WSSD Info. News
ISSUE # 9
5-16 August 2002
Compiled by
Richard Sherman
Edited by
Kimo Goree
Published by the
International Institute for
Sustainable Development (IISD)
Distributed exclusively to the
2002SUMMIT-L
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GENERAL
NEWS
-
EARTH
SUMMIT TO SPUR UKRAINE TO ACTION (The Moscow Times 16 August 2002)
-
ENVIRONMENTAL GROUP CALLS FOR CORPORATE GLOBAL RULES (SABC News 16 August
2002)
-
DEVELOPMENT
WORKERS GATHER AHEAD OF S. AFRICA SUMMIT (The Jordan Times 16 August 2002)
-
JAPAN PM
SET TO ANNOUNCE AFRICA AID PACKAGE (The Namibian 16 August 2002)
-
TEN YEARS
ON, THE RIO "CIRCUS" HEADS FOR SOUTH AFRICA (ENS 16 August 2002)
-
'WE'LL TAKE
SANDTON' (Mail & Guardian 16 August 2002)
-
PM TO MAKE
SPEECH AT SUMMIT (Daily Star 16 August 2002)
-
GREENS
DON'T NEED THE US (The Guardian 16 August 2002)
-
FAMINE-THREATENED AFRICA SHIES AWAY FROM GENETICALLY MODIFIED RELIEF FOOD
(The Namibian 15 August 2002)
-
ESKIMOS
DYING TO GET TO SOUTH AFRICA (Independent Online 15 August 2002)
-
BUSH
UNLIKELY TO ATTEND EARTH SUMMIT (The Guardian 15 August 2002)
-
UN UNDER
PRESSURE TO SECURE RATIFICATION OF KYOTO PROTOCOL (Bangkok Post 15 August
2002)
-
ESCWA URGES
ARABS TO UNITE FOR JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT (Daily Star 15 August 2002)
-
SOMBRE
OUTLOOK FOR JO'BURG SUMMIT (Mail & Guardian 15 August 2002)
-
FORUM
INSISTS IT WILL BE READY DESPITE ITS FUNDING PROBLEMS (Business Day 15
August 2002)
-
IS THERE
ENOUGH TIME FOR WORLD SUMMIT AGREEMENT? (SABC News 15 August 2002)
-
WORLD
SUMMIT TO DISCUSS THE WAY GLOBAL ECONOMY WORKS (IPS 15 August 2002)
-
MOVEMENT
FOR ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE IN SOUTHERN AFRICA (IPS 15 August 2002)
-
BUSH
PRAISED FOR OPTING OUT OF EARTH SUMMIT (CNN 15 August 2002)
-
REPLENISHMENT OF GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT FACILITY SEEN AS MAJOR SUCCESS FOR
JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT PROCESS (UN 14 August 2002)
-
FLIGHTS OF
FANCY (The Guardian 14 August 2002)
-
EARTH
SUMMIT DUBBED THE BIGGEST TALK SHOP EVER (The Nation (Nairobi) via All
Africa 14 August 2002)
-
ADDRESSING
ENVIRONMENTAL CHALLENGES THROUGH GLOBAL PARTNERSHIP (Standard Times
(Freetown) 14 August 2002)
-
GREENPEACE
HOPEFUL OF SUMMIT'S SUCCESS (Business Day 14 August 2002)
-
GREEN
GROWTH JOHANNESBURG NEEDS MORE THAN HOT AIR (The Guardian 14 August 2002)
-
GREENPEACE
CALLS FOR PROTECTION NOT CRIMINALISATION OF INDEPENDENT INVESTIGATORS
(Greenpeace (Amsterdam) 14 August 2002)
-
ROUND TABLE
SEEKS WAYS TO HARNESS TRADE AND INVESTMENT FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
(United Nations Development Programme 14 August 2002)
-
RICH 'WILL
HELP THE POOR' - UN (BBC 13 August 2002)
-
CALL FOR
'SENSE OF URGENCY' AS JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT APPROACHES (All Africa 13 August
2002)
-
PLANET
EARTH IN PERIL (Associated Press 13 August 2002)
-
UN SUMMIT
HEAD EAGER TO LURE BUSH TO JOHANNESBURG (Reuters 13 August 2002)
-
BRAZIL
CAUTIOUS ON AMERICAS FREE TRADE ZONE, CITING US BARRIERS (Voice of America
13 August 2002)
-
ENVIRONMENT: WILL KLAUS TOEPFER HEAD A NEW WORLD ENVIRONMENT AGENCY? (The
Earth Times 13 August 2002)
-
NEED FOR
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT STRESSED (Gulf News 13 August 2002)
-
COMPANIES
RICHER THAN COUNTRIES IN UN LIST (The Scotsman 13 August 2002)
-
NGOS GLOOMY
ABOUT PROSPECTS OF GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT TALKS (Daily Star 13 August 2002)
-
WORLD
SUMMIT TAKES SHAPE IN JOHANNESBURG (Environment News Service 13 August
2002)
-
DIVISIONS
REMAIN AHEAD OF EARTH SUMMIT, SOUTH AFRICA SAYS (Associated Press 13
August 2002)
-
BLEAK
OUTLOOK FOR SUMMIT TO CURE SICK PLANET (SABC News 13 August 2002)
-
WORLD
SUMMIT MAY FACE ELECTRONIC ATTACKS (Business Day 13 August 2002)
-
DESAI URGES
YOUTH TO COME TO JOHANNESBURG AND MAKE A DIFFERENCE (United Nations 12
August 2002)
-
EARTH
SUMMIT GUEST LIST GROWS (BBC 12 August 2002)
-
U.N.
ENVIRONMENTAL CHIEF CALLS FOR ACTION TO PREVENT GLOBAL WATER CRISIS
(Associated Press 12 August 2002)
-
INDIA TO
ATTEND SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (AsiaPulse 12 August 2002)
-
WORLD
LEADERS AIM HIGH AT EARTH SUMMIT (Xinhua News Agency 12 August 2002)
-
WWF
LAUNCHES SOS PLANET CAMPAIGN FOR EARTH SUMMIT (Xinhua News Agency 12
August 2002)
-
WSSD
SUCCESS DEPENDS ON GOVERNMENT, CIVIL SOCIETY (BuaNews 12 August 2002)
-
UN CALLS
FOR GREATER ROLE OF YOUTH IN SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT POLICIES (Xinhua News
Agency 12 August 2002)
-
NATION'S
NGOS NOW IN COALITION FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (Daily Trust (Nigeria)
12 August 2002)
-
CHINESE
PREMIER TO VISIT FOUR AFRICAN NATIONS, ATTEND UN SUMMIT (Xinhua News
Agency 12 August 2002)
-
BUSH SET TO
SKIP EARTH SUMMIT (Reuters 12 August 2002)
-
EARTH
SUMMIT MUST NOT FAIL - UN'S TOEPFER (Planet Ark 12 August 2002)
-
M'SIA AND
OTHERS ATTEND SOUTHEAST ASIAN DEVELOPMENT MEET (The Star 12 August 2002)
-
LAND REFORM
TO TAKE CENTRE-STAGE AT SUMMIT (The Herald (Harare) via All Africa 12
August 2002)
-
ASIAN BROWN
CLOUD' MENACES THE WORLD (International Herald Tribune 12 August 2002)
-
BETTER
WATER ACCESS KEY TO POVERTY FIGHT, EXPERTS (Reuters 12 August 2002)
-
SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT STILL TOPS WORLD AGENDA (The East African Standard (Nairobi)
via All Africa 12 August 2002)
-
TOP BOSSES
'HIJACKING' ECO-SUMMIT (The Observer 11 August 2002)
-
HE PROMISED
LEADERSHIP. NOW BLAIR SNUBS THE EARTH SUMMIT (Independent 11 August 2002)
-
IN DISARRAY
BEFORE IT HAS EVEN BEGUN (Independent 11 August 2002)
-
INDIA
LOOKING FORWARD TO JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT (Xinhua News Agency 11 August 2002)
-
ALEX URGED
TO PUT OUT WELCOME MAT FOR SUMMIT (The Star 11 August 2002)
-
NIA SPOOKS
GRILL SUMMIT PROTESTERS (Sunday Independent 11 August 2002)
-
TRADE
UNIONS REQUEST WSSD NEGOTIATORS TO HELP REFOCUS NEW GEF MULTI-BILLION
DOLLAR FUND TOWARD 'THREE PILLAR' STRATEGY ICTFU 10 August 2002)(
-
NHEMA MUM
ON ZIM'S WSSD AGENDA (Zimbabwe Independent 10 August 2002)
-
SECURITY
ACCOUNTS ONE THIRD OF S. AFRICA'S BUDGET FOR EARTH SUMMIT (Xinhua News
Agency 10 August 2002)
-
ANNAN HEADS
TO AFRICA FOR FIVE-NATION OFFICIAL VISIT LATER THIS MONTH (Xinhua News
Agency 9 August 2002)
-
CANADA
RELEASES NATIONAL REPORT TO THE WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
(Canada Newswire 9 August 2002)
-
WORLD
SUMMIT EXPECTED TO PRODUCE WORKABLE, SUSTAINABLE PLANS (BuaNews 9 August
2002)
-
EUROPE
STRIVES TO MAKE EARTH SUMMIT SUCCESSFUL: PRODI (Xinhua News Agency 9
August 2002)
-
HUMANITY
LOSES $250 BILLION A YEAR IN WILD HABITAT (Environment News Service 9
August 2002)
-
MANY
DISASTER DEATHS PREVENTABLE, UN SAYS (Reuters 9 August 2002)
-
HIGH HOPES
FOR AGREEMENT AT WORLD SUMMIT (Daily Dispatch 9 August 2002)
-
UK SET FOR
EARTH SUMMIT PAY BACK (BBC 9 August 2002)
-
SECRETARY-GENERAL CALLS ON WORLD LEADERS TO SIGNAL COMMITMENT TO
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT BY ATTENDING JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT (United Nations 8
August 2002)
-
STATEMENT
ON THE ON WORLD SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT (UK 8 August 2002)
-
JAPAN
CONSIDERS AID TO 7 ASIAN NATIONS TO LOWER GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS
(Associated Press 8 August 2002)
-
WORLD'S
LEAST DEVELOPED COUNTRIES APPEAL FOR HELP FIGHTING POVERTY (Associated
Press 8 August 2002)
-
SUMMIT MUST
YIELD TIME FRAME FOR GOALS (Business Day 8 August 2002)
-
ECOJARGON
THE LINGUA FRANCA AT JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT (Reuters 8 August 2002)
-
UN
GATHERING IN JO'BURG ACID TEST OF WILL TO REFORM (Business Day via All
Africa 8 August 2002)
-
NEARLY 100
FINNS TO TAKE PART IN THE JOHANNESBURG SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT (Helsingin
Sanomat International Edition 8 August 2002)
-
JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT: WHAT'S MISSING FROM THE WSSD? (The Earth Times 8
August 2002)
-
EARTH
SUMMIT NUMBERS UNKNOWN BUT PLANS ON TRACK (Reuters 7 August 2002)
-
UN BAN ON
FEASTS DURING FAMINE (BBC 6 August 2002)
-
THE BIGGEST
TALKING SHOP IN HISTORY OR A MASS GATHERING TO SAVE THE WORLD? (The
Guardian 6 August 2002)
-
WELSH
POLITICIANS AT JOHANNESBURG WORLD SUMMIT (NewsWales 6 August 2002)
-
NATIONS
PLEDGE ENVIRONMENT FUNDS (Associated Press 7 August 2002)
-
RUSSIAN
PREMIER TO HEAD TEAM AT TALKS (Business Day 6 August 2002)
-
SUMMIT WILL
BOOST TRADE TALKS' (Business Day 5 August 2002)
-
JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT: ACHIM STEINER SAYS IUCN WILL OFFER A HELPING HAND ON
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (The Earth Times 5 August 2002)
-
SUMMIT
'SHADOW' FOR FIRST MINISTER (BBC 5 August 2002)
-
SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT VITAL FOR SECURITY: POWELL (SABC News 5 August 2002)
OPINIONS
-
FREEDOM
MAKES ALL THE DIFFERENCE A TASK FOR JOHANNESBURG by Amartya Sen
(International Herald Tribune 15 August 2002)
-
SEASONED
THOUGHTS OF THE GREEN KING (The Guardian 15 August 2002)
-
HOW TO SAVE
THE WORLD IN JOHANNESBURG by Jeffrey Sachs (Financial Times 14 August
2002)
-
THE
EXPANDING REACH OF NONGOVERNMENT AID Barry James (International Herald
Tribune 14 August 2002)
-
ON THE
ENVIRONMENT, IT ISN'T ALL BAD NEWS by Mohamed T. El-Ashy (International
Herald Tribune 13 August 2002)
-
STATEMENT
OF THE UNITED NATIONS HIGH COMMISSIONER FOR HUMAN RIGHTS INTERNATIONAL
YOUTH DAY (UNHCR 12 August 2002)
100. CHALLENGES OF DEVELOPMENT Learning to manage urban sprawl
(International Herald Tribune 12 August 2002)
101. STEERING ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES BACK ON THE POLITICAL AGENDA (DW World
8 August 2002)
GENERAL NEWS
1. EARTH SUMMIT TO SPUR UKRAINE TO ACTION
The Moscow Times
16 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.themoscowtimes.com/stories/2002/08/16/014.html
KIEV -- Chernobyl, rusting industrial relics of the Soviet era, heavy
pollution and mountains of waste -- Ukraine has one of the world's bleakest
environmental landscapes. But Environment Minister Serhiy Kurykin said
Thursday he hoped the Johannesburg Earth Summit later this month would bring
changes by helping Ukraine fight widespread public indifference toward
environmental issues. "Ecological problems in Ukraine are very serious. We
inherited from the Soviet Union piles of industrial waste and ecologically
dangerous companies. We also inherited a negligent attitude toward nature,"
Kurykin said. "But I hope the summit will give a powerful boost for a
better understanding of ecological problems at the national level and more
active practical steps. Currently, Ukraine is doing less than it could and
must do." President Leonid Kuchma plans to attend the United Nations summit
on the environment and development. One of the worst problems is
radioactive contamination after the explosion at the Chernobyl nuclear power
station in 1986, the world's worst civil nuclear accident. Ukraine closed
the Chernobyl plant in December 2000. But the surrounding land remains
contaminated, Kurykin said. Ukraine's government announced Thursday that it
will increase funding by more than $80 million annually over the next three
years to alleviate the human consequences of Chernobyl, The Associated Press
reported. Total funding for the program is expected to reach $657 million
by 2006, up from $400 million, the level reached this year, said Vasyl
Lutsko, state secretary of the Emergency Situations Ministry, AP reported
citing Interfax. Kurykin said the country had made some progress in tackling
the issues of air pollution and safely securing dumps of chemicals across
the country. But a lot remains to be done as the country's environmental
problems rarely receive proper funding. "Ecological problems are not local,
they are global. We should coordinate efforts and I hope for a positive
outcome from the summit and a massive impulse for action in Ukraine and
other countries," Kurykin said.
2. ENVIRONMENTAL GROUP CALLS FOR CORPORATE GLOBAL RULES
SABC News
16 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.sabcnews.co.za/world/summit/0,1009,40899,00.html
The environmental group, Friends of the Earth, today called on world leaders
meeting at the upcoming World Summit on Sustainable Development, in
Johannesburg, to introduce global rules for business. "Some corporations
continue to abuse the rights of people, destroy the livelihoods of
communities, and pollute water and forest resources for future generations,"
according to a report released by Friends of the Earth. In the report, the
environmental group mentions the mining giant, Rio Tinto that is prospecting
for gold in the Poboya protected forest in Indonesia, despite opposition
from local people. South Africa's chemical company Sasol has also come under
fire. "Sasol has been influential in pushing for voluntary environmental
agreements, rather than legally enforceable standards that the local
community could use to hold them liable." Friends of the Earth said the call
for global rules had so-far been met with "little enthusiasm" from Western
governments. It had received the backing of many developing countries,
though, the organisation said. "The evidence in this report highlights the
real damage companies are doing to people and to our environment," Tony
Juniper, the vice-chairperson of Friends of the Earth International said.
