Examples of National Environment Council in a sentence
With regard to enviromental air quality, Act No. 28817 of July 2006 provides that the National Environment Council (CONAM), in its capacity as National Environmental Authority, is responsible drafting, revising and progressively adopting air quality standards and that the Department of Environmental Health of the Ministry of Health is charged with monitoring air quality and carrying out emission checks and epidemiological studies in coordination with the Technical Environmental Studies Groups109.
Improve Environmental Policy Coordination and Priority Setting through Better Functioning of The National Environmental Management System (SINAMA) and the National Environment Council (CONAMA).
EMCA 1999 No. 8 part iii section 4 outlines the establishment of the National Environment Council (NEC).
For the National Environment Council in Kenya, as well as similar organizations in other East African countries, to put on their agenda the phase out of leaded gasoline.
The National Environment Council (NEC) formed of representatives of both the public and private sectors, in addition to the Ministries in charge of environment issues play only a marginal role; NEC did not hold meetings regularly as stipulated in the Law.
These organizations will include the Ministry of Energy and Mines, Ministry of Health, Ministry of Education, Ecological Police, Conservation International, National Environment Council, and others.
This would require: Enhancing coordination among relevant institutions: a) At the policy level, in the short term: by increasing inter-ministerial coordination on environmental sustainability through the COM until a National Environment Council is formed at the highest level and backed by an institution with intellectual leadership.
NEMA also provides the secretariat for the National Environment Council (NEC), the main entity responsible for the setting of environmental policy.
The 2014 amendments to EMCA abolished the National Environment Council (NEC) and the Standards and Enforcement Review Committee (SERC), which served as key sectoral coordination structures in the environment sector.
A central body should be established to coordinate all convention-related activities (perhaps the existing National Environment Council) and implementing a natural resource inventory should be done as a matter of priority.