Meta Data
Draft: 
No
Revision of previous policy?: 
No
Draft Year: 
1984
Effective Start Year: 
2002
Scope: 
National
Document Type: 
Act
Economic Sector: 
Multi-Sector, Other
Energy Types: 
All, Oil, Gas, Other
Issued by: 
Government of the Republic of the Marshall Islands
Overall Summary: 
The National Environmental Protection Act 1984 [35 MIRC Ch.1] (Revised Code 2014) to provide for the establishment of a National Environmental Protection Authority for the protection and management of the environment, and for matters connected therewith or incidental thereto.
Governance
National policy structure: 
The Authority shall, in consultation with the Council and with the assistance of the Ministry of Resources and Development, recommend to the President the basic policy on the management and conservation of the country's natural resources in order to obtain the optimum benefits therefrom and to preserve the same for future generations, and the general measure through which such policy may be carried out effectively.
Energy institutional structures: 
§104. Establishment of the Authority. (1) For the purposes of this Chapter, there shall be established an Authority called the National Environmental Protection Authority (in this Chapter referred to as the "Authority"). [...] §119. Objects. The primary purpose of the Authority shall be to preserve and improve the quality of the environment, and to that end, the following shall be the objectives of the Authority: (a) to study the impact of human activity including population growth and redistribution, culturalchange, exploitation of resources and technological advances on the environment: (b) to restore and maintain the quality of the environment; (c) to use all practicable means including financial and technical assistance to foster and promote the general welfare of the people by creating conditions under which mankind and nature can coexist in productive harmony; (d) to improve and coordinate consistently with other essential considerations of national policy, governmental plans, functions, and programs and resources, so as to prevent, as far as practicable, any degradation or impairment of the environment; (e) to regulate individual and collective human activity in such manner as will ensure to the people safe, healthful, productive, and aesthetically and culturally pleasing surroundings; (f) to attain the widest possible range of beneficial uses of the environment without degradation orimpairment thereof and other undesirable consequences to the health and safety of the people; and (g) to preserve important historical, cultural and natural aspects of the nation's culture and heritage, maintaining at the same time an environment which supports multiplicity and variety of individual choice. [P.L. 1984-31, §19.]