"Despite big companies' green public relations efforts, it illustrates how,
for many companies, sustainable development means business as usual.
"Without global rules to check this behaviour, the environment is not going
to figure on the corporate bottom line and it would be naive to expect
otherwise."- Sapa
3. DEVELOPMENT WORKERS GATHER AHEAD OF S. AFRICA SUMMIT
The Jordan Times
16 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.jordantimes.com/Fri/homenews/homenews7.htm
AMMAN - Twenty-six Arab and foreign experts are here for a leadership course
in exchanging views on development issues ahead of the upcoming World Summit
for Sustainable Development (WSSD) in Johannesburg. Those taking part are
expected to define and comprehend the challenges facing leadership in order
to gain a better understanding of the obstacles to be presented at the
Johannesburg conference, said Eve Thompson, director of the United Nations
University Leadership Academy, which organised the event. The development
workers began sessions Aug. 14 and will travel to Johannesburg for the WSSD
conference from Aug. 28-Sept. 4. Those participating in the conference here
come from 22 countries including Canada, Oman, Germany, Spain and India.
Nidal Hussein, an environmental director in Zarqa Municipality and a
Jordanian participant, said he is meeting "experts from different countries
and exchanging experiences on environmental issues. Later we get the chance
to see the real thing in Johannesburg," he told The Jordan Times. A follow
up to the 1992 Rio "Earth Summit" and subsequent international summits, the
Johannesburg gathering will call upon countries to implement the
comprehensive plan for sustainable development of Agenda 21, a resolution
adopted at the Rio summit. Each country is expected to present the South
African summit a national plan of its sustainable development achievements
over the past 10 years, including the challenges the implementation process
faces and future goals. According to Elizabeth Dowdswell, the former
executive director of the UN Environment Programme, who directed the first
session, many experts are refraining from taking part in the WSSD, believing
it would be a "marathon of talking" with 60,000 people participating. "We,
however, cannot risk not to go. It will be a chance to hear each country's
success story case by case so we can build on them and make a change in our
own countries," she said. "The Johannesburg summit should call for the
implementation of existing plans, rather than coming up with new policies,"
said another participant, Zeenat Adam, a Middle East specialist from South
Africa working as foreign service officer in the department of foreign
affairs. Sessions began on Wednesday, and the academy hopes participants
will "learn about leadership directly from leaders." In a country like
Jordan where natural resources are scarce, humans are the only assets, said
Minister of Higher Education & Scientific Research Walid Maani. Briefing
the participants on the education sector in the Kingdom, Maani said local
university programmes have adopted international standards and the flavour
of a multiethnic society to them. "We try to bring people together," said
Maani, referring to a 15 per cent rate of non-Jordanians at private and
public universities.
4. JAPAN PM SET TO ANNOUNCE AFRICA AID PACKAGE
The Namibian
16 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.namibian.com.na/2002/august/africa/027B70E7A1.html
TOKYO, Aug 16 (Reuters) - Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi is set
to pledge fresh aid to southern Africa in response to urgent United Nations
warnings that a humanitarian crisis is looming in the region due to chronic
food shortages. Japan's Yomiuri newspaper said on Friday that Koizumi would
announce $30 million in emergency food aid at the U.N.'s "Earth Summit" in
Johannesburg opening on August 26. An official on the Foreign Ministry's
Africa desk said the content of the package had yet to be decided. "We're
still looking at exactly how the contribution will be made and whether food
aid will be included. I think there will be an announcement before the prime
minister goes to Johannesburg," he said. About 100 heads of state are
expected to attend the U.N. World Summit on Sustainable Development from
August 26 to September 4, along with some 40,000 delegates and media
representatives. A severe food crisis threatens 13 million people in the
six countries in the region -- with Malawi and Zimbabwe the worst hit. The
U.N. has appealed for a million tonnes of food. Japan is the world's
second-biggest aid donor after the United States, but the budget has been
shrinking under pressure from its ailing economy. Nampa-Reuters
5. TEN YEARS ON, THE RIO "CIRCUS" HEADS FOR SOUTH AFRICA
ENN
16 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.enn.com/news/wire-stories/2002/08/08152002/reu_48156.asp
LONDON - Jane Fonda, the actress, was there. So was Pele, the footballer. A
relatively obscure U.S. senator called Al Gore swung into town and looked
impressed at a symbolic "Tree of Life." John Denver sang for a spiritual
parliament. Hollywood star Shirley MacLaine meditated with the Dalai Lama.
Amazon Indians, Greenpeace activists, and the Beach Boys rubbed shoulders
near the legendary Copacabana Beach. Ten years ago, the Brazilian city of
Rio de Janeiro teemed with politicians, celebrities, and environmentalists
as the United Nations hosted what was at the time its largest meeting, the
Conference on Environment and Development, better known as the Earth
Summit. One hundred and eight heads of state and government, supported by
delegations from 172 countries, made speeches and negotiated in a conference
center out of town on treaties to save the world. Buzzwords like sustainable
development, chlorofluorocarbons, biodiversity, and NGO bounced around the
halls, where an army of journalists tried to make sense of them. The NGOs,
or nongovernmental organizations, lobbied in their hundreds, adding to the
blizzard of position papers, speeches, and statements. Some miles away, on
the Rio beachfront, thousands of Green activists gathered at an
environmental fair, a rainbow of posters and T-shirts that was part '60s
hippie love-in and part anti- globalization rally. In the shadow of
Corcovado's towering figure of Christ the Redeemer and Sugar Loaf's massive
outcrop, activists demanded protection for rain forests and endangered
species, an end to fossil fuels and the nuclear industry, and the general
scaling back of the ravages of capitalism. One U.S. official described the
whole event as "a circus." It was not meant as a compliment.
JOHANNESBURG BOUND
Ten years on, and the Earth Summit - this time called the World Summit on
Sustainable Development - moves to South Africa, where it will open in
Johannesburg on Aug. 26. The issues will be water and sanitation, energy,
agricultural productivity and food security, biodiversity and ecosystem
management, and health. All will be wrapped under the rubric of sustainable
development - or, roughly, how to manage global economic growth without
environmental loss. A decade ago, the leaders also had far-reaching plans.
They agreed to treaties to combat climate change and to protect plants and
animals, the rich said they would help the poor develop, and they all
adopted a huge blueprint to guide themselves through it. But there are few
today who would argue that the promises of Rio have been met. "There was
really quite a buzz at Rio," said Tony Carritt, who attended the summit as a
reporter and is now media relations manager for the European Environment
Agency in Copenhagen. "There was a feeling that things would actually
happen. Then as soon as Rio was over the momentum went out of it." Most, if
not all, of the major issues facing the Earth Summit - pollution,
environmental destruction, poverty - are still around. Indeed, many of the
clashes between competing interests that dominated Rio are expected to be on
display once again. The U.S. official's comments about a "circus" in 1992,
for example, reflected Washington's dismay at hearing a drumbeat of demands
that the rich West share its wealth with the poor and adopt policies that it
did not necessarily see as being in its interests. Then-President George
Bush refused to sign the Earth Summit's biodiversity treaty, fearing it
would hurt U.S. pharmaceutical interests, and generally found himself cast
in the role of Rio party-pooper. A decade later, his son, President George
W. Bush, may not even attend and has been lambasted for pulling out of the
Kyoto agreement, a follow-on pact from Rio's treaty on climate change.
HIGH PROFILE
Veterans of Rio say, however, that the Earth Summit did have one huge
effect: It put many issues that only environmentalists seemed to care about
on the world agenda. "Rio changed a lot in terms of attitude," said Nitin
Desai, U.N. undersecretary general, who is organizing the Johannesburg
summit. "Today one does not have to argue the case for integrating
environment and development." The issue of sharing the wealth between
developing and developed countries - a key dispute at Rio - has come to
dominate most global summits and international negotiations. It was most
clearly on display last year in Qatar, when the World Trade Organization met
to negotiate the launch of a new trade round. "Rio was in some senses a
'first one,'" said Desai, who expects tens of thousands of nongovernmental
activists to show up in South Africa to fight their causes on the sidelines
of the official meeting. "One of the things that has changed is that summits
are not seen just as summits of government, but of stakeholders," he said.
Global warming, the ozone layer, rain forest destruction, the spread of
deserts, and the effect of poverty on the environment are all now common
subject for debate, 10 years after Rio. "A lot of things that were
considered screamer environmentalist are now accepted as part of the
economic reality," said Abby Spring, who was press officer for the U.S. arm
of the World Wide Fund for Nature at the Earth Summit. It was not always
so. Spring recalled the reaction before Rio when she tried to get
journalists interested in the now widely accepted concept that pollution was
changing the climate. "Reporters would hang up on you and think it was a
joke," she said.
6. 'WE'LL TAKE SANDTON'
Mail & Guardian
16 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.mg.co.za/Content/l3.jsp?o=7347
The anti-globalisation lobby fired the first public salvo in its war on the
World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) at a series of demonstrations
on Thursday -- and warned it was mobilising for a frontal assault. Hundreds
of township activists converged on Johannesburg's Jeppe Regional Court to
support comrades charged with public violence in April at the home of the
city's mayor, Amos Masondo. Solidarity protests were organised in London,
New York, Washington DC, Toronto and Paris. While the catalyst in
Johannesburg was the trial of the "Kensington 87", the rhetoric was
anti-summit. "The WSSD is a gathering of the rich and powerful; it is a
gathering of the hypocrites; it is a gathering of the exploiters... We'll
take Sandton," one protest leader, Trevor Ngwane, said. Sandton is the main
venue for the WSSD, starting August 26. Thursday's events indicate South
Africa can expect the same vocal, and sometimes violent, protest that has
accompanied major global gatherings since the 1999 Seattle summit of the
World Trade Organisation. Ngwane, a former city councillor expelled from the
African National Congress for his anti-privatisation stance, and 86 more
Soweto residents were arrested in April when they marched on Masondo's home
in Kensington, Johannesburg, demanding an end to electricity and water
cut-offs. That protest, led by the Soweto Electricity Crisis Committee that
is chaired by Ngwane, turned violent as Masondo's bodyguard fired into the
crowd, reportedly wounding three. The trial, due to have started on
Thursday, was postponed to October 23 after the defence argued it had
received the prosecution docket too late to
prepare. But outside the court building up to 500 protestors under banners
of, among others, the Anti-Privatisation Forum and Ngwane's crisis
committee, faced lines of police armed with shotguns and shields. There were
no violent incidents. Both organisations belong to a loose alliance of South
African groups that mobilise around issues such as access to water,
electricity and land, as well as environmental activists. They see their
often-localised protests as part of a larger struggle against the ills of
globalisation. Anti-globalisation groups tend to blame multinational
corporations, with the governments of the industrialised West and agencies
such as the World Bank, International Monetary Fund and World Trade
Organisation, for problems that beset both the world's poor and the
environment. The Sunday Independent reported at the weekend that the
National Intelligence Agency was "particularly concerned about the plans of"
the Landless People's Movement and had been questioning its leaders. The
Landless People's Movement is part of the same alliance. All these groups
are planning to march on Sandton on August 31, and are also organising what
they have called a "festival of resistance to visiting heads of state" on
September 2.
Ngwane told protestors: "We want it to be the biggest march in South Africa
under the new regime ... since Thabo Mbeki took over."
A number of speakers attacked Mbeki and his government for policies
including the privatisation of basic services and the New Partnership for
Africa's Development (Nepad). Ngwane said while the WSSD ostensibly promised
to alleviate poverty through sustainable development, "the very same country
that is hosting it is evicting people from houses, cutting electricity. In
fact they're doing exactly the opposite." Dennis Brutus, a veteran
anti-apartheid campaigner and political prisoner now prominent in the
international anti-globalisation movement, called the WSSD "a summit
designed to increase hunger [and] hardship".
At the time of going to press the outcome of the protests abroad, which were
to be convened outside South African embassies and consulates late on
Thursday, was not known. A London organisation helping to organise these
protests, Globalise
Resistance, said on its website: "Disconnections, evictions and the seizure
of property, often carried out at gunpoint, are being spontaneously resisted
all over [South Africa]. As resistance becomes progressively more organised
with strong local, national and international networks forming ... more
repression is anticipated." Meanwhile groups not necessarily part of the
anti-globalisation lobby but with radical agendas of their own are also
converging on Johannesburg. Environmental activist group Greenpeace has set
up an office in Sandton and is considering its options for protest.
Greenpeace has expressed serious reservations about the summit agenda. "The
failure to include concrete targets and timetables for action on sustainable
development defeats the entire purpose of the Summit," Greenpeace political
director Remi Parmentier said in an earlier statement. This week Greenpeace
spokesperson Sara Holden would not be drawn on protest plans, reportedly
saying: "I would like to give you some idea of what we have planned but I
will not do so." The police, assisted by the defence force, metro police
and, according to an earlier police statement, "other relevant security
agencies", are preparing to counter any attempt at disruption. The police
statement said: "Our information gathering is intelligence-driven and we are
geared to deal with any crisis should one arise ... Stop and search
operations as well as roadblocks are determined by tactical intelligence
daily. The vacation leave of South African Police Service members has been
cancelled for the period of the summit."
In addition, a no-go zone will be demarcated around the summit venue in
Sandton. The statement says only approved marches will be allowed, and only
along a pre-determined 1,8km route. "The police are present to ensure the
safety of demonstrators, citizens and property. Should an illegal gathering
or march take place, the security forces will take the necessary action."
7. PM TO MAKE SPEECH AT SUMMIT
Daily Star
16 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.dailystar.com.lb/16_08_02/art5.asp
Prime Minister Rafik Hariri is to deliver an address on behalf of Lebanon
during the upcoming World Summit on Sustainable Development, which is due to
open in Johannesburg on Aug. 26. Hariri, whose address has been set for
Sept. 2, is expected to speak about the impact of consumption and production
trends on poverty, natural resources, agriculture, globalization,
governance, health, education and the environment. An informed source called
for not underestimating the importance of the nine-day meet, which has been
dubbed the "Earth Summit" and is expected to be attended by most of the
heads of the 189 member states of the United Nations. This summit, which is
held once every ten years, was held the last time in Rio de Janeiro.
Kesrouan MP Fares Boueiz, who was then serving as foreign minister,
represented Lebanon at the 1992 meeting. A political source said that
although many of the issues to be discussed at the summit were not political
in nature, their implications are. Lebanon's attendance comes as it is
hoping to benefit from financial assistance from the world's industrialized
countries. The source said that Hariri is expected to make the most out of
his trip by holding talks with several heads of state, including French
President Jacques Chirac on the likelihood of holding the "Paris II"
conference of donor states willing to help Lebanon overcome financial
strife.
8. GREENS DON'T NEED THE US
The Guardian
16 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldsummit2002/story/0,12264,775542,00.html
There is no pleasing some people. The organisers of the Johannesburg summit
on the environment bent over backwards to persuade George Bush to accept
their invitation. As the most accommodating hosts, they even changed the
date to suit him, bringing it forward to avoid a clash with the anniversary
of September 11. But still it was not enough. Yesterday came the clearest
signal yet that the US president, leader of the world's sole superpower and
the planet's greatest single polluter, will snub the UN and the 65,000
delegates to this month's world summit on sustainable development by failing
to show up. He received congratulations on that from a clutch of US
arch-conservatives, praising him for having the good sense to stay away. It
is not official yet, but it seems Colin Powell will go in his place -
confirmation, if it were needed, of the secretary of state's status as the
human figleaf of the Bush administration, dispatched whenever Washington
needs to put on its moderate, inclusive or "listening" face. It all amounts
to a clearer two-fingered salute than even the first Bush administration
managed. Ten years ago Bush Sr dithered and delayed before finally showing
up at the earth summit for a few hours. But now Bush Jr has decided to
listen to those rightists who believed his dad made a mistake by flying down
to Rio, giving in to the long-haired, granola-munching whiners of the
environmental lobby. "Why would you want to go to a party when they want to
throw pies at you?" asked Fred L Smith Jr of the Competitive Enterprise
Institute, first to praise the prez. "The fortunate thing is, when 40,000
goofies get together not much happens."
