UNEA7

Minamata Convention at UNEA-7

Nairobi, Kenya, 08 Dec 2025 - 12 Dec 2025
    Meeting Information

    The seventh session of the United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA-7) will take place from 8 to 12 December, 2025 at the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) headquarters in Nairobi, Kenya, on the theme "Advancing sustainable solutions for a resilient planet” .

    The theme sends a strong message to accelerate sustainable solutions and effective responses for a safer and more resilient planet. 

    This theme recognizes that striving for a world that is just, equitable and inclusive hinges on advancing sustainable development, promoting sustained and inclusive economic growth, social development and environmental protection to benefit all, as recognized in the “Future We Want.” 

    UNEA-7 will be preceded by the seventh meeting of the Open-ended Committee of Permanent Representatives (OECPR-7) which will be held from 1 to 5 December 2025.

    Ahead of the meeting, Executive Secretary Monika Stankiewicz noted: “As we gather at UNEA-7, we are reminded that addressing the triple planetary crisis calls for solutions that are connected, inclusive and grounded in science. The Minamata Convention shows the possibility of advancing sustainable solutions when countries work together to reduce mercury pollution across its entire life cycle. I look forward to strengthening our collaboration and partnerships at UNEA-7 with governments, other multilateral environmental agreements, scientific partners and communities on the ground.”

    This page highlights the Minamata Convention Secretariat's activities at UNEA-7 and the Assembly processes relevant to the Convention.

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    Events
    Introduction

    The Multilateral Environmental Agreements (MEAs) Pavilion will host exhibitions organized by the MEAs, serving as a dedicated space to showcase their work. 

    All side events will take place separately in the MEAs Side Events Tent, providing a venue for participants to connect and exchange ideas.

    Participation in the MEAs Pavilion is open to all UNEA participants, including all Member States, Heads of MEA Secretariats and relevant UN entities and Specialized Agencies and intergovernmental/international organizations, as well as accredited major groups and stakeholders.

    MEA side events

    MEAs side events will be held from 8 to 12 December 2025 as part of the agenda item “Cooperation with Multilateral Environmental Agreements".

    The side events will provide a platform to showcase partnerships and success stories in MEA implementation, promoting integrated approaches, collaboration, cooperation and synergies, in alignment with the UNEA-7 theme “Advancing sustainable solutions for a resilient planet”. 

    All MEAs side events can be viewed online: MEAs side events playlist.

    See here the list of all MEA side events

    MEA exhibitions

    MEAs exhibitions will be organized during the whole week of UNEA-7. MEAs exhibitions will provide a platform for the MEA Secretariats and UNEP to showcase their work with key partners, promoting integrated approaches and solutions that advance cooperation, collaboration and synergies in implementing MEAs.

    Official side events

    Each of the Official Side Events is intended to enrich and complement the UNEA-7 session by providing a unique opportunity to discuss the theme, share experiences, find solutions and inspire partnerships towards tackling climate change, biodiversity loss and pollution. 

    All official side events can be viewed online: Official side events playlist.

    See here the list of all official side events

    Associated events

    On the margins of UNEA-7, associated activities will take place and complement efforts to advance the UNEA mandate and theme towards "Advancing sustainable solutions for a resilient planet”

    These related activities and events will provide a platform for diverse stakeholders to convene discussions. Find below the additional moments to look at in addition to the official UNEA programme.

    See here the list of all associated events

    Note: The list of side events and exhibitions might still change.

    Monday, 8 December - 15h00-16h15 EAT: MEAs Side Event: Joining Forces: How MEAs Drive Compliance and Enforcement Against Illegal Traffic
    UNEA7

     

    Many multilateral environmental agreements (MEAs) set out trade control provisions as a key approach to achieve their goals. The illegal trade of environmentally sensitive substances and commodities – ranging from hazardous substances, such as ozone-depleting substances and mercury, to hazardous wastes and endangered species pose serious threats to health, ecosystems, economies and security, and undermines individual and collective efforts.

    MEAs with trade-control provisions play a central role in regulating international trade, including preventing and combatting illegal traffic. Strengthening compliance and enforcement mechanisms with trade-related provisions of MEAs is therefore essential to advancing sustainable solutions for a resilient planet, in line with the theme of UNEA-7.

