no 258-1990 that bans importation of these substances, Decree of the Ministry of Internal Trade no 55-1996 that made a list of chemicals not to be imported, produced, or used. This list includes substances referred to in annexes (A) and (B) of the Convention). Based on the above, the following table shows the various obligations and duties binding on the Stochkolm Convention Parties. It shows that the Government has taken bold steps to implement its obligations and duties and to enforce the provisions of the Convention. Requirements of the Stockholm Convention How it is addressed by Egypt Categorizing substances in accordance with the annexes of the convention: (i) Annex (A): Aldrin, Chlordan, Dieldrin, Endrin, Hexachlorobenzene, Heptachlor, Mirex, Toxaphene, PCBs; (ii) Annex (B): DDT; and (iii) Annex (C): Chlorinated Dioxins, Chlorinated Furans, and Hexachlorobenzene. Activities related to reduction of intentional releases Egypt has banned production, import and use of from production and use: chemicals of annex (A) and annex (B) included in a (i) Legal and administrative actions should be taken in list of other chemicals in accordance with the order to eliminate the production, use, export and import following laws and regulations: of chemical substances listed in annex (A) of the -Law on Agriculture No 53- 1966 as amended to convention and to reduce production and use of the date others listed in annex (B) of the convention, (ii) -Decree no. 60- 1986(Ministry of Agriculture) that Encouragement of the use of the best available bans use of pesticides including chemical substances techniques and the best environmental practices, and under annexes (A) and (B); (iii) Any chemical substance listed in annexes (A) or -Decree no. 258- 1990 (Ministry of Agriculture) that (B) is not to be imported except for the following cases: bans importation of chemical substances under (a) For the purpose of sound elimination from the annexes (A) and (B); environment, and (b) For a purpose allowed to any State - Decree no. 55 - 1996 (ministry of Commerce) that is a party in the Convention. defining a list of chemicals not to be imported, produced or used. This list includes pesticides under annexes (A) and (B) of the Convention. - - Guidelines for the safe handling of hazardous substances in general and of POPs in particular in order to inform on the safe handling of hazardous substances from different technical aspects issued by EEAA. These guidelines were issued in Arabic and include best international practices on information related to the substance, its classification, degree of hazard, packing group, CAS number, safety phrases, risk phrases, synonyms, molecular weight, melting point, boiling point, potential hazards, emergency response, transport, handling, treatment, disposal, first-aid compatibility, consistency and storage. These guidelines also provide clear and brief notes on about 300 chemical substances in addition to the substances listed under the Stockholm Convention on POPs (9 pesticides). 3- A record of specified exemptions: There should be a There is no record of specified exemptions because record of specified parties that have exceptional of the absolute ban concerning all the chemicals exemptions according to the convention. This record under annexes (A) and (B) of the convention, should include a list of the specified exemptions and according to the above-listed applicable laws and 122 another of the expiry dates for each of the specified regulations. exemptions. 4- taking actions to reduce or eliminate unintentional Egypt completed a preliminary inventory- as a part releases from the production of the POPs, including: (i) of the national implementation plan- to assess the Setting a work plan as a part of the national present and the expected unintentional releases of implementation plan within two years form the date of POPs. Egypt is also bounded to the specified time putting the convention in force. This work plan should for this plan in the convention (within two years include the convention in force including the following; after the convention came to effect), in accordance (ii) An assessment of present and expected releases; (iii) with the general instructions concerning actions An assessment of the efficacy of the laws and policies related to the prevention and reduction of releases related to the management of releases; (i) Development under annex (C). of strategies to fulfill the required obligations in Egypt has also taken the following steps: Under the addition to encouraging learning, awareness and supervision of EEAA, Egypt runs the project of training on such strategies; (v)Presentation of those improving the quality of air (CAIP) that aims at strategies and their success in fulfilling obligations in cleaning the air pollutants as (benzene, carbon reports presented every five years according to the items monoxide, lead, carbon dioxide, nitrogen dioxide of the convention; (vi)Preparation of an agenda for the and sulphur dioxide). implementation of the work plan that includes strategies Moreover, the chemicals of POPs that are released and specified actions; (vii) Development and usage of unintentionally are now to be included among the alternative