That may be a crude summary of US attitudes but, coupled with the
presidential absence, it suggests Johannesburg will provide the biggest
demonstration yet of the new American disregard for the rest of the world.
The summit will give eloquent expression to the Bush doctrine of go-it-alone
unilateralism, in which America pursues its own interests first - with an
avowed aversion to any multilateral efforts to make the world a better
place. There has been other evidence, such as Washington's refusal to sign
up for the international criminal court. But just as Bush's tear-up of the
Kyoto protocol shocked the world into realising the depth of the new
administration's contempt for multilateralism, so the Johannesburg stayaway
will reveal again the unilateralist heart of Republican thinking, confirming
the coalition-building that followed September 11 was the exception, not the
rule.
This poses a great danger for those who want to see results from South
Africa. At a presummit meeting last month, European diplomats spoke openly
of their fears that the US was bent on undermining the global get-together,
replacing binding targets and timetables with mere "voluntary initiatives".
Washington has also sought to have trade, aid and debt relief taken off the
Johannesburg agenda - which would not leave much to talk about. The
summiteers are left wondering how they can hope to achieve anything if the
world's sole superpower is at best barely engaged and, at worst, outright
hostile? And this poses a wider challenge: for what can the nations of the
world do in any sphere if the US refuses to play the international game?
They could try to battle on regardless, as they did at Bonn last year when
they renewed the Kyoto protocol despite the US boycott. That is what
influential US economist Jeffrey Sachs advocates. Ignore "Washington's
arrogant disregard", he says. But that kind of effort takes leadership.
Most environmentalists can see only one candidate: the European Union. "This
is as much a test of the EU as it is about America," says Kevin Watkins,
senior policy adviser at Oxfam. "Is the EU capable of showing leadership?"
The US has left a vacuum and the EU alone has the capacity to fill it. Put
together, EU nations have far greater voting strength on the World Bank and
the IMF than the US (and more than Africa, Latin America and South Asia
combined). It has the muscle if it wants to use it. But so far Europe has
not dared act as a coherent power bloc. And nor, says Watkins, has it set an
example. With the honourable exception of Britain, the leading EU states
have cut, not increased, their aid to poor countries and have not made good
on their promise to help fund education in the poorest nations. So the easy
posture later this month will be to denounce the Americans for staying away
from Johannesburg. A better move might be to ask whether the Europeans did
enough while they were there.
9. FAMINE-THREATENED AFRICA SHIES AWAY FROM GENETICALLY MODIFIED RELIEF FOOD
The Namibian
15 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.namibian.com.na/2002/august/africa/027ADC2041.html
CAPE TOWN, Aug 15 (AFP) - Half the countries facing famine in southern
Africa are stalling food aid from the United States fearing that genetically
modified (GM) maize may cause health problems and harm their exports, but
the United Nations is warning they are putting the hungry at greater risk.
Judith Lewis, the UN World Food Programme (WFP) director for southern and
eastern Africa, said Mozambique, Zambia and Zimbabwe had raised concerns
about receiving shipments of yellow corn, which forms the bulk of aid
supplies sent by the United States. The loudest protests have come from
Zambian President Levy Mwanawasa, who was quoted on international television
as saying: "It is necessary to examine the maize before we give it to our
people... we will rather starve than get something toxic." Lewis said that
most of the seven countries threatened with famine -- Angola, Lesotho,
Malawi, Mozambique, Swaziland, Zambia and Zimbabwe -- had in recent years
received US-grown corn to make up for food shortfalls but that the safety
objections surfaced only recently. "The debate has suddenly cropped up. The
countries are asking whether there is a health risk, and they also fear that
the maize could be planted and cause cross pollination of their crops or
influence meat if it is eaten by their livestock," she told Nampa-AFP from
Johannesburg.
At a meeting on Monday, Zambian Agriculture Minister Mundia Sikatana accused
international donors of having deceived the country for years. He gave no
indication of whether the government would accept a shipment of 23,500
tonnes of relief corn from the United States which Lusaka-based US officials
said was due to arrive at the end of August. Zimbabwe, which is home to
half the region's people threatened with famine and has seen its food
production plummet because of President Robert Mugabe's turbulent land
reform programme, in May failed to accept a consigment of relief corn from
the US and the grain was sent elsewhere, Lewis said. A second shipment of
15,500 tonnes of US corn arrived in the South African port of Durban at the
beginning of August but has not been sent on to Zimbabwe as, WFP officials
say, "it is not a done deal". "We received an import permit but the grain
is still sitting in Durban, in a silo. Why? We do not know for sure," South
Africa's registrar for genetically modified produce, Shadrack Moephuli told
Nampa-AFP on Tuesday. Lewis said Zimbabwe, Mozambique and Zambia had asked
whether grain would be milled to prevent it from sprouting in the soil, or
transferred in sealed containers, and whether the agency would mount a
"vigorous campaign" warning recipients not to plant the grain. Swaziland,
Lesotho and Malawi have accepted GM shipments without any conditions. The
United States, which is expected to supply half of the million tonnes of
food the WFP has called for and has so far sent 165,000 tonnes of corn,
refuses to mill the grain, and the WFP says it does not have the cash to do
it. The UN World Health Organisation has certified the US corn as safe.
Jason Lott, a research fellow at the University of the Witwatersrand in
Johannesburg, said milling would shorten the shelf life of maize and prevent
it being stored for coming months, when the real famine is expected to hit.
"This is a mixture of ignorance and malice on behalf of African leaders. The
grain is safe but they are shifting the political agenda from the problems
they have created to problems pushed on them by the UN and the US. Zimbabwe
won't blame the famine on the farm crisis," Lott said. A European
Commission official in Brussels told Nampa-AFP the concerns were groundless
as any crop contamination that could occur from the relief supplies was
likely to be too small to matter. "Unless you grow a GM crop it is highly
unlikely that traces of GM would be significant. And the EU has no
requirement on labelling livestock fed on GM feed," he said. Lewis said the
WFP hoped that South African President Thabo Mbeki, who will host the UN
World Summit on Sustainable Development this month, would "play a mediating
role" in resolving the matter. "The dilemma is that we have food available
and people who need it. We have to resolve this and get the food to the
people," she said. The agency has termed the threat of starvation in
southern Africa the world's worst humanitarian crisis at the moment, saying
seven million people need emergency food now, with that figure expected to
rise to around 13 million by the end of the year.
10. ESKIMOS DYING TO GET TO SOUTH AFRICA
Independent Online
15 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?click_id=14&art_id=qw1029382922479B263&set_id=1
Montreal - Arctic Inuit will lobby nations at the Johannesburg Earth Summit
to ratify the Stockholm Convention to eliminate the "dirty dozen" pollutants
that are poisoning many of them, their leaders said Wednesday. The general
assembly of the Inuit from around the Arctic - Russia, Canada, Greenland and
Alaska - met in Kuujjuaq, Quebec to discuss the effects of these pollutants
on their health. The Inuit are especially endangered by these chemicals,
which do not break down as quickly in the cold temperatures and poison the
marine mammals they eat. The Inuit are concerned about the small number of
signatory nations to the Stockholm Convention, and one of their
representatives, Canadian Sheila Watt-Cloutier, will make the case for the
Inuit at the Earth Summit.
The Inuit praised Canada, Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Iceland for signing
the convention. Global climate change is another matter of great concern
since reports of several communities confirm scientific studies that the
permafrost is beginning to thaw.
The dozen Persistent Organic Pollutants contaminate air, ground, rivers and
seas, transported by atmospheric and ocean currents.
They then are introduced into the food chain and can cause cancer in both
humans and animals, as well as anomalies in reproductive organs and damage
to nervous and immune systems. The highest concentrations of these
substances have been discovered in the mother's milk of Inuits, scientists
have found. - Sapa-AFP
11. BUSH UNLIKELY TO ATTEND EARTH SUMMIT
The Guardian
15 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uslatest/story/0,1282,-1948075,00.html
WASHINGTON (AP) - Conservative activists are praising President Bush's
apparent decision to send Secretary of State Colin Powell to a U.N.
conference on global ecology rather than attending the once-a-decade summit
himself as his father did in 1992.
With the summit little more than two weeks away, there are no plans for Bush
to go the conference, which conservatives have taken as a sign he will not
attend. ``We applaud your decision not to attend the summit in person,''
said an Aug. 2 letter to Bush from Fred L. Smith Jr., president of the
Competitive Enterprise Institute, and 30 other conservative activists who
support Bush.
The letter warns of likely widespread anti-U.S. sentiment among the
participants at the World Summit on Sustainable Development being held Aug.
26 through Sept. 4 in Johannesburg, South Africa. Other signers include Paul
M. Weyrich of Coalitions for America, Grover Norquist of Americans for Tax
Reform and David A. Keene of the American Conservative Union. ``Your
presence would only help to publicize and make more credible their various
anti-freedom, anti-people, anti-globalization and anti-Western agendas,''
they wrote Bush. ``We also strongly support your opposition to signing new
international environmental treaties or creating new international
environmental organizations at the Johannesburg summit.'' The White House
has been silent so far about who will lead the U.S. delegation to the
summit. Administration officials say an announcement will come soon, but
Powell is expected to attend. This is the fourth summit in four decades
where world leaders and environmentalists have gathered to address the
environmental costs of feeding, clothing and housing the Earth's growing
population.
For environmentalists, the series of talks reached a height in 1992 at Rio
de Janeiro, Brazil, when Bush's father, George H.W. Bush, then the
president, was among 110 world leaders who agreed to tackle problems in
forestry, biodiversity and climate change.
The conservatives say those talks were a mistake for the elder Bush, one
that his son is now wise to avoid. ``Why would you go to a party when they
want to throw pies at you?'' Smith said in an interview. ``The fortunate
thing is when 40,000 goofies get together, not much happens.'' In 1972 at
Stockholm and in 1982 at Nairobi, each of the U.S. delegations was led by
the chairman of the White House Council on Environmental Quality. The
current chairman, James Connaughton, has not said whether he will attend.
More than 100 world leaders - either the head of state or a minister-level
representative - have announced they will be at the summit. Many among them
share a deep concern about the state of the world's ecological systems, and
some have said they also worry about a lack of leadership and lackluster
U.S. support for global approaches. Summit leaders say they will try to
solidify commitments made over the past year to open markets to developing
countries and increase financing to them. They also cite challenges such as
2 billion people living on $2 or less a day, more burning of fossil fuels
blamed for climate change and damage to a quarter of the world's coral
reefs. Connaughton said whoever represents the United States will emphasize
both the U.S. commitment to creating lasting partnerships and also the idea
that each nation bears responsibility for its own development. ``It doesn't
mean they go it alone. But each nation has to take that task onto itself to
look at sustainability,'' he said recently. Some environmental leaders view
this year's summit as a last, best chance to convert high hopes into deeds.
``There is a real sense of urgency,'' U.N. Undersecretary-General Nitin
Desai, who will chair the summit, told reporters this week. ``In many cases
we are talking about slipping back.'' In the weeks leading up to the
summit, Desai has campaigned to sow seeds of hope while also warning that
disappointment will only confirm widespread pessimism about the world's
ability to deal with what he says is a growing crisis. ``We will be
endangering all of the things we have achieved and we will not have another
chance,'' he told summit leaders at the Brazilian Embassy in Washington
earlier this month. ``There is no major global event planned beyond
Johannesburg which allow us to retrieve lost ground. This is it.'' Gus
Speth, dean of Yale University's School of Forestry and Environmental
Studies, said world leaders are running out of time because the world
economy is projected to double in size every 25 years. ``We have squandered
more than 20 years on these global-scale issues and this period we're in is
truly our last chance to get it right,'' Speth said. The uncertainty about
U.S. participation reflects deeper questions in the environmental community
about Bush's approach to global challenges in the wake of his rejection last
year of the Kyoto climate treaty. ``People around the world are seriously
concerned that the Bush administration is undermining the World Summit
instead of working with other countries to benefit everyone,'' Sierra Club
director Michael Dorsey said.
12. UN UNDER PRESSURE TO SECURE RATIFICATION OF KYOTO PROTOCOL
Bangkok Post
15 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.bangkokpost.com/News/15Aug2002_news13.html
Environmentalists from around Asia have urged the United Nations to press
the world's major industrialised countries into ratifying the Kyoto Protocol
at the World Summit on Sustainable Development, which will be held later
this month in Johannesburg.
Gathering in New Delhi for a two-day seminar sponsored by the UN Environment
Programme and the India-based Tata Energy Research Institute, the
environmentalists criticised the world's largest producers of greenhouse
gasses _ Australia, Austria, Canada, Russia and the United States _ for
failing to cut emissions. ``A rise in natural disasters, such as flash
floods and landslides in Nepal, has lead to scepticism about the role of
industrialised countries in cutting greenhouse gas emissions, which cause
climate change and global warming,'' said Yubaraj Ghimire, a journalist from
Nepal. Indian Power Minister Suresh Prabhu said industrialised countries did
not work hard enough toward tackling global warming. Mohan Munasinghe, an
energy adviser to the government of Sri Lanka, said many developing
countries had joined the Kyoto Protocol in good faith, adding it was
unacceptable that heavy polluters were ignoring the issue. ``Developed
countries must set a good example by taking responsibility for the pollution
they create, he said. ``Developing countries will bear similar burdens in
the future.'' Under the Kyoto Protocol, industrialised countries were
required to reduce their greenhouse-gas emissions by 5.2% of 1990 levels. To
carry any weight, the agreement required ratification from 55 countries, the
emissions of which represented 55% of the world's total. The US and Russia,
which account for 36% and 17.4% of global emissions respectively, refused to
ratify the pact through fear it would halt industrial and economic growth.
The National Environment Board agreed this month to ratify the protocol,
which it adopted in 1997. However, environmentalists have urged cabinet to
delay ratification, saying parliament should also be consulted as the
agreement could have a nationwide impact. Mr Mohan said the United Nations
should urgently address issues regarding climate change and conflicts over
the Kyoto Protocol, saying several countries were being hampered in their
moves toward sustainable development
13. ESCWA URGES ARABS TO UNITE FOR JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT
Daily Star
15 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.dailystar.com.lb/15_08_02/art18.asp
Arabs should show "immense" solidarity during the World Summit for Social
Development to face the challenge presented by powerful new fronts, an
Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA) official said
Wednesday. Hosny Khordagui, ESCWA's regional advisor on the environment, was
speaking after a media briefing at UN House in Beirut on preparatory
activities for the summit, to be held in Johannesburg, South Africa, from
Aug. 26 to Sept. 4. "Arab countries should get together. They should be more
supportive of each other in Johannesburg to face a new challenge, that of
newly formed and strong blocs and coalitions," Khordagui told The Daily
Star, in reference to alliances among mainly industrialized countries, with
the European Union on one hand and the United States, Australia and Canada
on the other. Khordagui, representatives of nongovernmental organizations
and all other stakeholders profess to have a clear picture of events in the
upcoming summit after attending the last preparatory meeting, which took
place in June in Bali, where negotiations among 173 countries should have
led to a final text.
