Local public environmental information Centers (Aarhus Centers) will soon open in the capitals of the Syunik, Tavush and Lori regions of Armenia with the help of the OSCE Office in Yerevan, which today signed an agreement with the Ministry of Nature Protection and local administrations.
The Centers will promote access to information, including through the Internet, public participation in decision-making and access to justice in environmental matters-the three main pillars of the Aarhus Convention, ratified by Armenia in 2001. They will also contribute to the creation of a public climate of transparency in environmental affairs and to the general democratization and good governance in the region.
The need for local Aarhus Centers in the regions was one of the recommendations of the OSCE-supported study of the perspectives of the socio-economic development of the Syunik region, conducted last year.
The Centers will also serve as a link between governmental authorities and non-governmental organizations (NGO) in the field of environmental policy-making, promote co-operation between all environmental stakeholders and their potential counterparts, such as national, foreign and international NGOs, as well as the business community, and serve as a basis for coalition-building among local environmental NGOs.
The Centers will open later this year and make use of the experience and expertise of the Yerevan Aarhus Center, established in 2002 as the first one in Southern Caucasus.
The OSCE Office in Yerevan supports the establishment of a network of Aarhus Centers in Armenia to promote the principles and values of the international Aarhus Convention, which combines both environmental issues and democratic spirit.
Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) - 6 October 2005