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  2. International Cooperation

International Actions for Reducing Mercury Emissions and Use

Looking for information about the Mercury Export Ban?

By federal law, it is now illegal to export elemental mercury from the United States. For more information, see Questions and Answers about the Mercury Export Ban Act of 2008.

Mercury is a potent neurotoxin that negatively impacts human health and the environment around the world. Mercury pollution is transported globally in the atmosphere and in water, so mercury emitted far away affects people and ecosystems in the United States.
 
The U.S. engages its international partners, multilaterally and bilaterally, to address key mercury issues such as:
  • Data collection and inventory development,
  • Source characterization, and
  • Best practices for emissions and use reduction.

In 2013, the United States joined the Minamata Convention on Mercury, a multilateral environmental agreement that addresses specific human activities which are contributing to widespread mercury pollution. The Minamata Convention entered into force in 2017. Implementation of this agreement will help reduce global mercury pollution over the coming decades.

Learn about EPA's International Work on Mercury: 

Mercury poured from cap into soda bottle.
Mercury is used extensively in artisanal and small scale gold mining, often with unsafe techniques. Photo credit: Malgorzata Stylo.                

On this Page:

  • UNEP Global Mercury Partnership
  • Regional Activities on Mercury
    • Arctic
    • Asia
    • Latin America
  • Past Activities
    • Arctic
    • Europe
    • Latin America
    • North America
    • Russia

On other pages:

  • Minamata Convention on Mercury
  • Mercury Emissions: The Global Context
  • Reducing Mercury Pollution from Artisanal and Small-Scale Gold Mining
  • Artisanal and Small-Scale Gold Mining Without Mercury

UNEP Global Mercury Partnership

The United States was a catalyst in the formation of the Global Mercury Partnership. Established in 2005, the Partnership initiates and supports efforts to achieve reduce the use and emissions of mercury globally (see the UNEP Governing Council Decision 23/9 IV, 2005). The United States continues to participate actively in the Partnership, including through leadership of some of the eight areas of work: 
 
  • Artisanal and Small-Scale Gold Mining (ASGM):  Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC); United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO), United Nations Environment Program (UNEP).
  • Mercury Cell Chlor-alkali Production: United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO).
  • Mercury in Products: Government of the United States (Environmental Protection Agency), Zero Mercury Working Group.
  • Mercury Air Transport and Fate Research: Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR) Institute for Atmospheric Pollution, Italy; Biodiversity Research Institute, U.S.A., Dartmouth University (USA).
  • Mercury Waste Management: Government of Japan.
  • Mercury Supply and Storage: Government of Spain; Government of Uruguay.
  • Mercury Releases from the Cement Industry:  World Business Council For Sustainable Development; Cement Sustainability Initiative.
  • Mercury Releases from Coal Combustion:  Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI); Macquarie University. 

Learn more:

  • EPA’s involvement and contribution to the Global Mercury Partnership
  • Official UNEP Partnership Page 

Regional Activities on Mercury

Arctic

The Arctic Council, in collaboration with the Norwegian Institute for Water Research (NIVA), is working on a proposed project to evaluate risks of mercury releases to the Arctic environment. The project will include three selected Arctic Contaminants Action Program (ACAP) member state localities (in Canada, Norway, and Russia) with potential point and non-point sources of mercury input to the Arctic Ocean.

These localities will be chosen in accordance with explicit selection criteria, including their potential for representing various other sites in the Arctic. An important outcome of the project will be a prioritized list of effective actions and investments for reduction of mercury risks to the Arctic populations and environment. 

Learn more:

  • EPA’s work with the Arctic Council
  • Arctic Council home page 

Asia

Bilateral Cooperation

The U.S. has developed bilateral mercury cooperation programs to foster assessment and sector-specific improvements in a number of countries including Japan, China, and Indonesia.
 

Asia Pacific Mercury Monitoring Network

The Asia-Pacific Mercury Monitoring Network (APMMN) cooperatively measures mercury in precipitation through a network of sites operating in Asia and the Northwest Pacific region.   The network addresses significant data gaps in a region where mercury emission estimates are the highest globally, and available measurement data are limited.  
 

APMMN began operating in 2015 with three pilot sites in Thailand, Indonesia, and Vietnam.  Since then, the network has expanded. In 2018-19, the most recent new sites began operating in Philippines, Sri Lanka, and a second in Vietnam. Through APMMN’s equipment donation and technical trainings, these countries are routinely monitoring mercury in rainwater for the first time.

 

Latin America

Mercury Management, Storage and Disposal Action Planning in Peru

Participants at mercury management, storage and disposal action planning workshop (December 2017).