But those attending in Bali witnessed a fierce power struggle among three
main poles the European Union, a group chaired by the United States and the
Group of 77, which is an alliance of developing countries. Each coalition
was negotiating in its own interest rather than trying to serve global
concerns. The Bali negotiations almost collapsed due to disagreement among
the three poles over major sustainable development issues such as climate
change and replenishing funds for developing countries.
"Seventy-five percent of the text was produced in Bali and 25 percent was
left for negotiations in Johannesburg, but this 25 percent comprises the
most difficult and critical issues," Khordagui said. "We should not expect a
bed of roses." According to Khordagui, the 13 Arab countries that belong to
ESCWA need to be strong and unified to direct the attention of world leaders
in Johannesburg to their priorities, which are mainly peace and security,
scarcity of water and poverty. "It should be firmly stated that the lack of
peace and security has hindered development in the region," he said. "Our
reports show clearly that money intended for development went toward weapons
purchasing. "And we should expect that industrialized countries will try to
omit talking about peace and security by saying they are political issues
with nothing to do with development." According to Khordagui, Arab countries
should understand the need to establish regional partnerships or they will
be left "on their own." Industrialized countries, he said, seem determined
to change a course adopted at the Rio summit 10 years earlier consisting of
forming international partnerships and dispersing assistance intended to
achieve sustainable development, a compulsory matter. The new approach,
which will most likely be adopted in Johannesburg, is a "type two
partnership," which basically turns international cooperation and assistance
into a voluntary exercise. "The West is pushing for type two partnerships,
and this has the disadvantage of allowing countries to select, based on
their own judgements, the states they want to work with," Khordagui said.
"This has the danger of leaving several countries out of development." "From
here stems the need for a regional strategy of sustainable development, the
formulation of new mechanisms of cooperation and the strengthening of our
own institutions." In preparation for the summit, also known as Rio+10,
ESCWA produced 18 reports on sustainable development. ESCWA also issued a
report showing that over the past decade in the Arab world, medical and
educational services improved, the fertility rate decreased, women were
empowered and environmental awareness increased.
14. SOMBRE OUTLOOK FOR JO'BURG SUMMIT
Mail & Guardian
15 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.mg.co.za/Content/l3.jsp?a=13&o=7234
The biggest attempt to tackle the Earth's worsening environment problems and
help the planet's poorest gets underway in less than two weeks, but already
the prospect of failure hangs over the Johannesburg summit. Wrangling over
textual nuances, squabbling over financial commitments and a doctrinal row
between Europe and Washington could hollow out the the summit, transforming
the second Earth Summit into a ludicrous exercise in hot air. "Johannesburg
should be the opportunity for a decisive change of direction," says Crispin
Tickell, director of the Green College Centre for Environmental Policy and
Understanding at Oxford
University. "(But) so far the progress has been unsatisfactory, and the
prospects... do not look good." Between 40 000 and 60 000 people are
scheduled to attend the August 26-September 4 meeting, whose last three days
will climax with a summit of heads of state or government. The gathering is
a 10-year followup to the fabled Earth Summit on sustainable development at
Rio de Janeiro.
Trumpeted as mankind's new dawn, the Rio Summit gave birth to an array of
agreements on staving off climate change, preserving biodiversity and
curbing pollutant chemicals that linger in the environment for decades. A
decade down the track, none of these accords has been implemented. And the
most important of them -- the Kyoto Protocol on global warming -- has been
almost gutted by the astonishingly complex rulebook that took almost four
years to negotiate. It has also been snubbed by the United States, the worst
carbon polluter of all. Agenda 21, the "action programme" of 2 500 proposals
on sustainable development set down in Rio, has been a bible that has
gathered dust on bureaucrats' shelves. In the meantime, a mountain of
evidence, from UN agencies, scientists and credible environment groups,
highlights the effects of man's parasitic use of the Earth. The charges
range from species extinction, soil erosion by intensive farming and water
depletion to overfishing, rampant destruction of tropical forests, worsening
air and sea pollution and urban sprawl. "Humans are as qualified to be
stewards (of the Earth) as goats are to be gardeners," says the conservation
pioneer James Lovelock. Johannesburg will seek to put Agenda 21 back on
track and also push ahead with another lofty goal, set down at the UN's
Millennium Summit, to halve the number of poor and hungry by 2015 and boost
access to clean water and power. How to achieve this is of course the big
problem, for the New Age generosity that prevailed in Rio has melted like an
alpine glacier faced with atmospheric warming. "At discussions on global
finance and the economy, the environment is still treated as an unwelcome
guest," UN Secretary General Kofi Annan said last month. US President George
Bush's administration is opposing all attempts for anything other than
voluntary, rather than binding, summit text on matters such as aid and
incentives for alternative energy. In Rio, rich countries pledged to
contribute 0,7% of their gross national product (GNP) in development aid.
Today, the European Union's share remains under half of that -- 0,33% of GNP
-- while that of the United States is a mere 0,11%. The wealthy nations
club, the OECD, spends six times more on farming subsidies than it does on
development assistance. Non-government groups are holding their own "Global
Forum", from August 19 to September 4, where criticism of the wealthy West
will be fierce. "The decisions (at Johannesburg) must yield clean air, clean
water, renewable energy and a healthier environment, not rhetoric," says
Marcelo Furtado of Greenpeace International. - Sapa-AFP
15. FORUM INSISTS IT WILL BE READY DESPITE ITS FUNDING PROBLEMS
Business Day
15 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.businessday.co.za/bday/content/direct/1,3523,1152839-6078-0,00.html
DESPITE the empty boxes littering the Nasrec stadium and a somewhat
lackadaisical team of security guards manning the entrance gates, the
organisers of the Global People's Forum insisted yesterday that they would
have everything ready when the event starts on Monday. The Global People's
Forum will play host to an estimated 40000 people from civil society groups
that hope to influence the talks at the United Nations' World Summit on
Sustainable Development later this month. The forum has had funding
problems, triggered partly by claims of financial mismanagement against
former head Jacqui Brown, who was fired in March. But the Commission for
Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA) ruled yesterday that she must
be reinstated as the head of the civil society secretariat. The secretariat
is the formal structure tasked with organising the event. Yesterday the
secretariat's CEO, Desmond Lesejane, admitted that the organising group was
still R5,6m shy of its R90m budget. Briefing journalists and diplomats at
Nasrec yesterday, he insisted that the shortfall would not adversely affect
events at the forum.
Diplomats expressed relief that what they tactfully called the secretariat's
organisational "hiccups" had not derailed the forum, which they saw as
finally being on track. The United Nations Development Programme's
environmental head in SA, Eddy Russel, said that this would be the first
time that an organised civil society event had accompanied a major UN
conference.
The World Wildlife Fund, the conservation organisation, has launched a
global multimedia campaign to urge political leaders to take action at the
world summit. The WWF's campaign, dubbed "SOS Planet", uses the website
www.wwf.orgsosplanet for people to send messages to world leaders. Visitors
to the site can send e-mails to a central WWF address, and the most
appealing ones will be displayed on the WWF's display at Nasrec. The
messages will then be symbolically handed over to an as yet unidentified
world leader at the summit. The WWF is asking governments to ensure that
10% of the world's energy comes from renewable sources by 2010, and commit
to securing supplies of water by conserving existing water resources.
16. IS THERE ENOUGH TIME FOR WORLD SUMMIT AGREEMENT?
SABC News
15 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.sabcnews.co.za/world/summit/0,1009,40877,00.html
South Africa and the United Nations (UN)have invited governments to come to
Johannesburg two days ahead of the official start date of WSSD for informal
talks. The aim is to clear the way for them to reach an agreement on the
draft plan of implementation - which must be adopted by the summit. The
informal discussions will be held at the summit venue, the Sandton
Convention Centre, on August 24 and 25. Governments may arrive the day
before for consultations with their regional groupings or special interest
groups such as the Southern African Development Community (SADC) and the
European Union (EU). But, as the summit gets closer, some government and UN
officials, as well as environment and development activists, are growing
more and more concerned about how difficult it is proving to reach
agreement. They are not at all confident the draft plan of implementation
will be settled ahead of the WSSD. However, there is no official report on
the state of talks because in terms of UN protocols, governments are not
allowed to negotiate about the plan of implementation outside of the
official UN channels. While 75 percent of the plan of implementation was
agreed at the final preparatory for the summit -- meeting held in Bali
earlier this year - the outstanding issues are deal-breakers.
Consensus on eradication of poverty
There is broad consensus that central focus of the summit should be the
eradication of poverty and that discussion should focus on the
implementation of all three pillars of sustainable development: social and
economic development and the protection of the environment, says the South
African Minister for Environmental Affairs and Tourism, Valli Moosa. There
is also agreement that the development of Africa should receive priority and
that the New Partnership for Africas Development (Nepad) should receive the
support of the summit. Moosa says that the outstanding areas of agreement
include: targets and a timetable for the provision of adequate sanitation
and the use of renewable forms of energy; the phasing-out of trade
subsidies; and the need for new resources for international development
programmes. Broadly speaking, developing countries want the summit to
come-up with a programme to detail and fund international poverty relief
programmes and kick-start their economic development. The advanced economies
want the summit to focus on protecting the global environment - and are
reluctant to commit themselves to any new financing for development or trade
agreements. They argue that the World Trade Organisation should deal with
trade talks and that a range of financing for development initiatives is
already in place. The United States - the world's biggest polluter and
contributor to development financing - seems to be determined to stay
outside any international commitments. Latest reports indicate that US
President, George Bush, will almost certainly not be attending the WSSD.
Moosa remains determinedly optimistic that the summit will reach an
agreement on a plan of action. However, some governments and environmental
and development activists fear that any compromise agreement may not be
strong enough to improve the lot of the world's poor or protect the global
environment.
17. WORLD SUMMIT TO DISCUSS THE WAY GLOBAL ECONOMY WORKS
IPS
15 August 2002
Internet:
http://athena.tbwt.com/content/article.asp?articleid=1380
JOHANNESBURG - The contortions that international investment cause in the
lives of citizens of poor countries is epitomised in Arundathi Roy's
compelling description of Indian workers labouring in the dead of night to
lay cables for a multinational electricity corporation by the light of a
candle. Roy's polemic against the illusion that globalisation brings
progress -- best summarised in her brilliant essay, The Cost of Living - is
likely to power much of the debate that will take place at the World Summit
on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg, South Africa this month. But,
paradoxically, the sheer power and precision of her prose, a damning
critique of infamous alliances between governments and multinationals in the
developing world, may also have an unintended effect. It may also overshadow
the way in which thousands of people across southern Africa have, against
the odds, managed to make the global economy work for rather than against
them. About 6,000 people in the far north of Zambia, keep their families
alive, and protect some of the most pristine forests on the continent, by
farming with wild bees to make some of the purest honey in the world for
Sainbury's, Waltrose and the Body Shop. In Mozambique, among the poorest
countries in the world, people living in a remote forest called Djabula -
the Forest of Joy - are trying to protect the sacred groves where their
ancestors are buried from an army of demobilised soldiers called ninjas.
The ninjas come at night to cut 300-year-old trees for the country's
insatiable charcoal industry.
They are inspired by a young crafter from Maputo, the capital of Mozambique,
who encourages the residents of forests like Djabula to collect dead
sandalwood, instead of cutting live trees, which he sculpts into artefacts
that feature in Elle Decor and at the New York International Gift Fair. On
the other side of the subcontinent, in the desert of Namibia, a group of
young tour guides have inserted one of Africa's most ancient treasures into
the global economy: a collection of 3000-year-old rock paintings that have
been described as the richest in the world. They bring foreign and domestic
tourists to these sites and, in the process, provide for hundreds of
families who were abandoned by a tin mine that shut down 30 years ago. And
in the Okavango Delta of Botswana, small communities of impoverished rural
people are able to make up to 300 U.S. dollars per capita each year - more
than they would make in the formal economy - by leasing their land to the
developers of 'Big Five' safari game lodges. Examples like these, scattered
across the continent in which World Summit on Sustainable Development will
take place, provide a classic example of what Hernando de Soto calls, in his
book -- the Mystery of Capital. And the IUCN-World Conservation Union plans
to highlight such enterprises in Johannesburg as part of the big
conservation organisation's drive to fuel a debate that aims to reform, as
well as oppose, the way the global economy works. ''The words international
poverty too easily bring to mind images of destitute beggars sleeping on the
curbs of Calcutta and hungry African children starving in the sand.. I
resent the characterisation of such heroic entrepreneurs as contributors to
the problem of global poverty,'' says De Soto. ''They are not the problem.
They are the solution . in the midst of their own poorest neighbourhoods and
shantytowns there are - if not acres of diamonds - trillions of dollars, all
ready to be put to use if only we can unravel the mystery of how assets are
transformed into live capital.'' The South African branch of the IUCN-World
Conservation Union is running a major campaign at the summit to highlight
the way in which innovative entrepreneurs are able to compete in a global
system by using their traditional skills and natural surroundings in
ingenious, and sometimes gentle, ways. ''Entrepreneurs the world over -
excluded from the mainstream for historical, geographic, cultural or
economic reasons - have taken it upon themselves to create their own
livelihoods. On a global scale, this 'other way' may be less well known. But
it works,'' says a booklet published by the IUCN and the WK Kellog
Foundation in time for the World summit in Johannesburg.
While the incisive work of Roy, perhaps the most famous and persuasive of
the anti-globalisation campaigners, focuses on the deals between corrupt
governments and unscrupulous multinationals, the IUCN projects demonstrate
resilience of ordinary people and the possibility of working within the
system to oppose it, to benefit the poor. ''The global economy in which
these enterprises are expected to flourish is characterised by distortions
and inequities that are a threat to their global trading potential in spite
of the opportunities that a global economy purports to offer,'' says Lutske
Newton in a communique issued by the IUCN. While opposing the global
economy and the current trade regime is important, the IUCN also believes it
is vital to nourish and support indigenous enterprises like those that are
already working within international markets to debunk images of Africa as a
destitute and unproductive basket case. There are many ways to do this,
says Newton. But the summit will make a massive contribution to the efforts
of ''heroic entrepreneurs'', like those showcased by the IUCN, if it
resolves that ''further trade liberalization should contribute to
sustainable development, lead to better access for (people in) developing
countries to world markets and reduction or elimination of trade distorting
subsidies''.
18. MOVEMENT FOR ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE IN SOUTHERN AFRICA
IPS
15 August 2002
Internet:
http://athena.tbwt.com/content/article.asp?articleid=1381
NELSPRUIT, South Africa - When the thousands of delegates to the World
Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) jet into Johannesburg later this
month, they will fly over a landscape that is littered with state-of-the-art
laws, conventions and policies designed to protect and nurture the ecoystems
of Southern Africa. They may also notice that these landscapes are
literally burning. Satellite images from space and a view from the window
seat of a Boeing 727 show that countries like Malawi, Zambia, Zimbabwe and
Mozambique are literally alight as people resort to slash-and-burn
agriculture, veld fires to promote spring-time grazing and the chopping of
hardwoods for charcoal. And these images, taken from the very tableau
against which the summit will take place, will probably cause the passengers
to reflect on how best to bridge the vast gap that exists between policy and
performance when it comes to dealing with desertification, loss of
bio-diversity and global warming. They are three of the big issues at the
summit. Professor Christo Fabricius, head of the Department of
Environmental Sciences at Rhodes University in South Africa, says:
''Southern African countries have all adopted the major conventions designed
to protect the ecosystems of the subcontinent, which are still among the
most biologically rich in the world. The problem is the big gap between
policy and practise".
''There are many reasons for this but one thing stands out very clearly from
our research. That is where grassroots movements by people who live in and
with their ecosystems are active to protect the living environment, the gap
is smaller and this is because local people come up with more appropriate
action plans to deal with threats to their environment,'' he says.
All of the governments in Southern Africa have signed the major conventions
that will be up for review in Johannesburg, including those on climate
change, biodiversity, desertification and greenhouse emissions.
