Please check out the new WECF website on wecf.org!

Stay here to browse our website archive (2004-2019).

WECF Deutschland

WECF France

WECF Nederland

Facebook

Twitter

YouTube

WECF and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

Breast Cancer: Policy and Prevention

WECF training programmes and capacity building on gender and sustainability

International “Nesting” programme – A Healthy Environment for Healthy Children

Women's Major Group -Sustainable Development Goals and the Post 2015 Development Agenda

WECF representation in international and UN policy processes

Safe and Sustainable Sanitation for Women and Girls

EDC Free Coalition Public Consultation

Asbestos: a silent killer on a global scale – substitute it now!

WHO European Environment and Health Process (EEHP)

EVENT: WHO 6th Ministerial Conference on Environment and Health, Ostrava

EVENT: Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm Conventions Conference of the Parties, 2017

EVENT: Gender Just Climate Solutions Awards, COP22, Marrakesh

EVENT: WECF on the road to the COP22

Women and Gender Constituency at UNFCCC

Women's Global Call for Climate Justice

EVENT: WECF at the COP21

Don't Nuke the Climate - Paris 2015

Gender E3 Working Group in the European Parliament

Women and Gender Constituency at COP20 Lima, Peru

UNECEs 5th MOP to the Aarhus Convention, Maastricht 2014

Nuclear Power is not a solution to climate change – plug into renewables

WECF at the COP19 in Warsaw: Climate Finance and Gender Equality

International ‘Safe Toys’ Coalition – toxic free children products

Online discussion group INTERA

UN Conference on Sustainable Development 2012 - Rio +20

Toxic free beauty - safe cosmetics

The Golden Nuclear Fuelrod Award

ToNi-Finder - WECF's Map for Sustainable School Toilets and Nitrate Levels

Children's Environmental Health Award 2010

Children's Environmental Action Plan for Europe

REACH - Eliminating Toxic Chemicals in the EU



WHO European Environment and Health Process (EEHP)

In April 2015 Israel brought together health and environment ministers from 53 countries to assess how far we have progressed with the targets set in 2010

| WECF Campaign


Countries: Germany and Europe
Donors: German Ministry of Environment, private donors
Partners: Health and Environment Alliance (HEAL), WHO
Issues: Chemicals & Health
Duration: 11/2013 - 12/2017

This little movie introduces you into the European Environment and Health Process, EEHP. Please take 12 minutes of your time to watch it and get some updated information about the process.


Introduction into European Environment and Health Process by WECF

If you like to be involved in the campaign or want to receive information, please join our EHP email list.  Please contact Alexandra Caterbow


About EEHP:

In the late 1980s, European countries initiated the first ever process to eliminate the most significant environmental threats to human health, which is called European Environmental Health Process (EEHP). The fifth Ministerial Conference was held in Parma, Italy, on 10-12 March 2010. The Parma Declaration is the first time-bound outcome of the environment and health process. Governments of the 53 European Member States set five clear-cut targets to reduce the adverse health impact of environmental threats in the next decade for children’s health including:

  1. national plans to eliminate asbestos -related diseases
  2. achieving a healthy and tobacco smoke-free indoor air environment in settings for children
  3. eliminating children’s and pregnant women’s exposures to harmful chemical substances
  4. creating healthy and safe environments for children in in which to walk and bike to school and more green spaces to play and exercise, which will also help to prevent injuries
  5. achieving safe water and sanitation in schools and other children settings

Mid-term review
In April 2015 Israel brought together health and environment ministers from 53 countries to a Mid-term review to assess how far we have progressed with the ambitious targets set in 2010. To prepare for the assessment, national focal points within the environment and health ministries are asked to fill in an online policy questionnaire outlining the progress they have made in policies related to the time-bound Parma commitments. They are also asked to highlight the top environmental and health challenges to be addressed in the next Ministerial conference foreseen to take place in 2017.

NGOs are involved in this process from the beginning, being represented by the Health and Environment Alliance (HEAL) for the health sector, and EcoForum (which is represented by Women in Europe for a Common Future - WECF) for the environmental NGOs.

The European Environment and Health Process (EEHP) will continue towards the Sixth Ministerial Conference on Environment and Health in 2017. Further information on the process can be found here.