The United States and Peru are both Parties to the Minamata Convention on Mercury, which includes Articles specific to mercury storage (Article 10), disposal (Article 11) and capacity building/technical assistance (Article 14). The United States and Peru signed an Environmental Cooperation Agreement (ECA), which entered into force in 2009. The 2015-2018 update to the Environmental Cooperation Work Program identifies "Institutional and Policy Strengthening for Effective Implementation and Enforcement of Environmental Laws" as a priority area. 

In 2017, EPA provided technical support to Peru’s Ministry of Environment (MINAM) on managing, storing and disposing of identified stocks and supplies of mercury in Peru. EPA supported MINAM in organizing and hosting a multisector, public-private stakeholder workshop in Lima to develop action plans which were integrated into Peru’s article-by-article Minamata Implementation Plan. 

EPA continues to support Peru’s advancement in the area of mercury management, including interim storage and final disposal of mercury, through work funded by the U.S. Department of State. Additionally, EPA is working through UN Environment’s Global Mercury Partnership to provide additional technical expertise to the Government of Peru and its industries in support of their implementation of the Minamata Convention on Mercury. 

Localized Mercury Management and Interim Storage in Colombia

Colombia is signatory to the Minamata Convention on Mercury, currently working toward full ratification. Under the United States—Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement (TPA), which entered into force on May 15, 2012, both Parties committed to effectively enforce their own domestic environmental laws and adopt, maintain, and implement laws, regulations, and all other measures to fulfill their obligations under covered multilateral environmental agreements, like the Minamata Convention.

As a part of the United States’ bilateral cooperation with Colombia under the TPA, in support of Minamata Convention obligations to reduce the use, emission and release of toxic mercury into the global environment, EPA continues to engage in a number of capacity building activities with Colombian Ministries, through the US Embassy in Bogota. Technical support has been focused on the subject of local management and interim storage of mercury from artisanal and small-scale gold mining (ASGM) operations. EPA experts have shared their experiences, training local authorities in the use of technologies for testing air, soil and water in order to detect the presence of mercury at mine sites.

Past Activities

Arctic

EPA is a member of the Arctic Council’s Arctic Contaminants Action Program Expert Group on Persistent Organic Pollutants and Mercury.  The mandate of the group is to develop, coordinated and facilitate demonstration projects that detect and reduce the release of mercury in the environment.

Learn More:

  • The U.S. Mercury Emission Inventory for the Arctic Council Action Plan (PDF) (10 pp, 42 K)

Europe

In June 1998, under the auspices of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE), the Executive Body of the Convention on Long-range Transboundary Air Pollution Protocol on Heavy Metals  adopted the Protocol on Heavy Metals. This legally-binding agreement, to with the United State is a party, went into effect in December 2003. The Protocol target three heavy metals – cadmium, lead and mercury;
 
  • Aims to cut emissions from industrial sources (iron and steel industry, non-ferrous metal industry), combustion processes (power generation, road transport), and waste incineration.
  • Includes strict limit values and deadlines for emissions reductions for new and existing stationary sources and suggests Best Available Techniques (BAT) for these sources.
  • Contains measures to reduce emissions of heavy metals emissions from products, such as leaded gasoline and mercury in batteries, through the mandatory phase-out of leaded gasoline and mandatory mercury concentration limits for certain types of batteries.
In addition, the Task Force on Hemispheric Transport of Air Pollution (HTAP) was established under the Convention in 2004 to develop a fuller understanding of intercontinental transport of air pollution in the Northern Hemisphere, including mercury. The Task Force, co-chaired by the U.S. and the European Union, developed a 2010 assessment report (HTAP 2010) (pdf) (12.6M), which includes a technical assessment of the state-of-science on intercontinental transport of mercury (Part B) (pdf).(13.3M) 
 

Latin America

Piloting Mercury Capture Systems in Latin America

EPA's Mercury Capture System (left), attached to an amalgam burning hood (right).

To reduce airborne mercury emissions from these Gold Shops, EPA and the Argonne National Laboratory (ANL) have partnered to design a low cost, easily constructible technology called the Gold Shop Mercury Capture System (MCS). The MCS was piloted and tested in Amazonian gold producing regions in Brazil and Peru.

Building on a pilot project and workshop held in September 2008, Peru has developed a strategy for the national implementation of this new technology, including workshops and promotion via posters, brochures, and press.

Performance tests indicate the MCS technology can reduce airborne mercury emissions in gold shops by 80 percent, a significant reduction in regions that typically do not have access to any form of effective mercury control technology.

Data collected during site visits in Peru, to Puerto Maldonado, Masuko, and Huepetue in the Amazon, and La Rinconada and Ananea in the high Andes, showed that in shops with the installed MCS technology, mercury vapor concentrations were close to the American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists threshold limit value (ACGIH TLV) for occupational exposure (25 ug/m3). Gold shops that did not have the MCS technology installed had mean ambient mercury vapor concentrations that were five to 20 times higher than those shops that had the mercury control system installed.

