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Contents
GENERAL NEWS
-
THE
GREAT RACE (The Economist 4 July 2002)
-
MAJOR
NATIONS MULL SUMMIT PLAN (Yomiuri Shimbun 4 July 2002)
-
DUTCH
GOVERNMENT DONATES R25M TO SUMMIT COFFERS (Business Day via All Africa 3
July 2002)
-
DENMARK
SETS OUT AMBITIOUS EU GREEN AGENDA (Environment News Service 2 July 2002)
-
GLOBAL
FORUM WILL GO AHEAD DESPITE BUDGET CUTS (SABC News 2 July 2002)
-
SCIENTISTS IN DEBATE ON SAVING WORLD (EDP24 2 July 2002)
-
'MICROCREDITS'
HELP ERADICATE POVERTY (The Yomiuri Shimbun 2 July 2002)
-
WORLD
CONSERVATION UNION PREPARES SA FOR SUMMIT (Zimbabwe Standard (Harare) via
All Africa 2 July 2002)
-
ENVIRONMENT ESSENTIAL TO NEPAD'S LIFE (The East African Standard (Nairobi)
via All Africa 2 July 2002)
-
'WE
WON'T SOLVE CAPITALISM EVILS' (The Post (Lusaka) via All Africa 1 July 2002)
-
U.S.
LINKS AID, ACCOUNTABILITY IN HELPING DEVELOPING COUNTRIES SECRETARY O'NEILL
ADDRESSES UN COUNCIL MEETING (Washington File 1 July 2002)
-
UN
WARNS OF HOT AIR AT JO'BURG SUMMIT (Mail & Guardian 1 July 2002)
-
PRESS BRIEFING BY
SECRETARY-GENERAL'S SPECIAL ADVISER ON MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS (United
Nations 1 July 2002)
-
ECOSOC
PRESIDENT URGES INVESTMENTS, MORE FOREIGN AID IN EDUCATION AND HEALTH
(United Nations 1 July 2002)
-
PEOPLE
MUST BE CENTRE OF UN'S WORK, ANNAN TELLS OPENING OF ECOSOC SESSION (United
Nations 1 July 2002)
-
BRAZIL
IN BID TO SAVE GREEN SUMMIT FROM DISASTER (Independent 30 June 2002)
-
'DEVELOPMENT HAS MEANT DEPRIVING POOR PEOPLE OF THEIR RESOURCES' (The Post
(Lusaka) via All Africa 30 June 2002)
-
WSSD
STRUGGLING WITH MAJOR FUNDING CRISIS (Daily Dispatch 28 June 2002)
-
WORLD
SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: ACTIONS, NOT WORDS, COUNT (Mail &
Guardian via All Africa 28 June 2002)
-
PRINCESS BASMA ATTENDS RIO DE JANEIRO SEMINAR ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
JORDAN READIES REPORT FOR JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT (Jordan Times 28 June 2002)
-
ANTI-GLOBALIZATION ACTIVISTS PREP U.S. PUBLIC FOR UPCOMING SUMMIT (OneWorld
27 June 2002)
-
CLEARING THE ATMOSPHERE (Mail & Guardian 27 June 2002)
-
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: UN IN GRIP OF BIG COMPANIES, ACTIVISTS SAY (Bangkok
Post 27 June 2002)
-
CIVIL
SOCIETY IS RUNNING OUT OF TIME (Mail & Guardian 27 June 2002)
-
RICH
STATES LEAVE AFRICA IN THE SLOW LANE (The Guardian 26 June 2002)
-
FINLAND
PUMPS R10 MILLION INTO WORLD SUMMIT COFFERS (SABC News 26 June 2002)
-
US
POLICE WARN SA ABOUT DANGERS OF PROTESTERS (South African Press Association
26 June 2002)
-
SOUTH
AFRICA TAKES EARTH SUMMIT TORCH TO G-8 MEETING IN CANADA (WWF 26 June 2002)
-
MBEKI
SAYS SUMMIT WILL BE A 'NEW START' (SABC News 26 June 2002)
-
GLOBAL
EFFORT CAN END POVERTY: MBEKI (SABC News 26 June 2002)
-
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT DELEGATES PREPARE FOR AUGUST MEETING (Voice
of America 26 June 2002)
-
G8
SUMMIT: RICH STATES LEAVE AFRICA IN THE SLOW LANE (The Guardian 26 June
2002)
-
SUMMIT
CUTS COSTS WITH DISPOSABLE CUPS (Independent Online 26 June 2002)
-
MBEKI
APPEALS FOR PARTNERSHIP ON 'SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT' (Voice of America 25
June 2002)
-
LEADERS
DISCUSS UPCOMING ENVIRONMENTAL SUMMIT (Voice of America 25 June 2002)
-
BETTER
WORLDWIDE MANAGEMENT OF GMO'S: THE EU RATIFIES THE CARTAGENA PROTOCOL ON
BIOSAFETY (European Commission 25 June 2002)
-
EXPERTS
CALL FOR ACTION TO PROTECT CHILDREN'S ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH (Islamabad News
25 June 2002)
-
PRESCOTT BLAMES U.S. SUBSIDIES FOR TRADE DEAL DELAY (The Scotsman 25 June
2002)
-
SCENARIOS FOR EARTH'S FUTURE LOOK BAD (Yomiuri Shimbun 25 June 2002)
-
"GET TO
CONSUMERS" TO HELP SAVE THE ENVIRONMENT, SAYS NEW REPORT (OneWorld 24 June
2002)
-
HUMANS
OVERDRAWING EARTH'S RESOURCE BANK (HealthScoutNews 24 June 2002)
-
WORLD
SUMMIT IS TOO IMPORTANT TO FAIL' (Business Day (Johannesburg) 24 June 2002)
-
BRITAIN, DENMARK PLEDGE SUPPORT FOR JOBURG SUMMIT (South African Press
Association (Johannesburg) 23 June 2002)
-
BRAZIL
ASKS RICH COUNTRIES FOR MORE DEVELOPMENT AID AND CLEAN ENERGIES (Associated
Press June 23 2002)
-
PRESCOTT JOINS BID TO SAVE WORLD POVERTY SUMMIT (Independent 23 June 2002)
-
UN-COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY LAUNCH NEW PARTNERSHIP (Voice of America 22 June
2002)
-
PYRAMID
ERECTED ON MT KENYA (The Nation (Nairobi) 22 June 2002)
-
BRAZIL
HOSTS COMMEMORATIVE CONFERENCE AHEAD OF 10TH ANNIVERSARY OF 1992 EARTH
SUMMIT (The Earth Times 22 June 2002)
-
ENVIRONMENT, POVERTY PLAN SUGGESTED (Associated Press 21 June 2002)
ON THE WEB
-
BUSINESS ROLE CRUCIAL AT GLOBAL SUMMIT, LEADER SAYS (Reuters 5 July 2002)
-
AFRICA
NEEDS GREEN GROWTH TO FIGHT POLLUTION, SAYS U.N. (Reuters 5 July 2002)
-
SOUTH
AFRICA READIES 26,000 POLICE FOR EARTH SUMMIT (Reuters via Planet Ark 27
June 2002)
-
BRAZIL
LEADER SAYS MUCH STILL NEEDED ON ENVIRONMENT (Reuters via Planet Ark 26 June
2002)
-
SOUTH
AFRICA ACTIVISTS SAY WILL DEFY POLICE ON SUMMIT (Reuters via Planet Ark 25
June 2002)
EDITORIAL/OPINIONS
-
TIME
FOR THE BIG PUSH by Derek Osborn (Guardian 3 July 2002)
-
YEMI
KATERERE: THE FUTURE OF THE SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (Mail and
Guardian 28 June 2002)
-
GLOBAL
AGENDAS ARE SET BY THE USUAL SUSPECTS by Dennis Brutus (Business Day via All
Africa 27 June 2002)
-
IN THE
BALANCE: THE FUTURE OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT Interview with Felix Dodds
(Open Democracy 26 June 2002)
-
'NO' TO
CHARITY, 'YES' TO INVESTMENT by Thabo Mbeki (The New York Times 25 June
2002)
-
TRADE
NOT AID IS THE WAY FORWARD by Maria Livanos Cattaui (Bangkok Post 25 June
2002)
-
TRADE
JUSTICE NEEDS MORE THAN JUST WARM WORDS by Ian Willmore (Observer 23 June
2002)
-
RIO +10 BRAZIL EVENT
23 - TO 25 JUNE 2002 PANEL AND PRESS INFORMATION PREPARED by Achim Steiner (IUCN
23 June 2002)
SPEECHES
-
OPENING
OF THE 76TH ORDINARY SESSION OF THE OAU COUNCIL OF MINISTERS, DURBAN, 4 JULY
2002: STATEMENT BY KY AMOAKO, EXECUTIVE SECRETARY OF THE UN ECONOMIC
COMMISSION FOR AFRICA (African Union 4 July 2002)
-
"THE EU
TRADE & DEVELOPMENT AGENDA FROM DOHA VIA JOHANNESBURG TO CANCUN" PASCAL LAMY
EU TRADE COMMISSIONER (Meeting with the All-Party group on the Overseas
Development London, House of Commons, European Commission 27 June 2002)
-
PASCAL
LAMY EU TRADE COMMISSIONER TRADE, GLOBAL GOVERNANCE, SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
EUROPEAN COMMISSION POLICY SEMINAR BRUSSELS (European Commission 24-25 June
2002)
-
MARGOT
WALLSTRÖM MEMBER OF THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION, RESPONSIBLE FOR ENVIRONMENT
"EUROPEAN RIO +10 COALITION CONFERENCE - WSSD " THIRD CONFERENCE OF THE
EUROPEAN COALITION, IN VIEW OF WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
BRUSSELS, (European Commission 21 June 2002)
-
POUL
NIELSON, EUROPEAN COMMISSIONER FOR DEVELOPMENT AND HUMANITARIAN AID: A
BETTER QUALITY OF LIFE FOR ALL: DELIVERY AND GOVERNANCE, SPEECH TO 3RD
EUROPEAN CONFERENCE OF THE RIO+10 COALITION, BRUSSELS (European Commission
21 June 2002)
-
KEYNOTE
ADDRESS BY DR BS NGUBANE, MINISTER OF ARTS, CULTURE, SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY,
AT 3RD CONFERENCE OF THE EUROPEAN RIO +10 COALITION, 20-21 June 2002 (Issued
by the South African Ministry of Arts, Culture, Science and Technology 20
June 2002)
-
POVERTY
REDUCTION AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: THE CHALLENGE FOR JOHANNESBURG SPEECH
BY THE RT HON CLARE SHORT MP, SECRETARY OF STATE FOR INTERNATIONAL
DEVELOPMENT, ON THE WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (20 June 2002)
GENERAL NEWS
1. THE GREAT RACE
The Economist
4 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.economist.com/finance/displayStory.cfm?story_id=1199867
Growth need not be
the enemy of greenery. But much more effort is required to make the two
compatible, says Vijay Vaitheeswaran SUSTAINABLE development is a dangerously
slippery concept. Who could possibly be against something that invokes such
alluring images of untouched wildernesses and happy creatures? The difficulty
comes in trying to reconcile the "development" with the "sustainable" bit:
look more closely, and you will notice that there are no people in the
picture.
That seems unlikely
to stop a contingent of some 60,000 world leaders, businessmen, activists,
bureaucrats and journalists from travelling to South Africa next month for the
UN-sponsored World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg. Whether
the summit achieves anything remains to be seen, but at least it is asking the
right questions. This survey will argue that sustainable development cuts to
the heart of mankind's relationship with nature-or, as Paul Portney of
Resources for the Future, an American think-tank, puts it, "the great race
between development and degradation". It will also explain why there is reason
for hope about the planet's future. The best way known to help the poor
today-economic growth-has to be handled with care, or it can leave a degraded
or even devastated natural environment for the future. That explains why
ecologists and economists have long held diametrically opposed views on
development. The difficult part is to work out what we owe future generations,
and how to reconcile that moral obligation with what we owe the poorest among
us today. It is worth recalling some of the arguments fielded in the run-up to
the big Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro a decade ago. A publication from
UNESCO, a United Nations agency, offered the following vision of the future:
"Every generation should leave water, air and soil resources as pure and
unpolluted as when it came on earth. Each generation should leave undiminished
all the species of animals it found existing on earth." Man, that suggests, is
but a strand in the web of life, and the natural order is fixed and supreme.
Put earth first, it seems to say. Robert Solow, an economist at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, replied at the time that this was
"fundamentally the wrong way to go", arguing that the obligation to the future
is "not to leave the world as we found it in detail, but rather to leave the
option or the capacity to be as well off as we are." Implicit in that argument
is the seemingly hard-hearted notion of "fungibility": that natural resources,
whether petroleum or giant pandas, are substitutable.
Rio's fatal flaw
Champions of
development and defenders of the environment have been locked in battle ever
since a UN summit in Stockholm launched the sustainable-development debate
three decades ago. Over the years, this debate often pitted indignant
politicians and social activists from the poor world against equally indignant
politicians and greens from the rich world. But by the time the Rio summit
came along, it seemed they had reached a truce. With the help of a committee
of grandees led by Gro Harlem Brundtland, a former Norwegian prime minister,
the interested parties struck a deal in 1987: development and the environment,
they declared, were inextricably linked. That compromise generated a good deal
of euphoria. Green groups grew concerned over poverty, and development
charities waxed lyrical about greenery. Even the World Bank joined in. Its
World Development Report in 1992 gushed about "win-win" strategies, such as
ending environmentally harmful subsidies, that would help both the economy and
the environment. By nearly universal agreement, those grand aspirations have
fallen flat in the decade since that summit. Little headway has been made with
environmental problems such as climate change and loss of biodiversity. Such
progress as has been achieved has been largely due to three factors that this
survey will explore in later sections: more decision-making at local level,
technological innovation, and the rise of market forces in environmental
matters. The main explanation for the disappointment-and the chief lesson for
those about to gather in South Africa-is that Rio overreached itself. Its
participants were so anxious to reach a political consensus that they agreed
to the Brundtland definition of sustainable development, which Daniel Esty of
Yale University thinks has turned into "a buzz-word largely devoid of
content". The biggest mistake, he reckons, is that it slides over the
difficult trade-offs between environment and development in the real world. He
is careful to note that there are plenty of cases where those goals are
linked-but also many where they are not: "Environmental and economic policy
goals are distinct, and the actions needed to achieve them are not the same."
No such thing as win-win
To insist that the
two are "impossible to separate", as the Brundtland commission claimed, is
nonsense. Even the World Bank now accepts that its much-trumpeted 1992 report
was much too optimistic. Kristalina Georgieva, the Bank's director for the
environment, echoes comments from various colleagues when she says: "I've
never seen a real win-win in my life. There's always somebody, usually an
elite group grabbing rents, that loses. And we've learned in the past decade
that those losers fight hard to make sure that technically elegant win-win
policies do not get very far." So would it be better to ditch the concept of
sustainable development altogether? Probably not. Even people with their feet
firmly planted on the ground think one aspect of it is worth salvaging: the
emphasis on the future. Nobody would accuse John Graham of jumping on green
bandwagons. As an official in President George Bush's Office of Management and
Budget, and previously as head of Harvard University's Centre for Risk
Analysis, he has built a reputation for evidence-based policymaking. Yet he
insists sustainable development is a worthwhile concept: "It's good therapy
for the tunnel vision common in government ministries, as it forces integrated
policymaking. In practical terms, it means that you have to take economic
cost-benefit trade-offs into account in environmental laws, and keep
environmental trade-offs in mind with economic development." Jose Maria
Figueres, a former president of Costa Rica, takes a similar view. "As a
politician, I saw at first hand how often policies were dictated by short-term
considerations such as elections or partisan pressure. Sustainability is a
useful template to align short-term policies with medium- to long-term goals."
It is not only
politicians who see value in saving the sensible aspects of sustainable
development. Achim Steiner, head of the International Union for the
Conservation of Nature, the world's biggest conservation group, puts it this
way: "Let's be honest: greens and businesses do not have the same objective,
but they can find common ground. We look for pragmatic ways to save species.
From our own work on the ground on poverty, our members-be they bird watchers
or passionate ecologists-have learned that 'sustainable use' is a better way
to conserve." Sir Robert Wilson, boss of Rio Tinto, a mining giant, agrees. He
and other business leaders say it forces hard choices about the future out
into the open: "I like this concept because it frames the trade-offs inherent
in a business like ours. It means that single-issue activism is simply not as
viable." Kenneth Arrow and Larry Goulder, two economists at Stanford
University, suggest that the old ideological enemies are converging: "Many
economists now accept the idea that natural capital has to be valued, and that
we need to account for ecosystem services. Many ecologists now accept that
prohibiting everything in the name of protecting nature is not useful, and so
are being selective." They think the debate is narrowing to the more empirical
question of how far it is possible to substitute natural capital with the
man-made sort, and specific forms of natural capital for one another.
The job for Johannesburg
So what can the
Johannesburg summit contribute? The prospects are limited. There are no big,
set-piece political treaties to be signed as there were at Rio. America's
acrimonious departure from the Kyoto Protocol, a UN treaty on climate change,
has left a bitter taste in many mouths. And the final pre-summit gathering,
held in early June in Indonesia, broke up in disarray. Still, the gathered
worthies could usefully concentrate on a handful of areas where international
co-operation can help deal with environmental problems. Those include
improving access for the poor to cleaner energy and to safe drinking water,
two areas where concerns about human health and the environment overlap. If
rich countries want to make progress, they must agree on firm targets and
offer the money needed to meet them. Only if they do so will poor countries be
willing to co-operate on problems such as global warming that rich countries
care about. That seems like a modest goal, but it just might get the world
thinking seriously about sustainability once again. If the Johannesburg summit
helps rebuild a bit of faith in international environmental co-operation, then
it will have been worthwhile. Minimising the harm that future economic growth
does to the environment will require the rich world to work hand in glove with
the poor world-which seems nearly unimaginable in today's atmosphere poisoned
by the shortcomings of Rio and Kyoto. To understand why this matters, recall
that great race between development and degradation. Mankind has stayed
comfortably ahead in that race so far, but can it go on doing so? The sheer
magnitude of the economic growth that is hoped for in the coming decades (see
chart) makes it seem inevitable that the clashes between mankind and nature
will grow worse. Some are now asking whether all this economic growth is
really necessary or useful in the first place, citing past advocates of the
simple life. "God forbid that India should ever take to industrialism after
the manner of the West... It took Britain half the resources of the planet to
achieve this prosperity. How many planets will a country like India require?",
Mahatma Gandhi asked half a century ago. That question encapsulated the bundle
of worries that haunts the sustainable-development debate to this day. Today,
the vast majority of Gandhi's countrymen are still living the simple life-full
of simple misery, malnourishment and material want. Grinding poverty, it turns
out, is pretty sustainable. If Gandhi were alive today, he might look at China
next door and find that the country, once as poor as India, has been
transformed beyond recognition by two decades of roaring economic growth. Vast
numbers of people have been lifted out of poverty and into middle-class
comfort. That could prompt him to reframe his question: how many planets will
it take to satisfy China's needs if it ever achieves profligate America's
affluence? One green group reckons the answer is three. The next section looks
at the environmental data that might underpin such claims. It makes for
alarming reading-though not for the reason that first springs to mind.
2. MAJOR NATIONS MULL SUMMIT PLAN
Yomiuri Shimbun
4 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/newse/20020704wo42.htm
In an effort to
ensure the success of the World Summit on Sustainable Development that will
open in Johannesburg in late August, government representatives of the most
powerful nations and South African President Thabo Mbeki, who will chair the
meeting, are likely to set up an unofficial coordination meeting, Foreign
Minister Yoriko Kawaguchi said Wednesday. After the final preparatory meeting
ended in Bali, Indonesia, in late June without setting an agenda or completing
other essential tasks for organizing the conference, the United Nations and
several participating governments expressed concerns over the upcoming
conference, which will be held to mark the 10th anniversary of the landmark
Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro
3. DUTCH GOVERNMENT DONATES R25M TO SUMMIT COFFERS
Business Day via
All Africa
3 July 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200207030057.html
THE Dutch
government has donated R25m to the World Summit on Sustainable Development to
be held in SA from late August to early September. This has given the project
a huge boost, bringing the amount raised to almost three-quarters of the
budgeted R550m needed for the summit. Most of the money will be spent on
"logistical preparations" such as venues, accommodation and transport. "We are
doing our best to ensure all stakeholders are satisfied with the preparations
for SA's biggest international event," said Johannesburg World Summit Company
(Jowsco) CEO Moss Mashishi. "This is the most important global event for the
Netherlands. We are in this together with SA, and we want to be involved,"
said Dutch ambassador Laetitia van den Assum. She said the summit would tackle
"global issues that shape the 21st century", and urged that "every individual
should a be part of it". The Dutch government will be heavily involved in some
of the parallel events hosted at the summit, especially those targeting water
supply and conservation. Mashishi said the summit was not just about
discussing problems of sustainable development, but to find solutions on "how
to do it". The Dutch donation is among several that have been made by
different countries in recent weeks. Jowsco still needs about R150m, and hopes
to raise the money in the next couple of weeks. Most of the money needed for
the summit has been donated by foreign governments and local and multinational
corporations. Hewlett-Packard has been the biggest sponsor so far, with a R40m
grant. Jowsco is expecting about 40000 delegates and world leaders. About
15000 people will be needed to run the summit, most of whom will be
volunteers.
4. DENMARK SETS OUT AMBITIOUS EU GREEN AGENDA
Environment News
Service
2 July 2002
Internet:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/oneworld/20020702/wl_oneworld/1032_1025645485
BRUSSELS, July 1,
2002 (ENS) - Denmark took over the European Union 's rotating six month
presidency Monday carrying a long and ambitious environment policy agenda for
its term directing the bloc's business. Key aims are to secure ministerial
agreements on carbon dioxide emission trading and rules for tracking and
labeling genetically modified foods. Other points of focus will be a draft
environmental liability directive and a new European Union chemicals policy.
Denmark takes over from a Spanish Presidency that has pursued a relatively
restrained environmental agenda, with national priorities lying elsewhere. The
Danes' own overriding political priority will be to complete accession
negotiations with European Union candidate countries with a view to enlarging
the EU in 2004. Sustainable development is one of the four other headline
priorities set out in a presidency program unveiled in Brussels today by
Foreign Minister Per Stig Møller, and green issues feature strongly. Danish
officials pick out an accord on emissions trading as a crucial target for
their first European Council meeting in October. "It's very important to get
an effective climate trading system to work for external and internal
reasons," one official told reporters today. An enthusiastic supporter of the
European Commission 's emissions trading proposal, Denmark will need to work
hard to overcome objections from Germany, the UK and Finland. The Commission
was disappointed with progress made by the Spaniards and will be pleased to
see the file move north to Denmark, which introduced Europe's first, albeit
modest, emissions trading system. Another goal for that first meeting is a
deal on traceability of genetically modified organisms and labeling rules, to
coincide with the entry into force of the newly revised deliberate release
directive. "Whether we like it or not, this will bring into focus the
moratorium [on new GM crop and food approvals] again," the official said.
Denmark's position on this - that new products cannot be commercialized before
traceability and labeling are in place - has survived its recent change of
government. Copenhagen is also eager to finalize talks on an EU liability
regime for environmental damage but has admitted that this is unlikely -
member states are still far from agreement on some basic points, while the
European parliament has only just begun its deliberations. An ongoing dispute
over which committee is leading the process could mean the parliament's
opinion is not delivered before the end of the Danish presidency on December
31.
As befits a member
of the "Nordic hardline" club on substance policy, Denmark will also make
action on chemicals a priority. The presidency has scheduled a public
ministerial debate on the issue for its December council to pressure the
Commission into proposing draft legislation following a white paper last year.
This looks unlikely, however, and Denmark may have to content itself with
brokering an agreement on rules for implementing the Rotterdam convention on
trade in hazardous substances.
One last major
issue that under EU timetabling rules must be settled during Denmark's watch
is the conciliation to thrash out new rules on waste electronics recycling and
hazardous substance restrictions. Governments have yet to reach a consensus in
response to the parliament's second reading on this law, and little movement
is expected before September. Other issues that should be advanced during the
presidency include access to environmental information under the Arhus
convention, emissions from pleasure craft and non-road mobile machinery, and
sulfur free fuels. An informal meeting of EU environment ministers on July 19
through 21 will discuss sustainable development in the run-up to the
Johannesburg summit which opens August 26.
The largest
European federation of environmental organizations, the Brussels based
European Environmental Bureau (EEB), submitted its wish list including the
EEB's Ten Green Tests, to the new Danish Presidency Monday. Among the EEB's
most important criteria for a successful Danish Presidency are: the
achievement of a "global deal" at the Johannesburg World Summit on Sustainable
Development; respect for the environment in the enlargement process;
initiating major reform of the Common Agriculture Policy; progress on
chemicals legislation; adoption of minimum standards for taxation of energy
products; an effective system for environmental liability. On sustainable
development, to fully include the environmental dimension in the Lisbon
process and to further environmental policy integration; to ensure
traceability, labeling and liability rules for the use of genetically modified
organisms; improved public access to environmental information; improvement of
the environmental performance of packaging.
EEB Secretary
General John Hontelez said, "Knowing that the Danish government is eager to
play a decisive role in developing a progressive chemicals policy for the EU,
we very much regret the delays announced by the Commission in presenting its
proposals for a new chemicals policy, to protect European citizens and their
environment from hazardous substances. "However," said Hontelez, "the EEB
does appreciate the Danish environment minister's support and promised
participation in an EEB initiated conference to discuss this policy to be held
in Copenhagen this autumn." The Ten Tests will serve at the end of the Danish
Presidency to assess its achievements. The EEB expressed disappointment in the
outgoing Spanish Presidency saying, "For sustainable development, Barcelona
was a failure." "The Spanish Presidency also drew the attention of
environmental organizations all over Europe for its stubbornness in insisting
on EU support for Spain's own National Hydrological Plan, despite
unprecedented protests in Spain and demonstrations around Europe over the
scheme - a gigantic water transfer plan that will have a major, negative
impact on biodiversity and the environment, and which is likely to contravene
EU water legislation."
It was "clearly
astonishing," said the EEB, that within Spain itself, no dialogue at all took
place between environmental organizations and the government on issues related
to the Presidency.
5. GLOBAL FORUM WILL GO AHEAD DESPITE BUDGET CUTS
SABC News
2 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.sabcnews.com/world/summit/0,1009,37674,00.html
The budget for the
Global Forum -- the meeting of civil society organisations at the World Summit
on Sustainable Development (WSSD) - has been slashed in half, but the
gathering will go ahead. The Global Forum is an opportunity for
non-governmental and civil society organisations of the world to meet and
sketch their vision of how global poverty can be erased while still protecting
the environment and natural resources of the world. With about 40 000
delegates expected to attend the gathering, it will be the largest of the WSSD
meetings. We have had a few jitters around funding, says the spokesperson
for the Global Forum secretariat, Muzi Khumalo, "We received a lot of pledges
from potential donors, but very few have honoured their word. But, now we have
some commitments in writing, and we are more confident." The South African
government has committed itself to ensuring that the Global Forum happens, but
it has not yet publicly put any money on the table. The Johannesburg World
Summit Company (Jowsco) - set up by the government to deal with the logistical
preparations for the Summit - is also trying to help the Global Forum
secretariat with its fundraising efforts. Khumalo says the Forum has slashed
its budget from R400 million to R200 million - and that it plans to reduce the
amount of space it has secured for the gathering and will be cutting back on
the amount of facilities it will offer delegates. Jowsco has also taken over
some logistical preparations for the Global Forum - like the registration of
delegates and provision of transport and accommodation for them. Political
problems have been resolved Preparations for the Global Forum were initially
delayed by political and ideological differences among the South African
non-governmental and civil society organisations charged with organising the
gathering. While the political problems seem to have been dealt with, local
and international funding agencies are apparently still reluctant to commit
money to the Forum. Until now, there has been real concern among organisers of
the WSSD that the Global Forum may not happen. "We have no idea what is
happening there," comments one official. Khumalo emphatically dismisses
concerns that the forum may not happen. "It is happening," says Khumalo, "We
are a bit behind on logistical preparations but our technical advisers assure
us we will be ready." The big logistical challenge facing the Global Forum is
getting the venue ready in time for the gathering. Presently, the venue Nasrec,
is an exhibition centre and it must be upgraded to be able to host a
conference. Khumalo is also confident that enough preparatory work has been
done to ensure the Forum will be able to come-up with a policy document on
sustainable development and that it will be able to contribute to the final
declaration of the WSSD
6. SCIENTISTS IN DEBATE ON SAVING WORLD
EDP24
2 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.edp24.co.uk/content/News/NewsStory.asp?Brand=EDPONLINE&Category=NEWS&ItemId=NOED02+Jul+2002+22%3A11%3A10%3A070
Scores of Europe's
most eminent scientists gathered in Norwich today. And the main topic on the
agenda was the little matter of saving the world. Less than a week after a
report said the human race was using the earth's resources at 20pc beyond its
renewable capacity, they got together to see what could be done. The Science
for Sustainable Development conference at the University of East Anglia, which
ends tomorrow, Wednesday, is a forum for scientists to add to the debate about
our planet's future.
Its conclusions
will go forward to the Government, which is strongly represented at the
gathering by the likes of chief scientific adviser Prof David King - a UEA
lecturer in chemical physics from 1966 to 1974. They will then form part of
the Government's approach at the United Nations World Summit on Sustainable
Development in Johannesburg, South Africa, in September - a follow-up to
summits at Kyoto and Rio. Prof Trevor Davies, dean of the School of
Environmental Sciences at the UEA, said: "It is very important. If all
countries adopted the West's way of life we would need three or four planets
to sustain us. We only have one.
"We want to make
sure that the big questions which are challenging us are on the agenda in
Johannesburg."
7. MICROCREDITS' HELP ERADICATE POVERTY
Yomiuri Shimbun
2 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/newse/20020702wo72.htm
Increasing poverty
and expanding populations in developing countries are believed to be one of
the primary causes of environmental damage from practices such as excessive
logging. Thus, eliminating poverty is a top priority for preserving the
environment. In fact, the eradication of poverty is the main item on the
agenda of the World Summit on Sustainable Development to be held in
Johannesburg in August. Large-scale bilateral financial aid for developing
countries is one possible solution to the problem. However, small loans have
also benefited many who suffer from poverty. In a village called Ramsing,
about 40 kilometers south of Dhaka, a 40-year-old housewife, named Sairun,
lives with her three children. Twelve years ago, she bought a dairy cow with a
grant of 50 dollars. Every morning, the cow produced milk, which her husband
then sold at market. The couple has since expanded the business, and currently
has eight cows and a field in which to cultivate feed. "I had never lived in
a 'regular' house. But now, our house has three rooms and it is even resistant
to storms. Also, our children are studying at school. I really enjoy working,"
Sairun said. The initial capital for Sairun's business came from Grameen
Bank, which has offered "microcredits" of 200 dollars or less a year to
poverty-stricken people in the area in an attempt to help them support
themselves. Muhammad Yunus, 62, a former professor in the economics
department at Chittagong University, started Grameen Bank in 1976 with 27
dollars of his own funds. The business was later authorized by the government
of Bangladesh. Another villager runs a successful sewing business after
buying a sewing machine with microcredit. In another case, a villager bought
cellular phones and made a profit by renting them to other villagers.
Microcredits have revitalized the entire village. Microcredits are
advantageous because they support those who suffer from poverty directly,
without the intervention of central or regional governments. The U.N.
Development Program has adopted the Grameen model and it has spread to 73
countries. On the level of global politics, however, U.S. President George W.
Bush has argued that providing financial resources to undemocratic governments
does not benefit impoverished people in the country in question. Developing
countries, in response, have insisted that average life expectancy in
sub-Saharan countries is 30 years shorter than it is in developed countries,
and that this continuing disparity represents a mass slaughter by developed
countries. The International Conference on Financing for Development was held
this March in Monterrey, Mexico. At the conference, the issue of providing
financial aid to developing countries provoked heated discussion. Globally,
1.2 billion people live on less than 1 dollars a day. At least 1.1 billion
people have no access to safe water. In the least developed countries, one in
every five infants dies before celebrating his or her first birthday. Since
the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, there have been repeated worldwide
discussions of the need to eradicate poverty. Poverty and the anger it
provokes toward rich, developed countries are sometimes linked with terrorist
acts, such as last autumn's attacks on the United States. But developed
countries are concerned about the unclear distribution of financial aid in
developing countries. They worry that resources might not be used
appropriately, even if developed countries increase the amount of aid they
provide. The last preparatory committee for the Johannesburg summit met in
Bali in June, but the meeting failed to breach the gap between developed and
developing countries. Developed countries have asked developing countries to
take action to ensure the effective use of financial aid. The action plan
adopted at the Earth Summit in 1992 addressed the issue of poverty; however,
the plan did not include an actual framework for the assignment of financial
aid. Although, the issue of poverty appears in the text of every
U.N.-sponsored conference, the two sides of this debate are so divided that
the issue has not yet been settled. What is the most effective method of
supporting developing countries? This question will be asked once more at the
Johannesburg summit. Meanwhile, it seems that the model developed in
Bangladesh offers one possible solution.
8. WORLD CONSERVATION UNION PREPARES SA FOR SUMMIT
Zimbabwe Standard
(Harare) via All Africa
2 July 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200207020692.html
The forthcoming
World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) to be held in Johannesburg,
South Africa, in August is being viewed as a multi-stakeholder high-level
forum that will shape the environment agenda through the regional and
international multi-stakeholder dialogues. It is at this summit where
individual governments, companies, international organisations, civil society
and other stakeholders will take specific positions in relation to poverty,
environment, and sustainable development issues in Africa and the whole world.
Considering this summit is taking place in southern Africa, IUCN-the World
Conservation Union-has seen it imperative to ensure that the civil society in
southern Africa meaningfully contributes to both the preparations for and the
deliberations at the Summit. Participation of civil society groups is
sometimes constrained by a limited capacity and lack of information. IUCN has
therefore supported the participation of the region's civil society in key
Preparatory Committee Meetings (PrepCom) for the Summit. "There was a clear
recognition that civil society contribution to the summit's preparatory
process was constrained," said Dr Yemi Katerere, the regional director for
IUCN in southern Africa. "IUCN is therefore ensuring effective contribution by
existing civil society networks in the summit's preparatory processes in order
to raise Africa's position on conservation, poverty and sustainable
development both at the PrepComs and the summit." Katerere pointed out that
given the importance of the summit in determining the direction for
sustainable development, IUCN realised the need to mobilise civil society in
the region ahead of the fourth and final preparatory committee meeting. First,
IUCN took some representatives from the civil society in southern Africa to a
meeting in Dakar, Senegal in May. The purpose of this meeting was to discuss
the main issues of the summit with about 50 Anglophone and Francophone experts
from Africa on the basis of some expert papers that were produced by IUCN.
