At a Glance
Working to protect people and the environment from the most toxic chemicals
IPEN has more than 25 years of experience working to eliminate threats to human health and the environment from hazardous chemicals, including persistent organic pollutants (POPs). POPs are long-lived toxic chemicals that move through the environment globally, accumulate in living organisms, and are recognized as a serious, global threat. Since its founding in 1998, IPEN has engaged in the process to develop and strengthen the Stockholm Convention, a global agreement to eliminate threats from POPs.
Global and National Action
IPEN members work in their countries to end threats from POPs and join together at the negotiations of the Stockholm Convention, advocating for meaningful global policies to protect health and the environment.
In the News
Tackling Toxic Threats to Health and the Environment
POPs are a broad category covering a wide range of toxic substances, including certain pesticides (like DDT), industrial chemicals (like PCBs), chemicals released by industrial production and from burning plastic and other wastes (like dioxins), PFAS “forever chemicals,” and many other hazardous chemicals. Even at very low levels of exposure, POPs have the potential to cause serious health problems. Studies have linked POPs to cancer, neurological disorders, learning disabilities, immune suppression, and infertility and other reproductive health disorders.
In addition to the Stockholm Convention, IPEN also contributes to the development and strengthening of two related global agreements: the Basel Convention, which regulates the international trade in chemicals and hazardous waste, and the Rotterdam Convention, which provides a process for informing countries when toxic chemicals or hazardous wastes are being sent across their borders.
Negotiations for the three chemicals and waste Conventions are held back-to-back every other year. Called the Conferences of Parties to the Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm Conventions (BRS COPs), IPEN members from around the world engage in these policy negotiations and bring vital research and policy advocacy to inform delegates and shape stronger, more health-protective global policies. These policies can then serve as templates for national policy deliberations in IPEN members’ home countries.
IPEN also engages at the Stockholm Convention’s scientific expert body, the POPs Review Committee (POPRC), participating in meeting deliberations, informing the panel with the latest science, and advocating for global elimination of toxic threats.
IPEN members participating at BRS COPs
Years IPEN has participated at the Stockholm Convention
Projects documenting threats from POPs conducted by IPEN members