    This side event will spotlight the critical role of MEAs and their compliance committees in addressing illegal traffic and supporting Parties in ensuring that international trade takes place in a way that minimizes negative impacts to human health and the environment, and that illegal trade is prevented and addressed. The event will also emphasize the role of enforcement agencies, particularly customs and border authorities, as a first line of defense against illegal traffic, and showcase emerging tools by the MEAs secretariats and relevant international organizations for monitoring, detection, and enforcement at borders. Building on the longstanding cooperation among MEAs and the momentum of the UNEA-7 agenda item related to cooperation with MEAs, this event will present best practices on how MEAs can be implemented at the national level in a coordinated manner to facilitate trade control and address illegal traffic.

    Speakers

    • Megumi Seki Nakamura - Executive Secretary, Convention for the Protection of the Ozone Layer and Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer
    • Rolph Payet - Executive Secretary, Basel Rotterdam and Stockholm Conventions (BRS)
    • Ivonne Higuero - Secretary-General, Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES)
    • Monika Stankiewicz - Executive Secretary, Minamata Convention on Mercury
    • Sonja Dünnwald - Member, The Basel Convention’s Implementation and Compliance Committee
    • Pablo Moscoso - Senior Legal Officer, Ozone Secretariat
    • Haruko Okusu - Chief of the Governance Bodies Unit, CITES Secretariat

    Organizers: Secretariat of the Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm Conventions (BRS), Green Customs Initiative Secretariat, Secretariat of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), Secretariat to the Minamata Convention on Mercury, UN Environment Programme-Ozone Secretariat 

    Official page

    Monday, 8 December - 18h15-19h45 EAT: Official Side event: Synergies in the Chemicals and Waste Cluster: The Role of Emerging and Established Instruments
    UNEA7

     

    The global governance cluster on chemicals and waste includes key instruments such as the Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm Conventions, the Minamata Convention, the Global Framework on Chemicals, as well as the work and research of UNEP’s Chemicals and Health Branch and other institutions.

    Collectively, these actors have played a decisive role in protecting human health and the environment. With the adoption of the new Intergovernemental Science-Policy Panel on Chemicals, Waste and Pollution (ISP-CWP) on June 20, 2025, a significant new instrument has joined this global governance cluster, and the forthcoming global treaty on plastic pollution will further reinforce it. To ensure the work within the growing chemicals and waste cluster is based on science and aligned with States’ needs, while also recognizing ongoing resource constraints, a good integration of the new instruments and enhanced coordination across all instruments is essential.

    This event aims to initiate a dialogue on the strengthening of the chemicals and waste cluster and it’s science-policy interface. It further aims to explore approaches to enhancing synergies and efficiency and to ensuring the long-term strength of the cluster and its collaboration with other thematic clusters.

    Moderator

    • Jacqueline Alvarez - Chief Chemicals and Health Branch, UNEP

    Speakers

    • Rolph Payet - Executive Secretary, Basel Rotterdam and Stockholm Conventions (BRS)
    • Monika Stankiewicz - Executive Secretary, Minamata Convention on Mercury
    • Felix Wertli - Ambassador for the Environment, Switzerland
    • Valentina Sierra - Second Secretary, Directorate of Environment, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Uruguay
    • Ermira Fida - Deputy Executive Secretary, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

    Organizers: Switzerland

    Official page

    Tuesday, 9 December - 14h30-15h45 EAT: MEAs Side Event: Leveraging AI for beter cooperation, collaboration and impact for MEAs
    UNEA7

     

    AI presents an unprecedented opportunity to strengthen the science-policy interface and accelerate the achievement of global environmental goals. For MEAs, responsible use of AI can streamline knowledge access, improve national reporting, and enhance transparency and compliance. At the same time, it raises questions about data governance, sovereignty, and ethics that must be addressed collectively within multilateral frameworks.

    This event will:

    • Enhance understanding of how artificial intelligence (AI) can be responsibly harnessed to support the mandates and implementation of Multilateral Environmental Agreements (MEAs).

    • Facilitate shared learning across MEAs and partners on the deployment of digital innovation and AI for environmental monitoring, assessment, and policy support.

    • Showcase innovative tools developed by UNEP and MEAs that leverage AI to strengthen the science–policy interface and enable data-driven decision-making.

    • Promote recognition of the Global Environmental Data Strategy (GEDS) as a foundational enabler for trusted, interoperable, and AI-ready environmental data.

    • Identify capacity-building needs, governance gaps, and collaborative opportunities to ensure the equitable and sustainable application of AI in multilateral and national environmental processes.