In addition, the New Partnerships for African Development (NEPAD), a
continent-wide blueprint for economic renewal, states explicitly that a
''healthy and productive environment'' is a prerequisite for the objectives
of the programme to be achieved.
NEPAD, along with the Africa Union that was formed last month to replace the
Organisation of African Unity (OAU), thus in principle endorse conventions,
laws and policies that aim to deal with desertification, wetland protection,
coastal management, global warming, wildlife protection and good
environmental policy. ''But this is all talk. Africa is a very diverse
continent and has many problems associated with stable governance. These big
continental initiatives try to create a common ground and approach to the
conventions. They tend to fail, they're really all talk shows," says
Oussenyou Diop, the regional coordinator for a programme called Managing the
Environment Locally in Sub-Saharan South Africa (MELISSA). The more
effective approach is to try and create partnerships between local actors
who can devise local environmental action plans that are relevant to
specific conditions and thus more adapted and effective." Saliem Fakir,
director of the South Africa office of the IUCN-World Conservation Union,
agrees that one of the major issues to surface at the summit will be the gap
between policy and effective action by governments of Southern Africa. They
have yet to implement the conventions that were set in motion at Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil in 1992.
Most governments in the region are having problems in implementing their own
policies. They lack capacity, have a high staff turnover and in many cases
now rely on lobby groups think tanks, consultants, big business and NGOs
(non-governmental organisations) to formulate and implement policy for
them," says Fakir. What we are seeing is that, given this vacuum in
government implementation, action by civil society is becoming an important
instrument for environmental protection. It is this kind of action that
needs to be encouraged to turn policy into practice in this part of the
world." Steve Johnson, former co-ordinator of the Natural Resource
Management Unit of the Southern Africa Development Conference, says it is no
coincidence that those countries with a strong network of community based
organisations active in the environmental field have the best results in
terms of policy implementation. Namibia and Botswana provide good examples.
The governments of these countries have passed legislation that enables and
encourages local residents to take ownership of, and to make commercial use
of, resources that exist in their natural environment. The result is a
bottom-up groundswell that pressures governments to protect their living
environment.
And, says Fakir, protest politics and legal action by citizens in South
Africa has proved to be an extremely effective weapon in terms of forcing
government to adopt more effective policies. He points to the Treatment
Action Campaign, which is placing strong pressure on the government of South
Africa to adopt more effective policies to curb the AIDS pandemic. The
citizens also have launched a set of highly successful class actions against
asbestos companies that have forced government to introduce a new mining and
mineral policy that contains extensive environmental safeguards. The
proponents of civil action to ensure that policy becomes reality rather than
rhetoric all note that local people have more at stake than their
governments. The reason is simple," says the Johannesburg Memo, drafted by a
group of environmental activists and intellectuals under the auspices of the
Heinrich Boll Foundation. The direct victims of the degradation of living
systems are typically part of the majority beyond the corporate-driven
consumer classes,'' says the Memo. ''Essentially urbanite, the consumer (and
bureaucratic) class lives in a cocoon which shields their senses and their
existence from the decay of forests, fishing grounds, water tables, topsoils
and plant diversity in the countryside. Geographically or psychologically,
the scenes of accumulation and the scenes of destruction, the places of
comfort and the places of distress, are usually separated from each other by
large distancesà And this is why the awareness about the human despair and
despair caused by the fraying web of life can so easily be ignored," adds
the Memo. Fabricius states that this is precisely why local action by
citizens is either more effective, or an indispensable counterpart, to
governments in terms of promoting sustainable development. ''Big programmes
like NEPAD and the Africa Union assume a level of stability and homogeneity
in Africa that has never existed. They tend to impose blueprints on a highly
fluctuating situation with a diversity of opportunities," he says. What we
need, in order to close the gap between policy and practise, are adaptive
and flexible strategies of the type that local communities are far more
adept than bureaucracies at devising," adds Fabricius.
19. BUSH PRAISED FOR OPTING OUT OF EARTH SUMMIT
CNN
15 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.cnn.com/2002/TECH/science/08/15/earth.summit.ap/index.html
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Conservative activists are praising President George W.
Bush's apparent decision to send Secretary of State Colin Powell to a U.N.
conference on global ecology rather than attending the once-a-decade summit
himself as his father did in 1992. With the summit little more than two
weeks away, there are no plans for Bush to go the conference, which
conservatives have taken as a sign he will not attend. "We applaud your
decision not to attend the summit in person," said an August 2 letter to
Bush from Fred L. Smith Jr., president of the Competitive Enterprise
Institute, and 30 other conservative activists who support Bush. The letter
warns of likely widespread anti-United States sentiment among the
participants at the World Summit on Sustainable Development being held
August 26 through September 4 in Johannesburg, South Africa. Other signers
include Paul M. Weyrich of Coalitions for America, Grover Norquist of
Americans for Tax Reform and David A. Keene of the American Conservative
Union. "Your presence would only help to publicize and make more credible
their various anti-freedom, anti-people, anti-globalization and anti-Western
agendas," they wrote Bush. "We also strongly support your opposition to
signing new international environmental treaties or creating new
international environmental organizations at the Johannesburg summit." The
White House has been silent so far about who will lead the U.S. delegation
to the summit. Administration officials say an announcement will come soon,
but Powell is expected to attend. This is the fourth summit in four decades
where world leaders and environmentalists have gathered to address the
environmental costs of feeding, clothing and housing the Earth's growing
population. For environmentalists, the series of talks reached a height in
1992 at Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, when Bush's father, George H.W. Bush, then
the president, was among 110 world leaders who agreed to tackle problems in
forestry, biodiversity and climate change.
The conservatives say those talks were a mistake for the elder Bush, one
that his son is now wise to avoid. "Why would you go to a party when they
want to throw pies at you?" Smith said in an interview. "The fortunate thing
is when 40,000 goofies get together, not much happens."
Global approaches
In 1972 at Stockholm and in 1982 at Nairobi, each of the U.S. delegations
was led by the chairman of the White House Council on Environmental
Quality. The current chairman, James Connaughton, has not said whether he
will attend. More than 100 world leaders -- either the head of state or a
minister-level representative -- have announced they will be at the summit.
Many among them share a deep concern about the state of the world's
ecological systems, and some have said they also worry about a lack of
leadership and lackluster U.S. support for global approaches. Summit
leaders say they will try to solidify commitments made over the past year to
open markets to developing countries and increase financing to them. They
also cite challenges such as 2 billion people living on $2 or less a day,
more burning of fossil fuels blamed for climate change and damage to a
quarter of the world's coral reefs. Connaughton said whoever represents the
United States will emphasize both the U.S. commitment to creating lasting
partnerships and also the idea that each nation bears responsibility for its
own development. "It doesn't mean they go it alone. But each nation has to
take that task onto itself to look at sustainability," he said recently.
Some environmental leaders view this year's summit as a last, best chance to
convert high hopes into deeds. "There is a real sense of urgency," U.N.
Undersecretary-General Nitin Desai, who will chair the summit, told
reporters this week. "In many cases we are talking about slipping back."
Sowing seeds In the weeks leading up to the summit, Desai has campaigned to
sow seeds of hope while also warning that disappointment will only confirm
widespread pessimism about the world's ability to deal with what he says is
a growing crisis.
"We will be endangering all of the things we have achieved and we will not
have another chance," he told summit leaders at the Brazilian Embassy in
Washington earlier this month. "There is no major global event planned
beyond Johannesburg which allow us to retrieve lost ground. This is it."
Gus Speth, dean of Yale University's School of Forestry and Environmental
Studies, said world leaders are running out of time because the world
economy is projected to double in size every 25 years. "We have squandered
more than 20 years on these global-scale issues and this period we're in is
truly our last chance to get it right," Speth said.
The uncertainty about U.S. participation reflects deeper questions in the
environmental community about Bush's approach to global challenges in the
wake of his rejection last year of the Kyoto climate treaty. "People around
the world are seriously concerned that the Bush administration is
undermining the World Summit instead of working with other countries to
benefit everyone," Sierra Club director Michael Dorsey said.
20. REPLENISHMENT OF GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT FACILITY SEEN AS MAJOR SUCCESS FOR
JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT PROCESS
UN
14 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.johannesburgsummit.org/html/whats_new/otherstories_gef_1408.html
New York, 14 August-Johannesburg Summit Secretary-General Nitin Desai today
called the $2.9 billion replenishment of the Global Environment Facility a
positive indication that countries are serious about putting resources
behind efforts to promote the plan that will emerge from the World Summit on
Sustainable Development in Johannesburg later this month. Desai said that
not only did donor countries agree on the largest replenishment ever of the
GEF, they also agreed to expand the use the facility to finance efforts to
implement the Convention to Combat Desertification, which is working to
preserve and restore drylands for productive purposes, and for efforts to
eliminate persistent organic pollutants. More than 100 world leaders, along
with thousands of government delegates, NGOs and business leaders, have
indicated that they will participate in the Summit, an historic opportunity
to forge a global consensus on an action plan to reverse environmental
degradation and improve living standards.
The new GEF replenishment, agreed upon by 32 developed and developing
countries in Washington, funds operations over the next four years, from
2002 to 2006. In addition to the new areas of desertification and persistent
organic pollutants, the GEF will continue to finance projects aimed at
protecting biodiversity, mitigating climate change, protecting international
waters, and replacing ozone-depleting chemicals. Mohamed T. El-Ashry, Chief
Executive Officer and Chairman of the GEF, said that "the level of
replenishment is strong evidence of the participants' commitment to the
global environment and the GEF, and should contribute to the success of the
World Summit on Sustainable Development."
The replenishment of the GEF has been a contentious issue during the
preparatory process for Johannesburg, and one of the unresolved portions of
the draft Plan of Implementation calls for a substantial replenishment of up
to $3 billion. The issue of using the GEF to finance the implementation of
the Convention to Combat Desertification, heavily pushed by African
countries, was also unresolved. "This agreement is a huge step forward, and
will have a major effect on moving the negotiations forward on the remainder
of the Johannesburg Plan of Implementation," Desai said. "This shows that
the negotiations are not about empty words and promises. Countries are
prepared to put their money where their mouths are, to really achieve
results on the ground."
Although the GEF started before the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, the
first major infusion of resources to the facility came after that Summit,
and the GEF represents one of the major successes of the post-Rio era in
addressing areas of environmental degradation. During its first decade, GEF
allocated $4.2 billion, supplemented by $11 billion in co-financing, for
more than 1,000 projects in 160 developing countries and countries with
transitional economies. GEF is the only new funding source to emerge from
the 1992 Earth Summit and today counts 173 countries as members.
The 32 donors participating in the new replenishment are: Australia,
Austria, Belgium, Canada, China, Cote d'Ivoire, Czech Republic, Denmark,
Finland, France, Germany, Greece, India, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Korea,
Luxembourg, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand, Nigeria, Norway, Pakistan,
Portugal, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, United Kingdom and
United States.
21. FLIGHTS OF FANCY
The Guardian
14 August 2002
Internet:
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/green/story/0,9061,774291,00.html
At a brainstorming conference last January for this month's earth summit,
environment minister Michael Meacher said that Britain needed a "big idea"
to take forward to Johannesburg. Dan Morrell, founder of UK eco-business
Future Forests, suggested that the UK delegation should make its trip
"carbon neutral" by planting enough trees to offset the greenhouse gases
from their plane rides and hotel stays. The prospect of government
delegates, buinessmen and charities flying off to save the world, but at the
same time significantly adversely affecting the environment, is riddled with
irony, but when Future Forests wrote to Defra offering to help Meacher and
the government team ease their carbon conscience with a small voluntary
carbon "tax", there was no response for months. In April, after many
follow-up calls, a letter from the office of the secretary of state for the
environment, Margaret Beckett, said that they were "looking into it". Just
getting the 65,000 delegates to the Johannesburg summit throws into sharp
relief the environmental impact of foreign air travel. Aviation, fuelled by
cheap flights, is the fastest-growing source of greenhouse gases and is set
to account for 10% of man-made greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. Commercial
aircraft fly in the sensitive upper atmosphere, which means their exhaust
gases cause between two and four times the amount of global warming than the
carbon dioxide alone creates at sea level. Even at the lower end of these
figures, each passenger on a long-haul flight produces 124kg of carbon
dioxide for each hour of the journey. It is difficult to calculate
precisely how much each passenger emits on a flight, and therefore an
individual's effect on the global warming, in part because climate change
science is very complex but also because it depends on the type of plane,
its route, how much cargo it is carrying and how full it is. Future Forests
reckons the thousands of delegates flocking to Johannesburg in two weeks'
time could emit roughly 500,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide.
This is about what 135,000 car drivers in Britain would generate in an
entire year. It would take one million Indians a year to produce the same
amount. The estimated 6.5 tonnes of carbon dioxide that Meacher and each of
the 70 UK delegates will be responsible for emitting on their return flight
is more than half of the average UK citizen's carbon dioxide emissions in a
year.
The British government might be accused of tardiness, but others have leapt
at the chance to do something. The Norwegian government, Powergen, the UN
global environment fracility, and Volkswagen have chosen to go with the
Johannesburg Climate Legacy (JCL) scheme, co-run by Future Forests and the
US-based Climate Neutral Network. This aims to cancel out the delegates'
500,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide by raising £3.4m for renewable and energy
efficiency schemes to reduce emissions in communities across the host
country, South Africa. A handful of small web-based companies in the US,
Britain and Europe are now inviting anyone with an environmental conscience
to calculate their emissions and contribute to different projects by
offsetting their carbon emissions. The intention is to reduce carbon in the
atmosphere by enabling people to understand the links between their
lifestyles and environmental impacts.
Each scheme offers something slightly different and each calculates the
financial "offset" differently. Until now, Future Forests have had a
straightforward approach to helping people go "carbon neutral". For £6, they
promise to "plant enough trees to absorb over their lifetime the amount of
carbon dioxide you produce in one month". But despite glamorous backers
such as Atomic Kitten, Pink Floyd and Damien Hirst, the company has been
criticised for allegedly paying foresters unrealistically low prices to
plant and maintain each tree, and failing to plan ahead for when the trees
get old and die. Director Jonathan Shopley argues that the critics are
wrong. "We don't believe trees are the solution," he says. "It's the fact
that they help people make the link between personal action and climate
change, and hopefully think about other things they can do, such as energy
efficiency." As for the decaying tree conundrum, Shopley says the planters
guarantee to keep trees in the ground for 99 years, and he is optimistic for
the future. "In 99 years' time, I expect we'll be in a hydrogen economy, and
the carbon uptake of those trees will have done its job," Shopley predicts.
But the criticisms seem to have hit home. Tree-planting is not on Future
Forests' agenda for the earth summit delegates. The climate legacy partners
have identified 27 sustainable energy projects to benefit from the funds
generated. These will not only provide jobs, but also ensure that there is a
significant increase in local renewable energy capacity and, thereby, a
permanent reduction in the demand for carbon dioxide emitting fuels. One
project in South Africa would provide 50,000 solar home kits to bring light
to rural homes and replace sooty paraffin lamps or petrol-powered
generators. People would be given training to run the supply and to service
the solar kits under franchise. The idea is that income, skills and control
of energy supply would be retained within the community. Meanwhile, Climate
Care, another company specialising in offsetting carbon emissions, offers to
invest in a range of sustainable development projects. Money raised by this
company goes to the supply of energy-efficient lightbulbs to people in
Mauritius, a reforestation programme in Uganda, and a small-scale hydro
electricity scheme in Bulgaria
"Two years ago, people didn't have a clue what we were talking about," says
Morton. "This is rapidly changing. Now they understand carbon offsets and
that they can actually do something." Morton is working with British
Airways and with the Association of British Travel agents, who will offset
all the emissions made by their 1,500 delegates to the annual industry
meeting in Cairo. Meanwhile, the government was still dithering this week
but had, it seems, agreed in principle to sign up. At the very least,
Michael Meacher, who was told last week he couldn't go but is now back on
board, is expected to make an individual statement and to pay the voluntary
levy.
