24-25 January 2023 - 17th Annual meeting Green Customs Initiative (GCI) partners in Paris, France

Green Customs Initiative (GCI) partners gathered in Paris, France for their 17th Annual meeting on 24 and 25 January 2023 to discuss their work plan of activities for 2023. The meeting was hosted and coordinated by the OzonAction Branch at their UNEP office in Paris.

OzonAction’s Head of Branch, Mr. James Curlin in his welcome remarks to the GCI Partners said, “OzonAction is a long-standing member of the Green Customs Initiative and we have been supporting it from day one as part of UNEP’s mandate as an Implementing Agency of the Montreal Protocol’s Multilateral Fund. This is a very tangible, practical form of cooperation that has few peers within the UN system – coordinated delivery of capacity building services on the ground for Member States related to multiple multilateral environmental agreements. This initiative is the embodiment of the UN’s Delivering as One and merits more attention and support.”

The GCI meeting was opened sequentially by Ms. Patricia Kameri-Mbote, UNEP’s Law Division Director and head of the GCI Secretariat, Mr. Rolph Payet, Executive Secretary of the Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm (BRS) Conventions and Ms. Megumi Seki, Executive Secretary of the Ozone Secretariat. The three officials highlighted and noted the significant role played by customs in advancing compliance with multilateral environmental agreements (MEAs). Additionally, they commended the GCI activities and recognition by the United Nations General Assembly’s resolution on preventing and combating crimes that affect the environment.

There were a number of key topics discussed during the meeting including the individual and joint customs activities for 2022, the enforcement operations Thunder 2022, Demeter VIII, and the Green Customs Global Conference, the outcomes of the Conference of Parties for MEAs in 2022, the joint customs training and development of customs national curricula and the Green Customs Guide to MEAs.

Additional sessions covered fostering MEA synergies, particularly between the BRS conventions and the Montreal Protocol to the Vienna Convention, implementing new customs harmonized codes and strengthening the GCI. Furthermore, the sessions’ plenaries provided an opportunity to discuss specific issues such as enhancing voluntary and mandatory reporting for MEAs, promoting Customs’ role in a circular economy, enhancing gender integration in the partners’ and customs work, deepening linkages between trade and the environment, and understanding environmental terminologies relevant to customs.

The meeting concluded with a commitment to amplifying the initiative’s impacts through robust resource mobilization, increased collaborative efforts and implementation of a 2023 joint work plan. The agreed upon 2023 GCI activities include joint training workshops; updates of GCI related courses on CliKC! (Customs Learning and Knowledge Community) a WCO learning platform for Customs Officers; and a publication on gender and green customs.

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