substances and products to prevent the main pollutants of the air as part of the strategy of formation and release of the chemicals under annex (C), improving the quality of air. According to law no 4 taking into consideration the general instructions of 1994 (articles 19,20,21), the competent concerning actions related to the prevention and administrative authority or the authority giving reduction of releases under annex (C) of the convention; license requires an EIA to assess the impact on the and (viii) Encourage of use of the best available environment caused by the industry requiring a techniques and the best environmental practices. license, in accordance with guidelines approved by EEAA in coordination with competent administrative authorities. Then, the EIA is reviewed by EEAA and must be endorsed before any permit is issued. Egypt developed a Cleaner Production Strategy to establish integrated CP procedures for the Egyptian industry within an agreed national Policy. The industrial sources of unintentionally produced POPs are now to be included among the Egyptian cleaner production strategy. In the framework of reducing unintentionally produced POPs, the NPCU has prepared a plan for rising awareness. This plan includes organizing workshops for stakeholders and decision makers in both public and private sectors to increase awareness concerning the hazardous effects of unintentionally produced POPs on health and environment, and the legal framework for these releases on both local and international levels. Actions to reduce or eliminate the release from stored So far, the Government has established a substances and residues, including: Committee on pesticides management and (i)-development of strategies suitable for defining monitoring (including data recording) under the conditions of environmentally sound storage of supervision of the Minister of Agriculture. That chemicals or substances that contain; (a) Chemicals Committee has recommended and followed on the listed in annex (A) or (B); (b) Products and used establishment of a safe collection, transportation and materials and wastes that consisting or containing storage of obsolete pesticides. A comprehensive contaminated with any of the chemicals listed in any of report is being prepared on the status of obsolete the annexes (A), (B) or (C); pesticides. (ii)- actions when such substances and residues turn into wastes, including (a) environmentally sound handling, 123 collection, transportation, storage and final disposal or elimination, and (b) prohibition of transportation across international borders unless related guiding rules, criteria and principles are taken into consideration; and iii- development of suitable strategies to define the areas contaminated with the chemicals under annexes (A), (B) or (C). Parties to the Stockholm Convention to make recommendations to include one or more chemicals in the lists of Annexes (A), (B) or (C). The recommendation should include data about the substance, its persistence degree, its biological accumulation, its potential long – term environmental and its hazardous impact. The recommendation is to be made to the Convention secretariat which, after considering the merit of the recommendation, presents it to the POPs committee. Parties to the Stockholm Convention are required to Egypt has complied by starting on the preparation of adopt an implementation plan to comply with their the National Implementation Plan in 2003, the draft obligations under the Convention and to present that of which was released in 2005 and presented to the plan to the COP within two years after the Convention Secretariat of the Convention in 2006.. came to effect. The implementation plan shall discuss the domestic institutional arrangements for implementation including consultation and participation of stakeholders Information exchange: (i) The state is required to allow Egypt has established the Egyptian Hazardous information exchange on the following: (a) reduction or Substances Information and Management System elimination of the production, use and releases from (EHSIMS) which considered the best practices in the POPs; (b) alternatives to POPs including information field of environmental information systems. The about their hazards and their socio–economic costs; (c) objective of this project is the initiation of a defining a national data center to exchange such hazardous substances management system in Egypt, information; and (ii) the Convention Secretariat takes by providing basic guidelines and information for act as POPs information sharing center among member the purpose of ensuring sound and safe handling of countries, including the information presented by the such substances and by disseminating of such parties, international governmental organizations and information through an information network. All of non–governmental organizations. POPs substances are dealt with in the EHSIMS www.ehsims.org The EHSIMS has many of useful outputs, most of which are concerned with information exchange, the following are some examples of such outputs: The Database which has sub-databases (i) first database: Contains 5400 chemical substances and compounds including all features, characteristics and information related to these substances and compounds; (ii) second database: contains a sample on the unified permitting forms that include information and data on the establishments as well as the required data for issuing the permitting form; and (iii) third database: for decision makers to help prepare reports by different ministries, and (iv) an Importers Database whose objective is to locate their warehousing places using the GIS system in order to increase awareness concerning the safe handling of Hazardous Substances. 