    Organizers: Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm Conventions (BRS), Cartagena Convention, Multilateral Fund for the Implementation of the Montreal Protocol, Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), Secretariat of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), Secretariat to the Minamata Convention on Mercury, UN Environment Programme-Ozone Secretariat

    Official page

    Tuesday, 9 December - 16h00-17h15 EAT: MEAs Side Event: GEF-MEA Exchange on Financing: From Synergies to Solutions-Achieving a Resilient, Nature-positive, Pollution-free Future through GEF-9
    UNEA7

     

    As the world faces converging environmental crises, the Global Environment Facility (GEF) plays a pivotal role in advancing integrated, multilateral responses. With its mandate to finance the implementation of major multilateral environmental agreements (MEAs) addressing biodiversity, chemicals, waste, and pollution, the GEF remains a cornerstone of international environmental governance. Pollution undermines biodiversity by degrading ecosystems and affecting human health, economies and climate stability, while biodiversity loss threatens sustainable development through weakening ecosystem resilience. Addressing both challenges together is essential to building a resilient planet.

    This side event takes place during UNEA-7, amid the negotiations for the ninth replenishment of the GEF Trust Fund (GEF-9) - a critical moment for aligning finance with the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (KMGBF). Because GEF-9 covers the remaining five years of KMGBF implementation, the replenishment cycle offers a unique opportunity to integrate the biodiversity and pollution agendas and strengthen environmental resilience as the foundation of economies and societies.

    Building on the inaugural GEF–MEA Exchange in 2025, the event will showcase how GEF-9 supports MEA implementation through cross-sectoral, cost-effective, and transformative approaches. It will highlight integrated programming across biodiversity, climate, chemicals, pollution, and land degradation; innovative finance strategies; and ongoing GEF reforms enhancing alignment with MEAs. By promoting cooperation, coherence, and collective advocacy, this event will contribute to UNEA-7’s objectives to scale up integrated action and financing for a nature-positive, net-zero, and pollution-free future. 

    Speakers

    • H.E. Matthew Samuda, Minister responsible for Water, Environment, Climate Change, and the Blue and Green Economies, Jamaica
    • Marjeta Jager, Deputy Director-General, Directorate-General for International Partnerships, European Commission
    • Invited high-level government representative (to be confirmed)
    • Invited high-level government representative (to be confirmed)
    • Astrid Schomaker, Executive Secretary, Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD)
    • Ivonne Higuero, Secretary-General, Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES)
    • Musonda Mumba, Secretary-General, Convention on Wetlands (Ramsar Convention)
    • Monika Stankiewicz, Executive Secretary, Minamata Convention on Mercury
    • Chizuru Aoki, Manager Conventions and Funds Division, Global Environment Facility (GEF) 

    Organizers: Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm Conventions (BRS), Cartagena Convention, Global Environment Facility (GEF), Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD)

    Official page

    Thursday, 11 December - 14h30-15h45 EAT: MEAs Side Event: Atmospheric Monitoring of Substances under Multilateral Environmental Agreements: Opportunities for Synergistic Action
    UNEA7

     

    Systematic observations and measurements of the Earth’s atmosphere are fundamental to understanding its composition and dynamics, and detecting any changes and their potential impacts In particular, the continuous monitoring of substances regulated  under Multilateral Environmental Agreements (MEAs) and/or of measures taken under those is indispensable for safeguarding human health and ecosystems, ensuring compliance with international obligations, evaluating the effectiveness of treaties, and deterring illegal production and trade that could lead to unexpected emissions.

    This side event will underscore the critical role of atmospheric monitoring in relation to substances regulated under the Montreal Protocol, the Stockholm and Minamata Conventions. It will examine the contributions of existing monitoring networks and review actions taken to address persistent gaps in coverage under these agreements.
    Discussions will highlight the urgent need to strengthen global and regional monitoring of ongoing emissions, especially in under-sampled regions, inform on recent undertakings to close gaps in global atmospheric observations, and explore practical options for enhancing monitoring capacity.

    The event will also consider possibilities for cooperation among the existing monitoring programmes and networks of the above-mentioned treaties and the World Meteorological Organization (WMO). The objective is to identify opportunities to build synergies across conventions, optimize the use of the existing monitoring capacity such as the Global Atmosphere Watch (GAW), and improve access to global resources and expertise. By fostering integration and collaboration, the event aims to advance a more comprehensive and efficient global monitoring framework for treaty-related substances.