Fannie Mutepfa, the Programme Co-ordinator from Zimbabwe Regional Environment
Organisation (Zero), an IUCN member, stressed the role of civil society as she
saw it during the Dakar meeting. "We assist in translating the global
agreements and strategies into local action, and ensure that the voices and
needs of local and grassroots communities are heard and taken into account
when drafting global agenda for action." Mutepfa noted that it is important
that civil society documents and brings to the attention of leaders the
experiences from the field. "This is critical in informing the agenda for the
future. "It is up to us-in consultation with national governments-to create
the awareness on WSSD at local levels and consult the grassroots communities
on their vision for Sustainable Development."
9. ENVIRONMENT ESSENTIAL TO NEPAD'S LIFE
The East African
Standard (Nairobi) via All Africa
2 July 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200207020300.html
Africa is
undergoing a major transformation as the Organisation of African Unity is
changing into the African Union (AU), a more integration-oriented institution.
At the same time, African Heads of State have launched a major initiative, the
New Partnership for Africa's Development (Nepad), to put the region on the
track of sustainable development. What critical role does the African
Ministerial Conference on the Environment (AMCEN) intend to play within this
new environment and the broader context of sustainable development? How will
AMCEN influence the outcomes of the World Summit on Sustainable Development in
line with its priorities? How will Africa's environmental perspectives be
fully integrated and taken into account in the discussions in Johannesburg?
Barely two months before the WSSD, African Ministers and experts are coming
together in Kampala next week to discuss these key questions and consequently
deliberate on the strategic involvement of AMCEN in the emerging initiatives
in Africa and to shape a new vision for the Conference. A vision that should
clearly indicate the environmental issues and problems of the continent, the
instruments that are needed to address these problems and specific proposals
for practical action to be undertaken at all levels. AMCEN, in operation since
1985, has attained modest achievements particularly with respect to provision
of regional leadership on issues pertaining to consensus building and regional
environment issues. However, the Conference has not risen to the challenge of
building the much-needed strategic partnerships with the new global and
regional initiatives. To date also, AMCEN has not enjoyed a broad
cross-sectoral support at the national, sub-regional and regional levels.
AMCEN needs to position itself strategically within the framework of new
regional institutional developments such as the AU, Nepad and, most
importantly, prepare for the implementation of activities related to the
outcome of the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD). In this
context, the objective of the ninth session is to provide a platform for the
environment ministers to critically analyse the AMCEN in light of the
perspectives offered in the context of WSSD and the major developments
occurring in the region. Of special significance is the key question on the
links between environment, poverty reduction and economic development. In
particular, the conference will discuss means of effectively interacting with
the African Union and New Partnership for Africa's Development. Ministers are
expected to look at, among other things, the need for institutional linkages
with the Secretariat and the Heads of State, Implementation Committee of the
Nepad, the Commissions of the AU and the sub-regional economic communities.
Nepad process has integrated the full development of its environment
initiative. Resources mobilised through the GEF by UNEP are being used to
support the work of a steering committee. This committee is expected to
finalise the draft environment initiative of the Nepad to be tabled before the
ninth session. The conference will be looking back over the past 17 years to
evaluate its performance in the face of pending environmental challenges and
emerging threats such as growing population, poverty, natural disasters, wars,
the unabated burden of national debt and diseases. Other challenges include
introducing clean technologies, enforcing environmental agreements, empowering
of local communities and securing access to the international markets for
their goods and services.
10. 'WE WON'T SOLVE CAPITALISM EVILS'
The Post (Lusaka)
via All Africa
1 July 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200207010104.html
WE are not going to
solve the general evils of capitalism or unfair trade at the World Summit for
Sustainable Development (WSSD), said South Africa's environment minister Vally
Moosa last week. Addressing Southern African Development Community (SADC)
region editors at a media conference on the coming WSSD slated for
Johannesburg, Moosa said while the issues of the world economic order and the
unfair trade between the developed and developing countries would come up, it
would not be possible to resolve them. "It is true that these evils will not
be immediately solved at the summit, but the WSSD will help address those
other pressing issues which we can solve," he said. Moosa said the world was
faced with several problems which would not all be solved at the much
publicised WSSD but there was need for the developing countries not to give up
their fight. "We have several challenges. We have got one single country, the
USA, ruling the world, yes this is unfair," Moosa said. "The same US wants to
dump genetically modified crops in Africa but we have a problem, our people
are dying from hunger. The only way we can fight this is as a club (unity)."
Moosa cited as among other major challenges, the developed countries' failure
to give Third World nations access to their markets. He cited the issue of
subsidies to farmers in developed countries as adversely affecting the
developing nations' agriculture sectors while donor aid was not helping the
situation. "In fact a recent study has shown that for every dollar that
developing countries receive they lose US $14 billion in trade barriers," said
Moosa, quoting the Time magazine. However, Moosa expressed confident that some
sound implementation plans would be reached at the world summit slated for
Johannesburg in August to help the nations in the world attain the global
targets of halving poverty levels by 2015, including access to basic education
and water. But civil society leader and researcher Oupa Lehulere, commenting
on the minister's statement expressed concern that very little tangible
results would be achieved as long as enforcement and implementation of the
resolutions was not sound. "To what extent does the United Nations have
jurisdiction over the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, we know
that it has none," Lehulere said. "Whatever will come out of the summit has
been mortgaged to what the IMF and the World Bank will decide." Lehulere said
his assumption was based on past experiences. "Fine, Japan may have finally
ratified the Kyoto Treaty but the USA is likely to stay out of most of these
treaties and will continue polluting while trading this off with other
activities," said Lehulere.
11. U.S. LINKS
AID, ACCOUNTABILITY IN HELPING DEVELOPING COUNTRIES SECRETARY O'NEILL
ADDRESSES UN COUNCIL MEETING
Washington File
1 July 2002
Internet:
http://usinfo.state.gov/topical/global/develop/02070102.htm
United Nations --
The right combination of aid and accountability from both rich and poor
nations can accelerate the availability of clean water, education, and health
care throughout Africa and the developing world, U.S. Treasury Secretary Paul
O'Neill said July 1. In a speech to a high-level meeting of the Economic and
Social Council (ECOSOC) of the United Nations, O'Neill discussed President
Bush's "Millennium Challenge Account" emphasizing that if nations work
together, global poverty can be eradicated "not in the next generation, but
right now." "I feel great cause for optimism," O'Neill said. "In the year
2002, I believe we are seeing a breakthrough for human development around the
world. From the UN conference in Monterrey this March, through the G-8 summit
in Kananaskis last week, a consensus has been forming among the world's
economic and political leaders." The ECOSOC meeting, which is being held July
1-3 at UN headquarters, was planned to help developing countries focus on
health and education policies and amplify their call for more international
aid. Secretary General Kofi Annan told the opening session that ECOSOC must
ensure that there is an integrated, results-oriented, systematic follow-up
process to pledges made during international development conferences. "Let me
stress again: the focus from now on must be implementing the commitments that
have been made," he said.
"ECOSOC must give
life to the guiding motto of the United Nations in the 21st Century: Putting
people at the center of everything we do," the secretary general said. The
"Millennium Challenge Account" will increase U.S. assistance to developing
countries by 50 percent over the next three years, O'Neill said. The
initiative will result in a $5,000 million annual increase by 2006. The
account will fund initiatives that support economic growth in countries that
govern justly, invest in people, and encourage economic freedom.
O'Neill said that
the United States is currently developing a small number of criteria for
gauging the leadership and commitment of each nation and determining which
will receive the funds. "Too often, aid has been sustenance for bureaucracy,
rather than investment in people," the secretary said. Sometimes, he said,
donors are at fault, often prescribing western solutions for problems that
only local leaders can solve, and giving aid without setting standards for
accountability or defining clear measures for success.
Using education as
an example of how to gauge "real results," the secretary said that "for
primary education we should measure the number of 10-year-olds who have full
functional ability to read, write, and compute. That's different than
measuring how many children are purported to be in school." Clean water,
primary education, and fighting HIV/AIDS are the areas where aid and
investments can make a difference in Africa, O'Neill said. "We can help local
and national efforts to bring clean water to many towns and villages fairly
quickly," the Treasury secretary said. "Working together, we can make an
enormous difference in a very short time at a reasonable, achievable cost." In
the area of primary education, one starting place would be books, he said. "It
would cost only an estimated $18 million per year to buy one textbook for each
of four core subjects for every primary student in Uganda, for example. That
is a small step but a manageable one, and it would make a big difference in
the learning environment for those students, O'Neill said. No area needs
investment more than health care, especially in fighting AIDS, O'Neill said.
"Prevention of further HIV contagion is the utmost priority, especially to
keep the next generation of newborns free from disease."
Key participants in
the meeting of the 54-country ECOSOC include national ministers of health and
welfare, heads of the World Bank and World Trade Organization, as well as
officials of international agencies, including the UN Children's Fund
(UNICEF), UN Development Program (UNDP), UN Population Fund (UNFPA), World
Health Organization (WHO), and UNAIDS. A ministerial declaration giving policy
guidance to the UN agencies and member states will be issued on July 3.
12. UN WARNS OF HOT AIR AT JO'BURG SUMMIT
Mail & Guardian
1 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.mg.co.za/Content/l3.jsp?a=13&o=5459
A top United
Nations envoy on Monday called on member nations to reach a viable agreement
on sustainable development at the upcoming Earth Summit in Johannesburg. "If
there is no agreement on a plan of action, if there are neither type II
(concrete) results nor political statements, the World Summit on Sustainable
Development will be a failure," said Jan Pronk, UN Secretary General Kofi
Annan's special representative for summit preparations. Pronk made his
comments at the start of a two-day pre-summit conference attended by 500
French politicians, business leaders and members of non-governmental
organizations in the western city of Rennes. The UN World Summit on
Sustainable Development, or Earth Summit, is due to be held in Johannesburg
from August 26 to September 4. The conference, a follow-up to the Earth Summit
in Rio de Janeiro 10 years ago, is aimed at coordinating economic growth plans
and environmental protection in order to guard against global depletion of
natural resources.
About 65 000 people
are expected to attend the meeting, including some 70 or 80 heads of state,
though most have not yet committed themselves. Pronk, who is also Dutch
environment minister, urged heads of state to attend to lend the conference
more political weight, and warned against the adoption of empty texts or
additions to official documents in preparation.
The final
preparatory conference in Bali, Indonesia, ended in disarray last month after
delegates failed to agree on key goals.
French Prime
Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin lent his support to Pronk, telling those
assembled in Rennes: "We don't have the right to fail." "France wants to take
action so that Johannesburg is a success," Raffarin added, noting that Paris
was ready to boost its financial aid to developing countries. France currently
contributes 0,32% of its gross national product in development aid, compared
with the international goal of getting each industrialised nation to commit
0,7% of GNP to aid efforts. - Sapa-AFP
13. PRESS
BRIEFING BY SECRETARY-GENERAL'S SPECIAL ADVISER ON MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT
GOALS
United Nations
1 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.un.org/News/briefings/docs/2002/sachsbrf.doc.htm
"We need a real partnership
between the rich and poor countries, and a real operational strategy" to
address the needs of developing nations, the Secretary-General's Special
Adviser on the Millennium Development Goals, Jeffrey Sachs, told
correspondents at a Headquarters press briefing this afternoon. He stressed
the close connection between those goals and the subject of the high-level
segment of the Economic and Social Council, which opened today. [During the
Council session, which continues through 26 July, ministers and high-level
officials from all over the world will consider the role of human resources
development, particularly in the areas of health and education, as an
essential factor in the development process. In preparation for the World
Summit on Sustainable Development, which is set to open in Johannesburg next
month, the participants are also expected to address follow-up to the recent
Monterrey Conference on Financing for Development.] The Millennium Goals,
which were set by the international community during the United Nations
Millennium Summit in 2000, represented the global political commitment to
dramatically reduce hunger and poverty and fight pandemic diseases, including
HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria, said Mr. Sachs. It was impossible to
achieve economic growth with populations succumbing to epidemics and with
children not finishing school, for they were not developing skills required in
today's global marketplace. Thus, human development goals in health and
education were vital in achieving the goals of economic growth. Today, he
said, he had taken part in the first meeting of the Chairs of various task
forces of the Millennium Project. That was a project under the auspices of
the Secretary-General and the
United Nations
Development Programme (UNDP)
Administrator, designed to make an analytical assessment of how the world
could actually achieve those goals. He had also been meeting with leading
scholars and practitioners in those areas to initiate the Project, which over
the next few years would "try to make a road map, as specific and detailed as
possible, to get the job done."
The reason today's meeting was
so important and the Millennium Project was needed was that the problems
facing developing countries were not taking care of themselves. The last 10
years had been a dire period from the point of view of the world's poorest
countries. With spreading pandemics of life-threatening diseases and
deteriorating living standards, they were falling further and further behind.
At least 100 million children were not attending school, even at a primary
level. "We are just losing lives now, at a shocking rate", he said. The
question today in the
Economic and Social
Council was what to do
about it. The answer was that it could not be business as usual, because
business as usual could not pull the poorest countries out of the terrible
downward spiral they were in. Strategies to deal with the problem did exist,
he stressed. For example, between 20,000 and 25,000 lives around the world
could be saved every day by applying existing, standard health interventions
for impoverished people who currently did not have access to them. That would
be affordable, with assistance from rich countries. Such strategies needed to
be assessed in critical areas of human resource development areas, such as
health, water and sanitation, and education. Asked about how specific the road
map would be, Mr. Sachs said that the Millennium Project was mandated by the
Secretary-General to try to assess a way forward that could actually work.
The road map would talk about areas of neglect, where the problems stemmed
either from local or international governance, or where the need for financial
assistance was essential. He added that it would be an international effort
involving leading international scholars who liked to "tell it like it is", as
well as participants from civil society, non-governmental organizations
(NGOs), the business sector and the United Nations agencies. "But we're going
to tell it very straight", he said.
The project would have at least
12 outputs, he replied to a further question. There would be 10 separate
studies on parts of the Millennium Development Goals, for example on lack of
access to water, on the disease pandemics of HIV/AIDS, malaria and
tuberculosis, and on the question of hunger. There would also be an overall
synthesis volume delivered to the Secretary-General, while the Human
Development Report for 2003 would focus on the Millennium Development Goals.
As for the time-frame, he said, "we're off and running". Those goals were to
be met by 2015 -- and he was intent on standing there and cutting the ribbon.
That was a serious world commitment, and he did not have years and years to
study. Fortunately, there were existing studies from the United Nations and
other organizations, so he would not have to reinvent the wheel. He said he
would evolve practical suggestions, best practices, and illustrations of what
was working and what was not, as soon as possible. The project would run for
three years with plenty of outputs in the months ahead. Practical papers
would continually be produced, not to sit on the shelf, but to try to move the
practice forward. Asked about the effect of war on HIV/AIDS, he said it was
most surely a risk factor or a co-factor in the spread of disease. When war
had stopped in Uganda at the end of the 1980s, for example, that was the first
time a national policy could be put in place that led to a dramatic drop of
HIV prevalence. Soldiers and mercenaries in the midst of conflict and
surrounded by displaced populations were often transmitters of the disease.
So that would have to be looked at. In the general area of poverty
alleviation, conflict was a major factor and an objective of the task force
that he himself would head. All Member States had signed on to the Millennium
Development Goals with their respective obligations, he replied to a further
question. The rich countries were committed to being real partners of the
poor, including providing financial assistance and helping to create open
markets that made it possible for poor countries to grow. Poor countries were
committed to doing what was necessary on the ground to make those goals
achievable -- because if domestic governance did not work, there was no chance
for success, no matter how high the level of international cooperation. His
main role was diagnostic. He was also involved in implementation, for example
working with governments to help them "scale up" their health interventions.
Responding to a question about the different approaches to rich and poor
countries, he said he was trying to assess the extent to which barriers faced
by the poorest countries were due to insufficient donor assistance or lack of
access to rich-country markets. The poor countries were being asked about how
much domestic policies could be improved, or the degree to which corruption or
discrimination against various ethnic groups were blocking success. He said he
was trying to disentangle the story. It was not a simple story, as different
regions were suffering for different reasons, and different poor countries
faced different barriers. Sometimes it was terrible leadership; other times
it was extreme geographical isolation, or very difficult physical or
ecological conditions. So he was trying to "pull apart" the various factors
causing some countries to fall very far behind in meeting the Millennium
Goals. A correspondent asked whether it was predominantly the rich countries
that needed to pull back their trade barriers and provide aid, or the poor
countries that needed to "rejigger" their State-run economies. Mr. Sachs said
"we are not on a good path right now for a significant part of the world --
there are some real pockets of extreme distress". He highlighted sub-Saharan
Africa, parts of Asia, particularly Central Asia, and parts of Latin America.
The news had not been good for many years in those regions. "We are so far
behind where we could be in alleviating international suffering", he said.
Action would have to be taken on a number of fronts simultaneously -– better
governance internally, fairer trade, and more financial assistance. Turning to
the Johannesburg Summit on Sustainable Development, he said he was worried
because there was not yet a "clear win". For example, the level of
international cooperation on some key issues was still unclear. The
Conference was important, as it was really the first major meeting of its kind
in 10 years on sustainable development, and "we're not doing well on
sustainable development". Not only were the development prospects not looking
good for some of the poorest places of the world, but the sustainability of
the world's life-support systems had been neglected in the last 10 years. If
the Summit produced nothing because rich, powerful countries did not commit to
do their part, that could be a terrible blow for the world. Hopefully, he
said, it would be possible in the coming weeks to make some substantial
commitments with the real weight of political leaders behind them. The
Secretary-General had identified five priority areas -- water, energy, health,
agriculture and biodiversity. Those were five critical areas and he was
looking for real initiatives by rich countries. Asked to describe what he
meant by "rich" and "poor" countries, he said the rich nations were the
high-income countries, as classified by the World Bank, or the 22 donor
country-members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
(OECD). Those were the United States and Canada, Western Europe and Japan,
with an average of $25,000 per capita right now. When those countries closed
their markets that was the biggest punishment of all for the poorest countries
hoping to stay alive and make it on their own. By poor countries, he went on,
he had meant the low-income countries, of roughly $750 per capita or below,
depending on the classification being used. He added that he was most
concerned about the poorest of the poor –- the so-called least developed
countries -- which tended to have average incomes of $1 a day or less. The
poverty in those countries was so extreme that millions of people were dying
each year. While the rich countries had escaped from the crises of absolute
poverty and enjoyed a life expectancy of around 80 years, in the least
developed countries people were dying decades younger, with children still
dying in huge numbers from preventable disease. Studies showed that it was
possible for the whole world to enjoy improved living conditions, he said, and
that the rich countries, if they made a modest effort, could make a huge
difference in helping the poor escape from the trap of poverty. But so far
that effort had not been commensurate with the need.
14. ECOSOC PRESIDENT URGES INVESTMENTS, MORE FOREIGN AID IN EDUCATION AND
HEALTH
United Nations
1 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=4088&Cr=ECOSOC&Cr1=
1 July –
The current
high-level segment of the United Nations Economic and Social Council should
centre on building on the achievements of previous UN global conferences and
work towards making an upcoming summit on sustainable development a success,
the President of ECOSOC, as the UN Council is known, said today. Speaking at
a news conference at UN Headquarters in New York, Ambassador Ivan imonovic of
Croatia said that the current part of ECOSOC's annual session, which was
attended by senior government ministers and the heads of various international
agencies, aimed to improve the health and education policies in developing
countries and build momentum towards more international aid. He stressed that
the main message of the meeting was that investments in human resources in
health and education were productive investments, noting that for example, a
$1 investment in health led to $7 in economic output. The three-day segment
was also taking place in an extremely important environment, Ambassador
imonovic said, noting that it came after the International Conference on
Financing for Development, held in March in Monterrey, Mexico, and before the
World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg, South Africa, later
this year. Furthermore, five of the Millennium Development Goals agreed to by
world leaders at the 2000 Millennium Summit were directly related to health
and education. In order to achieve them, he said, estimates called for a
doubling of official development assistance (ODA), to about $100 billion per
year. In echoing that theme, Secretary-General Kofi Annan's Special Adviser
on the Millennium Development Goals, Prof. Jeffery Sachs, told reporters that
a real partnership between the rich and poor countries was needed in order to
achieve the goals in health and education, which were vital for poverty
reduction. With spreading pandemics of life-threatening diseases over the
past decade and deteriorating living standards, the world's poorest countries
were falling further and further behind, while a least 100 million children
were not attending school, even at a primary level, said Professor Sachs, the
director of The Earth Institute at Columbia University in New York. "We are
just losing lives now, at a shocking rate," he said. "The question today is
what to do about it, and the answer is: It can't be business as usual, because
business as usual is not going to pull the poorest countries out of the
terrible downward spiral that find themselves in. We need a real partnership
between the rich and poor countries, and a real operational strategy for
getting out of this mess."
15. PEOPLE MUST BE CENTRE OF UN'S WORK, ANNAN TELLS OPENING OF ECOSOC SESSION
United Nations
1 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=4080&Cr=ECOSOC&Cr1=
1 July –
The
international community must seize the unparalleled opportunities offered by
the globalizing world in order to achieve greater equity through more
sustained and balanced growth, especially in Africa, United Nations
Secretary-General Kofi Annan told the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC)
today as it opened its annual session at UN Headquarters in New York.
Referring to recent and upcoming UN conferences dealing with international
development aid and sustainable development, the Secretary-General said that
"the challenge before this Council is to ensure an integrated follow-up
process" to the meetings. "The process must be results-oriented and
systematic, and it must avoid duplication or fragmentation," he said in an
address to the high-level segment of ECOSOC, a three-day meeting of senior
government officials and heads of international agencies. "Let me stress
again: the focus from now on must be implementing the commitments that have
been made." The Secretary-General noted that the high-level segment was
focusing on the contribution of human resources development to the process of
development in general, and that health and education, in particular, were the
"twin pillars on which we must build the well-being of individuals, and thus a
more healthy, equitable and peaceful tomorrow." "They are mutually
reinforcing: a healthy individual has a better chance of achieving his or her
potential; educated individuals have a better chance of remaining healthy, and
contributing to the health and development of their family, their community,
and ultimately their country," Mr. Annan said. As for the global economic
situation, which was suffering its biggest setback in a decade, Mr. Annan said
that poor economies were paying the highest price for the downturn and warned
that only limited improvement was foreseen in the developing world for this
year. "The statistics do not adequately capture the human suffering and misery
generated at the level of the individual and the family," he said. While the
past year offered the UN many challenges, the Secretary-General said, and the
year ahead will again put the world body to new tests, its overall agenda and
the plan of action for ECOSOC remained the Millennium Declaration – a
blueprint for improving the lives of people everywhere in the 21st century.
"ECOSOC must give life to the guiding motto of the United Nations in the 21st
century: putting people at the centre of everything we do," Mr. Annan said.
"It must make the implementation of the Millennium Declaration its first
priority."
Among those also
speaking at this morning's opening session were Ivan imonovic , President of
the Council, Horst Köhler , Managing Director of the International Monetary
Fund (IMF), Rubens Ricupero Secretary-General of the UN Conference on Trade
and Development (UNCTAD) and Mamphela Ramphele, Managing Director of the World
Bank.
For more
information please visit:
http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2002/sgsm8294.doc.htm
16. BRAZIL IN BID TO SAVE GREEN SUMMIT FROM DISASTER
Independent
30 June 2002
Internet:
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/environment/story.jsp?story=310575
Brazil, long
castigated as an environmental villain, last week launched an extraordinary
bid to save this year's Earth Summit from disaster. The country's president,
Fernando Henrique Cardoso, held three days of talks with political leaders and
environmental experts from around the world in a last-minute attempt to rescue
the summit that opens in Johannesburg in August.
The meeting was
officially billed as a "passing of the torch'' from Goran Persson the Prime
Minister of Sweden (which hosted the first Earth Summit in Stockholm in 1972)
to President Cardoso (the second was held here 10 years ago) and on to
President Thabo Mbeki of South Africa, who will take the chair in
Johannesburg. In fact negotiations behind the scenes led to the formation of
an alliance between the three leaders and John Prescott to lobby world leaders
in what the Deputy Prime Minister called "a race against time''. President
Mbeki flew straight from the meeting to the G8 Summit in Canada to try to
persuade the leaders of the world's richest countries to get behind the
summit. Earlier this month, the last preparatory negotiations, in Bali,
Indonesia, ended in almost total failure as a result of the intransigence of
the Untied States, backed by Australia, Japan and Canada. Top UN officials
here warned that if the Johannesburg summit failed, the world's entire
international negotiating system would be at risk.
President Cardoso's
initiative marks an big turnaround for Brazil, which was the most outspoken
advocate of environmental destruction at the first summit in Stockholm,
arguing that pollution should be welcomed because it accompanied economic
growth. The country has been one of the main targets of environmental
campaigners because of the felling of tropical rain forests in Amazonia. The
President admitted that his country's previous stance had been "terrible'',
"abominable'' and "insane''.
Jonathan Lash, the
president of the prestigious World Resources Institute, described the
initiative as "the best hope for saving the summit in Johannesburg, and also
the last hope''
17. 'DEVELOPMENT HAS MEANT DEPRIVING POOR PEOPLE OF THEIR RESOURCES'
The Post (Lusaka)
via All Africa
30 June 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200206300103.html
DEVELOPMENT has too
often meant depriving the world's poor of their resources, Dr Wolfgang Sachs
of Germany's Wuppertal Institute has observed. Launching a memorandum entitled
the Jo-Burg Memo for the coming World Summit for Sustainable Development
(WSSD) slated for Johannesburg in September, Dr Sachs called for a
redefinition of development that would ensure equitable distribution of wealth
and social justice. He observed that there had been excessive exploitation of
natural resources by only 20 per cent of the world's rich population while the
rest of the global population were being denied access to their resources.
"Too often, development has meant depriving the poor of their resources to
sustainable livelihood for the benefit of the rich who are exploiting
resources even beyond their reach," he said. Dr Sachs said as the WSSD was
coming 10 years after the Earth Summit held in Rio de Jeneiro in 1992, there
was need to take stock of the status of the implementation of the resolution
branded Agenda 21. However, Dr Sachs noted that it was a matter of concern
that very little had been achieved or implemented, especially at a time when
humanity had in the last 25 years outstripped the Earth's carrying capacity
ecologically. "It is a challenge for Johannesburg to move beyond Rio," said Dr
Sachs, noting that it was further regrettable that the WSSD summit seemed to
focus more on development rather than the environment. "It should be noted
that equity among nations can't be achieved without the environment." Dr Sachs
said he anticipates this approach at the WSSD because most nations still
viewed ecological concerns as an obstacle to development. He further observed
that the already disadvantaged poor societies who have survived from the
environment were now suffering from the depleted fish in their fishing areas,
reduced soil fertility in their fields, including fast reducing forests due to
"the so called development projects" mostly driven by the corporate world.
"Any degradation of the environment means you are increasing these people's
vulnerability," he said. Dr Sachs said he expects that it would also be taboo
to talk about wealth alleviation even when the rich nations know that this
cannot be detached from poverty alleviation, especially when the world's
wealth lay in the hands of the rich minority. He called for consumer classes
in the developed world to immediately change to resource light production and
consumption patterns that were rapidly affecting the Earth's environment. The
Jo-Burg Memo was co-ordinated by Dr Sachs and commissioned by the Heinrich
Boll Stiftung. It was jointly formulated with the collaboration of 16 other
scholars and experts from around the world. And South African scholar
Professor Viviene Taylor, formerly of the University of Cape who also took
part in the memorandum's formulation, called on world leaders to make people's
rights a priority in sustainable development strategies to be tabled at the
WSSD. She said there was need to move away from the notion that economic
development, regardless of its impact, was justified. Prof. Taylor further
called for economic growth in the Third World countries which did not alienate
the locals from the production and economic systems. She cited the South East
Asian situation where the local people had not benefited from the economic
block's boom. And Kenya's Professor Wangari Maathai expressed concern at the
world leaders' failure to implement international treaties. However, she noted
that the problem did not only lie with leaders on the international scene but
also on the African continent's leadership. Prof. Maathai said it was worrying
that leaders did not seem to even understand the treaties they were signing .
"I am sure our leaders even forget whatever they sign after they leave the
summits," Prof. Maathai said. "What is further unfortunate is that, it is
these same leaders that we have entrusted a great deal in issues of
governance, human rights and sustainable development." Prof. Maathai called on
leaders in developing countries to continue lobbying the rich nations for
social justice as they were not in any way compelled to change their current
stance without such efforts. "Do you think they will push for fairness on your
behalf when they know they stand at an advantage to get whatever they want
under the current world order?" asked Prof. Maathai.
18. WSSD STRUGGLING WITH MAJOR FUNDING CRISIS
Daily Dispatch
28 June 2002
Internet:
http://www.dispatch.co.za/2002/06/28/easterncape/AAAWORLD.HTM
EAST LONDON -- A
major funding crisis faces the South African hosts of the NGO forum at the
World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) with a commitment of less than
30percent of a R190m budget -- two months before the forum is expected to host
about 40 000 international delegates. Civil Society Secretariat deputy CEO
Desmond Lesejane told a provincial WSSD indaba here yesterday that only R50m
had been committed of an anticipated R190m budget. The secretariat is
facilitating logistical preparations for the hosting of the global forum. The
biggest challenge was R30m that was still needed to convert the forum's venue
at Nasrec, near Johannesburg. Lesejane described the lack of funds as a major
disappointment, but not a train-smash, and said there was still time to
re-prioritise the budget, cut off core needs and deliver a decent summit. "It
won't be hi-tech but it will be functional," he said. The global civil
society forum will start before and run parallel to the official United
Nations inter-government summit and will include groups such as labour, NGOs,
community-based organisations, faith groups and indigenous peoples.
Cut-back measures
could see the forum's official language translations halved from six to three
and technical equipment dropped.
In addition, it was
likely that few funds would be allocated to bring disadvantaged groups to the
summit -- R66m was hoped to have been raised for this but Lesejane said only
R15m of the R50m would probably be used, with the danger that only the rich
would attend the forum. Lesejane said that the government -- which has
sponsored the R5,5m rental of Nasrec -- would be asked for a further R7m to
R8m for basic alterations. He anticipated a "snowball effect" once the venue
was secured. Alterations had been due to start at Nasrec this week but
contractors had been asked to wait until next Friday. The head of the
government's WSSD stakeholder liaison, JP Louw, told the indaba that
Environment Minister Valli Moosa wanted the civil forum to happen. He added
that funding the global civil forum was not the sole responsibility of South
Africa's government.
19. WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: ACTIONS, NOT WORDS, COUNT
Mail & Guardian via
All Africa
28 June 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200206270632.html
Two weeks of
intensive negotiations over the plan of action that governments will adopt at
the World Summit on Sustainable Development ended earlier this month with
substantial agreement on a wide range of issues that could boost efforts to
fight poverty and protect the environment. However, the talks could not bridge
differences on several key issues that will still have to be resolved at the
summit. The three-day negotiations, held in Bali, Indonesia, were the fourth
and final preparatory committee (Prepcom) meeting in the lead-up to the World
Summit in Johannesburg. More than 4 500 people from 173 countries, including
over 100 ministers and a large NGO contingent, attended the Bali meeting. The
Bali deliberations, aimed at generating high-level political commitments for
action at the World Summit, underscored the obstacles and challenges faced on
the road to Johannesburg, where the summit will be held from August 26 to
September 4. The negotiations resulted in agreement on about 80% of a plan of
action, yet disagreement over a series of contentious issues, particularly
concerning trade and finance, foreclosed an opportunity to seal agreement on
the plan. Prepcom chairperson Emil Salim stressed there were still three
months before the summit for governments to reconcile their positions.
"Significant agreement has been achieved," he said. "We can expect
Johannesburg to be a success." The main areas of disagreement revolved around
the trade and financing provisions of the plan -- the "economic platform" of
the document. Developing countries insist that a poverty eradication strategy
should not ignore the most important causes of poverty, among them unfair
terms of trade and, in particular, the lack of market access for agricultural
products from poor countries.
Developing
countries also differed with the rich countries on the resourcing of the
implementation plan. Developed countries wanted the plan to indicate who and
how the good intentions would be financed. "South Africa is of the view that a
summit on sustainable development that has poverty eradication as its theme
must deal with these questions," said Minister of Environmental Affairs and
Tourism Mohammed Valli Moosa. "The donor-recipient model in which the rich
give handouts to the poor does nothing for real economic development and is
not a sustainable poverty eradication strategy. "By allowing poor countries to
sell their agricultural products in rich countries, one of the biggest
obstacles to poverty will be eradicated. While aid is important and must be
expanded, it is far more important for rich countries to do business with poor
countries -- or at least to allow producers in poor countries a fair
opportunity to compete with producers in rich countries." The Bali
negotiations brought to an end the 18-month-long preparatory process for the
summit. But while the formal preparations are over, South Africa will continue
with informal consultations over the remaining three months, Moosa added.
Speaking for the Group of 77 countries and China, which represents over 130
developing countries, Venezuelan Minister for the Environment and Natural
Resources Ana Elisa Osario said, "We think it would have been better to
finalise the agreement in Bali", but added that the Group was still hopeful
complete agreement will be reached in Johannesburg. Margot Wallstrm, the
European Union's environment commissioner, said: "We have achieved a whole lot
in Bali. I would have liked to see more progress -- but indeed, we did make
progress." A historic opportunity, the Johannesburg summit provides a chance
for world leaders and representatives of citizen groups, business and
governments to forge initiatives that will reduce the ranks of people living
in poverty and address the relationship between human society and the natural
environment. "The agreements reached in Bali are substantial," said the United
Nations summit secretary general, Nitin Desai. "They provide governments --
and citizen groups and businesses -- a firm foundation to plan action-oriented
programmes and projects to achieve recognisable results that people can see.
"We now have agreement," Desai added, "on a plan of action for water and
sanitation, energy, health, agriculture and biodiversity. We can still improve
on the plan, but the real test ahead of us is not in the words of a document,
but in the actions that are undertaken." The plan of action will be one of the
outcomes of the World Summit. World leaders will also adopt a political
declaration, and new voluntary partnership initiatives by and between
governments, the private sector and NGOs will be launched in an effort to
mobilise implementation efforts. "We are pleased there is now global consensus
on the main framework for the summit," said Moosa. "It is becoming clearer
that the outcome of the summit has the potential of constituting a message of
hope to the world."
