Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants
The Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants aims to protect people and the planet from harmful chemicals.
The Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants aims to protect people and the planet from harmful chemicals.
The Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants (the convention) is a multilateral environmental agreement that aims to protect human health and the environment by banning the production and use of some of the most toxic chemicals.
The convention became international law in May 2004. New Zealand ratified (officially joined) the convention in September 2004. It entered into force (became legally binding) for New Zealand on 23 December 2004.
Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants [UN Stockholm Convention website].
The Stockholm Convention, together with the Basel Convention and Rotterdam Convention create international rules for transboundary movement and safe management and disposal of some of the most hazardous chemicals and wastes in the world.
National focal point Stockholm Convention, Ministry for the Environment, PO Box 10362, Wellington 6143
Phone: 0800 499 700 or +64 4 439 7400 / Email: stockholm@mfe.govt.nz
Persistent organic pollutants (POPs) are organic (carbon-based) chemical substances that have properties which can have significant negative effects on health and the environment.
Due to these characteristics over 180 countries are committed to the convention.
There are 30 chemicals targeted by the convention.
The listed chemicals are divided into three annexes according to how each is produced and the level of restriction required.
List of POPs, their description and use in New Zealand (PDF, 503 KB). The POPs are grouped by annex.
For more information about these chemicals see national implementation plans below.
New Zealand's national implementation under the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants (2006) (NIP) sets out how New Zealand proposed to meet our obligations for the initial 12 chemicals such as on:
In 2014, New Zealand submitted an addendum [Stockholm Convention website] to the first national implementation plan about the implementation of the 2011 listing of technical endosulfan and its related isomers.
In December 2018, we submitted New Zealand’s updated national implementation plan under the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants.
It outlined measures to implement our obligations relating to new POPs added to the convention in 2009, 2013, 2015, and 2017. It also reports on New Zealand’s achievements in phasing out the 12 initial POPs.
In December 2022, we submitted a further updated national implementation Plan, reporting on our implementation of the two new listed POPs added to the Stockholm Convention in 2019 – dicofol and perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA), its salts, and PFOA-related compounds.
This updated plan describes the measures New Zealand has already taken and aims to provide a proactive plan for the future to support compliance with the convention.
By implementing this plan, New Zealand will continue to contribute to the international efforts in limiting the effects of persistent organic pollutants on human health and the environment.
New Zealand has laws and regulations to tightly control POPs.
We implement the convention through:
The Stockholm Convention together with the Basel Convention and Rotterdam Convention create international rules for transboundary movement and safe management and disposal of some of the most hazardous chemicals and wastes in the world.
In 2019, two new chemicals were added to Annex A for elimination. These listings came into force on 3 December 2020:
This is a pesticide related to DDT. It is now prohibited in any country including New Zealand.
Many uses of this chemical are now prohibited internationally and in New Zealand. New Zealand has a five-year exemption under the convention for specific uses and a permit is required to import PFOA.
The specific use exemptions are:
The use of PFOA fire-fighting foam is also controlled in New Zealand under the Fire fighting chemicals group standard [EPA website].
PFOA is part of a group of chemicals known as per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances PFAS. The Ministry for the Environment has been focused on these chemicals since issues related to their historic use in fire fighting foams surfaced in 2017.
For more information see PFAS (per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances).
Parties to the convention must have an Action Plan to reduce or eliminate releases of dioxins and other Annex C chemicals. New Zealand’s Action Plan is in our updated National Implementation Plan [Stockholm Convention website].
'Dioxin' is a generic term used to describe a family of chlorine-containing chemicals called dioxins and furans. These unwanted and highly toxic 'by-product' chemicals are formed in very small amounts when chlorine is present in some industrial processes and during the burning (combustion, incineration) of organic materials.
For further information about dioxins, see Dioxins, furans and PCBs
Dioxins are released to the environment in very small amounts through a number of industrial and domestic activities, particularly the open burning of wastes. New Zealand is obligated under the convention to take measures to reduce and where feasible ultimately eliminate releases of dioxin. Although levels of dioxins in New Zealand foods (including our meats, dairy products and fish) are low and below the World Health Organisation guidelines, it is prudent to further minimise our exposure to dioxins where practicable.
In 2004, MfE developed the National Environmental Standards for Air Quality (NES) as regulations under the Resource Management Act 1991. The NES bans certain activities that produce dioxins and other air toxins.
New Zealand undertakes an inventory of dioxin emissions to air, land and water, and reservoir sources every five years.
See the latest update of the New Zealand inventory of dioxin emissions to air, land and water, and reservoir sources.
Further work on dioxin minimisation is set out in the Action Plan for Dioxins and other Annex C Chemicals, in New Zealand’s National Implementation Plan under the Stockholm Convention 2018.
New Zealand has clear regulations and guidelines in place for how to store, handle and dispose of POPs safely in the few situations where they are still present in New Zealand.
These are set out in the Hazardous Substances (Storage and Disposal of POPs) Notice 2004 (PDF 277 KB) [EPA website].
For advice about disposal of POPs contact HSCompliance@epa.govt.nz.
MfE, working with local government, is undertaking a national collection of agricultural chemicals in rural New Zealand. The programme has two stages. The first is to remove as much as possible the historical legacy of agrichemicals stored in rural sheds across the country. A key focus is the removal of POPs.
The second is to put in place a longer-term and producer-responsibility solution to manage and dispose of future unwanted chemicals. This is to ensure that we do not recreate the same problem in the future. One example of this approach is the Agrecovery rural recycling programme [Agrecovery website].
POP wastes must be exported for destruction. Under the HSNO Act 1996, the disposal of POPs must comply with the:
Hazardous Substances (Storage and Disposal of POPs) Notice 2004 (PDF 277 KB) [EPA website]
New Zealand must also comply with the requirements for the environmentally sound management of POP wastes set out in the:
The Hazardous Substances (Storage and Disposal of POPs) Notice 2004 states that POP wastes cannot be disposed of to a landfill. Increasingly, with waste containing POPs such as flame-retarded plastic waste and hexabromocyclododecane- (HBCD-) containing polystyrene, the management of POP disposal is much more problematic.
We commissioned the following studies on e-waste containing brominated flame retardants in New Zealand.
New Zealand has a comprehensive framework for managing contaminated land. Land contaminated by POPs is managed under this framework.
This includes a mix of:
Studies to monitor the levels of POPs in New Zealanders and the environment include:
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