22. EARTH SUMMIT DUBBED THE BIGGEST TALK SHOP EVER
The Nation (Nairobi) via All Africa
14 August 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200208130619.html
Even before the World Summit on Sustainable Development gets underway in
South Africa later this month, there are more scepticism than hope about its
ability to address environmental problems and the plight of the poor people.
Those sceptical about the whole process argue that ten years since the 1992
Rio Earth Summit promised a better world, little or no achievements have
been made. More than 55,000 people are expected to attend the summit. "It is
going to be the biggest talk-shop ever, which will not offer any substantive
outcome for the environment, the poor people and their poor nations," says
Andile Mngxitama, land rights co-ordinator at the National Land Committee,
South Africa. "The agenda of the United Nations has been taken over and is
now being directed by multi-lateral organisations such as the World Bank,
International Monetary Fund and World Trade Organisations," he adds. Like
Mngxitama, other cynics say governments especially those in developed
countries have failed to meet the commitments they made after the Rio
summit. "Developed countries have not ratified crucial environmental
protection protocols developed after the Rio summit. We spend so much money
and time discussing these documents, and when it comes to implementation,
nothing happens," a frustrated environmentalist from a local NGO says.
Environmentalists claim that countries such as United States, Australia and
New Zealand are even pushing for the weakening of targets set on various
environmental commitments.
They say developed countries dominate World Summit on Sustainable
Development (WSSD), and developing countries are therefore unlikely to get
much out of the Johannesburg meeting. This is the kind of frustration facing
some people especially after the goals of reducing poverty, implementation
of Biosafety and Kyoto protocols have moved no where near the practical
realm.
Analyst say although these protocols have been developed, Third World
countries are not going to benefit as their developed partners who call the
shots, are not willing to ratify them. The biosafety protocol, which is
expected to help developing countries protect the health of their people and
environment from any consequences of genetically modified foods and
associated technologies, is yet to come into force. It has not done so
because developed countries such as the United States, the leading producer
of GMO foods, have not ratified it. Up to now, less than 15 countries of
which over 70 per cent are from developing countries have ratified the
protocol. And yet, 50 ratifications are required before it comes into force.
Observers argue that countries like USA do not want to ratify it because it
fears the move might impact negatively on its farmers. This has left many
countries like Kenya and those in Southern Africa to grapple with the issue
of GMO foods, because they cannot enforce the protocol or afford to
implement it. Scientists say one of the spin-offs to developing countries if
the protocol comes into force, is the possibility of capacity building to
deal with biotechnology issues. Another is the transfer of technology to
bridge the gap between north and south. While the scenario on the biosafety
protocol remains gloomy, matters are even worse with the Kyoto protocol,
which deals with climate change matters. The instrument is yet to come into
force since countries such as the United States, the biggest emitter of
carbon monoxide, and Australia, have refused to ratify it. Instead, they
want their industries to be given leeway to develop their own guidelines. In
fact, it is understood that the United States and a few developed countries
threaten that discussions at the Johannesburg summit might breakdown if the
Kyoto issue is discussed. So powerful is its interest that the issue had to
be relegated on the Johannesburg WSSD agenda. According to the Kyoto
protocol developed countries agreed to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions
by at least 5.2 per cent by the year 2008 to 2012. This is based on the fact
that industrialised countries are the leading emitters of carbon monoxide
from fossil fuels, which is responsible for global warming. But only a few
of them have agreed to ratify the protocol. Instead they propose that
developing countries plant more trees to absorb the excess carbon dioxide in
the atmosphere. And they are even ready to fund such projects. Although some
developed countries have promised to ratify the protocol before the
Johannesburg meeting, the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) thinks the
chances of it coming into force soon are slim. On the country level,
governments like the Kenya one have abused the environment despite
committing themselves to protecting it. The decision by former minister for
environment, Mr Francis Nyenze, to excise 167,000 forests land was a slap in
the face to the commitments the government made at the Rio summit.
Environmentalists argue that as long as there is no mechanism in place to
make countries accountable to such commitments, then meetings of WSSD
nature will be waste of time and taxpayers money. Apart from these
shortcomings, failure by developed countries to avail 0.7 per cent of their
Gross National Product (GNP) as official development assistance to
developing countries is another area that is creating cynicism. "In spite of
rich countries promising to increase their aid levels to 0.7 per cent of
GDP, this have decreased since Rio, and are now as low as 0.24 per cent of
GDP," notes WWF in a press statement. The assistance is intended to help
developing countries reduce poverty levels by the year 2015. "One of the
biggest problem is when it comes to implementation of resolutions and
commitments passed at this meetings. Most of the developed countries are
still haggling on how agreements at WSSD will be implemented," During the
preparatory meetings meant to thrush out issues to be discussed in
Johannesburg, Angie Kapelianis of South African Broadcasting Corporation,
says the issue of the implementation of WSSD agreements was a stormy one.
"It is difficult to understand whether the developed countries think they
are the most to pay or to loss in the whole deal," she says. Despite three
preparatory conferences on implementing the outcome of WSSD, no agreement
has been reached on how several nicely worded recommendations are to be to
be funded. Plans are underway to set a side a few days to thrush out the
issue before the head of states arrive at the meeting to sign the
Johannesburg WSSD global deal.
23. ADDRESSING ENVIRONMENTAL CHALLENGES THROUGH GLOBAL PARTNERSHIP
Standard Times (Freetown)
14 August 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200208140281.html
The Rio Earth Summit in 1992 raised considerable expectations. It agreed on
an ambitious and comprehensive strategy to address developmental and
environmental challenges through a global partnership. Ten years down the
line, the 2002 World Summit on sustainable development (WSSD) will provide
an opportunity to revitalize the spirit of Rio, shape a renewed political
commitment to sustainable development, and above all, make concrete
achievements on delivering not just on Rio but also on the millennium
Development Goals. The European Union (EU) will, as it has done through the
preparations, play an active role in Johannesburg to getting concrete
results. We are doing this through active dialogue with partners, including
those from developing countries. The EU wants the WSSD to send a clear
political message on the need to make globalization more sustainable for
all, and just as importantly, also to agree on measurers to achieve this.
Since the UN conference in Rio '1992 (Conference on Environment and
Development) North- South relations have fundamentally changed. Today, there
is a wide agreement on the fact that economic, social and political
developments require an integrated approach. The achievements of the major
UN Conferences in the 1990s have built a new framework for development
policies, with the overreaching objective of poverty eradication, and which
focuses on human, social and environmental aspects as well as sustainable
management and use of natural resources. Based on these developments, the
United Nations Millennium Summit in 2000 adopted a set of comprehensive
goals in order to eradicate poverty- the Millennium Development Goals-,
which set out concrete objectives for the year 2015. Visions like achieving
universal primary education, combating diseases like HIV/AIDs and ensuring
environmental sustainability can only be realized by a common effort of
industrialized and developing countries and the international community.
The positive outcomes of the 4th WTO Ministerial meeting in Doha in November
2001 and of the International Conference on financing for development in
Monterrey in March 2002, provided further important elements towards
reaching the Millennium Development Goals. In the "Doha Development Agenda"
and the "Monterrey Consensus", a framework was agreed for improving market
access, for upgrading multilateral rules to harness globalization, and for
increasing financial assistance for development. The development countries
must now deliver on their commitments and the EU, as the world's leading
partner of developing countries and as the biggest provider of development
aid, is fully determined to do so. The EU and its Member states have
pledged, as a first significant step towards reaching the UN target of 0.7%
of Gross National income for Official development assistance, to raise the
collective average from the current 0.33% to 0.39% by 2006. Concretely, this
should result in an additional annual amount of aid of 9 billion pounds
sterling by 2006, and about 22 billion pounds sterling between now and 2006.
The developing countries must take their responsibilities by improving
internal policies and domestic governance and creating an enabling climate
for investment. All countries must work together, recognizing their common
but differentiated responsibilities, to ensure that growth is separated from
environmental degradation and that the needs of the present generation are
satisfied without destroying the capacity of future generations to cater for
their needs. In the light of the Doha and Monterrey achievements, the World
Summit on sustainable development, to be held from 26 August to 4th
September 2002, as a unique opportunity to close the implementation gap let
after Rio, and to renew political commitments by all stakeholders. Making
development polices sustainable implies tackling problems with foresight, an
approach that the European Union aims to promote and has embraced in its
Treaty, in the agreements it has signed and in the policies it has adopted.
Therefore, the EU wants the WSSD to take - after Doha and Monterrey- further
steps towards the implementation of the Millennium Development Goals, and to
build upon them, particularly in crucial areas such as sanitation and
energy. The EU intends to play an important role in ensuring that the
outcome of Johannesburg addresses the three pillars of sustainable
development (economic, social, environmental) and enforces coherent global
management.
All the players will have a role e.g.: developing countries by implementing
sound policies, good governance and the rule of law, industrialised
countries by ensuring that markets are open to all. All the stakeholders
should commit to a sense of common ownership, which is indispensable in the
follow- up of the Summit. The WSSD should adopt concrete commitments with a
precise time frame, carried out on the basis of effective partnership. One
of the implementing mechanisms could be well-developed partnerships between
governments, the private sector and civil society. There should however be a
clear link between the political goals and the partnerships decided by the
WSSD so that everyone can see how the political goals are being achieved.
The EU wants the WSSD to send a clear political message on the need to make
globalization more sustainable for all and to agree on measures aimed at
promoting this goal. In order to be clear and coherent in its approach to
the WSSD, the EU strategy for Johannesburg follows an integrated approach:
We start by putting our own house in order and thus provide leadership in
translating rhetoric into action. This internal strategy for sustainable
development was endorsed by the Gothenburg Council in June last year, where
poverty eradication and promotion of sustainable production and consumption
partners were identified as overriding objectives for the Summit. In
addition to that the Community has to make its contribution to promote
sustainable development beyond its borders. Putting this into practice, the
EU wants to promote progress in five keys areas- water, energy, health,
agriculture and biodiversity. The EU water initiative, for instance, plans
to bring together, in partnership with countries and regions, public and
private funds, stakeholders and experts to provide sustainable solutions to
problems of water management. Reaching the political goal of halving the
number of people without access to clean water and sanitation by 2015 would
provide a major contribution to improved health and economic development. At
the European Council in Seville, the EU reaffirmed its commitment to be a
constructive force at the Johannesburg Summit. We will use all opportunities
to achieve a positive outcome; the people and this planet deserve no less.
24. GREENPEACE HOPEFUL OF SUMMIT'S SUCCESS
Business Day
14 August 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200208140444.html
THERE were factors that pointed to a more desirable outcome for civil
society at Johannesburg's World Summit on Sustainable Development in
comparison to its 1992 predecessor. But there was still only hope, said
Steve Sawyer of Greenpeace International yesterday. He said the quantity,
quality and severity of climate change as illustrated, for instance, by
floods, had now penetrated public consciousness. There was also a growing
convergence of opinion between nongovernmental organisation (NGOs),
governments and business of the need for urgent action. "We find ourselves
fighting side by side with business at times," said Sawyer. He said NGOs and
business agreed at times on issues such as the actions or lack of action by
governments. With regards to the ratification of the Kyoto Protocol, an
international agreement designed to tackle global warming and climate
change, Sawyer said it was not an issue of "if" but "when". Governments
spent the past four years trying to reach consensus. While the protocol was
still inadequate in the opinion of Greenpeace, it was seen to represent a
step forward, he said. The organisation hoped for a commitment to be inked
at the summit this month to provide energy access, in the next 10 years, to
2 -billion people worldwide who are without electricity. Another target was
to have 10% of global energy generated through renewable energy by 2010.
Speaking at a pre-summit conference on sustainable energy hosted by the
Sustainable Energy and Climate Change Partnership (SECCP), Sawyer was more
optimistic about renewable energy developments worldwide in terms of wind
power. "Some of these have actually hit economic take-off," he said. At
present consumption levels, it was now predicted that 24% of the world's
electricity could be generated through wind power by 2020. "Wind power
growth has dramatically outstripped expectations," said Sawyer. It was the
fastest-growing energy sector with the 25000 MW of wind power installed
worldwide last year, growing to about 30 000 MW. Mary Metcalfe, Gauteng's
agriculture, conservation, environment and land affairs MEC, who also spoke
at the event yesterday, stressed the potential of renewable energy to
support the development of microenterprises, particularly in rural areas, as
well as improving the lives and health of women and children. She said that
in Gauteng, the political position of the African National Congress called
for a target of 10% renewable energy within 10 years. SECCP-project
co-ordinator Richard Worthington, said they wanted commitment of 20% of
global primary energy from renewable recourses by 2020.
25. GREEN GROWTH JOHANNESBURG NEEDS MORE THAN HOT AIR
The Guardian
14 August 2002
Internet:
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,9115,774304,00.html
Prague appears to be drowning, its Hapsburg palaces engulfed by the river
that runs through the historic centre on which they are built. In Austria
the Danube, more brown than blue, has punched through dams and 1,000
buildings are under water in Salzburg. About 50 people have died in Russia -
victims of flash floods along the Black sea coast. Meanwhile over Asia hangs
a two-mile thick haze of pollution which, according to the United Nations,
is blocking out sunlight and could reduce the rice harvest - a crucial
staple for the continent's 3bn people. These are not local difficulties, but
connected by how the weather appears to be changing.
From Bangladesh to Alaska to Malawi, altered climate conditions have caused
droughts, floods, landslides and melting polar caps. Rising temperatures are
triggering unprecedented levels of tropical diseases. Development, in its
current form, appears to be degrading the environment. Belching carbon
dioxide, a gas produced when fossil fuels are burnt, into the atmosphere
means the earth is heating up. The 1990s were the hottest decade of the
entire millennium. The last five years were among the seven hottest on
record. Some argue that this is not all bad as East Anglia might bathe
(though not this year) in Tuscan sunshine all year round. But this small
gain could see London submerged by the Thames.
In Rio a decade ago the world solemnly resolved that all this would never
happen. The 1992 UN summit saw two conventions signed - on climate change
and biodiversity - and a programme called Agenda 21 agreed, that would
ensure that growth and greenery could flourish. On most counts, Rio has not
delivered. Tropical forests and coral reefs are both quietly disappearing.
Emissions of carbon dioxide are up by 10% worldwide, despite the Kyoto
agreement which promised a cut of 5% by 2012. George Bush's administration
shares much of the blame for the lacklustre performance. It has preferred to
question the science and refused to sign up to Kyoto, while Europe and Japan
did. Even its own experts have disowned the Bush White House. The US, the
world's biggest polluter, emits nearly a fifth more carbon dioxide than a
decade ago. American intransigence has lowered expectations of the UN Earth
Summit in Johannesburg this month. Its high-minded goal is to promote
economic progress in the developing world without depriving future
generations of resources. Poor countries cannot industrialise, urbanise and
then consume power at the rate rich countries do at present. It would be
unsustainable for China's 1bn people to guzzle gas at the rate Americans do.
Different models of development are needed. The future needs to be a
low-carbon one. Adopting the EU's target for 10% of energy production from
renewable sources, such as solar or wind power, for the globe in 2010 would
be a good start. To kick start this, nations like Britain - which hand over
billions of pounds every year for fossil and nuclear fuel projects in
developing countries -could redirect the money to renewable schemes. To some
extent governments should be shamed by the growing number of companies
voluntarily committing themselves to greenhouse gas reduction targets - oil
giant BP has already cut emissions 10% below 1990 levels. There are
contradictions that need to be addressed - like why the costs of meeting
Kyoto, about $56bn, could not be found by simply cutting fossil fuel
subsidies worth $57bn. For the 65,000 delegates heading for Johannesburg,
there is much to talk about and much more to do.
