WSSD Info. News
ISSUE #
10 (C)
"A SNAP-SHOT OF THE SUMMIT" – UNITED NATIONS & AGENCIES
Issue # 10 (A)
~ Issue # 10
(B) ~ Issue # 10 (C) ~
Issue # 10 (D)
~ Issue # 10
(E)
Compiled by
Richard Sherman
Edited by
Kimo Goree
Published by the
International Institute for
Sustainable Development (IISD)
Distributed exclusively to the
2002SUMMIT-L
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IISD Reporting Services
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Richard Sherman.
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2002SUMMIT-L
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UNITED NATIONS WSSD SECRETARIAT
-
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT CONCLUDES IN
JOHANNESBURG: 4 September 2002
-
SUMMIT PRINT MATERIALS TO BE DONATED TO SOUTH
AFRICAN LIBRARY SYSTEM 4 September 2002
-
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT CONCLUDES IN
JOHANNESBURG: UN SECRETARY-GENERAL KOFI ANNAN SAYS IT'S JUST THE BEGINNING
4 September 2002
-
UN SUMMIT 'MAJOR LEAP FORWARD' FOR PARTNERSHIPS IN
GLOBAL FIGHT AGAINST POVERTY - ANNAN 4 September 2002
-
WITH A SENSE OF URGENCY, JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT SETS AN
ACTION AGENDA 3 September 2002
-
WORLD LEADERS STRESS SHARED RESPONSIBILITY,
IMMEDIATE ACTION, AS HIGH-LEVEL SEGMENT OF JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT CONTINUES 3
September 2002
-
UN SECRETARY-GENERAL CALLS FOR CHANGE AT SUMMIT 2
September 2002
-
SUMMIT SECRETARY-GENERAL SAYS COMPLETED NEGOTIATIONS
PROVIDE A SOLID FOUNDATION FOR ACTION 2 September 2002
-
NEGOTIATIONS ON JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT ACTION PLAN
ENTERS FINAL PHASE 2 September 2002
-
FOR EACH OTHER, FOR PLANET -- EMBODIES
SUMMIT'S HOPES, SAYS SECRETARY-GENERA, AS JOHANNESBURG'S HIGH-LEVEL
SEGMENT BEGINS 2 September 2002
-
INITIATIVE TO GROW SUSTAINABLE
BUSINESS IN WORLD'S POOREST COUNTRIES ANNOUNCED AT JOHANNESBURG WORLD
SUMMIT 2 September 2002
-
SOLUTIONS ARE UNDERSTOOD -- WILL TO
IMPLEMENT THEM STILL MISSING, BELGIUM'S PRIME MINISTER TELLS SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT 2 September 2002
-
MANY SUMMIT GOALS REALIZED AT MIDPOINT
31 August 2002
-
ADDITIONAL PARTNERSHIP INITIATIVES
ANNOUNCED IN JOHANNESBURG AIMED AT SUMMIT'S ECOLOGICAL IMPACT, CHILDHOOD
LEAD POISONING 31 August 2002
-
CHILDREN, AGRICULTURE, BUILDING CAPACITY IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, AMONG
ISSUES ADDRESSED AT SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT
32 Agencies, Organizations Speak in Plenary Session
30 August 2002
-
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT FOCUSES
ON IMPORTANCE OF REGIONAL ORGANIZATIONS IN SUMMIT FOLLOW-UP 29 August 2002
-
JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT CALLS FOR
RESTORATION OF FISHERIES BY 2015 28 August 2002
-
UN, SOUTH AFRICAN FLAGS RAISED OVER
SANDTON CONFERENCE CENTRE IN JOHANNESBURG 23 August 2002
UNITED NATIONS DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME
(UNDP)
-
JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT PROMOTES
PARTNERSHIPS FOR DEVELOPMENT 5 September 2002
-
JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT FOCUSES ON CIVIL
SOCIETY ROLE 4 September 2002
-
OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENTS IN
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN THE TROPICS REWARDED 31 August 2002
-
UNDP LAUNCHES PARTNERSHIPS TO EXPAND
ACCESS TO ENERGY FOR RURAL POPULATIONS 28 August 2002
-
WORLD SUMMIT IN JOHANNESBURG TO STAKE
OUT COURSE FOR PRACTICAL, REALISTIC DEVELOPMENT GAINS 26 August 2002
-
NEW PARTNERSHIPS TO HELP SEVERAL
HUNDRED MILLION POOR PEOPLE ACCESS CLEAN WATER 26 August 2002
UNITED NATIONS ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME
(UNEP)
-
WORKMANLIKE PLAN AGREED TO FIGHT
AGAINST POVERTY AND FIGHT FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SAYS KLAUS TOEPFER 4
September 2002
-
TRADE AND ENVIRONMENT TASK FORCE
STRENGTHENED IN JOHANNESBURG 3 September 2002
-
MASSIVE DESTRUCTION OF GREAT APE
HABITATS LIKELY OVER THE NEXT 30 YEARS UNLESS CURRENT TRENDS REVERSED 3
September 2002
-
PUTTING ENERGY INTO SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT - UNEP LAUNCHES NEW GLOBAL CLEAN ENERGY NETWORK AT
JOHANNESBURG WORLD SUMMIT 1 September 2002
-
NEW GLOBAL VIRTUAL UNIVERSITY TO
PROMOTE ENVIRONMENTAL AND DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION1 September 2002
WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION (WHO)
-
SUPPORT ROLLS IN FOR WHO'S NEW
"HEALTHY ENVIRONMENTS FOR CHILDREN" INITIATIVE 2 September 2002
-
BRUNDTLAND STARTS NEW MOVEMENT TO
ADDRESS ENVIRONMENTAL CRISIS AFFECTING CHILDREN'S HEALTH ENVIRONMENT KILLS
THE EQUIVALENT OF A JUMBO JET FULL OF CHILDREN EVERY 45 MINUTES 1
September 2002
FOOD AND AGRICULTIRE ORGANISATION (FAO)
-
HUNGER AND POVERTY: MORE POLITICAL
WILL AND FINANCIAL RESOURCES NEEDED 30 August 2002
-
HUNGER AND POVERTY NEED TO BE REDUCED
TO ACHIEVE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT 27 August 2002
-
FAO TO JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT:
AGRICULTURE CAN MAKE OR BREAK A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE 16 August 2002
-
DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT REAFFIRMS GLOBAL
COMMITMENT TO WOMEN'S HEALTH AND RIGHTS 4 September 2002
-
UNFPA CALLS FOR ACTION ON WOMEN AND
POPULATION 30 August 2002
-
REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH AND WOMEN'S RIGHTS
ARE KEY ISSUES FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT, EXPERTS SAY 27 August
2002
-
IFAD'S REPORT TO THE WORLD SUMMIT ON
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT CALLS FOR GREATER INVESTMENT IN THE MARGINAL AND
DEGRADED LANDS 20 August 2002
-
UNICEF ISSUES GLOBAL CHALLENGE TO
WORLD LEADERS ATTENDING JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT 30 August 2002
-
SWEDEN PLEDGES SUPPORT TO UNCTAD'S
INVESTMENTRELATED FOLLOW-UP WORK ON DOHA DEVELOPMENT AGENDA 3 September
2002
-
UNCTAD TO SIGN THREE PARTNERSHIPS ON
BIODIVERSITY 22 August 2002
-
NO SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT WITHOUT
EDUCATION 3 September 2002
-
WATER IS NOT JUST A COMMODITY, BUT A
COMMON PUBLIC GOOD, SAYS UNESCO UNESCO 30 August 2002
-
UNESCO LAUNCHES THE WORLD'S LARGEST
ENCYCLOPEDIA ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPPEMENT 29 August 2002
-
LIBRARIES AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
29 August 2002
-
CULTURAL DIVERSITY ESSENTIAL FOR
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, MAINTAINS UNESCO 28 August 2002
-
JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT ENDORSES ADEQUATE
SHELTER AND SUSTAINABLE URBANIZATION 4 September 2002
-
BRIEF SUMMARY ON THE PARTICIPATION OF
UN-HABITAT at the World Summit on Sustainable Development (Johannesburg,
26 August - 4 September 2002)
-
$500 MILLION TO BE MADE AVAILABLE FOR
WATER FOR ASIAN CITIES 31 August 2002
-
SUSTAINABLE URBANIZATION KEY TO
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT 26 August 2002
-
VOLUNTEERISM AND ITS ROLE IN
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT August 2002
-
PANELLISTS URGE GOVERNMENT BACKING OF
VOLUNTARY ACTION TO MEET DEVELOPMENT GOALS 30 August 2002
-
AIDS CHAIN REACTION THREATENS
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, UNAIDS SAYS Nations face 'un-development' as AIDS
destroys world's most valuable resource – people 30 August 2002
-
THE WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT CALLS ON THE GEF TO BECOME A FINANCIAL MECHANISM OF THE UNCCD.
10 September 2002
-
BIODIVERSITY, CLIMATE,
AND DESERTIFICATION REGIMES STRENGTHENED BY NEW PARTIES AND FUNDING
OPPORTUNITIES 30 August 2002
-
EVENTS OF SUNDAY, 1 SEPTEMBER 2002,
AND THE SIGNING OF AN MOU BETWEEN RAMSAR AND UNCTAD
ECONOMIC COMMISSION FOR AFRICA (ECA)
-
WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT 30 August 2002
-
UK, EC, UNDP & WB URGE POLICY MAKERS
TO STRESS POVERTY AND ENVIRONMENT LINKAGES 3 September 2002
-
GLOBAL VILLAGE ENERGY PARTNERSHIP
HARNESSING ENERGY FOR POVERTY REDUCTION: PEOPLE, PRODUCTIVITY AND
PARTNERSHIPS 30 August 2002
-
GLOBAL CONSULTATIVE PROCESS LAUNCHED
ON AGRICULTURAL SCIENCE LOOKING AT RISKS AND OPPORTUNITIES 29 August 2002
-
WORLD BANK URGES MORE BALANCED GLOBAL
APPROACH TO DEVELOPMENT 21 August 2002
UNITED NATIONS
UNITED NATIONS WSSD SECRETARIAT
Summit Website:
http://www.johannesburgsummit.org
Summit documents:
http://www.un.org/jsummit/html/documents/summit_docs.html
Live Coverage:
http://www.un.org/events/wssd/
Summit Press
Releases:
http://www.un.org/events/wssd/pressreleases/
Summit Speeches
and Statements:
http://www.un.org/events/wssd/statements/
Daily
Highlights:
http://www.un.org/events/wssd/highlights/020826hilit.htm
Press Releases
by UN Agencies:
http://www.un.org/events/wssd/pressreleases/agencies.htm
Meeting
Summaries:
http://www.un.org/events/wssd/summaries/
1. SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT CONCLUDES
IN JOHANNESBURG
4 September
2002
http://www.un.org/events/wssd/pressreleases/finalrelease.pdf
Johannesburg, 4 September.
Efforts to
promote sustainable development received a major boost today as the World
Summit on Sustainable Development concluded today with significant
commitments to improve the lives of people living in poverty and to reverse
the
continuing
degradation of the global environment. "This Summit makes sustainable
development a reality," United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan said at
a closing press conference in Johannesburg yesterday. "This Summit will put
us on a path that reduces poverty while protecting the environment, a path
that works for all peoples, rich and poor, today and tomorrow." "Governments
have agreed here," Mr. Annan said, "on an impressive range of concrete
commitments and action that will make a real difference for people in all
regions of the
world." The
overriding theme of the Summit was to promote action and major progress was
made in Johannesburg to address some of the most pressing concerns of
poverty and the environment. Commitments were made to increase access to
clean water and proper sanitation, to increase access to energy services, to
improve health conditions and agriculture, particularly in drylands, and to
better protect the world's biodiversity and ecosystems. The major outcome
document, the Plan of Implementation, contains targets and timetables
to spur action
on a wide range of issues, including halving the proportion of people who
lack access to clean water or proper sanitation by 2015, to restoring
depleted fisheries to the preserving biodiversity by 2015, and phasing out
of toxic chemicals by 2005. In addition, for
the first time
countries adopted commitments toward increasing the use of renewable energy
"with a sense of urgency," Although a proposed target for this was not
adopted. But rather than concluding with only the words of an agreed
document, the Summit has also
generated
concrete partnership initiatives by and between governments, citizen groups
and businesses. These partnerships are bringing with them additional
resources and expertise to attain significant results where they matter-in
communities across the globe.
"The Summit
represents a major leap forward in the development of partnerships," Mr.
Annan said, "with the UN, Governments, business and civil society coming
together to increase the pool of resources to tackle global problems on a
global scale." As a result of the Summit, governments agreed on a series of
commitments in five priority areas that were backed up by specific
government announcements on programmes, and by partnership initiatives. More
than 220 partnerships, representing $235 million in resources, were
identified during the Summit process to complement the government
commitments, and many more were announced outside of the formal Summit
proceedings. The true test of what the Johannesburg Summit achieves, Mr.
Annan said, are the actions that are taken afterward. "We have to go out and
take action," he said. "I am not saying that Johannesburg is the of it.
Johannesburg is the beginning."
2. SUMMIT PRINT MATERIALS TO BE DONATED TO
SOUTH AFRICAN LIBRARY SYSTEM
4 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.un.org/events/wssd/pressreleases/library.pdf
Johannesburg, 4
September. All of the print materials remaining at the close of the World
Summit on Sustainable Development will be donated to the Johannesburg City
Library, which will share the materials with other libraries in South
Africa, Summit organizers announced today. The 21,000 Summit attendees --
including summit delegations, UN agencies, NGO's, and major groups --
brought thousands of kilos of educational and outreach materials, addressing
every aspect of sustainable development, to Johannesburg. Many Summit
attendees will go home with briefcases and backpacks stuffed with
information. But those materials that remain behind will also
be put to good
use through the donation program. "In keeping with the principles of
sustainable use of resources, we are very pleased that these leftover
materials will find a home in Johannesburg's libraries," noted Summit
Secretary-General Nittin Desai. "Education is a cornerstone of sustainable
development and these materials, which represent some of the best
scientific, advocacy, and political thinking on the subject, will continue
to be used after the Summit ends to educate communities about sustainable
development issues."
Mr. Desai noted
that the donation of print materials is one of many efforts made to "green
the Summit," and reduce any negative environmental impact of the
Johannesburg meeting.
3. SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT CONCLUDES IN JOHANNESBURG: UN
SECRETARY-GENERAL KOFI ANNAN SAYS IT'S JUST THE BEGINNING
4 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.johannesburgsummit.org/html/whats_new/feature_story39.htm
Johannesburg, 4
September- Efforts to promote sustainable development received a major boost
today as the World Summit on
Sustainable
Development concluded today with significant commitments to improve the
lives of people living in poverty and to reverse the continuing degradation
of the global environment. "This Summit makes sustainable development a
reality," United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan said at a closing
press conference in Johannesburg yesterday. "This Summit will put us on a
path that reduces poverty while protecting the environment, a path that
works for all peoples, rich and poor, today and tomorrow." "Governments
have agreed here," Mr. Annan said, "on an impressive range of concrete
commitments and action that will make a real difference for people in all
regions of the world." The overriding theme of the Summit was to promote
action and major progress was made in Johannesburg to address some of the
most pressing concerns of poverty and the environment. Commitments were made
to increase access to clean water and proper sanitation, to increase access
to energy services, to improve health conditions and agriculture,
particularly in drylands, and to better protect the world's biodiversity and
ecosystems. The major outcome document, the Plan of Implementation,
contains targets and timetables to spur action on a wide range of issues,
including halving the proportion of people who lack access to clean water or
proper sanitation by 2015, restoring depleted fisheries by 2015, reducing
biodiversity loss by 2010, and, by 2020, using and producing chemicals in
ways that do not harm human health and the environment. In addition, for the
first time countries committed to increase the use of renewable energy "with
a sense of urgency," although a proposed target for this was not adopted.
But rather than concluding with only the words of an agreed document, the
Summit has also generated concrete partnership initiatives by and between
governments, citizen groups and businesses. These partnerships are bringing
with them additional resources and expertise to attain significant results
where they matter-in communities across the globe. "The Summit represents a
major leap forward in the development of partnerships," Mr. Annan said,
"with the UN, Governments, business and civil society coming together to
increase the pool of resources to tackle global problems on a global scale."
As a result of the Summit, governments agreed on a series of commitments in
five priority areas that were backed up by specific government announcements
on programmes, and by partnership initiatives. More than 220 partnerships,
representing $235 million in resources, were identified during the Summit
process to complement the government commitments, and many more were
announced outside of the formal Summit proceedings. The true test of what
the Johannesburg Summit achieves, Mr. Annan said, are the actions that are
taken afterward. "We have to go out and take action. This is not the end.
It's the beginning."
4. UN SUMMIT 'MAJOR LEAP FORWARD' FOR
PARTNERSHIPS IN GLOBAL FIGHT AGAINST POVERTY - ANNAN
4 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=4615&Cr=johannesburg&Cr1=summit
4 September -
Praising the partnership initiatives introduced by governments at the World
Summit on Sustainable Development, United Nations Secretary-General Kofi
Annan today said the conference marked "a major leap forward" in teaming up
the public sector, civil society, businesses and other key actors in the
global fight against poverty. Speaking to the press in Johannesburg, South
Africa, on the Summit's final day, the Secretary-General noted that
participating governments had agreed on an impressive range of concrete
commitments, particularly in the five priority areas of water, energy,
health, agriculture and biodiversity that he had identified for action.
The Summit
"will put us on a path that reduces poverty while protecting the
environment, a path that works for all peoples, rich and poor, today and
tomorrow," Mr. Annan stressed. While acknowledging that some were
disappointed that not everything that was expected to take place in
Johannesburg had been achieved, the Secretary-General said he was satisfied
with the results. "I think we have to be careful not to expect conferences
like this to produce miracles, but we do expect conferences like this to
generate political commitment, momentum and energy for the attainment of
goals," he said. Meanwhile, in responding to a question about Iraq, Mr.
Annan said he had told the country's Deputy Prime Minister, Tariq Aziz,
yesterday that UN inspectors should go in and that Baghdad should comply
with UN resolutions. Other leaders around the world were also asking Iraq to
comply, he added. As for Zimbabwe, the Secretary-General said he had been
in touch with President Robert Mugabe and had raised with him press reports
that the distribution of food was being politicized. Mr. Mugabe had provided
assurances that that was not the case, Mr. Annan said.
5. WITH A SENSE OF URGENCY, JOHANNESBURG
SUMMIT SETS AN ACTION AGENDA
3 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.johannesburgsummit.org/html/whats_new/feature_story38.htm
Johannesburg, 3
September- In the face of growing poverty and increasing environmental
degradation, the World Summit has succeeded in generating a sense of
urgency, commitments for action, and partnerships to achieve measurable
results, according to Johannesburg Summit Secretary-General Nitin Desai.
The Summit is expected to adopt the ten-chapter Plan of Implementation,
aimed at detailing the actions needed to fight poverty and protect the
environment, at its final session tomorrow. The document was negotiated in
meetings held in New York, Bali, and finally Johannesburg. By any standard,
participation and interest in the Summit has been high. The 104 Heads of
State and Government that took part in the Summit were joined by more than
21,000 people, including more than 9,000 delegates, 8,000 NGOs and 4,000
members of the press. As a result of the Summit, governments agreed on a
series of commitments in five priority areas that were backed up by specific
government announcements on programmes, and by partnership initiatives. More
than 220 partnerships, representing $235 million in resources, were
identified during the Summit process to complement the government
commitments, and many more were announced outside of the formal Summit
proceedings. For example, Desai said, for water and sanitation, countries
agreed to commit themselves to halve the proportion of people who lack clean
water and proper sanitation by 2015. These commitments were backed up by a
United States announcement of an investment of $970 million in water
projects over the next three years, and a European Union announcement to
engage in partnerships to meet the new goals, primarily in Africa and
Central Asia. The UN received 21 other partnership initiatives in this area
with at least $20 million in extra resources. In energy, Desai said
countries committed themselves to expanding access to the two billion people
that do not have access to modern energy services. In addition, he added
that while countries did not agree on a target for phasing in renewable
energy, they did commit to green energy and the phase out of subsidies for
types of energy that are not consistent with sustainable development. And to
bolster these commitments, a group of nine major electric companies signed
agreements to undertake sustainable energy project in developing countries.
In addition, the EU announced a $700 million partnership initiative on
energy and the US announced investments of up to $43 million for energy in
2003. On health issues, in addition to actions to fight HIV/AIDS and reduce
water borne diseases, and the health risks due to pollution, countries
agreed to phase out, by 2020, the use and production of chemicals that harm
human health and the environment. Proposals for the Global Environment
Facility to fund implementation of the Convention to Combat Desertification
have already been adopted, and will have a major impact on improving
agricultural practices in the drylands. The United States said it would
invest $90 million in 2003 for sustainable agriculture and 17 partnership
submissions to the UN contained at least $2 million in additional resources.
There were many commitments made to protect biodiversity and improve
ecosystem management, Desai said. These include commitments to reduce
biodiversity loss by 2010; to restore fisheries to their maximum sustainable
yields by 2015; to establish a representative network of marine protected
areas by 2012; and to improve developing countries' access to
environmentally-sound alternatives to ozone depleting chemicals by 2010.
These commitments are supported by 32 partnership initiatives submitted to
the UN, with $100 million in additional resources, and a US announcement of
$53 million for forest management in 2002-2005. "It's impossible to know
just how many resources the Summit has mobilized," Desai said, "but we know
they are substantial. Furthermore, many of the new resources will attract
additional resources that will greatly enhance our efforts to take
sustainable development to the next level, where it will benefit more people
and protect more of our environment."
6. WORLD LEADERS STRESS SHARED
RESPONSIBILITY, IMMEDIATE ACTION, AS HIGH-LEVEL SEGMENT OF JOHANNESBURG
SUMMIT CONTINUES
3 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2002/envdev690.doc.htm
China Announces
Kyoto Protocol Ratification; Russia Tells Summit Hopes to Ratify Kyoto 'in
Near Future'
JOHANNESBURG, 3
September -- World leaders stressed the need for shared responsibility and
immediate concerted action to ensure a secure and prosperous future for the
planet, as the World Summit on Sustainable Development continued its
high-level segment this morning. The international community has gathered in
Johannesburg, South Africa, to pursue new initiatives and build commitment
at the highest level to better implement Agenda 21, the road map for
achieving sustainable development adopted at the 1992 United Nations
Conference on Environment and Development -- the Earth Summit -- held in Rio
de Janeiro, Brazil. This morning, 22 additional heads of State or
government addressed the high-level segment, which began yesterday. "Put
your money where your mouth is", urged Dutch Prime Minister Jan-Peter
Balkenende. His country had been living up to that for years and would
continue to dedicate 0.7 per cent of its gross national product to official
development assistance. The international community must be clear about the
future it wanted and decisive about the action it would take to get there.
More than ever before, he stressed, the choice facing the world was a united
future or no future at all. Nicaraguan Vice-President Jose Rizo Castellon
emphasized that since the effects of national activities did not stop at
national borders, global cooperation was required to find solutions to
problems such as climate change and the depletion of the ozone layer. It
was clear that global environmental issues could not be solved through
isolated or local initiatives, but required immediate global responses.
Speaking on
behalf of the least developed countries, Mathieu Kerekou, the President of
Benin, said that the initiatives of past years had remained good intentions,
because they had not been followed by concrete action to address the serious
imbalances in the world. He appealed to all countries to commit to truly
supporting a more humane and just world -- to end disparity and inequality.
The world was indisputably one, and shared a common responsibility.
Solidarity was the only way to reach a new human vision. Micronesia's
President, Leo A. Falcam, said the hope of averting disaster for low-lying
countries such as his own was now gone. "Even if we all came to our
collective senses, this week in this beautiful city, and agreed to
immediately begin meeting the earlier targets and timetables, it is too late
for most of the Federated States of Micronesia." The time for words was
over; the time for action was now. Speaking on behalf of the Pacific Islands
Forum, Laisenia Qarase, Prime Minister of Fiji, said that sustainable
development, a fashionable phrase with a comforting, almost reassuring ring
to it, was really about the salvation of the earth and stopping humankind
from grossly abusing and destroying earth's resources. For the affluent
North, sustainable development at its most basic meant finding a less
destructive way of maintaining and increasing the greatest accumulation of
wealth in history. For the South, it might mean giving a man a chance to
own two good shirts, a digging fork and the money to buy a kilogram of
rice. It could no longer be denied, stated Ukrainian President Leonid D.
Kuchma, that man had been the greatest impediment to his own progress.
Among the historic initiatives undertaken by Ukraine to ensure its future
was the voluntary renouncement of its nuclear stockpiles. It subsequently
set out to put to good use the money it saved as a result of no longer
having to maintain those stocks. If even a small percentage of military
expenditures were diverted to sustainable development efforts, great
progress could be made. Unfortunately, his country's example went largely
ignored. Zhu Rongji, Premier of the State Council of China, announced that
China had ratified the Kyoto Protocol. China's strategy of sustainable
development had now run through all aspects of its economic and social
development efforts. As the world's largest developing country and a major
player in environmental protection, China was an important force in
international environment cooperation. He invited everyone to the Second
Global Environment Facility Assembly, to be held in Beijing in October.
Mikhail Kaysanov, Chairman of the Government of the Russian Federation, said
the Russian Federation had signed the Kyoto Protocol and was preparing for
its ratification, which, he hoped, would take place in the near future.
Moscow would host a world conference on climate change in 2003. In
providing an economic basis for sustainable development, a key role was
played by removing barriers and trade obstacles. Russia was preparing to
join the World Trade Organization (WTO) and was reducing import tariffs.
That would have a positive impact on trade with developing countries. In
organizational matters, the Summit approved the request of L'Organisation
pour la mise en valeur du fleuve Senegal to attend the Summit. Other heads
of State or government who spoke this morning were: Natsagiin Bagabandi,
President of Mongolia; Nursultan Nazarbayez, President of Kazakhstan;
Aleksander Kwasniewski, President of Poland; Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, President
of Maldives; Lyonpo Kinzang Dorji, Prime Minister of Bhutan; Goran Persson,
Prime Minister of Sweden; Fatos Nano, Prime Minister of Albania;
Jean-Bertrand Aristide, President of Haiti; Bernard Makuza, Prime Minister
of Rwanda; Pedro Verona Rodrigues Pires, President of Cape Verde; Isaias
Afwerki, President of Eritrea; Vicente Fox, President of Mexico; Joaqim
Alberto Chissano, President of Mozambique; Maaouya Ould Sid' Ahmed Taya,
President of Mauritania; Gustavo Noboa Bejarano, President of Ecuador. Also;
Arturo Vallarino, Vice-President of Panama; Juan Carlos Maqueda, Vice
President of Argentina; Charles Goerens, Minister of Environment of
Luxembourg; Shahida Jamil, Federal Minister for Environment, Local
Government and Rural Development of Pakistan; Rukman Senanayaka, Minister of
Environment and Natural Resources of Sri Lanka; Irakli Menagarishvili,
Minister for Foreign Affairs of Georgia; Sayyid Assaad bin Tariq Al-Said,
representing the Sultanate of Oman; Minister of Planning and Reconstruction
of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Denis Kalume Numbi; Minister for
Foreign Affairs and Education of Saint Kitts and Nevis, Timothy Harris;
Minister of Housing, Urbanization, Environment and Country Planning of
Djibouti, Abdallah Abdillahi Miguil; and head of the delegation of the
Transitional Government of Somalia, Abbas Yusuf.
Complete text
available:
http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2002/envdev690.doc.htm
7. UN SECRETARY-GENERAL CALLS FOR CHANGE AT
SUMMIT
2 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.johannesburgsummit.org/html/whats_new/feature_story36.htm
Johannesburg, 2
September- Calling the present model of development "flawed for many,"
United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan said he hoped the World Summit
on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg would mark the opening of a new
chapter of responsibility, partnerships and implementation. The
Secretary-General delivered his remarks at the opening meeting of more than
100 world leaders who have come to Johannesburg to participate in a major
global undertaking to improve living standards while protecting the
environment.
For the last
week, government delegates have negotiated a Plan of Implementation, now
complete, that sets forth commitments, some to be implemented by
partnerships of governments, NGOs and the private sector. In particular,
governments have committed themselves to take action to reduce the number of
people who lack access to clean water, proper sanitation and modern energy
services such as electricity, to promote a healthy environment and reduce
the incidence of disease, to increase agricultural productivity, and to
protect the world's biodiversity and ecosystems. "Let us face the
uncomfortable truth," Mr. Annan said. "The model of development we are
accustomed to has been fruitful for the few, but flawed for the many. A path
to prosperity that ravages the environment and leaves a majority of
humankind behind in squalor will soon prove to be a dead-end road for
everyone." Urging action and implementation toward sustainable development,
Mr. Annan said action starts with governments, and that the richest
countries must lead the way. "They have the wealth. They have the
technology. And they contribute disproportionately to global environmental
problems," he stated. But he said governments cannot do the job alone, and
civil society groups have a critical role to play, along with commercial
enterprises. "We are not asking corporations to do something different from
their normal business; we are asking them to do their normal business
differently." South Africa President Thabo Mbeki said in opening the
high-level segment, ""I am certain that the billions of people of the world
expect a very clear and unambiguous answer to the question of whether we are
ready and able to respond to the pressing challenges of sustainable
development." Several European leaders announced that they would increase
their assistance to developing countries. United Kingdom Prime Minister Tony
Blair stated that his country would double its assistance to Africa and
raise its overall assistance by 50 per cent. French President Jacques Chirac
said assistance should be increased to 0.7 per cent of its gross national
product in 10 years. German Chancellor Gerhard Schröeder said Germany would
contribute 500 million euros to promote cooperation on renewable energies.