20. PRINCESS BASMA ATTENDS RIO DE JANEIRO SEMINAR ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
JORDAN READIES REPORT FOR JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT
Jordan Times
28 June 2002
Internet:
http://www.jordantimes.com/Fri/homenews/homenews11.htmz
AMMAN (JT) - A
three-day International Seminar on Sustainable Development, which brought
world leaders together to discuss strengthening partnerships between states,
government and civil society, ended this week in Rio de Janeiro. HRH Princess
Basma, who was invited by President of Brazil Fernando Henrique Cardoso to
attend the event, joined Thabo Mbeki, president of South Africa, Goran Persson,
prime minister of Sweden, and John Prescott, deputy prime minister of the
United Kingdom, to review major achievements and challenges in sustainable
development over the past 10 years, according to a statement by Princess
Basma's office. The seminar, entitled "From Stockholm to Johannesburg -
Rio+10 Brazil" addressed environmental concerns, poverty and other threats to
humankind's well-being. The focus of debate was the upcoming Johannesburg
World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD), and necessary steps to ensure
its success, the statement said. The WSSD, which is a follow-up to the 1992
Rio "Earth Summit" and subsequent international summits, is considered as
coming at a critical time in the course of global development, and its
outcomes, whether positive or negative are expected to have a profound impact
on the future of sustainable development efforts, say the summit's
organisers. The success of the Johannesburg event, to start in late August,
is seen as vital to building trust between countries of the global north and
south. But at the same time, many fear that its failure may place in question
the value and credibility of such multilateral initiatives. Participants from
several countries representing a wide range of nationalities and professions
attended the Rio de Janeiro event. Farah Daghistani, executive director of the
Jordanian Hashemite Fund for Human Development (JOHUD), also participated in a
dialogue among representatives of the three generations of international
meetings on development and the environment. In discussing the 2002
generation, Daghistani stressed the importance of the role of youth and the
importance of incorporating their needs and roles in the WSSD to insure
broader consensus. Maurice Strong, senior advisor to the UN secretary
general, represented the outcomes of the 1972 Stockholm Conference, and
Juanita Castano, IUCN Special Adviser - World Summit on Sustainable
Development, talked about the 1992 Rio Summit. Report to WSSD to cover
achievements Meanwhile, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported on Thursday
that Jordan will present a national report on its achievements in sustainable
development to the summit in Johannesburg. According to Minister of Municipal
and Rural Affairs and the Environment Abdul Razzaq Tbeishat, the report will
cover achievements made since 1992, when Jordan participated in the first such
summit, in Rio de Janeiro. It will also include a briefing on all of the
impediments to development projects in the Kingdom, including the lack of
financial potentials, Tbeishat said. The minister made these remarks as he
inaugurated a conference on sustainable development in the Kura district. The
one-day conference was organised by the General Corporation for Environment
Protection in conjunction with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)
and other national institutions. During the conference, Tbeishat stressed
Jordan's keenness to achieve sustainable development and spoke about the
procedures taken to accomplish that goal, including the preparations for the
national agenda for the 21st century and the endorsement of the Environment
Protection Law. Several papers on sustainable development topped the
conference's agenda. They focused on the achievements such as reducing
poverty, regulating population growth and reducing the state deficit. The
conference ended with several recommendations, including a request for
involving the vocational and civil institutions in the development programmes,
activating the role of the media and implementing a national programme to
raise awareness on sustainable development as well as protecting and nurturing
human resources.
21. ANTI-GLOBALIZATION ACTIVISTS PREP U.S. PUBLIC FOR UPCOMING SUMMIT
OneWorld
27 June 2002
Internet:
http://www.commondreams.org/headlines02/0627-07.htm
International
activist leaders Wednesday called for a national campaign in the United States
against policies advanced by the administration of President George W. Bush
which help strengthen the global position of multinational corporations.
At a public
briefing held in Washington D.C., the 12 leaders sought to raise awareness of
the consequences of what many activists call "corporate-led globalization" and
to urge U.S. policymakers to reconsider their current approach to
globalization before this summer's World Summit on Sustainable Development in
Johannesburg, South Africa. "We feel that this is emergency time," said John
Cavanagh, director of the Washington-based Institute for Policy Studies and
vice-president of the International Forum on Globalization, which organized
the briefing. "There are six weeks left to put pressure on the U.S. government
to change its positions, or we may face a very negative outcome in
Johannesburg." The speakers highlighted a range of contentious issues behind
U.S. policy, but focused principally on unfair trade with developing nations,
lack of corporate accountability, and routes to economic growth for
impoverished countries which have a damaging impact on the environment.
Arguing that corporations have too much control over governments and the lives
of ordinary people, Brent Blackwelder, leader of the environmental alliance
Friends of the Earth, pointed out that the majority of the 100 largest
economies in the world belong to corporations, not governments.
The Bush
administration has advanced an environmental policy model that does not bind
corporations to meeting particular targets but rather relies on corporations
to voluntarily agree to reduce the environmental harm that they do, said
Blackwelder.
"The whole push for
voluntary codes of conduct has got to be put in the context of a large number
of unethical actors," he said, referring to such notorious companies as
WorldCom, Enron, and LGB Energy, which exempted its CEO from dismissal for any
felonies arising from an environmental violation. In a political and economic
system dominated by corporate greed and corruption, Blackwelder continued,
voluntary codes will penalize only those who follow "an upright path," while
helping those who scheme and defraud to become even more powerful. "The only
answer is a binding code of conduct," he argued. The Johannesburg summit,
also known as Rio+10, is intended to be an assessment of where the world
stands in terms of development and environmental progress 10 years after the
groundbreaking "Earth Summit" in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Activists claim that
the pledges made by industrial nations at that conference to promote the
economic development of the world's poorer nations and to pursue
environmentally sustainable practices have been largely disregarded. Martin
Khor, founder and director of the Malaysian-based Third World Network said
that the international community has gone backwards since Rio, largely because
the U.S. has been blocking the changes required in social, economic, and
international governance systems. Khor cited the need for an international
mechanism to prevent the collapse of commodity prices which has devastated the
economies of developing nations. Over the past 20 years, Africa has lost about
30 to 40 percent of its income as a result of declining commodity prices, he
said. Developing countries also require cancellation of their debt to Western
donors, reform of World Trade Organization rules and accessible, low-cost
medications to fight diseases, according to Khor. "The U.S. is the main
country blocking these proposals," Khor charged, warning, "If, when they
resume talks in Johannesburg, they are unable to resolve these development
issues then the entire summit will collapse. This would jeopardize the state
of international relations that we have today." Other speakers, representing
a range of organizations, included Victoria Tauli-Corpuz of the Indigenous
Peoples' International Centre for Policy Research and Education in the
Philippines, and Phineas Malepele of the Anti-Privatization Forum in South
Africa.
22. CLEARING THE ATMOSPHERE
Mail & Guardian
27 June 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FF20020627130000037.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
Jun 28, 2002 (Mail
& Guardian/All Africa Global Media via COMTEX) -- Experts predict that the
World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) will generate 500 000 tonnes of
carbon-dioxide -- one of the gases responsible for global warming -- the
equivalent of half a million cars. The emissions will be mainly generated by
delegates jetting to Johannesburg for the summit, and by the energy they will
use while staying and travelling in South Africa. United Kingdom-based
company Future Forests has launched a campaign to "off-set" greenhouse gas
emissions generated by the WSSD through compensating investments in
energy-saving technology. Delegates, international companies and individuals
attending the summit are being asked to invest in sustainable energy projects,
which will be used to replace " dirty" fuel sources. The resulting reduction
in greenhouse gases from these projects will compensate for emissions caused
by the WSSD and help improve the quality of the environment in poor and rural
communities. Called the Johannesburg Climate Legacy project, this will be the
first time an attempt will be made to offset the carbon gas emissions from an
event as big as the WSSD. Contributors will buy "Climate Legacy Certificates"
-- which cost between R100 for individuals and R1-million for corporations. A
R100 or $10 legacy certificate is estimated to be worth one tonne of carbon.
Investment in the certificates is a practical way for companies and
individuals to show their commitment to the environment and improve the
quality of life in poor communities. New Zealand-based The Warehouse Group was
the first international company to donate to the Johannesburg Climate Legacy,
while in South Africa Anglo American has been one of the first companies to
contribute. Urging delegates to the summit to support the project, national
coordinator for IUCN-The World Conservation Union Saliem Fakir says:
"Delegates and corporations are being offered a straightforward way to
'balance' their carbon emissions, while supporting local capacity-building and
transfer of skills through projects that will leave a legacy long after the
summit." Projects that have been submitted for funding by the Climate Legacy
project include solar water-heating systems at a technikon in northern Gauteng,
installation of energy-efficient equipment at Chris Hani Baragwanath hospital
and a novel project in KwaZulu-Natal that uses waste from cows to produce
methane for cooking and lighting. The project is being run by a governing body
comprising stakeholders from the government, civil society, business and
academia, and includes Eskom, Anglo American, IUCN, Earthlife and the
University of Potchefstroom. A trust fund set up for the project is being
administered by the Development Bank of Southern Africa. Certificates can be
purchased, and a "Summit Carbon Calculator" will be available on the website
www.climatelegacy.org. International and local delegates can also use the site
to calculate how much carbon they will generate during the summit. The
Johannesburg Climate Legacy project is part of the "Greening the WSSD"
initiative, which is trying to ensure that the summit is organised according
to environmental best practice.
23. SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: UN IN GRIP OF BIG COMPANIES, ACTIVISTS SAY
Bangkok Post
27 June 2002
Internet:
http://www.bangkokpost.com/News/27Jun2002_news21.html
The United Nations
has failed to help developing countries achieve sustainable development
because the world body is dominated by giant multinational companies, social
and environmental activists claim. Chanida Chanyapate, a senior associate of
Focus on the Global South, said the UN, an organiser of the World Summit on
Sustainable Development, favoured influential industries at the expense of
small farmers, women and ethnic groups. The summit, also known as Rio+10, will
be held on Aug 26-Sept 4 in Johannesburg, South Africa. Mrs Chanida, who took
part in the meeting this month of the UN's preparatory committee for the
summit, said the talks, held in Indonesia's Bali, had focused on trade and
investment to accommodate the interests of developed countries and failed to
discuss principles of sustainable development. ``We could no longer trust the
UN because it is apparent that they could not resist multinational companies,
which have taken over the UN's meetings and turned sustainable development
into trade issues,'' she said. There was no longer any difference between the
Earth Summit and the World Trade Organisation, where negotiations focused on
economic concerns of developed countries, she said. Srisuwan Kuankajorn, a
member of the National Economic and Social Advisory Council, said the UN
failed to convince developed countries to commit financial aid for programmes
in line with Agenda 21, a blueprint for sustainable development adopted in Rio
de Janeiro in 1992. ``According to Agenda 21, developed countries have to
allocate 0.7% of national income to support sustainable development programmes
in Third World countries. However, only 0.2% has been allocated so far,'' he
said. Mr Srisuwan also urged the Office of Environmental Policy and Planning (OEPP)
to publicise a report reviewing Thailand's performance in achieving
sustainable development. The report would be presented at the Johannesburg
summit. ``The OEPP should allow non-government organisations to take part in
the drafting process. It would be a shame if the country's report presents
only successful stories towards sustainable development and disregards its
failures,'' he said. Ampon Kittiampon, an inspector of the Agriculture
Ministry, said that at Rio+10 Thailand should call on developed countries,
particularly the United States, to stop practising unfair policies that hinder
developing countries' efforts to achieve sustainable development. He cited the
US Farm Bill, which would boost crop subsidies for American farmers in the
next 10 years. The bill would affect farm crop exports from Thailand because
subsidies to US crops would distort world prices of farm products. ``This kind
of legislation would destroy the livelihoods of farmers in developing
countries. It also reflects Washington's disregard of the well-being of Third
World people. This is obviously contrary to Agenda 21,'' said Mr Ampon.
24. CIVIL SOCIETY IS RUNNING OUT OF TIME
Mail & Guardian
27 June 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FF20020627150000016.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
Jun 28, 2002 (Mail
& Guardian/All Africa Global Media via COMTEX) -- Just two months before the
World Summit on Sustainable Development, South Africa's civil society leaders
say the government is not sticking to its undertaking to refurbish the main
NGO venue for the summit -- Nasrec. Organisers of civil society, the biggest
component of the summit, say it is the government's responsibility and
obligation to provide the funds to fix up Nasrec, the venue set aside to host
the civil society sector.
A minimum of
R9-million is needed for work to be done to the venue, which is supposed to
host about 50000 of the 65 000 delegates expected at the summit. But to date
little work has been done to convert this venue into a proper conference
facility.
"We are running out
of time. If by next week Friday [June 28] we can't get funding for contractors
for Nasrec, we may not be able to deliver what is necessary as civil society,"
says CEO of the Civil Society Forum Desmond Lesejane, who is also a South
African Council of Churches leader. He says the government is "obliged" to
provide the funds, and that while "we have entered into discussions with them,
we have had no response as yet". Lesejane says the issue might well be that
whereas there is the political will, the government might be having problems
raising the money. "We need R9-million for refurbishment. This excludes
conference equipment, facilities, translations and other things that need to
be set up." Despite the funding problems, and the in-fighting among civil
society groups preparing for the summit, the Congress of South African Trade
Unions (Cosatu) says it is ready policy-wise and logistically for the mammoth
event. Neva Makgetla, Cosatu's representative to the summit, says: "Yes, we
have been threatening to cancel if they don't come up with the money. But the
labour component will happen no matter what." Makgetla says that in all
fairness to the government, "they didn't get what they were expecting from
foreign donors and they are expected to put about 300 top officials in top
hotels". She estimates the budget for the civil society events and
exhibitions to be in the region of R200-million.
According to
Cosatu's papers in preparation for the summit, the main themes of the civil
society sector are:
- HIV/Aids as a
workplace issue;
- The link between
public health and workplace health and safety;
- Building
consensus on climate change, through employment and social transition;
- Capacity-building
for workplace actions between workers, trade unions and employers, a sector by
sector review;
- Addressing
poverty through integrating the social dimension with indicators, assessments,
performance reviews, analyses and political actions;
- Corporate
accountability, workplace verification, reporting and labelling;
- Trade investment
and sustainable development implementation, through export credits and other
measures;
- Understanding the
role of core labour standards in worker participation and capacity-building
issues; and
- Workplace
management and government responsibilities: the limits of deregulation and
privatisation.
The Civil Society
Indaba -- from which the Civil Society Forum broke away early this year -- is
planning its own registration and "summit" at a separate venue in
Johannesburg, about a week before the main event starts. It is expected that
anti-globalisation groups, which are opposed to the World Bank and the World
Trade Organisation, will be attending this summit. The split took place for a
number of reasons. Cosatu, the South African Council of Churches and the South
African National NGO Coalition, among others, alleged weak financial
management on the part of the CEO, Jacqui Brown, who was subsequently
suspended as head of the Indaba. Then an ideological faction fight began. The
Civil Society Indaba, which has a more left-wing focus, is alleging government
interference in the civil society sector and is opposed to the New Partnership
for Africa's Development.
25. RICH STATES LEAVE AFRICA IN THE SLOW LANE
The Guardian
26 June 2002
Internet:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/globalisation/story/0,7369,743930,00.html
As leaders of the
main industrial powers prepare to draw up an aid plan at their Canadian
conference, Tony Blair admits that global recession and September 11 mean the
continent faces a long haul out of poverty. Leaders of the world's richest
states will gather in a remote Canadian resort today to piece together their
rescue plan for Africa. But few on the world's poorest continent are holding
their breath in expectation of what the G8 leaders have promised will be a
"Marshall plan" for Africa. Last minute horsetrading has been going on to try
to put some substance around the rhetoric that has emanated from the G8 since
it decided at the Genoa summit last year to show that globalisation could be
made to work for even the poorest countries. Progress has been painfully
slow. The famine now engulfing southern Africa not only provides the clearest
evidence of the scale of the challenge involved in freeing Africa from
grinding poverty, but also illustrates that western countries are right when
they argue that better governance in African states has to form part of the
long-term solution. Tony Blair has seized upon an African-led plan which asks
the west for more aid and access to its markets in return for African
countries ending the corruption and conflict endemic in many of them. Four of
the plan's five African backers will be in the Rocky Mountains resort of
Kananaskis to present the G8 their blueprint for a new relationship between
donors and recipients, called New Partnerships for Africa's Development. But
unless there is an eleventh hour deal that provides substantial amounts of new
resources, Thabo Mbeki, the South African president, and his fellow leaders
may have a wasted trip. The original Marshall plan involved the US
transferring around 1% of its national income for five years to war-ravaged
Europe, on the brink of collapse. Nothing on the same scale is likely to be
offered to Africa this week, let alone the improved trade access, deeper debt
relief, and the billions of dollars needed for building schools, hospitals and
transport infrastructure. Aid agencies do not doubt Mr Blair's personal
commitment to Africa. He described its situation as a "scar on the conscience
of the world" in his party conference speech last October and his spokesman
said yesterday that he was horrified to discover during his trip to continent
in February, that one African child dies every three seconds. But Mr Blair,
together with the chancellor, Gordon Brown, and the international develop ment
secretary, Clare Short, have been fighting an uphill battle to persuade the
other G8 nations to dig deeper in their pockets for Africa at a time when
their economies are only just emerging from the first synchronised global
recession for a quarter of a century. Hope that the G8 would agree to earmark
for Africa half the $12bn boost to aid announced at the UN summit on financing
development in Monterrey, Mexico, in March this year seems likely to be
disappointed. The US is reluctant to cooperate with other G8 countries on
aid, because it wants to be able hoist the Stars and Stripes over the aid
projects it funds, even though dealing with a multitude of different donors is
a big headache for overstretched African civil servants. "While there are
some good elements in the plan, it falls far short of what we expected and
what is needed," Justin Forsyth, head of policy at Oxfam, said. "It has taken
an enormous amount of political energy to get to this, which makes it all the
more disappointing." It's not just agreeing the extra money that is the
problem. Since the G8 met last June in Genoa and promised to put Africa at the
top of the agenda at this year's summit, September 11 has changed the
geopolitical landscape.
Although Britain
and France see tackling global poverty as part of the fight against terror,
there is little doubt that Africa has slipped down the list of policy
priorities in Washington, where the focus is now firmly on Afghanistan, Iraq
and the Middle East. The UN secretary general, Kofi Annan, has written an
open letter to the G8 leaders, saying that people in the developing world
"have suffered disproportionately from the slowdown in the world economy, and
they are also the primary victims of terror and violence".
"Equally, even the
richest and most powerful countries, such as those represented at your
meeting, are unlikely to achieve lasting security, either in the economic or
the physical sense, so long as billions of people in other countries are
denied those benefits." A report by the UN Conference on Trade and
Development last week warned that on current trends 100 million more people
may fall below the absolute poverty line of US$1 a day by 2015. Mr Annan said
that the G8 should open western markets to exports from poor countries,
increase development assistance, support international efforts to halt the
spread of highly infectious diseases and make primary education available to
all children and commit themselves to a productive outcome from the
sustainable development summit in Johannesburg in August. Measured against Mr
Annan's list, progress has been patchy in the past 12 months. On the positive
side, leaders promised that developing countries would be the biggest winners
from the new round of global trade talks which began in Doha in November, and
in March the EU and the US promised to reverse a decade of declining aid
budgets. But in other areas, the G8 countries have gone backwards.
Washington's decision to spend $180bn more subsidising its farmers over the
next 10 years threatens the livelihoods of poor farmers throughout Africa. The
hope that the G8 would go beyond the promise made at Doha this week by
agreeing a special package of market access for Africa seems unlikely to be
fulfilled. Even a package of increased debt relief agreed in principle two
weekends ago may not be adopted. Mr Blair was putting a brave face on the
likely outcome of the Kananaskis summit yesterday. He candidly admitted to aid
agencies that the pressure to get a better deal for Africa would have continue
beyond this week's meeting.
26. FINLAND PUMPS R10 MILLION INTO WORLD SUMMIT COFFERS
SABC News
26 June 2002
Internet:
http://www.sabcnews.com/world/summit/0,1009,37262,00.html
The government of
Finland has contributed about R10 million towards the logistic funding for the
World Summit on Sustainable Development. The donation, made by Kirsti Lintonen,
Finland's ambassador to South Africa, was received by Moss Mashishi, the
Johannesburg World Summit Company (Jowsco) chief executive officer, in
Pretoria today. The summit will take place from August 26 to September 04.
About R550 million has been budgeted for the organising of the summit. The
contribution is part of the development co-operation agreement signed between
South Africa and Finland in 1994. Since then the Finish government has
supported the development of South Africa's environmental capacity, education
and training. To date Finland has contributed almost R60 million per year
towards the development of these factors. Today's signing strengthened
further the relationship between the two countries. Lintonen says her
government is convinced that the summit will be a success. "Your country can
make it and if it is a success all World Summits can be held in South Africa."
Meanwhile Jowsco's Mashishi says most of the money needed to fund the summit
has been received. He says two thirds of the funding is being raised through
foreign governments and the private sector. According to Mashishi preparations
are on track. "We have done most of the key logistical requirements for
instance we are done with accommodation preparations. We are done with
transport plans and some key issues like venues have been secured and are
currently being prepared for the summit. So the broad logistical planning is
in place for the summit and I am quite comfortable at the time of the summit
we will be ready," he adds. Mashishi denied that there was lack of interest
from heads of state representing developed countries in attending.
27. US POLICE WARN SA ABOUT DANGERS OF PROTESTERS
South African Press
Association via All Africa
26 June 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200206270010.html
United States'
police warned on Wednesday that protesters had become more violent over the
years and they would be one of the biggest threats to security at the upcoming
World Summit of Sustainable Development. "Protesters have become more violent
across the world in the last four to five years... Anything that is symbolic
of capitalism they are against," said John Timoney, former police commissioner
of the Philadelphia police department. He said "anarchists and
anti-capitalists" first target was the police as they worked for governments.
Their second target was private businesses as they represented capitalists.
Timoney and New York's police department chief of transportation Patrick
Harnett were briefing members of the SA Police Service (SAPS) on their
experiences at this type of summit in the United States. The briefing was
conducted via digital video conferencing.
Timoney suggested
that security could be tightened at businesses by hiring private security
guards. He said these guards would have to work in conjunction with the
police. Timoney also said that businesses should decide before the start of
the summit how to deal with security problems. "South African businesses must
plan ahead. If protesters take over how will you get your staff out... or will
some businesses close down during the summit." Harnett said the companies and
police would have to identify where there could be problems and draw up
detailed maps of these areas for security planning purposes. A representative
from the SAPS's VIP unit asked the two Americans how to deal with the
transportation of VIPs. Harnett said that in the United States VIPs and
delegates transport was pre-arranged. Top-ranking delegates were transported
in limousines and private cars along specific routes. Lower-level delegates
were ferried in buses which had police on board, he said. Air space over
conference centres was declared a no-fly zone. The SAPS told the two that they
were considering declaring the centres where various parts of the summit was
being held gun-free zones. Timoney said this was a good idea and that at some
conferences in the United States it was only the local police and secret
service members who were allowed to carry firearms in the centres. Harnett
said it was imperative that anybody in the centres, including police and
employees, displayed their credentials. The accreditation is being done by the
United States. On the possibility of heads of state bringing large entourages
of security personnel, Timoney said the police should gather information on
political situations across the globe to identify how much security certain
leaders would need with them all the time. "Different states bring different
targets," he said. Harnett suggested that the same police officers be assigned
to a VIP throughout the summit. "You got to pick your best and brightest," he
said. Timoney said communication between police had to be of the highest
standard, especially in the conference centres. He said that sometimes police
would want to communicate without alarming delegates and said this could be
done by using lights. Green lights could mean that everything was fine and red
lights could indicate that the centre needed to be immediately evacuated.
Harnett also said that delegates had to be warned which areas were not safe to
visit. Director Happy Schutte, the Gauteng co-ordinator of public order
policing, told reporters after the conference that security arrangements for
the summit were "going well" and police were concentrating on the final
touches. The main part of the summit will be taking place in Sandton from
August 26 to September 4.
28. SOUTH AFRICA TAKES EARTH SUMMIT TORCH TO G-8 MEETING IN CANADA
WWF
26 June 2002
Internet:
http://panda.org/news/press/news.cfm?id=2989
Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil - South African President Thabo Mbeki will deliver a message from past
and future Earth Summit hosts to the G-8 Summit starting today Canada: rich
countries, especially the USA, Canada, and Japan, must fully engage in global
efforts to build upon the legacy of the 1992 Earth Summit and the 1972
Stockholm Conference on the Human Environment and deliver concrete action
plans for poverty alleviation, environmental protection, and sustainable
economic development at the upcoming World Summit on Sustainable Development
(WSSD; also known as the Rio+10 and Johannesburg Earth Summit).
At a public meeting
with civil society hosted by Brazil on 24 June, President Mbeki, Brazilian
President Fernando Henrique Cardoso, and Swedish Prime Minister Goran Persson
pledged their full political support to rescue the legacy of the Stockholm
Conference and the Rio Earth Summit, and ensure that the WSSD secures concrete
government commitments for poverty alleviation and environmental protection.
The pledge comes after more than a year of slow and frustrating negotiations
in preparation for the WSSD, which will be held in Johannesburg, South Africa,
from 26 August-4 September this year.
The clear message
from the three leaders, echoed by UK Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott, was
that 'the world cannot afford failure in Johannesburg', and that they would do
everything in their power to ensure that it is a success. The three leaders
pledged to lead the campaign necessary to make the WSSD the success that the
world's poor and the global environment deserves and desperately needs.
"We've been searching for champions for this process, and now we've found
them," said Steve Sawyer of Greenpeace. "With only 62 days until the start of
the Johannesburg Summit, it's going to be an uphill struggle, but we believe
that President Mbeki, with strong support from President Cardoso and Prime
Minister Persson, are up to the task. We'll be anxiously awaiting the results
of the G-8 Summit in Canada, and hope that President Mbeki succeeds in
bringing the G-8 members into the process in a serious way." An example of
the kind of result that is needed from the WSSD is the Brazilian Energy
Initiative, which calls for a global target of 10% of global energy supply
from new renewable energy sources by 2010. "The Brazilian Renewable Energy
Initiative is exactly the kind of political signal that governments must send
from Johannesburg," said Jennifer Morgan of WWF. "It will also send a clear
signal to markets that governments are serious about combating climate change,
and bringing basic energy services to the two billion people who do not have
access. We are calling on South Africa to join Brazil and Sweden to lead this
charge and secure agreement on the initiative in Johannesburg." WWF and
Greenpeace have called upon the leaders of South Africa, Sweden, and Brazil to
live up to the promises they made at the public meeting on 24 June.
29. MBEKI SAYS SUMMIT WILL BE A 'NEW START'
SABC News
26 June 2002
Internet:
http://www.sabcnews.com/world/summit/0,1009,37221,00.html
President Thabo
Mbeki says he hopes the upcoming World Summit on Sustainable Development in
Johannesburg will give fresh impetus to work begun 10 years ago at the first
Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro. Mbeki was participating in a seminar on the
Johannesburg summit with Brazilian President Fernando Henrique Cardoso and
Britain's Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott on Monday and yesterday. "We
have to make a new start with regard to a practical programme, really
practical, not good resolutions only," Mbeki said, but noted that preparations
for the conference were lacking. "We have to do a lot of work now," he said,
noting that insufficient progress had been made at the fourth and final
preparatory ministerial committee ahead of Johannesburg held earlier this
month in Bali, Indonesia. Mbeki, who is to attend the G8 summit in Kananskis,
Canada today, expects to meet in the next few days with UN Secretary General
Kofi Annan to examine issues ahead of the Johannesburg summit, over which
Annan will preside, under UN sponsorship. A draft text prepared by Mbeki,
Cardoso and Prescott urges summit participants to go to Johannesburg to
address the pressing issues of: the environment, economic and social
development, and poverty alleviation. Some 107 heads of states are expected to
attend the sustainable development conference, also known as Rio+10, set for
August 26 to September 4. - Sapa-AFP
30. GLOBAL EFFORT CAN END POVERTY: MBEKI
SABC News
26 June 2002
Internet:
http://www.sabcnews.com/world/summit/0,1009,37219,00.html
A better world is
not impossible, says Mbeki. The passing of the torch from Brazil, a host of
the Rio Earth Summit to South Africa - host of the World Summit on Sustainable
Development - symbolised the global community's responsibility to victims of
unsustainable development and to future generations, South African President
Thabo Mbeki said today. "As (Brazil's) President Fernando Cardoso, passes on
the torch - the flame being Agenda 21 - to the World Summit on Sustainable
Development, the 'Johannesburg World Summit', the enormity of the
responsibility and challenge becomes tangible," he said in a speech prepared
for delivery in Rio de Janeiro. "At the Rio Summit the world declared with one
voice: 'Human beings are at the centre of concerns for sustainable
development. They are entitled to a healthy and productive life in harmony
with nature,'" he said. Agenda 21, the definitive document of the 1992 Earth
Summit, highlighted the causal relationship between poverty and environmental
degradation, and pointed to the integration of environment and development
issues addressed in a global partnership as the only realistic way forward.
While economic growth had been unprecedented since the Rio Summit, economic
inequities had deepened and environmental degradation accelerated, Mbeki said.
Gulf between rich and poor widens "Growth in the world economy in the year
2000 alone exceeded that during the entire nineteenth century. Yet people
continue to die of hunger; babies get born, grow up, and die without being
able to read or write; many fellow humans do not have clean water to drink;
and, people die of curable diseases. "The gulf between rich and poor members
of the human race widens as we speak." The WSSD had to apply the principles of
Agenda 21 and focus on action to eradicate poverty. "Its outcome must make
sense to she who has to walk for kilometres to fetch drinking water and to she
who spends hours gathering firewood for energy. It must also speak to he who
consumes more than the earth can give." Mbeki said the first UN Conference on
the Human Environment held three decades ago in Stockholm, Sweden, had set off
unprecedented global concern about the negative impact of human activity on
the environment but this had gone on unabated, subjected to a development
model that "is questioned daily by the earth's ecosystem on which all life and
all economic activity is dependent". Developed countries' excessive
consumption of natural resources could not go unchecked. "If the Chinese
citizen is to consume the same quantity of crude oil as his or her US
counterpart, China would need over 80 million barrels of oil a day - slightly
more than the 74 million barrels a day the world now produces. If annual paper
use in China of 35kg per person were to climb to the US level of 342
kilograms, China would need more paper than the world currently produces."
Since 1994, he said South Africa had provided seven million more people with
access to clean water, built over one million low-cost homes, provided over
two million more homes with electricity and afforded every child an
opportunity to go to school. "At the time of Rio this was all just a dream...
we all know that people can change and that it is possible to change the lives
of the poor. We also must believe that it is possible for us to live in
harmony with nature." A global partnership for sustainable development and for
the eradication of poverty was within reach and genuine human solidarity was
possible and necessary, he said. "Nobody can truthfully argue that the global
community of nations is too poor to defeat global poverty. Nobody can
truthfully argue that there is a larger human imperative or decisive
constraint that makes it obligatory that we must destroy the environment.
Together we must give real meaning to the solemn pledge that was made in this
city 10 years ago (Agenda 21)." - Sapa
31. SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT DELEGATES PREPARE FOR AUGUST MEETING
Voice of America
26 June 2002
Internet:
http://www.voanews.com/article.cfm?objectID=5241A41D-C6ED-46BE-875F919E7DD27B7C&title=Sustainable%20Development%20Summit%20Delegates%20Prepare%20for%20August%20Meeting&catOID=45C9C789-88AD-11D4-A57200A0CC5EE46C
The upcoming
sustainable development summit in Johannesburg got a boost this week in Rio de
Janeiro, when delegates attending a preparatory conference unanimously called
on the developed countries, the United States in particular, to participate.
South African President Thabo Mbeki, who attended the Rio meeting, will
deliver this message personally to the G-8 leaders meeting in Canada.
Delegates from around the world attended the meeting in Rio de Janeiro to
discuss the issues that will be raised in August at the U.N. sustainable
development summit in Johannesburg. The Johannesburg conference comes 10
years after the Rio Earth Summit, which resulted in an action program called
Agenda 21 to preserve the environment and foster sustainable economic
development. One of the results of the 1992 Earth Summit was to provide the
impetus for negotiations to curb the emissions of greenhouse gases. The
resulting Kyoto protocol on climate change obligates rich signatory countries
to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions by five percent from 1990 levels by
the year 2012. The Bush administration last year withdrew from the treaty,
saying its targets would harm the U.S. economy. The meeting in Johannesburg,
known as "Rio plus 10," hopes to build on the accomplishments of Agenda 21.
But it also will deal with a wider range of issues, including health, energy,
and agriculture. Swedish Prime Minister Goran Persson described the upcoming
Johannesburg summit as an opportunity to form new partnerships. "Johannesburg
must give us that vision, the vision of a global system in which every country
has a place and a stake in the benefits," he said. "And it must give us all a
clear sense of what our particular tasks are. The summit will be the
opportunity to form new partnerships. Only a partnership between governments,
business, and civil society will give us the necessary power to meet the
challenge. Nothing can be achieved in isolation." Mr. Persson was alluding to
the concern that too many heads of state, including President Bush, will not
bother to come to Johannesburg. But some environmentalists are more
optimistic. Steve Sawyer of Greenpeace says the consensus reached at the Rio
meeting provides strong incentive for the world's biggest economies to join
in. "The first real test of this new political leadership, which we very much
welcome, will happen at the end of the week in Kananaskis in Canada where the
G-8 summit is happening, and we know that President Mbeki is going there with
a clear mandate from this group of countries and this meeting to try and
figure out a way to engage Canada, the United States, and Japan seriously in
this process," he said. President Mbeki will deliver a letter urging the G-8
leaders to participate in the Johannesburg conference. The letter is signed by
Brazilian President Fernando Henrique Cardoso, Swedish Prime Minister Persson
and by Mr. Mbeki himself.
Mr. Sawyer says it
would be in President Bush's own interest to come to Johannesburg. "Given
what's happening in the world today, and given the importance of the U.S.
position and given the express need and desire for cooperation on a wide
variety of levels by the United States, it seems to me there's a real
opportunity for the rest of the world leaders if they are very clear in their
message to say: 'You need us for your war on terrorism and other things, we
need you to build sustainability on a global basis,'" he said. Brazilian
President Cardoso will also make a personal appeal by phone to the G-8
leaders. Whether this will work is unclear, but the mood in Rio at the close
of the preparatory meeting was upbeat.
32. G8 SUMMIT: RICH STATES LEAVE AFRICA IN THE SLOW LANE
The Guardian
26 June 2002
Internet:
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/foreignaffairs/story/0,11538,743933,00.html
As leaders of the
main industrial powers prepare to draw up an aid plan at their Canadian
conference, Tony Blair admits that global recession and September 11 mean the
continent faces a long haul out of poverty Leaders of the world's richest
states will gather in a remote Canadian resort today to piece together their
rescue plan for Africa. But few on the world's poorest continent are holding
their breath in expectation of what the G8 leaders have promised will be a
"Marshall plan" for Africa. Last minute horsetrading has been going on to try
to put some substance around the rhetoric that has emanated from the G8 since
it decided at the Genoa summit last year to show that globalisation could be
made to work for even the poorest countries. Progress has been painfully
slow. The famine now engulfing southern Africa not only provides the clearest
evidence of the scale of the challenge involved in freeing Africa from
grinding poverty, but also illustrates that western countries are right when
they argue that better governance in African states has to form part of the
long-term solution. Tony Blair has seized upon an African-led plan which asks
the west for more aid and access to its markets in return for African
countries ending the corruption and conflict endemic in many of them.