    Moderator

    • Ms Stephanie Haysmith, Ozone Secretariat  

    Speakers

    • Megumi Seki Nakamura, Executive Secretary, Convention for the Protection of the Ozone Layer and Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer
    • Rolph Payet, Executive Secretary, Basel Rotterdam and Stockholm Conventions (BRS)
    • Monika Stankiewicz, Executive Secretary, Minamata Convention on Mercury
    • Paolo Laj, Chief, Atmospheric Environment Research, Global Atmosphere Watch (GAW) Programme, World Meteorological Organization
    • Sophia Mylona, Senior Environmental Affairs Officer, Convention for the Protection of the Ozone Layer and for the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer (Ozone Secretariat)
    • Marylene Beau, Head of Legal and Policy Unit, Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm (BRS) Conventions

    Organizers: Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm Conventions (BRS), Secretariat of the Minamata Convention on Mercury, Vienna Convention - Montreal Protocol, World Meteorological Organization (WMO)

    Official page

    Thursday, 11 December - 16h00-17h15 EAT: MEAs Side Event: Integrated Actions for a Resilient Planet - ACP-MEAs III Achievements and Pathways Forward
    UNEA7

     

    For over sixteen years, the ACP-MEAs Programme has strengthened environmental governance across 79 countries in Africa, the Caribbean, and the Pacific through a unique partnership between the OACPS Secretariat, UNEP, and FAO with regional partners and funded by the European Commission. Now in its third phase (2020–2025), ACP-MEAs III has advanced compliance with biodiversity- and chemicals-related MEAs, enhanced ocean governance through Regional Seas Conventions, and supported the integration of biodiversity, chemicals and waste, and sustainable agriculture into national policies and institutions. This side event will present the Programme’s key achievements, innovations, and lessons learned, highlighting how regional leadership, capacity-building, and practical tools have helped countries translate global commitments into coherent national actions. It will also showcase institutional frameworks, policy instruments, and knowledge products developed under the Programme.

    Objectives
    * Highlight major results and impact of ACP-MEAs III in advancing MEA synergies, ocean governance, and integrated environmental management across ACP regions.
    * Showcase practical tools, policy solutions, and institutional mechanisms developed through the Programme.
    * Facilitate dialogue on sustaining and scaling MEA synergies beyond the Programme’s lifetime.

    Anticipated Outcomes
    * Recommendations for integrating MEA synergies into national and regional policies.
    * Strengthened networks among ACP governments, regional bodies, MEA Secretariats, and development partners.
    * Enhanced visibility of ACP-MEAs III contributions to a resilient and sustainable future.

    Speakers

    • H.E. Matthew Samuda, Minister of Economic Growth and Job Creation, Jamaica
    • H.E. Mosese Bulitavu, Minister of Environment and Climate Change, Republic of Fiji
    • H.E. Ms. Evelyn Ndlovu Minister of Environment, Water and Climate Change Republic of Zimbabwe
    • Ms. Marjeta Jager, Deputy Director-General, Directorate-General for International Partnerships, European Commission
    • Ms. Patricia Mbote, Law Division Director, UNEP
    • Mr Jeffrey Griffin, Executive Coordinator of the GEF Coordination Unit, Office of Climate Change, Biodiversity and the Environment, FAO
    • H.E. Mr. Moussa S. BATRAKI, Secretary General, OACPS (video message)

    Organizers: Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm Conventions (BRS), Cartagena Convention, European Union, Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), Secretariat of the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species (CMS), Secretariat to the Minamata Convention on Mercury, United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)

    Official page

    Thursday, 11 December - 16h45-18h30 EAT: Associated event: Bridging Science and Policy: Strengthening Resilience to Tackle the Environmental Crisis
    UNEA7

     

    On 20 June 2025 in Punta del Este, Uruguay, the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Panel on Chemicals, Waste and Pollution (ISP-CWP) was established. The founding of this new global science-policy panel dedicated to the sound management of chemicals and waste and the prevention of pollution against a challenging geopolitical backdrop is major win for multilateralism. In a world that faces the escalating impacts of climate change, biodiversity loss and pollution, the new Panel joins the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) in addressing today’s global environmental challenges and crises through the strengthening of the science-policy interface.

    With preparations underway for the first session of the ISP-CWP Plenary, that will take place from 2 – 6 February 2026 in Geneva, this side event will focus on relevant examples and experiences from IPCC and IPBES that the new Panel could build on and foster an early start of the work. It will also provide an opportunity to explore the potential for cooperation and collaboration between science-policy panels as well as with relevant Multilateral Environmental Agreements (MEAs). Finally, the event allows governments and stakeholders to share their expectations for the new Panel, identify synergies and highlight needs and priorities.

    The expected outcomes of the event include:

    • Relevant examples and experiences that can help expedite the work of the new ISP-CWP in the start-up phase are shared by other science-policy panels.
    • Science-policy needs, priorities and expectations of the new Panel are shared by Governments and Multilateral Environmental Agreements.
    • Opportunities to strengthen collaboration among science-policy bodies and with international organizations to find science-based solutions to the triple planetary crisis are identified.