124 Connecting the System Data Network with the Internet (Web-Base Application): In order to increase awareness on the national level for those who are dealing with hazardous substances, the system data network has been connected with the internet in which any information on hazardous substances is available; furthermore data on hazardous substances found on the database of the system can be printed. The Information Network connects the EEAA and the various ministries involved in POPs (Ministries of Agriculture, Industry, Electricity and Energy, Health and Population, Petroleum, Irrigation Scientific Research) in addition to the Customs Authority, the Civil Defense, and the regional centers for Basel Convention and the Egyptian Petroleum Company. The Network is open to any new Ministries that might join the system in the future. The EHSIMS website contains every information and data about the system as well as the list of hazardous substance, the required procedures for issuing permitting forms and the responsible authority in each Ministry. Egypt is participating in Information Exchange Network on Capacity Building for the Sound Management of Chemicals: INFOCAP which is an information exchange mechanism designed to enhance effective cooperation among countries and organizations which are providing and/or receiving assistance related to the sound management of chemicals. INFOCAP has an overall and long-term goal to facilitate the systematic exchange and public accessibility of information and experiences which are relevant to planning, implementing, evaluating and coordinating capacity building projects for the sound management of chemicals information about technical assistance and funding sources available from countries and organizations which provide support including information on ways, means and formal procedures to apply for such assistance. The Convention requires Member countries to develop Egypt is equipped with a plan for the awareness and programs to encourage the following items: (i) education of the public concerning POPs. This plan increasing awareness of leading authorities and decision is also aiming at authorities and decision makers, makers concerning POPs; (ii) making information about women and children and was made public through POPs available to the public through different means; workshops involving all stakeholders. Also the plan (iii) raising awareness especially of woman and child, includes training of workers, employees and on POPs and their health and environment. Effects; (iv) administrators on how to manage POPs in the way having the public share in the process of managing of reducing their effects on human health and POPs with their hazardous effect on public health and environment. the environment, and giving them the opportunity to participate in implementing the items of the convention at national level; (v) training workers, chemists, women, 125 employees and administrators on how to deal with POP; (vi) exchanging educational and awareness materials of the public about the POPs and their alternatives on both international and national levels; (vii) giving the public the opportunity to gain information about POPs and their alternatives and establishing special information centers on both regional and national levels; and (viii) setting a record of releasing and transporting the POPs for the purpose of collecting and publishing information about average annual quantities of the chemicals referred to in the convention that are released and are to be eliminated . Member countries are required to encourage researches Egypt has searched for new alternatives for POPs on POPs and their alternatives including: (i) their and has collected all data related to these sources and releases to the environment, their levels, alternatives, definition, properties, sources, releases direction and transfer; (ii) their effect on human health to the environment, levels, direction, transportation and the environment; (iii) their social, economic and and effect on public health and environment, data cultural effects; (iv) means of reducing or eliminating related to their social, economic and cultural effects, their releases. and the means of reducing or eliminating releases of POPs are also collected. States that are parties of the convention are required to A long term local expert in the field of POPs and the co-operate in the following: (i) providing technical preparation of related national implementation plans support for building, developing and strengthening the and strategies was appointed. Local experts of state capacities to fulfill its obligations; and (ii) experience in the field of issues related to POPs establishing