26. GREENPEACE CALLS FOR PROTECTION NOT CRIMINALISATION OF INDEPENDENT
INVESTIGATORS
Greenpeace
14 August 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200208140656.html
Environmental investigator released from prison after three-month detainment
Greenpeace Calls for Protection not Criminalisation of Independent
Investigators Ex-poacher turned conservationist Joseph Melloh was released
today from a Congolese prison where he had been detained for three months
following an investigation of the area of forests logged by Swiss-German
logging company, Congolaise Industrielle du Bois (CIB). During today's
sentencing hearing in Brazzaville, the judge sentenced Melloh to 45 days in
jail - all of which he has already served. Greenpeace, along with Swiss
photographer Karl Ammann, had campaigned for Melloh's release. Greenpeace
co-financed Joseph's visit to Pokola together with the German ENGO Rettet
den Regenwald.
"Joseph Melloh's investigation was aimed at contributing to forest law
enforcement in the Congo," said Filip Verbelen, Greenpeace Forest
Campaigner. "But in fact the law turned against him, condemning him to three
months in prison on a charge that was unfounded." Melloh, who has become a
leading figure in uncovering the illegal bushmeat trade in Central Africa,
was arrested on May 14th in the Congolese logging town of Pokola. He was
picked up by the police for conducting interviews with residents of Pokola
and for filming CIB forestry operations. "While we are delighted that Joseph
Melloh has been released, his case clearly highlights the current problems
that exist globally around monitoring the activities of logging companies in
the field," said Verbelen. "Corporate forest crime costs forest nations
several million US$ each year - yet most of these nations have no formal
framework - nor the institutional capacity - for independent monitoring of
the companies operating in their forests." Greenpeace argues that
independent on-the-ground monitoring of logging companies - whether leading
to a positive endorsement of a company or to the exposure of illegal and
destructive practices - is fundamental to achieving sustainable forest
management globally. "Like neighbouring Cameroon, we are now calling on the
government of Congo to commit to formal independent monitoring of logging
company activities," said Verbelen. "Without this kind of commitment, then
current political processes like the World Bank's programme on Forest Law
Enforcement and Governance will mean very little." At the Johannesburg Earth
Summit , Greenpeace is calling on world governments to commit to the
development of a global framework on corporate responsibility, which should
include issues of transparency, independent verification and corporate
liability.
27. ROUND TABLE SEEKS WAYS TO HARNESS TRADE AND INVESTMENT FOR SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT
United Nations Development Programme
14 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.undp.org/dpa/frontpagearchive/2002/august/14aug02/index.html
Wednesday, 14 August 2002: The challenge of reconciling the powerful forces
of international trade and investment with efforts to reduce poverty and
protect the environment is a key issue facing the upcoming World Summit on
Sustainable Development in Johannesburg, South Africa, opening on 26
August. A recent high-level round table in Abuja, Nigeria, hosted by the
Government and sponsored by UNDP, assisted by several partners, examined the
issue, focusing on partnerships between government, civil society and the
private sector for sustainable development in the oil, gas and minerals
sector and the water and sanitation sector.
Globalization driven by trade and investment has brought benefits for some
developing countries, but a number of countries have seen rising poverty
levels and growing environmental problems. Among these are the decline of
major ecosystems, degradation of agricultural land, diminishing supplies of
water and a growing prevalence of climate-related natural disasters, such as
droughts and floods. "While trade and investment can provide the
opportunities and capacities needed to sustain economic growth and
development, if not properly managed, they can lead to increased rates of
extraction of natural resources and unsustainable patterns of consumption
and pollution," said a welcoming statement from President Olussegun Obasanjo
of Nigeria.
Egbert Imomoh , senior corporate advisor with Shell International, discussed
his company's experiences in partnerships in Gabon, Nigeria, Thailand,
Mexico and the Philippines. Nigeria, for example, is a major exporter of oil
and gas, but the standard of living in the Niger Delta, where the exports
originate, is very low. Shell has embarked with local partners on programmes
aimed at reducing poverty and promoting economic empowerment, supporting
activities such as technical assistance for local farmers, income-generating
projects for women, and vocational training. Discussions on water and
sanitation highlighted successful partnerships and also raised concerns
about the power wielded by large multinational corporations. Kwabena S. Manu
of Mime Consult Ltd. in Ghana presented a pilot project to involve local
private firms in developing small town water supply systems. The project
aims to strengthen the capabilities of local firms and ensure community
management and provision of services to poor areas.
The round table adopted a declaration calling for trade and investment
policies that "capture the positive synergies between economic growth,
social development and environmental protection."
The declaration endorsed eight principles, the first stating that,
"Sustainable development should be the goal of trade and investment
policies. These policies must be aimed at fostering stable growth and
reducing poverty, while ensuring environmental sustainability." The
principles also call for developing countries to be provided market access
and fair terms of trade, participation of the poor in designing trade and
investment rules and policies, and steps to build the capacity of developing
countries to participate in creating fair trading systems. The declaration
also stated that partnerships between governments, civil society and the
private sector can play a vital role in promoting sustainable development
through trade and investment. A number of such partnerships are expected to
be forged at the Johannesburg Summit, and the round table sought to
contribute to these efforts.
The UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs, the UN Conference on Trade
and Development, and the International Centre on Trade for Sustainable
Development provided assistance to UNDP in organizing the round table, the
fourth such event on the road to Johannesburg.
28. RICH 'WILL HELP THE POOR' - UN
BBC
13 August 2002
Internet:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/sci/tech/2190459.stm
The world is now in earnest about working to end poverty, according to the
United Nations official running the Earth Summit, Nitin Desai. He believes
the meeting will succeed, despite criticism of its huge and unwieldy
agenda. A decision by President Bush to attend would be "a very important
indication of support". Mr Desai said the way the world was developing lent
the summit an unmistakeable urgency. He was speaking to BBC News Online
about a report, Global Challenge, Global Opportunity: Trends in sustainable
development, published by the UN department of economic and social affairs.
Mr Desai heads the department. He is also secretary-general of the World
Summit on Sustainable Development, starting in Johannesburg on 26 August.
Mr Desai said the report's inescapable message was the urgency of reversing
the present trend towards an unsustainable future. He said: "The second
message for Johannesburg is that we have to look at all these problems as a
package and act on all of them simultaneously. He insisted there was a new
seriousness about ending the abject poverty of hundreds of millions of
people, though he acknowledged that the rich world still tolerated
preventable mass child mortality. "We don't bother to prevent those deaths
because we don't make the connections", he said. "We think of health in
terms of therapeutics, not public health. "But I think the political will
is there. Development is now as sexy as the environment, absolutely." Mr
Desai rejected any suggestion that the summit agenda was overcrowded. "I
ask people: 'What do you want to drop?'", he said. "I don't get an answer -
because the issues are all so closely linked." "I see a lot of commitment,
and the countries involved have invested so much, they'll find a way. I'm
pretty hopeful. "If Mr Bush decided to come, that would be a very important
indication of support. But the US is very heavily involved anyway. The
report lists some encouraging advances. The average number of children born
by women in developing countries has fallen in 30 years from more than six
to under three. Poverty is falling in Asia and Latin America, and hunger is
slowly declining: about 800m people are chronically malnourished, 40m fewer
than in 1990. The number of under-five-year-olds dying from diarrhoeal
diseases is estimated to have fallen from 4.6m annually in 1980 to 1.7m in
1999.
But it lists some ominous trends too. Indoor air pollution kills more than
3m people a year, mainly children in poor countries. Africa contends with
increasing rates of malaria, as well as "by far the leading cause of death"
south of the Sahara, HIV-Aids. Its forests are vanishing at 7% each decade,
Latin America's at 5%. An estimated total of 90m hectares of global forests
was destroyed in the 1990s, an area larger than Venezuela. Most deaths in
the poorest countries are from communicable, environment-related diseases,
and could easily be prevented. More than 1bn people lack access to safe
water, and 2.5bn do not have adequate sanitation. Food production and
consumption are rising. And it is producing food that drives the depletion
of natural resources. Hungry countries will rely increasingly on food
imported from Europe and North America. Water shortages are growing: by
2025 they will affect about half the world's people. There are "many signs
of climate change". World population is growing, and demands for higher
living standards: together they "will pose enormous strains on natural
resources".
29. CALL FOR 'SENSE OF URGENCY' AS JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT APPROACHES
All Africa
13 August 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200208130643.html
Actual progress on the ground is far slower than hoped and in many cases we
are going backwards, Nitin Desai, Secretary-General of the World Summit on
Sustainable Development (WSSD) said Tuesday announcing the release of a new
United Nations report: Global Challenge, Global Opportunity. The report by
the U.N. Department for Economic and Social Affairs, which Desai heads,
found that capacity to produce enough food is diminishing, especially in
developing nations where almost 800 million people are chronically
undernourished, although the number is declining. "The real threat that we
face now is the insidious global spread of poverty and environmental stress,
and that is the real security threat that we need to address," said Desai
who will chair the WSSD Summit. The report, which focuses on trends among
the earth's natural resources and human development, found that 40 percent
of the world's population face water shortages, global sea levels are rising
in a "clear indication" of global warming, many plant and animal species are
at risk of extinction, "including half of the large primates, man's closet
relatives." During the 1990s, the report said, 220 million acres of forests
an area larger than Venezuela was destroyed, almost all in tropical regions
in Africa and Latin America. Every year, more than 3 million people die from
the effects of air pollution. The purpose of the report, said Desai speaking
to reporters in a telephone press conference, "is to provide a sense in
quantitative terms of where are we now and where are we moving to; and from
that we hope that we can derive a sense of urgency on the steps we need to
take to correct these trends."
Part of the challenge, said Desai, "was to try and put all of these things
in a compact way." For instance, he said, take the death rates from
respiratory illness and the high rates are in sub-Saharan Africa, North
Africa and developing Asia compared to other parts of the world: in
Tanzania, according to the report, children younger than five are three
times more likely to have been sleeping in a room with a traditional cook
stove (fueled by wood or dung or crop residues) than healthy children. In
Gambia, children carried on their mother's backs as they cook over smokey
stoves contract pneumonia at a rate 2.5 times higher than unexposed
children.
Desai says this is a problem that can be fixed, given commitment and
resources. Improved biomass cook stoves are the most feasible option, the
report says. The "Upesi Stove" developed in Kenya with its clay liner in a
mud and stone hearth uses 40 percent less fuel and emits 60 percent less
smoke. "We now know that we are talking about 3 million people in the world
dying essentially because of one form or the other of air pollution" said
Desai. "If you had a disease that was taking away 3 million people a year
you surely would treat it as some sort of emergency which requires an urgent
response." Improving agricultural yields is a "top priority" according to
the report. Close to 30 percent of the 1.5 billion hectares of agricultural
land in the world "is in some ways under stress. On this issue, says Desai,
"the focus is very much on Africa." A new rice variety combining the
hardiness of African rice varieties with the productivity of Asian rice
varieties "is going to be launched in or around Johannesburg at the time of
the Summit," said Desai.
Another especially important initiative for Africa is the convention on
desertification. "We have some real prospects of being able to fund some of
the activities that countries will want to undertake as part of their
obligations under the Convention on Desertification." Developing nations
have urged financial specificity on development goals at the upcoming WSSD,
and also want discussion on lowering trade barriers to expand market access.
In the view of the United States however, and several other wealthy nations,
this would reopen agreements reached at the World Trade Organization meeting
in Doha, Qatar and the summit on financial development held in Monterrey,
Mexico. According to Desai, a July 17 "friend of the chair" meeting between
nations on both sides of the issues has made dialogue instead of argument
possible. "The issue of how do we reflect the outcome of Monterrey and Doha
in what comes up in Johannesburg is an issue, but I do not see it as an
insuperable one. People recognize that Doha and Monterrey have set down
certain markers when it comes to trade and finance and we are to work within
the framework provided by those markers." Desai said he was pleased with
U.S. support The Bush administration "is very fully engaged in the summit."
President Bush who is planning a January trip to Africa is not expected at
the Johannesburg Summit. Secretary of State Colin Powell will lead the U.S.
delegation, according to State Department sources. President Bush's absence
notwithstanding, a number of heads of state and government are expected in
Johannesburg. These include the prime ministers of Britain, Canada, Italy
and Japan, French president Jacques Chirac, Chancellor Gerhard Schröder of
Germany, the presidents of Mexico and Brazil and numerous African
presidents.
30. PLANET EARTH IN PERIL
Associated Press
13 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2002/08/13/tech/main518542.shtml
(AP) A U.N. report sets the stage for this month's Earth Summit with a
sobering assessment of a planet where sea levels are rising, forests are
being destroyed and more than 2 billion people face water shortages. The
report, released Tuesday, reviewed the most authoritative data from U.N. and
international organizations about the use of natural resources. Fossil fuel
consumption and carbon emissions continued to rise in the 1990s,
particularly in Asia and North America, according to the study. Signs of
climate change linked to global warming were more apparent, including more
frequent and intense droughts in parts of Asia and Africa and rising sea
levels. During the 1990s, the report said, 2.4 percent of the world's
forests were destroyed, almost all in tropical regions in Africa and Latin
America. The estimated total area destroyed - 220 million acres - is larger
than the size of Venezuela. U.N. Undersecretary-General Nitin Desai, who
will lead the Earth Summit in Johannesburg from Aug. 26 to Sept. 4, said the
report underscores that the world is at a crucial crossroads in the new
millennium. "If we do nothing to change our current indiscriminate patterns
of development, we will compromise the long-term security of the Earth and
its people," he said. More than 100 world leaders are expected to attend the
summit and adopt a plan aimed at accelerating economic development while
preserving the environment. The report by the U.N. Department for Economic
and Social Affairs, which Desai heads, focuses on five key issues: water and
sanitation, energy, agricultural productivity, biodiversity and human
health. The need to feed a rising global population - now over 6 billion and
projected to reach 8 billion by 2025 - is exacerbated by an increase in food
consumption, from 2100 calories to 2700 calories a day in developing
countries, and from 3000 calories to 3400 calories a day in industrialized
nations, the report said. At the same time, it said, the capacity to produce
enough food is diminishing, especially in developing countries. The report
found that global water use has increased six-fold over the last century, at
twice the rate of population growth, and that agriculture represents 70
percent of this consumption. The greatest drain on the world's freshwater
supplies is inefficient agricultural irrigation systems.
Meanwhile, about 40 percent of the world population face water shortages; by
2025 that figure is expected to increase to 50 percent, the report said. "A
top priority at the summit is the need to agree on policies and programs
that improve agricultural yields in order to meet our long-term food needs,"
Desai said. "Equally pressing is the goal of expanding sustainable
agricultural practices, including the introduction of efficient irrigation
systems." Despite some recent improvements, 1 billion people still lack
access to safe drinking water and 2.5 billion lack adequate sanitation
facilities, the report said. More than 3 million people die every year from
the effects of air pollution and 2.2 million people die from contaminated
water, it found.
The great majority of those who die from polluted air are children in
developing countries who suffer from respiratory infections, the report
said. The report praises some small-scale programs that address problems
such as urban air pollution and child mortality linked to unsafe water. But
it said these gains will be lost if action is not taken soon on a much
larger scale.
31. UN SUMMIT HEAD EAGER TO LURE BUSH TO JOHANNESBURG
Reuters
13 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.miami.com/mld/miami/news/politics/3856861.htm
UNITED NATIONS - More than 100 world leaders plan to attend this month's
Earth Summit in Johannesburg, but President Bush has not said whether he
will come, a top U.N. official said on Tuesday. "The official reply I get in
Washington is, 'No decision has been taken on this matter,'" said U.N.
Undersecretary-General Nitin Desai, who is organizing the World Summit on
Sustainable Development opening in South Africa in 13 days. "I would
certainly look forward to the presence of President Bush there. But I would
stress that the United States is very thoroughly and effectively engaged in
this process. They are not standing on the sidelines," Desai told reporters.