    This side event directly supports the UNEA-7 theme, “Advancing Sustainable Solutions for a Resilient Planet,” by fostering dialogue on the role of science-policy interfaces in addressing the environmental crises. By spotlighting the recently established Intergovernmental Science-Policy Panel on Chemicals, Waste and Pollution (ISP-CWP), and drawing examples from the IPCC and IPBES relevant to the Panel as well as experiences from other international organizations, the event highlights how robust frameworks can drive effective, science-based solutions to policy challenges grounded in local realities.

    The discussion will empower governments, stakeholders and MEAs to contribute to strengthening science-policy interfaces that are responsive to real-world needs, enhance global cooperation, and support sustainable solutions for a resilient planet.

    Moderator

    • Andrea Hinwood - Chief Scientist, UNEP

    Speakers

    • H.E. Thierry Aartsen - Minister for the Environment and Public Transport, Kingdom of the Netherlands
    • Inger Andersen - UN Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director, UNEP
    • Monika Hencsey - Director, DG ENV, Green Diplomacy & Multilateralism, European Commission
    • Ilka Hirt - Deputy Director General, International Policy, Germany's Environment Ministry
    • Valentina Sierra - Second Secretary, Directorate of Environment, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Uruguay
    • Rolph Payet - Executive Secretary, Basel Rotterdam and Stockholm Conventions (BRS)
    • Monika Stankiewicz - Executive Secretary, Minamata Convention on Mercury
    • Haruko Okusu - Chief of the Governance Bodies Unit, CITES Secretariat
    • David Obura - Chair, Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES)
    • Prof. Jim Skea - Chair, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
    • Tessa Goverse - Principal Coordinator and Head of the Interim Secretariat, Intergovernmental Science-Policy Panel on Chemicals, Waste and Pollution

    Official page

    Thursday, 11 December - 18h15-19h45 EAT: Official Side event: GEF State of Play and Next Cycle – Opportunities for Developing Countries, LDCs, and SIDS
    • Where: Mt Kenya
    UNEA7

     

    Join senior representatives from across the GEF partnership as we present the state of play of the GEF-8 period, and provide a briefing on the strategic direction under negotiation for the Family of Funds for GEF-9.

    This session will give countries an inside view on the current status of GEF-8, including the Integrated Programs, and direction of the GEF – from the GEF-9 Programming and Policy Directions and replenishment milestones, to the Least Developed Countries Fund and Special Climate Change Fund negotiations, and the road toward the 2026 GEF Assembly.

    We’ll also share short updates on key decisions by major multilateral environmental agreements served by the GEF and what they mean for countries. A special focus will be placed on how LDCs and SIDS can stay closely engaged and make the most of support opportunities.

    Moderator

    • Sékou Touré - Advisor, GEF

    Speakers

    • Rolph Payet - Executive Secretary, Basel Rotterdam and Stockholm Conventions (BRS)
    • Monika Stankiewicz - Executive Secretary, Minamata Convention on Mercury
    • Jonathan Caldicott - Head, GEF Operations and Policy Division, GEF
    • Chizuru Aoki - Head, GEF Division of the Multilateral Environmental Agreements
    • Mohamed Bakarr - Head, Integration and Knowledge Division, GEF

    Organizers: Global Environment Facility (GEF)

    Official page

    Newsroom
    Multilateral Environmental Agreements day

    A dedicated Multilateral Environmental Agreements Day (MEAs Day) will be convened on Wednesday, 10 December 2025

    The day will feature an opening plenary session followed by two consecutive high-level dialogues. These engagements provide a compelling platform to highlight cooperation between UNEP and MEAs as well as among MEAs – celebrating success stories, championing integrated solutions, and inspiring greater collective environmental action. The day is convened under the agenda item “Cooperation with multilateral environmental agreements (MEAs)”, as endorsed in UNEA decision 6/7.

    Opening of the plenary of the MEA day

    The opening plenary of the MEAs Day will be held on 10 December 2025 from 10 am to 10.30 am EAT in Conference Room 1. It will be presided over by His Excellency Abdullah Bin Ali Al-Amri, Chair of the Environment Authority of Oman and President of UNEA-7, followed by a statement by the UNEP Executive Director and high-level introductory remarks from Presidents of the Conferences of the Parties of the MEAs.