regional centers for building capacities and were consulted. A long term international expert in exchanging technology. the field of issues related to POPs implementation plans for the Stockholm Convention on was appointed. A group of international experts in the field of preparing and implementing national implementation plans related to the Stockholm Convention on POPs was consulted. The personnel working in the hazardous substance department at EEAA were trained to raise their awareness concerning the following issues: (i) procedures for POPs analysis and monitoring ; (ii) POPs effects on health and environment; (iii) POPs inventories. A number of training courses were for national institutions involved in POPs management and monitoring including: the Custom Authority, NGOs, regional branches of EEAA, environmental offices in different governorates, the national steering committee and concerned departments at EEAA. Training provided relates to : (i) PCBs inventory; (ii) sources of unintentionally produced POPs (dioxins & furans ) ; (iii) health impacts of organochlorine insecticides and unintentionally produced POPs; (iv) source of dioxins and furans releases; (v) hazardous waste incineration in cement kilns; (vi) health impacts of POPs; (vii) analysis and assessment of POPs; (viii) socio-economic impacts of POPs; and (ix) on the Czech experience in the preparation of the national implementation plan related to Stockholm convention on POPs. 126 In the field of resources and financial mechanisms: (i) EEAA supports small industries in Egypt to develop States are required to have new extra financial their clean technologies and to achieve health and mechanisms to face extra costs of implementation environment protection. This support is technical actions through defining mechanisms required to and financial and is provided by the "Environmental provide consistent adequate financial resources, that are Protection Fund". managed by responsible inter- national entities that monitor and assess the use of such resources and present EEAA and the Ministry of Agriculture have regular reports to the conference on the consistency and implemented a nationwide investment project to adequacy of the funds for the connected activities of collect obsolete pesticides, including POPs. implementation this convention, and (ii) The state is Collected obsolete pesticides were repacked and required to provide financial support and financial transferred to a storage store for final safe disposal. raises, within limits of potentials, for national activities working on the fulfillment of the objectives of the convention. Under the Stockholm Convention, reporting is an important obligation to be fulfilled by member States. Periodical reports are presented, (in a form that is determined by the conference of the parties on its first meeting), to the COP on: (i) actions taken for the implementation of convention obligations; (ii) the efficacy of such actions in fulfilling the objectives of the convention (iii) the secretariat is to be provided with the following (a) Statistic data about the total quantities of the production, imports and exports of each of the chemicals stated in Annexes (A) and (B) or about a reasonable estimation of such data. (b) A list of the states, to the most practical limit, from which each of the substances had been imported and other states to which each had been exported Efficacy assessment: (i) the COP is to make an assessment of the convention [on regular…] basis following [decision of the COP];(ii) the COP must be provided with comparative monitoring data about chemicals in annexes (A), (B) and (C) and about its transfer, regionally and internationally, to the environment. The COP, as practically early as possible, takes proper actions to define whether there is a case of noncompliance to of the convention measures and to deal with states that are parties and are proven not to be complying. Annex (A) – Elimination: Egypt does not import chemicals of annexes (A) and (i)-any quantities of a chemical substance, in the form of (B) not even for the purpose of sound environmental manufactured substances, that had been used earlier elimination or any other purpose allowed such as before starting to carry take action to participate in the, fighting disease carriers, as in annex (B) related to is not to be listed under the annex, unless the DDT. responsible party had already told the secretariat that a certain type of chemicals was still being used; Egypt has also complied by starting to work on a (ii)- the Convention Secretariat is to be informed if any preliminary inventory – as part of the National of the chemical substances of the annex was being Implementation Plan – to assess present and produced or used in manufacturing of other products expected quantities of chemicals under annexes (A) within a closed system of a specified location in a way and (B) of the Stockholm Convention – Egypt is also that is not expected to affect humans or the environment bound to the time specified in the convention for this greatly; plan, which is two years starting from the time of (iii)- Use of PCBs compounds found in electrical putting the convention in force, and in accordance