The
55th Session of the United Nations General Assembly resolved
in December 2000 to hold the World Summit on Sustainable Development
(WSSD) in Johannesburg, South Africa in 2002. The GA also decided that
the Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD)
would serve as the central organizing body for the Summit and
coordinate a comprehensive 10-year review of progress achieved in the
implementation of
Agenda 21.
Johannesburg 2002: The World Summit on
Sustainable Development
was scheduled to
take place from 2 - 11
September 2002 in
Johannesburg, South Africa.
The Summit will now convene from
26
August - 4 September 2002 in Johannesburg.
World governments, concerned citizens, UN agencies,
multilateral financial institutions, and other major groups are
expected to participate and assess global change since the
United Nations
Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED)
in 1992.
The
United Nations Conference on Environment
and Development (UNCED) or "Earth Summit" convened in Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil, 3 - 14 June 1992. This global conference was held on the 20th anniversary of the first
international Conference on the Human
Environment
in Stockholm, 1972 and brought
together policy-makers, scientists, media and NGO
representatives from 179 countries in an effort to reconcile
the impact of human socio-economic activities on the environment.
A
major achievement of UNCED was
Agenda 21 - a
comprehensive plan of action that was to
be taken globally, nationally and locally by organizations of the UN
System, governments, and major groups in every area in which humans
impact the environment.
The 1972
UN
Conference on the Human Environment held in Stockholm focused international attention on
environmental issues, in particular those relating to environmental
degradation and "transboundary pollution", highlighting the fact that pollution does
not recognize political or geographical boundaries. Over the
decades, environmental issues have been increasingly recognized as
transnational in nature, requiring
concerted efforts by all countries and regions to deal with them.
Johannesburg Summit 2002 will strive to
answer some of the following questions: What accomplishments have been
made since 1992? How have participating countries been implementing Agenda 21? Have they
ratified the conventions they agreed to since 1992? What obstacles
have they encountered? What lessons have they learned about what works
and what does not work? What new issues have emerged to change the
situation? Where should we focus further efforts?
For
more information:
http://www.johannesburgsummit.org/html/brochure/final_brochure.pdf
For
the 55th General Assembly Resolution on
the World Summit on Sustainable Development:
http://www.johannesburgsummit.org/web_pages/resolution.htm
For ENB's Daily Coverage of UNCED PrepCom IV:
http://enb.iisd.org/vol01/
For ENB's Daily Coverage of the UNCED in 1992 in Rio, including
Pre-Conference Consultations:
http://enb.iisd.org/vol02/
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The Commission on Sustainable
Development (CSD) emerged from Agenda 21, the programme of action
adopted by the United Nations Conference on Environment and
Development (UNCED) in June 1992. Agenda 21 called for the creation of
the CSD to ensure effective follow-up of UNCED, enhance international
cooperation, rationalize intergovernmental decision-making capacity,
and examine progress of Agenda 21 implementation at the local,
national, regional and international levels. In 1992, the 47th session
of the UN General Assembly (GA) set out, in resolution 47/191, the
CSD's terms of reference, composition, guidelines for the
participation of NGOs, organization of work, relationship with other
UN bodies, and Secretariat arrangements. The Division for Sustainable
Development at the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA)
serves as the CSD Secretariat. The CSD held its first substantive
session in June 1993 and has since met annually in the spring at UN
Headquarters in New York. The spring (April-May) meetings are preceded
by two weeks of intersessional meetings (February-March). Expert
meetings focusing on CSD agenda items are often held prior to the
intersessional and/or Commission sessions.
First five CSD sessions: The CSD's
first substantive session (CSD-1) met from 14-25 June 1993 and adopted
a multi-year thematic programme of work. CSD-2, CSD-3 and CSD-4
subsequently met at UN Headquarters in New York during annual spring
sessions. Each session reviewed different sectoral chapters in Agenda
21. They all considered cross-sectoral issues including finance,
technology transfer, trade and the environment, and consumption and
production patterns. CSD-2 added panel discussions to the work method
to enable participants to enter into a dialogue on the session's
agenda items. CSD-3 established the Intergovernmental Panel on
Forests. CSD-4 completed the Commission's multi-year thematic
programme of work and began considering preparations for the 19th
Special Session of the UN General Assembly to Review Implementation of
Agenda 21 (UNGASS). CSD-5 focused on negotiations in preparation of
UNGASS.