Costa Rican
President Dr. Abel Pacheco de la Espriella told the Summit that Costa Rica
will not allow open gold mining, the exploitation of oil, and the
destruction of primary forest and the misuse of water resources. Namibian
President Dr. Sam Nujoma said his country was seriously implementing the
Convention to Combat Desertification by providing a safety net to farmers
and rural peasants.
8. SUMMIT SECRETARY-GENERAL SAYS COMPLETED
NEGOTIATIONS PROVIDE A SOLID FOUNDATION FOR ACTION
2 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.johannesburgsummit.org/html/whats_new/feature_story37.htm
Johannesburg, 2
September- Agreement was reached on the last remaining provisions of the
Plan of Implementation for the World Summit on Sustainable Development,
concluding negotiations that have taken place over nine months on three
continents, and that will guide implementation for actions to achieve
sustainable development. "This Plan of Implementation provides us with
everything we need to make sustainable development happen over the next
several years," according to Johannesburg Summit Secretary-General Nitin
Desai. "The test is whether governments, along with civil society and the
private sector, can pursue the commitments that are in the document, and
take actions that achieve measurable results." The negotiated document,
which must still be formally adopted by the full plenary, was completed
after a debate over a target for promoting renewable energy. The resulting
agreement calls for countries to act "with a sense of urgency" to
substantially increase the global share of renewable energy sources. It does
not set for a specific target. The document also calls for countries to
phase out energy subsidies that inhibit sustainable development. "The issue
of a target for renewable energy was a worthwhile goal," Desai said, "but
the reality is that with sustained action, we can build up the renewable
energy industries to the point where they have the critical mass to compete
with fossil fuel-generated energy. We have a commitment to make it happen
and now we need the follow-through." The Plan of Implementation is one of
three outcomes of the Summit, along with a Political Declaration and the
tangible partnership initiatives already announced.
9. NEGOTIATIONS ON JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT ACTION
PLAN ENTERS FINAL PHASE
2 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.johannesburgsummit.org/html/whats_new/feature_story35.htm
Johannesburg, 2
September- Agreement has been reached on virtually all of the World Summit
on Sustainable Development's Plan of Implementation, with the notable
exception of several key provisions on energy. Among the provisions that
were agreed upon in ministerial negotiating session last night, was a
commitment to set a goal for reducing by half the proportion of people who
lack access to proper sanitation by 2015, efforts to reduce the loss of
biodiversity, on good governance, to promote corporate responsibility, and
to reaffirm the Rio Principles, including the precautionary principle and
the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities. The remaining
unresolved issues involve energy issues, including setting a target for
achieving a certain level of renewable energy use and whether countries
should establish programmes to improve access to reliable and affordable
energy services. There is also an outstanding paragraph concerning health
care services. "The Summit has made some very significant advances,"
according to South Africa Minister of Environment and Tourism Valli Moosa.
"In some areas, it has made seminal advances." Valli Moosa said the
breakthroughs in the negotiations came during three days of round-the-clock
ministerial meetings. The idea of ministers, he said, sitting for days
dealing with the "nitty-gritty" of the issues involved, was a surprise. "It
represents the seriousness of which the WSSD is taken by developing and
developed countries." The high-level negotiations were necessary, he said,
because the remaining issues needed to be resolved at the political, not
technical levels.
Countries have
agreed to establish a voluntary world solidarity fund to eradicate poverty
and to promote social and human development that, without duplicating
existing UN funds, would encourage the role of the private sector and
individual citizens. Also agreed was a provision that encourages countries
to develop a 10-year framework of programmes to accelerate the shift toward
sustainable consumption and production pattern, which essentially asks
countries to live within the means of the supporting ecosystems. Another
provision calls for policies to improve products and services that reduce
environmental and health impacts using approaches such as life-cycle
analysis. On Kyoto, countries agreed that States that have ratified the
Kyoto Protocol "strongly urge States that have not already done so to ratify
the Kyoto Protocol in a timely manner. A target of 2010 was set as the
target for significantly reducing the current rate of biodiversity loss,
with an acknowledgement that additional financial and technical resources
would be necessary. Countries agreed to promote corporate responsibility and
accountability and exchange best practices through multi-stakeholder
dialogue such as in the Commission on Sustainable Development, the UN body
established to pursue implementation of sustainable development.
10. FOR EACH OTHER, FOR PLANET -- EMBODIES
SUMMIT'S HOPES, SAYS SECRETARY-GENERA, AS JOHANNESBURG'S HIGH-LEVEL SEGMENT
BEGINS
2 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2002/envdev686.doc.htm
South Africa's
President Says World Leaders Must Send Message They Intend to End 'Global
Apartheid'
JOHANNESBURG, 2
September -- United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan this morning told
the heads of State and government gathered for the high-level segment of the
World Summit on Sustainable Development that if there was one word that
should be on everyone's lips, one concept that embodied everything the
international community hoped to achieve in Johannesburg, it was
responsibility -- for each other, especially the poor, for the planet and
for the future. "Let us stop being economically defensive, and start being
politically courageous", he said. And it was time to face an uncomfortable
truth: the accustomed model of development had been fruitful for the few,
but flawed for many. A path to prosperity that ravaged the environment and
left a majority behind in squalor would be a dead end. "It is said that to
everything there is a season", he said. "The world today needs to usher in
a season of transformation, a season of stewardship. Let it be a season in
which we make a long overdue investment in the survival and security of
future generations." The international community has gathered in
Johannesburg, South Africa, to pursue new initiatives and build a commitment
at the highest level to better implement Agenda 21, the road map for
achieving sustainable development adopted at the 1992 United Nations
Conference on Environment and Development -- the Earth Summit -- held in Rio
de Janeiro, Brazil. Following its opening on 26 August, it held a series of
interactive plenary sessions on the key areas of water, energy, health,
agriculture and biodiversity, and heard statements from agencies and
organizations.
South African
President Thabo Mbeki, opening the high-level segment today, said that two
days ago people took to the streets to demand that the Summit "act in unity"
to eradicate poverty and bring about human advancement, while protecting the
earth. "Surely, there is no one among us, who thinks that billions in the
world should continue to be condemned to poverty, underdevelopment and a
denial of human dignity", he said. Less than a decade ago, he went on to
say, his country had been home to the anti-human system of apartheid. It
would thus be fitting that from here -- also the home of our common
ancestors -- the leaders of the world would send the message that they
understood and respected the principle and practice of human solidarity and
were therefore determined to defeat "global apartheid". "Nothing,
whatsoever, can justify any failure on our part to respond to this
expectation." Han Seung-soo, President of the United Nations General
Assembly, said the Summit provided a timely opportunity to explore ways to
build on the progress to be made in implementing the Doha development agenda
and the Monterrey Consensus. It was also important for ensuring the active
involvement of all stakeholders and actors in the implementation process
through true partnership. With regard to follow-up, he proposed using the
high-level dialogue of the Assembly for deliberating effective ways and
means to achieve the various international development goals and sustainable
development in a more mutually reinforcing manner. Also this morning, five
young people addressed the Summit. Three of them, representing the
International Children's Conference on the Environment sponsored by the
United Nations Environment Programme, presented a list of challenges to the
leaders of the world. Those challenges were inspired, written and voted on
by some 400 children from 80 countries and represent their hopes and fears
for the future of the planet. Justin Friesen, 11 years old from Canada,
Analiz Vergara, 14 years old from Ecuador, and Liao Mingyu, 11 years old
from China, were chosen by the Conference to convey their message to the
Summit. Two South African children, 6-year old Tiyiselani Manganyi, from
Soweto and 10-year old Julius Ndlovena, from Blargowrie, recited a poem
written for the launch of South Africa's National Plan of Action for
Children. The Summit's opening session was also addressed by 22 heads of
State or government, some of whom likened the struggle to reaching the
Summit's aims -- eradicating poverty while preserving the global environment
-- to South Africa's struggle for freedom against apartheid and, thus, how
appropriate it was to have convened the Summit here. They addressed a wide
range of issues, among them: the "common but differentiated
responsibilities" called for by the Rio agreements; the need to address the
inequities of globalization; HIV/AIDS; support for the Kyoto Protocol of the
Framework Convention on Climate Change; the need to increase development
assistance; the distortion of agricultural subsidies and the need for open
markets for developing world products; and the need to monitor sustainable
development efforts.
Addressing the
Summit were: The President of Indonesia, Megawati Soekarnoputri: President
of Bolivia, Hugo Chavez; Prime Minister of Denmark, Anders Fogh Rasmussen;
President of the Marshall Islands, Kessai H. Note; President of the
Commission of the European Commission, Romano Prodi; President of Guyana,
Gharrat Jagdeo; Chancellor of Germany, Gerhard Schröder; President of
Namibia, Sam Nujoma; Prime Minister of Lesotho, Pakalitha Bethuel Mosisili;
the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Tony Blair; the Prime Minister of
Canada, Jean Chrétien; the President of Uganda, Yoweri Kaguta Museveni; the
President of Turkey, Ahmet Necdet Sezer; the Prime Minister of Portugal,
José Manuel Durão Barroso; President of Algeria, Abdelaziz Bouteflika; the
President of France, Jacques Chirac; President of Brazil, Fernando Henrique
Cardoso; Prime Minister of Armenia, Andranik Margaran; President of Kenya,
Daniel arap Moi; Prime Minister of Mali, Ahmed Mohamed Ag Hamani; King
Mohammed VI of Morocco; and President of Zambia, Levy Patrick Mwanawasa..
Also speaking were the Vice-President of Burundi, Domitien Ndayizeye; the
Vice-President of Botswana, Seretse Khama Ian Khama; the Vice-President of
Colombia, Francisco Santos Calderon; and Bolivia's Minister of Sustainable
Development and Planning, Jose Guillermo Justiniano Sandoval. Complete text
available:
http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2002/envdev686.doc.htm
11. INITIATIVE TO GROW SUSTAINABLE BUSINESS
IN WORLD'S POOREST COUNTRIES ANNOUNCED AT JOHANNESBURG WORLD SUMMIT
2 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.un.org/events/wssd/summaries/envdevj26.htm
JOHANNESBURG, 2
September (Global Compact Office) -- Mobilizing resources and expertise to
address the scourge of entrenched poverty, major international companies
today agreed to partner with governments, labour and civil society to pursue
sustainable business development in the world's least developed countries
at the World Summit on Sustainable Development. The initiative was the focus
of a high-level meeting at the Summit, chaired by Secretary-General Kofi
Annan and attended by British Prime Minister Tony Blair, French President
Jacques Chirac and other heads of State and government; ministers; United
Nations officials; representatives from labour and non-governmental
organizations; and the chief executive officers of such companies as
Hewlett-Packard and Shell International. "Growing sustainable business in
the world's least developed countries is arguably the most promising pathway
in overcoming the poverty trap," said Secretary-General Kofi Annan. "By
working together to mobilize sustainable investment in the least developed
countries, government, business and civil society give hope and opportunity
to the world's poorest". The round table was organized by the United Nations
Global Compact, in cooperation with the United Nations Conference on Trade
and Development (UNCTAD), the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)
and other United Nations agencies. At the round table, Sir Mark
Moody-Stuart, Chairman of Business Action for Sustainable Development,
presented a plan that would commit partners to identifying, over the next
year, business opportunities in specific least developed countries that
would be sustainable and designed in ways to help grow local small and
medium-sized businesses.
The plan
received wide endorsement from the round table participants. Government
heads agreed to help facilitate the process through active participation,
while labour and civil society groups agreed to work as partners with
companies in the development and implementation of specific initiatives.
Participants agreed on the critical importance of: growing sustainable
business and economic capacity in the least developed countries; working in
partnership; and developing a defined process for implementation. The
companies represented at the meeting are participants in the Global Compact,
a corporate citizenship initiative launched by Secretary-General in July
2000. The Global Compact asks companies to support nine principles in the
areas of human rights, labour standards and the environment. (See
www.unglobalcompact.org). During the next 12 months, companies will
identify specific least developed countries that they will target for
business development in partnership with other stakeholders and in alignment
with the nine principles of the Global Compact. Participants in the
initiative agreed to publicly share progress made and their respective
contributions to the process over the next year. The least developed
countries is a United Nations category that describes the world's poorest
and economically marginalized nations. The number of least developed
countries has almost doubled since the category was first created in 1971,
from 25 to 49 today. According to recent figures, the average per capita
gross domestic product in the least developed countries is approximately
$235, compared with $24,522 in the developed world. Eighty per cent of the
613 million population of the least developed countries -- the majority of
which are located in sub-Saharan Africa -- live on less than $2 a day, while
50 per cent live on less than $1 a day. Development experts say that one of
the primary challenges facing the least developed countries is their
inability to attract significant levels of foreign direct investment.
According to the latest estimates, during the 1990-2000 period, least
developed countries received only 0.5 per cent of global foreign direct
investment (FDI) flows.
12. SOLUTIONS ARE UNDERSTOOD -- WILL TO
IMPLEMENT THEM STILL MISSING, BELGIUM'S PRIME MINISTER TELLS SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT
2 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2002/envdev687.doc.htm
Says Agreed
Language in Summit Text on Trade Disappointing; African Leaders Call for
Efforts on Food Security, Water Needs, HIV/AIDS
JOHANNESBURG, 2
September - As the World Summit for Sustainable Development convened this
afternoon to continue its high-level segment, the Prime Minister of Belgium
told delegates it had become clear that everyone knew what solutions had to
be implemented and it should thus be easy to harmonize a world that had been
split in two for too long, but the common political will to apply the
solutions and show true solidarity was still missing. Guy Verhofstadt added
that he was disappointed, for example, with the agreement concluded this
morning in trade and finance, which was well below the legitimate
expectations of developing countries. He, therefore, proposed a political
declaration that was much stronger than the plan of action. Globalization
of the economy also called for globalization of solidarity, he said.
The
international community has gathered in Johannesburg, South Africa, to
pursue new initiatives and build a commitment at the highest level to better
implement Agenda 21, the road map for achieving sustainable development
adopted at the 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development
-- the Earth Summit -- held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It opened its
high-level segment this morning, and this afternoon heard from 21 heads of
State or government, and 25 ministers and others. Several African leaders
drew attention to the plight of their continent this afternoon. Nigeria's
President, Olusegun Obasanjo, said the first step towards the eradication of
poverty was food security, and factors that threatened agriculture, such as
drought and desertification, should be addressed. He asked, therefore, for
support for implementation of the Convention on Desertification and called
on the international community to work with Africa to address its dire need
for water. Less talk was needed and more action to regain the respect of
the children of the world. "Let success in Johannesburg be judged by the
action taken to change commitments into reality", he said. King Mswati III
of Swaziland said the message of hope at this Summit would be meaningless if
there was insufficient commitment to contain the spread of the virus that
caused AIDS, and to help those countries unable to cope. He called for a
truly global effort -- a global coalition against HIV/AIDS -- that mobilized
resources in the priority areas of drugs, finances, infrastructure,
equipment and training, and for equal distribution of available resources.
The global family must acknowledge that it was not an isolated problem for a
few of its members; it was a crisis for the whole of humankind.
Robert G.
Mugabe, President of Zimbabwe, said he joined those in the world who had
rejected attempts by some countries and regional blocs whose real objective
was interference in the domestic affairs of others. The poor should be able
to use their sovereignty to fight poverty without interference. There could
be no sustainable development without agrarian reform. In his country, that
issue had pitted the black majority against an obdurate and internationally
well-connected white minority, manipulated by the Blair Government. "Blair,
keep your England and let me keep my Zimbabwe", he said. A number of other
speakers addressed global climate change. Tuvalu's Prime Minister and
Minister for Foreign Affairs, Immigration and Labour, Saufatu Sopoanga,
noting that the rise of the sea level had increased in magnitude and
momentum, stressed the reverse impact of climate change on his country.
Climate change affected small island developing States and everyone else.
He insisted, therefore, that all parties, particularly the greatest emitters
of greenhouse gasses, ratify the Kyoto Protocol as a matter of urgency.
Other heads of State and government speaking this afternoon were: the
President of Bulgaria, Georgi Parvanov; Prime Minister of New Zeland, Helen
Clark; President of Senegal, Abdoulaye Wade; President of Croatia, Stjepan
Mesic; President of the Republic of the Congo, Denis Sassou-Nguesso; Prime
Minister of Italy, Silvio Berlusconi; President of Finland, Tarja Halonen;
Prime Minister of Japan, Junichiro Koizumi; Prime Minister of Iceland, David
Oddsson; President of Yugoslavia, Vojislav Kostunica; President of Costa
Rica, Abel Pacheco de la Espriella; President of Gabon, El Hadj Omar Bongo;
President of The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Boris Trajkovski;
Prime Minister of Togo, Koffi Sama; President of Malawi, Bakili Muluzi; and
President of Romania, Ion Iliescu. Other speakers included: Vice-President
of Iran, Massoumeh Ebtekar; Vice-President of Honduras, Alberto Diaz Lobo;
Vice-President of Ghana, Alhaji Aliu Mahama; Crown Prince Albert of Monaco;
Deputy Prime Minister of Malysia, Datuk Abdullah Ahmad Badawi; Deputy Prime
Minister of Vanuatu, Rialuth Serge Vohor; Vice Prime Minister of Iraq, Tariq
Aziz; Deputy Prime Minister of Lao People's Democratic Republic, Somsavat
Lengsavad; Minister for Environment, Agriculture and Forestry of
Liechtenstein, Alois Ospelt; Minister of Foreign Affairs of Switzerland,
Joseph Deiss; Minister of State for Municipal and Environmental Affairs of
Bahrain, Jawad Salem Al-Orayyed; Minister of the Environment of Greece,
Vasso Papandreou; Minister of Health of Kuwait, Mohammed Al-Jarallah;
Minister of Environment of Sudan, El-Tigni Adam El-Tahir; Minister of
Planning of Jordan, Bassam Awadallah; Head of the Amiri Diwan of Qatar,
Abdullah bin Mohammed bin Saud Al-Thani; Minister for Foreign Affairs of
Republic of Korea, Choi Sung-hong; Minister of State of Burkina Faso, Saif
Diallo; Minister for Foreign Affairs of Peru, Allan Wagner; Minister for
Social Housing of Uruguay, Carlos Cat; Minister of the Environment of
Lebanon, Michel Moussa; Minister for Foreign Affairs of Bahamas, Frederick
Mitchell; Minister for Foreign Affairs of Papua New Guinea, Rabbie Namaliu;
Minister of the Environment of Slovenia, Janez Kopac; and the Observer from
the Holy See, Renato Martino.
Complete text
available:
http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2002/envdev687.doc.htm
13. MANY SUMMIT GOALS REALIZED AT MIDPOINT
31 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.un.org/events/wssd/pressreleases/midwayrelease.pdf
Johannesburg,
31 August. The World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg
reached its midpoint with significant agreements on a wide range of issues
and major announcements on resources and partnerships, yet full agreement on
a Programme of
Implementation
is still dependent on a breakthrough on some of the toughest issues. Several
of the Summit's objectives have already been met, according to Johannesburg
Summit Secretary-General Nitin Desai. "One of the main goals of the Summit
was to have the
international
community reaffirm their support for implementing Agenda 21 and the
Millennium Declaration goals, and that has happened," Desai said. "The
Summit was also intended to accelerate implementation of sustainable
development, and from the announcements of
significant new
resources and partnerships, that has happened. And lastly, we sought to put
sustainable development back on the international agenda and in the global
consciousness, and without question, that too has happened." Desai added
that it was still important to get commitments from governments in the final
outcome document, but stressed that the important aim of the Summit, from
the outset, has been to encourage actual implementation, not the negotiation
or renegotiation of goals and principles. "What we want, more than anything
else, is to encourage governments, community citizen groups, and the private
sector to act in a sustainable way. We need large-scale implementation
efforts that will have a tangible and beneficial impact on people's lives
and the The negotiations have cleared about 95 per cent of the Plan of
Implementation, although technically, nothing is officially agreed until
everything is agreed. Still, consensus has been reached on agreements on a
wide range of issues, including commitments to improve access to clean
water, proper sanitation, and modern and clean energy. Also agreed are
provisions and funding that will improve agricultural productivity and
combat desertification, and reduce the health risks from pollution and
water-borne diseases, as well as a host of provisions aimed at improving
biodiversity and ecosystem management. But negotiations on the final
document are still focused on several important outstanding issues,
including targets for expanding access to sanitation and achieving a certain
level of renewable energy, subsidies, and a provision urging the
ratification of the Kyoto Protocol on Among the significant agreements
reached in the negotiations are provisions to take action on
the five areas that UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan suggested that the
Summit tackle. A list of these commitments, which is not exhaustive,
includes:
-
Commitment to
launch programmes to achieve the goal of halving the proportion of people
without access to safe drinking water.
-
Commitment to
develop and implement initiatives to increase access to proper sanitation
facilities in homes and institutions, especially schools.
-
Commitment to
increase access to modern energy services for the two billion people who
lack them.
-
Commitment to
establish programmes that will boost energy efficiency and increase the
use of renewable energy.
-
Commitment to
establish policies that will level the playing field for renewable and
cleaner fossil fuel energy and technologies.
-
Commitment to
phase out by 2020 the use and production of chemicals that harm human
health and the environment.
-
Commitment to
restore fisheries to their maximum sustainable yields by 2015.
-
Commitment to
establish a representative network of marine protected areas by 2012.
-
Commitment to
implement the Global Programme of Action for the Protection of the Marine
Environment from Land Based Sources of Pollution by 2004.
-
Commitment to
improve developing countries' access to environmentally-sound alternatives
to ozone depleting chemicals by 2010.
-
Commitment to
take immediate action on domestic forest law enforcement and the
international trade in forest products.
-
Commitment to
finance activities for the Convention to Combat Desertification through
the Global Environment Facility.
-
Commitment to
enhance the role of women at all levels and in all aspects of rural
development, agriculture, nutrition, and food security.
-
Commitment to
replenish the Global Environment Facility at a record level of $2.92
billion.
14. ADDITIONAL PARTNERSHIP INITIATIVES
ANNOUNCED IN JOHANNESBURG AIMED AT SUMMIT'S ECOLOGICAL IMPACT, CHILDHOOD
LEAD POISONING
31 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2002/envdev684.doc.htm
JOHANNESBURG,
31 August -- As various partnership initiatives were announced at the World
Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg this afternoon,
representatives of individual governments, regional organizations, and
non-governmental organizations pledged to take action on such priority
issues as climate change, energy, health, and biodiversity. In a departure
from traditional conference practice, these partnerships represent an
innovative mechanism for moving from paper commitments to joint action on
the ground by governments, business and civil society actors. Along with
intergovernmental agreements, which are being negotiated at the Summit, they
are designed to support the global goals of reducing poverty and
environmental degradation within the framework of sustainable development.
During this third round of official partnership announcements, which will
continue through Sunday, presentations were made by South Africa, Bahrain,
Germany, Belgium, the International Union for the Conservation of Nature
South Africa, the Global Lead Initiative, the International Institute for
Sustainable Development Law, the International Institute for Sustainable
Future and Global Futures Network, the Arab Civil Initiative for Waste
Management, the Conservation Collaborative Labelling and Appliance Standards
Program, and the European Space Agency in partnership with the United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).
The
"Johannesburg Climate Change Legacy, 2002" initiative, launched by the
International Union for the Conservation of Nature South Africa and
partners, seeks to reduce the environmental impact of international
conferences, in particular the amount of carbon emissions generated. The
partnership, which includes the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP),
Constructing an Efficient and Renewable Future and the International
Institute for Energy Conservation, aims to neutralize that impact with
sustainable carbon-reducing projects focused on four themes: solar energy;
biogas; biofuels; and overall energy efficiency. Keenly aware of the irony
that the very staging of conferences related to sustainability has a
negative impact the environment -- particularly for developing countries --
the Climate Change Legacy will use the Summit's ecological "footprint" as a
first call for action. It is expected that the Summit will generate some
350,000 tons of carbon dioxide. The initiative will be funded first by
individuals who purchase "Climate Legacy Certificates" of from $10-$150 --
corporations can purchase certificates from $1,000 to $100,000 -- to
mitigate the carbon impact their presence had on South Africa.
The "Alliance
to End Childhood Lead Poisoning", launched by the Global Lead Initiative,
hopes the Summit provides the opportunity to expedite a global effort to
phase out leaded gasoline and to eliminate other exposure sources through a
partnership process with specific implementation milestones and targets.
The Global Lead Initiative aims to convert existing international
commitments on lead-poisoning prevention, as well as the relevant text
included in the Summit's draft plan of implementation, into successful
action. According to the Alliance's International Action Plan, around the
world, human exposure to excessive amounts of lead imposes immense costs,
with many millions of children and adults suffering adverse health effects
and impaired intellectual development. And since neurological damage caused
by even low levels of lead is often irreversible, the only solution to lead
poison is to prevent it altogether. Believing that the elimination of
leaded fuels opens the gateway to removing other harmful substances from the
environment, the Alliance aims to phase out leaded gasoline in the context
of a cleaner fuel strategy. It is currently seeking funds, as well as staff
time or technical assistance, from governments, institutions and
foundations. Stressing the fundamental role the Summit will play in
developing partnerships that could assist South Africa in harnessing more of
the world's resources towards a practical global action programme to help
eradicate poverty, Essop Pahad, Minister in the Office of the President of
South Africa, announced a series of partnership-driven initiatives. The
"Centres of Excellence for Technological Innovation for Sustainability in
Africa " intends to bring stakeholders from African governments and
universities together with world-class expertise in technological innovation
to develop and implement a plan of action for building such centres at
African universities. That partnership is being promoted by the United
Kingdom, Finland, South Africa and Nigeria. Also announced was a
partnership with the European Union -- the "Africa/European Union Water
Initiative" -- which aims to address, among other things, the Millennium
Development Goal of halving, by 2015, the proportion of people without
access to sanitation. A diverse group of legal partners, representing the
International Institute for Sustainable Development Law, the Centre for
International Sustainable Development Law and the International Law
Association, launched the "International Sustainable Development Legal
Partnership". The initiative focuses on implementing significant legal
developments in the field of sustainable development. The main goal is to
strengthen sustainable development governance at the international, regional
and national levels, laying the foundation for policy implementation by
facilitating access to, compliance with and enforcement of economic, social
and environmental law. The project, which includes governments, law firms
and universities, is expected to be completed by 2007. The International
Institute for Sustainable Future and Global Futures Network, along with the
EcoEarth Alliance -- a coalition of organizations that promote activities
designed to provide a response to the rapid depletion of natural resources
-- launched the "Sustainable Rural Development and Ecovillage Training
Programme". The partnership will pioneer efforts to provide
technology-training programmes in sustainable development, particularly
rural development and advocacy work, and will promote other relevant,
regionally based projects. Through several "Sustainable Village"
programmes, the partners will implement small-scale solutions to global
problems, leveraging renewable energy, appropriate technology and
micro-enterprise ideas to improve quality of life, create jobs, increase
productivity and protect the environment. The Arab Civil Initiative for
Waste Management aims to initiate and support community-based projects in
the field of waste management through providing expertise and support in the
areas of project management, technology transfer, public awareness,
information exchange, fund-raising and good practices. The partners
involved are the Regional Office for West Asia of the United Nations
Environment Programme (UNEP), in collaboration with the Council of Arab
Ministers Responsible for the Environment. The partnership expects to
implement sound practices for civil society organizations in the field of
waste management, raise public awareness, and involve women and youth in
those activities as a major group. The Conservation Collaborative Labelling
and Appliance Standards Program aims to promote the appropriate use of
energy efficiency standards and labels for appliances, equipment and
lighting. Partners include the International Institute for Energy, Alliance
to Save Energy, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, as well as
governments, industries, intergovernmental organizations, non-governmental
organizations, technical support groups and funders. The partnership
supports research and dissemination of information, provides global tools
and information packaged to identify all labelling and standards programmes
going on around the world, and assists governments. It expected that
through implementing standards and labelling, a savings of 5 per cent in
energy use could be reached over 20 years. The European Space Agency and the
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)
announced two initiatives to be implemented through their joint-initiative
launched in 1998, "Integrated Global Observing Strategy" partnership. The
programmes will focus on enhancing coordination on space information and
earth observation systems, and also on satellite earth observation education
and training. They will further the goals of the Observing Strategy
partnership -- namely bringing together the major earth and space-based
systems for global environmental observations of the atmosphere, oceans and
land in a strategic planning process -- as well as address specific issues
affecting everyday life, such as global warming. The Integrated Global
Observing Strategy partnership's international partners include the
Committee on Earth Observation Satellites, the Food and Agricultural
Organization (FAO) and World Meteorological Organization (WMO).
Representatives
of Germany's Foreign Affairs Ministry, as well as German civil society
experts on human resources development, announced a partnership with
Mozambique on "Human Resources Development in Disaster Management", which
aims to strengthen the coordination and management capacities of
Mozambique's National Disaster Management Institute. The Institute was
founded in 1999 and now has 11 provincial branches coordinating on disaster
management and emergency relief operations throughout the country. The
partnership will promote Mozambique's new policy in disaster management --
from response to prevention. Representatives of the Belgian Government were
joined by representatives of the country's regional and Flemish local
authorities to introduce a slate of domestic partnerships for sustainable
development. The partnerships take into account basic principles identified
by the stakeholders as essential for development, including the principle of
common but differentiated responsibilities, inter- and intra-generational
equity in honouring the right to development, and good governance. The
presenters highlighted a project initiated by the Centre for Environmental
Health at the University of Brussels as a direct response to the health and
science development objectives of Agenda 21. They also highlighted a pilot
project initiated by the country's Trade Union Network for Environmental
Awareness, which aims to raise awareness among workers in public hospitals.
