Bonn Agreement (1969)
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(Redirected from Bonn Agreement (environment))
The Bonn Agreement is a European environmental agreement.
Following several oil spills in 1969, the coastal nations of the North Sea formed the Bonn Agreement to ensure mutual cooperation in the avoidance and combating of environmental pollution.
The agreement was revised in 1983 to include the European Union and again in 2001 to allow Ireland to join.
Members of the Bonn Agreement are Belgium, Denmark, the European Community, France, Germany, Ireland, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, United Kingdom and Spain.
External links
[edit]- www.bonnagreement.org - The Bonn Agreement web site (English version)
Categories:
- Environmental treaties
- Bonn
- Treaties concluded in 1969
- 1969 in the environment
- Treaties of Belgium
- Treaties of Denmark
- Treaties entered into by the European Union
- Treaties of France
- Treaties of West Germany
- Treaties of Ireland
- Treaties of the Netherlands
- Treaties of Norway
- Treaties of Sweden
- Treaties of the United Kingdom
- 1969 in West Germany
- European Union and the environment
- EU law stubs
- Treaty stubs