instruments (Such as transformers and condensers and with the general guidelines concerning procedures of 127 others that contain quantities of liquid substances) is to elimination and reduction referred to in annexes (A) be stopped by 2025; and (B). (iv)- Measures of eliminating the use of PCBs compounds are taken according to the following priorities (a) exerting consistent efforts to define and to stop using instruments that contain more than 10% of PCBs compounds and of quantities that exceed 5 liters. (b) exerting consistent efforts to define and to stop using instruments containing PCBs compounds with a concentration that exceeds 0.005% and quantities that exceed 0.05% liters. (c) Reduction and control of the cases of exposure to the hazards caused by PCBs compounds according to the following measures: (A) using such compounds only in tight and sound instruments or in areas where hazards release to the environment can be reduced to the minimum level and treated fast; (B) not using these compounds in areas related to the production or preparation of foods or feedstuffs; (C) taking all the possible measures for protection from electrical faults that could lead to breaking out of fire in residential areas with schools and hospitals. In addition, instruments should be checked regularly for leakage possibilities; (D) not exporting or importing instruments containing PCBs compounds except for the purpose of environmentally sound management of wastes; (E) not allowing the reuse of liquids containing PCBs compounds that exceed a concentration of 0.005% in other instruments except for maintenance and repair purposes; (F) exerting efforts needed to manage liquids, containing compounds of PCBs and equipment contaminated with these compounds or containing them it in a concentration that exceeds 0.005%, in an environmentally sound way. This is to be achieved as early as possible and before year 2028. (v)- The state is required to present a report to the conference of the parties on the progress gained in the process of eliminating PCBs compounds every five years to be considered by the conference of the parties when necessary. 16- Annex (B) – Restriction (i)-any quantities of a chemical substance, in the form of manufactured substances, that had had been used earlier before starting to take action to participate in the convention, is not to be listed under the annex; unless the responsible party had already told the secretariat that a certain type of chemicals was still being used. (ii)-the secretariat is to be informed if the DDT substance was being produced or used in manufacturing of other products within a closed system of a specified location. This information should include the following: (a) information about the total production and use of this substance, or at least a probable estimation of such information; (b) Information about the nature of the closed system of a specified location, including the quantity of any pollutant that does not turn into the 128 primary substance of the POPS in the final product; (c) the secretariat is to make such information available both to the conference of the parties and to the public; (d) the kind of production and use is to be terminated after ten years, unless the concerned party presented a new notification to the secretariat; (e) the kind of production or use is not to be considered of the exemplary nature; (iii)- Production and use of DDT is to be prevented except for the parties that inform the secretariat about it. Accordingly, a record of the DDT should be kept available to the public. (iv)- Each state has to keep the production and use of DDT limited to fighting disease carriers, according to the recommendations and guiding principles of the international health organization concerning DDT. This is to be applied in case the state had no available, effective safe, local alternatives of a proper cost. (v)- In case a state that is not listed on the record of DDT needed to fight disease carriers, the secretariat is to be notified as early as possible in order to add that state to the list. Meanwhile, the international health organization is to be notified too. (vi)- Each state using DDT has to give the secretariat and the (WHO) information every three years about the quantity used, the conditions of the use in relation to the strategy of that state fighting diseases. This is to be achieved in a form decided by the conference of the parties in consultation with the WHO. (vii)- Each state uses DDT is required to set a working plan as part of the implementation plan. The plan should include the following: (A) working out organizing mechanisms to guarantee the reduction of the use of DDT to fighting disease carriers; (B) developing alternative products and proper means and strategies, including strategies for the management of fighting, to guarantee the efficacy of such alternatives; (C) taking actions to support health care and to reduce infected cases with disease; (D) member states, according to their respective potential, are required to support research and development of alternative, safe chemicals and other products, following methods and strategies of the states using DDT that match with the circumstances of such a state. 129