FROM BASEL TO HONG KONG: INTERNATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATION OF SHIP-RECYCLING TAKES ONE STEP FORWARD AND TWO STEPS BACK
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NLU Jodhpur
Abstract
The increasing dominance of developing countries like India, China, Bangladesh and
Pakistan in the global ship-breaking industry illustrates the paradoxical nature of
economic globalization. While such operations provide access to employment and cheap
material resources, they also pose serious long-term and irreversible harm to local
environment and human health. In addition, the transnational character of the shipbreaking
trade has militated against effective domestic oversight of its environmental
hazards and has turned international regulation into an imperative.
This article reviews the international attempts to mitigate the environmental concerns
underlying ship-breaking. The Basel Convention on the Transboundary Movement of
Hazardous Wastes 1989 was one such attempt which however suffered from certain gaps
in its implementation. These lacunae in the Basel regime have led to the adoption of the
Hong Kong International Convention for the Safe and Environmentally Sound Recycling
of Ships in May 2009. The paper compares the key features of this new Convention with
the Basel regime and infers that while the former has made few significant breakthroughs
in oversight of trade in end-of-life ships, not only does it ignore certain basic norms of
international environmental law including the ‘polluter pays principle’ but it also contains
the same gaping holes that were discovered during the application of Basel Convention to
ship-breaking.
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1(2) TRADE L. & DEV. (2009)