Complete text available:
http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2002/envdev684.doc.htm
15. CHILDREN, AGRICULTURE, BUILDING CAPACITY IN DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES, AMONG ISSUES ADDRESSED AT SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT
32
Agencies, Organizations Speak in Plenary Session
30 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2002/envdev680.doc.htm
JOHANNESBURG,
30 August -- At the World Summit for Sustainable Development this morning,
32 agencies and organizations called for attention to issues of children,
agriculture, capacity-building, human and natural resources and population
in the context of achieving the international aim of eliminating poverty,
while protecting the Earth's resources. The debate was held ahead of the
Summit's high-level segment next week, when more than 100 world leaders will
gather to build a commitment to better implement Agenda 21, the road map for
achieving sustainable development adopted at the 1992 United Nations
Conference on Environment and Development -- the Earth Summit -- held in Rio
de Janeiro, Brazil. The Administrator of the United Nations Development
Programme, Mark Malloch Brown, stressed that in order to meet the goals set
at the Millennium Summit in September 2000, it was necessary first to
succeed in changing the terms of the global debate. Population issues must
be kept at the heart of the development agenda. Sustainable development was
simply not possible without transparent democratic institutions capable of
protecting the environment, while providing basic needs and economic
opportunities. He noted that communities where people protected their
ecosystems had better schools, health care and economies. Carol Bellamy,
Executive Director of the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), said
there was no more direct route to environmental well-being than investments
in children. In the decade since Agenda 21, there had been some impressive
achievements, but there had not been satisfactory progress towards many
goals and new challenges had emerged, such as HIV/AIDS, the proliferation of
armed conflict and globalization. The Summit must emphasize a child-centred
development paradigm, and stress that development could not be sustainable
unless children were protected from vulnerability everywhere, and unless
their rights to a basic education of good quality, nutrition, health, water
and sanitation were fulfilled. Kunio Waki, Deputy Executive Director, United
Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), said poverty reduction and protection of
natural resource could not be achieved without addressing population
issues. Global population was expected to reach 9 billion by the year
2050. It was, however, not growing as fast as it did before, thanks to the
world's women and governments that gave them support and choices. Since
UNFPA was established in 1969, overall fertility rates had dropped by half
in the developing world. Developing countries with lower fertility and
slower population growth had seen higher productivity, more savings and more
productive investment.
Speaking on
behalf the International Federation of Agricultural Producers, the President
of the Dutch Farmers' Union said agriculture was the key to sustainable
development. The drop in priority for agriculture from national budgets,
donors and international institutions must, therefore, be reversed.
Agriculture was key to food security, to conserving biodiversity and central
to international action in trade and investment. K.G. Ruffing, the Acting
Director, Environment Directorate, Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development (OECD), said one of the areas where OECD countries could show
leadership was to increase the coherence and integration of their own
policies. OECD countries were the largest donors of official development
assistance (ODA), but at the same time had policies to protect and subsidize
their own national industries. In many cases, the benefits of ODA were
swamped by the effects of trade-distorting subsidies and other barriers to
trade. Also speaking this morning were: the Executive Director of the Joint
United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS); the Assistant
Director-General for Natural Sciences of the United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO); the President of the
International Fund for Agricultural Development; the Executive Director of
United Nations Programme for Human Settlements (UN-Habitat); the Executive
Secretaries of the Convention on Biological Diversity, the United Nations
Convention to Combat Desertification, and the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change; as well as the Executive Secretaries of the
Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean, the Economic and
Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, the Economic Commission for
Africa, and the Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia. The
President of the International Parliamentary Union, the Regional Director,
Eastern and Southern African Office, International Civil Aviation
Organization; the Director of the Consultative Group on International
Agricultural Research; the Executive Director of the European Trade Unions
Confederation; the Director-General of the International Union for the
Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources; and the Secretary-General of
the Nordic Council of Ministers also addressed the Summit. In addition,
representatives of Environmental Alert, Foundation to Promote Indigenous
Knowledge, Estado Libre de Puerto Rico, Baltic Marine Environment Protection
Commission, Commonwealth of Independent States, Permanent Commission for the
South Pacific, United States Virgin Islands, Secretariat of the Basel
Convention, and Mines Ministries of the Americas Conference participated in
the discussion. Complete text available:
http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2002/envdev680.doc.htm
16. SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT FOCUSES
ON IMPORTANCE OF REGIONAL ORGANIZATIONS IN SUMMIT FOLLOW-UP
29 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2002/envdev676.doc.htm
JOHANNESBURG,
29 August -- The importance of regional arrangements and cooperation in the
implementation and follow-up of the outcome of the World Summit on
Sustainable Development was the focus of an interactive discussion held this
morning. As noted by the former Administrator of the United Nations
Development Programme (UNDP) and moderator of the discussion, Gustave Speth,
the regional level was becoming increasingly important, as there were many
things that could not be done at the global level and could not be done well
enough at the national level. The United Nations regional commissions, with
their proven analytical capacity, had an important role to play in the
implementation and follow-up of the Summit. Action at the regional level,
stated the Executive Secretary of the Economic Commission for Latin America
and the Caribbean (ECLAC), Jose Antonio Ocampo, was the bridge between
national realities and global priorities. Regional action played such a
critical role because the actors involved in global processes occupied
highly unequal positions. Hence, in political terms, regional action
allowed the voice of smaller countries to be heard within the global order.
The important role of the regional commissions was also emphasized by Kim
Hak-Sen, Executive Secretary, Economic and Social Commission for Asia and
the Pacific (ESCAP), who noted that with their multi-sectoral expertise,
regional commissions were strategically placed to promote regional and
subregional cooperation, enhance capacity-building and awareness, and render
technical assistance. They also contributed to cost-effective solutions and
avoided unnecessary duplication of efforts. Environmental degradation,
unequal access to markets, poverty eradication and peace and security could
be examined only within the context of international relations coupled with
regional and subregional level action, added Mervat Tallawy, Executive
Secretary of the Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA).
Regional implementation provided a forum for the promotion of regional
integration into wider development efforts, the best way regions could
together and independently face the challenges of globalization.
Participants emphasized the importance of regional initiatives and
strategies for development. Among the regional initiatives highlighted was
the New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD), which South Africa's
Vice- Minister for Foreign Affairs believed was a prerequisite for
sustainable development on the African continent. Among its important
features, he said, was the fact that it focused on African ownership and
leadership, that it would be financed primarily through African resources,
and, above all, that it fostered partnership between Africa and the rest of
the world. For a land-locked country and one with an economy in transition,
regional cooperation offered assistance to respond to the challenges of
globalization, stated Azerbaijan's representative. It also provided avenues
for the use of the limited resources of the countries in the region and the
integration of those countries into the global economy. He appealed to the
international donor community to be more attentive and responsive to the
regional context. While expressing appreciation for the efforts of regional
organizations, the Minister of Finance and Planning of Tuvalu said that it
was important to review and assess their direct impact on the lives of
people. Some of the regional organizations seemed to have their own
agendas. It was necessary to ensure that they truly were agents for
sustainable development and that the post-Johannesburg benefits flowed down
to those on the ground. This morning's interactive session followed a
series of "partnership plenaries" focusing on priority areas identified by
the Secretary-General as key for progress at the Summit -- water, energy,
health, agricultural production and biodiversity. The international
community has gathered in Johannesburg, South Africa, to build a commitment
to better implement Agenda 21, the roadmap for achieving sustainable
development adopted at the 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and
Development -- the Earth Summit -- held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Presentations were made by the Executive Secretaries of the five United
Nations regional commissions on the following themes associated with
sustainable development: poverty eradication; financing; natural resources;
integrating environment and sustainable development in decision-making; and
trade, investment and globalization in the context of sustainable
development. The Executive Secretary of the Economic Commission for Europe,
Brigitta Schmognerova, and the Executive Secretary of the Economic
Commission for Africa, K.Y. Amoako, also made presentations. Also on the
panel were representatives of United Nations specialized agencies, regional
organizations and development banks, and business. The government ministers
and representatives of Denmark (speaking on behalf of the European Union),
Indonesia, Romania, Tajikistan, Azerbaijan, Israel, Uganda, Croatia,
Switzerland, Argentina, the Palestinian Authority and the Council of Europe
also spoke.
Complete text
available:
http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2002/envdev676.doc.htm
17. JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT CALLS FOR
RESTORATION OF FISHERIES BY 2015
28 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.un.org/events/wssd/pressreleases/fishing.pdf
Johannesburg,
28 August .A provision calling for restoration of depleted fisheries not
later than 2015 was agreed to by negotiators at the World Summit on
Sustainable Development yesterday. The agreement was the last in a series of
provisions that recognizes that the world's oceans and fisheries are in
trouble and need urgent attention. United Nations studies have shown that
threequarters of the world's fisheries are presently fished to their
sustainable levels or beyond. A breakthrough, the agreement on the target
marks a major commitment that requires countries to marshal resources and
political will to ensure the responsible management of fisheries. "This
agreement provides us with the crucial underpinning for government action,"
according to Johannesburg Summit Secretary-General Nitin Desai. "Overfishing
cannot continue. The depletion of fisheries poses a major threat to the food
supply of millions of people. This agreement recognizes that we need
coordinated action between governments on an urgent basis to manage the
oceans responsibly, to meet the needs of people now and in the future."
Desai added that it was absolutely necessary that government commitments to
implement sustainable fishing be complemented through partnerships by and
between governments, fishermen, communities, and industry. "We have no
choice but to work together on this," he said. In addition, agreement was
reached on a provision that calls on countries to ratify the Convention on
the Law of the Sea, and other conventions that promote maritime safety and
protect the environment from marine pollution and environmental damage by
ships. Agreement was also reached on a text that asks regional fisheries
management organizations to consider the needs of developing countries when
allocating fish quotas. Developing countries have maintained that existing
fisheries regimes do not reflect their interests.
18. UN, SOUTH AFRICAN FLAGS RAISED OVER
SANDTON CONFERENCE CENTRE IN JOHANNESBURG
23 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.un.org/events/wssd/pressreleases/flag_ceremony.pdf
Johannesburg,
23 August. South African Foreign Minister Nkosazana Zuma symbolically handed
over the Sandton Conference Centre, the site of the World Summit on
Sustainable Development, to the United Nations today at a flag raising
ceremony. The raising of the UN and South African flags in front of the
Centre marked the official start of the UN presence in Johannesburg, with
the Centre assuming the status of international territory. Calling the
Summit "one of the most important conferences," Zuma, speaking at the
ceremony, said the Summit would determine "how this family of humanity will
deal with our common heritage." The Summit, Zuma said, was not only about
putting together a plan for action, but also for establishing a mechanism
for sustainable development, with the necessary financing. "At the
end of the day, it is about implementation." Accepting the handover on
behalf of the United Nations, Johannesburg Summit Secretary-General Nitin
Desai praised the South African government for the work they have done to
prepare for the Summit. "They have done a fantastic job. They pulled out all
the stops." Thanking South Africa for their efforts in Zulu, he said "Ngiyabonga
South Africa, Ngiyabonga.
Johannesburg."
Desai pointed out that much had changed since the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio
de Janeiro. "Ten years ago when we met at the Earth Summit, South Africa was
not even present. Today it is the host country." More than 100 presidents
and prime ministers, along with thousands of government representatives,
NGOs and business leaders, are expected to attend the Summit, which marks an
historic opportunity to commit to actions that will improve people's lives
and protect the environment. The official opening of the Summit will take
place on Monday, 26 August, with an address by South African President Thabo
Mbeki. Mr. Desai will then formally address the plenary, followed by United
Nations Environment Programme Executive Director Klaus Topfer.
UNITED NATIONS DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME (UNDP)
Internet:
http://www.undp.org/wssd/
Updates:
http://www.undp.org/wssd/updates.html
19. JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT PROMOTES
PARTNERSHIPS FOR DEVELOPMENT
5 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.undp.org/dpa/frontpagearchive/2002/september/5sept02/index.html
Thursday, 5
September 20002: After 12 days of intense negotiations in Johannesburg, the
World Summit on Sustainable Development concluded last night with the
adoption of a political declaration and a plan of implementation to fight
poverty and preserve the environment. Over 100 Heads of State and
Government attended the summit and adopted the final documents, which
focused the attention of the world on five priority areas: water, energy,
health, agriculture and biodiversity. Progress in these areas is essential
for halving severe poverty by 2015 and achieving the other Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs). "The summit represents a major leap forward in the
development of partnerships, with the UN, governments, business and civil
society coming together to increase the pool of resources to tackle global
problems on a global scale," said UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan. UNDP
Administrator Mark Malloch Brown observed that the meeting focused on
important poverty reduction issues, such as access to modern energy services
for more than two billion people lacking them. "In the end, this was not so
much the Earth Summit as the 'Down to Earth Summit,'" he said. "The summit
is a real platform for UNDP and the world to move forward towards achieving
the MDGs and helping people build better lives," said Mr. Malloch Brown. "As
the UN's global development network, we will be rolling up our sleeves and
working with partners around the world to help countries follow up on the
summit's mandates." The world leaders reaffirmed the principles of
sustainable development adopted in the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro 10
years ago, and also affirmed the role of trade in reducing poverty agreed on
at the World Trade Organization (WTO) meeting in Doha last year and their
commitments on development financing at the International Conference on
Financing for Development in Monterrey, Mexico, in March. In addition, they
set a new target for reducing by half the proportion of people with no
access to adequate sanitation by 2015 and recognized the link between access
to energy services and poverty eradication. The governments also committed
to reducing agricultural subsidies and protecting biodiversity, including in
fisheries. The summit reaffirmed the UNDP mandate for capacity building,
which UNDP is pushing forward through the Capacity 2015 initiative, focusing
on helping countries reach the MDGs. It also called for UNDP to provide
technical assistance in trade, environment, and development, along with the
WTO, the UN Conference on Trade and Development and the UN Environment
Programme. The summit emphasized the role of the private sector and civil
society as key partners to achieving sustainable development and the
creation of public-private partnerships to help improve the living standards
of the world's poor. UNDP Associate Administrator Zéphirin Diabré said the
summit's recognition of the private sector as a genuine development partner
is significant, especially regarding the issues of capacity building,
technology transfer and development financing. "Public-private partnerships
will be critical in the coming months, and UNDP will have to increase its
efforts through the existing Public-Private Partnership Programme and other
mechanisms," he said.
20. JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT FOCUSES ON CIVIL
SOCIETY ROLE
4 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.undp.org/dpa/frontpagearchive/2002/september/4sept02/index.html
Wednesday, 4
September 2002: Three events at the World Summit on Sustainable Development
in Johannesburg spotlighted the key role of civil society in efforts to
achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). The Grassroots Academy on
the MDGs, co-sponsored by GROOTS International (Grass Roots Organizations
Operating Together in Sisterhood) and the UNDP Civil Society Division,
brought together community leaders and activists on 31 August to brainstorm
on how to mobilize local networks of community groups in support of the MDGs
and link these efforts to global development networks. UNDP Administrator
Mark Malloch Brown and Ana Tibaijuka, Executive Director of UN-Habitat,
opened the event by underscoring the value of working with grassroots
communities and the critical role they can play in campaigning for the MDGs,
which are the agenda endorsed by world leaders for halving severe poverty by
2015 and reaching other global priorities. Speakers included leading
activists from Shackdwellers International (the slum dwellers' movement),
indigenous peoples' organizations and groups campaigning against HIV/AIDS.
Participants agreed to set up a pilot project to support national community
dialogues on MDGs, activate an electronic learning platform among key
community groups, and make information about the MDGs available in a
community-friendly format. The event highlighted the role of UNDP as a
global development network facilitating dialogue and knowledge sharing,
South-South learning exchanges and capacity development. A policy dialogue
on the MDGs on 1 September, co-sponsored by UNDP and the Sustainable
Development Issues Network, brought together leading groups from North and
South, including Martin Khor from Third World Network, a member of the UNDP
Civil Society Advisory Committee, to discuss the MDGs with Mr. Malloch
Brown. Participants discussed cooperation between civil society and the UN
vis-à-vis the MDGs, policies that will underpin the MDGs, and how they
converge with existing development frameworks and can be integrated into
national programmes. "The MDGs are about expanding choices, not replacing
one development paradigm with another," said Mr. Malloch Brown. He
emphasized that the role of the UN is to provide a space for dialogue and
for critical voices to be heard. At a round table on Indigenous Peoples and
MDGs on 2 September, co-sponsored by UNDP and the Tebtebba Foundation of the
Philippines, panelists and the audience questioned development paradigms
that underpin the MDGs, as well as indicators used to measure progress.
Discussion focused on obstacles to achieving the MDGs, including conflict,
discrimination, lack of disaggregated data that reflects conditions in
indigenous communities and their lack of land titles and - most importantly
-- lack of recognition of indigenous peoples' rights. The newly established
Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues and the UNDP regional programme in Asia
were seen as valuable avenues to address these issues. UNDP is also a key
member of a partnership on Indigenous Rights and Sustainable Development
launched by Denmark on 1 September. The partnership aims to enhance the
ability of indigenous peoples to influence development policies and
decision-making and promote knowledge sharing between donor agencies and
indigenous peoples. The partnership's plan of action will be discussed at a
seminar in Copenhagen in early 2003.
21. OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENTS IN SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT IN THE TROPICS REWARDED
31 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.undp.org/dpa/pressrelease/releases/2002/august/31aug02.html
Johannesburg,
31 August 2002: Last night communities spread across the equator got
international recognition for their extraordinary work to reduce poverty
while conserving and ensuring the use of biodiversity in a sustainable
manner at a ceremony held at the World Summit on Sustainable Development
(WSSD). Winners in several categories were announced and received
US$30,000.
The winners
are:
Associação Vida
Verde da Amazônia (AVIVE) - Brazil
Fiji
Locally-Managed Marine Area Network - Fiji
Toledo
Institute for Development and Environment - Belize
Uma Bawang
Residents' Association - Malaysia
Il Ngwesi Group
Ranch - Kenya, and Suledo Forest Community - Tanzania (sharing an award for
their innovative approaches to poverty reduction and biodiversity
conservation in similar cultural and ecological environments)
A prize was
also awarded to a community initiative associated with a World Heritage Site
for successfully reconciling biodiversity conservation with local
livelihoods. This prize was awarded to Iniciativa Talamanca of Costa Rica
"These communities are models of the kind of sustainable future UNDP
believes is possible. They demonstrate how powerful partnerships between
individuals, communities, governments and civil society can reap huge
dividends for both local livelihoods and the environment," said Mark Malloch
Brown, Administrator of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).
The winners were selected from 27 finalists, out of more than 420
nominations from 77 countries. They represent outstanding examples of
community-led partnerships that are best able to tackle the planet's most
pressing development challenges, including poverty and biodiversity loss. In
an unexpected announcement, Steve McCormick, President of the Nature
Conservancy, said that his organization will contribute $30,000 to each of
the remaining 20 finalists communities. "These groups have dedicated
themselves to improving their communities through the sustainable use of
biological resources," said Mr. McCormick. "We want to recognize their
innovations, and give them additional needed resources". Representatives of
these 27 finalists are sharing their experiences at the WSSD with other
communities who are also working towards local sustainability. They are at
the Ubuntu Community Kraal, an innovative forum for local dialogue that has
been sponsored by the Equator Initiative. "The lessons that these
communities identify during the Summit will form the basis for the Equator
Initiative's continuing work," says Programme Manager, Sean Southey of
UNDP's Bureau for Development Policy. "It will also lead to the development
of a learning and exchange strategy that will expand the programme's growing
global movement for poverty reduction and biodiversity conservation."
Information about all 27 finalists is available at
http://www.equatorinitiative.org.
22. UNDP LAUNCHES PARTNERSHIPS TO EXPAND
ACCESS TO ENERGY FOR RURAL POPULATIONS
28 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.undp.org/dpa/pressrelease/releases/2002/august/28aug02.html
Johannesburg,
28 August 2002:Today, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and
the World Bank, together with other donors and non-governmental
organizations (NGOs), will launch the Global Village Energy Partnership (GVEP)
expanding poor people's access to affordable energy services. The
initiative announced at the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD),
is based on a decade-long programme aimed at bringing electricity, and clean
liquid and gaseous fuels to people living in rural areas. By increasing
access to modern energy services, rural populations could get higher
incomes, more job opportunities and a better quality of life. The GVEP
includes private sector partners, NGOs and other development agencies and
aims to provide access to energy services to 50,000 communities and 300
million people over the next decade. In Johannesburg, UNDP will also
announce a new public-private partnership to increase the availability of
Liquified Petroleum Gases (LPG). LPG, a clean fossil fuel, could meet the
world's rural heating and cooking requirements. UNDP will work with
governments and industry on policies and on improvement of equipment design,
gas marketing, distribution and costing to meet the specific needs of rural
populations. Over two billion people worldwide do not have access to
electricity and the benefits that energy services provide, such as
illumination, mechanization, and communication. A similar number rely on
traditional fuels for heating and cooking. The repercussions are most
strongly felt by women and girls, who are removed from school to help meet
the family's energy needs, having a life long impact on literacy and job
opportunities. Current energy use is having a negative impact on economic
activity and people's health, and leads to pollution and global
environmental damage. Over 2.5 million people die annually from respiratory
diseases caused by poorly ventilated stoves using traditional fuels. Almost
two years ago, world leaders endorsed the Millennium Declaration, an
ambitious plan for development that includes eight specific goals with
multiple targets to address the most pressing needs of the poor, including
cutting by half the proportion of people living with less than US$1 per day
by 2015. Last year, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan asked UNDP Administrator
Mark Malloch Brown, in his capacity as chair of the UN Development Group (UNDG),
to be the "campaign manager" for the Millennium Development Goals-working
closely with the UN system to help spread awareness about the goals while
making them an integral part of the UN's work on the ground. The Millennium
Declaration doesn't include any specific goal on energy, but energy services
are essential for achieving all the development goals. "It will not be
possible to bring hundreds of millions of women and men out of poverty in
the next decade unless people have access to reliable, affordable energy
services. Electricity and cleaner fuels are essential to do this," said Mr.
Malloch Brown. "This however will require concerted public action to change
policies and to use energy as a means to support development." Worldwide,
UNDP has spent $873 million in the last decade on energy projects, including
those supported through the Global Environment Facility, and is currently
working on energy in over 80 countries. For instance, in Nepal, the UNDP-sponsored
Rural Energy Development Programme, using small hydropower and photovoltaics,
has reduced household firewood consumption by 25 percent and lightened the
burden for women and children of gathering fuelwood. Over 18,000 people in
rural areas now have access to electricity. Providing energy services is
one of the key responsibilities of the public sector, but progress is highly
dependent on the involvement of the private sector, since large investments
are needed to make the necessary changes to the energy system. Due to
expanding economies and population growth the largest investment will occur
in developing countries over the coming decades. UNDP has published a new
book focusing on the role of policies in energy and other sectors. Entitled
Energy for Sustainable Development: A Policy Agenda, this guide for
policy-makers will be released in Johannesburg.
23. WORLD SUMMIT IN JOHANNESBURG TO STAKE
OUT COURSE FOR PRACTICAL, REALISTIC DEVELOPMENT GAINS
26 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.undp.org/dpa/pressrelease/releases/2002/august/26aug02a.html
Johannesburg,
26 August 2002: World leaders, United Nations officials, citizen's groups
and business representatives are meeting in Johannesburg this week to agree
on a practical and clear agenda that will offer access to clean water,
sanitation facilities, electricity and other services, with a focus on
preserving the environment. Nearly 100 Heads of State and Government will
attend the World Summit for Sustainable Development (WSSD), to be held from
26 August to 4 September in Johannesburg. The Summit will conclude with the
adoption of a political declaration reaffirming the commitment to
sustainable development and a plan of action with specific targets. Another
important outcome will be initiatives between governments, civil society,
the private sector and international organizations, such as the Global
Village Energy, which will help address specific problems. The overall goal
will be to improve living conditions worldwide while protecting natural
resources and ecosystems. At the United Nations Millennium Summit, 189
countries endorsed the Millennium Declaration, which includes eight concrete
development goals from halving extreme poverty by 2015 to providing
universal primary education and halting the spread of HIV/AIDS. Last year in
Doha, a new process aiming at creating fair global trade mechanisms was
launched. At the Conference on Financing for Development, in Monterrey,
Mexico, rich countries agreed to provide more aid, improve trade relations,
increase the transfer of technology, as well as investment in poor countries
committed to serious political and economic reforms. "The World Summit for
Sustainable Development represents an historic opportunity to build on all
this progress, and map out practical plans of action for a sustainable
future," said UNDP Administrator Mark Malloch Brown. "The leaders of the
world must come up with an agreement that show their citizens, particularly
the poor, that they are truly committed to helping provide prosperity to all
the world's people while protecting the planet for future generations."
Agenda 21, the plan of action adopted 10 years ago at the Earth Summit for
sustainable development-a development balanced between the economic, social
and environmental requirements-is still considered a powerful and valuable
tool. Progress has been made to meet the targets of Agenda 21, but some
areas, such as energy, were overlooked and achievements have been
insufficient. The Summit should not only reinvigorate previous political
commitments but also outline priority actions in five key areas to achieve
the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs): Water and Sanitation, Energy,
Health, Agriculture and Biodiversity. As the UN's global development
network, UNDP is working with developing countries to build the capacity
needed to meet those goals and to help them find their own solutions to
global and national development challenges. The experience drawn from
Capacity 21, the programme launched by UNDP in 1992 to implement Agenda 21,
has helped create a more ambitious and expanded initiative-Capacity
2015-that will focus on the MDGs and on achieving sustainable development,
especially at the local level. It is estimated that two billion people
worldwide do not have any access to energy services while another 1.5
billion have to depend on unreliable supplies of electricity. More than one
billion people lack access to safe drinking water. Each year, roughly 3.4
million people die from diseases associated with inadequate drinking water
and sanitation. It is also estimated that 250 million people have been
directly affected by desertification and nearly one billion are at risk,
with dire impact on their ability to produce food, preserve water and build
sustainable livelihoods. UNDP is launching the Capacity Development for
Improved Agriculture and the Management of Natural Resources in the Drylands
of the World, an initiative aimed at halving poverty in these areas by 2015.
This is a major contribution towards achieving the MDGs for water, hunger
and poverty, through better management of local resources. It will help to
increase productivity of drylands while avoiding or resolving conflicts over
the use of natural resources. Over the past decade, UNDP-funded programmes
have provided US$3.8 billion in the field of environment and sustainable
energy, including $1,650 million through the Global Environment Facility and
$333 million through the Montreal Protocol Fund .At WSSD, UNDP will reaffirm
its commitments to capacity development, support for water, energy, drylands
management and biodiversity as critical means to support the global fight
against poverty.
24. NEW PARTNERSHIPS TO HELP SEVERAL HUNDRED
MILLION POOR PEOPLE ACCESS CLEAN WATER
26 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.undp.org/dpa/pressrelease/releases/2002/august/26aug02.html
Johannesburg,
26 August 2002: The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) will launch
a new partnership on effective water governance to support developing
countries in their efforts to increase by fifty percent the proportion of
people with access to safe water and to halt the unsustainable exploitation
of water resources. Currently, at least 1.1 billion people lack access to
safe water supplies and almost 2.5 billion people do not have access to
adequate sanitation. More than 2.2 million people in developing countries
die each year from diseases associated with unsafe drinking water,
inadequate sanitation and hygiene. Two thirds of the world's population may
be living in countries that face serious water shortage by 2015 unless we
take action. Priorities include improving the efficiency of water use,
better watershed management, and reducing leakage, especially in the many
cities where water losses are a 40 percent or more of total water supply.
The Global Water Partnership -- a global alliance of stakeholders from over
140 countries, including UN agencies, governments, non-governmental and
private sector organizations, -- and the International Council for Local
Environmental Initiatives are partners in this Dialogue on Effective Water
Governance, which will be presented on 30 August. Water governance systems
and action strategies to improve them will be analyzed in a series of
roundtables. "The competition for increasingly precious water resources has
intensified dramatically over the past decade, reaching a point where water
shortages and degraded water quality are seriously affecting prospects for
economic and social development," said UNDP Administrator Mark Malloch
Brown. Globally, about 70 percent of freshwater is used for agriculture, but
most irrigation systems are inefficient. In the next two decades, it is
expected that water for use by people will increase by 40 percent and that
17 percent more water will be needed to grow food crops. The new partnership
being launched by governments, civil society, businesses, international
organizations and other major groups is expected to be one of the main
outcomes of the Johannesburg Summit. A political declaration reaffirming the
commitments to sustainable development and an implementation plan with
specific targets to meet the Millenium Development Goals are also expected
outcomes. "Achieving the Millennium Development Goal of halving the
proportion of people without access to safe drinking water will require the
mobilization of international and domestic financial resources, technology
transfer and the capacity to ensure that infrastructure and services meet
the needs of the poor, especially women", said Mr. Malloch Brown. Water can
be both an effective basis for dialogue to build trust and confidence.