    MEA high-level dialogues

    The two high-level dialogues will focus on two broad programmatic areas:

    • MEAs Dialogue 1 - “Signed, Sealed, Delivered?” - Turbocharging MEAs implementation through whole-of-government and whole-of-society approaches (Wednesday, 10 December 2025 10:30 to 13:00 EAT)
    • MEAs Dialogue 2 - “Keeping the Promise” - Boosting SDGs implementation through the MEAs (Wednesday, 10 December 2025 15:00 to 17:00 EAT)

    High-level discussions on the conclusions

    The MEAs Day will conclude with a moderated high-level plenary discussion highlighting the conclusions and key outcomes of the day. The session will reflect on proposed solutions, shared insights, and suggested areas for future action. The moderated discussion on the conclusions will be held on 10 December 2025 from 5 to 6 pm EAT in Conference Room 1.

    A summary of these discussions — including the main messages and recommendations for action — will be presented during the closing plenary on Friday 12 December, and captured in the official proceedings report of UNEA-7.

    Participation in the MEAs Day

    Participation in the MEAs Day is open to all Member States and observers, including MEA Secretariats, intergovernmental/international organizations, relevant UN entities and specialized agencies and related organizations, as well as accredited Major Groups and Stakeholders participating to UNEA-7. The MEAs Day will feature broad participation from the MEAs, including the UNEP administered global and regional MEA Secretariats and other UNEP-hosted global entities including the Science-Policy Panels, as well as non-UNEP administered global and regional MEAs.

    For more information, visit the UNEA webpage.

    Meeting with the Children and Youth Major Group to UNEP

    CYMG and Monika Stankiewicz

    The Secretariat of the Minamata Convention was happy to engage in an informal discussion with the Children and Youth Major Group and learn about their inspiring initiatives, including the Global Youth Declaration and the Youth2BeatPollution campaign. 

    Executive Secretary Monika Stankiewicz heard ideas and plans for advancing the work to fight pollution and exchanged ideas for stronger engagement of Youth under Minamata Convention processes and the challenges faced by some of their constituents with accreditation under the Convention. 

    Their input is invaluable, and the Secretariat looks forward to continuing this dialogue with CYMG and other youth stakeholders. As the Convention prepares for COP-7 in 2027, the Secretariat invites youth groups to join technical discussions and share research or work on mercury to help inform Parties’ decisions. Together, let’s move toward to make mercury history. 

    Learn more about the Convention and youth engagement.

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    UNEA-7 side event: Bridging Science and Policy: Strengthening Resilience to Tackle the Environmental Crisis

    unea

    In a major win for data-based decision making, the Intergovernmental Science Policy Panel on Chemicals, Waste and Pollution (ISP-CWP) was established in June.

    This afternoon, an event brought together the head of the ISP-CWP and the chairs of two other intergovernmental scientific panels to discuss the challenges of trying to strengthen the science-policy interface in the fight against environmental degradation.

    The creation of the ISP-CWP is a meaningful development, said UNEP Executive Director Inger Andersen, adding the body "will help shine a light on the science, help inform us, help us understand better" how to combat chemical waste and pollution. 

    Minamata Convention Executive Secretary Monika Stankiewicz said she was looking ahead to the panel beginning its work, stressing that "every MEA and intergovernmental process needs to measure progress in a robust way, and we cannot really claim success until science confirms that the progress is indeed being achieved".

    You can rewatch the event here. 

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    UNEA-7 side event: Integrated Actions for a Resilient Planet - ACP-MEAs III Achievements and Pathways Forward

    unea7

    During UNEA‑7, this side event on the ACP-MEAs Programme showcased results of the joint partnership among the European Commission, the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States (OACPS), the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO). For over sixteen years, the programme has built capacity in 79 countries in Africa, the Caribbean, and the Pacific (ACP) to help them meet their obligations under Multilateral Environmental Agreements (MEAs), address environmental challenges, and strengthen governance at national and regional levels. 

    In the period 2020–2025, ACP-MEAs III has advanced compliance with biodiversity- and chemicals-related MEAs, including the Minamata Convention on Mercury, enhanced ocean governance through Regional Seas Conventions, and supported the integration of biodiversity, chemicals and waste, and sustainable agriculture into national policies and institutions. 

    Richard Gutierrez of the Minamata Convention Secretariat presented highlights of impactful mercury-related activities achieved through synergies with ACP-MEAs, NGOs, partner countries, and the Secretariat, demonstrating how collaboration translates global commitments into concrete national actions. 

    The event reinforced the importance of partnerships and capacity-building in creating a resilient and sustainable future across ACP regions. 

    You can rewatch the event here.   