Four of the plan's
five African backers will be in the Rocky Mountains resort of Kananaskis to
present the G8 their blueprint for a new relationship between donors and
recipients, called New Partnerships for Africa's Development. But unless
there is an eleventh hour deal that provides substantial amounts of new
resources, Thabo Mbeki, the South African president, and his fellow leaders
may have a wasted trip. The original Marshall plan involved the US
transferring around 1% of its national income for five years to war-ravaged
Europe, on the brink of collapse. Nothing on the same scale is likely to be
offered to Africa this week, let alone the improved trade access, deeper debt
relief, and the billions of dollars needed for building schools, hospitals and
transport infrastructure. Aid agencies do not doubt Mr Blair's personal
commitment to Africa. He described its situation as a "scar on the conscience
of the world" in his party conference speech last October and his spokesman
said yesterday that he was horrified to discover during his trip to continent
in February, that one African child dies every three seconds. But Mr Blair,
together with the chancellor, Gordon Brown, and the international develop ment
secretary, Clare Short, have been fighting an uphill battle to persuade the
other G8 nations to dig deeper in their pockets for Africa at a time when
their economies are only just emerging from the first synchronised global
recession for a quarter of a century. Hope that the G8 would agree to earmark
for Africa half the $12bn boost to aid announced at the UN summit on financing
development in Monterrey, Mexico, in March this year seems likely to be
disappointed. The US is reluctant to cooperate with other G8 countries on
aid, because it wants to be able hoist the Stars and Stripes over the aid
projects it funds, even though dealing with a multitude of different donors is
a big headache for overstretched African civil servants. "While there are
some good elements in the plan, it falls far short of what we expected and
what is needed," Justin Forsyth, head of policy at Oxfam, said. "It has taken
an enormous amount of political energy to get to this, which makes it all the
more disappointing." It's not just agreeing the extra money that is the
problem. Since the G8 met last June in Genoa and promised to put Africa at the
top of the agenda at this year's summit, September 11 has changed the
geopolitical landscape.
Although Britain
and France see tackling global poverty as part of the fight against terror,
there is little doubt that Africa has slipped down the list of policy
priorities in Washington, where the focus is now firmly on Afghanistan, Iraq
and the Middle East.
The UN secretary
general, Kofi Annan, has written an open letter to the G8 leaders, saying that
people in the developing world "have suffered disproportionately from the
slowdown in the world economy, and they are also the primary victims of terror
and violence". "Equally, even the richest and most powerful countries, such
as those represented at your meeting, are unlikely to achieve lasting
security, either in the economic or the physical sense, so long as billions of
people in other countries are denied those benefits."
A report by the UN
Conference on Trade and Development last week warned that on current trends
100 million more people may fall below the absolute poverty line of US$1 a day
by 2015. Mr Annan said that the G8 should open western markets to exports
from poor countries, increase development assistance, support international
efforts to halt the spread of highly infectious diseases and make primary
education available to all children and commit themselves to a productive
outcome from the sustainable development summit in Johannesburg in August.
Measured against Mr Annan's list, progress has been patchy in the past 12
months. On the positive side, leaders promised that developing countries would
be the biggest winners from the new round of global trade talks which began in
Doha in November, and in March the EU and the US promised to reverse a decade
of declining aid budgets.
But in other areas,
the G8 countries have gone backwards. Washington's decision to spend $180bn
more subsidising its farmers over the next 10 years threatens the livelihoods
of poor farmers throughout Africa. The hope that the G8 would go beyond the
promise made at Doha this week by agreeing a special package of market access
for Africa seems unlikely to be fulfilled.
Even a package of
increased debt relief agreed in principle two weekends ago may not be
adopted. Mr Blair was putting a brave face on the likely outcome of the
Kananaskis summit yesterday. He candidly admitted to aid agencies that the
pressure to get a better deal for Africa would have continue beyond this
week's meeting.
33. SUMMIT CUTS COSTS WITH DISPOSABLE CUPS
Independent Online
26 June 2002
Internet:
http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?sf=2668&art_id=qw1025529121922W232&click_id=2668&set_id=1
"Green" is the
buzzword when referring to the World Summit on Sustainable Development - but
how green will it really be?
The option to
supply the estimated 60 000 guests at the Ubuntu Village with biodegradable
corn starch cups has been abandoned - plastic cups will be used instead.
According to Tzila Katzel, project co-ordinator of Greening the Summit,
plastic cups - which are made from environmentally unfriendly petroleum - will
be used to provide delegates with a cheaper South African product, instead of
a more expensive, environmentally friendly, imported one. 'The cost could be
as little as R1 per cup' "South Africa doesn't as yet have the production
capacity to produce enough biodegradable corn starch cups to adequately supply
the summit, so we will most likely opt for recyclable plastic cups, and paper
cups for hot drinks," according to Katzel. Although the decision was a
cost-effective one, no one at Greening the Summit was able to supply The Star
with the price of the plastic cups compared with corn starch cups. Katzel adds
that the greening committee felt that the jet fuel polluting our air when
importing the biodegradable products into the country was more harmful than
the plastic cups the delegates will use. Katzel says many of the summit's food
and drink outlets will be restaurants instead of takeaway venues, and will
probably use cutlery and crockery made from glass, aluminium and ceramics.
Originally, Greening the Summit decided against the corn starch cups, saying
they were too expensive - exceeding R10 per cup. Upon investigation, however,
it was revealed that the cost could be as little as R1 per cup, according to
Gary Burns, a supplier of the biodegradable products. The clear corn starch
cups look as though they are made from plastic
Burns imports a
range of cups, plates, cutlery and rubbish bags, all made from biodegradable
and renewable resources. The paper cups - for hot and cold beverages - are
made from unbleached paper, with the inside lining made from a polymer and
corn, wheat and potato starch. In compostable conditions it will biodegrade in
30 to 45 days. The clear corn starch cups - which look as though they are made
from plastic, but can be thrown on a compost heap - are made from a material
derived from lactic acid produced by certain vegetable products such as wheat,
rice, corn starch and beef. The cutlery is made from cellulose acid, corn
starch and chalk, and, when ground, is biodegradable within 30 to 45 days. The
rubbish bags are manufactured from biofilm, made from a biopolymer and corn,
wheat and potato starch. These will also biodegrade in 30 to 45 days. All
these products are made in Europe and the United States and imported to South
Africa. Muna Lakhane, who is responsible for greening the civil-society part
of the summit at the Nasrec Expo Centre, says they have decided to use paper
cups for hot and cold drinks, in order to stay in line with their zero waste
policy and to be cost-effective, as they cost about 50c each. "The cups will
be put on a compost heap after they have been used so that they can
decompose," Lakhane says. Hazardous waste, such as batteries and condoms, will
be collected in bins and analysed afterwards to find ways of disposing of it
in an environmentally friendly manner and not by incineration
34. MBEKI APPEALS FOR PARTNERSHIP ON 'SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT'
Voice of America
25 June 2002
Internet:
http://www.voanews.com/article.cfm?objectID=F276A15C-FEB5-47EF-AC33422384652A01&Title=Mbeki%20Appeals%20For%20Partnership%20On%20%27Sustainable%20Development%27&db=current&CatOID=45C9C789-88AD-11D4-A57200A0CC5EE46C&Categoryname=
South African
President Thabo Mbeki has called for a global partnership to achieve
sustainable development and the eradication of poverty throughout the world.
The South African leader made the appeal Tuesday in Rio de Janeiro on the last
day of a preparatory conference for the upcoming sustainable development
summit in Johannesburg. The three-day meeting in Rio brought together
government officials and representatives of the United Nations,
non-governmental organizations and others to discuss the issues that will be
raised at the Johannesburg summit in August. Addressing the delegates, South
African President Mbeki made an impassioned appeal for concrete action to
achieve the goals of sustainable development and the eradication of poverty.
"As we prepare to travel to Johannesburg we all know that people can change,
that it is possible to change the lives of the poor. We also must believe that
it is possible for us to live in harmony with nature," he said. "A global
partnership of sustainable development and for the eradication of poverty is
within reach.... On behalf of the people of Johannesburg and of South Africa
in general, I'd like to invite the leaders of the world and the
representatives of peoples from all walks of life to join in the pursuit of
this agenda of hope." He was joined in this appeal by Brazilian President
Fernando Henrique Cardoso and Swedish Prime Minister Goran Persson, who both
addressed the conference Tuesday. Rio was the site ten years ago of the Earth
Summit which laid out a series of recommendations for preserving the
environment and achieving sustainable economic development. But some of the
targets set in 1992 were not met, and the hope is that Johannesburg will set
the stage for a renewed global commitment. At this week's meeting, delegates
discussed issues such as energy, global water policy, aid for developing
countries and improved trade access for third world products into the markets
of industrialized nations. Steve Sawyer of Greenpeace says while more progress
needs to be made on these issues, he is encouraged by the pledges made at the
Rio meeting by the leaders of Brazil, Sweden and South Africa. "All these
issues are still on the table, and they need to be tied up in the next two
months, and it is very encouraging to see President Mbeki, President Cardoso
and Prime Minister Persson stand up and basically put their political
credibility on the line in a very strong way and say we must succeed in
Johannseburg; we cannot afford failure," he said. "They have staked their
colors to the mast, and we hope more world leaders will do that in the course
of the next few months." President Bush has no plans to attend the
Johannesburg summit, which prompted President Cardoso Tuesday to call on all
members of the international community to, as he put it, "assume their
responsibilities." After he spoke, Mr. Cardoso handed over a box made of
tropical wood to President Mbeki to symbolize the transfer from Rio to
Johannesburg of the mandate for implementing Agenda 2,1 the program of action
agreed to by world leaders at the Rio Earth Summit in 1992.
35. LEADERS DISCUSS UPCOMING ENVIRONMENTAL SUMMIT
Voice of America
25 June 2002
Internet:
http://www.voanews.com/article.cfm?objectID=7579E85C-ED32-44F6-8766114F493EDE61&Title=Leaders%20Discuss%20Upcoming%20Environmental%20Summit&db=current&CatOID=45C9C789-88AD-11D4-A57200A0CC5EE46C&Categoryname=
The leaders of
Brazil, South Africa and Sweden are stressing the need for a successful and
productive summit later this year in Johannesburg on sustainable development.
The three leaders made their appeal Monday in Rio de Janeiro, where a meeting
to prepare for the U.N.-organized conference is taking place. Brazilian
President Fernando Henrique Cardoso says the upcoming Johannesburg summit will
build on the progress made at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro ten years
ago, and the Stockholm environmental conference of 1972, which started the
process. Mr. Cardoso said the goal at Johannesburg is not just to preserve
the environment, but to come up with programs for achieving sustainable
economic development that balances the needs of humankind with the needs of
nature. To do this, he said, world poverty and misery must be reduced. "It is
unacceptable that the levels of poverty and misery continue to exist today,
especially now that there are available means to improve the conditions of
people," says Mr. Cardoso. He went on to describe poverty eradication as a
moral imperative, and urged rich countries like the United States to support
the initiatives that will emerge from the Johannesburg summit. The Brazilian
leader spoke Monday after meeting with South African President Thabo Mbeki and
Swedish Prime Minister Goran Persson. The two leaders are in Rio to attend a
three-day preparatory conference for the Johannesburg summit. The summit,
known as Rio +10, opens August 26. It is expected to bring together the
leaders of almost 100 nations and thousands of representatives of
non-governmental organizations. For ten days, they will discuss poverty
eradication and environmental preservation, and come up with recommendations
for achieving these goals. President Bush has no plans to attend. Perhaps
with this in mind, South African President Thabo Mbeki Monday urged all world
leaders to come to Johannesburg. "It is the expectation of the peoples of the
world, certainly it is the expectations of the three of us here, and I am sure
John Prescott the deputy British prime minister, the princess from Jordan and
the people who have been participating in this process here in Rio that we
want them to attend the conference, as all of us will do, with the frame of
mind which says: we have to move forward with regard to all of these
matters." Swedish Prime Minister Goran Persson echoed this view, and said
persuading rich nations to set aside more money for economic development will
be a key issue at Johannesburg. At the Rio Earth Summit in 1992,
participating nations agreed that rich countries should set aside seven-tenths
of one-percent of their Gross Domestic Product for development aid. Until now,
only the countries of Scandinavia have done this. Mr. Persson told reporters
Monday the European Union is now more disposed to meet this goal. He said
continued pressure will eventually persuade the United States to follow on
this issue, as well as on the question of signing the Kyoto Protocol on global
warming. "This is a political process. Governments come and go, it is a
pendulum swinging," he says. "So you constantly need to argue for your side,
and you constantly need to press them back who are opposing because you will
always see them. It is a fight, and it is a fight worth taking." The
preparatory conference in Rio, which opened Sunday, has brought together
representatives from the United Nations, non-governmental organizations,
scientists and others from around the world. The conference ends Tuesday.
36. BETTER WORLDWIDE MANAGEMENT OF GMO'S: THE EU RATIFIES THE CARTAGENA
PROTOCOL ON BIOSAFETY
European Commission
25 June 2002
Internet:
http://europa.eu.int/rapid/start/cgi/guesten.ksh?p_action.gettxt=gt&doc=IP/02/927|0|RAPID&lg=EN&display=
Worldwide access to
better information on Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) moved a step
closer today when the European Union ratified the Cartagena Protocol on
Biosafety. The Protocol is designed to protect biological diversity, and, in
turn, human health. It will establish an Advanced Informed Agreement (AIA)
procedure which ensures countries are given the necessary information to make
informed decisions on whether to import GMOs intended for introduction into
the environment. The EU's action should be an incentive for other countries to
ratify this Protocol, ensuring it comes into force quickly. Environment
Commissioner Margot Wallström said: " This is a global issue which needs
global action. The Cartagena Protocol establishes one set of basic
international rules for dealing with GMOs. The Protocol will ensure countries,
exporters and importers have the necessary information to make informed
choices about GMOs. This Protocol will particularly help developing countries,
which often lack the resources to assess the risks of biotechnology. If we
are promoting free trade on a global scale we must ensure that protecting the
environment and human health is taken into account. This is another example of
our commitment to finding multilateral solutions for global problems. Last
month the EU ratified the Kyoto Protocol on Climate Change. These measures
contribute to our overall aim of sustainable development. We call on
countries to ratify and implement the Cartagena Protocol and we urge those who
are not in a position to ratify to contribute to the achievement of its
objectives on a voluntary basis. " The Cartagena Protocol sets out the first
international legal framework for the cross-border movement of GMOs on the
basis of the 'precautionary principle'. It contains documentation requirements
for shipments of GMOs and establishes a Biosafety Clearing House (BCH) to
facilitate the exchange of information on living modified organisms and to
assist countries in the implementation of the Protocol. 110 countries have
signed the Cartagena Protocol so far and 20 have ratified it, including Spain
and The Netherlands. Fifty ratifications are necessary for its entry into
force. During 2002, the rate of ratifications has increased considerably. A
survey conducted during the third meeting of the Inter-Governmental Committee
of the Cartagena Protocol (ICCP) indicated that 25 countries intend to ratify
before the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) in Johannesburg in
August, and 20 more before the end of this year. This would mean the Protocol
will enter into force in spring 2003.
Notes to Editors
The Conference of
the Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity adopted a supplementary
agreement to the Convention known as the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety, on
29 January 2000, after more than three and a half years of complex
negotiations. The Protocol is legally binding and was the first Multilateral
Environmental Agreement (MEA) concluded in the new millennium. The Protocol's
entry into force has been prepared by the Inter-governmental Committee of the
Cartagena Protocol (ICCP), created by the Conference of the Parties to the
Convention on Biological Diversity. The ICCP has adopted an Action Plan for
Building Capacities for the Effective Implementation of the Protocol. It has
established a Roster of Experts to provide advice to developing countries,
inter alia, on risk assessment, and prepared a compliance mechanism. The EU
already has an extensive legislative framework on GMOs and the Commission has
recently proposed a new Regulation, aimed at implementing the Cartagena
Protocol, which specifically addresses the issue of the transboundary movement
of GMOs. The third meeting of the ICCP was held in The Hague from 22 to 26
April 2002.
37. EXPERTS CALL FOR ACTION TO PROTECT CHILDREN'S ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
Islamabad News
25 June 2002
Internet:
http://www.jang.com.pk/thenews/jun2002-daily/25-06-2002/metro/i3.htm
ISLAMABAD:
Environmentalists and health experts have called for protecting children's
environmental health (CEH) by translating knowledge on environmental hazards
into action. They gave their inputs at an international conference on
'Environmental Threats to the Health of Children' organised by the World
Health Organization (WHO) in Bangkok recently. Over 300 participants from 35
countries attended. Dr Mahmood A Khwaja from SDPI presented a paper on 'Lead
and Children Development with Special Reference to Studies in Pakistan on
Blood Lead Levels in School Children' in one of the five plenary sessions.
Amid growing concerns on children's environmental health due to prevailing
hazardous conditions, environmentalists and health experts hoped that the
World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) to be held in Johannesburg from
August 26 to September 4 would take up the CEH as a priority area. The WSSD
will bring together tens of thousands of participants, including heads of
state and government, national delegates and leaders from non-governmental
organisations, businesses and other major groups to focus the world's
attention and direct action toward meeting difficult challenges, including
improving people's lives and conserving our natural resources in a world that
is growing in population, with ever-increasing demands for food, water,
shelter, sanitation, energy, health services and economic security. The
Bangkok statement adopted at the end of the conference called for developing
active and innovative national and international networks for promotion and
protection of children's environmental health in all areas, and especially in
four critical areas including protection and prevention, healthcare and
research, empowerment and education and advocacy. On protection and prevention
area, the Bangkok statement said that there is a need to strengthen existing
programmes and initiate new mechanisms to provide access for all children to
clean water and air, adequate sanitation and safe and appropriate food. There
is a need to reduce or eliminate environmental causes of asthma and
respiratory diseases, including exposure to environmental tobacco smoke;
reduce or eliminate exposure to toxic metal such as lead, mercury and arsenic,
to fluoride, and to hazardous anthropogenic chemicals such as toxic wastes,
pesticides and persistent organic pollutants. The statement calls for reducing
or eliminating exposure to known and suspected anthropogenic carcinogens,
neurotoxicants, developmental and reproductive toxicants, immunotoxicants and
naturally occurring toxins. It also suggests for avoiding the incidence of
accidents, injuries and poisoning, as well as exposure to noise, radiations
and other factors by improving the physical environments of children at home,
in school and in all environments where children spend time. About healthcare
and research, the Bangkok statement urges the need to promote recognition,
assessment and study of environmental factors that have an impact on the
health and development of children. It could be done by developing and
implementing cooperative multidisciplinary research studies, as well as
disease surveillance and exposure monitoring in association with centers of
excellence, and by promoting the collection of harmonised data and its
dissemination. It calls for incorporating training on CEH for health care
providers and other professionals, and promote the use of the environmental
history. Seeking financial and institutional support for research, data
collection, education, intervention and prevention programmes and develop risk
assessment methodologies that incorporate children, as special group are
important in this regard, it added. On empowerment and education, the
statement emphasises to promote education of children and parents-to-be about
the importance of their physical environment and their participation in
decisions that affect their lives, and to inform parents, teachers and
care-givers and the community in general on the need and means to provide a
safe, healthy and supportive environment to all children: There is a dire need
to provide environmental health education through healthy schools and adult
education initiatives, incorporate in the school and high school curricula
lessons on health and the environment, impart environmental health expertise
to educators, curriculum designers and school administrators. The statement
also calls for creating and disseminating culturally relevant information
about the special vulnerability of children to environmental threats and
practical steps to protect children. Empower the community to identify toxic
threats to children and to work with local authorities in developing
prevention and intervention programmes, the statement added. On advocacy area,
the Bangkok statement urges the need to advocate for the protection and
promotion of CEH at all levels, including the political spheres,
decision-makers and the communities and utilize lessons learned to prevent
environmental illness in children, for example by promoting legislation for
the removal of lead from all gasoline, paints and ceramics, and tobacco
smoke-free environments in all public buildings. It calls for sensitizing
decision-makers about the results of research studies and observations of
front-line workers that need to be accorded high priority to safeguard
children's health. It also advocates for promoting environmental health
policies that protect children, raising the awareness of decision-makers and
potential donors about known children's environmental health threats and work
with them and other stakeholders to allocate necessary resources to implement
interventions and working with the media to disseminate information on core
CEH issues, locally relevant environmental health problems and possible
solutions.
38. PRESCOTT BLAMES U.S. SUBSIDIES FOR TRADE DEAL DELAY
The Scotsman
25 Jun 2002
Internet:
http://www.news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=4861741
Large-scale
subsidies for American farmers introduced by President George Bush are
hindering international efforts to secure a fair trade agreement, Deputy Prime
Minister John Prescott said today. Mr Prescott is taking part in emergency
talks in Brazil to salvage global environment negotiations after a failure to
reach agreement at Bali earlier this month. He hopes to put in place a
comprehensive agreement covering trade, financial relations, economic
development and environmental protection which can be approved by the world's
heads of government gathering in Johannesburg for the UN eco-summit in August.
Mr Prescott acknowledged that large areas of negotiation remained to be
concluded following the Bali talks. He told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme:
"At Bali, something like 75% of the issues were settled. There is 25% left -
the more difficult ones, admittedly." The farm subsidies which the US
Government approved in May were causing friction with poorer nations, which
felt they were being blocked from access to the markets of the rich world, he
said. "There is no doubt many developing countries feel very strongly about
that and it affected attitudes at Bali," said Mr Prescott. "It is not helpful
and it runs counter to what we want to achieve." Talks on opening up world
markets to poorer countries, as well as reforming global finance systems and
taking action to provide access to clean water for all, were continuing, he
said. Mr Prescott added: "What Johannesburg tries to do is bring them all
within a comprehensive framework so we can see all the things we have to do in
trade for development and finance for development and not at the cost of
environmental degradation, and get a commitment to do something about poverty.
"What we have got to find now is the political statement that sets us in that
direction, and at the same time a plan of action to achieve it."
39. SCENARIOS FOR EARTH'S FUTURE LOOK BAD
Yomiuri Shimbun
25 June 2002
Internet:
http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/newse/20020625wo74.htm
The U.N.
Environment Program has recently published the third issue of its report,
Global Environment Outlook-3. The GEO-3 report, commemorating the 30th
anniversary of UNEP, begins with this analysis: "Poverty and excessive
consumption--the twin evils of humankind that were highlighted in the previous
two GEO reports--continue to put enormous pressure on the environment." The
report, in connection with the World Summit on Sustainable Development to be
held in Johannesburg in August, also covers environmental issues from the past
30 years and forecasts on the environment for the next 30 years. The first
topic the report mentioned is the negative impact on land as a result of the
increase in population. Over the past 30 years, the world population has
increased by 2.2 billion. At the same time, increased urbanization and food
production has led to an excessive use of ground water and an expansion of
deforestation. The report states: "Around 2 billion hectares of soil, equal to
15 percent of the Earth's land cover, or an area bigger than the United States
and Mexico combined, is now classed as degraded as a result of human
activities." Human activities also cause serious damage to the quality of
water. Currently, about half the rivers of the world are dried up or polluted.
The worsening of the environment and the destruction of the ecosystem
certainly have negative impacts on mankind, as revealed by an increase in the
number of natural disasters such as floods and droughts. The report pointed
out that the number of those affected by natural disasters caused by the
deterioration of the environment increased by 64 million between the 1980s and
the 1990s. Based on past struggles and the current situation, the report
offered four plans for restoring the Earth's environment. The "Market First"
scenario focuses on the market as a dominant force in society and politics.
The "Policy First" scenario emphasizes decisive initiatives taken by
governments, such as the introduction of carbon taxes. The "Security First"
scenario predicts the creation of "gated communities" among wealthy groups.
The "Sustainability First" scenario predicts collaborations among governments,
businesses and citizens who seek harmony between development and the
environment. Each scenario makes a forecast on the state of the Earth's
environment in 2032, taking into consideration such factors as population
increase, economic growth and technological development. The "Market First"
and "Security First" scenarios predict there will be no slowdown in the
increase of carbon dioxide emissions, which are linked to global warming. The
"Policy First" scenario states that there will be a shift in the trend of
carbon dioxide emissions and a decrease would begin around 2030.
"Sustainability First" predicts that a similar shift could occur in the
mid-2020s, following improvements in energy efficiency. These scenarios were
compiled in cooperation with the National Institute for Environmental Studies
and Kyoto University. In the last preparatory meeting for the Johannesburg
summit, held in Bali earlier this month, UNEP Executive Director Klaus Topfer
said in a press conference that if nothing happened and the development
process followed the current trend, there would be negative consequences, such
as the loss of mammal species. "This is not a fantasy prognosis, this is
simply reality," Topfer said. He called on participants of the summit to show
greater awareness of the need for "concrete progress" in working toward a
consensus before the summit took place. We have seen the future. To help
restore the Earth's environment, Japan must take the initiative in creating a
society that values sustainability.
40. "GET TO CONSUMERS" TO HELP SAVE THE ENVIRONMENT, SAYS NEW REPORT
OneWorld
24 June 2002
Internet:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/oneworld/20020624/wl_oneworld/1032_1024935846
The Earth's "vital
signs" weakened in 2001, but consumers can play a critical role in improving
the planet's health, according to the results of an annual study published
last week documenting more than 50 social, economic, and environmental trends
around the world. The study, 'Vital Signs 2002: The Trends That Are Shaping
Our Future'--produced by The Worldwatch Institute, a Washington D.C.-based
independent organization researching on issues of environmental and social
policy--found economic recession, increasing use of fossil fuels, and
continued population growth to be some of the more worrying trends identified
during 2001. The global population swelled to 6.2 billion--more than double
the figure for 1950--while the rate of economic growth was just 2.1 percent,
one of the lowest recorded over the past five decades. Despite growing
awareness of the impact of fossil fuels on the global environment, consumption
of coal, oil, and natural gas rose by 1.3 percent last year, according to
study results.
Production and
consumption patterns in industrialized countries are playing a critical role
in the ongoing destruction of the environment, said the United Nations
Environment Programme's (UNEP) executive director Klaus Toepfer at last
Friday's afternoon launch of the study, adding, "We must get to the
consumer." In particular, the study stressed that an increasing volume of
toxic waste was being created by the haphazard disposal of new technologies.
Computers contain significant quantities of lead, and the semiconductors used
in cell phones and other such gadgets contain a variety of cancer-causing
substances, the study noted. While in Europe, responsibility for safe
recycling of such products is increasingly being placed on producers, no
similar efforts are underway in the United States, said study co-author Molly
Sheehan. More than 2.9 million tons of "e-waste" ended up in U.S. landfills
in 1997, and this figure is expected to rise rapidly by 2004, as tens of
millions of cell phones and an estimated 315 million computers are discarded,
according to Worldwatch. The study's co-author, Michael Renner, however,
stressed that consumers are increasingly "voting with their wallets" for
products that are manufactured without causing environmental destruction or
degradation. With the help of product labeling--for example, of genetically
engineered foods or wood products harvested in a sustainable way--and the use
of quality and efficiency standards, consumers now have the choice of more
environmentally friendly products. The study describes six "eco-labeling"
programs--covering such diverse areas as seafood, domestic appliances,
tourism, and coffee--that award a seal of approval to producers who observe
standards designed to ensure environmental protection. If embraced by a
critical mass of consumers and industries, said Worldwatch researcher Lisa
Mastny, such programs could play a vital role in promoting sustainable
development. "Consumers will not save the world by themselves, but they are
welcome allies in a struggle where we are going to need all the help we can
get," concluded UNEP's Toepfer, who is playing a leading role in preparations
for the World Summit on Sustainable Development planned for August in
Johannesburg, South Africa.
41. HUMANS OVERDRAWING EARTH'S RESOURCE BANK
HealthScoutNews
24 June 2002
Internet:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/hsn/20020625/hl_hsn/humans_overdrawing_earth_s_resource_bank
MONDAY, June 24 (HealthScoutNews)
-- Like the houseguest who raided the refrigerator and refused to restock it,
humans are depleting the Earth's resources faster than the planet can
replenish itself. A new study says that in 1999, the human economy overshot
available ecological resources by 120 percent, meaning it would require 1.2
Earths to regenerate what humans consumed that year. The research appears in
tomorrow's issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Previous studies have calculated use of individual elements, such as forests
and carbon dioxide, but this is the first time a larger accounting picture has
come into focus. "It's like borrowing. That's why we need these accounts,"
says Mathis Wackernagel, study author and program director at Redefining
Progress, a nonprofit public policy organization in Oakland, Calif. "What we
don't measure we don't see; so now basically we rip up our receipts and say
'great,' but the debt is not going away. It's like a business that doesn't
have an accounting department." And this "business" is saddled with other bad
news. Last week's issue of Science ran a study finding that global warming
will likely mean an increase in infectious diseases. "We're certainly using
more than our share," says Dr. Paul Epstein, associate director of the Center
for Health and the Global Environment at Harvard Medical School in Boston.
"We're using too much and generating waste, and this is when most organisms
level off their growth rates. We have not been able to do that. This is the
crux of the matter." Wackernagel and his colleagues compared humanity's
demand on the environment to the earth's bioproductive capacity over the past
40 years. The researchers looked at the amount of land used for growing crops
and grazing animals; the harvesting of timber; marine fishing; and the effects
of using fossil fuels. They found that in 1961, human demand was about 70
percent of Earth's regenerative capacity. By the mid-1970s, demand was
equaling supply and, by the 1980s, demand was exceeding supply. Although the
study doesn't document how long humans have before ecological assets run out,
the planet's resources are finite and our current rate of consumption is
simply not sustainable indefinitely. "The problem is that overuse can lead to
destruction of assets," Wackernagel says. "If you use up the capital, it
doesn't produce interest. It doesn't necessarily come back on its own."
However, people can still make choices that would avert ecological bankruptcy.
Wackernagel says people could reduce fertility rates, and also use resources
more efficiently. "There are actually ways to improve quality of life by
controlling our consumption, because now consumption runs into rat races," he
says. The findings point up the need to explore different models of
development. "One can hope that this will make us question our form of
development and the way we're using resources for energy," Epstein says. "It's
very clear that equity is an issue for development and for leveling off
population growth. While we don't have to give up all of what we're doing, we
do have to think about how to make trade and development and share of
resources more equitable." Wackernagel points out the timing of the article
couldn't be better -- just before the United Nations World Summit on
Sustainable Development in Johannesburg, South Africa, at the end of the
summer. "If we choose, we can turn it around," Wackernagel says. "And here's
a tool to track it."
42. WORLD SUMMIT IS TOO IMPORTANT TO FAIL'
Business Day
(Johannesburg) via All Africa
24 June 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200206240025.html
THE World Summit on
Sustainable Development has to succeed because at stake are issues that
determine the survival of human beings, says Jon Bech, Norwegian ambassador to
SA . Bech was speaking at one of the Johannesburg World Summit Company's
legacy projects, a multipurpose resource centre towards which Norway
contributed about R8m. The centre, near the Sandton Convention Centre where
the summit will take place, includes a library, a media centre, a website and
a call centre. It will co-ordinate all communication between representatives
at the summit including the media, local and international delegates and
nongovernmental organisations" Norway is dedicated to support financing for
sustainable development. It has for a long time been engaged in a wide variety
of efforts aimed at conservation and responsible management of Africa's
precious resources," the ambassador said. After the summit, the centre, which
has been donated to the multibillion rand Alexandra Renewal Project, will be
transformed into a sustainable resource centre and moved to Alexandra
township.
43. BRITAIN, DENMARK PLEDGE SUPPORT FOR JOBURG SUMMIT
South African Press
Association via All Africa
23 June 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200206240016.html
Britain and Denmark
have committed themselves to ensuring the success of the World Summit for
Sustainable Development in meetings with Foreign Affairs Minister Nkosazana
Dlamini-Zuma. Speaking to Sapa from London, department spokesman Ronnie
Mamoepa that bilateral talks with her counterparts in those countries were
part of a national thrust led by President Thabo Mbeki to find common ground
and build global consensus ahead of the summit. The two European countries
also said they would send "high-level delegations", Mamoepa said. The event is
scheduled to be held in Johannesburg in August and September. "Both Britain
and Denmark have committed themselves to working with South Africa towards
ensuring a successful summit while also building upon the foundations laid by
(the World Trade Organisation meetings) at Monterrey and Doha. "The ministers
discussed issues around market access, agricultural subsidies, human rights
and good governance and a balance between political, economic and
environmental issues," Mamoepa said. Zuma proceeds from Europe to Canada where
she will prepare for President Thabo Mbeki's visit to the G8 summit this week.
At the summit, Mbeki will announce the details of the New Partnership for
Africa's Development (Nepad).
44. BRAZIL ASKS RICH COUNTRIES FOR MORE DEVELOPMENT AID AND CLEAN ENERGIES
Associated Press
June 23 2002
Internet:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20020623/ap_wo_en_po/brazil_rio_summit_1
RIO DE JANEIRO,
Brazil - A top Brazilian official Sunday urged more aid money for
environmental projects in developing countries and said developed countries
should take a hard look at how they consume resources. Speaking on the eve of
a United Nations sponsored meeting on sustainable development, Brazilian
Foreign Minister Celso Lafer also called for a global effort to boost
renewable energy production. "We think that special attention needs to be paid
to poverty and the necessity that developed countries adjust their current
predatory production and consumption patterns," Lafer said. Officials
attending the three-day meeting in RIO are preparing for a larger U.N. summit
on sustainable development to be held in Johannesburg, South Africa Aug. 26 to
Sept. 4. The summit is dubbed Rio + 10, after the Earth Summit held in Rio in
1992. Brazil, along with other Latin American and Caribbean countries, have
proposed that rich, industrialized countries devote 0.7 percent of their gross
domestic product to assisting. World leaders attending the 1992 Rio summit
committed to such a reduction in a nonbinding resolution, but aid funding on
average fell from 0.4 percent to 0.2 percent of GDP in developed countries,
according to Brazilian officials. Lafer also said developed countries should
commit to producing at least 10 percent of their energy needs with renewable
energy sources by 2012, a proposal rejected by Middle East countries. "We need
a cleaner energy production that uses renewable sources, such as wind or
biomass," Lafer said.
45. PRESCOTT JOINS BID TO SAVE WORLD POVERTY SUMMIT
Independent
23 June 2002
Internet:
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/environment/story.jsp?story=308124
John Prescott, the
Deputy Prime Minister, is today helping to launch an emergency attempt to save
a crucial summit on world poverty from disaster. He arrives in Rio de Janeiro
this morning to join talks aimed at working out a rescue plan for the world
summit on sustainable development due to open in Johannesburg in August.