Increased cooperation between countries sharing the same water is critical,
especially in water scarce regions. UNDP is already part of a successful
international public-private partnership to restore the degraded Black Sea
ecosystem on which so much economic activity and human health depends. The
partnership brings together 15 countries in the Danube River Basin, two
regional commissions, UNDP and other UN organizations, the World Bank, and
non-governmental organizations. UNDP is also working with UN Industrial
Development Organization to help build cleaner factories and sustainable
industries in the region. The World Water Forum to be held in Japan in early
2003 will present the next major international opportunity to address water
and resource management issues.
See Also:
COMMUNITY ROLE
VITAL IN WATER, ENERGY, HEALTH, AGRICULTURE AND BIODIVERSITY INITIATIVES
30 August 2002: UNDP
http://www.undp.org/dpa/frontpagearchive/2002/august/30aug02/index.html
NEW
INTERNATIONAL TASK FORCE ON GLOBAL PUBLIC GOODS LAUNCHED IN JOHANNESBURG 29
August 2002
http://www.undp.org/dpa/frontpagearchive/2002/august/29aug02/index.html
LOCAL
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: A DECADE OF LESSONS LEARNT
28 August 2002:
http://www.undp.org/dpa/frontpagearchive/2002/august/28aug02/index.html
'VOICES OF
REALITY' HIGHLIGHTS COMMUNITY ACTION AT JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT 26 August 2002
http://www.undp.org/dpa/frontpagearchive/2002/august/26aug02/index.html
UNDP SEEKS
PROGRESS TOWARDS MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS AT JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT 23
August 2002:
http://www.undp.org/dpa/frontpagearchive/2002/august/23aug02/index.html
UKRAINE'S
REPORT FOR JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT CITES PROGRESS AND POTENTIAL
22 August 2002
http://www.undp.org/dpa/frontpagearchive/2002/august/22aug02/index.html
UNITED NATIONS ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME (UNEP)
WSSD Web page:
http://www.unep.org/wssd/
Update:
http://www.unep.org/wssd/wssdpageupdates.asp
UNEP financial
Initiatives:
http://www.unepfi.net/wssd/index.php
25. WORKMANLIKE PLAN AGREED TO FIGHT AGAINST
POVERTY AND FIGHT FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SAYS KLAUS TOEPFER
4 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.unep.org/Documents/Default.asp?ArticleID=3120&DocumentID=264
Johannesburg/Nairobi, 4 September 2002 - Satisfactory is how Klaus Toepfer,
Executive Director of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), today
described the outcome of the World Summit on Sustainable Development
(WSSD). "At various moments during these negotiations we were facing a much
weaker prospect for the environment and thus for sustainable development. I
am satisfied that what has been delivered is a step forward. While there
will be disappointment that nations failed to agree global time tables and
targets for boosting the level of renewable energy, it has been agreed that
there is a need for regional and national targets for renewable energy. We
also have a commitment to halve the number of people without access to
sanitation" he said at the close. Mr Toepfer highlighted some other areas
of success. He said there had been important agreements in the area of
chemicals. Governments have, for example, accepted the need for a new,
international, approach for the management of chemicals and the
harmonization of labeling and classification of chemicals which will be
operational by 2008. Governments also aim, by 2020, to produce and use
chemicals in such a way that they do not adversely affect human health.
"This should benefit all people and especially those in developing countries
and regions like the Arctic where chemical pollution is a real threat to the
health of humans and wildlife," he said. Mr Toepfer also welcomed world
leaders endorsement of the NEPAD, the sustainable development initiative for
Africa, and their support to regenerate agriculture and fisheries and to
implement food security strategies on the Continent by 2005. In the field
of biodiversity, a commitment to reverse the trend of losses by 2010 should
also be welcomed, he said. A decision to cease destructive fishing
practices and establish marine protected areas and networks by 2012, was
good news said Mr Toepfer. An important decision in the plan was the
support for the Multi-Lateral Environment Agreements (MEAs) and a
re-affirmation that they have parity with the multilateral trading system.
Mr Toepfer also pointed to the action plan for small island states where
governments have agreed to reduce and prevent waste and pollution by
undertaking, before 2004, initiatives aimed at implementing the Global Plan
of Action for the Protection of the Marine Environment from Land Based
Activities (GPA). Earlier in the week UNEP along with UNESCO organized a
high level round table hosted by Jacques Chirac, the President of France, on
cultural diversity and biodiversity for sustainable development. Mr Toepfer
said he was pleased to see that the Plan of Implementation recognizes the
need to consider ethics and cultural diversity in the implementation of
Agenda 21. "It also outlines the need to develop policies to improve the
cultural, economic and physical well being of indigenous people and their
communities," he said. Mr Toepfer said the world's political situation is,
in 2002, far different than the one that maked the Rio Earth Summit of
1992. "We had the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Cold War.
Today we have a new realism as a result of globalization. So the action
plan, agreed here in Johannesburg, is less visionary and more work-man like
reflecting perhaps the feeling among many nations that they no longer want
to promise the Earth and fail. That they would rather step forward than run
too fast," he added. Mr Toepfer, who during the summit has been a special
advisor to UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, said one very positive outcome
was the new partnership between governments, civil society, industry and the
United Nations (UN) in areas such as corporate responsibility and
environmental standards. "This must be welcomed. The development of a
10-year framework with programmes in support of sustainable consumption and
production patterns, based on science-based approaches and life-cycle
analysis, has been agreed. We now also have an initiative to encourage
industry to improve their social and environmental performance, taking into
account the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) standards
and the Global Reporting Initiative in which UNEP has been involved," he
said.
26. TRADE AND ENVIRONMENT TASK FORCE
STRENGTHENED IN JOHANNESBURG
3 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.unep.org/Documents/Default.asp?ArticleID=3120&DocumentID=264
Johannesburg, 3
September 2002-- The second phase of a joint UNCTAD-UNEP Capacity-building
Task Force on Trade, Environment and Development (CBTF) will be launched
today in Johannesburg (Sandton Convention Centre, Ballroom 2, 18:30-20:00)
during the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD). Representatives
from UNCTAD, UNEP and the WTO will highlight their collaboration on
capacity-building activities on trade, environment and development.
Ministers from Finland, Romania, Thailand, Uganda and other countries, and
the Director-General of the European Commission's DG Development, will
outline their expectations for extended activities in Phase II of the CBTF.
Jan Pronk, Special Envoy to the UN Secretary-General on the Summit, will
also speak. Since its inception in 2000, the CBTF has supported a number of
projects to assist developing countries in dealing with trade and
environment-related development challenges. Training workshops in Cuba and
Viet Nam centred on national case studies and discussed practical policy
measures to help maximize the sustainable development gains of trade. An
international policy dialogue allowed developing country governments to
identify opportunities for increasing the production and export of organic
food products. Ongoing country projects in Indonesia and Lebanon are
assisting policy makers to assess the environmental and developmental
impacts of trade and trade policies. And a subregional project is under way
in 10 Central American and Caribbean countries on enhancing regional
cooperation in sound collection and recycling of spent vehicle batteries. A
major new financial contribution to be announced by the European Union at
the Summit will enable the second phase of the CBTF to respond to the high
demand for capacity-building in trade and environment. Phase II funding also
includes contributions from Sweden and the United States.
Activities for
Phase II which are either already under way or set to begin immediately
after the Summit include:
-
New
country-based projects in Mozambique and Cambodia designed to enhance the
poverty-reducing potential of trade;
-
Country-based
projects assessing the environmental and developmental effects of trade
liberalization in the rice sector;
-
A policy
dialogue for Lusophone countries on trade implications of climate change;
-
A training
workshop for African least developed countries (LDCs) on developing
mutually supportive trade and environment policies;
-
International
policy dialogues on environment-related market access issues;
-
Regional
workshops on WTO-related issues organized in conjunction with WTO regional
seminars;
-
Regional
training programmes implemented in partnership with regional and
subregional institutions; and
-
Workshops for
Geneva-based negotiators.
A new call for
project proposals will enable Phase II to address a range of priority
issues, including those relating to the UN Programme of Action for the LDCs
and the WTO Doha Work Programme in the area of trade and environment. The
CBTF is involving UN regional economic and social commissions, regional
environmental organizations, economic integration arrangements, academic and
research training institutes, NGOs and the private sector. The CBTF is a
WSSD "Type II" partnership, which will engage the expertise of a very broad
range of stakeholders in its strengthened second phase.
27. MASSIVE DESTRUCTION OF GREAT APE
HABITATS LIKELY OVER THE NEXT 30 YEARS UNLESS CURRENT TRENDS REVERSED
3 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.unep.org/Documents/Default.asp?ArticleID=3119&DocumentID=264
Johannesburg/Nairobi, 3 September 2002 - Less than 10 per cent of the
remaining habitat of the great apes of Africa will be left relatively
undisturbed by 2030 if road building, mining camps and other infrastructure
developments continue at current levels a new report suggests.
Findings for
the orangutans of South East Asia appear even bleaker. The new report
indicates that in 28 years time there will be almost no habitat left that
can be considered "relatively undisturbed". The results have come from
study by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), which is
co-ordinating the Great Apes Survival Project partnership (GRASP), and
scientists from Norway and the United States. They are based on a
pioneering new method of evaluating the wider impacts of infrastructure
development on key species which, in this study, are the chimpanzee, bonobo
or pygmy chimpanzee, the gorilla and the orang-utan. The report, whose
findings were announced today at the World Summit on Sustainable Development
(WSSD), has looked in detail at each of the four great ape species to assess
the current, remaining, habitat deemed relatively undisturbed and thus able
to support viable populations of apes. The experts have then mapped the
likely impact and area of healthy habitat left in 2030 at current levels of
infrastructure growth. While most studies focus on the actual area of land
taken by a new road, mining camp or infrastructure development, the GLOBIO
method also factors in the wider impacts such as habitat fragmentation and
noise disturbance. Klaus Toepfer, the Executive Director of UNEP who is a
special advisor to UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan at the Summit, said: "
This report suggests the possible fate of the great apes and their habitats.
Roads are being built in the few remaining pristine forests of Africa and
South East Asia to extract timber, minerals and oil. Uncontrolled road
construction in these areas is fragmenting and destroying the great apes'
last homes and making it easier for poachers to slaughter them for meat and
their young more vulnerable to capture for the illegal pet trade". "It is
not too late to stop uncontrolled exploitation of these forests. By doing
so, we may save not only the great apes, but thousands of other species.
Saving the Great Apes is also about saving people. By conserving the Great
Apes, we will also protect the livelihoods of the many people that rely on
forests for food, medicine and clean water. Indeed the fate of the Great
Apes has great symbolic implications for humankind's ability to develop a
more sustainable future. I call on all nations here, on all sectors of
society, to join our Great Apes Survival Project partnership. Without
concerted action, without political will, we are all the poorer," he said.
Mr Toepfer added: "Here, near the close of WSSD, we have an agreement to
significantly reduce biodiversity loss by 2010. This is an important
agreement. The Great Apes, our closest living relatives will be the litmus
test of whether the world succeeds in this important goal or not".
GORILLA
The study
estimates that around 28 per cent, or some 204,900 square kilometres of
remaining gorilla habitat, can be classed as relatively undisturbed. If
infrastructure growth continues at current levels, the area left by 2030 is
estimated to be 69,900 square kilometres or just 10 per cent. It amounts to
a 2.1 per cent, or 4,500 square kilometre, annual loss of low-impacted
gorilla habitat in countries including Nigeria, Gabon, Rwanda and Burundi.
CHIMPANZEE
The study
estimates that around 26 per cent, or some 390,840 square kilometres of
remaining chimpanzee habitat, can be classed as relatively undisturbed. If
infrastructure growth continues at current levels, the area left by 2030 is
estimated to be 118,618 square kilometres or just eight per cent. It amounts
to a 2.3 per cent, or 9,070 square kilometre, annual loss of low-impacted
chimpanzee habitat from countries including Guinea, Cote D'Ivoire and Gabon.
BONOBO
The study
estimates that around 23 per cent, or some 96,483 square kilometres, of
remaining bonobo habitat, can be classed as relatively undisturbed. If
infrastructure growth continues at current levels, the area left by 2030 is
estimated to be 17,750 square kilometres or just four per cent. It amounts
to a 2.8 per cent, or 2,624 square kilometre, annual loss of low-impacted
bonobo habitat from the Democratic Republic of the Congo-the only country in
which they are found.
ORANGUTAN
The study
estimates that around 36 per cent, or some 92,332 square kilometres, of
remaining orangutan habitat, can be classed as relatively undisturbed. If
infrastructure growth continues at current levels, the area left by 2030 is
estimated to be 424 square kilometres or less than one per cent. It amounts
to a five per cent, or 4,697 square kilometre, annual loss of low-impacted
orangutan habitat from areas such as Sumatara (Indonesia) and Borneo which
includes Kalimantan, Indonesia, Brunei Darussalam and Sarawak and Sabah,
Malaysia.
The report, The
Great Apes-the road ahead, is edited by Dr Christian Nellemann of UNEP Grid-Arendal
in Norway and Dr Adrian Newton of UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre
in Cambridge, UK. It was launched at the WSSD as governments and other
supporters of GRASP announced more cash backing for the project. More
funding was announced from the Government of the United Kingdom and new
money from the United Nations Foundation (UNF) and the wildlife charity the
International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW). Robert Hepworth, Deputy
Director of the UNEP Division of Environmental Conventions and a
biodiversity expert, also unveiled the organization's GRASP strategy
document which will build on the work carried out by the wide range of
partners since the pioneering initiative project was launched in 2001. The
strategy aims to cover all of the two dozen range states of the Great Apes
and draw up national recovery action plans in collaboration with the
governments concerned, wildlife groups and local people. A key feature is
the role of the specially appointed "Ape Envoys" in raising the profile of
the cause. Two of the three GRASP envoys-Jane Goodall and Russ Mittermeier,
spoke personally about the unique partnership at today's event at the IUCN
Centre in Johannesburg, South Africa. Mr Hepworth said:" An international,
collaborative effort, has been urgently needed which was why GRASP was born.
The strategy will guide and assist UNEP and UNESCO and our other partners to
target conservation effort, while helping to join p and marshal the efforts
of other international agencies and conventions such as the Convention on
Biological Diversity and the Convention on the International Trade in
Endangered Species as well as governments and civil society. This can be
only realistic when local communities have a stake in conservation, when
they can reap benefits from sustain ably harvesting forests for food, fuel,
building materials and medicines or from ecotourism". He said he was also
delighted to announce that, along with IFAW and the UNF, other new partners
include the Dian Fossey Gorilla Foundation (Europe), the Wildlife
Conservation Society, the Institute of Tropical Forest Conservation and the
Pan African Sanctuaries Alliance. UNESCO, a co-partner in the GRASP
initiative, are also working with the European Space Agency to image and map
ape habitats in the Albertine Valley of Africa's Central Rift region.
Notes to
Editors-Governments, the private sector, non governmental organizations and
the public can learn how to donate money to GRASP by accessing
http://www.unep.org/grasp/Help.asp The full report, The Great Apes-the
road ahead, is available from today (3 September 2002) at
www.globio.info GRASP has three special ape envoys who are Jane Goodall,
the celebrated primate conservationist, Russ Mittermeier of Conservation
International and Toshisasa Nishida of Kyoto University. A list of GRASP
partners can be found at
www.unep.org/grasp/partners.asp
28. PUTTING ENERGY INTO SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT - UNEP LAUNCHES NEW GLOBAL CLEAN ENERGY NETWORK AT JOHANNESBURG
WORLD SUMMIT
1 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.unep.org/Documents/Default.asp?DocumentID=264&ArticleID=3118
The goal of
bringing new and less polluting energy sources to billions of deprived
people around the world came a step closer today as the United Nations
Environment Programme (UNEP) launched a pioneering global network of
"sustainable energy" centres. JOHANNESBURG/PARIS, 1 September 2002 -
Speaking at the launch here at the World Summit on Sustainable Development,
Klaus Toepfer, UNEP's Executive Director said, "The provision of
environmentally sound energy services are integral to poverty alleviation
and sustainable development." "Over two billion people in developing
countries do not have access to reliable forms of energy," Toepfer said.
"Nine out of ten Africans have no access to electricity," he continued.
"Providing clean energy on a sustainable basis is not only vital for
fighting environmental issues like global warming but for reducing poverty
and misery in Africa and parts of Asia and Latin America."
Access to
affordable, modern energy services is increasingly seen as a pre-requisite
for sustainable development and poverty alleviation. Access to energy is a
condition for achieving the UN's Millennium Development Goals including the
goal to halve the proportion of people in poverty by 2015 that is at the
heart of the Johannesburg debate. For one-third of the world's population,
dependence on traditional fuels results in many hours spent each day
gathering wood, animal and crop waste. Moreover, limited access to adequate
and appropriate energy, including electricity (there are currently two
billion people worldwide who lack access to electricity) means that
value-adding income generating activities are constrained. The consequences
for the environment of present energy production and consumption patterns
are also significant. For example, in developing countries, the widespread
use of traditional fuels for indoor cooking and heating results in serious
respiratory diseases and loss of life related to indoor air pollution, as
well as a contribution to deforestation, particularly in arid and semi-arid
areas. Air pollution in developing countries is one of the four most
critical global environmental problems. Such pollution causes an estimated
two million excess deaths per year, or 5 percent of the global burden of
disease. At the global level, emissions of greenhouse gases, which mostly
originate from the use of fossil fuels, (presently 80 percent of the world's
primary energy comes from fossil fuels), will have to be reduced in order to
combat global warming. Solving the climate change challenge means reducing
global dependence on fossil fuels. The new Global Network on Energy for
Sustainable Development (GNESD), made up initially of ten centres in ten
developed and developing countries, will help promote the research, transfer
and take-up of green and cleaner energy technologies to the developing
world. It will achieve this by strengthening collaboration between existing
"centres of excellence" that work on energy, development and environment
issues. And, through these centres, influence sustainable energy policies,
strategies and programmes.
"The underlying
rationale of the Network is that it increases the capacity of developing
country research institutions to look at energy for sustainable development
issues, says Mark Radka, head of UNEP's Energy Unit. "Furthermore, it
creates a shared research and information base on policy and technical
guidance, advice and information." "Critically, the Network will help all
partners to develop and apply policies suitable to the needs and constraints
of developing countries, thus supporting the use of energy as an instrument
for poverty alleviation and sustainable development," he said. Promising
advances in energy-related technology hold a great potential for sustainable
development, particularly regarding renewable energy and energy efficiency.
A number of technology options (energy from wind, "new" biomass, solar,
geothermal sources) have been advanced to a state of technical reliability,
and technological developments continue to reduce costs. The challenge
remains to introduce or scale up the application of sustainable energy
services. Similarly, policy and regulatory challenges remain if these are to
become commercially viable options and able to compete with conventional and
environmentally harmful energy options that typically benefit from
favourable pricing conditions and perverse policy incentives.
"Technological solutions to energy problems are available today. We now need
the political will and action to implement them," Toepfer said. "The
choices humankind makes on energy in the next decade will largely determine
the history of the 21st century, and in particular whether we are able to
put ourselves securely on the path to sustainable development," he said.
Note to Editors
The Global
Network on Energy for Sustainable Development (GNESD) is a partnership, and
has been submitted to the World Summit on Sustainable Development for
recognition as a "Type Two" outcome. UNEP will host a small secretariat for
the Network. A Steering Committee representing the energy centres as well as
the other Network partners will provide strategic direction. The creation
of GNESD is in line with the G8 Renewable Energy Task Force Report (2001)
which recommended that its member countries "expand support for assistance
programmes and networks for capacity building" to help promote the policy
shift towards sustainable energy solutions. Core partners in the Network
are out-standing energy centres in industrialised and developing countries
with proven experience and success in advancing knowledge and policies on
various energy issues. The list of energy centres includes, for example, the
Tata Energy Reseach Institute (TERI) in India, the African Energy Policy
Research Network (Kenya), the Bariloche Foundation (Argentina), ENDA Tiers
Monde (Senegal), and the Energy Research and Development Centre (EDRC) in
South Africa. The energy centres are joined in the Network by international
organisations, governments, financial institutions, private sector
representatives, foundations, and other parties who share the goal of
promoting energy for sustainable development. The idea of the Network was
developed by UNEP in cooperation with the UNDP, UNIDO, UN DESA, and The
World Bank drawing on proposals and inputs from the energy centres
themselves. Initial funding partners are the governments of Germany, France,
United Kingdom, Denmark, and the UN Foundation.
29. NEW GLOBAL VIRTUAL UNIVERSITY TO PROMOTE
ENVIRONMENTAL AND DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION
1 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.unep.org/wssd/Documents/UN-UNIVERISTY.doc
Norway grants
NOK 15 million (US$2 million) to a new United Nations University (UNU)
branch hosted at UNEP/GRID-Arendal
Johannesburg -
In an agreement signed today at the World Summit on Sustainable Development,
the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs granted NOK 15 million (US$2
million) to the creation of a new United Nations University (UNU) branch at
UNEP/GRID-Arendal: the Global Virtual University (GVU). The GVU will be
implemented by a core partnership between UNEP/ GRID-Arendal, the Agder
University College and the UNU. These core partners will together establish
the international network of co-operating universities.
The GVU will
offer education for the common future, providing scientific knowledge
supporting the prudent management of the environment and help map out
national and regional pathways to sustainable development. The studies will
increase people's sensitivity to, and involvement in, finding solutions for
environment and development problems, develop expertise to understand the
potential and the limits of the environment, and foster ethical awareness,
values and attitudes, skills and behaviour needed. The courseware will be
developed in a collaborative, global network of academic institutions, and
the studies will be on-line and decentralised, with a focus on the
developing countries.
UNU Rector Hans van
Ginkel thanked the Norwegian Government saying "this initiative represents a
very substantial addition to UNU's ongoing work to apply the best available
technologies to global educational needs."
Klaus Toepfer,
UNEP Executive Director UNEP, says "Raising of environmental awareness among
the peoples of the world is one of our responsibilities. I believe the GVU,
generously backed by the Government of Norway, will advance this important
area of our work and raise among students and academics world-wide,
awareness and knowledge of the UN's vital work in the areas of environment
and sustainable development"
"GVU will
expand our already existing international network of universities and excel
our capacity in e-Learning," says Ernst Håkon Jahr, Rector of Agder
University College.
During the initial
phase, the UNU branch in Norway and UNEP/GRID-Arendal will establish the GVU
and will provide course materials based on their activities. The GVU is
planned to grow into a network organisation, which will focus on education
based on e-Learning and will support and build competencies related to
sustainable human development in developing countries through partnerships
with co-operating universities and research organisations. New information
and communication technologies will be used in order to bridge the digital
divide and to deliver up to date access to quality learning across wide
geographic regions at reasonable costs.
The GVU
partnership is supported by the Norwegian Governement, the United Nations
Environment Programme (UNEP) and the United Nations University in Tokyo.
Svein Tveitdal,
the Managing Director of UNEP/GRID-Arendal, says: "The branch will
strengthen our institutional network and open a new channel for UN's
environmental information to managers and decision-makers of tomorrow."
The mayor of
Arendal, Alf-Eivind Ljøstad, is very pleased and says: "The GVU will
strengthen the profile of Arendal as a place with many UN activities and
will put Arendal firmly on the map as an international academic town."
The agreement on the Global Virtual University was signed by
the Government of Norway, UNU and UNEP at a ceremony in Johannesburg at the
World Summit for Sustainable Development today. Hilde Frafjord Johnsen, the
Minister of International Development in Norway, Klaus Toepfer, Executive
Director of UNEP, Hans G.A. van Ginkel, Rector of UNU, and Ambassador Milos
Alcalay, Chairman of Group 77 and China all participated.
See Also:
MULTI MILLION
DOLLAR BACKING FOR INTERNATIONAL CORAL REEF ACTION NETWORK GIVES BIG BOOST
TO COASTAL COMMUNITIES AND WILDLIFE 1 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.unep.org/Documents/Default.asp?ArticleID=3117&DocumentID=264
INNOVATIVE
BUSINESS APPROACH HELPS PROVIDE CLEAN ENERGY TO WORLD'S NEEDIEST
30 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.unep.org/wssd/Documents/energy.doc
WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION (WHO)
WSSD Web page:
http://www.who.int/mediacentre/events/johannesburg/en/index1.html
30. SUPPORT ROLLS IN FOR WHO'S NEW "HEALTHY
ENVIRONMENTS FOR CHILDREN" INITIATIVE
2 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.who.int/mediacentre/releases/WHO68/en/
Endorsements
for the World Health Organization's new initiative aimed at galvanizing
action to create healthy environments for children came in from many
quarters at its top-level function in Johannesburg last night. WHO announced
its new initiative during the World Summit on Sustainable Development
yesterday, to address urgent concerns about the impact of unhealthy
environments which contributed to the deaths of over 4.7 million children
under five in 2000. The global alliance will mobilize wide-ranging partners
for a broad movement on healthy environments for children. Scientifically
proven research will form the basis of cost-effective action and time-bound
results to save the lives of millions of children. Last night, royalty,
health ministers, heads of UN agencies, the European Commission, NGO's, and
youth gave strong support for the initiative which was described as "bold,
timely, and very important" by the US Environmental Protection Agency. The
Princess of Thailand, her Royal Highness Chulabhorn Mahidol, endorsed the
alliance and expressed her interest in supporting the initiative. The South
African Health Minister, Dr Manto Tshabalala-Msimang, said the country was
very excited about the initiative, and was the first to join the alliance.
These views were echoed by delegates from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Canada,
Côte d'Ivoire, Hungary, Indonesia, and Moldova. Heads of UN agencies such as
the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), the United Nations
Environmental Programme (UNEP), and UN Habitat, as well as NGO's such as
Doctors for the Environment, also declared their strong support and
commitment. "This global alliance will build on our extensive experience
with multi-partner initiatives such as the polio eradication drive, Roll
Back Malaria, Stop TB, and the Tobacco-Free Initiative which is pioneering
the first public health treaty known as the Framework Convention on Tobacco
Control," said Dr Gro Harlem Brundtland, WHO Director-General."We are
committed to driving this initiative forward speedily. Immediately after the
World Summit, we will firm up plans so that we can have activities up and
running within six months, and agree on measurable targets with our alliance
partners," said Dr Brundtland. At last night's function, Dr Brundtland
received the Swedish City of Göteborg's International Environment Prize for
2002 -- worth 1 million kronor (about $100 000) -- for her "visionary and
innovative work during the 80s which laid the foundation for all the
pioneering work around Agenda 21". In accepting the award, Dr Brundtland
announced that she would donate her prize to the new initiative to "get work
off to a flying start."
31. BRUNDTLAND STARTS NEW MOVEMENT TO
ADDRESS ENVIRONMENTAL CRISIS AFFECTING CHILDREN'S HEALTH ENVIRONMENT KILLS
THE EQUIVALENT OF A JUMBO JET FULL OF CHILDREN EVERY 45 MINUTES
1 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.who.int/mediacentre/releases/who66/en/
JOHANNESBURG --
Dr Gro Harlem Brundtland, pioneer of sustainable development and
Director-General of the World Health Organization today outlined publicly
for the first time her major new initiative to tackle the worldwide
environmental crisis affecting children's health.
"Our top
priority in health and development must be investing in the future - in
children and the young - a group that is particularly vulnerable to
environmental hazards. Today, I initiate a mass movement for children's
environmental health. Its ultimate aim is to prevent millions of annual
deaths and disabilities in children, especially those of the poor, and
improve children's quality of life," declared Dr Brundtland at the World
Summit on Sustainable Development. She called for healthy environments for
children to be one of the highest social and political priorities of this
decade.
A VAST AND GROWING PROBLEM THAT HURTS POOR CHILDREN MOST
Unhealthy
environments are a major killer of children, according to the latest
evidence. Up to one third of the 13 000 child deaths that occur every day
are due to the dangers present in the environments in which children live,
play and learn. Put differently, environment-related illnesses kill the
equivalent of a jumbo jet full of children every 45 minutes. Children who
manage to survive these threats may be physically disabled or mentally
impaired for the rest of their lives, preventing them from reaching their
potential and contributing fully to the development of their countries.
Environmental hazards are on the rise. Increasing industrialization,
explosive urban population growth, lack of pollution control, unabated waste
dumping, non-sustainable consumption of natural resources and unsafe use of
chemicals affect the environment in which today's children live.Preliminary
estimates suggest that almost one third of the global burden of disease (for
all ages) can be attributed to environmental risk factors. Over 40% of this
burden falls on children under five years of age, even though they make up
only about 10% of the world's population. In under fives, unhealthy
environments contributed to most of the 1.3 million deaths from diarrhoea; 2
million deaths from acute respiratory infections; 1 million deaths from
malaria and other infectious diseases; and 400 000 deaths from injuries
making a grim total of 4.7 million preventable deaths in the year 2000.
While all children, no matter what their socio-economic level, are affected
by the environmental health burden, poor children are most at risk because
poverty aggravates the effects of environmental risk factors. Such high risk
children live in poor regions and poor countries. They are found in the poor
communities or families even in rich countries. One in five children in the
poorest parts of the world will not live beyond their fifth birthday to a
large extent because of environment-related diseases. The international
community, however, agreed on a Millennium Development Goal to reduce by
two-thirds the under-five mortality rate by 2015. Children are highly
vulnerable to environmental health hazards because they breathe more air and
consume more food and water in proportion to their weight than adults. Their
immune, digestive, reproductive and central nervous systems are more
vulnerable than those of adults. Children also live their lives closer to
the ground exposing them more to unhealthy conditions and dangerous
chemicals. The two major problems for children that arise from an unhealthy
environment are infectious disease due to lack of safe water and sanitation
and acute respiratory infections due to high levels of indoor air pollution
in combination with poor housing. Asthma, neurological effects and cancer,
among other problems, can also arise in children as a result of an unhealthy
environment.
