C13 | |
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ILO Convention | |
Date of adoption | November 19, 1921 |
Date in force | August 31, 1923 |
Classification | Toxic Substances and Agents |
Subject | Occupational Safety and Health |
Previous | Workmen's Compensation (Agriculture) Convention, 1921 |
Next | Weekly Rest (Industry) Convention, 1921 |
White Lead (Painting) Convention, 1921 is an International Labour Organization Convention established in 1921 to advance the prohibition of using white lead in paint.
As of 2017 many leading global nations, including the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, Japan, China and India remain outside the organization.
As of 2013, the convention has been ratified by 63 states:
Country | Date | Notes |
---|---|---|
Afghanistan | 12.6.1939 | |
Algeria | 19.10.1962 | |
Argentina | 26.5.1936 | |
Austria | 12.6.1924 | |
Azerbaijan | 19.5.1992 | |
Belgium | 19.7.1926 | |
Benin | 12.12.1960 | |
Bosnia and Herzegovina | 2.6.1993 | |
Bulgaria | 6.3.1925 | |
Burkina Faso | 21.11.1960 | |
Cambodia | 24.2.1969 | |
Cameroon | 7.6.1960 | |
Central African Republic | 27.10.1960 | |
Chad | 10.11.1960 | |
Chile | 15.9.1925 | |
Colombia | 20.6.1933 | |
Comoros | 23.10.1978 | |
Congo | 10.11.1960 | |
Côte d'Ivoire | 21.11.1960 | |
Croatia | 8.10.1991 | |
Cuba | 7.7.1928 | |
Czech Republic | 1.1.1993 | |
Djibouti | 3.8.1978 | |
Estonia | 8.9.1922 | |
Finland | 5.4.1929 | |
France | 19.2.1926 | |
Gabon | 14.10.1960 | |
Greece | 22.12.1926 | |
Guatemala | 5.1.1990 | |
Guinea | 21.1.1959 | |
Hungary | 8.6.1956 | |
Iraq | 19.4.1966 | |
Italy | 22.10.1952 | |
Lao People's Democratic Republic | 23.1.1964 | |
Latvia | 9.9.1924 | |
Luxembourg | 16.4.1928 | |
Madagascar | 1.11.1960 | |
Mali | 22.9.1960 | |
Malta | 9.6.1988 | |
Mauritania | 20.6.1961 | |
Mexico | 7.1.1938 | |
Montenegro | 3.6.2006 | |
Morocco | 13.6.1956 | |
Netherlands | 15.12.1939 | |
Nicaragua | 12.4.1934 | |
Niger | 27.2.1961 | |
Norway | 11.6.1929 | |
Panama | 19.6.1970 | |
Poland | 21.6.1924 | |
Romania | 4.12.1925 | |
Russian Federation | 10.10.1991 | ratified as the Soviet Union |
Senegal | 4.11.1960 | |
Serbia | 24.11.2000 | ratified as the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia |
Slovakia | 1.1.1993 | |
Slovenia | 29.5.1992 | |
Spain | 20.6.1924 | |
Suriname | 15.6.1976 | |
Sweden | 27.11.1923 | |
The Republic of Macedonia [1] | 17.11.1991 | |
Togo | 7.6.1960 | |
Tunisia | 12.6.1956 | |
Uruguay | 6.6.1933 | |
Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela | 28.4.1933 |
Basel Convention, is an international treaty that was designed to reduce the movements of hazardous waste between nations, and specifically to prevent transfer of hazardous waste from developed to less developed countries (LDCs). It does not, however, address the movement of radioactive waste. The convention is also intended to minimize the rate and toxicity of wastes generated, to ensure their environmentally sound management as closely as possible to the source of generation, and to assist LDCs in environmentally sound management of the hazardous and other wastes they generate.
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