Preparatory negotiations broke down in Bali two weeks ago. Tomorrow he will
meet Kofi Annan, the UN Secretary-General, Thabo Mbeki, the South African
President, Fernando Henrique Cardoso, the Brazilian President, and Goran
Person, the Swedish Prime Minister. to hammer out a strategy to save what is
the biggest attempt to tackle world poverty in over two decades.The Bali
meeting, to pave the way for agreement at the summit, ended with more than 100
points of disagreement. The administration of President George Bush blocked
progress and refused to negotiate, while weak leadership in Europe and the
Third World compounded the problem. Brazil held the last Earth Summit in Rio
in 1992, and the original one, in 1972, took place in Stockholm, Sweden. The
meeting marks Mr Prescott's return to the fray, after being blown off course
by press reports last month that alleged that he was going to the Bali
conference for a "junket". Various senior UN figures are eager for him to get
involved again as they believe he is one of the few people who could broker a
deal at the summit. The plan would be to launch a new initiative after the G8
meeting of the leaders of the world's richest countries in Canada on 27 and 28
June. Mr Prescott said that if the summit fails, the chance to address the
needs of the world's poorest people may be lost for a decade or more. * A
report to be published tomorrow by the charity ActionAid will warn G8 leaders
that missed targets on aid have cost the lives of 15 million children. It says
that they are behind schedule on "virtually every target" set in 1990 in the
Millennium Development Goals, supposed to be met by 2015.
46. UN-COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY LAUNCH NEW PARTNERSHIP
Voice of America
22 June 2002
Internet:
http://www.voanews.com/article.cfm?objectID=61526E19-89BA-4E6B-8C7184BD2AE25189&title=UN%2DColumbia%20University%20Launch%20New%20Partnership&catOID=45C9C787-88AD-11D4-A57200A0CC5EE46C
A partnership
between Columbia University in New York city and the United Nations has been
launched for the first time, to assist local communities to deal with a
growing number environmental and social challenges. For five years, academics
at Columbia University's Earth Institute have taken a hands-on approach to the
world's most pressing problems, from the jungles of the Amazon in South
America to the mountains of the Himalayas in South Asia. Now, the University
has joined forces with the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural
Organization, UNESCO. Jeffrey Sachs, who is set to become the head of the
University's Earth Institute, will run the program. He is also an advisor to
U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan. Professor Sachs said the world's poor,
particularly in Africa, are in dire need of assistance, following a failure by
wealthy nations to address their social and environmental concerns. "You have
the poorest countries actually experiencing absolute declines in living
standards," he said. "Now this is shocking, it's deeply distressing, it's
counter to all our shared global ambitions, and it remains the most urgent
problem in the world, although not necessarily the most addressed problem in
the world." Professor Sachs says the Columbia University - U.N. partnership
will focus on five key issues, water, energy, health, agriculture, and
biodiversity presented recently by Secretary General Annan. Six research
sites have already been established in Cambodia, Peru, South Africa, the
Democratic Republic of Congo and the United States. The program is attempting
to address problems in rural areas. For example, UNESCO and the Earth
Institute are working with the Cambodian government to restore the eco-system
of the Tonle Sap Great Lake, which provides the fisheries for more than
one-million people. Researchers are focusing on the alleviation of poverty in
the Democratic Republic of Congo and on the environmental consequences of
human ranching in desert grasslands in North America and Kenya. The world's
largest cities are receiving attention too. A partnership of participants in
New York, Madrid, Rome, Sao Paulo and Cape Town examine the effects of
urbanization on the environment. UNESCO's Peter Bridgewater said the scope of
the Columbia - United Nations partnership differentiates the program from
other joint efforts. "It is different because it is linking what is happening
in the countries, it is linking governments, it is linking local people, real
local people on the ground with the capacity of Columbia [University] to
deliver on the research activities," he said. In two years, additional
research sites will include Eastern Europe, the Mongolian grasslands,
Indonesia, India, Brazil and Costa Rica. The launch of the program comes just
two months before the World Summit on Sustainable Development begins in
Johannesburg.
47. PYRAMID ERECTED ON MT KENYA
The Nation
(Nairobi) via All Africa
22 June 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200206220020.html
A pyramid is being
put up at a shrine on Mt Kenya in preparation for an international conference
to be held in South Africa.
The Sh900,000 Earth
Justice Pyramid has portraits of presidents of Africa - Jomo Kenyatta, Nelson
Mandela, Kwame Nkurumah, and Julius Nyerere - on each side of the base. Dr
Jack K Githae, the chairman of the Mount Kenya Shrines committee, said a
statue of an African seer would stand on top of the pyramid in Kibirichia
location, Meru Central District. "We decided to put the portrait of the
legendary Wamugumo, a Kikuyu seer known for his strength since we have his
picture. His statue will represent other African seers like Mugo Wa Kibiru,"
the herbalist said. The pyramid, which will be built of concrete and granite,
will be 12-feet high with a 15-feet base. It will be commissioned on July 30
before the People's Earth Summit, which starts in August in Johannesburg,
South Africa. This will mark the launch of the Global Drumming Wave in Kenya -
a series of activities to create awareness on the People's Earth Summit, Dr
Githae said yesterday in Nyeri after laying the pyramid's foundation stone. He
said Mandela stands for justice, Nkrumah represents liberty while Kenyatta and
Nyerere symbolise prosperity and peace respectively. In South Africa, a group
of people will gather at a site called Cradle of Humankind, an hour before the
opening of the summit. And in Brazil, over 1,000 people from different
religious backgrounds are scheduled to join the wave by gathering at a
convention centre for meditation.Other activities will also be done in United
States of America, United Kingdom, Australia and Portugal. The groups are
supposed to come together to link up collectively to strengthen a creative
expression of people's relationship with the earth, according to a spokesman
of Global Newsletter - Drumming, Mr Gaia Alex
48. BRAZIL HOSTS COMMEMORATIVE CONFERENCE AHEAD OF 10TH ANNIVERSARY OF 1992
EARTH SUMMIT
The Earth Times
22 June 2002
Internet:
http://www.earthtimes.org/jun/brazilhostscommemorativejun22_02.htm
Activists,
legislators and journalists from all over the world have begun gathering here
for a conference intended to set the stage for the upcoming 10th anniversary
of the 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development. The
conference is scheduled to be inaugurated by President Fernando Henrique
Cardoso of Brazil. He will symbolically "hand over" the headquarters of the UN
conference to President Thabo Mbeki of South Africa. President Mbeki will host
the World Summit Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg, August
26-September 4. The Johannesburg conference--which Brazilians popularly call
Rio Plus 10--will review the progress made by nations on the Earth Summit's
initiatives. The conference is also expected to formulate a new assault on
global poverty. Here in Rio, Presidents Cardoso and Mbeki are expected to be
joined by Prime Minister Göran Persson of Sweden. It was in the Swedish
capital of Stockholm that the first global conference was held in 1972, the UN
Conference on the Human Environment. One of the initiatives that came out of
that conference was the UN Environment Programme, an agency that started out
vigorously under the leadership of Maurice F. Strong, a Canadian businessman
and environmentalist. UNEP, however, has become a moribund body because of
poor performance by Strong's successors, according to knowledgeable
observers. Strong himself is in Rio, not the least because he was Secretary
General of both the 1972 Stockholm Conference and the 1992 Rio Summit. His
deputy at the time of the Earth Summit, Nitin Desai, is also here. Desai is
Secretary General of the Johannesburg Summit which, like the Rio Summit, is
expected to attract tens of thousands of participants.
The Rio meeting,
which formally starts on Sunday, is called the International Seminar on
Sustainable Development. Seminars will be held on the expectations and
opportunities presented by the Johannesburg Summit. This meeting will also be
a critical gauge of perceptions of the Johannesburg Summit. It is widely
thought that preparations for Johannesburg have faltered and that the summit's
agenda has yet to be fully clarified. There is also rising concern that the
rich donor countries who are expected to commit additional monies for poverty
alleviation, may demur on account of global economic malaise. The world's 30
wealthiest countries currently give some $50 billion in grants to the 137
so-called developing countries, a figure that is widely considered inadequate.
There is growing sentiment in the wealthy industrialized countries that much
of the trillion dollars of development assistance since World War II has been
wasted through mismanagement and corruption. Today, more than half of the
world's p[opulation of 6 billion lives in abject poverty. Sunday's opening
ceremony as well as the three-day international seminar will take place in the
Modern Art Museum (Museu de Arte Moderna) here.
49. ENVIRONMENT, POVERTY PLAN SUGGESTED
Associated Press
21 June 2002
Internet:http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20020621/ap_on_re_us/global_trends_1
The need for a
global action plan on problems such as environmental decline and poverty has
never been as evident as it is this year, the Worldwatch Institute said
Friday. The gap between rich and poor is widening, AIDS ( news - web sites)
and other diseases pose health challenges and ecosystems are getting battered,
the institute concluded in a report, "Vital Signs 2002: The Trends That Are
Shaping Our Future." Many of these topics will be addressed this summer in
Johannesburg, South Africa, at the World Summit on Sustainable Development,
said Michael Renner, director of the project. Worldwatch, a Washington-based
organization that researches global trends in economics and the environment,
teamed up with the U.N. Environment Programme to produce the 215-page report,
its 11th since 1992. Vital Signs examines more than 50 environmental and
social trends, including waste generated by computers, cell phones and other
electric devices; the surging wind energy industry and the increase in soda
and sugar consumption around the world. "On the downside," the report said,
"there is continuing forest loss in the tropics, the threat of extinction for
many freshwater species, the relentless generation of huge amounts of
hazardous waste, the massive spread of HIV ( news - web sites) infections and
declining foreign aid." Promising developments are growing sales of efficient
compact fluorescent lamps with 1.8 billion in use worldwide, the steady
decline in oil spills and the reduction in production of ozone-destroying
chemicals, the report said. "We tend to think of the 'new economy' as being
cleaner than the 'smokestack economy,'" Renner said in a statement. "But
manufacturing semiconductors is chemical-intensive. And the short life span of
these products is creating mountains of electronics waste." He said cell phone
and computer users should demand that manufacturers take their products back
and design them to be recycled instead thrown out. The report estimates that
by 2004, tens of millions of cell phones and an estimated 315 million
computers may be headed for dumps. Worldwatch said wind energy remains the
world's fastest growing energy source, with generating capacity reaching
24,800 megawatts in 2001, up 37 percent from 18,100 megawatts in 2000. Europe
has more than 70 percent of the world's wind generating capacity, with Germany
leading the way, the survey said. But the United States and Brazil also are
making important strides in increasing their programs. One topic Worldwatch
examined this year for the first time was sugar and sweetener consumption.
Global per-capita consumption of sweeteners rose to 157 million tons in 2001,
or more than 2 1/2 times the amount consumed in 1961, the report said. "The
United States is by far the leader - using almost three times as many
sweeteners as India and 10 times as many as China," the report said.
"Americans on average consumed 686 calories of sweeteners a day in 1999 more
than a quarter of the recommended 2,250 calorie diet." The report said
carbonated soft drinks maintained their position as the third most popular
commercial drink edging closer to milk and tea.
ON THE WEB
50. BUSINESS ROLE
CRUCIAL AT GLOBAL SUMMIT, LEADER SAYS (Reuters 5 July 2002)
http://www.enn.com/news/wire-stories/2002/07/07052002/reu_47739.asp
51. AFRICA NEEDS
GREEN GROWTH TO FIGHT POLLUTION, SAYS U.N. (Reuters 5 July 2002)
http://www.enn.com/news/wire-stories/2002/07/07052002/reu_47735.asp
52. SOUTH AFRICA
READIES 26,000 POLICE FOR EARTH SUMMIT (Reuters via Planet Ark 27 June 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16601/story.htm
53. BRAZIL LEADER
SAYS MUCH STILL NEEDED ON ENVIRONMENT (Reuters via Planet Ark 26 June 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16568/story.htm
54. SOUTH AFRICA
ACTIVISTS SAY WILL DEFY POLICE ON SUMMIT (Reuters via Planet Ark 25 June 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16557/story.htm
EDITORIAL/OPINIONS
55. TIME FOR THE BIG PUSH by Derek Osborn
Guardian
3 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Archive/Article/0,4273,4452820,00.html
Derek Osborn headed
the UK preparations for the Rio earth summit in 1992. A major conference on
the summit will be held on July 16 in Birmingham.
World leaders,
civil servants and armies of pressure groups, lobbyists and the media will be
descending on Johannesburg at the end of August for the world summit on
sustainable development. Ten years after the earth summit in Rio de Janeiro,
what will they be aiming to achieve? Sustainable development means managing
growth in the world's economies during the next century in a way that avoids
disaster for the environment, and reduces the intolerable gaps between the
haves and the have-nots. It is the largest single challenge facing mankind. A
big summit meeting is a tremendous opportunity to deepen public understanding
of the issues, and to build support for the necessary actions. Preparations
for Johannesburg have been going on for the past year at the UN in New York,
and last month in a final pre-summit preparatory meeting in Bali. The issues
are becoming clearer, but there is much yet to be done to clinch a meaningful
agreement. The agenda and the negotiations have covered an enormous range of
issues. The emerging agreement will reinforce the centrality of the
sustainable development goal to governments and organisations at all levels.
It will underline the importance of creating, implementing and monitoring
effective sustainable development strategies with specific timetabled goals
and targets. Vital to this is allocation of resources and monitoring
development progress with indicators. It will also give a new impetus to the
process of ratifying and implementing key international agreements on the
environment including those on climate change, biodiversity, desertification
and international fish stocks. Hopefully, it will send a clear message to the
new trade round about building sustainability into trade rules and improving
market access for the south. Possibly it will agree a new approach on
globalisation and the role of international business. Local government,
business, trade unions, and non-governmental organisations of all kinds have
played a leading part in the preparatory discussions, and have been encouraged
to develop partnership proposals for advancing sustainability. The
preparations have focused strongly on the problems of the developing
countries, and particularly of the least developed countries - many of which
are in Africa. They have the most pressing problems of unsustainability. Their
economies are in the worst shape. Poverty, hunger and ill health are most
acute there. And in many cases these problems are compounded by degradation of
the natural environment through pollution, deterioration of the land and soil,
and loss of natural resources.
It was agreed early
on that the primary focus at Johannesburg would be tackling poverty in the
developing world and shaping a development programme that would prioritise
this global campaign in a sustainable way. Within that general objective five
issues have been identified as particularly significant - water, energy,
health, agriculture and biodiversity. Each of these areas cries out for a
sustainable approach. Take water. The objective is to bring fresh drinking
water to the 20% of the world's population without it by 2015. This cannot be
achieved simply by abstracting water from rivers and groundwater in
traditional ways, because in many parts of the world the water resources are
insufficient and are shrinking. What is needed is to manage all the water in a
catchment area in an integrated and sustainable way. Dealing with dirty water
and sewerage is just as important as providing the fresh water. Only an
integrated approach will be sustainable. Similarly for energy. Supplying
electricity to the two billion people who do not have it is a pressing
development need. But this does not have to be done on the western model with
major polluting power plants and a national grid. It may make better economic,
social and environmental sense to go for smaller dispersed forms of
generation, and to include substantial elements of renewable energy in the
mix. Again, health discussions often focus on the provision of health- care
and drugs. But in many developing countries there are better returns in
sustainability terms from investment in environmental and social improvements
that can reduce disease. The important task is to turn these statements of
priority into concrete programmes that can be delivered. The countries and
organisations responsible for taking the lead need to be identified, new
resources allocated and committed. Delivering real outcomes in these five
areas is one of the key tests for success at Johannesburg. Some new funding is
apparently on offer from the developed world, but it needs to be pinned down.
In the preparatory meetings much progress has been made, but countries have
not shown enough flexibility to reach full agreement on some of the issues.
The Americans have resisted adding any new targets to those already agreed,
although at Monterrey, earlier this year, they promised a significant increase
in resources to support sustainable development. They need to be persuaded to
accept the new targets for sanitation, for renewable energy and for
biodiversity. Many of the development assistance ministers of Europe,
including development secretary Clare Short, have been reluctant to allow any
aid budgets to be earmarked for the five priority areas. Ways must be found to
accommodate these priorities within the overall poverty reduction goal.
Developing
countries are themselves reluctant to tie their hands about priorities. But
they will need to find some way of responding to the north's readiness to give
extra support to the key areas. They are insistent that a clear message be
sent to the trade negotiators about the need to improve access to northern
markets for goods and services from developing countries, and to find ways of
taking forward the debate about globalisation and the framework within which
giant multinationals should be allowed to operate.
Deals on some of
these key issues have still to be done but it will require great political
skill to pull off an agreement which will really advance sustainability in the
world at Johannesburg. Now is the moment for the big push.
56. YEMI KATERERE: THE FUTURE OF THE SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
Mail & Guardian
28 June 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FF20020627120000088.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
Fiona Macleod
interviews Yemi Katerere, Southern African regional director of IUCN-The World
Conservation Union, about the challenges and the future of the World Summit
Some people would
say "sustainable development" is a contradiction in terms. What is your
understanding of it? What does it mean?
If you take a very
theoretical or conceptual discussion about sustainable development, it can be
contradictory because sustainable development as a concept is not the basis
for action. It does not describe the action that you will actually do, so it
becomes a theoretical discussion of sustainable development. But in terms of
how we use it, it's really about the wise use of the natural resources. In
particular for a region like Southern Africa that is dependent on natural
resources for local and international markets, it's about how we can use those
natural resources to generate economic development without undermining your
future ability to continue to grow the economy. Secondly, the environment is
not only a source of inputs into different sectors -- whether you are talking
tourism, mining or agriculture -- but it acts as a sink: as you create waste,
the environment absorbs all that waste you generate. There's clearly a limit
to which the environment can continue to provide inputs into those different
sectors and also act as a sink for all the waste we generate. It's creating
that balance that is really what we are talking about when we refer to
sustainable development.
How does IUCN-The
World Conservation Union further sustainable development in Southern Africa?
In different ways.
First of all, our mission in Southern Africa is to promote sustainable and
equitable development, and also the sustainable use of biodiversity. In order
to do that, we believe that to mobilise people to be able to conserve the
natural resources and biodiversity in a sustainable manner, we first have to
demonstrate benefit. People have to see that these natural resources generate
tangible benefits. Secondly, people have to have a sense of ownership. This
means they can make decisions about the resources and the benefits that derive
from those resources. Our contribution has been to try to promote this
thinking through policy changes, engaging governments, bringing on board
examples of good practice, engaging parliamentarians, civil society, middle
managers and senior bureaucrats -- and showing them what is working and what
is not working. We are trying to facilitate policy development that then
promotes the ability of people to manage their resources and to benefit from
those resources.
Benefit is
important, and a sense of ownership and participation in the process.
Do you get actively
involved in projects?
We get involved in
projects to the extent that we need to test or to demonstrate concepts or to
undertake case studies, but generally in terms of projects we do not want to
be involved in dissemination. If we undertake a study, for example, in a
particular area of how communities manage a resource, we would collect the
information and we would then disseminate the information to other
organisations that can take it further by replicating that example in other
parts of the country. We wouldn't get involved in mass replication, that would
not be our role. But to the extent that we need to come up with new methods
of doing something, we do projects. We don't have a mandate to do field work
and mass dissemination. We are a membership organisation and one of our core
values is that we work in partnership with our members. So ultimately it will
be our members who take on the main roles of implementing field projects,
rather than IUCN.
How do you expect
the World Summit to further sustainable development in this region?
What is critical
firstly is that the World Summit is being held in Africa. There has been a lot
of focus on Africa, on Africa's poverty, on the fact that Africa is a very
rich continent and despite its wealth, in terms of natural resources and
people, it remains poor. Having the summit in Africa is putting a focus on
Africa, and it's bringing into focus some of these issues.
Yes, we have known
all these things, there is nothing new in what is being said, but in terms of
finding solutions, in moving forward, we are hoping the summit will focus on
the action. We must not be getting into debate. Agenda 21 was an action
agenda -- for example, it talked about capacity building in terms of
sustainable development. Agenda 21 is still relevant today. But we really have
not committed ourselves to the implementation of Agenda 21.
Capacity building
remains an issue on the agenda for the World Summit. Partnerships is another
issue that is coming across strongly in terms of getting what needs to be
done, done. The summit is going to highlight the actions that need to be taken
-- very concrete, practical actions in terms of starting to address some of
the challenges that we face within the context of Africa.
The kinds of
economic growth that we are looking at in terms of the New Partnership for
Africa's Development (Nepad) vision, we are talking about economic growth of
7% a year, at halving poverty by half by the year 2015 to 2020. If you are
going to do that, it will imply that you are going to have to increase the
rate of exploitation of natural resources.
Now, unless we can
focus very critically on how we are going to exploit those natural resources,
we can put ourselves on an unsustainable path. It is important that, as we try
to address the poverty of Africa and as we inevitably are going to focus on
Africa's natural resources, we do so in a sustainable manner. I think the
summit is going to help renew our commitment to Agenda 21, to do the things
that we should have been doing. What we are seeing with Nepad being an African
vision of addressing some of the problems is very closely linked to the agenda
for the World Summit on Sustainable Development. I see Nepad mobilising the
financial resources, the political commitment from the leadership of Africa,
seeking African solutions to African problems -- I think that in itself will
enhance the whole agenda of sustainable development in Africa.
Will a programme of
action then be the most important legacy of the World Summit?
Yes, coming up with
types of actions that need to be taken forward. We are not renegotiating
Agenda 21, we are focusing on action, on what needs to be done. That's why,
for example, the issue of partnerships is being highlighted, because that will
be one way of achieving those actions. What is the role of the private sector;
can we identify those areas where the private sector can mobilise the
requisite financial resources to do the things that the private sector can do
best? What is the role of the public sector; what sort of public resources can
we mobilise to do certain things that the public sector should be doing? What
is the role of civil society in terms of this agenda? Those are the issues
that should be focused on.
We should not just
be looking at the summit itself, but beyond the summit. The real challenge is
the action that we actually implement after the summit. That is where the test
will be.
Does the Southern
approach to this programme of action and the issues attached differ from the
Northern approach?
There has always
been a North-South tension, there have always been issues around the flow of
the resources, about trade barriers. If Africa is going to develop, some of
those issues need to be addressed. The whole issue of governance is also
coming on the table. It's not just governance in terms of Africa, but
governance in terms of how the multilateral organisations -- the World Bank,
the International Monetary Fund, the World Trade Organisation -- are managed
and how the decisions are made in those institutions which impact on Africa.
I think the summit should not dwell on the North-South divide. We cannot avoid
some debate about what is the role or responsibility of the North and what the
South should be doing. But at the end of the day we should not end with
allegations that the North did not do this, and with the North responding that
the South did not do this. If we look at the South frankly, since 1992 we
have made some impressive gains. Even if we just look at Southern Africa and
the commitment to protected areas. Protected areas are a global, public good.
They benefit not just the Southern African region, they are a global benefit.
There is a tremendous commitment by the governments of Southern Africa, if you
look at the amount of land that has been committed to the protected areas. It
is a huge amount of land. If you look at the pressures that these countries
are facing, that land could easily be converted to various other users. We are
impressed with the amount of land that has been put under protected areas. So
we should not be focusing on blaming each other, but we should recognise where
we have not played our part, whether we are the North or the South, and
ultimately we have to be looking forward. We have to face the challenges and
find the commitment to address them.
57. GLOBAL AGENDAS ARE SET BY THE USUAL SUSPECTS by Dennis Brutus
Business Day via
All Africa
27 June 2002
Internet:http://allafrica.com/stories/200206270045.html
Brutus, emeritus
professor of Africana Studies at the University of Pittsburgh, is a poet,
internationalist activist and former Robben Island prisoner. Bush, Blair,
Chirac, Schröder and Chretien serve as a sort of board of directors
SA AND the world
are faced with critical ideological choices in coming weeks. What kind of case
is the global left making?
The stakes couldn't
be higher. When the World Summit on Sustainable Development convenes in
Sandton in late August, it will literally be deciding on an agenda for the
planet. When countries joining the Africa Union (AU) meet in Durban next week,
the New Partnership for Africa's Development (Nepad) will set the agenda for
our continent. But in reality, much of the agenda for both these events has
already been determined by the Group of Eight (G-8) leadership in its mountain
hideout in Canada. George Bush, Tony Blair, Jacques Chirac, Helmut Schröder,
Jean Chretien and the others serve as a sort of board of directors which
promotes northern corporate interests. That is not good for the rest of us.
This was proven at the Bali prepcom for the world summit in early June, when
corporations pushed the privatisation agenda via the G-8, World Bank,
International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Trade Organisation (WTO).
Frontline battles to save humanity and environment have been waged often
enough by people's movements against these institutions, from Seattle to
Prague to Washington. And there are many other sites across the Third World
that have hosted IMF riots against neoliberal (free-market) economics. Now we
find that we also must do battle with the United Nations bureaucrats and a
global compact that, because of US unwillingness to pay back dues, requires
Kofi Annan to go begging to some of the world's most criminal multinational
corporations. And now we learn too, that the host country for the world summit
and the AU are apparently intent on selling out the continent under the rubric
of a plan crafted by the same technocrats who wrote Pretoria's failed Gear
economic programme, under the guidance of Washington and the corporate leaders
of Davos. It is past time for us to insist that President Thabo Mbeki rise off
his kneepad and assume the dignity of an African leader, or face ridicule. In
Durban at the launch of the Africa Union, social movements will remind the
world that discredited elites cannot rename their club and continue to endorse
the Washington consensus. Virtually all civil society commentators have
complained that Nepad is top-down, nonconsultative, and so prone to neoliberal
economic mistakes that it must be tossed out and a new programme started from
scratch. Time magazine put Mbeki on its front cover on June 10, alleging
incorrectly that he has made a Uturn on AIDS.
The G-8 elites need
a rehabilitated Mbeki, and they insist that, as Time claimed, Nepad "could be
the continent's last hope for joining the global economy".Yet Africa has
joined the global economy, and that is the problem. For more than a quarter of
a century, the revenue from our outputs mainly cash crops and minerals have
fallen dramatically even though our outputs have increased, due to what
economists call "declining terms of trade". Meanwhile, debt repayments and
capital flight continue to suck us dry of finances we desperately need for
investment. So why then does Nepad politely agree to repay debt under the
Highly Indebted Poor Countries programme that even the World Bank now admits
has failed? And how can Mbeki in good conscience promote more "public-private
partnerships" in Africa which do not work at home? The privatisation of water,
electricity, transport and telecommunications by European, US and Asian firms
have all failed on their own terms, as well as in providing sustainable access
to the masses of South Africans. In the movements for global justice, our
strategy is to endorse, attend and create a series of progressive events at
the AU in July and the world summit in August that will allow the voices of
angry citizens to be heard.
These include
communities resisting evictions and water and electricity cut-offs, rural
people demanding land reform, AIDS activists seeking antiretroviral medicine,
environmentalists halting dams and dirty energy projects, women opposing
patriarchy and violence, consumer organisations opposed to corporate
domination of everything, and labour on strike against their oppressors in the
private sector as well as municipal and national governments. We expect all
these movements will join a mass march on the Sandton Convention Centre at the
mid-point of the world summit. Its aim is to nonviolently remind the elites
that we don't trust them, and to remind society of the issues that the elites
are doing their best to ignore.
58. IN THE BALANCE: THE FUTURE OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT Interview with Felix
Dodds
Open Democracy
26 June 2002
Internet:
http://www.oneworld.net/cgi-bin/index.cgi?root=129&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww%2Eopendemocracy%2Enet%2Fforum%2Fdocument%5Fdetails%2Easp%3FCatID%3D99%26Doc
ID%3D1539%26DebateID%3D177
Felix Dodds,
executive director of Stakeholder Forum For Our Common Future, is a key
participant in the global preparations for August's 'Rio plus 10' conference
in Johannesburg. In a compelling interview, he explains why Jo'burg may be the
endgame for 'sustainable development'.
FROM THE EDITORS
The World Summit on
Sustainable Development (WSSD) that will be held in Johannesburg between 26
August and 4 September will bring together negotiators from more than 150
countries to try to make practical, targeted agreements that will help bring
closer the prospect of a fairer, more sustainable world. The summit comes ten
years after the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED)
in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in June 1992. The 'Earth Summit', as it was known,
achieved binding agreement on two major global environmental issues - climate
change and biodiversity. Three other, non-binding, agreements were made on the
relationship between sustainable environment and social development. Agenda
21, an assessment and plan of action for advancing the agreed environmental
and social goals, was also secured at Rio, with a recommendation that all
countries should produce national sustainable development strategies. Ten
years on, four preparatory meetings (or 'PrepComs') were held in New York and
Bali, Indonesia, bringing together 'stakeholders' - governments, NGOs,
business groups - to plan the agenda and prospects for the Johannesburg
conference. One of the people who has been most active in trying to ensure the
summit's success is Felix Dodds, executive director of Stakeholder Forum For
Our Common Future. With a focused understanding of the agenda and practical
issues at stake, and an unmatched insight into the often delicate
relationships between non-governmental organisations, corporations and
governments, Dodds is uniquely qualified to speak about the problems and
opportunities of the summit process. Here, Felix Dodds talks to Caspar
Henderson, Globalisation editor of openDemocracy.
Opendemocracy - The
latest meeting in advance of the World Summit on Sustainable Development
(WSSD) recently ended in Bali. What was the meeting essentially about?
Felix Dodds - Bali
was the final preparatory meeting, or PrepCom, before Johannesburg. It was
expected to have two governmental outcomes: to finalise a programme of action,
and to start the negotiations on a political declaration.
A further goal was
an agreement or a framework for enabling partnerships, involving both
governments and other stakeholders, to be recognised at the summit.
The uneven road to
Bali
openDemocracy -
Some non-governmental organisations (NGOs) have suggested that Bali was a
tremendous letdown. Do you think this is fair?
Felix Dodds - In
general terms, yes. There were a number of problems at Bali and these go back
to the previous meeting, PrepCom 3 in New York in April. At that time, there
was a disagreement about the way that the Programme of Action should be
designed. The chair of PrepCom 3, Emil Salim, the former Environment Minister
of Indonesia, had approached it in an unusual way. Instead of producing a
document outlining specific actions and spending plans along with means of
implementing them (as documents such as Agenda 21 are designed), Emil Salim
simply offered a set of paragraphs under various topic headings (Draft Plan of
Implementation for the WSSD). This caused a lot of frustration to the WSSD
hosts, the South African government. In response, they distributed another
document in the run-up to Bali under what are called 'non-paper' terms. In
theory, a non-paper is one that is not attributable. But the South Africans
made it clear to everyone in Bali that they had written it. This non-paper was
an attempt to refocus the Bali discussion around a coherent agenda for
following through decisions: timetable and targets, specific activities, means
of implementation plus clarity on the finance and resources required. "By the
time we went into the Bali meeting we had the 'wrong' document". The
'non-paper' was a good piece of work. Many NGOs and stakeholder groups reacted
positively to it, the UK government made it clear that they supported the
South African government position, and even the vice-chairs from Canada and
Egypt suggested that the chair should redo his own document accordingly. But,
instead, the chair just tinkered with the text, and left it substantially
unchanged. Some governments went as far as actually asking us, the
Stakeholder Forum, to try to get the G8 to intervene. We actually had a
meeting with the G8 'sherpas' to help get things back on track. And the UN
Secretary General was so worried that he issued a statement suggesting the
summit should focus on five areas - energy, biodiversity, food security,
health and fresh water - as a way of trying to help push it in the right
direction. But it became very difficult to change course. Once government
representatives arrived in Bali, they had to approach the chair's text in good
faith. Thus, by the time we went into the Bali meeting we had, essentially,
the 'wrong' document.
openDemocracy - Why
do you think this was allowed to happen?
Felix Dodds - I
think that the UN - and we've made these comments to the Secretary General's
Office - should actually have instructions on what a programme of action
should look like so that it is not reinvented each time we start this process.
Many documents of this kind are relatively similar in the way that a programme
of action is developed, and the learnings they embody need to be shared. For
example, if the PrepCom document had been structured along the lines of Agenda
21, the gaps that needed to be filled in would be clear. We could go through
the document and see if questions, say, of regional level actions on fresh
water were missing. Instead, at Bali, all we had was a series of paragraphs
with no context or standard of comparison.
Even at this stage,
there is hope that the Secretary General's 'five areas' might be developed
into another document. What status that document would have is unclear. There
was discussion in the corridors that the G8 might in some way endorse the
Secretary General's call for these five areas and that some work could be done
to produce a kind of hybrid document that might be available for negotiating
in Johannesburg. But time is now desperately short. We are now in a situation
where there is no bureau to lead the process, because after Bali the political
bureau was dissolved and the bureau for the WSSD will not be elected until the
first day of the summit itself. Basically, the only people in place now are
the host country, South Africa. In this context, this might actually be a
blessing - they have been enormously impressive throughout this process. Their
clearness of direction in trying to push this conference in the right
direction deserves an enormous amount of credit.
From Bali to
Johannesburg: leaving it to the politicians?
openDemocracy -
Looking here at the programme of action or implementation document of the
WSSD, there are a huge number of bracketed areas. Why is this? Is the essence
of the document just a wish list, and in no way really a deliverable text?
Felix Dodds - This,
too, was very badly managed in Bali. The problem was that the Bali document
did not lend itself to the kind of agreements between the various stakeholders
that are a necessary part of making progress at the summit. For example, it is
likely that both the Group of 77 and the US were ready to agree a financial
deal over the TransNational Conference convention, based on money released
under the Monterrey Conference on Finance and Development. The chance of such
an agreement was lost by the inadequacies of the PrepCom document. To make
the point in more general terms: donor governments do not want to commit money
to things they cannot deliver. So, on water, a clear programme of action would
have entailed specified mechanisms to deliver it - such as a set of
partnerships on rainwater harvesting, on water delivery for countries in
sub-Saharan Africa that will require aid. All this could have been quantified
in terms of numbers of people and resources. We know, for example, that to
halve the numbers without access to clean water by 2015 means that, globally,
300,000 people a day have to gain access.
One of the things
that have become clear during this process is that the Millennium Development
Goals were too aspirational. In contrast, we very much wanted incremental
targets, and a work-orientated approach - something the South Africans, too,
have argued for. If we are serious about hitting a target for 2015, we must
know where we want to be in 2005. And if we know where we want to be in 2005,
then we must have some idea of the kinds of activities that are required now.
This has not happened. Partly because the US representatives have actually
been taking out some of the targets. Their argument, and I have some sympathy
with it, is that unless there is a serious attempt to achieve something, that
we really mean it and have a programme of action to do it, then what's the
point? They don't want to support targets that are not founded on a firm
scientific basis, and with no evidence that the international community
intends to deliver them.
openDemocracy - Was
the issue of greenhouse gas emission targets one of the US's sticking points?