An initiative
that will mobilize the players and achieve results in six areas to give
children, from infants to adolescents, the special protection they need
unsafe places?homes, schools, workplaces, playgrounds and streets? must
urgently be cleaned up. In addition, unhealthy behaviors?such as poor
hygiene, scavenging, playing with dangerous materials and inappropriate
nutrition?must be changed and their root causes addressed. Based on the
scientific evidence, Dr Brundtland's initiative covers six main areas of
environmental risks to children the world over:
-
household
water quality and availability;
-
hygiene and
sanitation;
-
indoor and
outdoor air pollution;
-
disease
vectors (e.g. malaria-transmitting mosquitoes);
-
chemicals
(pesticides and lead); and
-
accidents and
injuries.
Key
interventions include: improving water supply and sanitation facilities;
teaching the importance of washing hands with soap and water; installing
improved cooking stoves and adequately ventilating the home; using unleaded
gasoline in vehicles; sleeping under insecticide-treated bednets to protect
against malaria-transmitting mosquitoes; and breastfeeding infants."Unsafe
and unhealthy environments are violating children's rights to health and
thwarting their basic survival. This must stop before it's too late. There
is no excuse: we already have cost-effective, proven tools and strategies to
reduce and eliminate biological, chemical and physical hazards present in a
child's environment. These tools urgently must be made available worldwide,"
said Dr Brundtland.
A GLOBAL ALLIANCE TO LEAD THE MOVEMENT AND CATALYZE ACTION
The Healthy
Environments for Children initiative, as its starting point, will:
-
Mobilize
partners and individuals into a broad-based, popular, participatory
movement;
-
Empower
governments and their local partners to expand and scale up action;
-
Make
scientific knowledge on risk factors and the most cost-effective
interventions available;
-
Foster
cooperation amongst the world's nations and amongst different sectors
within each country, e.g. environment, transport, energy, housing, etc.;
and
-
Build on
successful past work of committed decision-makers, teachers, health
professionals, non-governmental organizations, the private sector and
families.
Because the
task at hand would be an insurmountable challenge for any single entity, the
movement will be spearheaded by a global alliance of key institutions and
organizations. The alliance will come together in the months immediately
following the Johannesburg Summit, and aims to be fully functional by early
2003. National and local level alliances will, using the evidence, rank
problems according to importance in their geographic area and decide on
appropriate, cost-effective action to achieve results within a specific time
frame. One country may choose to focus on provision of safe drinking water;
another may need to concentrate on injury prevention; while yet another
might, above all, need to find ways to protect kids from sunburn and too
much exposure to high levels of UV radiation. "Healthy environments will go
a long way to safeguard the intellectual, social and economic potential of
children ? the future of our societies. Sustainable development will not
take place unless we make environments healthy and safe for children. We
must make this happen," affirmed Dr Brundtland.
FOOD AND AGRICULTIRE ORGANISATION (FAO)
WSSD Web page:
http://www.fao.org/wssd/
32. HUNGER AND POVERTY: MORE POLITICAL WILL AND FINANCIAL
RESOURCES NEEDED
30 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.fao.org/english/newsroom/news/2002/8820-en.html
JOHANNESBURG/ROME, 30 August - More political will and financial resources
are urgently needed to address hunger and malnutrition as the root cause of
extreme poverty, said Dr. Jacques Diouf, Director-General of the UN Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO) in his statement delivered to the World
Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) in Johannesburg. "Some 800 million
people are currently suffering from hunger and malnutrition. Most live in
the developing countries and are constantly up against the degradation of
their natural resources and their environment. Their institutions are weak.
They lack infrastructure, especially markets. They have inadequate
technologies," Dr. Diouf said. The number of undernourished needs to fall
by more than 22 million each year if the objective of the World Food Summit
of reducing the number of hungry by half by 2015 is to be achieved. "It is
in fact up to the governments to ensure food security at national level,
acting in concert with civil society and the private sector and receiving
support from the international community," Dr. Diouf said. "Governments,
international organisations and financing institutions need to use their
resources effectively to improve their performance and to step up their
cooperation, working as one to overcome hunger and to consolidate the
primary role of sustainable agriculture and rural development in food
security." The FAO Director-General emphasized that "the fight against
hunger and poverty will come to nothing unless we make sure that women,
especially rural women, are placed at the heart of the process." He noted
that the goals of the WSSD reflect those of the World Food Summit: five
years later held in Rome in June this year. A costed Anti-Hunger Programme
drawn up by FAO mainly corresponds to the agriculture component of the UN
Secretary-Generals' WEHAB Initiative (water, energy, health, agriculture and
biodiversity). The Anti-Hunger Programme calls for additional national and
international investment for agricultural productivity in poor rural
communities, development and conservation of natural resources, expansion of
rural infrastructure and market access, and the generation and dissemination
of knowledge as well as action to ensure access to food for the most needy.
These expenditures would "translate into rapid and substantial reductions in
hunger and extreme poverty," the FAO Director-General said. The Anti-Hunger
Programme envisages an additional annual public investment of some $24
billion. This includes $5 billion to provide food assistance to the most
needy as well as around $3 billion for credits at market interest rates.
Around $16 billion would be required for agricultural and rural development.
This component should be equally shared between developed and developing
countries. "Realizing the reduction of the number of hungry people by half
by 2015 would boost the global economy by an estimated US$120 billion per
year," Dr. Diouf added. "I hope that, over the next 5 years, the process
started here in Johannesburg will prompt concrete and measurable
improvements in the implementation of Agenda 21 and in the realization of
the objectives of the Millennium Declaration," Dr. Diouf said.
33. HUNGER AND POVERTY NEED TO BE REDUCED TO
ACHIEVE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
27 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.fao.org/english/newsroom/news/2002/8705-en.html
JOHANNESBURG/ROME, 27 August 2002 - As long as millions of people are still
suffering from chronic hunger and extreme poverty, there cannot be
sustainable development, FAO Assistant Director-General, Hartwig de Haen
said in a statement distributed at the World Summit on Sustainable
Development (WSSD) in Johannesburg. "The poor are certainly not responsible
for the bulk of resource depletion and environmental degradation. However,
they suffer most from it. Poor farmers care deeply for the limited resources
on which they depend. Due to lack of sufficient access to land, water and
appropriate technologies their actions are dominated by the struggle to
survive," de Haen said. More than 70 percent of the poor in developing
countries live in rural areas and depend mostly on agriculture for their
livelihoods.
FAO endorsed
the Action Plan for Agriculture, identified as one of the five priority
areas for action in the UN Secretary General's so-called WEHAB Initiative.
The other areas are Water, Energy, Health and Biodiversity. "Sustainable
agriculture and rural development are the basis for success in fighting
hunger and poverty," de Haen said. "Extreme poverty, low agricultural
productivity and resource degradation may form a vicious circle. This circle
must be broken if we are to achieve the international community's commitment
to halve hunger and extreme poverty by 2015." Agriculture has a significant
impact on natural resources and the environment. It accounts for 70 percent
of fresh water use, and nearly 40 percent of land use. It is both a source
and a sink of greenhouse gas emissions. Agricultural practices can enhance
or reduce plant and animal genetic diversity, depending on the choices made.
But it is also a key sector for poverty and hunger reduction. FAO projects
world demand for food to increase by 60 percent by 2030. Most of the
additional demand and production is expected to originate in the developing
countries. FAO anticipates that close to 20 percent of the additional
production will come from an expansion of land, 10 percent from more
frequent harvests per year and 70 percent from higher yields. The projected
increase in agricultural land use amounts to 120 million hectares, mainly in
Africa and Latin America. "The possible encroachment into ecologically
sensitive lands is still a major concern. The projected 20 percent increase
in irrigated area is another challenge. Given the already high share of
agriculture in total fresh water use, this expansion must largely come from
water savings through efficient gains in current agricultural water use."
"The fundamental task is to realize the projected yield increases with
minimum negative impact on the environment. In other words: we need
sustainable intensification. More research is certainly needed. However,
sustainable intensification of agriculture can be achieved by using and
improving already existing technologies," de Haen said. "Integrated pest
management can reduce pesticide use substantially, integrated plant
nutrition systems can reduce fertiliser needs by 10 to 30 percent, and
conservation agriculture can raise crop yields by 20-50 percent while
sequestering 200-400 kg of carbon per hectare per year." "Biotechnology
holds potential for increases in productivity in a sustainable manner but
requires case by case assessment of possible risks to human health and the
environment."
FAO said that
political will, concrete commitment and involvement of all stakeholders was
essential to achieve the twin goals of halving hunger and sustainable
resource management. The five priority areas of the WEHAB framework for
action on agriculture draw to a great extent on the FAO Anti-Hunger
Programme. This programme was first presented to the 'World Food Summit:
five years later' in June and has been revised now for the WSSD. FAO
estimates that reducing the number of hungry people by half, which the
Programme is expected to achieve,would bring about annual benefits in the
order of US$120 billion as a result of longer, healthier and more productive
lives. This would be to the advantage of poor and rich countries alike.
Mobilising the resources needed for the agriculture and rural development
components of the Anti-Hunger Programme and the WEHAB priority actions for
agriculture was not an unreasonable prospect, de Haen said. Excluding
financing through credits, it would require roughly US$16 billion annually.
This could be equally shared by developed and developing countries,
according to FAO. "For the developed countries, the amount of US$8 billion
is less than they transfer to their own agriculture every 10 days," de Haen
said. "The developing countries would have to increase their national
budgets for agriculture on average by 20 percent."
34. FAO TO JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT: AGRICULTURE
CAN MAKE OR BREAK A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE
16 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.fao.org/english/newsroom/news/2002/8160-en.html
ROME, Italy --
The Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1992 challenged the agriculture sector
to resolve environmental problems such as land degradation, chemical
pollution and loss of genetic resources. FAO took up the task of
incorporating the principle of sustainability into the global development of
the food and agriculture sector. When the World Summit on Sustainable
Development (WSSD) opens in Johannesburg, South Africa on 26 August, an FAO
delegation led by Director-General Jacques Diouf will call for greater
efforts to alleviate poverty and achieve food security through the sound use
of natural resources. Jacques Paul Eckebil, Assistant Director-General of
the Organization's Sustainable Development Department, sets the scene:
WHAT IS FAO'S MESSAGE TO THE WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT?
We have three
related messages. The first is that agriculture and the environment are
intimately linked. For example, agriculture uses 70 percent of all fresh
water worldwide. The planet cannot be managed sustainably without taking
this relationship into account. The second message is that strong political
will and broad-based public support are prerequisites both to reduce hunger
and to achieve sustainable agriculture and rural development. The third
message is that fighting hunger sustainably needs more capital and human
resources than low-income developing countries can afford. The Johannesburg
Summit must promote a global effort to find the needed resources.
WHAT DO YOU THINK THE SUMMIT WILL ACHIEVE?
I have seen the
principle of sustainability take root in FAO's development work since the
1992 Rio Summit -- a new way of thinking has evolved in quite a short time.
The Johannesburg Summit, which brings together some of the most powerful and
influential public and private figures in the world, will speed up this rate
of change. United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan has identified five
key areas for which he thinks agreement should be reached in Johannesburg --
water, energy, health, agriculture and biodiversity, known by the acronym
WEHAB. In terms of agriculture, FAO believes that the Summit has the power
to make a number of real advances: to enhance future investment for
improving agricultural productivity in poor rural communities and for
developing and conserving natural resources important to agriculture; to
expand rural infrastructure and market access; to strengthen national
capacity to generate and disseminate agricultural knowledge; and to ensure
access to food for the most needy. The world will have to feed eight billion
people in 2030.
What new food
production methods are available to accomplish this without harming the
environment? Ecosystem approaches to agriculture include such innovations as
conservation agriculture, which ensures soil fertility through better
nutrient cycling by micro-organisms in the soil, integrated pest management
, which prevents pest outbreaks by encouraging naturally occurring
predators, and organic agriculture. The problem is that economic pressures
often induce farmers to grow a particular crop in the most profitable way
possible, leading them to ignore sustainable practices. Therefore, public
policy needs to encourage and support sustainable agriculture. An ecosystem
approach, which considers economic, social and ecological factors together,
is the only way to prevent degradation of the environment.
WHAT NEW INITIATIVES WILL FAO BRING TO JOHANNESBURG?
FAO is
proposing an Anti-Hunger Programme with actions that reduce hunger through
agriculture and rural development and providing wider access to food. The
programme would require an additional public investment of an estimated
US$24 billion annually, which we estimate would yield benefits worth at
least US$120 billion per year as a result of longer, healthier and more
productive lives for all those who gain from such improvements. This
initiativeis in addition to the Organization's continuing work on the
chapters of Agenda 21, the plan of action from the 1992 Rio Earth Summit,
for which we have been given responsibility. FAO held its own summit in
June, the World Food Summit: five years later, in order to renew the
political will to reduce hunger by half by 2015. Is the goal of ending
hunger relevant to the Johannesburg Summit? We believe the Plan of Action
from the 1996 World Food Summit provides an appropriate framework for many
Johannesburg Summit initiatives by linking increased productivity and
sustainable natural resource use directly to opportunities to reduce poverty
and hunger. Put another way, without sustainable agriculture, forestry and
fisheries, the eradication of poverty and hunger will not be possible.
Finally, the fight against poverty cannot be won without eliminating hunger,
the most critical manifestation of poverty.
YOU HEAD FAO'S DEPARTMENT RESPONSIBLE FOR SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT. HOW DOES FAO CONTRIBUTE TO SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT?
We serve as a
global reference centre for knowledge and advice on biophysical, biological,
socio-economic, institutional and technological dimensions of sustainable
development. We also coordinates FAO's follow-up to the Rio Summit and are
responsible for important conventions on biological diversity,
desertification and climate change. At Johannesburg, in partnership with
major groups, civil society and governments, we will facilitate the launch
of the Sustainable Agriculture and Rural Development Initiative. We expect
the initiative to result in concrete and measurable improvements in the
livelihoods and living conditions of the rural poor over the next five
years.
UNITED NATIONS POPULATION FUND (UNFPA)
WSSD Web page:
http://www.unfpa.org/population/wssd.htm
35. DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT REAFFIRMS GLOBAL
COMMITMENT TO WOMEN'S HEALTH AND RIGHTS
4 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.un.org/events/wssd/pressreleases/mso125.pdf
Johannesburg, 4
September 2002-The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) today welcomed
world leaders' reaffirmation of goals linking poverty eradication and
environmental protection to health, including reproductive health, and
women's empowerment. At its conclusion today, the World Summit for
Sustainable Development (WSSD) adopted a ten-chapter Plan of Implementation,
detailing actions needed to fight poverty and protect the environment. Some
104 heads of state and government took part, along with 9,000 delegates,
8,000 nongovernmental organization representatives and 4,000 members of the
press. Emphasizing that "eradicating poverty is the greatest challenge
facing the world today", the action plan endorses the United Nations'
Millennium Development Goals for addressing poverty. It supports actions,
among others, to promote equality for women; eliminate violence and
discrimination against them; and improve their status, health and economic
welfare through equal access to economic opportunity, land, credit,
education and health care services.
The chapter on
health calls for strengthening countries' capacity to deliver basic services
for all and promote healthy lives, including reproductive and sexual health.
It upholds the commitments made at recent United Nations meetings including
the 1994 International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) and
its review in 1999. The plan reaffirms the targets for reversing the AIDS
pandemic set at last year's General Assembly special session, in particular
a 25 per cent reduction of HIV prevalence in young men and women aged 15-24
in the most-affected countries by 2005, and globally by 2010. It urges
implementation of national prevention and treatment strategies and increased
international cooperation against AIDS, and calls on countries to meet
agreed commitments to support the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis
and Malaria, while promoting access to the Fund by the neediest countries.
"We are gratified that the summit recognized women's rights to be an
important aspect of sustainable development," UNFPA's Executive Director
Thoraya Obaid said in New York. This will boost the global effort to promote
gender equality and universal access to reproductive health care." Health
service delivery, the plan states, should be "in conformity with human
rights and fundamental freedoms" and consistent with national laws and
cultural and religious values. The human rights reference was included after
behind-the-scenes negotiations in the final hours of the 10-day conference.
This was widely understood as a reaffirmation of international consensus
agreements, notably the ICPD's endorsement of the right to reproductive and
sexual health, encompassing access to family planning information and
services, safe motherhood, prevention of sexually transmitted infections
including HIV/AIDS, and elimination of sexual coercion and violence. In a 30
August statement to the summit plenary, delivered by Deputy Executive
Director Kunio Waki, Ms. Obaid noted that progress towards these goals is
indispensable to meeting the WSSD's environmental and poverty reduction
goals. UNFPA is the world's largest multilateral source of population
assistance, with programmes in 142 countries. Since it became operational in
1969, the Fund has provided some $5.6 billion to developing countries to
meet reproductive health needs and support sustainable development.
36. UNFPA CALLS FOR ACTION ON WOMEN AND
POPULATION
30 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.un.org/events/wssd/pressreleases/unfpacalls.pdf
JOHANNESBURG,
30 August-Progress towards sustainable development must include progress in
ensuring reproductive health and women's rights, leaders of the United
Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) declared today. In a statement delivered for
UNFPA Executive Director Thoraya Obaid, Kunio Waki, UNFPA Deputy Executive
Director (Programme), told a plenary session of the World Summit
on Sustainable
Development (WSSD) here that global population, environmental issues and
women's reproductive health and rights are interrelated. "Today, our world
is dangerously out of balance," Mr. Waki said. "One fifth of the world's
people consume four fifths of the world's resources while a billion people
have no access to safe drinking water and 3 billion lack adequate
sanitation. ... The poor suffer the most from environmental degradation and
are the most vulnerable to global climate change." "The combination of
poverty, population pressures and environmental stress is a powerful
destabilizing force, driving migration from rural areas to cities, and
across national
borders." "We
cannot reduce poverty and protect natural resources without addressing
population issues." Population is growing by 77 million people every
year-200,000 per day-most of them in the world's least-developed countries,
where hunger, water scarcity, HIV/AIDS and environmental degradation are
already serious problems. But the population, expected to reach 9 billion by
2050, is not growing as fast as it did, Mr. Waki said, because overall
fertility rates have dropped by half in the developing world since 1969,
when UNFPA was created. "This is truly an historical achievement." "For this
we can thank the world's women and the governments that gave them support
and choices," he said. "The last two generations of women have chosen to
have smaller families, and the next generation will do the same if they have
access to education, health services and family planning, and if they are
confident the children they do have will survive.
"Everything we
have learned shows that when women are empowered-through laws that protect
their rights, healthcare that protects their health, and education that
expands their opportunities, the benefits extend far beyond the individual,"
Mr. Waki stressed. "Greater
progress
towards sustainable development depends in part on greater progress for
women. Women need access to education, credit, income opportunities and land
ownership." International funding must increase to meet these objectives, he
said. Universal access to education and reproductive health, including
family planning, safe motherhood and HIV prevention-goals of the 1994
International Conference on Population and Development-"are key to meeting
the Millennium Development Goals of cutting global poverty and hunger in
half by 2015, reducing maternal and child mortality, curbing HIV/AIDS,
advancing gender equality, and promoting environmentally sustainable
development", he said. Yet "spending on population assistance is declining
and has dropped by 25 per cent since
1995" and is now less than half the assistance targets agreed at Cairo, Mr.
Waki noted. "Evidence indicates that if we continue on this course, the
clashes between humankind and nature will only grow worse."
37. REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH AND WOMEN'S RIGHTS
ARE KEY ISSUES FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT, EXPERTS SAY
27 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.unfpa.org/news/2002/pressroom/wssd2002.htm
Johannesburg,
27 August--Reproductive health and women's rights are critical to
alleviating poverty and the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD)
should say so, speakers at a summit panel discussion stressed today.
Parliamentarians
from the United Kingdom and Japan, South African Minister of Finance Trevor
Manuel, Indian economist Devaki Jain, United Nations Foundation President
Timothy Wirth and Kunio Waki, Deputy Executive Director (Programme) of UNFPA
(the United Nations Population Fund) spoke on the topic "Population in
Sustainable Development, Reproductive Health and Gender in Poverty
Reduction".
Some 200 WSSD participants
including several government ministers attended the event, hosted by UNFPA,
the Government of South Africa, the UK All-Party Parliamentary Group on
Population and Development and Reproductive Health, and the Inter-European
Parliamentary Forum on Population and Development.
Christine
McCafferty, a Member of Parliament and Chairperson of the UK All-Party
Parliamentary Group led the discussion. She noted that inattention to
women's health takes a terrible toll in developing countries, including half
a million deaths during pregnancy and childbirth each year, and limits
women's participation in development. She called on the WSSD to reaffirm the
commitment made in Cairo at the1994 International Conference on Population
and Development (ICPD) to ensure universal access to reproductive health
services by 2015.
Finance Minister Manuel
emphasized the enormous gap between living standards of rich and poor,
exacerbated by widespread unemployment, a lack of resources for education
and health care, and unfair trade policies. "We cannot tackle poverty
without open markets," he said.
Yoshio Yatshu,
Chairman of the Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and
Development, pointed out that rapid population growth is one reason that 80
countries have a lower per capita income today than 10 years ago at the time
of the Earth Summit was held in Rio de Janeiro. "We must slow population
growth by stressing reproductive health and rights and the empowerment of
women. It is imperative that WSSD delegates recognize this," he stated.
A new approach
to development that empowers the poor to be agents of change is needed, Ms.
Jain argued. She contended that "the poor have the capacity to generate
demand and economic growth." Poor women do not want to have many children,
she added, but lack the capacity to say no. "It is a matter of power."
Mr. Waki of
UNFPA reiterated the point he made Monday in the first of five of
partnership plenaries on the summit's five major themes, health,
biodiversity, water, energy and agricultural productivity: reproductive
health and equality for women are essential to sustainable development.
"Gender must be given more importance" in WSSD deliberations," he said. The
momentum of Cairo has been reversed and must be turned back around," said
Mr. Wirth of the United Nations Foundation. "Northern consumption is still
growing; reproductive health and women's empowerment are still neglected,"
he said. This undermines prospects for alleviating poverty and reversing
environmental problems.
A number of audience
members joined the ensuing discussion. Michael Meacher, the United Kingdom's
Minister of State (Environment), said his Government is committed to the
ICPD agreement. "If you want sustainable development, poverty reduction and
stabilization of world population growth, then investment in health,
particularly reproductive health, is absolutely critical. This is a very
important issue for this summit."
Uganda's
Minister of Gender, Labour and Social Development said that since the ICPD,
her country had benefited from UNFPA's support for reproductive health. She
herself had been trained as a traditional birth attendant under this
programme.
A
university professor from the United Kingdom said, "the pill and the condom
are symbols of environmentalism just as much as the bicycle and the
windmill"."The road from Rio to Johannesburg must pass thru Cairo. This has
not happened," said Mahendra Shah of the Global Science Panel on Science and
Development. A number of speakers supported his call for the WSSD to include
a strong reference to population in the Political Declaration the summit is
expected to adopt next week.
INTERNATIONAL FUND FOR AGRICULTURAL
DEVELOPMENT (IFAD)
WSSD Web page:
http://www.ifad.org/events/wssd/index.htm
38. IFAD'S REPORT TO THE WORLD SUMMIT ON
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT CALLS FOR GREATER INVESTMENT IN THE MARGINAL AND
DEGRADED LANDS
20 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.ifad.org/media/press/2002/35-02.htm
Rome-
Johannesburg, Tuesday, 20 August 2002 - Lennart Båge, President of the
International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) will arrive in
Johannesburg on Wednesday 28 August to participate in the World Summit on
Sustainable Development (WSSD). President Båge is scheduled to address the
Summit on Friday 30 August 2002. The Conference will also receive IFAD's
Report entitled "The Rural Poor: Survival or a Better Life?" On the eve of
his travel to Johannesburg, President Båge emphasized the need to translate
the vision of Rio, the commitments of the Millennium Summit and the
resources pledged at Monterrey, Mexico earlier this year into substantive
programs that bring sustainable development within the reach of hundreds of
millions of poor who, for too long, have been bypassed. President Båge said:
"IFAD has already shown the way towards enabling the rural poor in marginal
and low-potential areas to develop not only in an environmentally safe
manner but also to contribute substantially to the process of rebuilding the
lost natural resource base, including reforestation and bio-diversity
conservation." He added, "the vicious cycle of environmental degradation
breeding poverty and poverty aggravating environmental degradation is
breakable" IFAD's Report to the Summit calls upon the international
community to focus its efforts on interventions in marginal and
low-potential agro-ecological zones where the majority of people, being 40%
of the world's poorest, can lead efforts to reverse environmental
degradation and bio-diversity depletion while realizing a sustainable local
economic development and a better future for themselves. The Report warns
that the negative linkages between poverty and environmental degradation are
likely to worsen in the future, in view of predicted changes to global and
regional climates, affecting rainfall patterns and increasing the frequency
and severity of droughts, floods and storms. The key to halting
environmental degradation and promote sustainable development is engaging
the active participation of poor farmers, herders and other rural groups,
especially women. For this they need material support, greater resources and
enabling policies. Unfortunately aid to the rural sector has dropped by
nearly 50% over the last decade. To achieve sustainable development and the
Millennium Development Goals, this trend must be reversed.
See Also:
A JOHANNESBURG
PARTNERSHIP INITIATIVE FOR THE WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
LAND ALLIANCES FOR NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
http://www.ifad.org/popularcoalition/re_sp_2002-Land_Alliances_Johannesburg.htm
UNITED NATIONS CHILDREN'S FUND
(UNICEF)
WSSD Web page:
http://www.unicef.org/events/wssd/index.html
39. UNICEF ISSUES GLOBAL CHALLENGE TO WORLD
LEADERS ATTENDING JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT
30 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.unicef.org/newsline/02pr52wssd.htm
JOHANNESBURG,
NEW YORK, GENEVA, 30 August 2002 - UNICEF today issued a bold challenge to
world leaders attending the World Summit on Sustainable Development in
Johannesburg. Noting that access to clean water can save the lives of
millions of children, UNICEF's Executive Director, Carol Bellamy, called on
leaders to ensure that every school, in every corner of the world, be
equipped with clean water and separate sanitary facilities for boys and
girls over the course of the next decade. "Achieving truly sustainable
development means creating a world that is fit for children," said Ms.
Bellamy, in her plenary address to the summit. "Something as simple as
providing safe water and clean toilets in schools will not just help protect
children from deadly diseases- it will keep millions of them, especially
girls, going to school. And, making sure children get a quality basic
education can help a single generation make a huge leap." In her speech Ms.
Bellamy said children are every society's most precious natural resource,
and that investing in them is a virtual guarantee to achieving true
sustainable development. "Investing in children is one of the most
farsighted decisions any leader, government or community can make," said
UNICEF's Executive Director Carol Bellamy. "Investment in a child benefits
the child, the family and the cause of sustainable development. It's not
only common sense but it's based on sound economic sense, too." Investing in
children yields higher economic returns than virtually any other type of
public or private investment. Studies that show an investment of $1 in
comprehensive child development programmes has a $7 return on future cost
savings. "We all know about the cycle of poverty," said Ms. Bellamy. "But
we also know how to break the cycle. It means investing in the comprehensive
care of children, including health care, clean water, adequate sanitation,
education and protection from abuse. Healthy and educated children become
productive young adults. These young adults later become healthy, educated
parents and a true measure of sustainable development." Some 60,000
participants, more than 100 heads of State and Government, leaders from NGOs
and business, and representatives of farmers, indigenous people, scientific
and technological communities, workers as well as children and young people
have gathered at the World Summit on Sustainable Development in
Johannesburg. They will focus on strategic actions to preserve the
environment and eradicate poverty. One very clear articulation for the
outcome of the Johannesburg Summit can be stated in terms of its impact on
children: that achieving truly sustainable development means creating a
world that is fit for children. Many of the draft commitments of the Summit
grow out of the four pillars of action for children that came from the first
ever UN Special Session on Children held in May of this year; promoting
healthy lives, providing quality education, protecting children from abuse,
exploitation and violence - and combating HIV/AIDS. But as the world meets
to discuss the critical issues of sustainable development in South Africa,
six neighbouring countries in the region are reeling from cumulative shocks
and crises that have put nearly 13-million people at immediate risk. More
than six million of those at risk are children, and 2.4 million of them are
under the age of 5. "We must put urgency behind our commitments and action,"
said Ms. Bellamy, having just visited three of the six countries affected.
"While sustainable development and a healthy human environment will benefit
tomorrow's children, we must also stay focused on today's children as our
first priority."