Related News

Report on National Workshop on SDGs in Georgia
On the Interlinkages of Environment & Health in the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development
23.05.2018


Policy Dialogue On Sustainable Development, Health and Social justice in Tirana, Albania
Linking the Ostrava Declaration of the European Environment and Health Process to SDGs Agenda 2030
10.03.2018


Women, Chemicals & UNEA
Our Executive Director Sascha Gabizon being interviewed by UNEP, emphasising that we need greater collective action, than the voluntary efforts made by the chemical's sector, to eliminate hazardous chemicals in our environment.
14.02.2018


Film premiere: what does chemicals have to do with gender? (UNEA3 resistance event)
05.12.2017


UN Summit on Eradicating Poverty and Promoting Prosperity in a Changing World
8 days of advocacy and activism for a gender just future within the SDG process. WECF recently attended the UN summit on the Sustainable Development Goals (High Level Political Forum, HLPF) in New York and reports back on their experiences.
10.08.2017


Youth at the heart of ECO Forum's participation in Ostrava
Reporting back on WHO’s regional conference on environment and health, where WECF (and its ECO Forum delegation of 23 youths and seniors) was to advocate for a healthy future
23.06.2017


"Let's Ensure a Healthy Future" - WECF side event at WHO 6th Ministerial Conference
Protecting children from exposure to harmful chemicals to avoid irreversible damage.
14.06.2017


Sixth Ministerial Conference on Environment and Health
13.06.2017


Side Event "Let's Ensure a Healthy Future" - WHO 6th Ministerial Conference
13.06.2017


WHO European Environment and Health Process (EEHP)
In April 2015 Israel brought together health and environment ministers from 53 countries to assess how far we have progressed with the targets set in 2010
20.03.2016 | WECF Campaign


Improving Environment And Health In Europe: How Far Have We Gotten?
WHO report
08.07.2015


Midterm review of environment and health progress in the European Region
From 28 to 30 April WECF was part of the Ecoforum delegation, representing environmental organisations from the European Region, participating at the mid-term review meeting of the WHO European Environment and Health Process in Haifa, Israel
15.05.2015


At least one in three Europeans can be exposed to asbestos at work and in the environment
WHO press release
30.04.2015 | WHO Regional Office for Europe


Baby’s in couveuse blootgesteld aan extra gezondheidsrisico’s door lekken hormoonverstorende stoffen uit medische hulpmiddelen
Deze week verschijnt, gelijktijdig met de WHO-conferentie over Gezondheid & Milieu in Israël, een nieuw rapport dat laat zien dat ziekenhuizen in een aantal landen al volop bezig zijn met deze vervanging. Nederland blijft achter
30.04.2015


WECF/EcoForum and HEAL represent European Region Environmental Health Organisations at WHO meeting in Haifa, Israel
WECF/EcoForum and aiming to critically assess implementation of 2010 Parma Declaration to protect (children’s) health at high-level meeting of the European Environment and Health Process (EEHP)
29.04.2015


WHO high-level meeting of the Task Force – the Mid-term Review (MTR) Meeting of the European Environment and Health Process (EEHP)
28.04.2015


Towards non-toxic healthcare: HCWH Europe reports on alternatives to phthalates and BPA in medical devices
HCWH press release
28.04.2015 | Health Care Without Harm Europe (HCWH)


From Parma to Haifa: how far have we gotten?
Environment and health progress review in the WHO European Region
28.04.2015 | WHO Regional Office for Europe


Air pollution costs European economies US$ 1.6 trillion a year in diseases and deaths, new WHO study says
WHO press release
28.04.2015 | WHO Regional Office for Europe


WECF’s Position Paper on EEHP, WHO MTR in Haifa 2015
Eco Forum, HEAL, WECF International and undersigned signatories present position paper on EEHP
24.04.2015


Poor indoor environments at school
WECF represents environmental NGOs in WHO mid-term review of European Environment and Health Process (EEHP)
23.04.2015


Stronger action required on environmental pollutants
WECF represents environmental NGOs in WHO mid-term review of European Environment and Health Process (EEHP)
20.04.2015


Time running out to reduce climate change threats to health
WECF represents environmental NGOs in WHO mid-term review of European Environment and Health Process (EEHP)
16.04.2015


Water and sanitation: still a luxury for millions of Europeans
WECF represents environmental NGOs in WHO mid-term review of European Environment and Health Process (EEHP)
14.04.2015


Mid-term review of WHO Environment and Health process, April 2015
In April 2015, representatives of health and environment ministries from 53 countries will come together to assess progress in reaching ambitious targets to protect children from environmental threats.
22.11.2014 | WECF



Donations

If you want to donate money to this campaign, here are the bank account numbers for tax deductable donations:

The Netherlands:

•    Women in Europe for a Common Future, WECF
•    Account Number: 435 42 99 14
•    IBAN: NL 84 ABNA 0435429914
•    BIC: ABNANL2A ABN-AMRO Utrecht

Germany: Women in Europe for a Common Future, WECF e.V.

•    Account Number 13 1390 50
•    Bank code 701 500 00
•    SWIFT: SSKMDEMM
•    IBAN: DE68 7015 0000 0013 1390 50 Bank: Stadtsparkasse München