Felix Dodds - There
were several. The US have also been arguing against sanitation targets, which
is something that the Bonn Freshwater Conference endorsed. It requires 380,000
people a day to be given proper sewage systems to reach the target. Well, to
deliver this enormous target would mean reorientating aid giving to both the
millennium and later targets. The governments of northern countries don't seem
to be prepared to do that. They have lost their political belief. "The
governments of northern countries have lost their political belief" I think
that one of the hopes for Johannesburg, precisely because it is a meeting of
heads of government, is that the leaders can use their political weight to put
it back on track. If, for example, we could have a proper programme of action
and intention to deliver, then the head of a government could then instruct
the development ministry to relocate its resources to the relevant area. There
is hope that the Secretary General's five areas (food security, fresh water,
health, biodiversity and energy) might be able to do that to some extent.
openDemocracy -
Four of these are primarily but not exclusively development targets. The
fifth, energy, though it has important development aspects, is also very much
in the environmental category. In that regard it seems unlikely the US would
endorse the kinds of proposals the European Union has put forward.
Felix Dodds - I
look at it slightly differently. In the original discussions in 1999 about
this summit, it was felt that it should have a poverty focus. The component
parts of poverty - food, water, energy, shelter, work, healthy environment -
are essentially contained in the Secretary General's proposal. In the context
of the work on energy, the US are not unsympathetic to looking at renewables
and different forms of energy provision for developing countries. For example,
one of the US initiatives is the Energy Village Network, which is an attempt
to link villagers into alternative forms of energy. The US administration is
approaching this summit seriously, and with money to spend. We don't know
exactly how much - but at Monterrey they promised some $4 billion. Now, even
if far less than this is put on the table, it will require the European Union
to be prepared to match it. But the problem we have is, as I've indicated,
that the summit document does not lend itself towards helping to spend that
kind of money.
Getting round the
rich men's roadblocks
openDemocracy - The
call for a charter for corporate accountability has received some attention.
What is going on there?
Felix Dodds -
Friends of the Earth have come out for a convention, in one of the most
impressive campaigns I've seen by an NGO for a long while. It has really
opened up a debate, which will have to be addressed. A number of companies
would be very sympathetic to such a discussion, because they feel that many of
their colleagues are freeloading on the voluntary initiative agenda. Now
voluntary initiatives on social and environmental responsibility are very
important. But, unless you create a baseline which you can move off, then
there is no reward to companies that actually are delivering. In the last few
years, we've seen a shift within the leading companies on this question. We
raised this issue in 1999, and produced a non-paper then on the summit
process, which the International Chamber of Commerce responded to. Some
companies feel dissatisfied with the existing Global Compact, which has nine
areas that companies are meant to be abiding by - but they only have to abide
by one in order to join. There is no system of incremental improvement built
into it, where the commitments and standards that companies have to meet on
environmental and social responsibility show a clear progression. There are
different possible ways of making progress here. I do think that the issue of
a convention for companies may not be fully dealt with by Johannesburg, but it
is now at least firmly on the agenda.
openDemocracy - The
trade agenda for poverty reduction is still a crucial aspect but it's not
developing in a way many people have hoped. In this connection, something in
the Draft Plan of Implementation presented in Bali made me, in the context of
what's been happening in the last few months, laugh out loud - the agreement
to "achieve substantial improvements in market access... reductions of, with a
view to phasing out, all forms of export subsidies and substantial reduction
in trade distorting support for agricultural products". Do you think the
spotlight of Johannesburg may help to change the political temperature and
ultimately the way that trade and subsidies are handled in Europe and the US?
Felix Dodds - This
is one of the major issues that wasn't resolved. There was a deal on the
table, which was put forward by the South Africans. I wasn't...well, none of
us were allowed in the room! It's my understanding that two countries within
the European Union blocked the deal - France and Ireland. It's probably not
surprising why that was the case. We don't know enough about the ins and outs
of the deal. But we understand the Americans were prepared to go with it, as
was the rest of the European Union.
This is an issue
that will be one of the major issues in Johannesburg. One of the problems that
we suffered from in Bali was a selective use of agreements. For example, the
Americans often went back on previous agreements such as the Beijing and Cairo
Conferences on women, population and development. Meanwhile, they and others
were refusing to move back on the Monterrey Consensus or the Doha Agreements.
And so you have a schizophrenia: either we agree that everything that has
previously been agreed stands and we move forward, or we pick and choose which
previous agreements to overturn in order to get what we want this time round.
In the context of trade, in Johannesburg we need to lay down what the
sustainable development criteria should be for the next round. But, so far, we
have merely put all the key points in brackets in the text and so postponed
their resolution. This is because of a disagreement over whether the World
Trade Organisation (WTO) or the WSSD is the proper place for that
conversation. It's unclear what will happen in Johannesburg on that. We also
have to factor in what happens at the G8 meeting this week in Canada, because
there are five African heads of state going - led by Thabo Mbeki, the South
African President. It's the first time we have had such a meeting, and the
main item on the agenda is to map out the New Partnership for African
Development (NEPAD). There may be some deals on trade being done there. NGOs
criticise the G8 for being opaque, when its impacts on the WTO, the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank are enormous. There have
already been conversations with the French, who hold the next G8 presidency,
to try to open up some space for more creative debate with all the other
stakeholders.
After Rio: one step
back, two forward?
openDemocracy -
What achievements from Johannesburg would satisfy you?
"I'd like to see
timetables and targets on energy, biodiversity, freshwater, security, health
with tranches of money then delivered to implement these."
Felix Dodds - We
need a new text based on the five issues of the UN Secretary General, drawn up
in a proper programme of action format. With the right political will from the
G8 and others, it could still be achieved because the Americans would then be
told by their President that they had to deliver something. I'd like to see
timetables and targets on energy, biodiversity, freshwater, security, health -
with tranches of money then delivered to implement these, whether these come
through government initiatives, UN initiatives, intergovernmental bodies, or
from stakeholders. I think this is a very exciting agenda around which we
could all start to rally.
openDemocracy - Are
we back to where we were in Stockholm in 1972?
Felix Dodds - No,
we're not. For one thing, the world is a lot more complicated now. If you look
back to 1992, the Soviet Union had only just dissolved. The impacts of that
were not yet known. We had also not really experienced globalisation - and we
have called for a UN commission on the globalisation of sustainable
development. One of our arguments to the people involved in drawing up the
Johannesburg programme of action was that we should have addressed
globalisation in each of the areas. What does globalisation in energy, water
and health mean? This would allow putting some tangible good and bad into our
understanding, rather than the ungraspable discussion on globalisation that
often occurs. So I think that 1992 in a sense was easier compared to where we
are now. We've had a large change in governments in developed countries prior
to this summit, which has caused a definite change of mood. But the other
thing that we potentially have, which we did not have in 1972 or 1992, is
money. In theory, we should be able to do something with that!
openDemocracy - But
there have been declarations in the past to increase aid as a proportion of
GDP from the leading industrialised countries. This hasn't happened.
Felix Dodds - Well,
in 1992, governments agreed to try and deliver a $125 billion transfer from
north to south. This amounted to 0.7% of GDP. It was amazing how close it got
to what was meant to be the UN target for official development assistance. Yet
the only new money that was committed at Rio was for the Global Environment
Facility - and lo and behold, at the same time, aid dropped by an equivalent
amount. The year 1997, the five-year review of Rio, was a wake-up call; after
that, aid flows started to go back up. In 1992, northern governments used the
recession and dissolution of the Soviet Union to postpone action and, after
the economic upturn started, they then declared foreign direct investment to
be their favoured route to help the poorer countries. But foreign direct
investment only went to ten countries in the world - none of them in Africa.
They simply weren't addressing the poorest at all. Meanwhile, we had no
understanding of what the impact of foreign direct investment was, positive or
negative. Basically, the developed countries didn't do what they promised in
1992. After 1997, the UK did start to push up its aid. I understand the
French have set a date for 0.7%, over a ten-year horizon, according to the
French ambassador in Canada. If this happens, two major European
right-of-centre governments would actually be committing to aid increases in a
way that left-of-centre governments have not.
openDemocracy -
There is a tendency for governments of rich countries to make nice promises,
but when the time comes for them to deliver, there are 'problems' - a new US
recession, say, or a serious security situation in the Middle East. I was
struck by a comment reported from Thabo Mbeki at the World Food Summit (WFS)
recently held in Rome, to the effect that all the heads of NATO had managed to
attend an extravagant jamboree in Rome the previous week, yet only two
bothered to turn up for the WFS - and this at a time when 800 million people
suffer serious food insecurity, hunger and worse! That spoke of a real divide,
and anger on his part. Is there a division developing between the rich
countries and the rest of the world, that actually things are much less
promising than we would like to believe?
Felix Dodds - The
WFS was a five-year review, which you would not expect a large number of heads
of government to attend. Around seventy of them were at Rio Plus Five in 1997.
Not many were at the original WFS. Not many countries regarded it as being at
a level for heads of government. Johannesburg, in contrast, is a world summit,
not a five-year review, and we already have forty-five heads of government
committed to coming, including Chirac, Schroder and Blair, with the promise of
seventy in toto.
There is a second
point that relates to your fundamental question. I'll give you a negative
outcome from Johannesburg - that it's the end of the sustainable development
process as we know it, basically not something that people are prepared to put
money into. Compare this with the way governments responded to the challenge
of terrorism, by quickly delivering a massive amount of money for
security-related policies - even where the intimate link between problems of
security and poverty is widely recognised.
But if Johannesburg
does prove to be the end of sustainable development as we know it, what are
the implications? It may mean that those of us committed to the agenda may
have to retreat, to spend the next ten years fighting for every marginal
point, and to accept losing in many cases along the way. But even if this
negative outcome occurs, it could be profoundly important in its own way.
Because it may force people to fundamentally address some of the real issues
that are not at present being addressed.
For example, we in
the north are not facing up to consumption and production issues. We are
losing the chance of making progress because of a lack of political
leadership. No head of government is taking the lead in calling for society to
address its fundamental problems. In this perspective, even if the outcome is
negative, Johannesburg may actually be a wake-up call for the world. In which
case, we have to go back to the grass roots and rebuild a movement that is
able to generate leaders newly willing to take political risks. "Even if the
outcome is negative, Johannesburg may actually be a wake-up call for the
world. We may have to go back to the grassroots and rebuild a movement that is
able to generate leaders willing to take political risks"
Ideal outcomes and
real prospects
openDemocracy -
What then would be the positive outcome for Johannesburg? You mentioned
earlier partnerships you were working with to deliver practical results at a
grass-roots level. What do they involve?
Felix Dodds - Many
organisations today need to change their focus. The Stakeholder Forum has,
overall, been a 'policy wonk' organisation. We are now changing as much as we
can into a development organisation as well, whose concern is with the
implementation of ideas. We want to contribute to, say, the water target in a
quantifiable and practical way, rather than just talking about it. As an
organisation we want to work in areas such as energy, food, security, health
and fresh water.
openDemocracy - The
role of the private sector in water and sewerage provision, especially in
urbanising environments is a hot topic. It has been discussed a good deal in
the city of Johannesburg itself. Do you have any thoughts as to how that
debate has evolved?
Felix Dodds - We
were contracted to organise the NGO involvement in the Hague Fresh Water
Conference, then by the German government to hold the multi-stakeholder
dialogues for the Bonn Fresh Water Conference which finished in December 2001.
At The Hague, there was a lot of infighting but, by the time we got to Bonn,
we had been able to create a positive dialogue. In fact, for the first time
ever in a fresh water conference, we persuaded ministers and the private
sector to discuss corruption in the water industry. The debate on water
privatisation falls into different areas. One is that most water companies
will say, not that they favour privatisation, but that they favour being
contracted to deliver water - and that water should remain in the ownership of
local or national governments. If a government is prepared to sell off water
as a commodity and the ownership shifts, then the companies of course will go
in and bid, because it's a market. The key point is that the debate has to be
won at the political level. I think a coalition can be drawn together, which
would include some of the major companies, in favour of ownership of water
remaining in public hands while service provision can be from the private
sector. At present, only 5% of water is delivered by private companies. The
other 95% is delivered by public sector or by other community means. The issue
of service delivery is about how we can ensure water gets to people. There are
different possible models, involving a mix of community-based, private and
public agencies. With water, as with the other key issues on the sustainable
development agenda, there may be many options. Governments need to set up a
scheme which really involves the local stakeholders in a decision-making
process and which reflects what is best for the country and its people
59. 'NO' TO CHARITY, 'YES' TO INVESTMENT by Thabo Mbeki
The New York Times
25 June 2002
Internet:
http://www.iht.com/articles/62381.html
The writer is the
president of South Africa. He contributed this comment to The New York Times.
CAPETOWN: A great
moment is at hand: a chance for developed countries to make a sound investment
while helping to break the cycle of African underdevelopment. This prospect
now seems as obvious as it was previously elusive. The Group of Eight
conference of industrialized nations that begins this week in Canada comes as
we plan for the World Summit on Sustainable Development in South Africa in
September. It follows significant commitments made by the Bush administration
and the European Union at a United Nations conference earlier this year in
Mexico to increase development aid. The common thread here is the renewed
determination among political leaders and civil society to build a humane
world of shared prosperity. The idea gains its momentum not from the desire to
provide charity. Nor is it premised merely on fears in highly developed
nations of new immigrants or of poor regions becoming so volatile as to pull
the rest of the world into instability. The momentum for sustained
development, in partnership with the private sector, is based on a recognition
that it is possible to revive poor nations, particularly in Africa, through
investments for mutual benefit. There is an unprecedented resolve on the
continent to turn away from the begging bowl and engage in new efforts to
build a better life. The fact that most African states have held multiparty
elections in the past decade is relevant.
So is the imminent
formation of the African Union, out of the Organization of African Unity,
which will occur at a summit in South Africa early next month. Such
developments have helped reveal a socioeconomic potential previously obscured,
and they have given strength to a new realism. In this great effort, we
Africans seek, and need, partners. On offer to the investors from the highly
developed economies are sound prospects in countries whose infrastructures -
limited telecommunications systems, poor roads, rail and port facilities,
sometimes dilapidated cities - hold the promise of exponential improvement.
Where others are approaching saturation, Africa offers rapid growth. Such
cooperation will reward the many African nations prepared to improve political
and economic governance. But there could be broader spinoffs. This partnership
of equals may lead to new introspection among the citizens of developed
countries about themselves; it may rekindle that humanism that should lie at
the foundation of global relations. Such might be the outcome, if the
developed nations work with Africans in redefining assistance, fashioning a
fairer trade regime and treating Africa as an investment destination. Group of
Eight leaders and other statesmen will gather in a remote spot in the Canadian
Rockies to hear more about the New Partnership for Africa's Development.
African leaders will arrive with concrete proposals on how to get this
partnership off the ground. A central feature of the new partnership is
ensuring democracy, human rights and good governance. It sets out independent
mechanisms for peer review, with provisions aimed at foreseeing problems and
working to prevent their spread - rather than just censuring and punishing
when things go wrong. If programs in manufacturing, agriculture, education and
health are to succeed, Africans in their millions must take an active part.
Most important, it is Africans who have done and will continue to do the
planning. As George Marshall noted in proposing his famous plan to rebuild
Europe half a century ago: "It would be neither fitting nor efficacious for
this government to undertake to draw up unilaterally a program designed to
place Europe on its feet economically. This is the business of the Europeans."
And so it will be for Africans now.
60. TRADE NOT AID IS THE WAY FORWARD by Maria Livanos Cattaui
Bangkok Post
25 June 2002
Internet:
http://www.bangkokpost.com/News/25Jun2002_news29.html
Maria Livanos
Cattaui is secretary-general of the International Chamber of Commerce.
Trade agreements
reached by the powerbrokers alone are not enough. The developing countries
need real access to the markets of the richer nations. Aid can help them, but
the benefits are short term. Added trade opportunities are what's needed. If
you want a safe bet on the outcome of the Group of Eight summit in the
Canadian mountain resort of Kananaskis tomorrow and Thursday, put your money
on it culminating in a ringing declaration of support for open trade and
investment. The heads of state and government will depict trade as the most
potent force for defeating poverty in the developing countries and for
sustaining an expanding global economy, or words to that effect. But will
pledges be matched by deeds? On present form, no smart punter would be willing
to risk his money on such a wager. The world's two biggest traders, the United
States and the European Union, will sign the resulting declaration regardless
of simmering trade disputes that threaten to deteriorate into tit-for-tat
protectionism. That is unless, in defiance of political expediency, there is a
radical departure from current intransigence and the G8 governments reaffirm
their free trade principles through their actions and willingness to
compromise. It was after all the US and the EU that only last November threw
their combined weight behind the launch of the World Trade Organisation's Doha
development round _ one of the few positive developments of an otherwise grim
year. Since then, the horizons have darkened with the imposition by the US of
``safeguard'' tariffs on imported steel, duties on Canadian timber, and plans
for big increases in agricultural subsidies. In the US congress, moves are
afoot to attach protectionist strings to the Trade Promotion Authority _
formerly known as ``fast track'' _, which the Bush administration needs to
negotiate trade agreements. Trading partners are gearing up to retaliate
against the steel tariffs. The EU, Japan, India and China are among those
busily preparing sanctions lists against US products ranging from motorcycles
to orange juice. Further souring the atmosphere is a spate of moves across the
world to secure relief from foreign imports through the WTO's anti-dumping and
anti-subsidy provisions. Ironically, all these restrictive actions invoke the
rules of the very organisation whose purpose it is to liberalise trade. The
144 WTO member governments have given themselves until January 2005 to
complete a substantial trade liberalisation package that will open world
markets, including for the agricultural and textile exports on which most of
the people in the developing world depend for a living. The chances of meeting
that deadline look bleak unless the major trading nations settle their
squabbles. The leaders of the world's most powerful economies are rightly
making African development the centrepiece of the Kananaskis summit. They will
be focusing on a continent that is wracked by natural and man-made disasters
and desperately in need of the tonic of investment, both foreign and domestic.
To be sure, the summit leaders will be heartened by the African leaders'
determination to make a success of their own self-help initiative, the New
Partnership for Africa's Development, or Nepad, under whose banner African
leaders have pledged their commitment to good governance and
investment-friendly policies.
We can expect much
talk at Kananaskis about aid programmes and debt relief. But what good does it
do poor African countries to invest in their industries and raise their farm
output if the markets of the rich world are closed to the goods they produce?
Without the ability to sell their products, the African countries will never
achieve the economic growth they need. Trade barriers will cancel the benefits
of aid programmes. Even though Africa's share of world exports is only a
meagre 2%, that still represents many times the amount the continent receives
in aid. Think of the effect that even a modest increase in their share of
world markets would have on their economic prospects. This is why African and
other developing countries want the United Nations summit in Johannesburg at
the end of August to tackle trade issues as well as all the other topics
covered by its title of the World Summit on Sustainable Development. The
developing countries are crying out for greater market access from the
industrialised world so that they can depend on their own resources in
preference to hand-outs. Mindful of the insecurity and instability that
poverty breeds, the G8 countries would do well, in their own self-interest, to
make sure that plea is heeded. Trade is the best way to help the developing
countries to help themselves.
61. TRADE JUSTICE NEEDS MORE THAN JUST WARM WORDS by Ian Willmore
Observer
23 June 2002
Internet:
http://www.observer.co.uk/worldview/story/0,11581,741844,00.html
Ian Willmore is
media coordinator at Friends of the Earth, and writes a regular monthly online
commentary for The Observer on environmental issues.
New Labour
ministers are telling protestors for justice in global trade that the
government is on their side. But merely seeking corporate volunteers for an
ethical approach is not enough to bring about change. Last week saw one of the
largest ever mass lobbies of Parliament, organised by the Trade Justice
Movement, an alliance of development, environmental and aid organisations.
Politicians queued
up to pour honeyed compliments over the lobbyists, and of course to grab that
all-important photo opportunity. Tony Blair said how he shared their aims and
values, and how much he hoped that developing countries would get fair access
to rich country markets for their goods and services. Trade Secretary Patricia
Hewitt said that if the success of the lobby were replicated in every country
round the world, there would be an irresistible momentum for change, although
she was somewhat vague about exactly what this change might be. Was this a
real commitment to the aims of the Trade Justice Movement or just the usual
political pieties? Of course, the UK is part of a European Union that still
spends half its budget on the grossly unfair and inefficient Common
Agricultural Policy. Among other things, the CAP acts as a giant barrier to
fair trade in farm goods. But it would be unfair to blame Tony Blair for this
long-standing, even if progress towards CAP reform has been achingly slow
since New Labour took office. More to the point, the Trade Justice Movement is
not just about fair access to markets, important as this is. It is also about
finding ways in which political institutions, both global and national, can be
enabled to regain a measure of regulation and control of the world economy.
This is particularly important in developing countries, which often find
themselves helpless in the face of the power of multinational corporations and
the developed country Governments that so often seek to advance their
interests. About this most vital issue, neither Tony Blair nor Trade Secretary
Patricia Hewitt said a word. Two simple facts show the scale of the problem.
First, five hundred multinational companies now control almost two thirds of
world trade. Second, the world's five largest companies together generate
annual sales greater than the combined incomes of the forty-six poorest
countries in the world. Multinational companies have been able to gain such
wealth and power because northern governments and the international
institutions they dominate, including the World Trade Organisation, have
removed barriers to trade whenever it is in their interests to do so, while
retaining barriers when it is developing countries who have most to gain by
their removal. The Bush Administration, for example, recently put in place
protectionist measures to benefit the US steel industry, directly at the
expense of steel industries in the developing world. The potent combination of
greater power and weaker regulation for the world's corporations is certainly
contributing towards growing levels of environmental damage and economic
instability. Half of the world's forests have now been destroyed, for example,
while half of the world's rivers are seriously depleted and polluted. There is
also a growing gap between rich and poor, both within and between states. The
UN Development Programme has concluded that "multinational corporations are
too important and too dominant a part of the global economy for voluntary
codes to be enough ... They need to be brought within the frame of global
governance, not just the patchwork of national laws, rules and regulations".
NGOs across the world are therefore calling for an international, legally
binding agreement, to ensure global rights for people and global rules for big
business.
Such an agreement
would
· Place duties on
companies and directors, including a duty to take social and environment
matters into their decision making, a duty to ensure effective prior
consultation with affected communities, and a duty to report fully on social
and environmental impacts,
· Guarantee rights
for citizens and communities, such as the right to a clean and healthy
environment, and the right of redress (eg compensation) when corporations
cause social and environmental damage, and
· Establish high
standards of social, environmental, labour and human rights behaviour by
corporations.
Those companies
that are sincere in their commitment to sustainable development should have
little to fear from this proposal. But in practice, too many corporations are
engaged in mere "greenwash - PR exercises designed to give the impression of a
socially and environmentally conscious company, without any real change to
corporate activities. Business lobbyists often argue that action is best
delivered through voluntary initiatives. But in the UK, the voluntary approach
has clearly failed. Speaking to the CBI two years ago, Tony Blair told
business leaders: "I am issuing a challenge, today, to all of the top 350
companies to be publishing annual environmental reports by the end of 2001".
Predictably, more than three-quarters of the top British businesses completely
ignored Blair's challenge. Only 79 of the top 350 companies produced
substantive reports on their environmental performance by the deadline which
the prime minister set. NGOs around the world are calling on politicians to
agree the principle of a corporate accountability convention at the Earth
Summit in Johannesburg later this year. Tony Blair is expected to attend the
Summit, and he is likely to be joined by cabinet ministers including Margaret
Becket and John Prescott. But so far the US in particular is resisting any
move towards binding rules for corporate behaviour. The EU seems quite happy
for the US position to prevail. The most likely outcome of the Johannesburg
summit is therefore a long list of voluntary initiatives, with few if any
sanctions if these commitments are not honoured. In other words, there will be
plenty of warm words but precious little action - exactly the problem with the
voluntary approach to the UK. If Tony Blair and Patricia Hewitt were really
serious about supporting the Trade Justice Movement, they would join the call
for a convention on corporate accountability. They would also show that New
Labour has finally understood that a world in which the market outruns the
capacity of political institutions to regulate it is dangerous for all of us.
So will they speak out before the Earth Summit? Don't hold your breath.
62. RIO +10
BRAZIL EVENT 23 - TO 25 JUNE 2002 PANEL AND PRESS INFORMATION PREPARED BY
ACHIM STEINER, DIRECTOR GENERAL OF IUCN
IUCN
23 June
Internet:
http://www.iucn.org/wssd/docs/news_events/brazil_event.pdf
What are the positive
achievements in the context of sustainable development in the last 10 years?
What has not happened that could have made the situation better today?
Following the Rio Earth Summit, people across the globe initiated an
unprecedented number of initiatives and actions to address sustainable
development and environment issues. Agenda 21 – directly and indirectly –
catalysed communities, local Councils, youth groups, governments and
businesses to act. In millions of locations, both in the North and the South,
we have seen the impact of greater awareness about the environment. Perhaps
the greatest shortcoming during this period has been our inability to move the
global agenda of collective efforts forward. Rio gave us three Conventions and
thus excellent opportunities for addressing climate, biodiversity and
desertification issues. The intergovernmental process in realising this
potential left many disappointed. Sustainable development requires both local
and global efforts to succeed. It also requires partnerships and solidarity.
Developed countries, for instance, did not meet their commitments at Rio to
share the financial burden of maintaining our 'global commons'. In many
developing countries, resource depletion continues without change despite
commitments to the contrary. As land, forestry and fisheries resources are
destroyed, it will be the poor – globally and locally – who will bear the
ultimate cost of this unsustainable path.
How can sustainable development
be used as a tool to make globalization more inclusive and equitative?
Economically the global
production of goods and services has increased remarkably over the past
decade. However, at the same time, some 80 countries experienced an actual
decline in GNP. In other words, the distribution of the very substantial
benefits of development based on a globalized economy, have been very unevenly
distributed. Markets can be a powerful force for ensuring sustainable
development. But markets work effectively to support sustainable development
only when environmental impacts of economic development are fed back into
decisions regarding the resources that are the target of development.
Globalization has enabled consumers to ignore the impacts of their consumption
on local environments, as well as global environments. An honest and
transparent 'global new deal' would ensure that the environmental costs of
production are built into the prices of the goods and services produced. IUCN
does not accept the often cited argument about 'lack of resources' to ensure
sustainable development. Even some of the poorest communities and countries
are able to manage their resources well, recognis e the equity of all their
citizens and provide an adequate baseline of health and education. Economic
sustainability must be built on the capacities of countries to manage their
available resources in the most productive possible way.
Having recognised that
governments have the primary responsibility for managing their own welfare, it
also is important to recognise that foreign direct investment and official
development assistance play an important role in sustainable development. But
this role needs to be more carefully designed with sustainable development in
mind. What are your expectations for the Johannesburg Conference? At
Johannesburg we must assess the progress we have made with Agenda 21. Reasons
for failures and successes need to be understood so that we may revise our
strategy accordingly. WSSD must also provide us with a renewed commitment at
the international level to work together on some of the key issues such as
climate change, biodiversity, poverty and globalization. IUCN has identified
three cross-cutting issues that Johannesburg must address in particular if we
are to make progress:
? Sustainable livelihoods and
ecosystems – specific measures should be taken to address both consumptions
patterns of the wealthy and the reliance of the poor on nature for their
survival.
? Governance issues – both at
domestic and international levels we need to forge a new consensus for our
international institutions. We must also search for more effective national
institutions and ensure that the private sector recognises its corporate
responsibility.
? Financial resources –
additional resources must be committed through national budgets, foreign
direct investments, development assistance and other sources. Investments in
sustainability cannot rely on goodwill alone.
The Summit must deliver credible
commitments and specific initiatives with targets to give societies an
orientation as to what is feasible and given priority. From your personal
perspective, how would you access the scenario of sustainable development for
the next 10 and 30 years? Two to three decades may leave us with entirely new
scenarios. The potential impacts of climate
change or water crises could
trigger fundamental shifts in policy. Similarly, new technologies (e.g. the
shift from a carbon to a hydro economy) and changes in governance,
accountability and public awareness could lead to significant changes in
development and public policy. Whatever the individual trends are, I have no
doubt that the environment and equity issues will become top
of our agenda for the future.
Just take the example of fisheries. Today 14 of the world's 17 fisheries are
in decline. Extrapolate from this 30 years down the line and you can see the
impeding crisis. Conflicts and controversies arising from economic
globalization will also escalate unless we deal with equity issues.
Sustainability issues will become the focus of 'human security'
concerns. The future of
sustainable development is thus not a matter of 'if' but rather 'when'. The
only problem we have is that the longer we hesitate, the higher the price –
economically, socially and environmentally - of dealing with what we already
know today will happen tomorrow.
How can we improve the
partnership between government and civil society?
The importance of civil society
as a voice and capacity in sustainable development today is tremendous. While
it may sometimes be uncomfortable for governments overall, it represents an
enormous asset for development. Both NGOs and governments must engage in open
and constructive dialogue and partnerships to complement their respective
responsibilities and efforts. Giving civil society an enabling legal
framework, access to financial resources and fostering partnerships with
government departments and the private sector, offer the best prospects for
successful outcomes. In your specific field of knowledge and activity, what
are the main actions that should be taken in order to put into practice more
meaningful results at the Johannesburg Summit? First and foremost,
Johannesburg must review and reaffirm Agenda 21. It remains as relevant today
as it was in 1992. Second, governments must offer a positive vision and
roadmap for the next 10 years, providing all stakeholders with a strategy and
targets for implementation. The Johannesburg Plan of Action and the political
declaration should enable everyone to find their place in the global strategy
and allow citizens to track progress after Johannesburg. The Summit must also
set some priorities and catalyse some exemplary initiatives that offer
guidance and vision. Kofi Annan's five priority areas for action at WSSD –
Water, Energy, Health, Agriculture and Biodiversity – offer us all a useful
focus for moving beyond rhetoric and declarations to implementing initiatives
on the ground.
Above all, Johannesburg must
deliver a credible illustration as to how international cooperation adds value
to what nations, communities and businesses do individually. If governments
are unable or unwilling to make commitments on this vital issue of global
cooperation then more and more people will question the value of holding such
summits in the future.
SPEECHES
63. OPENING OF THE 76TH ORDINARY SESSION OF THE OAU COUNCIL OF MINISTERS,
DURBAN, 4 JULY 2002: STATEMENT BY KY AMOAKO, EXECUTIVE SECRETARY OF THE UN
ECONOMIC COMMISSION FOR AFRICA
African Union
4 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.au2002.gov.za/docs/speeches/amoa047a.htm
"Meeting the
challenge of sustainable development in Africa"
Mr. Chairman, His
Excellency, Mr. Amara Essy, Secretary-General of the Organization of African
Unity Honourable Ministers,
Ladies and
Gentlemen, This is the twelfth time that I have been honored to address this
august Council. You can be forgiven for thinking: Well, here he is again. But
the fact is that I have never taken this privilege as routine and I certainly
do not do so this year. For this year has been extraordinary. When I addressed
you last year in Lusaka, I reviewed concepts for a new relationship with
donors, which the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) had proposed. I said
that a new relationship with donors was required to address our trade, debt,
HIV/AIDS and development crises. In fact, we have had the busiest year for
African development issues in a long time. Whether it is the most
consequential year is yet to be seen. Shortly after the attack on the World
Trade Center, many world leaders said that the world had to respond in part by
making life more secure for those in poverty. It was pointed out that the G-8
had a chance to do that if it took advantage of the World Trade Organization
(WTO) ministerial at Doha, the UN Financing for Development Conference (FfD)
in Monterrey, the G8 Summit in Canada, and the World Summit on Sustainable
Development in Johannesburg.
Where have we come
since?
At Doha, hard work
and excellent preparation by the Geneva African Ambassadors Group under the
leadership of the United Republic of Tanzania paid off. A so-called
development round of tariff reduction negotiations was put on a timetable of
three years, compared with eight years for the Uruguay Round. There were
pro-development achievements on Public Health issues and on trade-related
intellectual property rights. There was progress on agricultural trade but
serious slippage since due to huge new US subsidies to its wealthy farmers. We
made little headway on textiles. Environmental and hygiene standards are to be
resolved. We did not gain much on industrial tariffs. We made progress on
capacity building by placing the issue on the continuing agenda. So the
results at Doha were mixed, but a lot better for us than many previous WTO
meetings. Certainly Doha built up expectations for further progress at
Monterrey. In Monterrey, there was further progress. To me, it was most
striking that all the major national statements, from developed and developing
country leaders, agreed that the highest priority for developing countries was
good governance. They agreed that these economies had to be part of the global
system. They agreed that there is a need for higher quality aid. And they
agreed on the need for more resources, estimated by experts at $50
billion/year, to meet the Millennium Development Goals. Both the European
Union (EU) and the United States of America (USA) made commitments to increase
their aid levels by a combined total of $12 billion/year. $12 billion to meet
the goal of $50 billion was, like Doha, a partial success; but it marked a
reversal of aid trends. The lingering question was what would be Africa's
share of this increase.
That question was
answered last week when the G-8 leaders agreed that under conditions of good
performance, Africa could expect half of the increase, bringing our aid back
to 1990 levels. A G-8 Africa Action Plan was adopted as a framework to support
NEPAD. The G-8 agreed that each of them would establish Enhanced Partnerships
with countries [Quote] whose performance reflects the NEPAD commitments [End
quote]. They agreed on a goal for duty-free and quota free market access for
all products originating from the Least Developed Countries (LDCs), many of
which are in Africa. They added $1 billion to fully fund the Highly-Indebted
Poor Countries (HIPC) Trust Fund and to increase the use of grants rather than
loans for the poorest debt-vulnerable countries. They were specific on peace
issues. With active encouragement from UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, the
G-8 agreed to provide additional support to bring peace to the Democratic
Republic of Congo (DRC) and Sudan, and to consolidate peace in Angola and
Sierra Leone within the next year. They agreed to joint action to support
post-conflict development in the Great Lakes and Sudan and to set up contact
groups with the UN and other partners to resolve specific conflicts in Africa.
They also agreed to finish work on a joint plan with Africa by 2003 to develop
African capabilities to undertake peace support operations, including at the
regional level. Pursuit of these points has significant promise.
Finally, the G-8
agreed to keep Africa on their agenda, by reviewing progress in implementation
of the plan at their next session.
So we emerged from
the G-8, like Doha and Monterrey, not with everything we wanted, but with
tangible progress.
Now we have the
Johannesburg World Summit for Sustainable Development coming at the end of
next month.
The Summit is
intended to accelerate the implementation of the environmental agenda,
established in the Rio Summit a decade ago, and the Millennium Development
Goals for human development adopted at the Millennium Summit. In essence,
sustainable development is the merger of human well-being and natural resource
stewardship.