UNITED NATIONS CONFERENCE ON TRADE AND DEVELOPMENT (UNCTAD)
Internet:
http://www.unctad.org
40. SWEDEN PLEDGES SUPPORT TO UNCTAD'S
INVESTMENTRELATED FOLLOW-UP WORK ON DOHA DEVELOPMENT AGENDA
3 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.unctad.org/en/press/nc0240en.htm
Johannesburg, 3
September 2002-- The Government of Sweden has announced two donations to
UNCTAD for its work in the area of investment. SEK 6 million ($640,000) was
pledged towards UNCTAD's project on capacitybuilding in developing countries
on issues in international investment agreements. This project seeks to
assist developing countries and economies in transition in the follow-up to
the Doha Declaration's work programme on the relationship between trade and
investment, which was adopted at the WTO's Fourth Ministerial
Conference in
Doha, Qatar, last November. Another pledge of SEK 2 million ($213,000) was
announced for UNCTAD's project on good governance in investment promotion
and facilitation. The announcement was made at the meeting here on 1
September of the
UNCTAD/ICC
Investment Advisory Council (IAC), a framework for high-level consultations
between business and government leaders. The meeting took place on the
occasion of the World Summit on Sustainable Development. UNCTAD's work
programme on IIAs aims to provide developing countries and economies in
transition with research and policy analysis and development, along with
human and institutional capacity-building. It offers intensive training
courses, workshops on negotiation facilitation and WTO issues, and technical
assistance for
institution-building in the area of foreign investment. The activities are
intended to help beneficiary countries better evaluate the implications for
their development policies and objectives of closer multilateral cooperation
in the area of long-term cross-border investment, particularly foreign
direct investment. UNCTAD's work programme on good governance focuses on the
streamlining of investment procedures and the introduction of
client-oriented and transparent administrative systems that will facilitate
and encourage investment by both national
and foreign
companies. The first phase began with five least developed countries:
Ethiopia, Lesotho, Maldives, Mali and Tanzania. Activities include advisory
work on reducing non-transparent practices and other "hassle costs" for
investors, and consensus-building on concrete action plans. The programme
also offers training to medium- and high-level officials and builds local
training capacity through training-oftrainers courses.
41. UNCTAD TO SIGN THREE PARTNERSHIPS ON
BIODIVERSITY
22 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.unctad.org/en/press/pr0248en.htm
UNCTAD has just
concluded three new partnerships that will help developing countries enter
the US and European markets for biodiversity products and services and
increase access to credit and venture capital. The partnerships, which are
aimed at boosting trade and investment in this area, will be formally signed
at the upcoming World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) in
Johannesburg. Biodiversity is made up of the millions of microbial, plant
and animal species that inhabit the planet. The Earth's essential goods and
services depend on the variety and variability of genes, species,
populations and ecosystems. Biological resources provide food, clothing,
housing, medicines and spiritual nourishment. They also provide an
increasing number of intermediate products, such as natural ingredients for
the cosmetics and pharmaceutical sectors (essential oils, natural dyes,
latex, fibres, resins, gums and medicinal plants), or final products, such
as timber, handicrafts, nuts and tropical fruits. Great potential exists for
bio-businesses in developing countries to tap into the increased consumer
demand for biodiversity products. World markets for herbal medicines in 1997
amounted to US$ 16.5 billion, and by 2011 this market is estimated to more
than double to US$ 40 billion annually. If managed well, bio-businesses
could generate tangible economic benefits for populations whose livelihood
depends on biodiversity and provide an incentive to use that biodiversity in
a sustainable fashion. Maritza Parra from the Colombian region of Choco is
a good example. She and 75 other women heads of household produce and market
medicinal plants at the local level. Thanks to technical assistance and
credit access provided by UNCTAD's BIOTRADE programme in Colombia, they are
beginning to broaden their product range and market products nationally,
increasing their families' income and improving their quality of life. The
first of UNCTAD's new partnerships is a regional programme to fund BIOTRADE
activities in Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Venezuela. Introducing
the notion of sustainability to businesses and familiarizing local producers
and communities with sound business practices are among the activities. The
BIOTRADE programme also encourages businesses, conservationists, governments
and local and indigenous communities to work together, provides input for
the development of regulations and policies, supports enterprise development
and provides market information. This partnership brings together UNCTAD;
the Andean Community (CAN), based in Lima, Peru; and the Andean Development
Corporation (CAF), based in Caracas, Venezuela. The second partnership to
be announced this month is a BioTrade Facilitation Programme for Latin
America, Africa and Asia. It promotes access to foreign markets, for example
through matchmaking between enterprises, product development, certification
and support of participation in trade fairs. The partnership involves UNCTAD
and the Geneva-based International Trade Centre UNCTAD/WTO (ITC), in
cooperation with the Dutch Centre for the Promotion of Imports from
Developing Countries, the Swiss Import Promotion Programme and BIOTRADE
partners. A financing contest that assists selected small and medium
enterprises (SMEs) in up-grading their business operations to access credit
and venture capital is the focus of the third partnership. SMEs that are
working with products and services derived from biodiversity and that
contribute to the sustainable use of biodiversity are eligible to
participate. This is a partnership between UNCTAD, the Washington-based
World Resources Institute (WRI) and CAF. To date, US$ 9 million has been
pledged for these partnerships by UNCTAD, its partners and such donors as
the Swiss State Secretariat for Economic Affairs, the United Nations
Foundation and CAF. Over the next five years the partnerships are expected
to generate an additional US$ 10 million in credits and venture capital for
SMEs and community-based enterprises.
UNITED NATIONS EDUCATIONAL,
SCIENTIFIC AND CULTURAL ORGANISATION (UNESCO)
WSSD Web page:
http://portal.unesco.org/ev.php?URL_ID=1071&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201
42. NO SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT WITHOUT
EDUCATION
3 September
2002
Internet:
http://portal.unesco.org/ev.php?URL_ID=5751&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201&reload=1032514282
Johannesburg -
A new vision of education for sustainable development was outlined yesterday
by UNESCO Director-General Koïchiro Matsuura, President Gustavo Noboa of
Ecuador, President Natsagiin Bagabandi of Mongolia and Education Minister
Kader Asmal of South Africa, at a major symposium during the World Summit on
Sustainable Development. South Africa's Ministry of Education, in
co-operation with UNESCO and the UNESCO Liaison Committee, a
non-governmental organization, organized the two-day symposium, entitled
"Education for a sustainable future: action, commitments and partnerships",
which continued today. "Education - in all its forms and at all levels - is
not only an end in itself but is also one of the most powerful instruments
we have for bringing about the changes required to achieve sustainable
development," Mr Matsuura said. "This new vision of education emphasizes a
holistic, interdisciplinary approach to developing the knowledge and skills
needed for a sustainable future, as well as the necessary changes in values,
behaviour, and lifestyles. This vision requires us to re-orient education
systems, policies and practices in order to empower everyone - women and
men, young and old - to make decisions and act in ways that are culturally
appropriate and locally relevant in order to redress the problems
threatening our common future," the Director-General said. This new vision
of education applies to both developing and industrialized countries, said
Mr Asmal. "Many national education systems that are presently deemed
effective tend to produce individuals geared to individual enhancement and
pecuniary wealth maximization," said Mr Asmal. "If we believe that education
and learning throughout the world have neglected important areas of values
and attitudes, then we have to accept that education for sustainable
development throws up significant challenges for developed as well as
developing countries." Mr Asmal then made a plea for concerted action. "Bertolt
Brecht and Karl Marx called for the unity of 'head and hand'. Our global
challenges enjoin us now to call for the unity of heart, head and hand" he
said. "We need to thrust the discourse of education into a new paradigm. But
we must do this with a real and substantive engagement of the challenges, so
that we can formulate concrete actions, commitments and partnerships. I say
this with the full realization of the dangers of false euphoria. Too often
have our deliberations resulted in the addition of new terms to the existing
lexicon of sustainable development. Constructing this new paradigm is not
about coining new terms - seductive as they may be. It is about action."
International action should begin with foreign debt relief for developing
countries, said President Noboa of Ecuador. "It is inhuman that developing
countries must spend about half their budgets on international financial
obligations. The resources spent on financing the foreign debt should be
made available for education and social programmes in order to ease the
extreme poverty which is a major cause of environmental damage in developing
countries." The President also urged the international community "to
abandon paternalist visions of development. An old Chinese proverb reminds
us that instead of giving fish to those who have nothing to eat, we should
teach them to fish," said Mr Noboa. "So despite the extremely difficult
financial situation facing Latin America, education offers hope for a better
future." Education at all levels - from primary school to university - is a
prerequisite for sustainable development, said President Bagabandi of
Mongolia. "Education is a decisive factor in building a world where people
can discover and further develop their potential and lead meaningful lives.
Therefore, it is vital to provide free and high quality primary education
for all children." Distance education and access to the Internet is
extremely important in Mongolia, a vast country with a considerable nomadic
population. "In Mongolia, the advent of radio and television broadcasting
marked a dramatic breakthrough in disseminating information to people in our
vast and sparsely populated territory. Today, a similar breakthrough is
occurring as we make great efforts to use satellite technologies and the
Internet to meet the growing demand and need for public information," said
Mr Bagabandi. "Many people in Mongolia and other developing countries would
like the information and broadcasts emanating from the major developed
countries to focus more on learning and education." The symposium offers
UNESCO a platform to launch three educational partnership projects and
present Japan's proposal to the United Nations General Assembly for a Decade
of Education for Sustainable Development, which could be launched in 2005.
43. WATER IS NOT JUST A COMMODITY, BUT A
COMMON PUBLIC GOOD, SAYS UNESCO UNESCO
30 August 2002
Internet:
http://portal.unesco.org/ev.php?URL_ID=5543&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201&reload=1032514282
Johannesburg/Paris, August 30 - Preliminary results of the most extensive
United Nations undertaking to assess the world's freshwater resources will
be presented on September 3 at the Water Dome (2p.m. to 4.30p.m., rooms 3
and 4) during the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) in
Johannesburg. Twenty-four United Nations agencies have joined forces to
produce a World Water Report, which will be finalized in 2003. UNESCO is
taking the lead in the programme, entitled the World Water Assessment
Programme (WWAP), which will provide comprehensive evaluation and monitoring
of the planet's hydrological resources. It will include, for example, the
first global map of groundwater resources, recently produced by UNESCO, the
International Association of Hydrogeologists and the Commission for the
Geological Maps of the World. "Groundwater is going to be increasingly
important in the future. More than one billion people lack access to safe
drinking water and more than 2.4 billion are without adequate sanitation. At
the Johannesburg Summit, governments are, once again, pledging to reduce
these numbers by half by 2015. To meet these goals, we must better assess
and manage groundwater supplies, which offer tremendous potential but are
nevertheless extremely vulnerable to pollution and over-use," says Andras
Szollosi-Nagy, Director of UNESCO's International Hydrological Programme (IHP).
"There is also an ethical issue which must be recognized at Johannesburg,"
says Mr Szollosi-Nagy, who is participating in the Summit. "Access to water
should be recognized as a basic human right. For UNESCO, water is not just a
commodity but a common public good. It is, however, essential to recover the
costs of providing people with water in order to manage the demand. At the
core of any discussion on privatization, there should be a firm legal
recognition that the resource is a common public good." IHP aims to provide
the scientific studies, policy-advice and training required for better
management of national and international water supplies. It covers a wide
array of issues - from the ethical use of fossil water (which can be
thousands and even millions of years old) to flood control in Europe. "Ten
years ago, we were in a better position to monitor hydrological conditions
than today," says Mr Szollosi-Nagy. "Many governments reduced monitoring and
research budgets. But this short-term approach ends up costing them more, as
is so clearly seen with the catastrophic flooding events in Europe, for
example. There is considerable speculation that the floods were related to
climate change. It is too soon to confirm this. However, there is no denying
anthropogenic or man-made factors aggravated the situation. To begin with,
better monitoring that means better predictions. In addition,there is a lack
of infrastructure to deal with periodic floods "The situation is even worse
in developing countries. In 20 years, Africa will lose half of its reservoir
space to sedimentation. Silt from the rivers is accumulating at dramatic
rates because of deforestation, erosion and poor land management. If the
current rates continue, many of the major reservoirs will be so filled with
silt that they won't be able to operate properly, provoking major cuts in
electricity, irrigation and drinking water supplies," says Mr Szollosi-Nagy,
referring to an IHP database that is tracking sedimentation flows in rivers
around the world. UNESCO's Director-General Koïchiro Matsuura will
participate in the WWAP presentation, as will the WSSD Secretary General,
Nitin Desai, and several government ministers of environmental and water
affairs. The event will also provide a platform to launch the International
Year for Freshwater 2003, of which UNESCO is the main organizer. UNESCO
will hold a roundtable on international water conflicts with the
non-governmental organization Green Cross International, founded by Mikhail
Gorbachev. Experts will present innovative approaches to resolve brewing
conflicts on five international river basins: the Okavango, Volta, La Plata,
Jordan and Incomati. Each presentation will be followed by a debate.
UNESCO and Green Cross have launched a major project on water diplomacy,
entitled From Potential Water Conflicts to Co-operation Potential, which is
part of the larger WWAP framework. The roundtable will take place in the
Water Dome on September 3 (2p.m. to 4p.m.).
44. UNESCO LAUNCHES THE WORLD'S LARGEST
ENCYCLOPEDIA ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPPEMENT
29 August 2002
Internet:
http://portal.unesco.org/ev.php?URL_ID=5531&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201&reload=1032514282
Johannesburg/Paris-UNESCO will launch the largest and most comprehensive
encyclopedia ever published on sustainable development on September 3, at
the World Summit on Sustainable Development. With contributions from more
than 5,000 scientists, this Internet-based resource will be regularly
updated and made available for free to universities in the least developed
countries. It aims to provide the knowledge base required for sustainable
development in all its myriad aspects, from ecological issues to human
security. The Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems (EOLSS) is the result of
an unprecedented global effort and a decade of planning. Never before has an
encyclopedia gone beyond ecological sciences to cover all aspects of
sustainable development. EOLSS is the only series to comprehensively examine
the origins and threats facing all the systems that support life on Earth -
from the climate to the world's oceans, forests, water cycle and atmosphere.
The contributions offer step-by-step explanations on how to apply the
abstract or pure sciences such as mathematics , to assess environmental
pollution or to predict food consumption patterns. However, technical
solutions alone won't resolve the current ecological crisis. EOLSS therefore
covers a diverse range of social issues - from international human rights
law and poverty eradication to the psychology of religion. The leading
experts who have contributed to this state-of-the-art publication come from
diverse fields such as: the natural sciences (like chemistry and biology);
social sciences (such as history, economics, law and psychology);
humanities, and engineering. EOLSS also deals with interdisciplinary
subjects, like earth and atmospheric sciences, environmental economics as
well as the most effective approaches for managing natural resources like
non-renewable energies, biodiversity, and agriculture. This approach is
critical for managing life on Earth. The global water crisis, for example,
cannot be resolved by a single discipline. The most experienced civil
engineer responsible for constructing dams and mapping the flows of rivers
may have little knowledge on tapping groundwater sources, which offer
tremendous potential provided that the proper safeguards are taken. EOLSS
provides not only the technical information required but critical analyses
on the economics and politics involved in managing such a resource. "The
Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems is different from traditional
encyclopedias. It is the result of an unprecedented world-wide effort that
has attempted to forge pathways between disciplines in order to address
contemporary problems," said UNESCO Director-General Koïchiro Matsuura,. "A
source-book of knowledge that links together our concern for peace,
progress, and sustainable development, the EOLSS draws sustenance from the
ethics of science and the culture of peace. At the same time, it is a
forward-looking publication, designed as a global guide to professional
practice, education, and heightened social awareness of critical life
support issues. In particular, the EOLSS presents perspectives from regions
and cultures around the world, and seeks to be free from geographic, racial,
cultural, political, gender, age, or religious bias." EOLSS is designed to
be a guide and reference for a wide range of users: from natural and social
scientists to engineers, economists, educators, university students and
professors, conservationists, entrepreneurs, law and policy-makers. The aim
is not merely to provide raw information but to serve as a kind of expert
advisor. The various chapters are divided into different levels of
specialization to cater to a diverse readership. General readers might turn
to EOLSS for summaries on nuclear energy, for example, while university
students may focus more on explanations of the theoretical principles of
nuclear energy, and policy-makers turn to the future perspectives and
related recommendations. "Our best hopes for future peace and global
security rely upon strengthened international cooperation to protect the web
of life support systems that we destroy, so ridiculously, day in and day
out. We share only one planet. We - and future generations - have nowhere
else to go," according to Dr. Mostafa K. Tolba, formerly Executive Director
of the United Nations Environment Programme and the editor of a related
EOLSS series of two printed volumes. "It is hoped that the encyclopedia will
provide the necessary impetus and knowledge support to enable humanity to
choose the right direction to move towards sustainable development." The
project is coordinated by a joint committee between UNESCO and EOLSS
Publishers, which is based in Oxford (United Kingdom) and has provided the
sponsorship. Teams of experts will regularly update the various sections on
the Internet, making EOLSS a "living library and a site for action rather
than just a publication," according to Mustafa El Tayeb, secretary of the
UNESCO-EOLSS joint committee. The encyclopedia already contains about 25
million words, equivalent to about 50,000 standard pages, and several
thousand tables, graphics, boxes and photographs. Within the next two years,
it will mature to its full size of about 70 million words (equivalent to
about 150 volumes) through new editions and regular updates as often as once
every three months. "Most United Nations projects of this size begin by
consulting government representatives. But EOLSS went straight to the
scientific communities involved," said Andras Szollosi-Nagy, a member of the
joint committee and Director of UNESCO's International Hydrological
Programme. In 1996, thousands of scientists, engineers and policy-makers
began meeting just to define the scope of the project, before discussing the
details of the contributions. Regional workshops were held in Washington DC,
Tokyo, Moscow, Mexico City, Beijing, Panama, Abu Sultan (Egypt) and Kuala
Lumpur to develop lists of possible subjects and debate analytical
approaches for treating them. "From the start, we had to be absolutely
certain that one school of thought did not dominate the conceptual basis of
the encyclopedia," said Mr Szollosi-Nagy. "This democratic process guided
every step in the encyclopedia's development. With thousands of authors from
more than 100 countries, the editors have set up a self-regulating mechanism
to assure that the subjects are not dominated by Western world views."
Access to the EOLSS is by subscription, via the website http://www.eolss.net.
Subscription rates will vary, depending on the nature of the applicant.
Universities from the UN list of Least Developed Countries will have free
access for one year, renewable subject to the submission of annual reports
on educational and research activity. These universities are invited to sign
an agreement on the website and submit it to UNESCO for endorsement.
Likewise, disadvantaged individuals registered through charitable
organizations will be given free access for one year. Universities and
public libraries will be charged US$3000 for two years while individuals
will be asked to pay US$300 for the same period. Governments and
corporations will pay slightly higher rates which will, nevertheless, be
significantly lower than those of commercial publications. EOLSS covers
roughly 200 themes, each managed by an internationally recognized expert in
the field. Each theme comprises an overview chapter of about 30 pages that
is addressed to the general reader. This is followed by five to eight "topic
level chapters", of about 20 pages, intended for university students
specializing in the field. Every topic includes another five to eight
articles on the latest advances and findings in the subject, as well as
indications of future trends.
45. LIBRARIES AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
29 August 2002
Internet:
http://portal.unesco.org/ev.php?URL_ID=5656&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201&reload=1032514282
29/08/2002 As
negotiations on the Plan of Implementation of the World Summit on
Sustainable Development in Johannesburg continue, the International
Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA) asserts that
library and information services promote sustainable development by ensuring
freedom of access to information. In a "Statement on Libraries and
Sustainable Development" that was approved by IFLA's Governing Board on 24
August 2002 in Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom, IFLA says that library and
information services help people improve educational and social skills,
indispensable in an information society and for sustained participation in
democracy. Calling upon library and information services and their staff to
uphold and promote the principles of sustainable development, the world
library organization acknowledges the importance of a commitment to
sustainable development to meet the needs of the present without
compromising the ability of the future. UNESCO is involved in a number of
parallel events, side-events and partnership initiatives associated with the
World Summit. It has long been concerned with activities related to
sustainable development, contributing to many of the streams of action
generated by the UN Conference on Environment and Development held in Rio in
1992. UNESCO's contribution to the World Summit builds on its mandate in the
fields of education, science, culture and communication, and on key
documents and events such as the UNESCO Medium Term Strategy for 2002-2007,
a resolution of the UNESCO General Conference on the Johannesburg Summit,
the UN Millennium Declaration, the World Conference on Higher Education, the
Dakar 'Education for All' Forum, the World Conference on Science in
Budapest, the World Conference on Culture and Development in Stockholm.
46. CULTURAL DIVERSITY ESSENTIAL FOR
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, MAINTAINS UNESCO
28 August 2002
Internet:
http://portal.unesco.org/ev.php?URL_ID=5496&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201&reload=1032514282
28/08/2002
Johannesburg/Paris - How can we alleviate poverty while promoting cultural
and biological diversity? What political and legal measures need to be taken
at the national and international levels to promote cultural diversity and
protect biodiversity? Johannesburg/Paris - How can we alleviate poverty
while promoting cultural and biological diversity? What political and legal
measures need to be taken at the national and international levels to
promote cultural diversity and protect biodiversity? Which measures should
be taken to protect indigenous and local communities in the face of
globalization? These are some of the questions to be addressed at an
official side event at the World Summit on Sustainable Development in
Johannesburg (South Africa) on September 3 (Intercontinental Hotel, 1 p.m.
to 3 p.m.). UNESCO will organize the debates and discussions in cooperation
with the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the French
government. UNESCO Director-General Koïchiro Matsuura will take part, as
will Klaus Toepfer, Executive Director of UNEP and President Jacques Chirac
of France. Several other Heads of State and Government will also
participate, including President Joaquim Chissano of Mozambique and the Vice
President of Iran, Massoumeh Ebtekar, as well as Nobel Prize laureates
Rigoberta Menchu of Guatemala and Wole Soyinka of Nigeria. "At Johannesburg,
we must take a major leap forward by recognizing that culturally diverse
visions of human well-being are essential to truly understand and protect
the environment while meeting the needs of this generation and those of the
future," says Mr Matsuura. Many discussions and debates over biodiversity
are dominated by a narrow technical perspective, which neglects or ignores
the surrounding cultural, political and ecological contexts. "It is not
enough to simply classify and quantify the number of plant and animal
species," says the Director-General. "We must grasp the links between how
different cultures shape the environment and vice versa." The roundtable
will examine the correlations between cultural and biological diversity and
the common threats facing them, notably unsustainable patterns of
consumption and production. It will also examine the threats that may be
posed by globalization to cultural diversity and traditional knowledge, in
particular that of indigenous and local communities. Seven out of nine top
countries for linguistic diversity are also among the top 17 countries for
biological diversity, according to the UNESCO publication, Sharing a World
of Difference, produced with the non-governmental organizations World Wide
Fund for Nature and Terralingua. The publication, to be released in
September, also found that 13 out of the 17 biological megadiversity
countries - Papua New Guinea, Indonesia, India, Australia, Mexico, Brazil,
Democratic Republic of Congo, the Philippines, the United States, Malaysia,
China, Peru and Colombia - figure among the top 25 countries for endemic
languages spoken exclusively within their respective borders. These
languages are generally spoken by indigenous peoples and minorities with a
wealth of information concerning the surrounding ecosystem. However, these
communities are being increasingly impoverished by the same economic forces
that threaten biodiversity. Previously the notion of sustainable development
embraced economic, environmental and social parameters, yet largely ignored
those pertaining to cultural issues. A change in strategy is clearly a must,
UNESCO believes, if the promotion of cultural diversity is to be given a
central, rather than peripheral, place in the debate. This is why UNESCO
developed and adopted in 2001 the Universal Declaration on Cultural
Diversity*, which states that: "Cultural diversity is as necessary for
humankind as biodiversity is for nature. In this sense, it is the common
heritage of humanity and should be recognized and affirmed for the benefit
of present and future generations." This has been a longstanding principle
in the Organization's diverse projects to promote sustainable development.
For example, the Man and the Biosphere Programme** began 30 years ago to set
up biosphere reserves around the world. Each one serves as a kind of "living
laboratory", in which the local community develops its own ways of
benefiting from and conserving biodiversity.
UN -HABITAT
WSSD Web page:
http://www.unhabitat.org/wssd/
47. JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT ENDORSES ADEQUATE
SHELTER AND SUSTAINABLE URBANIZATION
4 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.unhabitat.org/press2000/presswssd6.asp
Johannesburg, 4
September 2002 -- The World Summit on Sustainable Development concluded
successfully with a Political Declaration that made adequate shelter an
additional but essential component of WEHAB (clean water and sanitation,
energy, health, agriculture and Bio-diversity). The declaration made by
world leaders assembled at WSSD calls for 'decisions, on targets timetables
and partnerships to speedily increase access to basic requirements such as
clean water, sanitation, adequate shelter, energy, health care, food
security and the protection of bio-diversity.' (Declaration: Para. 17) The
centrality of adequate shelter to sustainable development and to the
eradication of poverty was further endorsed in the Plan of Implementation of
the World Summit on Sustainable Development. In particular, the plan called
for support to African countries in their efforts to implement the Habitat
Agenda and the Istanbul Declaration through initiatives to strengthen
national and local institutional capacities in the areas of sustainable
urbanization and human settlements. This includes providing support for
adequate shelter and basic services and the development of efficient and
effective systems of governance in cities and other humans settlements. The
plan of implementation also calls for the strengthening of UN-HABITAT and
UNEP's programme Managing Water for African Cities. (Implementation Plan
Para 65) "Adequate shelter and sustainable urbanization are critical for
sustainable development," said Mrs. Anna Tibaijuka. "The economic, social
and environmental future of human settlements depends on how all Habitat
Agenda Partners, governments, local authorities, the private sector,
non-governmental organizations and grass roots communities meet the
challenge set by the international community at Johannesburg." Sustainable
Urbanization was the joint message of UN-HABITAT and the Habitat Agenda
Partners presented at WSSD. During the conference, a Coalition for
Sustainable Urbanization was launched involving over 50 partners and
countless local authorities all of whom have joined in partnership to
develop a number of joint projects and programmes. This includes the
Managing Water for Asian Cities Programme which was also launched during
WSSD. During the launch a letter of intent was signed between UN-HABITAT and
the Asian Development Bank providing UN-HABITAT with $5 million in grant and
$500 million in fast track credit to UN-HABITAT's Water for Asian Cities
Programme. The Government of the Netherlands will also provide UN-HABITAT
with $2.8 million. This partnership is a perfect example of the kind of
commitment that is being encouraged by the WSSD process. The programme will
also make an important contribution to meeting the goals set by the Plan of
Implementation which includes halving, by the year 2015, the proportion of
people who are unable to reach or afford safe drinking water and the
proportion of people who do not have access to basic sanitation.
(Implementation Plan Para 7) At WSSD UN-HABITAT organized and participated
in a number of events including a Round Table on Partnerships for
Sustainable African Cities. UN-HABITAT's exhibition at the Water Dome was
visited by Mrs. Nane Annan, the wife of the UN Secretary-General. UN-HABITAT
also played a major role in the parallel events designed to highlight the
role of local authorities. The WSSD process was deemed a success by all the
participants. At his press conferences, Kofi Annan, the Secretary-General of
the UN, said that although there were those who were disappointed, WSSD had
successfully brought the sustainable development back on the agenda with a
stronger emphasis on the urgent need to reduce poverty while preventing
environmental degradation. It was now up to all the partners who had
assembled in Johannesburg to show their commitment to achieving the targets
and goals set by the international community. In the concluding press
conference, President, Thabo Mbeki of South African agreed with the youth
and children from around the world who had called upon the delegates to stop
bickering over brackets. It was time to act so that the world's children
could inherit a sustainable future.
48. BRIEF SUMMARY ON THE PARTICIPATION OF
UN-HABITAT AT THE WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
(Johannesburg,
26 August - 4 September 2002)
Internet:
http://www.unhabitat.org/wssd/cpr_briefing.asp
1. WSSD IN FACTS AND OPINIONS
The World
Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) marked the culmination of a process
that had started in early 2001 with progress reports prepared by UN-system
task managers on the implementation of Agenda 21 1 and that involved four
meetings of the Preparatory Committee 2 . WSSD itself had 21,000 registered
participants (9,000 government delegations including 104 heads of state and
numerous ministers; 8,000 representatives of IGOs and NGOs; and 4,000
journalists). The Secretary-General was present from 1-4 September 2002.
Presided by
President T. Mbeki of South Africa, WSSD adopted two negotiated documents on
the evening of the last day:
In addition to
the plenary, negotiation sessions and high-level round table discussions,
WSSD provided the framework for exhibitions and over 500 side and parallel
events at various sites. The South African government impressed the world
with a logistically flawless organization of WSSD in the luxurious Sandton
convention, hotel and shopping complex.
In contrast,
general world opinion and most participants are not impressed by the
negotiated results of WSSD and its preparatory process (type-1 outcomes):
-
The
negotiated texts barely confirm previous agreements, and with very few
exceptions do not commit governments to new goals, targets and time frames
(one such rare exception is the target to halve the number of people
without access to sanitation by 2015, but even this target is only a step
forward from the related Millennium Development Goal on drinking water,
adopted two years ago);
-
There is
general disappointment over the lack of implementation of Agenda 21 and
related international agreements with calls for postponing any future
summits until governments have demonstrated willingness and ability to
implement agreements already reached.
Positive
opinions expressed on WSSD relate mostly to awareness raising on the social,
economic and environmental dimension of sustainable development and the
broader involvement of NGOs and the business community in partnerships with
governments and IGOs in tangible implementation initiatives (type-2
outcomes).
2. OUTCOMES FOR UN-HABITAT
UN-HABITAT,
with special concerns and task-manager responsibilities for chapters 7, 21
and 28 of Agenda 21 (sustainable settlements, waste and sanitation, local
authorities), has done relatively well in the WSSD process. Its normative
and operational mandate is well reflected in the Type-1 outcome of the
Summit (negotiated text).