Recent third-party experience have identified modifications that can significantly enhance the MCS performance.

Environmental mercury vapor monitoring: La Rinconada, Puno (Peru)

EPA and ANL scientists used Jerome and other Mercury Vapor Analyzers to measure the concentration of airborne mercury released by gold shops located over 17,000 feet above sea level.
The town of La Rinconada (pop: 40,000) in the Andes is one of the highest cities in the world, at 17,020 feet above sea level, and is one of the most productive artisanal gold mining sites in Peru. All of the gold is produced through mercury amalgamation, with open mercury use.
 
There are an estimated 250-300 gold shops in La Rinconada. EPA and Argonne scientists discovered that average mercury vapor concentrations in open areas (such as the central marketplace) approach the ACGIH TLV for occupational exposure (25 ug/m3). Measurements inside the gold shops were also significantly above the ACGIH TLV.
 
During a visit to La Rinconada, EPA collected data to assess efficiency of the MCS technology in low temperature and high altitude settings so that this technology can improve air quality in La Rinconada.
 

North America

Great Lakes Binational Toxics Strategy

The 1997 Canada-United States Strategy for the Virtual Elimination of Persistent Toxic Substances in the Great Lakes Basin, known as the Great Lakes Binational Toxics Strategy, created a framework for addressing mercury pollution in the Great Lakes Basin by establishing a goal of "virtual elimination" of anthropogenic mercury inputs to the Great Lakes, as well as by establishing goals of reducing U.S. mercury emissions and use by 50% and reducing Canadian mercury releases by 90%.

The Strategy established a workgroup of U.S. and Canadian federal, state and local government officials, industry, and environmental groups, who shared information about cost-effective mercury reduction approaches. The Strategy was successful in gaining commitments for voluntary mercury reduction from the chlor-alkali industry, which committed to reduce its mercury use by 50% (actually achieving more than 95%); from the American Hospital Association for the virtual elimination of mercury from hospital waste, and from northwest Indiana steel mills; who inventoried their mercury-containing equipment and reduced it by more than 80%. The workgroup has ceased its activity, having achieved its interim reduction goals.

North American Regional Action Plan on Mercury

Under the auspices of the North American Commission for Environmental Cooperation (CEC) , the U.S., Canada, and Mexico developed a North American Regional Action Plan (NARAP) on Mercury  (finalized in 2000). The goal of this ten-year Plan was to reduce anthropogenic mercury releases within North America through tri-national and national initiatives in the three countries.
 
The Mercury NARAP contained provisions on risk management approaches to address mercury in air emissions, industrial processes and operations, products and waste. It also described activities related to research, monitoring, modeling, inventories and communication. 
 

New England Regional Mercury Action Plan

In 1998, the New England Governors and Eastern Canadian Premiers adopted a Regional Mercury Action Plan for the Northeast U.S. and Eastern Canada. This plan established a long term regional goal of virtually eliminating the discharge of mercury from human sources into the environment. It also established goals of 50% reduction of mercury emissions by 2003 (which has been met) and 75% reduction by 2010. A preliminary assessment completed in 2010 indicated that the binational region has probably achieved this 75 percent reduction goal for mercury air emissions.

Russia

EPA has taken a role in projects to reduce the use and release of mercury in several industrial sectors:

  • EPA has assisted Russian chlorine producers in upgrading plant processes and equipment to reduce releases by almost 1 metric ton per year.
  • EPA helped the Chlor-Alkali Partnership create a global inventory of mercury-cell chlor-alkali facilities. 
  • In collaboration with various Russian institutes, the United Nations Environmental Program (UNEP) and the Swedish Environmental Institute, EPA concluded a multi-year program to demonstrate controlling mercury emissions using activated carbon injection technologies (both standard and brominated) at a Russian coal-fired power plant. 
    • View the scientific report: Mercury Emissions Capture Efficiency with Activated Carbon Injection at a Russian Coal-Fired Thermal Power Plant.
  • Mercury is also emitted in the process of zinc smelting.  To address this, EPA helped develop a more robust mercury emission inventory in China, in order to understand how much mercury is coming from the zinc sector.  EPA also supported studies on mercury emissions from other nonferrous metals production.

Contacts

For additional information on EPA's work on mercury, contact:
Rodges Ankrah
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Office of International and Tribal Affairs (2670R)
1200 Pennsylvania Ave., NW
Washington, DC 20460
E-mail: ankrah.rodges@epa.gov
(202) 564-0280


 

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Last updated on November 22, 2024
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