Our stakes are
highest in the upcoming Summit because our sustainability issues are more
acute than other regions.
Only ten of our
countries will meet the poverty reduction, education and health Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs), if current trends continue. In many of our countries
our most precious asset, our people, are increasingly wasting away from
HIV/AIDS. Here in Southern Africa, we are in the midst of a grim parade of
funerals. The warnings are clear that West, Central and Northeast Africa are
about to emulate the crisis of Eastern and Southern Africa. We have a second
wasting away. From time immemorial, humanity has managed to pass down an
environment from one generation to the next that has had promise for the
future. If present trends continue, our inheritors will receive a markedly
worse environment and much worse prospects. These trends will result in Africa
being a full degree warmer in temperature over the next half century and that
will bring us10 percent less rain in Southern Africa and the Horn, and 15
percent less rain in the already parched Sahel. If present trends continue,
our forests will shrink by 25 percent over the next half century. Those in
low-lying coastal areas will have to move inland because of a rising ocean.
Climate change is real. Recently, a piece of ice, nearly three times the size
of Mauritius, broke off of the Antarctic. The trends are well under way, but
they can be slowed and in many cases reversed. UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan,
says that we already have the right substantive agreements, we now need to
form the partnerships and take other actions necessary to sustain our
environment. The rich countries need to fund accelerated implementation of the
key agreements reached in recent years on climate, desertification and
biodiversity. The rich countries are the main polluters and main cause of
global climate change. They must be held to account. I believe that we need
commitment from key governments to back the Kyoto Climate Change and other
vital agreements.
At the same time,
we in Africa have our share of hard work to reverse very serious environmental
damage now going on in such fields as:
* Water, where
chronic shortages are now being faced in 14 of our countries;
* Desertification;
* Deforestation,
and
* Soil fertility,
where our ability to grow our own food is being rapidly eroded. I should note
that a major ECA report next month will say we must buy into the genetic food
crop revolution in part to preserve our soil.
Underlying the
negative environmental trends is the fact that our high population growth is
straining our limited natural resources.
The challenge in
Johannesburg is to mobilize different sets of actions, rich and poorer
countries need to take, to contribute to a sustainable world.
What about after
Johannesburg? In considering the coming year, I offer you and our Heads of
State a few observations.
The first regards
NEPAD. Several among the press and Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) felt
that the G-8 offered us only peanuts. We should not be disappointed, or
deterred. Let us recall the fundamentals of NEPAD: an initiative for African
ownership of development, African leadership of development, African
accountability for development, and African responsibility for development.
NEPAD is not about building a bigger tin cup for begging. In this regard,
Presidents Obasanjo and Mbeki were right to observe that the G-8 meeting was a
new departure not an arrival.
All of us must be
in for the long haul. It is our plan and we must make it work.
Second, the heart
of NEPAD, the breakthrough of NEPAD, indeed the hallmark of NEPAD is in
Governance. The NEPAD Heads of State and Government Implementation Committee
have made important recommendations in their "Declaration on Democracy,
Political, Economic and Corporate Governance" which they will table at the
Summit. Why take the Declaration seriously? Because our stakes override those
of others. There is clear evidence that democracy is equated with high growth;
and that good governance is synonymous with very high growth. This is as true
for the resource rich countries as for others not so fortunate.
The Declaration on
democracy and governance is a far-reaching and powerful statement. The
challenge will be in the implementation. The Implementation Committee
recommends an African Peer Review Mechanism for a periodic review of
political, economic and corporate governance status in member States. This is
a self-monitoring mechanism for collective action and mutual learning. As
such, the African Peer Review Mechanism is first and foremost for Africans.
Conducted with
professionalism and integrity, it holds the promise to generate popular
confidence in institutions and processes of our governments. It is essential
for making efficient use of our scarce public resources. It will foster an
enabling environment for the private sector and has the potential to unlock
resources from this sector to generate economic growth and help overcome
poverty. By demonstrating that Africans have the political will and commitment
to hold themselves accountable to mutually agreed codes and standards of
governance, the African Peer Review holds the promise of being instrumental
for effective partnerships with the international community.
ECA has worked
closely with the NEPAD Steering Committee and the secretariat on a number of
key areas related to the design of NEPAD, particularly on the peer review and
governance related matters. We pledge our continued and deepened support and
assistance in this area through our assigned role in the African Peer Review
Mechanism.
My third
observation is that while the discussions so far have not produced a
cornucopia of funds for priorities identified by NEPAD, there is enough
interest among our Governments, the donors, and the private sector for NEPAD
to get started. Let us encourage some practical, doable public and private
investments and let us call this a testing period for NEPAD. It is important
that we get started. We can test out the NEPAD mechanisms to improve them
through experience. We can become more credible by taking concrete actions.
Fourth, we should
take seriously the dialogue process authorized by the G-8. In fact we should
strive to be a permanent part of the G-8 agenda. We need to continue to work
with our friends in the G8 who are keeping Africa as a key issue. But we must
also remember our non G-8 partners - such as The Netherlands, Norway, Sweden -
who, in percentage terms, provide more ODA and are among Africa's strongest
partners.
Fifth, I want to
underscore that insofar as HIV/AIDS is concerned, we either become a community
together or we will die. At the political level, as a region, we have not yet
made AIDS an appropriate priority. Our upcoming Summit and the Johannesburg
Summit are key occasions to correct this. The same population planning
programmes will save lives from HIV/AIDS while reducing the pressure on our
resources through promoting smaller families.
The Global Fund for
HIV/AIDS, Malaria and Tuberculosis is overwhelmed with proposals and requires
bold replenishment to save millions of our people from certain death. I appeal
to you to help make this case boldly, clearly and without hesitation.
Finally, I come to
our African Union. Last March ECA in full cooperation with OAU, held two
back-to-back events to help define priorities for regional integration. One
was a symposium on the African Union organized by the InterAfrica Group. The
other was our flagship African Development Forum involving 1,000 leaders from
Africa's public, private and non-profit sectors. All of our countries were
represented at the Forum with official delegations, several headed by
Ministers present here. I am very pleased that recommendations from these
meetings have contributed to the recommendations for the African Union that my
colleagues and dear brother, Amara Essy, the Secretary-General of the OAU, has
placed before you. We at ECA are invested in the African Union and will do all
we can to help make it a major success. Honourable Ministers, Ladies and
Gentlemen, Colleagues,
Just as we are
coming to the end of a series of international meetings creating added
solidarity with Africa, we are also entering a new era of internal solidarity.
In this amazing and critical period, when the agenda has become so complex,
the work of Foreign Ministers has correspondingly grown more complex. My ECA
colleagues and I are at your service.
I wish you well in
your important deliberations.
Thank you
64. "THE EU TRADE & DEVELOPMENT AGENDA FROM DOHA VIA JOHANNESBURG TO CANCUN"
PASCAL LAMY EU TRADE COMMISSIONER Meeting with the All-Party group on the
Overseas Development
London, House of
Commons,
European Commission
27 June 2002
Internet:
http://europa.eu.int/rapid/start/cgi/guesten.ksh?p_action.gettxt=gt&doc=SPEECH/02/309|0|RAPID&lg=EN&display=
It's a great
pleasure to be here with you today, and I am grateful to Tony Worthington and
the All-Party Group on Overseas Development of the House of Commons for having
invited me today to set out how I see the trade and development agenda for the
EU post-Doha.
Sorry that Kevin
Watkins is not with us here today - indeed, he is receiving an OBE from the
Queen for gallant service in attacking the Common Agricultural Policy, though
to be fair, I suspect that his overall interests and service in development
policy may have also had something to do with it. But clearly we live in
revolutionary times: NGOs at the Palace, French Commissioners at the House of
Commons. Not so much "Barbarians at the Gates" as "Barbarians inside the
Gates, having tea."
But let me start by
telling you how I see today's debate. I will not engage in a point-by-point
rebuttal of the Oxfam report - and even less of the rather gimmicky double
standards index where, on the basis of dubious indicators and shoddy
methodology, Oxfam decided to put the EU as the frontrunner on hypocrisy.
Apparently, the US envied us this position and immediately came forward with
the Farm Bill which should assure them pride of place for quite a while. So if
you are interested in our comments on this aspect of the Oxfam report, I would
refer you to the DG Trade website. Don't get me wrong: I fully understand the
need for an NGO to mount publicity stunts such as awarding gold medals for
hypocrisy, and I am quite admiring of Oxfam's talents in this respect (at the
European Commission, we could certainly do with a bit more of this). But we
must make sure that PR actions do not detract from the real issues: what is
the link between trade and development, and what can we do, in the context of
the Doha Development Round and beyond, to address some of the problems
identified by Oxfam in making trade more development-friendly.
Trade and development - a complex relationship
According to
textbook economics, trade and foreign direct investment confer large
efficiency benefits by fostering the international division of labour and by
disseminating the gains from technological progress. This produces economic
growth, which in turn should lead to development and contribute to the
eradication of poverty. Economic studies and empirical data highlight the
substantial benefits that developing countries have reaped from integration
into the world economy.
However, such
studies also show that the translation of trade into growth and of growth into
development is far from automatic. Market access alone, however great its
contribution, will not bring growth in itself. Nor does increased growth
automatically lead to sustainable development.
We also see that
trade liberalisation has not benefited all regions of the world or all layers
of society in an equal manner. There is in fact an increasing and worrisome
split between a group of middle income developing countries which are
successful participants in global trade and a large number of nearly 80
developing and transition economies comprising over one third of world
population which are virtually excluded from it. All this is well put and
substantiated in the Oxfam Report.
The reasons for
this situation are manifold, but it seems to me that the key to success lies
first and foremost with the domestic policies of the developing countries
themselves.
A successful
approach to development needs to take account of the whole range of
institutional, social and structural needs of a well-functioning society, such
as good governance (including policies aimed at transparency, free information
flows, fighting corruption, an efficient civil service), an appropriate
institutional and regulatory framework, social inclusion policies (in the
field of education, health care, social protection), public services and
infrastructures and environmental protection policies.
Sound domestic
policies are indispensable to create the stability, predictability and
security that is needed to stimulate investment, be it local or foreign. I
therefore welcome and support Oxfam's stress on the importance of domestic
policies.
Although domestic
policies are the key for developing countries to be able to tap the benefits
of globalisation and to mitigate its negative effects, that does not absolve
developed countries from their responsibility for supporting sound policies.
We need to provide more access for products in which developing countries have
a comparative advantage and which are produced in respect of core labour and
environmental provisions (this is the incentive-based approach of the EU GSP)
there has to be genuine involvement of developing-country stakeholders in
trade negotiations more generous and effective official development assistance
and an increased effort by the financial institutions to help tackle debt and
co-ordinate their support and assistance better.
DDA
Let me now turn to
the question of how the Doha round can be pro development, and what lessons we
have learned from the past that will allow it to be a genuine development
round.
My first
proposition is that progressive liberalisation is inherently good for
development. I emphasise the progressive nature liberalisation at a
rate that each country can handle in terms of its domestic and international
competitiveness etc. Contrary to popular belief, the WTO does not propose free
trade, whatever that rather abstract notion is. The WTO means progressive
opening and with all the caveats imaginable. In this sense, the WTO has always
been pro-development.
But trade
liberalisation cannot be seen in isolation. It is just one component of the
holistic economic and development policy I tried to describe before. The
contribution of the system and other members is in helping to identify the
necessary flanking policies to trade liberalisation and giving guidance and
aid in putting them in place. But I will say something later about the
contribution of WTO rules to the establishment of the right flanking measures.
Developing country
market access. Number one priority for the Doha round for most developing
countries with competitive export sectors. EC has obviously to further open
its markets in agriculture, peak industrial sectors, tariff escalation and so
on. We will do so, in return for some improvements in openness from developing
countries where they are able to do so, and of course the DDA does not expect
full reciprocity here and if our partners sign on to some rule making areas.
It's quite a shrewd deal for them to trade off gains for their exports against
the domestic implementation of rules that are of a systemic, not a
mercantilist nature, rules that will help their development. To those who
question the EC's political willingness to open its markets, then EBA is I
hope a proof that we are ready to grasp the nettle : indeed, I wanted EBA both
for its own sake to help to reduce poverty in one area where I could make a
difference and to bring about a subtle cultural shift in the Community to
demonstrate that we can take hard trade policy decisions for the greater
international good. But developing countries also have to open up amongst
themselves. It is a widely held misconception that poor countries face rich
country protectionism that is more acute than their own. In fact, as Jagdish
Bhagwati put it so eloquently in last week's "Economist", asymmetry of trade
barriers often goes the other way. Rich-country tariffs, for instance, average
3%; poor countries' tariffs average 13%. The peak tariffs in textiles,
fisheries and footwear do not change the picture much - UNCTAD has estimated
that they apply to just one-third of poor country exports.
Moreover, the trade
barriers of poor countries against one another are more significant restraints
on their own development than those imposed by the rich countries. The Oxfam
report has some telling examples to support this. So my proposition is that
the trade barriers of both rich and poor countries need to be tackled together
to ensure effective exports by the poor countries.
But the ability or
inability to benefit from open markets is more crucial to many countries,
particularly sub Saharan Africa. They may lack economies of scale, or there
may be other factors linked to production, or simply an inability to meet the
requirement either set by consumers or by regulators of developed markets. No
silver bullet solution. Decades of preference via Lomé did not work. Resolving
that problem needs a combination of measures to promote exports including
access to information, simpler regulations in the major export markets (this
is difficult however as consumer expectations get higher), better technology
transfer and investment flows which will only come about if stable economic,
social, legal and political conditions for investors are put in place, and the
encouragement of regional integration to reap economies of scale and to make
countries trade more with their neighbours rather than maintain post-Colonial
dependency. Not all of this can be tackled at multilateral level. We can do
more and go further at bilateral level, in the context of a broad political
and economic partnership. This is what we propose to do in the trade
negotiations under the Cotonou Agreement with the ACP countries, the so-called
"post-Cotonou" process.
On the question of
rules, I am convinced that rules are also beneficial for development. Need to
challenge the mind set developing in the WTO and in many circles that rules
are somehow bad for development. They are not. The rule making areas we
propose areas like investment, competition, trade facilitation and procurement
all reflect the basic GATT principles of transparency and non discrimination
which I would argue are the best friends of development. Why? Because
transparency and non discrimination are the twin keys to improving domestic
governance. They promote sound policy decision making, and help prevent
governments from being held captive either by narrow domestic interest groups
or foreign pressures. They are principles which strengthen democracy and the
exercise of sovereignty by countries, rather than diminish that sovereignty,
as some critics of WTO allege.
So the issue is not
whether or not to develop the rules but rather get the level of ambition
right, and we can of course do better than we did in the past regarding time
and transitional periods. Scope in a development round for tailoring the
implementation of rules to the individual circumstance of each member rather
than an arbitrary transitional period. Scope too for coupling those
personalised transitions to our aid packages a notion we are pioneering in an
area like trade facilitation.
There is
speculation too of course about the possible role of soft law in the future
WTO system. The Community is open to that we want incentives not sticks - but
equally aware of its limitations. Rules lock in reforms, soft law requires a
high degree of pre-existing consensus on the benefits to lead to long term
change. Rules give guarantees to trading partners, soft law requires partners
to be perpetually vigilant and exercise peer pressure. Open to see what
combination of hard and soft law possible. As someone said the other day : you
need hard law to get married, you need soft law to make the marriage work, but
you will need hard law again if it doesn't work. I tend to think that soft law
for example the benchmarking of standards, peer review arrangements can only
be part of a broader rules framework rather than an alternative to it. The key
is to create incentives for rules to be followed rather than a stick
approach. What other lessons from the past can we learn. From the Uruguay
Round, the limits of what can be termed positive rule making or positive
integration. With the TRIPS agreement we moved from the model of negative
integration « thou shall not discriminate , thou shall ensure thy regulations
do not cause disproportionate obstacles etc » to positive rule making : « thou
shall introduce in thy legislation patent and copyright laws and set up a
patent agency etc ». This has at least two consequences. One, it raises a
fundamental question about the extent to which WTO members should set
substantive standards that reach into domestic regulations. I think the
conclusion is that there should be no more standard setting in the WTO itself,
whether on TRIPS or environment or biodiversity or whatever. The "trade and"
debate is about setting the rules of disengagement.
Second, it creates
a stronger link between rule making and development aid or provision of
resources. To the extent that future WTO rules imply positive action in
Members to build institutional capacity, infrastructure etc, then there will
be a need for resources. That is why several of the new rule making areas
which are mainly negative integration but with a component of positive rule
making for example modernising customs or setting up a domestic competition
regime - do prefigure assistance as part of the deal.
Technical
Assistance. There are clear lessons from failure of past experiences.
Arguably, the resources are sufficient, but absorption capacity is
insufficient. Arguably, donors' intentions are good but recipient countries
lack commitment and ownership. Possible to remedy all of this but needs
enormous reserves of stamina amongst both donors and recipients and a rare
ability to co-ordinate. I do see grounds for hope in the attitude of the
international organisations, in the determination of donors not to fail yet
again, and in the understanding of developing countries that they have to make
a commitment, be responsible for managing their affairs and put in place the
right public policy measures without which aid is simply wasted. I think that
is what Monterrey brought us.
The private sector.
The WTO as a contract between governments has with only few exceptions been
unable or unwilling either to regulate or to invite the involvement of the
private sector. Some change in the offing here : investment negotiations offer
scope to look at issues like corporate social responsibility, competition
rules of course apply directly to corporate behaviour, in TRIPS we are now
seeking to redefine the nexus between public policy and private profit
motives, and in doing so re-establishing the commitments in TRIPS as a ceiling
and not a floor. And in the area of development aid there are enormous
untapped opportunities for welding together official ODA, private sector
support and FDI. This is one of the many themes that I hope would come out of
Johannesburg. In the Doha negotiations we have above all to empower
governments either at national level or through improved international
co-operation to exercise better management and control of the private sector,
particularly in developing countries where governments are unacceptably weak
against the activities of multinationals.
So to conclude I do
think that the Doha round does carry within it the potential to be a true
development round although we have to be clear in knowing the difference
between what is really good for development and what is conventionally or for
tactical reasons claimed to be good for development. If we can draw that
distinction then half the battle is won.
65. PASCAL LAMY EU TRADE COMMISSIONER TRADE, GLOBAL GOVERNANCE, SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT EUROPEAN COMMISSION POLICY SEMINAR BRUSSELS
European Commission
24-25 June 2002
Internet:
http://europa.eu.int/rapid/start/cgi/guesten.ksh?p_action.gettxt=gt&doc=SPEECH/02/299|0|RAPID&lg=EN&display=
I want to begin by
expressing my gratitude to all those who have travelled to Brussels from
around the world to take part in this discussion. In the spirit of outreach
to all these with a stake in trade policy, the world beyond Europe's borders
is represented not only by government ministers and officials but also by
academics, business people and NGOs. We have the same balance on the European
side. This form of dialogue between government and civil society has become a
common feature of trade policy making here in Brussels: I hope it can also be
a useful tool to illuminate the topics on the agenda today and tomorrow.
The agenda is a
valiant attempt to extract your wisdom on a wide range of issues in a short
span of time. It is inevitable, if we want to create coherence across
traditionally separate areas of policy, that we pool our ignorance of some
things and learn to listen to the unfamiliar languages of those who are expert
in fields beyond our own experience. Given the quality of the response to our
invitation, I am confident that we will end tomorrow with new ideas and some
concrete proposals as to what Europe, and perhaps partners should be doing in
the months ahead.
TRADE, GOVERNANCE,
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
Here in Europe, I
have been involved in the last 12 months, together with other colleagues from
across the Commission, in some new thinking on all three of the issues that
form the background to this debate: trade, governance and sustainable
development.
On trade, the
run-up to Doha and the subsequent push to get the negotiations under way speak
for themselves.
Despite dangers,
distractions and pitfalls in steel and other sectors, we remain committed to
the multilateral route as the keystone of world trade progress. I am
encouraged by the papers being tabled in Geneva but I am concerned that we
seem to be still at a stage of staking out positions, rather than engaging in
negotiations paper. I do regret the tactical delays already being pursued by
some partners, particularly on market access talks: but this cannot endure.
The bigger challenge will be to advance before next year's ministerial in
Mexico on outstanding business from Doha, which to my mind still means above
all on access to medicines.
On governance, the
Commission launched last summer a new set of proposals to improve governance
both within the EU and globally. We are asking your help in particular on the
global side of that puzzle. Finally, on sustainable development, as our South
Africans friends know all too well, the deadline of Johannesburg is
approaching. We have been thinking here in Brussels, as elsewhere, how to
ensure that, after Doha and Monterrey, Johannesburg too can mark a step
forward. Without this, the benefits of Doha and Monterrey will not disappear,
but let us be frank: trade alone cannot drive towards poverty alleviation in
countries that have not also at home taken grip of their own responsibilities
for steering society towards greater equality, whether among the sexes or
among the richer and the poorer. If those are the three background issues, we
have tried to focus the three working groups more narrowly: on ways to develop
more open policy-making; on soft law tools to complement hard law, and on the
scope for improving the intergovernmental structures for global cooperation.
Let me say a word about our own experience in the search for what the
governance White Paper calls an 'open and participative' approach to policy
making. In principle, I guess we all would agree on the need for the
Commission and other European policy-makers to work beyond their normal
spheres of influence, to extend the dialogue to other stakeholders, not only
here in Europe, but to those from around the world with a stake in the
process. In practice, at least in my own current field, this is quite a
challenge, perhaps not for all of us, but certainly for some European trade
policy officials. It is also a challenge, let us be frank, for
non-governmental organisations and for business. These groups may be
accustomed both to lobbying governments privately and to conducting rather
snappy publicity campaigns for what they want. But they are not always
comfortable to speak out publicly for what they desire in fora where others
can then bring to bear other views and occasionally inconvenient facts.
Despite these challenges on all sides, we have now entrenched a pretty open
and very inter-active trade policy dialogue here in Brussels. But the question
I want to pose for participants in this seminar is whether we can do better in
extending such dialogue worldwide, at least when one player, such as European
Union, is developing policies which will have an impact on government and
non-government players in third countries. There are two complications to
consider here.
The first is fear.
Fear that third country partners will be more powerful than we are, and will
somehow also obtain a seat at the decision-making table if we offer them a
voice in the deliberations that precede decisions.
The second
challenge is capacity. Even if a voice in the deliberative process is allowed,
not every partner with an interest will be able to take up that opportunity.
How can we not only create a theoretical right to dialogue but in practice
ensure that all important voices are heard?
I believe that this
issue is essential not only to good policy-making within our countries but to
better policy-making between us.
The second set of
issues which we have chosen to focus on is the scope for using new tools such
as benchmarking or voluntary undertakings in the field of corporate social
responsibility, as a means of complementing hard international law. This issue
has been given a boost with the recent suggestion of incoming WTO Director
General Supachai for some sort of code of conduct in trade matters for
transnational corperations. We clearly have a meeting of minds here, and I
hope that today's and tomorrow's discussions will equip me with some food for
further thought on how to take this forward.
Let me state a
personal prejudice here:
I am distrustful of
recipes that may lend apparent dignity to surreptitious attempts to avoid
law-making. I have a strong preference for clear laws and public compliance
procedures. But I recognise, particularly in the international sphere, that
the hard law approach does not always work: that is, takes too long, costs too
much, creates no real or timely improvement in the world. I recognise, too,
that softer approaches can sometimes build bridges between evolving positions
in one or other country and can certainly be effective in drawing in
non-governmental stakeholders whose contribution may be a crucial part of the
solution to any problem.
So here, I guess
the challenges of the group are two-fold.
First, how to
expand the toolbox beyond hard law solutions, without creating a presumption
that the more difficult hard law solutions should always be set on one side?
Second, how to
develop verification mechanisms so that soft law solutions can be truly
effective.
I am pleased that
the example on which this group is invited to focus concerns corporate social
responsibility. The Commission is currently sifting responses to its CSR green
paper, and will be taking that work forward in the near future. My hope is
that we can use this European Corporate Social Responsibility exercise to
build on the good work done in the development in OECD of guidelines for
behaviour by multinational investors in host countries. I also hope that, not
least in the World Summit on Sustainable Development, we can create developing
country willingness to use the same sort of tools.
Why this view from
Europe as a major outward investor? Is this a slip into inadvertent
anti-capitalism? On the contrary. I am very conscious that the behaviour of
investors is both generally scrupulous: but their behaviour is also generally
mistrusted, not least by negotiators engaged in the investment rule-making
debate in WTO or elsewhere.
I believe that
Corporate Social Responsibility tools can contribute to the additional
confidence-building we need in order to provide a basis for effective
rule-making in WTO by the end of the Doha process. I do not believe that hard
law can effectively create world-wide obligations on private sector actors.
Nor should we even dream of trying that recipe. But I do believe that more
widespread recourse by host governments, as well as by rich country
home-states, to the sort of benchmarks set on a voluntary basis in the OECD
guidelines could do much to clarify this debate. I look forward to the result
of those discussions. Finally, this seminar is asked to focus on international
institutional reform. Here in Europe, a Convention is currently considering
how to reform our own institutions to make them work effectively in a Europe 4
times bigger than the original planned by the Founding Fathers. There is less
enthusiasm for this debate at global level. My hope is that after
Johannesburg, and after our Convention has put the European house in order, we
will be able to make some progress nonetheless. But while waiting for a
comprehensive reform of multilateral institutions, co-operation between them
and openness in their workings are already objectives worth pushing for. My
prejudice here is that we are all far too timid. I regret the mutual
suspicions that have hampered any real increase in transparency in the WTO, I
hope that discussion in this group can bring some fresh thinking to bear on
that problem, for the WTO and for all the other institutions worldwide. This
is a focussed and business-like seminar, and I do not want to give a lengthy
key note speech. You all are present because you know that these apparently
narrow and complex questions have implications for bigger and broader
challenges. There are no easy answers: even a perfect outcome to the Doha
Round will not in itself alleviate poverty, improve governance world-wide, or
magically ensure sustainable development. But I guess we are here together
because we all believe that we can take individual parts of the puzzle and
begin to make a practical difference piece by piece. I look forward to hearing
tomorrow afternoon which pieces you want us to start with, and how we can all
act together.
66. MARGOT WALLSTRÖM MEMBER OF THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION, RESPONSIBLE FOR
ENVIRONMENT "EUROPEAN RIO +10 COALITION CONFERENCE - WSSD " THIRD CONFERENCE
OF THE EUROPEAN COALITION, IN VIEW OF WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
BRUSSELS
European Commission
21 June 2002
Internet:
http://europa.eu.int/rapid/start/cgi/guesten.ksh?p_action.gettxt=gt&doc=SPEECH/02/294|0|RAPID&lg=EN&display=
Ladies and
Gentlemen,
Hannah Njeri is a
45-year old woman who sells vegetables outside a gas station on a street in
Nairobi. Every morning she collects a few tomatoes, onions or beans from her
tiny plot and spends the rest of the day selling what she can to passers-by
and people who stop for petrol. Margins are small. Hannah makes just a few
dollars a day, which she uses to put her children through school. She would
like to own her own greengrocery, but capital is a problem. She says "competition
is tough. Everything depends on the market
sometimes you can't get tomatoes,
so we are going to sell them for more. Or everyone has potatoes, so you have
to cut your price a lot. Prices go up and down just like that". I read
Hannah's story on the journey back from the Ministerial meeting in Bali last
week. It appeared in an essay in Time magazine about the impact of farm
subsidies in the north on developing countries in the south. It strikes me
that we should always remember stories such as Hannah's when we speak about
sustainable development and our expectations for the World Summit on
Sustainable Development. Poverty, soil erosion, lack of water, fair trade and
education are not just concepts in policy documents! In just ten weeks time,
ten years after the Rio Earth Summit, world leaders will gather in
Johannesburg. The Earth Summit was a landmark for sustainable development. It
established new concepts and new ways of working which have been shaping the
world's agenda ever since. Will the Johannesburg meeting make a similar
contribution by setting an agenda that will improve the real lives of people
like Hannah Njeri, or will it be just one more international conference?
Before attempting to answer this question lets look back to why Rio was a
success and examine whether developments since then should lead us to be
optimistic.
The Rio Context
Rio came to life in
an era of optimism. The Berlin wall had fallen and the Cold War was on its way
into the history books. Eastern European countries were embracing freedom and
democracy, the US economy was recovering from recession and the Asian Tigers
leaped ahead. In Europe green-left governments put people and the environment
in the centre of their policies and won elections. All this created a good
atmosphere for high ambitions in Rio. There was genuine hope for real
change.
The Johannesburg Context
Ten years later, at
the beginning of the 21st century the picture is very different.
Hope has tempered. Many feel insecure, threatened by forces beyond their
control; excluded from the prosperity which globalisation is supposed to
bring; alienated from their politicians and the political process. The
attacks on 11th of September shook the global community - we all
realised that we live under a threat of terrorism and we are still trying to
come to terms with the consequences. We all realise that poverty lies at the
root of terrorism, but we are struggling to come to grips with solutions. The
world knows a lot more about what it takes to bridge the gap between rich and
poor but is the international community willing to act on this knowledge?
Many blame globalisation for the problems currently facing the world. While it
offers enormous opportunities for development, there are concerns that not all
countries benefit from it. There are fears for negative environmental and
social implications, as well as for loss of cultural diversity. Globalisation
can be a powerful force for positive change but its potential to promote
sustainable development for all remains to be realised. So the stakes are
high.
Worsening Trends
And in some
respects as you know very well - conditions are worse today than they were ten
years ago:
Population
pressures continue to mount; Global consumption of metals, minerals, wood,
plastic and other materials increased some two and a half times between 1960
and 1995; and, The gap between rich and poor is increasing. Today, 10% of the
world's population receives 70% of its income. The three richest men on Earth
have assets equal to the annual output of the 48 poorest nations. These
trends are unsustainable.
Some Progress as Well
But do these
worrying trends mean that the hopes and ambitions of Rio are dead? I don't
think so. Trends are not our destiny.
We cannot let
failures of the past and the enormity of the challenge paralyse us. But to
realise these dreams and ambitions, we have to make a realistic assessment of
the problems and set out to solve them in a focused and systematic manner.
Not least, because
there are some positive signs too: in the health care sector, in reducing
child and infant mortality rates, in food production and hunger reduction, in
providing education, safe water and sanitation. There are also some reasons
for optimism in the environmental field. There are positive trends regarding
water and air in some regions of the world, including our own. The
international community has addressed a series of global environmental issues
some successfully, for example, in reducing threats to stratospheric ozone, or
persistent organic pollutants (POPs) through a new international convention
signed last year. And I am obviously delighted that the European Community
and all the 15 Member States ratified the Kyoto protocol on 31st of May. This
was a historic moment in our efforts to combat climate change and it is at the
same time an important signal for the World Summit on Sustainable Development
in Johannesburg. The ratification reaffirms the commitment of the EU and all
its Member States to pursue multilateral solutions to issues of global
concern.
Participation and Involvement
Over the last ten
years, civil society has been the driving force for sustainable development.
And I'm sure you will remain important in the process, as our objectives in
Johannesburg will not be achieved without a continued active involvement of
NGOs and civil society. Local Agenda 21 has also been a success. Throughout
the world around 2 000 cities and towns have concretely implemented Agenda 21.
These local initiatives bring together representatives of local government
with business, NGOs and other local organisations, and link action at the
local level, where most action must take place, with the global issues defined
by Rio's Agenda 21. Some businesses have made significant changes in the way
they operate throughout the world. The World Business Council for Sustainable
Development has taken an enlightened lead in stimulating the commitment to
sustainable development on the part of its membership of more than 120
multinational corporations. Voluntary instruments for corporate responsibility
are increasingly being applied. But it is too often the same companies who are
taking the lead.
The Implementation Gap
So the progress
that we have witnessed is commendable, but still the questions remain - why
haven't we made more progress? Why has progress been slow?
One reason is
undoubtedly that the industrialised world's unsustainable patterns of
consumption and production have remained unchanged. This explains one of the
key problems of globalisation: market liberalisation and trade are opening up
new economic opportunities, but our model of production and consumption is
simply not viable as a model for the global economy.
A second reason for
the gap in implementation is that the financial resources required to
implement Agenda 21 have not been forthcoming. Official development assistance
actually declined from 0.35% of donor countries GDP in 1992 to 0.22% in 2000.
The Doha, Monterrey, Johannesburg Continuum
If we are to
deliver on our ambitions, we have to see the World Summit this summer as part
of a wider process stretching from Doha through Monterrey to Johannesburg and
beyond. The new trade round launched in Doha last November will improve market
access for developing countries. The UN Ministerial Conference on Financing
for Development in Monterrey made progress regarding finance for sustainable
development. The European Union decided to substantially increase development
aid. The EU aid already represents more than 50% of all assistance world-wide,
and we are now committed to reaching an EU average of 0.39% by 2006. The
ultimate objective for each Member State is to attain the UN goal of 0.7%
development assistance of GDP. This EU pledge is an important part of the
wider commitment made by the international community to increased development
assistance in Monterrey. Johannesburg must build on these agreements. It must
set the political targets the world aims to deliver in the coming ten years
and harness the Doha and Monterrey processes as key means to implement these
political goals.
The Bali Conference
However, success in
Johannesburg is by no means guaranteed. The recent Ministerial meeting in Bali
was a disappointment in that it became bogged down in the fight over trade and
aid between developed and developing countries instead of promoting agreement
on a new positive agenda for sustainable development. We will need to work
hard in the coming weeks to avert the risk that Johannesburg degenerates into
acrimony over market access and development funding. The developed countries
must clearly re-affirm their commitment to deliver on the promises they made
in Doha and Monterrey, without any qualifications or quibbling. The developing
countries must accept that they cannot re-open Doha and Monterrey and all of
us must agree on how to use these processes in the cause of sustainable
development. As the NGOs said in their submission to the Seville European
Council on this subject, "We do not regard the lack of consensus in Bali as a
bad thing. The alternative was a bad agreement and that would have been far
worse".
The Agenda for Change
The EU believes
that we can help to set a positive agenda for change at Johannesburg. My
colleague Poul Nielson will address in his speech the specific EU initiatives
for deliverables at Johannesburg. Let me just underline that we are calling
for clear political commitments to measurable targets. Our deliverables must
be linked to these political commitments. For example, the EU is committed to
ensuring that, by 2015, the number of people unable to reach or afford safe
drinking water is halved. And that, by the same date, the number of people
without access to adequate sanitation is halved. At Johannesburg, we want
others to sign up to these targets and to agree on how we will achieve them.
Similarly, the EU is committed to concrete action in the field of energy and
development. We will in particular focus on access to energy services for
those who are currently without it, improved energy efficiency, clean
technologies and the development of locally-available renewable sources.
Generally, the EU wants the Summit to give a strong signal to increase of the
share of renewable energy sources world-wide.