The Plan of
Implementation contains important references to UN-HABITAT's work in the
sections on poverty eradication, changing unsustainable patterns of
consumption and production, protecting and managing the natural resource
base of economic and social development, sustainable development in Africa,
means of implementation, and institutional framework for sustainable
development. The following commitments are of special interest 3 :
-
Paragraphs 6
and 7 - halve the number of people without access to drinking water and
sanitation by 2015;
-
Paragraph 10
- improve the lives of 100 million slum dwellers by 2020 (with references
to land, adequate shelter and the role of local authorities);
-
Paragraph 65
- support African countries in their efforts to implement the Habitat
Agenda and the Istanbul Declaration (with references to sustainable
urbanization, adequate shelter, basic services, governance systems in
cities and other human settlements, as well as national and local
institutional capacities);
-
Paragraph 137
- strengthen UN-HABITAT (jointly with UNEP, UNDP and UNCTAD) in its role
to build capacities at all levels for implementing Agenda 21;
-
Paragraph 149
- enhance the role of local authorities and partnerships involving local
authorities and other levels of government as called for in the Habitat
Agenda;
-
Further,
there are numerous other references relevant to UN-HABITAT's work,
including the following: transport (20); waste management (21); water
resource management (25, 60); coastal area management and land-based
marine pollution (26, 32); disaster management (35, 59); lead pollution
(50); capacity building in GIS, indicators, planning and management
methodologies (119 bis - undeciens); and good governance and broad-based
decision making (120, 121).
The
Johannesburg Declaration on Sustainable Development is a brief political
statement agreed at the highest level and is not meant to repeat the much
more detailed and longer Plan of Implementation. But even at this general
policy level, the Declaration contains explicit reference to UN-HABITAT's
areas of responsibility, placing them at the top of the agenda, effectively
up-dating the WEHAB 4 list of priorities:
-
Paragraph 17
- "We welcome the Johannesburg Summit focus on the indivisibility of human
dignity and are resolved through decisions and targets, timetables and
partnerships to speedily increase access to basic requirements such as
clean water, sanitation, adequate shelter, energy, health care, food
security, and the protection of bio-diversity. At the same time...."
UN-HABITAT's
normative and operational responsibilities are also well reflected in the
Type-2 outcome of WSSD (partnership implementation commitments). The
"Coalition for Sustainable Urbanization", developed by UN-HABITAT with more
than 40 Habitat Agenda partners, posted on the official WSSD website, has
been formally announced by the Executive Director in her plenary address,
and has been launched in a half-day "corporate event" involving the full
range of partners. The Coalition has received compliments from peers and
partners as a coherent cluster of eleven mutually supportive initiatives
linked by the common conceptual framework of "sustainable urbanization" (the
term "Sustainable Urbanization" was coined by the ED during PrepCom-2).
At the same
time, individual components of the Coalition for Sustainable Urbanization
have gained prominence in their own rights. Among them, and most
importantly, the launch of the "Water for Asian Cities" partnership between
UN-HABITAT, the Asian Development Bank, the Government of the Netherlands,
and Governments of Asian Countries has received much attention and praise.
With its agreed $7.8 million in grants and $500 million in fast-track
credit, the initiative is expected to demonstrate the complementarity
between capacity building and lending operations, between the UN and
development finance institutions.
Other
noteworthy components of the Coalition for Sustainable Urbanization involve
close operational partnerships with global associations of local authorities
(individually or through WACLAC and UNACLA) for strengthening local
capacities for sustainable urbanization. These partnerships, involving also
partner organizations such as UNEP, UNITAR, ILO, UNV and WHO, focus on
thematic issues such as HIV-AIDS, or on modalities for capacity development
such as demonstration/replication, training, best practices, and
city-to-city cooperation. Prominent among these partnerships is the next
phase of the "Sustainable Cities Programme" with funding from the Dutch
Government and the "Partnership for Local Capacity Development" a result of
joint work on city-to-city cooperation in which the associations of local
authorities place high expectations.
3. UN-HABITAT ACTIVITIES IN JO'BURG
A focused and
coherent message was developed and agreed with Habitat Agenda Partners from
the onset of UN-HABITAT's preparations for WSSD, eight months ago. This
message was consistently promoted by all. It has two dimensions that
parallel the two types of interrelated outcomes expected from the overall
WSSD process (i.e. type-1, negotiated norms and policies; and type-2,
partnership implementation commitments):
1. Sustainable Urbanization (policy framework):
2. Coalition for Sustainable Urbanization (11 partnership
implementation commitments):
-
Millennium
Cities Partnership
-
Local
Capacities for Global Agendas
-
Partnership
for Local Capacity Development
-
Model
City-to-City Cooperation Partnership
-
Demonstrating
Local Environmental Planning and Management
-
National
Capacities for Up-scaling Local Agenda 21 Demonstrations
-
Local
Capacity Building and Training for Sustainable Urbanization
-
Learning From
Best Practices and Policies in Support of Sustainable Urbanization
-
Water for
Asian Cities
-
Partnership
for Sustainable African Cities
-
Partnership
for Managing HIV/AIDS at the Local Level
Over the past 8
months UN-HABITAT and its partners have been relatively successful in
ensuring that the key messages on "Sustainable Urbanisation" and the
"Coalition for Sustainable Urbanisation" are reflected in the negotiated
text of WSSD. This political work resulted in the UN-HABITAT related text
mentioned in section (2) above, and was completed by the end of PrepCom-4 in
Bali. Remaining government negotiations in Johannesburg for the most part
did not deal with text directly related to the mandate of UN-HABITAT - with
the important exception of the Political Declaration, which was drafted from
scratch in Johannesburg. The extra-ordinary achievement of having "adequate
shelter" mentioned as a priority concern in the Johannesburg Declaration was
due to the lobbying skills of the Executive Director, members of the Nairobi
CPR, and other concerned government representatives - especially during the
last day of the Summit.
During the ten
days of the Johannesburg Summit itself, the work of the UN-HABITAT team
focused primarily on delivering the UN-HABITAT message, making best use of a
variety of special opportunities presented by the Summit. These
opportunities included plenary statements by the Executive Director, side
and parallel events organized by UN-HABITAT, events organized by UN-HABITAT
partners, press conferences, book launches, exhibitions, bilateral meetings,
etc. Following is an overview:
-
The Executive
Director addressed close to 20 events during the 10-day Summit. This
included two statements to the plenary and participation in a high level
round table with heads of state;
-
The Executive
Director gave two official press briefings and close to 20 one-on-one
interviews (separate briefing available);
-
UN-HABITAT
organized with various partners a dozen side and parallel events
including:
-
a "corporate
event" on the Coalition for Sustainable Urbanization (separate briefing
available);
-
a partnership
event on Sustainable African Cities (separate briefing available);
-
three
partnership events on Water for Cities (separate briefing available);
-
a meeting of
UNACLA
-
UN-HABITAT
organized a major exhibition on water and sanitation (separate briefing
available)
-
UN-HABITAT
launched three publications:
-
Sustainable
Urbanization: Achieving Agenda 21 (based on the World Urban Forum, in
cooperation with DFID, providing the unifying framework for the Coalition,
1000 copies distributed in Johannesburg and 2000 copies to be distributed
world-wide)
-
Coalition for
Sustainable Urbanization: Partnership Commitments for Implementing Agenda
21 (prepared with more than 40 Habitat Agenda partners, endorsed at the
World Urban Forum, 500 copies distributed at WSSD, 500 to be distributed
world-wide);
-
Sustainable
Urbanization: Bridging the Brown and the Green Agendas (260 pages, in
cooperation with DFID and DPU);
-
UN-HABITAT
staff participated as chairperson, keynote speaker or speaker in numerous
events organized by partners such as the following:
-
Several
events during the Local Government Session organized by ICLEI (separate
briefing available)
-
Event
organized by the Global Lead Network
-
Official Side
Event organized by UNITAR
-
WHO launch of
"Healthy Environment for Children"
4. CONCLUSION AND FOLLOW-UP
Time will tell
whether WSSD has generally been a success or just a waste of effort,
resources and opportunity. As far as UN-HABITAT is concerned, initial
assessment indicates that the Habitat Agenda has done quite well in the WSSD
process, considering the generally acknowledged limitations of this process.
UN-HABITAT did
well in making good use of the worldwide momentum created by the WSSD
process, of the worldwide sense of urgency to address sustainable
development in all its dimensions, and of the heightened spirit of
partnership that emerged. Accordingly, UN-HABITAT and its partners
successfully used the WSSD process to make significant progress in three
areas:
-
To focus more
sharply on what we must do in our area of expertise and responsibility to
achieve sustainable development. This has resulted in the policy framework
of "Sustainable Urbanization" developed, agreed, published, and applied to
partnership implementation agreements.
-
To build
awareness of the important role of cities and other human settlements for
sustainable development. This has resulted in broad awareness of the issue
globally and among Habitat Agenda partners who are using "Sustainable
Urbanization" as a unifying framework for joint normative and operational
activities.
-
To use the
momentum, heightened interest in sustainable development and partnership
spirit to develop implementation initiatives, complete with concrete work
plans, agreed responsibilities, and funding commitments. This has resulted
in the "Coalition for Sustainable Urbanization" and its component
initiatives (e.g. the Water for Asian Cities programme).
These
activities went according to a plan developed, refined and implemented over
the past eight months in close and systematic collaboration between UN-HABITAT's
senior management and professional staff, the Committee of Permanent
Representatives, and the full range of Habitat Agenda partners. Next steps,
in broad terms, are part of the plan. The component initiatives of the
"Coalition for Sustainable Urbanization" will be developed further and
implemented. New partners and new initiatives may join the Coalition.
Synergy and cohesion under the unifying framework of "Sustainable
Urbanization" will be periodically reviewed in the context of the World
Urban Forums. Through this the concept of "Sustainable Urbanisation" will be
further developed enabling UN-HABITAT and its partners to enhance over time
their important contribution to socially, economically, and environmentally
sustainable development.
49. $500 MILLION TO BE MADE AVAILABLE FOR
WATER FOR ASIAN CITIES
31 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.unhabitat.org/press2000/presswssd5.asp
Johannesburg,
31 August 2002: Launch of a new partnership between UN-HABITAT and the Asian
Development Bank .
A letter of
intent was signed today between UN-HABITAT and the Asian Development Bank (ADB)
that commits ADB to providing $5 million in grant and $500 million in fast
track credit to UN-HABITAT's Water for Asian Cities Programme. The
Government of the Netherlands will provide $2.8 million while other donors
such as the Swedish Development Agency are also considering supporting the
programme. The total outlay of the programme is $10 million as grant in aid
and $500 million in credit. "The partnership between the ADB and UN-HABITAT
will bring benefits to the region and especially to the urban poor who lack
essential basic services like water," said Mrs. Anna Tibaiuka, Execuitve
Director of UN-HABITAT. "As the premier development finance agency, ADB will
provide its experience with sectoral and multi-sectoral investment while
UN-HABITAT will provide its experience in the management of water for
cities." Mr. Tadao Chino, President of the ADB pointed out that the $500
million fast track credit line was part of ADB's new commitment to poverty
alleviation. "All too often, good projects that can genuinely help alleviate
the problems of the poor fail because of the inability of the banking sector
to respond quickly enough," said Mr. Chino. "It is my hope that the
partnership between the ADB and UN-HABITAT will overcome these bottle-necks
and provide a rapid response mechanism to help municipalities to help the
poor." At the launch of the partnership, Hon. A.M.A. van Ardenne-Van der
Hoeven, Minister for International Development Cooperation of the Government
of Netherlands also emphasised the need for increased investment in the
urban water sector, stating that her government was strongly committed to
the project. Hon. Wang Guangtao, the Chinese Minister of Construction,
congratulated UN-HABITAT and ADB on the launch of their partnership stating
that there was an urgent need to improve the management of water in many
cities in China. Finally, in his speech, Hon. Earl Blumenauer, Member of
United States Congress, pledged to "make the United States a partner in
these goals".
Note to the Editor:
The Water for
Asian Cities works to build partnerships and capacity within city
municipalities. The central emphasis of the Water for Asian Cities Programme
will be on capacity building in the countries and cities of the region with
a view to preparing pro-poor investments in the water and sanitation sector.
The programme will also encourage up-scaling of good practices and community
based management of water and sanitation facilities. Water is one of the
five priority issues that are being discussed at WSSD. UN figures indicate
that 1.1 billion people around the world lack access to safe drinking water
and over 2.4 billion people lack access to adequate sanitation. It is
estimated that more than 2.2 million people in developing countries, most of
them children, die each year from diseases associated with lack of access to
safe drinking water. And a large proportion of people in developing
countries suffer from diseases caused either directly or indirectly by the
use of contaminated water. Asian cities are facing a major challenge in the
water and sanitation sector. Of the world's population that lives without
clean water, it is estimated that about two thirds live in Asia. If the
world is to meet the Millennium Declaration Goal of halving the population
of poor people without access to basic services like water by 2015, at least
a billion people in Asia will need to be given access to safe water.
Improving access to water and sanitation of the poor is also critical if the
lives of 100 million slum dwellers are to be improved by 2020. UN-HABITAT
is the lead agency within the UN system responsible for sustainable
urbanization. Its main responsibility is to implement the Habitat Agenda
that is committed to improving the living environment through better urban
management.
50. SUSTAINABLE URBANIZATION KEY TO
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
26 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.unhabitat.org/press2000/presswssd4.asp
Johannesburg,
26 August 2002: -- At the World Summit, UN-HABITAT, Mayors, representatives
of local authorities, donor agencies, non-governmental organisations and
other Habitat Agenda Partners called for sustainable urbanization. This
message was also tabled at the Plenary Session of WSSD by Mrs. Anna
Tibaijuka, the Executive Director of UN-HABITAT. At a major parallel event,
the Coalition on Sustainable Urbanization, a cross section of partners
presented papers that tabled the problems and possibilities of urbanization.
At the same occasion, UN-HABITAT launched a number of publications including
a joint paper on Sustainable Urbanization with the UK Government Department
for International Development (DFID) and a book Sustainable Urbanization:
Bridging the Green and Brown Agendas. In her presentation to the plenary
session, Mrs. Tibaijuka, stated that "Urbanization and globalisation were
dominant trends that were changing the parameters of sustainable development
and that the impact of these two trends means that increasingly, Agenda 21
will become an urban agenda." She went onto state that as three fifths of
the world's population was soon to live in urban areas, there was an urgent
need to fundamentally change the way cities worked, the way they made
decisions, allocated resources and established institutions. This is why
UN-HABITAT had focused on "Sustainable Urbanization" as its key contribution
to the WSSD process. Sustainable Urbanization had a normative dimension
corresponding to the "type 1" outcome which recognises that sustainable
development is contingent upon effective partnership with diverse
stakeholders. It also has an operational dimension, corresponding to the
"type 2" outcome as over 20 partners have come together to launch the
Coalition. The Coalition on Sustainable Urbanization was launched during the
first week of WSSD at a meeting, attended by over 200 delegates from all
over the world, who were welcomed by Mrs. Tibaijuka. The keynote address was
made by Hon. Mrs. S.D. Mthembi-Mahanyele, Minister for Housing, South
Africa, followed by a an address by Cllr. Alan Lloyd, President of IULA and
Chairman of WACLAC which stressed the critical role of local authorities in
implementing Agenda 21 and the Habitat Agenda.
The meeting was
also addressed by eleven presenters who made short interventions on the
eleven "Partnership Implementation Commitments" that are based on
commitments made by the members of the Coalition. Presenters included M.
Bresso, President of United Towns Organisation, B.Kante of UNEP, J. Smith,
of IULA, C. Piquemal of Metropolis, E. Agevi of ITDG, H. Wessels from the
Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs, His Worship, G. Collomb, Mayor of Lyon,
D. Heron, of Vivendi Environment, P. Gopalan of the Huairou Commission, Hon.
Y. Barimah, the Ghanian Minister for Water Dev., A. Vawda, South Africa, and
N. Mthembu, AMICAAL, Swaziland. The presenters stressed the need for
committed partnerships to ensure effective implementation of Agenda 21.
After much discussion, the session concluded by calling for the general
recognition that there can be no sustainable development with sustainable
urbanization. This includes understanding the nature of demographic shifts
and rural to urban migration patterns. There was also an urgent need to
understand how best to plan for integrated regional development that
supports the development of small towns. Delegates emphasised that
successful implementation of Agenda 21 and the Habitat Agenda required
capacity building and coordinated action between all the partners and
stakeholders. Such partnerships were considered a powerful unifying
framework for diverse initiatives; building interrelationships and promoting
synergies, to strengthen individual and collective efficiency. In
conclusion, Mrs. Tibaijuka thanked the Chair and the organisers, and the
delegates for their interest and commitment, stressing UN-HABITAT's
continued support to promoting partnerships for sustainable urbanisation.
UNITED NATIONS VOLUNTEERS (UNV)
Internet:
http://www.unv.org/infobase/events/WSSD/index.htm
51. VOLUNTEERISM AND ITS ROLE IN SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT
August 2002
Internet:
http://www.unv.org/infobase/articles/2002/02_05_21IDN_wssd.htm
A central
feature of the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) is the effort
to seek new approaches for transforming sustainable development from vision
to reality and moving from analysis of issues to action on the ground. All
stakeholders in the WSSD process are urged to consider volunteerism as a
global phenomenon whose potential for helping meet desired goals has not yet
been fully incorporated into the discussion arena and which, with necessary
support, can help bring the vision of peaceful, secure and stable world one
step closer. Volunteerism is not new. Indeed, since the beginning of
civilization, one of the most basic of values has been people helping people
and, in the process, helping themselves. Most cultures have a name to
describe it. From shramadana in South Asia, harambee in East Africa, minga
in Latin America and al taawun wal tawasul in many Arab States, the act is
familiar, even if the word "volunteer" is not". As a non market response to
situations in which markets function poorly or have a negative impact, the
webs of social connectedness generated by volunteerism constitute the most
basic of safety nets for the poor. While volunteerism is not new, what is
new, and has received great impetus during the International Year of
Volunteers 2001, is an acceptance by the international community of "...the
need to approach voluntary activities strategically as a means of enhancing
resources, addressing global issues and improving the quality of life for
everyone" (UN General Assembly resolution A/RES/56/38). Governments are well
positioned to play a leading role, in collaboration with other actors from
civil society and the private sector, to enhance the environment within
which volunteerism can contribute to meeting global challenges. Indeed, by
not factoring volunteering into development strategies, governments risk
overlooking a valuable asset and undermining traditions of cooperation that
bind communities together. Volunteerism connects well with the three
pillars of the WSSD: economic growth, social development and environmental
protection. In countries where the contribution of volunteerism has been
tabulated, the figures suggest that anywhere between 8% and 14% of GNP can
be traced to voluntary action. Less empirical observations in many other
countries on the economic productive capacity of local communities clearly
highlight the impact of voluntary action on the well-being of those
communities. Volunteerism is also a key means by which people articulate
their engagement as citizens, and by building trust and reciprocity
volunteering contributes to more cohesive, stable societies. Evidence is
growing that variances in performances among different parts of countries,
and between countries, can be accounted for to some extent by such "social
capital". Finally, both spontaneous and organized voluntary action is a
crucial factor in the struggle for environmental protection. The challenge
may be hands-on environmental clean-up campaigns, building protective
defenses against floods, or planting trees to protect ecologically fragile
land. Or it maybe on the side of advocacy where action to raise public
consciousness is often instigated and maintained by volunteers, sometimes
starting-up on an individual basis but generally coalescing at some point
into action groups working anywhere from the local to the global level.
Volunteering and sustainable development are inexorably linked and the WSSD
is a unique opportunity to highlight the dynamics at play. There are a
number of very pragmatic reasons why the outcome documentation from the WSSD
process should take cognizance of volunteerism. First, although the notion
of volunteerism permeates much of Agenda 21 as far as it pertains to the
involvement of people in the fields of environment and development, at no
point are ways to foster volunteerism addressed. Second, there is little
hope of attaining many of the Millennium Development Goals without the
massive involvement of people on a voluntary basis and this fact is only now
beginning to be discussed with ideas for action being generated. Third, as
stated earlier, the mandate and the tools are available. The UN General
Assembly has recognized the important role of volunteering, including for
sustainable development, and has adopted a set of recommendations on ways
governments and the UN system can promote a favourable environment for
volunteering to flourish. Fourth, the WSSD seeks to benefit all social,
groups, but especially the more disadvantaged among them, and it is this
segment of the population that has the most to gain from a pro-active
approach to volunteerism. Fifth, the success of the WSSD will depend to a
large extent on partnerships between governments of the North and the South
and between governments and major groups. There are manifestations of
volunteerism in almost every culture which governments can harness for the
betterment of their societies. Moreover, voluntary action itself cuts across
all the sectors expressed as it is through programmes of government, the
private sector as well as, of course, civil society.
52. PANELLISTS URGE GOVERNMENT BACKING OF
VOLUNTARY ACTION TO MEET DEVELOPMENT GOALS
30 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.unv.org/infobase/news_releases/2002/02_08_30ZAF_mdg.htm
JOHANNESBURG,
30 August 2002 -- Panellists taking part in a side event on community
involvement and volunteering at the World Summit on Sustainable Development
(WSSD) have urged governments to increase cooperation with voluntary
organizations in a bid to improve chances for a cleaner, safer and more
prosperous world. "Volunteers are our greatest strength," said the President
of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC),
Juan Manuel Suarez del Toro Rivero. IFRC represents nearly 100 million
volunteers worldwide. Noting in particular the role volunteers play in
disaster situations and in the fight against disease, he urged governments
to consider the contribution of volunteers to development. "Governments need
to build effective partnership with voluntary organizations, and include
them in discussions around development," he said. "They need to listen
carefully to their ideas and proposals. And they need to take the concrete
actions to encourage and promote and value voluntary action." South
Africa's Minister of Social Development, Zola Skweyiya, called for greater
recognition of volunteers, including thousands of local volunteers assisting
at WSSD. He acknowledged the important role volunteers play in tackling
problems facing his country, most notably the HIV/AIDS pandemic and
widespread poverty. The Associate Administrator of the United Nations
Development Programme (UNDP), Zéphirin Diabré, who chaired the discussion
late Wednesday, noted that informal mutual aid and self-help or formal
service volunteerism contributed to "almost every area" of development.
"Efforts of the international community to address the major global
challenges would be greatly weakened without voluntary action." A strategic
approach to volunteerism could complement the actions of governments and
other actors to address many global challenges, said Robert Leigh of the
United Nations Volunteers (UNV). "It is hard to see how many of the goals
being discussed here at the WSSD can be satisfactorily resolved without a
massive voluntary effort from the grassroots, with appropriate support," he
said.
Mr. Leigh
recalled that on 5 December 2001, at the close of the International Year of
Volunteers, Member States at the UN General Assembly adopted resolution
56/38, which includes a set of recommendations on how to move forward to
ensure that measures be taken to "maximize the contribution of
volunteerism". Dr. Najma Heptulla of the Inter-Parliamentary Union Council,
said all parliamentarians rely to some extent on the efforts of volunteers
in their campaigns and that similarly, all parliamentarians have acted as
volunteers in the democratic process at some stage. Describing a resolution
of the Inter-Parliamentary Union on the promotion of volunteerism, she
recommended that parliaments involve encourage volunteer activities in all
sectors of society and incorporate volunteerism in their planning
activities. The private sector is increasing its support to volunteerism,
said Jane Nelson of the International Business Leaders Forum. She also noted
that one of the gains from the Earth Summit in 1992 was increased pressure
from consumers on business to be more socially responsible. She recommended
that businesses help promote volunteer activity by contributing their
knowledge and skills, by donating products, by carrying out social marketing
and by giving back a percentage of their profits to the communities in which
they work.
UNV, in
collaboration with IFRC and with the support of the IPU, hosted the WSSD
side event. UNV, IFRC and IPU have formed a partnership to promote
volunteerism globally. The organizations have held successful meetings this
year at the World Assembly on Ageing in Madrid in April, the Fourth Prep Com
for the WSSD held in Bali in June and the World AIDS Conference in Barcelona
in July.
Read more about
UN Volunteers and the World Summit on Sustainable Development. Based in
Bonn, Germany, UNV is the United Nations organization that supports
sustainable human dvelopment globally through the promotion of volunteerism.
THE JOINT UNITED NATIONS PROGRAMME
ON HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS)
Internet:
http://www.unaids.org/
53. AIDS CHAIN REACTION THREATENS
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, UNAIDS SAYS Nations face 'un-development' as AIDS
destroys world's most valuable resource – people
30 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.unaids.org/whatsnew/press/eng/pressarc02/WSSD_300802.html
Johannesburg,
30 August 2002 - The head of the United Nations AIDS programme has warned
that meaningful sustainable development cannot be achieved if the AIDS
epidemic is allowed to devastate human resources and capacities. "If we
continue to allow AIDS to drain human resources at an increasing rate,
sustainable development will be impossible," said Dr Peter Piot, Executive
Director of the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS). "Quite
simply, if you do not survive, you cannot develop." Dr Piot was speaking to
the plenary session of the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD),
taking place here from 26 August to 4 September. A report released by UNAIDS
for the Summit warns that by robbing communities and nations of their
greatest asset - their people - AIDS drains the human and institutional
capacities that drive sustainable development. This distorts labour markets,
disrupts production and consumption, erodes productive and public sectors
and ultimately diminishes national wealth. As HIV prevalence rises, poverty
deepens, and in combination with other setbacks, AIDS can trigger food
crises. Some of the countries worst affected by AIDS face the prospect of
'un-developing' - seeing their development achievements dissolve in the wake
of the epidemic. Particularly affected by this chain reaction are young
people, since half of all people newly infected with HIV are under 25. "An
AIDS-ravaged generation of youth constitutes not only a human tragedy, but a
basic threat to communal security," Dr Piot said. Dr Piot told world
leaders at the Summit that joining forces is essential if the epidemic is to
be fought effectively. To do so requires significant broadening of
prevention programmes, dramatic expansion of treatment, and a lessening of
the impact of AIDS on social and economic development. Key to these policy
achievements is the integration of HIV/AIDS responses into wider development
strategies, with AIDS impact assessments becoming commonplace.
Progress at the
national level also requires political action, including consistent
commitment and high-level support from a variety of groups in society.
Another priority is greater involvement of people living with HIV/AIDS in
shaping policies and responses to the epidemic, vital to overcoming stigma
and discrimination. Finally, the protection of young people and women - the
growing impact of AIDS on women is evidence of glaring gender inequality -
is paramount if the response to the epidemic is to be effective. Without
human capacity development - the will, skills, capabilities and systems
needed to respond effectively to HIV/AIDS - the epidemic's impact and spread
will continue. Developing human capacity requires creating a culture of
facilitation whereby organizations involved in AIDS responses promote
leadership on HIV/AIDS in the public, private and community sectors, learn
from those sectors, apply the lessons learned, and collaborate across
institutions and locales. Priorities will be so much sand in the wind
without financial commitment, however. "Investing in AIDS is good
investment," said Dr Piot. "AIDS spending in low- and middle-income
countries needs to rise to US$10 billion a year, three times the current
level." Meeting this goal will require greater investment not only by donors
but by developing countries themselves, underlining the need to build their
capacity to contribute by lightening their debt load. In two decades, AIDS
has killed more than 20 million people. By 2020, unless concerted and
effective action is taken now, another 68 million risk premature death in
the 45 most affected countries. For example, a study in Zambia shows that
two-thirds of urban households that have lost their main breadwinner to AIDS
have seen their income fall by 80%; in combination with other setbacks, AIDS
can trigger food crises, even famine, and up to 13 million people face
possible starvation in southern Africa this year; transmission of HIV from
mother to child is increasing maternal and child mortality rates. Global
consensus already exists on the urgency of fighting AIDS. Last year, at the
UN Special Session on HIV/AIDS, world leaders unanimously adopted a
Declaration of Commitment that provides a benchmark for action and
accountability. The Declaration has already been endorsed in the action
agenda of the WSSD. Similarly, the Millennium Development Goals commit to
halting the spread of HIV/AIDS by 2015 but HIV/AIDS is a block to their
achievement. The recent creation of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and
Malaria and contributions to it are further evidence of a growing commitment
to the fight against AIDS. Worldwide, at end 2001, 40 million people were
living with HIV/AIDS, of whom five million were newly infected during the
year. Sub-Saharan Africa remains the hardest hit region, with some 3.5
million new infections last year, followed closely by the Caribbean. HIV
prevalence continues to rise alarmingly even in parts of Africa where the
epidemic is already well-entrenched. The epidemic is spreading rapidly in
Eastern Europe and Asia, including some of the most populous countries in
the world.
UNITED NATIONS CONVENTION TO COMBAT DESERTIFICATION (UNCCD)
Internet:
http://www.unccd.int
54. THE WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT CALLS ON THE GEF TO BECOME A FINANCIAL MECHANISM OF THE UNCCD.
