The Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) at A Glance - Arms Control Association
The Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) at A Glance - Arms Control Association
The Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) at A Glance - Arms Control Association
Search
Search
Treaties (/treaties)
Login/Logout
Username:*
Password:* Log in
"I find hope in the work of long-established groups such as the Arms Control Association...[and] I find hope in younger anti-nuclear activists and the movement
around the world to formally ban the bomb."
– Vincent Intondi
Professor of History, Montgomery College
July 1, 2020
The Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) is a multilateral treaty that bans chemical weapons and requires their destruction within a specified
period of time. The treaty is of unlimited duration and is far more comprehensive than the 1925 Geneva Protocol, which outlaws the use but not the
possession of chemical weapons.
CWC negotiations started in 1980 in the UN Conference on Disarmament. The convention opened for signature on January 13, 1993, and entered
into force on April 29, 1997.
The CWC is implemented by the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), which is headquartered in The Hague with about 500
employees. The OPCW receives states-parties’ declarations detailing chemical weapons-related activities or materials and relevant industrial
activities. After receiving declarations, the OPCW inspects and monitors states-parties’ facilities and activities that are relevant to the convention, to
ensure compliance.
The CWC is open to all nations and currently has 193 states-parties (http://disarmament.un.org/treaties/t/cwc). Israel has signed but has yet to ratify
the convention. Three states have neither signed nor ratified the convention (Egypt, North Korea and South Sudan).
Prohibitions
Declaration Requirements
The CWC requires states-parties to declare in writing to the OPCW their chemical weapons stockpiles, chemical weapons production facilities
(CWPFs), relevant chemical industry facilities, and other weapons-related information. This must be done within 30 days of the convention's entry
into force for each member state.
Chemical Weapons Stockpiles—States-parties must declare all chemical weapons stockpiles, which are broken down into three categories:
Category 1: chemical weapons based on Schedule 1 chemicals, including VX and sarin. (See below for an explanation of “scheduled”
chemicals.)
Category 2: chemical weapons based on non-Schedule 1 chemicals, such as phosgene.
Category 3: chemical weapons including unfilled munitions, devices and equipment designed specifically to employ chemical weapons.
Chemical Industry—The CWC requires states-parties to declare chemical industry facilities that produce or use chemicals of concern to the
convention. These chemicals are grouped into “schedules,” based on the risk they pose to the convention. A facility producing a Schedule 1
chemical is considered a Schedule 1 facility.
Schedule 1 chemicals and precursors pose a “high risk” to the convention and are rarely used for peaceful purposes. States-parties may not
retain these chemicals except in small quantities for research, medical, pharmaceutical, or defensive use. Many Schedule 1 chemicals have been
stockpiled as chemical weapons.
Schedule 2 chemicals are toxic chemicals that pose a “significant risk” to the convention and are precursors to the production of Schedule 1 or
Schedule 2 chemicals. These chemicals are not produced in large quantities for commercial or other peaceful purposes.
Schedule 3 chemicals are usually produced in large quantities for purposes not prohibited by the CWC but still pose a risk to the convention.
Some of these chemicals have been stockpiled as chemical weapons.
The CWC also requires the declaration of facilities that produce certain nonscheduled chemicals.
Destruction Requirements
States-parties that signed the treaty when it entered into force were supposed to destroy their entire stockpiles by April 29, 2012. However, the OPCW
may extend these deadlines due to “exceptional circumstances,” and in December 2006, the OPCW Executive Council granted nearly all possessors
extensions of differing lengths. The only exception was Albania, which was the sole state-party nearing the complete destruction of its stockpile at
that time,
Category 2 and 3 chemical weapons destruction must start within one year after the CWC enters into force for a state-party.
Destruction of CWPFs capable of producing Schedule 1 chemicals must start within one year after the CWC enters into force for a state-party. States-
parties that signed the treaty when it originally entered into force had to complete of CWPFs producing schedule 1 chemicals by April 29, 2007.
Destruction of other CWPFs must start within one year after the CWC enters into force for a state-party. States-parties that signed the treaty when it
originally entered into force had to complete destruction by April 29, 2002.
States-parties may request to convert CWPFs to facilities that they can use for nonprohibited purposes. Once their requests are approved, states-
parties that signed the treaty when it originally entered into force were supposed to complete conversion by April 29, 2003.
On-Site Activity
The convention establishes three types of on-site activities that aim to generate confidence in states-parties’ CWC compliance. These include:
“Routine inspections” of chemical weapons-related facilities and chemical industry facilities to verify the content of declarations and to confirm
that activities are consistent with CWC obligations.
“Challenge inspections” which can be conducted at any facility or location in states-parties to clarify questions of possible noncompliance. (To
prevent abuse of this measure, the OPCW’s executive body can vote by a three-quarters majority to stop a challenge inspection from going
forward.)
Investigations of alleged use of chemical weapons.
Trade
The convention encourages trade among states-parties, calling upon them not to maintain restrictions on one another that would hamper the trade
of chemical-related items to be used for peaceful purposes. The convention does restrict trade with non-states-parties, outlawing the transfer of
Schedule 1 and 2 chemicals. To ensure that Schedule 3 transfers to non-states-parties are not used for purposes prohibited by the convention, the
CWC requires exporting states-parties to obtain an end-use certificate from importing states.
If states-parties are found to have engaged in prohibited actions that could result in “serious damage” to the convention, the OPCW could
recommend collective punitive measures to other states-parties. In cases of “particular gravity,” the OPCW could bring the issue before the UN
Security Council and General Assembly.
States-parties must take measures to address questions raised about their compliance with the CWC. If they do not, the OPCW may, inter alia, restrict
or suspend their CWC-related rights and privileges (such as voting and trade rights).
Libya 24.7 Sulfur None Completed destruction of Category 1 chemicals on May 4, 201
metric Mustard (https://www.armscontrol.org/factsheets/LibyaChronology).
tons1
Syria 1,308 Sulfur Declared stockpile has been eliminated but No projected timeline for destruction of undecared chemicals.
metric Mustard undeclared chemicals still exist
tons
United 27,771 Binary 1,731.8 Will not meet deadline; U.S. estimates
States metric nerve (https://www.peoacwa.army.mil/2020/03/31/bgcapp- (https://www.opcw.org/fileadmin/OPCW/EC/88/en/ec8803_c23c
tons agents, monthly-recap-march-2020/) metric tons September, 2023.
Lewisite, (https://www.peoacwa.army.mil/2020/03/31/bgcapp-
Mustard, monthly-recap-march-2020/) (as of March 27, 2020)
Sarin,
Soman,
VX
1. Libya's official 2004 declaration (https://www.opcw.org/opcw-archive/the-opcw-and-libya/libya-facts-and-figures%20) was 24.7 metric tons. Libya
declared additional CW stocks (https://www.opcw.org/opcw-archive/the-opcw-and-libya/libya-facts-and-figures) in November 2011 and February
2012, bringing the total to 26.3 metric tons.
Resources (/archive/search)
Donate (/donate)
About (/about)
Contact Us (/contact)
Email Updates (/get-the-latest)
PRIVACY (/privacy) RESOURCES (/archive/search) ARMS CONTROL TODAY (/aca) BLOG (/blog) ABOUT (/about) JOIN
(/join) DONATE (/donate)