The Way Forward
In the coming ten
weeks, the EU will seek to play a constructive role and promote common
commitments in bringing the WSSD parties together. Upcoming meetings such as
the Seville European Council and the G8 meeting in Canada in late June, as
well as bilateral contacts, will provide important opportunities for review
and discussion among developed countries on how to respond to the concerns of
the developing countries, without re-opening the Doha and Monterrey
agreements. We will need to work closely with the G77 to re-establish a
climate of trust and partnership, and to explain our globalisation and
sustainable development agenda. In addition to political contacts, we will
also continue our technical work to build support for our partnership
initiatives which can bring real benefits in terms of poverty reduction,
improvement in health and education and environmental protection to developing
countries.
Concluding Remarks
There of course
remains a possibility that the Johannesburg meeting will be dominated by
acrimony over the issues of trade and finance and the focus on sustainable
development risks being lost.
So now is the time
for leadership. I welcome the fact that the South Africans are now in the
driving seat. They will need our help and support to pull things together in
the coming weeks.
For our part, the
EU is committed to sustainable development. We are trying to practice what we
preach, by developing new ways of making economic, social and environment
policy work together, decoupling economic growth and environmental
degradation. We believe that this is the only sustainable approach, the only
way to reconcile the needs of the present and future generations.
It is equally valid
on an international level. The challenge for our leaders when they meet in
Johannesburg is to embrace this approach and to commit themselves to new ways
of international co-operation. Some NGOs told me after Bali that they were
not too disappointed that it had not been a great success. "It gives us
something to campaign for in the run-up to Johannesburg" they told me. The
opportunity to campaign is definitely there now. Johannesburg can be a
worthy successor to Rio but we will all have to work hard in the coming
weeks to make sure that it will be. And remember, it is for normal
people like Hannah Njeri that we need to take the right decisions. Thank you
for your attention.
67. POUL NIELSON, EUROPEAN COMMISSIONER FOR DEVELOPMENT AND HUMANITARIAN AID:
A BETTER QUALITY OF LIFE FOR ALL: DELIVERY AND GOVERNANCE, SPEECH TO 3RD
EUROPEAN CONFERENCE OF THE RIO+10 COALITION, BRUSSELS,
European Commission
21 June 2002
Internet:
http://www.europaworld.org/week88/poulnielson28602.htm
The Rio de Janeiro
Earth Summit in 1992 raised considerable expectations. The international
community agreed an ambitious and comprehensive strategy to address
environment and development challenges through a global partnership for
sustainable development. Ten years after Rio, the 2002 World Summit on
Sustainable Development will provide an opportunity to revitalise the spirit
of Rio and to shape a renewed political commitment by all countries towards
achieving sustainable development.
Our overriding
objectives for WSSD should be poverty eradication and promotion of sustainable
consumption and production patterns: to take the title of this conference 'A
Better World For All'. Taking into account the results of the international
conferences of Doha and Monterrey, WSSD should be a significant step forward
on the road to achieve international development targets, notably the
Millennium Declaration Goals.
As I am sure you
are aware, preparations for Johannesburg are not progressing as smoothly as we
might wish. The latest preparatory meeting in Bali was not a breakdown. But
neither was it a breakthrough and much remains to be done between now and the
Summit itself. As always, the main outstanding questions are about how to
achieve the Summit's overall goals.
Building upon the
principles and objectives agreed in Rio and laid down in Agenda 21, and in
order to improve their implementation, the EU wants to see an outcome of the
WSSD that is action-oriented and that specifies as much as possible the means
of implementation to achieve objectives. The Plan of Implementation should
contain concrete deliverables to which all actors can be held to account.
Targets and timetables for implementation are essential. Commitments to action
must also be backed up by specific means of implementation. At Monterrey, the
EU announced a substantial future increase in official development assistance
(ODA). This, and increases by others, should help to facilitate progress in
Johannesburg. However, we need to deepen discussions on new sources of
financing, including the potential contribution of the private sector.
I welcome the
attention that you have been giving here over the past 2 days to the issue of
delivery. The real test of WSSD's success will be the implementation of
commitments taken there by all partners. The "Type II" outcomes, that you have
been focusing on, will be one of the means to help achieve the objectives
agreed at Johannesburg. They cannot replace commitments by governments, which
will be contained in the Political Declaration and the Plan of Implementation.
But they will complement these, through the creation of voluntary partnerships
involving groups of governments and other stakeholders, and should be clearly
linked to them. They should have strong ownership amongst developing countries
and be embedded in national or regional poverty reduction strategies.
Priorities for
Action at WSSD
The potential
agenda for WSSD is enormous: achieving poverty eradication and sustainable
consumption and production patterns requires action in many different areas.
Johannesburg offers a unique opportunity to address all the elements of
sustainable development economic, social and environmental together, and in a
mutually supportive way. If we are to make the most of this opportunity,
however, we need to focus on a limited set of priorities for action, as
emphasised by UN Secretary General Kofi Annan. We should also not see WSSD in
isolation: it forms part of a coherent agenda for action, with the Doha
Development Agenda and the Monterrey Consensus.
In its preparations
for Johannesburg, the EU is focusing on 6 areas, which were endorsed by EU
Ministers at the Development Council of 30 May. These are areas where we
believe poverty eradication and sustainable development objectives come
together. They are:
- water and
sanitation,
- energy,
- health,
- globalisation and
trade,
- global public
goods, and
- sustainable
patterns of consumption and production.
In a minute, I will
tell you more about what the EU is proposing to do in each of these areas.
Before I do that, I would like to make some general comments about our
approach to Johannesburg.
The EU's
preparations for the WSSD began some time ago, with the preparation of the
Commission Communication in February 2001, "Ten years after Rio: preparing for
the World Summit on Sustainable Development in 2002". Since then, EU countries
have been active at the regional and internal level.
In March 2002, EU
Ministers underlined the main challenges to be addressed in relation to the
global dimension of sustainable development, as follows:
- Poverty
eradication and promoting social development as well as health;
- Making
globalisation work for sustainable development;
- Sustainable
patterns of production and consumption;
- Conservation and
sustainable management of natural and environmental resources;
- Strengthening
governance for sustainable development at all levels, in particular
international economic governance, including public participation; and
- Means of
implementation, including capacity building and technology co-operation.
As part of the its
contribution to help ensure a positive outcome at WSSD, the EU has also
prepared its own, comprehensive sustainable development strategy. This
addresses both the internal and the external dimensions, and aims to move the
EU 'Towards a Global Partnership for Sustainable Development'. It identifies
clear priorities for action at Johannesburg and beyond, including in the areas
above. It also identifies areas where the EU needs to improve its own
performance, including policy coherence.
EU Initiatives for WSSD
The 6 EU priorities
for common action in the lead up to Johannesburg itself (water and sanitation,
energy, health, globalisation and trade, global public goods, and sustainable
patterns of consumption and production) are areas where the EU intends to
launch concrete initiatives at Johannesburg, building on the Sustainable
Development Strategy. They will be grounded in the Political Declaration and
the Plan of Implementation adopted there.
We are still in the
process of developing these initiatives, and we plan to do so through an open
dialogue with developing countries and other partners.
In water, we want
to contribute to ensure that, by 2015, the proportion of people unable to
reach or afford safe drinking water, and the proportion of people without
access to adequate sanitation, are halved. We will be launching an initiative
for a strategic partnership on water and sanitation, drawing on EU experience
in river basin management. This will focus on poverty reduction and health,
and on integrated water resources management to contribute to sustainable
development and conflict prevention. The main elements will be capacity
building, the provision of expertise, development of regional and sub-regional
co-operation, awareness raising and improved efficiency of financial
mechanisms.
In energy, we want
to facilitate the achievement of the Millennium Development Goal of halving
the number of people in extreme poverty and other MDGs by 2015, through the
provision of adequate, affordable, sustainable energy services. The core of
the initiative will be support for institutional capacity building and
technical assistance to developing countries to put in place adequate energy
policies through the development of partnerships. Development Banks, investors
and private sector companies will be invited to participate, as part of the
market building activities.
In health, the EU
will increase, over the next five years, the volume of development assistance
targeting improved health outcomes, in particular communicable diseases,
maternal health, and reproductive and sexual health and rights. We will be
inviting the international donor community and developing countries to join us
in this effort. WTO members also need to resolve differences on compulsory
licenses and work for pharmaceutical products to be made available to the
developing world at the lowest possible prices; and we need research
partnerships for new generations of products. The EU will continue to
participate actively in the Global Fund to fight HIV/AIDS, malaria and
tuberculosis.
Globalisation and
Trade: Making globalisation work for sustainable development and poverty
reduction requires timely progress on the Doha Development Agenda, and
concrete trade-related initiatives going beyond it. WSSD can help sustain the
momentum of the endeavour launched at Doha and contribute to a sustainable
outcome of the negotiations, although it should not un-pick the deal reached
there nor prejudice its results. Beyond the Doha Agenda, the EU will argue for
the adoption world-wide of levels of access for Least Developed Countries
equivalent to the EU's Everything But Arms scheme, and for preferential access
for sustainable goods from all sources. We will also be promoting enhanced
trade-related technical assistance; a constructive and sustainable
relationship between trade and social development; and measures to simplify
and make more transparent domestic trade procedures.
While the basic
idea of global public goods has attracted a lot of attention recently
(particularly because of climate change), there is still a divergence of views
over what exactly defines them. We also believe that once they are defined it
will be important to define the best way of making sure that they are
protected or provided. For Johannesburg, the EU will be proposing the
establishment of an open, transparent and inclusive participatory process at
the global level to examine these issues.
Sustainable
production and consumption patterns: One of the reasons that we have not been
able to halt environmental degradation is that we have not changed our
consumption and production patterns. Global sustainable development cannot be
reached if we do not take into account the environmental impacts of unchanged
consumption and production by an ever-growing population. Industrialised
countries have to take the lead in moving towards more resource efficient
production processes and lifestyles. There are various tools that we can draw
on, including life-cycle approaches, eco-labelling and environmental impact
assessments. We should also help developing countries to move towards the same
objective.
Given that the
primary responsibility for sustainable development lies with the countries
themselves, all these initiatives should be implemented in the framework of
national sustainable development strategies and, where these exist, in the
context of national or regional poverty reduction strategies. In the
implementation of these initiatives, the EU will pay special attention to and
provide strong support for African countries' own efforts to achieve
sustainable development, including through the New Partnership for African
Development (NEPAD).
We want to work
with others in the development of these initiatives, particularly developing
countries. We are already working with African Caribbean and Pacific
countries, for example, to put together a Programme for Water Governance, as a
component of the EU's planned initiative on water. We will also need support
from others if the targets and timetables that we have proposed are to be
adopted, in particular on water/sanitation and energy. We are keen to hear
about suggestions that others may have for other priority areas or
initiatives.
In addition to
initiatives in priority areas, the Commission and Member States are also
engaged in policy and analytical work related to broader issues to be
addressed at WSSD. For instance, whilst it is now widely recognised that we
need to strengthen linkages between poverty eradication and environmental
protection, including by the integration of environmental concerns into
national strategies for poverty reduction, there is still a lack of
understanding concerning the relationship between these two issues. This is
why, as part of its contribution to WSSD, the European Commission has been
working with the World Bank, the UN Development Programme and the UK
Department for International Development (DFID), to analyse the relationship
between environmental degradation and poverty reduction. The preparation of
the report on this work has benefited from public consultation, and the final
report will be provided as an input to Johannesburg.
Governance
Before I close, I
should like to come back to one remaining element of the title of this
session: governance. You may have noted that this is one of the main
challenges identified earlier in relation to sustainable development. It is
also a key theme in the emerging Plan of Implementation for Johannesburg.
Governance
encompasses many aspects, and I do not want to cover many of them now. It
involves international, regional, national, and local government. I shall talk
only about one level, the national. It encompasses processes ranging from
democratic accountability through observance of international human rights
instruments to coherent and consistent policy-making and effective delivery of
public services. All of these are crucially important to poverty reduction,
and I should be uneasy to imply that any are less significant by talking about
only a few. However, since our time (and your patience) is limited, I propose
to mention only a couple of specific areas now.
These deal with
implementation, and especially the key issues of public expenditure
management. That is not to say that public policy formulation can be
forgotten, but rather that as in the rest of the Commission's approach to
Johannesburg I want to focus on making things change in the real world. Hence
I intend today only to talk about this particular part of the governance
story.
On public
expenditure management, I want to offer two thoughts that have come through
strongly from our preparations for Johannesburg. The first is that we all have
an interest in improving systems to get best value for public funds.
Governments above all have this interest, because this is the way to deliver
better health care, better education, better roads, and all the other things
that people look to Government for. Donors have a similar interest, and by
putting our own money through the budget we can help to improve both the way
the whole of the budget is spent and the amount of time that officials need to
spend dealing with donor missions. We are keen to do more to help in improving
public expenditure management, with others, and this will be a major theme for
us in future.
The other aspect of
public expenditure management to which I should like to refer is a less
obvious one. While most people think of better value for money, reduced
opportunities for corruption, more timely accounting, and so on, perhaps fewer
people think about where the costs and benefits fall. But I believe that it is
important that we think carefully about who pays tax, and how much, and who
benefits from public services. In particular we need to know whether our
taxation and public service systems lay heavier burdens on women, and whether
they benefit proportionately from the services we provide. Gender budgeting,
then, is another, less obvious aspect of governance to which we attach
importance.
As I am sure you
are aware, preparations for Johannesburg will be one of the main items for
discussion at the Seville European Council, which begins today. In Seville, EU
Leaders will agree the EU mandate for Johannesburg. Although we still have
much work to do, the work that has already been done provides a strong basis
on which to build. I am confident that the European Union will play a leading
role in achieving an ambitious and action-oriented outcome of Johannesburg.
This, in turn, will help to achieve a 'Better Quality of Life for All'.
68. KEYNOTE ADDRESS BY DR BS NGUBANE, MINISTER OF ARTS, CULTURE, SCIENCE AND
TECHNOLOGY, AT 3RD CONFERENCE OF THE EUROPEAN RIO +10 COALITION, 20-21 June
2002
Issued by the South
African Ministry of Arts, Culture, Science and Technology
20 June 2002
Internet:
http://www.gov.za/search97cgi/s97_cgi?action=View&VdkVgwKey=%2E%2E%2Fdata%2Fspeech02%2F02062512461002%2Etxt&DocOffset=41
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The Chairperson,
Mrs Ilona Graenitz, Lord Holme of Cheltenham, Mr Derek Osborne, Mr Raymond
Van Ermen and distinguished delegates.
I am deeply
honoured by the opportunity afforded to me to make a contribution to the
European Rio +10 Coalition's preparations for the World Summit on Sustainable
Development. South Africa is privileged to host this event that will be held
in Johannesburg at the end of August this year. The fourth preparatory
committee meeting was held in Bali at the end of May, as I am sure many of you
are aware. The World Summit on Sustainable Development faces the considerable
challenge of carrying forward Agenda 21, as well as strengthening global
action to address poverty in response to the deeper understanding that has
emerged of the importance of sustainable development. Sustainable development
is considered to be based on a proper balance and dynamic between economic,
social and environmental imperatives. Overemphasis of one dimension at the
expense of another ultimately leads to potential failure of the system as a
whole. In the 10 years since Rio, the world has changed dramatically. The
rapid advance of globalisation, the widening gap between rich and poor, and
the ongoing concern about the sustainability of our current patterns of
consumption has characterised this period. It was to be hoped, therefore,
that a new high-level consensus would emerge about the challenges that face
us. The process of negotiation has, however, been slow. As new insights and
issues have come to the fore, they have not been taken up in a positive and
effective way. There is therefore a risk that the World Summit on Sustainable
Development will not deliver targeted action plans with proper resource
commitments and agreed time scales. In the jargon of the WSSD, negotiated
commitments have come to be called "Type-1" outcomes. These Type-1 outcomes
operate in contradistinction to Type-2 outcomes, which are intended to be
voluntary partnerships of willing participants who work together to support
the broader Type-1 agreements.
However, from a
developing world perspective, the insistence of some countries in the
negotiations on removing any references to resources or time-lines, will
inevitably devalue Type-2 partnerships. The simple reason for this is that
voluntary partnerships cannot be a substitute for multilateral global
commitments. Therefore, it is critical to recognise that Type-2 partnerships,
in and of themselves, may be very positive, but within the context of a weak
negotiated text, Type-2 partnerships become potentially an insubstantial sop
to the developing world.
Europe, of course,
should not fall into the trap of devaluing the negotiated text, for indeed;
the European story has been one of cooperative development based on a shared
vision of the future. The story of the European Union and the strengthening
and development of real bonds between the nations is a signal to the rest of
the world that collaboration is possible and that proactive resource
allocation to weaker partners within agreed frameworks is indeed the preferred
way to deal with underdevelopment. It is my appeal therefore that all actors
within the European setting seek to achieve a strong Type-1 negotiated text
which will provide a positive basis for Type-2 partnerships.
Part of the
difficulty faced by the developing world is the rapid convergence of economic,
social and environmental issues, and this places huge burdens on countries
wrestling with issues such as poverty, disease, environmental disasters and
the protection of fragile young democracies. Indeed, it is difficult to argue
with the perspective of the least developed countries that, in the short-term,
economic survival, and hopefully economic growth, is the most pressing
challenge. There is no doubt that such countries face challenges that could
be addressed, given sufficient resources and political will. The types of
issues under negotiation in the WSSD include water and sanitation, health,
education, access to reliable modern energy systems, improved agricultural
practices, and a more effective basis for food security. The developed world,
which commands the resources to address many of these issues, insists on
effective governance and responsible programmes of action. As the Minister
responsible for science and technology in my country, I am keenly aware of the
critical role that technology plays in development. Technological innovation
and improvement, usually based on new knowledge, contributes to more than half
of the economic growth of the developed world. In the developing world, this
is not the case. Labour, capital and natural resources are the prime sources
of growth.
Unless there is a
fundamentally changed mechanism for the developing world to use technology,
and to harness its power for economic growth, the least developed countries
will in fact move backwards relative to the developed world. The process of
technology transfer, as currently conceived, is simply insufficient to create
the conditions for development at an accelerated pace.
Of course, this
requires of the developing world that there be a greatly increased emphasis on
science and technology in the economy and in the social sphere. Mathematics,
science and computing should be the focus of primary and secondary schooling.
Universities and research organisations in the developing world should
significantly strengthen their production of engineers and scientists. In
addition, we should develop stronger programmes with local industry to
transfer technology to small enterprises, and to support larger enterprises in
the process of innovation. However, there is such a massive backlog to be
dealt with in critical areas of infrastructure and social need that such
programmes will be meaningful only if undertaken in partnership with the
developed world.
In the area of
trade there is also, as we will indicate in a later session, a need to support
developing countries to ensure that new types of "invisible" trade barriers do
not inhibit the ability of developing world exporters to reach markets in the
developed world.
It is critical that
we find positive ways to move beyond the recent setbacks evidenced by
increased protection of agriculture in the developed world. As many of you
will be aware, the domestic agriculture subsidies granted in Europe and the
United States directly and negatively impact the ability of the developing
world to trade in the domain where we have the most productive resources -
that is, agriculture. There is also the matter of the sophistication of
consumers. In order for resource poor exporters to trade successfully, they
need access to critical knowledge and technologies related to consumer choices
and preferences. The science, technology and innovation that would support
them in addressing such issues are a pressing concern. It is my hope that
relatively soon multinational companies will begin to engage with developing
countries to create positive and effective programmes to enhance the science
and technology base of the developing world. It is a sad fact that many
intergovernmental organisations and multilateral development agencies should
be challenged to engage in the same process. Some agencies endeavour to avoid
working with national governments, preferring instead to deliver solutions
through NGOs and consultants. This has the effect of damaging the credibility
of national governance in the eyes of the NGO sector, while at the same time
creating capacities in the NGOs that rival the delivery capacity of
governments themselves. As I will indicate in my remarks on NEPAD, country
strategies and governmental ownership are crucial to sustainable development.
In considering
Type-2 partnerships, therefore, it is important for the participants to be
aware of the needs of the developing world. Type-2 partnerships should always
involve proper support from national and regional governmental structures if
they are to be sustainable and credible. The private sector has a key role to
play, both as a partner and as a source of expertise, but it is important to
recognise that in many developing countries, large companies do not have an
uncomplicated relationship with government and communities more broadly.
Corporate social responsibility must be seen in the context of the developing
world and include actions to develop the knowledge infrastructure of the
nations in which multinational companies engage.
However, I would
not want the, perhaps, cautionary tone I have adopted to suggest that the
developing world does not see any value in productive and effective
partnerships. Indeed, South Africa and other developing countries have
welcomed many of the initiatives that have emerged in recent years in the
fields of health, water, agriculture and the like. The developing world will
continue to engage in such processes, given the pressing needs and challenges
that we face. As you are aware, there are now strong moves to improve
integration of such efforts and to ensure that they are effective and
synergistic. This implies that major donor programmes should be mediated by
direct budgetary support to governments rather than through hundreds of small
projects and programmes. This will lead to greater efficiency, greater
delivery capacity and more strategic use of resources.
Smaller projects
and programmes have their place. They are normally most needed where knowledge
is limited and where "piloting" and "demonstration" are the key processes of
delivery. Sustainable development, however, must necessarily operate at the
"system" level. South Africa, therefore, will tend to lend its support to
significant Type-2 initiatives that will have a system-wide impact and to
smaller ones where the process of knowledge generation/learning is crucial.
In drawing to a
close, I would like to recognise the achievements of recent negotiations at
Doha and Monterrey, and suggest that, if the World Summit on Sustainable
Development is to be similarly successful, the focus be on practical,
well-resourced measures that would lead to the eradication of poverty, and
full and equal participation by the developing world in the global economy. I
have indicated how important science and technology are to this process. We
have welcomed the proposal by Mr Nitin Desai, the Secretary General of the
WSSD that a science forum operate as a parallel event to the WSSD. We also
welcome the participation of the EU in this parallel event. It is to be hoped
that we will be able to announce some significant Type-2 partnerships at that
time.
I encourage all
participants to be practical, pro-poor and pro-planet in the actions you seek
to take. Business should seek to act responsibly and stakeholders should seek
effective solutions and partnerships. Coalitions such as the European Partners
for the Environment should endeavour to incorporate the perspectives of the
developing world in all programmes. Indeed, if we are to succeed,
representatives of the developing world should be full partners in all
initiatives. I look forward to joining with you in these important
discussions.
I thank you.
See Also:
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=24&DocsFound=5899&Collection=speech02&Collection=speech01&SortField=TDEDate&SortOrder=desc&ViewTemplate=gov%2Fdocview
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69. POVERTY REDUCTION AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: THE CHALLENGE FOR
JOHANNESBURG SPEECH BY THE RT HON CLARE SHORT MP, SECRETARY OF STATE FOR
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT, ON THE WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
20 June 2002
Introduction
In a little over
ten weeks' time Ministers from across the world – including our Prime Minister
– will meet in Johannesburg, South Africa, at the World Summit on Sustainable
Development (WSSD), which marks ten years since the UN Conference on
Environment and Development in Rio. The final preparatory meeting for this
Summit finished two weeks ago in Bali. It was not the disaster that some NGOs
claimed – the preparatory processes for UN conferences often leave much to be
desired – but there is some way to go before we can be confident that we will
have a successful outcome at Johannesburg.
I would like today
to outline my hopes for the Summit. I see it as a critical opportunity to
bring the development and environment movements together in a systematic
effort to both reduce poverty and pursue sustainable development.
WSSD should not be
seen in isolation. It is the culmination of an international process – the
Millennium Summit in September 2000, the Doha meeting of the World Trade
Organisation last November, and the Monterrey Conference on Finance this
March. Together these meetings have made important steps in improving the
effectiveness of the international system.
The Millennium Summit
At the Millennium
Summit in 2000 world leaders committed themselves to work together to meet a
series of Millennium Development Goals. The overarching goal was the halving
of the proportion of people living in extreme poverty by 2015, together with
other goals, including achieving universal primary education and reducing
child mortality by two-thirds – all by 2015.
The goals were
carefully chosen. They are achievable. But they are not simply a description
of present trends – business as usual is not an option. Reaching them will
require a significantly increased development effort from the whole
international community. This means fairer trade rules that allow developing
countries to access our markets; and it means increasing development
assistance, improving how that assistance is delivered, and focusing it on
poverty reduction.
WTO meeting
Trade has an
important role to play in the achievement of the Millennium Development
Goals. For too long the rich countries of the world have lectured the
developing world about trade liberalisation, but created barriers to
developing country access to their markets. Doha agreed an agenda for
change. It placed the concerns of developing countries at the heart of the
next trade round. And it included a particular commitment to negotiations on
agriculture aimed at substantial improvements in market access.
We need to deliver
on this commitment – and the European Union needs to show leadership. The
EU's Common Agricultural Policy acts as a barrier to progress on developing
countries. The Common Fisheries Policy subsidises the EU fishing industry,
which contributes to over-fishing in waters often far from Europe meaning that
subsidised and highly sophisticated European fishing boats compete with
communities dependent on fishing for their livelihoods. These policies need
to be reformed.
Financing for Development
Four months after
Doha, the UN Conference on Financing for Development in March this year also
marked an important step forward. Monterrey was about recognising the need to
galvanise all sources of finance – domestic savings, foreign direct
investment, export earnings, debt relief and aid – in order to eradicate
poverty, achieve sustained economic growth and promote sustainable
development. It was about a new consensus that recognised the crucial role of
the state and private sector in promoting social and economic development.
Developing countries recognised the importance of good governance – both
political and economic - and OECD countries committed to providing more and
better aid, a sustainable exit from debt, better trade access, and a stronger
voice for developing countries in international decision making.
At Monterrey, the
European Union and the United States made pledges of increased aid which we
estimate will lead to an increase in development assistance from a total of
$55 billion in 2003 to $67 billion a year by 2006. This commitment to reverse
the recent decline in aid levels is welcome. And the UK Government will play
its part. We have increased the aid budget from 0.26% of gross national
income in 1997 to 0.32% in 2001 – a one third increase in real terms. This
makes the UK the fourth largest bilateral donor in volume terms. And we are
committed to raising development assistance to the UN target of 0.7% of gross
national income. The announcement of our next step towards this goal will be
made following the 2002 Spending Review in July.
Improving the
quality of aid – as well as increasing the quantity – is also crucial. In the
past aid has been used too often for political reasons, or to promote the
trade interests of the donor country, or to prop up corrupt rulers for
short-term political reasons. The Monterrey Consensus recognised the need to
improve the effectiveness of aid: to untie it from the interests of donor
countries; to harmonise donor procedures so that the high transaction costs in
developing countries are reduced; to make it more responsive to the needs of
developing countries; and to increase its targeting on the reduction of
poverty.
A constant barrage
of negative media images lead many people to believe that international
development is a hopeless enterprise. This is misleading. Aid works, and is
lifting large numbers of people permanently out of poverty. There have been
big improvements in how aid is delivered – but more needs to be done. In fact
if the existing $55 billion of international aid was untied and focused on
poor countries who are pursuing effective pro-poor policies, it could increase
its value by up to 50%.
More effective use
of aid means moving away from funding a proliferation of projects to backing
poverty reduction strategies drawn up by developing countries themselves.
Unsurprisingly, experience has shown that reform agendas drawn up locally are
more successful than those imposed from outside.
The consequence of
this new approach has been considerable strengthening of the quality and
effectiveness of local institutions. This kind of improvement in the quality
of governance has encouraged and enabled development agencies to put finances
directly into government budgets – so helping to fund rapid improvements in
health, education, water and other services that contribute to poverty
reduction.
This is, I believe,
the true meaning of partnership. Developing countries in the lead in
developing their own poverty reduction strategies; development assistance
supporting these strategies – building national capacity rather than
undermining it. It represents a new approach to development assistance – from
seeing aid as a drop of charity in an ocean of poverty, to being part of the
process of building modern, effective states and strengthening local
communities in order to deliver long-term improvements in the lives of the
poor.
So this is the
context within which we approach Johannesburg. We have an internationally
agreed set of targets in the Millennium Development Goals; from Doha we have
an agenda for a pro-development trade round; and from Monterrey we have
commitments to increase the levels and improve the quality of aid.
So what can be
achieved in Johannesburg?
Recommit the
international community; build on existing partnerships
The Summit is an
opportunity for world leaders to demonstrate their willingness to work
together in the fight against poverty in the way that they have demonstrated
their resolve to fight terrorism. Doha and Monterrey gave us agreed agendas
for action. Sustained political will is now needed if these agendas are to be
implemented. Johannesburg is an opportunity to integrate the environment into
this consensus for global reform focused on poverty reduction.
The focus on
establishing partnerships to achieve sustainable development is welcome. But
we must be clear that Johannesburg is not about spending the money pledged at
Monterrey. This money has only been pledged. It is not yet committed and
will not be available until 2006. The stress should be on making aid more
effective in the ways I have described and integrating environmental
sustainability into the development agenda agreed at the Millennium Summit,
Doha and Monterrey. We must also take the opportunity to integrate the New
Partnership for Africa's Development into the global consensus.
Bringing
environment and development together
Johannesburg
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 that we have. We want improved lives
for the poor of the world and a world that is sustainable for future
generations.
We must also
understand that better environmental management can help eliminate poverty.
Too often the environment is seen as a cost rather than an investment. We
must move away from the scenario which says "do no harm". This quickly takes
on an anti-development perspective. Moreover, it has not worked.
Instead, we must
harness the benefits that better environmental protection and management can
offer to poor people. If we don't have such an approach, developing countries
will increasingly see environmental concerns as a pre-occupation of the North:
a North which achieved its own development by plundering and polluting the
planet and is now trying to pull up the ladder behind it to exclude them from
the benefits of economic development.
I believe that the
World Summit provides an opportunity to forge a consensus around these
issues. My hope is that we can fuse the energy of the development and
environment movements so that they can work more effectively together for
systematic poverty reduction and sustainable development.
The environment is
crucial to the livelihoods of poor people. The poor depend on wood for their
cooking and heating, they use fodder for feeding their livestock, they get
medicine from the forest, they get water from streams and wells and they often
build houses from natural materials.
The poor suffer
most when air and water are polluted. A billion people – mainly women and
children – are exposed to indoor air pollution from inadequate ventilation and
the burning of traditional fuels, such as wood and dung. And they suffer too
when seas are over-fished and forests corruptly decimated.
And poor people are
highly vulnerable to environmental disasters and to environment-related
conflict. Droughts, floods and other disasters can wipe out any development
gains that poor people have made. And their frequency and severity is
expected to increase with climate change.
Kofi Annan and
WEHAB
Johannesburg will
produce three things: a high level political declaration, a more detailed
Programme of Action, and a series of partnerships to deliver what is agreed.
Kofi Annan recently highlighted five key areas where he hoped concrete results
could be achieved - water and sanitation, energy, health, agriculture and
biodiversity. Action on each of these – at Johannesburg and beyond – is
important to the achievement of poverty reduction. Let me say a word on what
I hope will be agreed.
First, on water and
sanitation the political declaration and programme of action should recognise
the importance of access to freshwater and sanitation to the lives of the
poor. One billion people lack access to safe drinking water, and 2.4 billion
people currently lack access to sanitation. Agreeing a new target to halve
the proportion of people without access to sanitation – to complement the
existing Millennium Development Goal on access to freshwater – would be a good
achievement.
In terms of
partnerships and concrete action, the Summit provides an opportunity to
improve donor effectiveness on water supply issues, to identify innovative
schemes to lever in private finance, and to highlight access to sanitation as
a key issue for the poor.
My Department is
working with other EU Member States to develop a new partnership to be
launched at Johannesburg.
Second, on energy
we should focus on the role energy can play in nationally-owned poverty
reduction strategies. My Department is providing funding to help develop the
Global Village Energy Partnership. This partnership would seek to create a
10-year work programme to reduce poverty and enhance economic and social
development through the accelerated provision of modern energy services to
those without access. It would bring together developing and industrialised
country governments, public and private organisations, multilateral
institutions and other key stakeholders to address the links between energy
and poverty reduction in rural areas, and improve the delivery of energy
services.
Third, on health
the political declaration should focus on action to achieve the Millennium
Development Goals for health: reducing child mortality by two- thirds,
reducing by three-quarters the maternal mortality rate, and reversing the
spread of HIV/AIDS, malaria and other major diseases – all by 2015.
Action on health
should emphasise increasing the resources available to existing partnerships.
We are pressing the international community – starting with the G8 meeting in
Kananaskis - to increase investments to build comprehensive basic health care
systems in African countries that are committed to achieving the MDGs. This
will complement the Global Fund established in December to provide drugs and
commodities to fight HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria. To date, the Global
Fund has received pledges of around $2 billion over five years – of which the
UK has pledged $200 million.
Fourth, on
agriculture the political declaration and programme of action should recognise
the vital contribution of agriculture to poverty reduction through economic
growth, sustaining livelihoods and delivery of environmental services.
Actions are
required by developing countries to improve rural roads, access to markets,
seed and fertiliser, credit and land security, supported by actions by
developed countries to reduce the current iniquitous system of tariff barriers
and subsidies.
Fifth, on
biodiversity the political declaration and programme of action should
recognise the links between biodiversity and poverty reduction. Whether for
food, medicine, shelter or income generation, poor people throughout the world
depend on biodiversity. Forests provide poor people with a range of goods and
services.
The Summit should
lead to action on illegal logging and the associated trade. This trade, which
is based on corrupt and abusive misuse of forests, denies a livelihood to
millions of poor people, it robs governments of billions of dollars which
could be spent on development programmes, and it provokes and sustains
conflicts. It is a problem shared by producer and consumer countries alike.
And it requires actions by governments, business, consumers and civil society.
Africa
Finally, I believe
that the location of the World Summit in Africa is important. Africa is the
poorest continent. Half the population of sub-Saharan Africa survives on less
than a dollar a day. On current trends population growth in Africa is
outstripping economic growth and therefore the continent is set to become
steadily poorer.
This is the
challenge which the New Partnership for Africa's Development seeks to
address. Launched in October last year, this partnership sets out a bold
vision for Africa's development. Its central principle is that it is Africa's
responsibility to advance African development, in particularly through efforts
to promote peace, security and good governance.
If it is to
succeed, NEPAD must transform the relationship between Africa and the rest of
the world. It must bring a new drive and a new political energy to the
development of Africa. Most important of all the people of Africa must be
empowered to demand more of their governments and of the international
community – both of which have let them down for too long.
Conclusion
The opportunity to
eliminate poverty and leave a sustainable planet to future generations is
within our reach. If we can grasp this, we can help build a world in which
mass poverty will exist only as a memory – and a world that is more stable and
secure for all our grandchildren. But this will not be done through business
as usual or on a green agenda that is hostile to development. To achieve this
we need to lock the world into a commitment to systematic poverty reduction
and to meeting the Millennium Development Goals and we need to change our
practice throughout the world to ensure that development is sustainable.
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