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    UNEA-7 side event: Atmospheric monitoring of substances under Multilateral Environmental Agreements: Opportunities for synergistic action

    unea7

    This UNEA‑7 side event underscored the critical role of systematic atmospheric observations in supporting compliance with Multilateral Environmental Agreements (MEAs) and safeguarding human health and ecosystems. The discussion focused on substances regulated under the Montreal Protocol, the Stockholm Convention, and the Minamata Convention, highlighting how continuous monitoring helps evaluate treaty effectiveness and deter illegal production and trade. 

    In her opening remarks, Brenda Koekkoek, Senior Coordination Officer of the Minamata Convention Secretariat, stressed that mercury’s global transport and toxicity make atmospheric monitoring essential for the Minamata Convention’s effectiveness evaluation, which will take place at COP‑7 in 2027. 

    Eisaku Toda, Senior Programme Management Officer, presented on atmospheric mercury monitoring under the Minamata Convention, showcasing efforts to strengthen global and regional observation networks and integrate mercury monitoring into broader atmospheric frameworks. 

    The event explored opportunities to build synergies across conventions, optimize existing resources, and advance a more comprehensive global monitoring framework for substances regulated under international environmental agreements. 

    You can rewatch the event here.   

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    UNEA-7 side event: GEF–MEA Exchange on Financing: From Synergies to Solutions

    UNEA7

    On 9 December, this exchange explored how the forthcoming GEF-9 replenishment can strengthen integrated action across multilateral environmental agreements (MEAs). Speakers highlighted that as countries confront accelerating biodiversity loss, pollution and climate pressures, coherent financing and collaboration are essential to achieving a resilient, nature-positive and pollution-free future. Because GEF-9 covers the remaining five years of the Kunming–Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, participants emphasized the opportunity to better align biodiversity and pollution agendas.

    Discussions showcased how integrated programming can advance cross-sectoral solutions spanning chemicals, waste and pollution, biodiversity, climate and land degradation. The event also built on the inaugural GEF–MEA Exchange earlier in 2025, reflecting growing momentum toward coordinated implementation, shared monitoring, and more inclusive approaches involving Indigenous Peoples, local communities, women, youth and civil society.

    Executive Secretary Monika Stankiewicz underscored that mercury and broader pollution issues must be elevated to the same level of priority as biodiversity and climate. She called on GEF-9 to strengthen chemicals mainstreaming, ensuring that Integrated Programs include rigorous reporting on mercury and POPs mitigation, and that pollution-related MEA obligations are fully reflected in the GEF Integrated Programmes such as the Amazon, Congo, Sustainable Cities, Critical Forest Biomes and Pollution-Free Supply Chains.

    Across interventions, one message stood out: the challenges of chemicals, waste, pollution and biodiversity loss are deeply interconnected, and meeting them requires a whole-of-government, whole-of-society and whole-of-MEA approach. Strengthened cooperation and coherent financing under GEF-9 will be essential to translate these synergies into concrete results.

    You can rewatch the event here. 

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    Side event: Leveraging AI for better cooperation, collaboration and impact for MEAs

    UNEA7

    On Tuesday, 9 December, multilateral environmental agreement (MEA) representatives and UN bodies gathered to discuss how artificial intelligence can strengthen cooperation, improve information accessibility and enhance implementation across agreements. Speakers highlighted that MEAs manage large volumes of multilingual, complex data, making AI a promising tool for improving coherence, comparability and support to Parties, provided it is developed responsibly, transparently and with strong safeguards.

    The Minamata Convention presented its journey under its digital strategy, noting progress in dashboards, website architecture and interoperability with partners such as GEF, BRS and InforMEA. A key focus was the Convention’s exploration of a source-bounded AI model to support the analysis of national reports, one of the richest datasets among MEAs. AI-assisted synthesis can help identify patterns, recurring challenges and emerging good practices, while making support to Parties more consistent and targeted.  This synthesis will also inform the upcoming first effectiveness evaluation as well as capacity- building efforts under the Convention.

    Panelists shared experiences and complementary initiatives, from document cross-referencing to decision workflows and early experimentation with environmental knowledge platforms. All speakers emphasized that AI innovations must be developed in ways that significantly reduce their environmental footprint. Across interventions, several shared priorities emerged: strengthening interoperability, aligning AI safeguards with UN system guidance, co-developing pilots on reporting analysis and investing in capacity-building to ensure equitable access. The session underscored a collective commitment to advancing AI in ways that are responsible, inclusive and beneficial for environmental governance.

    In closing, the Minamata Convention highlighted UNEP’s Environment GPT as an emerging  tool that can support MEAs.  INFORMEA was also noted as a key established platform to support and guide MEA collaboration in this area moving forward to better serve Parties collectively. 

    You can rewatch the event here. 