10 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.unccd.int/publicinfo/pressrel/showpressrel.php?pr=press10_09_02
Bonn, 10
September 2002 - World leaders gathered in Johannesburg at the World Summit
on Sustainable Development called on the Second Assembly of the Global
Environment Facility (GEF) to designate land degradation as a focal area of
the GEF as a means to enhance the provision and mobilization of financial
resources for the effective implementation of the United Nations Convention
to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) as agreed at the GEF Council in December
2001. Furthermore, the Plan of Implementation of the World Summit on
Sustainable Development called on the next GEF Assembly to consider making
the GEF a financial mechanism of the Convention. The Second Assembly of the
GEF, which will meet in Beijing from 16 to 18 October, is expected to act
upon the proposal of the Johannesburg Summit. "In fact, when our Assembly
meets in Beijing next month, it is expected to endorse recommendations that
desertification and organic pollutants be added to GEF's focal areas," said
Mohamed El-Ashry, CEO and Chairman of GEF, to The Earth Times. On August 7,
donor nations reached consensus for the highest replenishment ever of the
Washington, DC - based facilitator of multilateral funding for the
environment in the amount of US$2.92 billion for the next four years. The
endorsement is expected to facilitate the channeling of GEF resources
directly to the country Parties and enable them to considerably strengthen
their capacity to implement the Convention and thus reverse the vicious
cycle of desertification and poverty, which is propelling a mass exodus of
environmental refugees from degraded lands. Country Parties have repeatedly
identified the lack of predictable financial resources as their greatest
stumbling block in the UNCCD process. Desertification affects more than 100
countries worldwide. Already 135 million people are at risk of forced
migration from no longer productive lands. While the annual cost of fighting
land degradation is estimated at $2.4 billion a year, $42 billion in income
is lost every year due to desertification. The Convention was adopted in
1994 as the only legally binding instrument to address the growing global
threat of desertification. Three more countries acceded to the Convention
during the ten-day Summit, bringing its membership to 184 Parties.
RIO CONVENTIONS JOINT PRESS RELEASE
WSSD Web page:
http://unfccc.int/wssd/index.html
55. BIODIVERSITY, CLIMATE, AND DESERTIFICATION REGIMES
STRENGTHENED BY NEW PARTIES AND FUNDING OPPORTUNITIES
30 August 2002
Internet:
http://unfccc.int/press/prel2002/pressrel300802.pdf
Johannesburg, 30 August 2002
– As delegates in Johannesburg work towards broad agreements on poverty
alleviation and sustainable development, three issue-specific treaties that
contribute to these goals – the conventions on biological diversity, climate
change and
desertification – continue
to attract vital support for carrying out their mandates. The biodiversity,
climate change and desertification conventions all have their roots in the
1992 Rio Earth Summit. After a decade of institution-building and national
and international
action, they provide
coherent frameworks and practical tools for promoting sustainable
development. The Convention on Biological Diversity has thus far received
some $1.4 billion in funding from the Global Environment Facility and $2
billion in co-funding for country-driven
projects to conserve and
sustainably use biodiversity. Meanwhile, since the start of the World Summit
on Sustainable Development, the CBD has welcomed two newcomers: Kuwait and
Bosnia-Herzegovina – bringing the total number to 185 parties. The CBD's
Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety has added six new parties – Austria,
Belarus, Bhutan, Denmark, the EC and Mexico – bringing the total to 31.
Fifty ratifications are required for entry into force. The number of
ratifications of the Kyoto Protocol of the Climate Change Convention
went up drastically during
the summit. The total number now stands at 89 ratifications, including
developed countries representing 37.1% of the rich world's carbon dioxide
emissions, some two thirds of the way to the 55% required for entry into
force. In addition, the Protocol's Clean Development Mechanism, one of the
most important new instruments for financing sustainable development since
Rio, is fast becoming operational. The UN Convention to Combat
Desertification, which until now has relied on a so-called Global Mechanism
for identifying possible sources of funding in support of activities for
reversing dryland degradation, is also opening up new and concrete
opportunities for financing. The WSSD has called for the GEF to become a
financial mechanism of the Convention and it is expected that the next
assembly of the Global Environment Facility to be held in Beijing in October
2002 will agree to open its multi-billion dollar fund to
anti-desertification projects. The Convention to Combat Desertification has
welcomed seven new parties this year: Andorra, Somalia, the Slovak Republic,
the FYR of Macedonia, Ukraine, Bosnia-Herzegovina and the Maldives bringing
its membership to 184 parties.
For more information:
www.biodiv.org ;
www.unfccc.int and
www.unccd.int
RAMSAR CONVENTION
Internet:
http://www.ramsar.org/
56. EVENTS OF SUNDAY, 1 SEPTEMBER 2002, AND
THE SIGNING OF AN MOU BETWEEN RAMSAR AND UNCTAD
Internet:
http://www.ramsar.org/wssd_sg_report3.htm
While Ministers
continued with their negotiations behind closed doors, the rest of the
participants at the Summit were involved in a myriad of activities at the
Water Dome, Ubuntu Village (where South Africa and other countries have
mounted national pavilions not related to water), at NASREC the site where
civil society is camping, at the IUCN Centre near the Convention Centre and,
yesterday, at the Hilton Hotel where there was a special event for business
leaders from all over the world, with Kofi Annan and many ministers in
attendance. Ramsar chaired a session on wetlands in water management held at
the IUCN Centre within a day of activities under the theme "Water -
Responsibility for security". The panel at the wetland session included
Peter Spillet, Head of Environment and Sustainability at the Thames Water
company, UK; Torkil Clausen, Chair of the Scientific Committee of the Global
Water Partnership; Tabeth Chiuta, Coordinator of the IUCN Water Programme
for Southern Africa; Paul Mabafi, Uganda Wetland Programme; and Jamie
Pittock, WWF Living Waters Programme. The Secretary General participated
also in the kick-off meeting of the Ministerial Conference on Water to be
held in conjunction with the Third World Water Forum in Japan in March 2003.
The meeting was organized by the Government of Japan to brief governments
and international organizations about the preparations for the Conference
and to receive feedback on the content and proposed modus operandi of the
event.
Finally, Ramsar
was represented at a high-level meeting invited by the Secretary General of
the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), Dr. Rubens Ricupero, in
relation to the BIOTRADE Initiative. At the meeting a series of Partnerships
on biotrade were launched, and Ramsar and UNCTAD signed a Memorandum of
Understanding to formalize the cooperation with the BIOTRADE Initiative. A
special side event and an exhibition of wetland products are being organized
for COP8 by the Ramsar Bureau in cooperation with the BIOTRADE Initiative.
The UNCTAD Initiative is being funded by the UN Foundation and the
Governments of Switzerland and the Netherlands.
-- reported by
Delmar Blasco, Secretary General.
ECONOMIC COMMISSION FOR AFRICA (ECA)
WSSD Web page:
http://www.uneca.org/wssd/
57. WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
30 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.uneca.org/eca_resources/Speeches/2002_speeches/083002eca_press_conference.htm
African
countries must exploit a range of options to ensure that future
biotechnology initiatives reached their full potential for alleviating
poverty, combating disease and ensuring food security, an official of the
Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) said at a press conference this
afternoon. Patrick Asea, Director of the ECA's Economic and Social
Division, said those options included promoting African-focused
biotechnology research that emphasized "orphan crops", particularly cassava,
millet, sorghum, sweet potatoes and yams, as well as cereals like maize,
rice and wheat. Speaking as the ECA released a report on how emerging
technologies could help Africa reduce food insecurity and allow more
flexible crop management systems, he said the experience of countries that
had deployed genetically modified crops showed that success depended on the
extent to which they had pursued such options. The experiences of South
Africa with maize and cotton, Kenya with the sweet potato and Egypt with
maize, fava beans and cotton are cited in the report, which was released by
K. Y. Amoako, Executive Secretary of the ECA. A journalist asked whether
biotechnology could mark the start of a new era for Africa, given that the
market for it had vanished as rapidly as it had grown in North America and
Europe. Did traditional African crops not have greater nutritional potential
than genetically modified ones? Mr. Asea conceded that current
biotechnological research had not focused on traditional African crops like
such as cassava, millet and sorghum, but pointed out that genetically
modified crops also had significant nutritional qualities. They were also
more resistant to drought. Asked whether the Government of Zambia had done
the right thing in rejecting a shipment of genetically modified relief food,
he said that individual countries bore the responsibility for their own food
standards. The miniscule risk of harm from genetically modified foods should
be weighed against the fact that 14 million people in southern Africa were
facing famine, he added. Another journalist asked why the report contended
that the "green revolution" was a powerful tool for poverty reduction, while
it had been proven that the revolution had caused a decline in production
and increased poverty. Mr. Asea replied that the report argued in favour of
an eventual balance between traditional and genetically modified crops.
Agreeing with the correspondent that traditional crops were important for
food security, he said the ECA advocated research that would make them much
hardier. Asked whether African countries had the capacity to assess the new
biotechnologies and how many of them had ratified the Convention on
Biosafety, he said that Kenya, South Africa and Egypt all had excellent
facilities. Furthermore, it was not necessary for each country to assess the
biotechnologies. He added that 24 African countries had signed the
Convention. Did the report take into account that governments were not
involved in funding the research and that Western corporations provided the
funding? Mr. Asea said the ECA advocated strategic partnerships that would
result in mutual benefits, including the focusing of attention on the
African "orphan" crops. Asked how the ECA could advocate what the rest of
the world has rejected, particularly in light of one corporation's role in
contaminating Canada's soy bean crop and subverting the contract rights of
small farmers, he replied that there was a potential for biotechnology if
used effectively in a consistent and balanced framework.
Mr. Amoako
added that the greater risk for Africa was to allow the biotechnology
revolution to pass the region by without entering the debate. Africa could
not afford to sit on the sidelines, he stressed.
WORLD BANK
WSSD Web page:
http://lnweb18.worldbank.org/ESSD/essdext.nsf/43ByDocName/WorldSummitonSustainableDevelopmentWorldBankandWSSD
58. UK, EC, UNDP & WB URGE POLICY MAKERS TO
STRESS POVERTY AND ENVIRONMENT LINKAGES
3 September
2002
Internet:
http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/NEWS/0,,contentMDK:20064907~menuPK:34463~pagePK:34370~piPK:34424~theSite
PK:4607,00.html
JOHANNESBURG,
September 3, 2002-A bold set of policy measures to strengthen poverty
reduction through improved environmental management were presented today at
the launch of "Linking Poverty Reduction and Environmental Management," a
joint report produced by the UK Department of International Development (DFID),
the European Commission (EC), the United Nations Development Program (UNDP),
and the World Bank (WB). European Commissioner Poul Nielson, said that, "It
is often the poor who are most affected by environmental degradation, such
as desertification, deforestation, and overfishing . As a result, they are
not able to earn a decent living. In our development cooperation efforts,
we are specifically addressing this by better integrating environmental
issues. Moreover, we should look at our own consumption patterns and arrive
at a fairer world trading system. We are addressing our own agricultural and
fisheries subsidies in order to take developing country and environmental
concerns into account." The report stresses that global policies are
critical, including reform of trade distorting agriculture subsidies and
other trade barriers, making foreign direct investments more environmentally
and socially responsible, the greening of development assistance strategies,
and debt relief. According to Clare Short, Secretary of State for
International Development, UK, "This initiative provides an important
opportunity to change the terms of the global debate on the links between
poverty, the environment, and sustainable development. We must be clear that
protecting the environment is not an end in itself. We do not simply want to
conserve the world we have. We want improved lives for the poor of the world
and a world that is sustainable for future generations." At the national
level, the report recommends ways to better integrate environmental
assessment into economic policy reforms, improving national income accounts
to better reflect the real cost of environmental damage, strengthening
governance at local and national levels, and expanding the poors' access to
environmental resources, such as clean water supply and sanitation. For Mark
Malloch Brown, UNDP Administrator, "Reversing environmental decline in ways
that benefit the poor is critical to achieving poverty eradication and the
Millennium Development Goals. And this means empowering people and local
communities to improve their livelihoods by protecting and benefiting from
the environment, and ensuring that global and national policies support
rather than undermine their efforts." James D. Wolfensohn, President of the
World Bank, stressed that, "In order to reduce poverty we need growth, but
we need socially and environmentally responsible growth. It must not
curtail the options of future generations by destroying biodiversity or the
capacity of ecosystems to support human life, nor can we continue with the
inequalities of today, where 80 percent of the world's population has 20
percent of the planet's income." To reduce poor peoples' exposure to
environmental hazards, the report proposes strengthening of disaster
preparedness and expanding people's access to insurance and other risk
management mechanisms.
59. GLOBAL VILLAGE ENERGY PARTNERSHIP
HARNESSING ENERGY FOR POVERTY REDUCTION: PEOPLE, PRODUCTIVITY AND
PARTNERSHIPS
30 August 2002
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JOHANNESBURG,
August 30, 2002-A group of 70 representatives of community groups,
consumers, non-governmental organizations, governments, multilateral
institutions, and private firms will unveil a new global initiative tomorrow
that aims to double the number of people who gain access each year to
lighting, heating, mechanical energy and electrical power. The partnership,
which will be launched Saturday, August 31, at the World Summit on
Sustainable Development, aims to reduce poverty in rural, and semi-urban
unserved areas by linking 400 million people to electricity and cleaner
fuels over a period of 10 years, and providing 50,000 communities with power
for productive uses, more modern schools, telecommunications, hospitals and
clinics. The partnership seeks to trigger new investments of up to $5
billion to $7 billion a year. "Energy is at the center of many of the most
critical development challenges facing the world today," said Mark Malloch
Brown, administrator of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), one
of the initiative's partners. "Improving access to energy services is not an
end in itself but rather a critical means for achieving the goals of
sustainable development, and especially the Millennium Development Goals."
Providing affordable, reliable and environmentally sustainable energy
services is one of the keys to improving livelihoods and addressing poverty
in developing countries. Currently, up to 2 billion people in Asia, Africa
and Latin America lack access to electricity and can neither undertake
significant income generating activities nor light their homes adequately.
Almost as many people use fuelwood for cooking, which causes indoor air
pollution and leads to severe health effects through exposure to noxious
fumes. By using modern energy sources, villagers can improve their living
conditions, generate the incomes necessary to lift themselves out of
poverty, provide better lighting of homes, adopt cleaner fuels for cooking
and heating, and produce cleaner emissions from energy-consuming industrial
plants. Peter Woicke, Executive Vice President of the International Finance
Corporation and Managing Director of the World Bank Group, has called on
partners to "to embrace the initiative with full commitment". He noted the
critical role of all parties involved in this public-private partnership,
each bringing its own unique perspective to the joint effort. "Through this
initiative, we can help reduce poverty by substantially increasing the
number of small and medium-sized entreprises and institutions that can
undertake village energy projects," said Woicke. "Only by working together,
can we improve access to modern energy services that can transform lives and
improve livelihoods." The Global Village Energy Partnership builds on the
existing experience of its over 70 partner organizations from a wide range
of individuals and organizations, including representatives of the private
sector and civil society. Instrumental in supporting the development of the
partnership are a number of bilateral donors, including Canada, France,
Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the United
States, NGOs including UN Foundation, the Kumasi Institute of Technology and
Environment of Ghana (KITE), Energia, Winrock International, and
Stakeholders Forum, and multilateral organizations like the World Bank and
UNDP. The partnership will expand existing programs that use outreach
efforts and training to increase the number of people with access to modern
energy services in developing countries, such as successful efforts in Sri
Lanka and Chile that gave people more options for starting entrepreneurial
activities and dramatically improving people's lives. The partnership will
make available lessons learned and best practices, disseminate models for
effective energy delivery, pool technical and financial resources,
strengthen local community organizations and aggregate and account for
results. The new initiative will reach out to non-energy organizations in
the health, education, water, agriculture, transport and enterprise sectors,
offering a range of technology solutions to meet their needs, which cover
renewable energy, energy efficiency, modern biomass, liquefied petroleum gas
and cleaner fossil fuels."The Global Village Energy Partnership has exciting
potential to facilitate knowledge sharing, cooperation and project
development across the range of issues and organizations," said Doug Banks,
operator of a small South African business called RAPS. " Millions of
households have inadequate energy services. The task at hand is huge and a
global initiative supporting existing and new local entrepreneurs and
private entities is sorely needed. We look forward to participating in the
development and implementation of the partnership."
The Global
Village Energy Partnership will provide:
The opportunity
for communities, governments, private entrepreneurs and financial and
multilateral institutions to agree on Action Plans for the development of
energy services, including policy and regulatory frameworks;
Capacity
Building services to help entrepreneurs, consumers and others to develop
their activities as energy service providers and consumers;
Knowledge
Management services to share existing knowledge on technologies and delivery
models; and make available registries of service providers; it will reach
communities and all other partners, through a network of trained people and
organizations, radio and television programs, publications, and an internet
based service;
Funding
Facilitation services, to help access available financing sources, train
local financial institutions, mobilize new local and international funding
sources, and provide seed capital to new or expanding energy service
providers;
Monitoring,
results and evaluation services to measure the impact of all these efforts
in order to be able to account publicly for achievements.
The partnership
enables groups such as the Ghanaian NGO Kumasi Institute of Technology and
Environment, to team up with partners and leverage their experience in
reaching a common goal. KITE Director Dr. Abeeku Brew-Hammond, noted that,
"KITE started this journey towards a sustainable energy future on its own.
Now, it is time for us to join the global community. We can no longer go it
alone, and they cannot succeed without us. Together we will complete the
journey."
60. GLOBAL CONSULTATIVE PROCESS LAUNCHED ON
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCE
LOOKING AT
RISKS AND OPPORTUNITIES
29 August 2002
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JOHANNESBURG,
August 29, 2002 - A new international consultative process was launched
today on the risks and opportunities of using agricultural science to reduce
hunger and improve rural livelihoods in the developing world. The
initiative, which is expected to last through mid-2003, aims to exchange
ideas between consumers, farmers, scientists, NGOs, governments, and the
private sector in an effort to produce an international assessment on
agricultural science that would give decision-makers the tools and
information they need to answer the tough questions surrounding the issue.
The new process will be co-chaired by World Bank Chief Scientist Robert T.
Watson, who is also the former head of the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC); Claudia Martinez Zuleta, former Colombian deputy
minister of environment; Rita Sharma, the joint secretary and land resources
commissioner of India's agriculture ministry; Louise Fresco, the FAO's
assistant director general for agriculture; and Seyfu Ketema, executive
secretary of the Association for Strengthening Agricultural Research in
Eastern and Central Africa. "Nearly 800 million people go to bed hungry
every night and over the next 50 years, food production will have to double
to meet growing demands," said Ian Johnson, the World Bank's vice-president
for sustainable development. "This will involve both productivity and
environmental management challenges. As we move forward, the application of
science to agriculture needs to be fully assessed in terms of its
contribution to enabling farmers to be more productive. But equally, the
environmental and social risks, as well as ethical issues, need to be
discussed in an open and transparent manner. By discussing and examining the
issues with everyone from farmers and consumers, to NGOs and governments, we
can contribute to the informed dialogue among them," said Johnson, who also
chairs the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR).
The consultative process on agricultural science will look at the risks and
opportunities of a broad range of issues, such as organic agriculture,
traditional plant breeding techniques, new farming technologies, and
biotechnology. The assessment will be modeled on similar assessments on
climate change and ozone that have proven invaluable for guiding policy
makers on pressing issues. "My experience in chairing international
assessments on climate change, biodiversity and ozone leads me to believe
that it is possible to ensure that a professional assessment in which all
voices are heard will be achieved," said Watson. "Such agreements only work
when they are inclusive and transparent. We must not shy away from the
difficult challenge of discussing with a wide range of partners what exactly
are the tradeoffs in using agricultural science to meet growing food needs."
The consultative process will try to maximize input through a number of
ways, including meetings in various parts of the world, videoconferences,
and an interactive website at
www.agassessment.org
61. WORLD BANK URGES MORE BALANCED GLOBAL
APPROACH TO DEVELOPMENT
21 August 2002
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WASHINGTON,
August 21, 2002 - The next 50 years could see a fourfold increase in the
size of the global economy and significant reductions in poverty, provided
that governments act now to avert a growing risk of severe damage to the
environment and profound social unrest, according to a new World Bank
report. In nearly 50 years, the world could have a gross domestic product
of $140 trillion and a total population of nine billion people, up from six
billion today. Without better policies and institutions, social and
environmental strains may derail development progress, leading to higher
poverty levels and a decline in the quality of life for everybody, according
to the World Development Report 2003. The World Bank is calling on heads of
state, ministers, private sector leaders, and civil society representatives
at next week's World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg to
reach agreement on steps that can be taken now to ensure that
poverty-reducing growth does not come at great cost to future generations.
Misguided policies and weak governance in past decades have contributed to
environmental disasters, income inequality, and social upheaval in some
countries, often resulting in deep deprivation, riots, or refugees fleeing
famine or civil wars. Today, many poor people depend on fragile natural
resources to survive. Similarly, trust between individuals, which can be
eroded or destroyed by civic unrest, is a social asset with important
economic benefits, since it enables people to make agreements and undertake
transactions that would otherwise not be possible. Development polices need
to be more sharply focused on protecting these natural and social assets,
the report said. The World Development Report 2003 suggests new alliances
are needed at the local, national and global levels to better address these
problems. The burden for development must be shared more widely. Rich
countries must further open their markets and cut agricultural subsidies
that depress incomes of third world farmers, and they must increase the flow
of aid, medicines, and new technologies to developing countries. Governments
in the developing world, in turn, must become more accountable and
transparent, and ensure that poor people are able to obtain secure land
tenure, as well as access to education, health care, and other basic
services.
ACTION ON AGRICULTURE
Developing
countries depend on their agricultural sectors for around one quarter of
their total output. However, farmers in these regions are faced with many
hurdles to boosting their living standards in the years ahead. Rich country
subsidies depress agricultural prices and stifle opportunities for exporters
in the poorest countries. Poor roads, a scarcity of finance, lack of access
to new technologies, and growing environmental degradation also threaten the
livelihoods of poor farmers in many parts of the world. To help the poorest
in the developing world rapidly boost their incomes, the World Bank is
urging rich countries to stop spending $1 billion a day on agricultural
subsidies, to accelerate the transfer of new technologies, and to provide
more aid, particularly to Sub-Saharan Africa, which is struggling to raise
agricultural productivity in the face of rapid population growth. The
report says that the next few years offer the opportunity to shape
investment patterns to make more efficient use of natural resources, to
protect the environment, and to bring deep reductions in poverty. The Bank
is urging world leaders to take advantage of the spirit behind such recent
milestones as the Monterrey Consensus, the compact adopted by the United
Nations at the March 2002 International Conference on Financing for
Development, and the New Partnership for Africa's Development, an initiative
by African leaders, to establish a global effort for attaining sustainable
development.
"Low- income
countries will need to grow at 3.6 percent per capita to meet the United
Nations' Millennium Development Goal of halving poverty by 2015, but this
growth must be achieved in a manner that preserves our future," said Ian
Johnson, Vice President of the World Bank's Environmentally and Socially
Sustainable Development Network. "It would be reckless of us to successfully
reach the Millennium Development Goals in 2015, only to be confronted by
dysfunctional cities, dwindling water supplies, more inequality and
conflict, and even less cropland to sustain us than we have now." The
latest World Development Report (WDR 2003) stresses that the burden of
guaranteeing sustainable development must be shared locally, nationally, and
globally:
-
Developing
countries need to promote participation and substantive democracy,
inclusiveness, and transparency as they build the institutions needed to
manage their resources.
-
Rich
countries need to increase aid, cut poor country debts, open their markets
to developing country exporters, and help transfer technologies needed to
prevent diseases, increase energy efficiency, and bolster agricultural
productivity.
-
Civil society
organizations contribute when they serve as a voice for dispersed
interests and provide independent verification of public, private, and
nongovernmental performance.
-
Private firms
contribute when they commit to sustainability in their daily operations
and also create incentives to pursue their interests while advancing
environmental and social objectives.
"The world must
act to help its poorest people manage their own resources and build their
productivity and incomes now, to empower these communities and help them
prepare for the demands of the decades ahead," said Nicholas Stern, World
Bank Chief Economist and Senior Vice President. "Rich countries can take
such a step by opening their markets to developing world exports and by
abandoning agricultural subsidies and other barriers to trade that depress
prices and limit market opportunities for the very goods that poor people
produce most competitively." The WDR 2003 estimates that the global
population will reach nine billion people by 2050 and stabilize by the end
of the century at 10 billion or less. By mid-century, two-thirds of the
world's population will live in cities. The demands for energy, water,
housing, and education will be enormous. Yet these trends also offer
windows of opportunity, according to the report. Most of the capital stock -
apartments, shops, factories, and roads - that will be needed by the growing
population in coming decades does not yet exist. Better standards, increased
efficiency, and new, more inclusive means of decision-making could mean that
this new capital stock could be built in ways that puts fewer strains on
society and the environment. Similarly, as population growth slows,
economic growth will translate more readily into lower poverty and higher
incomes per capita - provided that economic and population growth over the
next few decades has been handled in a way that does not destroy the natural
resources that underpin growth or erode critical social values, such as
trust.
MANAGING WATER FOR ALL
The World
Commission on Water estimates that water use will jump 50 percent over the
next 30 years. As much as half the world's population - largely in Africa,
the Middle East and South Asia - will face severe water shortages by 2025.
Effectively managing the world's water resources and ensuring delivery to
rapidly growing urban areas, rural communities, and industries will
increasingly require internationally coordinated efforts. Many developing
countries will need to make sizeable investments in water infrastructure. In
the past, inappropriate pricing policies have led to massive waste and have
not provided benefits to poor people, who often lack access to water
connections. Water supply is an essential element in many other poverty
reduction efforts, such as nutrition, and disease prevention programs. Next
week's summit in Johannesburg will consider ways to ensure poor people have
wider and continuous access to clean water. "The $140 trillion world of
five decades time simply cannot be sustained on current production and
consumption patterns," Stern said. "A major transformation - beginning in
the rich countries - will be needed to ensure that poor people have an
opportunity to participate, and that the environment is not damaged in a way
that undermines their opportunities for the future." Coordinating globally
and acting locally will be critical to ensuring that gains in social
indicators - such as incomes, literacy rates, or access to sanitation - of
the past 20 years are not reversed by population growth pressures and
unsustainable economic expansion. "The goal for the World Summit in
Johannesburg should be to establish truly global alliances, with partners
from all sectors, that will transparently and fairly work towards ensuring
that development gains do not exhaust our environment and its resources or
threaten social upheaval because they exclude poor people," Johnson said.
"In the quest to deliver a better life for poor people, we must plan for
better management of critical public resources: water, energy, health,
agriculture, and biodiversity."
The challenges
are daunting. The average income in the richest 20 countries is already 37
times that in the poorest 20 nations. Globally, 1.3 billion people live on
fragile lands - arid zones, slopes, wetlands, and forests - that cannot
sustain them. Both the gap between rich and poor countries and the number of
people living on fragile lands have doubled in the past 40 years. Around
half of the world's wetlands disappeared in the last century. Water use is
expected to jump 50 percent over the next 30 years, and yet pollution and
climate changes are already threatening water supplies, particularly in
Africa, the Middle East, and South Asia. By 2025, it is likely that three
quarters of the world's population will live within 100 kilometers of the
sea, placing huge strains on coastal ecosystems. Since the 1950s, nearly
two million hectares of land worldwide - representing 23 percent of all
cropland, pastures, forest, and woodland - have been degraded, and tropical
forests are disappearing at the rate of 5 percent per decade. More than one
third of terrestrial biodiversity is squeezed into habitats that altogether
represent just 1.4 percent of the Earth's surface. In the latest World
Development Report, the World Bank notes that the Earth Summit in Rio de
Janeiro 10 years ago did much to heighten awareness of the policy challenges
necessary to achieve sustainable development. Since then, the need for more
effective local, national, and international institutions to design and
implement these policies has become increasingly evident, the report says.
The 2003 report describes promising innovations around the globe that
address these problems. It argues for rich and developing countries to build
upon these efforts to make sustainable development a reality and enable poor
people to participate in economic growth. "In the next 50 years, the
world's population will begin to stabilize, and the majority of people will
live in cities for the first time in history," said Zmarak Shalizi, lead
author of the WDR 2003. "By thinking long term and acting now, we can take
advantage of these windows of opportunity to shift development to a more
inclusive and sustainable path and achieve steep reductions in poverty in
the decades ahead." The WDR 2003 suggests that sustainable development will
require:
Achieving
substantial growth in income and productivity in developing countries.
Managing the
social, economic, and environmental transitions to a predominantly urban
world.
Attending to
the needs of hundreds of millions of people living on environmentally
fragile lands.
Reaping the
"demographic dividends" seen in declining dependency rates and slowing
population growth.
And avoiding
the social and environmental stresses3/4at local and global levels3/4likely
to emerge on the path to a $140 trillion world economy.
Across the
developing world, new rules, organizations, and other institutional
innovations are already leading to better environmental outcomes. Air
pollution is declining in Mexico City and in some Chinese cities. All but a
handful of countries have eliminated lead from gasoline. In the past 10
years, the percentage of people in low- and middle-income countries with
access to sanitation has climbed to 52 percent, from 44 percent. Countries
as different as China, Morocco, and Cameroon are experimenting with new
institutional approaches to these problems, often involving increased
participation of the private sector and civil society. In Brazil, for
example, the government has made it possible for poor people in some locales
to secure title to their homes and land, so that even those with only the
barest means of shelter feel confident they will not be evicted. With
security of tenure, even poor people are able to invest to improve their
homes or their businesses. Most importantly, poor people must have a
greater say in the process that will shape their lives in the decades ahead.
Decisions need to be taken in an inclusive and consultative manner that
recognizes the views of poor people while also empowering them with greater
control of their own resources.