UNGASS: In June 1997, five years
after UNCED, the General Assembly held a Special Session (UNGASS-19),
which adopted a "Programme for the Further Implementation of Agenda
21." Among the decisions adopted at UNGASS was a new five-year CSD
work programme, which identifies sectoral, cross-sectoral and economic
sector/major group themes for the subsequent four sessions of the CSD.
Overriding issues for each year are poverty, and consumption and
production patterns.
CSD-6: CSD-6
met from 20 April to 1 May 1998. Participants considered the economic
theme of industry and the sectoral theme of strategic approaches to
freshwater management. They also reviewed implementation of the
Barbados Programme of Action for the Sustainable Development of Small
Island Developing States and discussed the cross-sectoral themes of
technology transfer, capacity building, education, science and
awareness raising.
CSD-7: CSD-7
met from 19-30 April 1999, to consider the economic theme of tourism,
the sectoral theme of oceans and seas and the cross-sectoral theme of
consumption and production patterns. Participants also prepared for
the review of the Barbados Programme of Action.
CSD-8: CSD-8
met from 24 April to 5 May 2000. Participants deliberated on the
economic theme of sustainable agriculture and land management, the
sectoral theme of integrated planning and management of land resources
and the cross-sectoral themes of financial resources, trade and
investment, and economic growth. The conclusions and proposals in the
final report of the Intergovernmental Forum on Forests were also
discussed, as were preparations for the ten-year review of UNCED.
CSD-9:
CSD-9 met from 16-28 April 2001. Participants focused on the
economic theme of energy and transport, the sectoral themes of
atmosphere and energy and the cross-sectoral theme of information for
decision-making and participation and international cooperation for an
enabling environment.
WSSD preparations: The World Summit
on Sustainable Development (WSSD) will be held 10 years after the
UNCED to review implementation and to reinvigorate the global
commitment to sustainable development. In December 2000, the General
Assembly adopted resolution 55/199, in which it decided to embark on
this ten-year review. The General Assembly accepted South Africa's
offer to host the event in 2002. The resolution decided that the
review should focus on accomplishments and areas requiring further
efforts to implement Agenda 21 and other UNCED outcomes, leading to
action-oriented decisions. It should also result in renewed political
commitment to achieve sustainable development.
CSD-10, acting as the Preparatory
Committee for the WSSD, held its
first session at UN Headquarters from
30 April to 2 May 2001. The session adopted decisions on: progress in
WSSD preparatory activities at the local, national, regional and
international levels, as well as by Major Groups; modalities of future
PrepCom sessions; tentative organization of work during the Summit;
provisional rules of procedure; and arrangements for accreditation and
participation of Major Groups.
The
second session of the PrepCom
was held
from 28 January to 8 February 2002 at UN Headquarters.
The session engaged in review and
assessment of progress achieved in the implementation of Agenda 21,
agreed to transmit to its third session the Chair's Paper as
the basis for negotiation, and adopted the Chair's Report, to which
are annexed the Chair's Summary of the Second Preparatory Session,
the Chair's Summary of the Multi-Stakeholder Dialogue Segment,
and the Proposals for Partnerships/Initiatives to Strengthen
the Implementation of Agenda 21.
The
third session of the PrepCom
took place at UN headquarters in New York from 25 March to 5
April 2002. The first week of PrepCom III was dedicated to preliminary
consideration of the Chairman's Paper, with discussions on
the subsequent compilation text taking place during the second
week. The PrepCom also held preliminary discussions on an informal
paper on sustainable development governance, prepared by the Bureau on
the basis of comments made during PrepCom II. In addition, delegates
began consideration of Type 2 outcomes (partnerships/initiatives).
The fourth session
convened in
Bali, Indonesia from 27 May - 7 June, with informal consultations
beginning on 25 May. During the session, delegates produced the
Draft Plan of Implementation for the WSSD , which was
transmitted to the Summit in Johannesburg for further negotiation.
They also agreed on the modalities for the
organization of work during the Summit (A/CONF.199/PC/L.7) and,
based on the consultations held, mandated PrepCom Chair Emil Salim to
prepare
elements for a political declaration and post them on the
Johannesburg Summit website by the end of June 2002. Although the
session had hoped to conclude negotiation of the implementation plan,
round-the-clock negotiations by ministers during the last three days
of the session failed to produce consensus on key aspects of the plan,
particularly on trade, finance and globalization.
The WSSD is scheduled to take place
in Johannesburg, South Africa, from 26 August to 4 September 2002,
with informal consultations on the Draft Plan of Implementation to be
held from 24-25 August.
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