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    Side event: Synergies in the Chemicals and Waste Cluster: The Role of Emerging and Established Instruments

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    On Monday, 8 December, this official side event initiated a dialogue on strengthening the global governance cluster on chemicals and waste, which includes the Minamata Convention on Mercury, the Basel, Rotterdam, and Stockholm Conventions, the Global Framework on Chemicals, and UNEP’s Chemicals and Health Branch. With the recent adoption of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Panel on Chemicals, Waste and Pollution (ISP-CWP) and the forthcoming global treaty on plastic pollution, participants explored how to enhance integration, coordination, and the science-policy interface within this growing cluster. The discussion focused on approaches to improve synergies, efficiency, and long-term collaboration across thematic clusters to protect human health and the environment. 

    Reflecting on the importance of unified action, Executive Secretary Monika Stankiewicz underlined that coherence is essential to advancing global efforts on chemicals and waste: “We must speak with one voice on chemicals and waste whenever the situation demands it. Fragmented narratives offer no benefit, while unity strengthens our impact. This approach depends on building trust and exercising leadership that prioritizes the common good. I also look forward to the ISP supporting us in strengthening our collective voice,” she stated.

    You can rewatch the event here.  

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    Side event: How MEAs drive compliance and enforcement against illegal traffic

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    On Monday, 8 December, delegates gathered for the side event Joining Forces: How MEAs Drive Compliance and Enforcement Against Illegal Traffic, a joint initiative led by the secretariats of the Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm Conventions (BRS), the Minamata Convention on Mercury, CITES, the Green Customs Initiative, and the Ozone Secretariat.

     The discussion highlighted the role of multilateral environmental agreement (MEA) compliance committees and enforcement agencies, such as customs and border authorities, as the first line of defense against illegal traffic. Participants explored innovative tools for monitoring and enforcement, shared best practices for national-level implementation, and reinforced the importance of cooperation for a resilient planet.

    In her closing remarks, the Minamata Convention Executive Secretary Monika Stankiewicz stated: “Synergies work best when we focus on concrete issues and take practical approaches. Trade control is one such area of common interest where cooperation is essential. Decades of experience from other MEAs and organizations such as INTERPOL and UNODC will accelerate our efforts.”

    You can rewatch the event here. 

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    UNEA-7 launches MEAs Pavilion to promote synergies across global environmental agreements

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    On 8 December, the Multilateral Environmental Agreements Pavilion was officially opened at UNEA-7, providing a shared space for MEA secretariats and UNEP to highlight integrated approaches and solutions that advance cooperation, strengthen synergies, and enhance coherence across global environmental governance. 

    The Pavilion was opened by UNEA-7 President Abdullah Bin Ali Al-Amri and UNEP Deputy Executive Director Elizabeth Mrema. At UNEA, “we can see where MEAs come together”, said Mrema. She emphasized the importance of addressing environmental issues in a synergistic and collaborative way. 

    A shared exhibition booth for chemicals and waste, highlighting the collaborative work of the Minamata Convention on Mercury with the Basel, Rotterdam, and Stockholm Conventions, and the Global Framework on Chemicals, is part of the exhibition.

    This initiative underscores the critical importance of cooperation and multilateralism in achieving tangible results for people and the planet. 

    The pavilion will be open to all visitors of UNEA-7 throughout the week including the MEAs Day

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    The Secretariat of the Minamata Convention on Mercury gets ready for UNEA-7

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    The seventh session of the United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA-7) will take place from 8 to 12 December 2025 at the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) headquarters in Nairobi, Kenya.

    Bringing together representatives from all 193 Member States of the United Nations, UNEA-7 will once again serve as the world’s top decision-making body on the environment. The Assembly is designed to unite countries in addressing the accelerating decline of the natural world and in forging a more sustainable, resilient future.

    Under the theme “Advancing sustainable solutions for a resilient planet”, this year’s Assembly will highlight the urgent need for approaches that are environmentally sound, socially just and economically inclusive. Discussions are expected to span a wide range of emerging and interconnected issues, from the environmental impacts of crimes to the challenges posed by ecosystem degradation and artificial intelligence.

    Ahead of the meeting, Executive Secretary Monika Stankiewicz noted: “As we gather at UNEA-7, we are reminded that addressing the triple planetary crisis calls for solutions that are connected, inclusive and grounded in science. The Minamata Convention shows the possibility of advancing sustainable solutions when countries work together to reduce mercury pollution across its entire life cycle. I look forward to strengthening our collaboration and partnerships at UNEA-7 with governments, other multilateral environmental agreements, scientific partners and communities on the ground.”

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