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Labour
As part of its work with business and industry, UNEP DTIE
regularly involves labour in its activities. Labour representatives
attend the Annual Consultative Meeting on Business and Industry
held in Paris. In training materials developed by UNEP and
partner organisations, the role of informed employees is
central.
UNEP
recently joined the International Labour Organization (ILO)
and International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC
formerly ICFTU) in launching the Green Jobs Initiative.
The aim is to assess, analyze and promote the role of employment
in efforts to mitigate and adapt to global climate change.
This exciting new work stream supports activities by governments,
employers and trade unions to promote environmentally sustainable
jobs. A preliminary report entitled Green Jobs: Towards
Sustainable Work in a Low Carbon World was developed
under this initiative and introduced at the World Economic
Forum in January 2008. The final Green Jobs Report will
present an analysis of employment levels, provide estimates
and projections of green jobs around the world, and identify
key policy areas to develop a Green Jobs Strategy. For more
information, see UNEP-
ILO- ITUC Green Jobs Initiative.
In 2006 UNEP, the ILO and the International Confederation
of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) co-hosted the WILL 2006 Trade
Union Assembly on Labour and the Environment. Attended by
union leaders from over 150 countries, the Assembly followed
up on undertakings made at the 2002 World Summit on Sustainable
Development (WSSD) related to decent work, an environmentally
sound, healthy and safe working environment. Case study
presentations and working group discussions focused on issues
such as climate change, chemicals risks, occupational health
and safety. For more information read the full WILL
2006 meeting report (PDF), as well as conclusions from
the working group on Enterprise
Social Responsibility. The latter group agreed on six
key elements that need to be part of any definition of ESR/CSR.
The background of WILL 2006 goes back to 2002. At the WSSD,
UNEP co-hosted a high level meeting with the ICFTU, the
Trade Union Advisory Committee to the OECD (TUAC) and the
ILO entitled 'Fashoning a New Deal'. The key objective of
this conference was the to identify linkages between sustainable
employment practices and environmental management. It resulted
in a commitment by UNEP, ILO and ICFTU/TUAC to start a joint
programme of work on labour and sustainable development
issues.
UNEP & the International Labour
Organisation (ILO)
As
core agencies in the UN Global Compact, UNEP and ILO are
working closer to integrate good working conditions and
environmental care. The two agencies led the development
of the Global Compact Resource Package, published in 2003.
Following the 2002 Johannesburg Summit, UNEP and ILO also
agreed to start the introduction of labour related issues
in training at the UNEP/UNIDO network of National Cleaner
Production Centres.
UNEP & the International Trade
Union Confederation (ITUC)
UNEP collaborates with the ITUC on an ongoing
basis, in particular through the new Green Jobs Initiative
launched in 2007. This follows years of collaboration with
its predecessor, the ICFTU, as well as the Trade Union Advisory
Committee to the OECD (TUAC) and Global Union Federations.
In co-operation with UNEP and the ILO, the ICFTU/TUAC launched
in 2002 a workplace assessment programme to provide Occupational
Health and Safety (OHS) officers with the tools and support
structures needed to perform workplace assessments. The
term 'workplace assessment' refers to the process whereby
trade unions jointly evaluate the environmental, occupational
and social standards of workplaces. It relies on commonly
agreed checklists against which workplace standards are
screened.
With support from the Spanish Development Co-operation
Agency (AEC), a trade union-based foundation called 'SustainLabour'
was set up to co-ordinate the implementation of workplace
assessments activities regionally and to provide a common
structure for the various organisations involved. UNEP is
involved regularly in events organised by the Foundation.
(see press
release PDF - 11KB)
Unions, Sustainable Consumption
and Production
At the request of UNEP DTIE a study on labour unions and
sustainable consumption and production was conducted by
the Ecologic Institute in May 2004. The study analyses the
actual and potential role of labour unions in the process
towards more sustainable consumption and production patterns,
providing a number of case studies from Germany, United
Kingdom, United States, South Africa and Indonesia. Download
and print the PDF
version of this report (304 KB).
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