The right to a healthy environment is closely linked to economic, social and cultural rights. The exportation to developing countries, particularly in Africa, of hazardous waste produced by the industries of the North is a serious violation of the most important human rights, foremost of which is the right to life. Individuals and companies have engaged in transactions for the transfer of industrial wastes in disregard of the rights of individuals and peoples.
According to a report of the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development, the conservation of biological diversity is fundamental to human life. It is a basic factor in the way in which living organisms are structured. As such, it provides support for ecosystems, for the regulation of water and the atmosphere and the basis for agricultural production. When genetic variations are lost, therefore, the result is not only that specific and potential properties and adaptations are lost but also that the number of species-is diminished, ecosystems are impaired and the ability to sustain human life is damaged. That destruction of the ecosystem and of the equilibrium necessary for the survival of our species is aggravated in modern life by the effects of such contemporary human activities as pollution, the dumping of toxic and hazardous wastes and so forth.
A 1999 report from the European Environment Agency records that despite progress in certain areas, the overall quality of the environemnt is deteriorating. It highlighted problems that needed tackling as insufficient recycling, increased production and use of chemicals and the threat to human health from air pollution and skin cancer throgh the depletion of the ozone layer.