create i will if you will challenge
create i will if you will challenge

LONG-AWAITED LAW ON PROTECTION OF SEAS FINALLY PASSED IN RUSSIAN PARLIAMENT

20 December 2012, Moscow: The Russian parliament has today passed a long-awaited law to protect the country’s seas from oil pollution, after the voices of 120,000 Russians were presented to the government during Earth Hour’s I WILL IF YOU WILL campaign in 2012.

WWF-Russia has been working on a law to be passed in parliament since the catastrophic oil spill in the Kerchensky Strait of Southern Russia in 2007, and over the years has presented the idea to various government bodies to gather political momentum behind its inception.

After a round-table in the Russian State Duma took place, ecologists further developed the draft law together with the specialized committee on environment in 2010. A year later, the State Duma approved a first hearing of a similar draft law prepared by the Ministry of Natural Resources, however it failed to include the necessary measures needed to fully protect the seas in case of an oil spill.

In response WWF-Russia decided to use Earth Hour’s I WILL IF YOU WILL campaign in 2012 to motivate citizens to add their voice to the growing call for the government to support a full version of the draft law to protect the seas.

Celebrity ambassadors filmed video pledges about what they’d be willing to do if 100,000 signatures were gathered during the Earth Hour campaign, with most completing their dares after the goal was reached within three weeks.

In response to the overwhelming call to redraft the law, an agreement was reached after Earth Hour between WWF Russia, the Ministry of Natural Resources and a specialized State Duma committee that would see them work together to redraft the law that was accepted in the first hearing.

The rework included most of the crucial aspects needed to protect the natural environment of the seas from oil pollution, including the establishment of special conditions for extracting and transportation of hydrocarbons on the continental shelf, in the inner seawaters and in the territorial seas of Russia.

The law also widens responsibilities for operating companies to prevent oil spills, including conditions aimed to protect the seas from oil pollution. 

“There has been major progress in the regulation of coordination response in case of oil spills,” says Ekaterina Khmeleva, Environmental Legislation program coordinator at WWF Russia.

“The new law establishes an approach of a mandatory full restitution to the environment in case of an oil spill, including water and bio-resources, highlighting that the owner of the license bears responsibility even in cases that a spill happens through a fault of his contractor.”

The law will also make it possible for volunteers to engage in the liquidation of oil spills and their consequences on shore.   

“We think that the steps that are now fixed in the law will essentially improve the situation in the legal regulation in protection of seas from oil pollution,” says Khmeleva.

“However, they are not solving all problems, which is why we are not stopping on what has been achieved and will continue our work on that issue further”.

Earth Hour 2013 will take place at 8.30pm – 9.30pm on Saturday 23 March

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Media enquiries:

Benjamin Vozzo, Earth Hour Global E:benjamin@earthhour.org Ph: +65 8223 1728

Daria Kudryavtseva, WWF-Russia E: dkudryavtseva@wwf.ru Ph: +7 916 994 6882

Маша Винокурова, WWF-Russia E: mvinokurova@wwf.ru Ph: +7 903 273 60

For more information please visit:

Earth Hour – www.earthhour.org

About Earth Hour
Earth Hour is a global environmental initiative in partnership with WWF. Individuals, businesses, governments and communities are invited to turn out their lights for one hour on Saturday March 23, 2013 at 8:30 PM to show their support for environmentally sustainable action. In 2012, Earth Hour’s I Will If You Will concept invites individuals and organisations to challenge others to an ongoing environmental commitment beyond the hour. Earth Hour began in one city in 2007 and by 2012 reached over 2 billion people in 152 countries across every continent, receiving reports as ‘the world’s largest campaign for the planet’.

About WWF
WWF is one of the world’s largest and most respected independent conservation organisations, with almost five million supporters and a global network active in more than 100 countries. WWF’s mission is to stop the degradation of the earth’s natural environment and to build a future in which humans live in harmony with nature, by conserving the world’s biological diversity, ensuring that the use of renewable natural resources is sustainable, and promoting the reduction of pollution and wasteful consumption.

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