The Aug. 26-Sept. 4 conference is meant to build on the 1992 Rio de Janeiro
Earth Summit, which set out global goals for environmental protection, and
the 2000 Millennium Summit in New York, which established goals for battling
hunger, poverty and disease. Bush left Washington for his Texas ranch on
Aug. 6 and is planning to stay there until early September. He has given no
indication he will attend the summit, but U.S. officials say their
delegation has not been announced, although Secretary of State Colin Powell
plans to attend. Bush will face fierce criticism whether he shows up at the
summit or not.
WORLD'S BIGGEST POLLUTER
He is already under fire from many of America's closest allies for pulling
out of the Kyoto protocol, a global treaty on global warming, after arguing
the pact would harm the U.S. economy and insisting there was no proof
linking industrial pollution to climate change. The United States is the
world's largest emitter of the greenhouse gases -- like carbon dioxide and
methane -- that scientists widely blame for an alarming warming trend. If he
fails to attend, he is certain to come under fresh fire for turning his back
on the world's environmental woes. During the run-up to the summit,
activists have been lining up to accuse Washington of trying to undermine
the meeting by strongly opposing ambitious and potentially costly
environmental and development goals. At the summit, the United States is
expected instead to emphasize private sector partnerships and the importance
of economic growth over binding global agreements to fight environmental
problems and poverty. At least in part due to the hard line taken by
Washington during negotiations, the drafting of a blueprint for
environmentally friendly development, to be adopted at the summit's close,
has been painfully slow. Because of this, Desai said the 189 U.N.
member-nations had been asked to send delegates to Johannesburg three days
early, "in the hope of moving issues forward, so that when we start the
formal conference on Monday, we will have made some significant progress in
identifying how we resolve this." Desai said he remained confident the
conference would reach agreement on the complex issues ahead of it. "The
real threat that we face now is the insidious global spread of poverty and
environmental stress. That is the real security threat that we need to
address," Desai said.
32. BRAZIL CAUTIOUS ON AMERICAS FREE TRADE ZONE, CITING US BARRIERS
Voice of America
13 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.voanews.com/article.cfm?objectID=37FB8F60-1646-4894-AD114021733CFA6F&title=Brazil%20Cautious%20on%20Americas%20Free%20Trade%20Zone%2C%20Citing%20US%20Barriers&catOID=45C9C785-88AD-11D4-A57200A0CC5EE46C
A top Brazilian official says his country may not join the proposed western
hemisphere free trade zone if the United States does not eliminate trade
barriers to Brazilian products. The official, who spoke Tuesday, said he
expects difficult negotiations ahead.
Trade, Development, and Industry Minister Sergio Amaral gave a cautious
appraisal Tuesday of Brazil's prospects in the proposed Free Trade Area of
the Americas. The U.S.-promoted FTAA was first proposed in 1994, and aims
to establish a hemisphere-wide free trade zone in 2005. Negotiations to
achieve this goal received a boost last week when President Bush signed
legislation giving him expanded authority, commonly known as "fast track",
to negotiate trade deals. But speaking to foreign reporters in Rio, Trade
Minister Amaral said despite Fast Track, Brazil is concerned about U.S.
trade barriers on its products, especially in agriculture and steel. For
this reason, Mr. Amaral said, his government views FTAA trade talks with
caution. "Brazil is cautious, because the main export products to the United
States face some kind of trade restrictions," he said. "Sometimes very high
tariffs, for instance on orange juice; sometimes very small quotas;
sometimes safeguards like on steel; sometimes a very significant subsidy
[or] domestic financial support for producers that in effect take Brazilian
products out of the U.S. market." Brazil also is concerned over provisions
in the new Fast Track law that require the Bush administration to consult
with Congress before agreeing to make concessions on some 500 products.
These include items such as frozen meats, fruits, orange juice and other
products, which Brazil is hoping to export freely into the U.S. market under
the FTAA. Mr. Amaral said he hopes the new Congressional requirements do
not undermine the prospects for an FTAA agreement. "We hope that this new
procedure will not prevent the United States from putting on the table the
real issues that prevent trade in the Americas from expanding as they
might," he said. "Brazil has made substantial efforts to restructure its
private sector, to take more sound macroeconomic policies. We are
competitive in some areas, and we are prepared to negotiate FTAA, provided
the real issues are put on the table." If not, the trade minister warned,
Brazil will have "no interest" in participating in the FTAA. The United
States is Brazil's major trading partner. Last year, Brazilian exports to
the U.S. market grew by seven percent, to just over $14 billion. Mr.
Amaral's warnings were also underscored in a speech Tuesday by Brazilian
President Fernando Henrique Cardoso. Mr. Cardoso called on world leaders to
discuss ending what he called "excessive protectionism," saying that opening
markets is the best way to improve the distribution of wealth in the world.
The Brazilian leader spoke before a government commission preparing for the
World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg later this month.
33. ENVIRONMENT: WILL KLAUS TOEPFER HEAD A NEW WORLD ENVIRONMENT AGENCY?
The Earth Times
13 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.earthtimes.org/aug/environmentwillaug13_02.htm
Klaus Toepfer, the head of the Unitd Nations Environment Programme, is being
widely reported to be the leading candidate to head a new global agency for
the environment, if such an agency is created at the upcoming World Summit
on Sustainable Development. The European Union is vigorously pushing for
such an organization, to be called the World Environment Organization.
Toepfer--a German national who was formerly his country's environment and
urban-affairs minister--is rumored to be actively lobbying for the job. He
has stepped up his travel schedule in recent months. He has also staked out
for himself a major role at the WSSD, which will be held in Johannesburg,
August 26-September 4. Efforts to reach Toepfer for comment about his
travels were unsuccessful. His New York spokesman, James Sniffen, did not
respond to an e-mail query sent Monday evening. The other candidate
mentioned in connection with the new environment agency is Nitin Desai of
India, Secretary General of WSSD. Desai is currently head of the UN's
Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA); he is scheduled to retire
from the UN early next year. Toepfer is known to personally dislike Desai.
According to widely circulated reports, Toepfer and UNEP have been sniping
at Desai's efforts concerning the Johannesburg summit, which is expected to
attract some 85,000 participants. There is no certainty that the summit
will authorize the creation of a new World Environment Organization. There
is already a feeling in many quarters that the Global Environment
Facility--jointly managed by UNEP, the World Bank and the UN Development
Programme--is doing an adequate job. Moreover, Toepfer's stewardship of
UNEP has been perceived as less than successful. His arrogance and attitudes
concerning third-world people have brought him opprobrium. And he is less
than popular in political circles in his native Germany. Their backing would
be important for obtaining any new high-level international post for Toepfer.
Indeed, Germany had considered replacing Toepfer a couple of years ago when
he underwent heart surgery. Earlier this week, a group of influential
conservatives in Washington wrote a letter to President George W. Bush
opposing the creation of a new global environment agency. It is unlikely
that the Bush administration would support such an agency in any case.
34. NEED FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT STRESSED
Gulf News
13 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.gulf-news.com/Articles/news.asp?ArticleID=60428
A report released by the United Nations today highlights the disturbing toll
of current patterns of development on global living standards and the
Earth's natural resources. Published on the eve of the World Summit on
Sustainable Development (WSSD), the report, 'Global Challenge, Global
Opportunity', underscores the need for increased efforts to support
sustainable development to better manage global resources. Today's report
comes as over 100 world leaders prepare to attend the summit, to be held in
Johannesburg from August 26 to September 4, where they are set to finalise a
new global implementation plan to accelerate sustainable development, and to
launch a series of innovative partnerships to promote sustainability.
"Global Challenge, Global Opportunity highlights the choice we face between
two futures," said Nitin Desai, Secretary-General of the WSSD at the UN
Department for Economic and Social Affairs, which published the report. "If
we do nothing to change our current indiscriminate patterns of development,
we will compromise the long-term security of the earth and its people. At
Johannesburg, we have an opportunity to build a more secure future, by
embracing a more sustainable form of development that will improve lives
today, and build a better world for our children and grandchildren." The
report examines a number of issues that UN's Secretary-General Kofi Annan
has identified as central to the negotiations at the summit, including water
and sanitation, energy, agricultural productivity, bio-diversity, and human
health. In a sobering assessment of current trends in these areas, the
report finds that at present, 40 per cent of the world's population faces
water shortages. Global sea levels are rising, a clear indication of the
impact of global warming. Many plants and animal species are at risk of
extinction, including half of the large primates, man's closest animal
relatives. Also 2.4 per cent of the world's forests were destroyed during
the 1990s, and every year more than 3 million people die from the effects of
air pollution. The report finds that global water use has increased
six-folds over the last century, twice the rate of population growth, and
that agriculture represents 70 per cent of this consumption.
"Despite some recent improvements in this area, 1 billion people still lack
access to safe drinking water. By 2025, half of the world's population, 3.5
billion people will face serious water shortages, particularly in North
Africa and West Asia, as groundwater supplies are consumed faster than they
can be replenished." Meanwhile, fossil fuel consumption and carbon emissions
continued to rise in the 1990s, particularly in Asia and in North America.
Demand for food is rising as the world population grows, and the capacity of
food production to keep pace is diminishing, especially in the developing
countries. "This situation creates a long-term threat to food security,
particularly in regions of the world where land has been degraded due to
over-cultivation or desertification," it says. On health issues, the report
notes that a significant proportion of mortality in least developed
countries is caused by the environment-related diseases. It added: "Malaria
is increasing due mainly to the reduced effectiveness of available
medications, but the spread of the disease has also been assisted by
development factors which favour the breeding of mosquitoes, including
irrigation systems and deforestation." Desai said: "Governments,
corporations and civil society must come to Johannesburg with a commitment
to improve people's lives on a sustainable basis. At the summit a number of
major partnership initiatives will be launched. "However, many more such
programmes must be set up and implemented if we are to reverse the
destructive patterns of development highlighted by this report." Desai cited
the innovative WASH (Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for All) Initiative as an
excellent example of the new partnerships. It involves 28 governments, NGOs,
development banks, UN agencies and major businesses in a global effort to
provide water and sanitation to over 1.1 billion people by 2015. On a
positive note, the report identifies the emergence of sustainable
development practices on a small scale that are beginning to be replicated
to address issues such as eco-system preservation, urban air pollution and
child mortality linked to unsafe water. But these gains are imperiled, say
the summit representatives, if greater action is not taken soon to reverse
the more disturbing trends noted in the report
35. COMPANIES RICHER THAN COUNTRIES IN UN LIST
The Scotsman
13 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.thescotsman.co.uk/business.cfm?id=882722002
A MASSIVE 29 of the world's 100 biggest economic entities represent
shareholders rather than voters, according to a United Nations report
released yesterday, with oil giant ExxonMobil gaining a higher ranking than
nuclear power Pakistan.
The report shows that some multinational behemoths have more financial clout
than many large countries, with the energy giant 45th on the list, two
places ahead of General Motors, which in turn is one place ahead of Peru and
three spots ahead of New Zealand. The UN Conference on Trade and
Development ranked countries according to gross domestic product (GDP),
while the corporations are ranked based on "value added" - the sum of
pre-tax profits, salaries, amortisation and depreciation for the year 2000.
The data was released just days ahead of the start of the World Summit in
South Africa, where world leaders are due to discuss the issue of
sustainable development. The US tops the list with a GDP of £6.4 trillion,
more than double that of second-placed Japan. Britain is fourth, behind
Germany, with £927.5 billion. China, which is one of the world's fastest
growing economic superpowers, comes in 6th, with a GDP of £702 billion,
ahead of both Italy and Canada. Scotland, although not included in the list,
would sit between Egypt and Iran in 39th place, with a total GDP of about
£64 billion.
Oil giant Royal Dutch/Shell comes in at 62nd place, with a total of £23.4
billion, only two places behind Kuwait, which is one of the world's largest
oil producing countries, with £24.7 billion. Rival BP is just a few rungs
further down the ladder in 68th place.
Other economic entities running neck and neck include tobacco giant Philip
Morris in 85th place and the Dominican Republic - one of the largest cigar
producing nations - in 83rd. Argentina, despite its recent economic woes,
comes in at 17th, with a GDP of £185.3 billion. UNCTAD said the top 100
multinational corporations accounted for 4.3 per cent of the world's gross
domestic product in 2000, up from 3.5 per cent in 1990. Other corporations
on the list include car makers Ford, Toyota and Volkswagen, tobacco company
Philip Morris, pharmaceutical manufacturer GlaxoSmithKline and US retailer
Wal-Mart. British telecommunications firm BT props up the index at 100th
with a value of £11.1 billion, just one place behind GSK.
36. NGOS GLOOMY ABOUT PROSPECTS OF GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT TALKS
Daily Star
13 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.dailystar.com.lb/13_08_02/art6.asp
Local nongovernmental organizations are predicting the failure of the
Johannesburg World Summit, in which the planet's heads of state attempt to
forge a safer future for us all. The summit, from Aug. 26 to Sept. 4, is
also called Rio Plus 10, as it is supposed to materialize and set the
framework for the vision reached by world leaders 10 years ago in Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil. That vision was summarized in the vague, but now commonly
used terminology of "sustainable development," which simply means that
economic growth should take the environment into account if life is to
continue on this planet. Ten years ago, world leaders came to the
realization that if economic development continued at the same rate, with
consumption and production maintaining the same pace and pattern, future
generations would be robbed of natural resources. In an attempt to spare
some forests as well as clean air and water for our grandchildren, the 117
heads of state concluded the Rio meeting with the signing of two conventions
on climate change and biodiversity as well as the Agenda 21 program, an
implementation tool for sustainable development. As part of the Agenda 21
program, the largest and most important forum of world leaders, gathering
some 65,000 people in Johannesburg, should also specify how the capacities
of local authorities will be built and poverty eradicated. The Johannesburg
summit is also expected to specify how the principles of democracy,
transparency and public participation will lead to sustainable development,
a concept for which the assembly at Rio created the name of governance.
After the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio, several preparatory meetings took place
to devise the sustainable development guidelines and timetables that should
ultimately reduce emissions responsible for climate change and protect
remaining forests and the biological diversity of the planet. But local NGOs
that attended the last preparatory meeting in Bali last June, where
ministers of 173 countries met to draft the text of their final agreements,
strongly doubt that these goals will be achieved. Like other NGO
representatives, Greenpeace Lebanon campaigner Zeina Hajj came back from
Bali with very low expectations, as the meeting, which was supposed to
produce the document to be ratified in Johannesburg, was plagued with
disagreements. "Bali witnessed a fierce power struggle between three groups
the United States and company, the European Union and the G77 countries,"
Hajj told The Daily Star, adding that the United States chaired a group with
Australia and Canada, which was often named by the NGOs as "the axis of
environmental evil" and the "filthy three." "Each group was fighting to get
benefits out of the summit that serve its national interests. Sustainable
development is a global goal (but) we cannot achieve it if countries are
going to pursue their national interests," Hajj said. The Greenpeace
representative also said that there were times when the European Union sided
with the United States against the G77 a sort of "poor man's G8" and other
times when it sided with developing countries, depending on the issues in
question. "For example, the EU and the United States disagreed with the G77
countries over corporate liability," Hajj said. The developing countries
wanted big corporations, which often ... caused environmental disasters, to
be obliged to show more responsibility, said Hajj. But industrialized
countries, from which big corporations emanate, wanted to exclude such a
clause from Johannesburg's final declaration, thus failing to define any
concrete steps to deal with this issue in the final draft. It was just
stated in a theoretical way, that "there should be corporate liability."
Disagreement, as Hajj said, resulted in the final production of a "weak
text" and yet another list of "theories and empty promises," rather than the
"implementation guidebook of sustainable development" that the Johannesburg
declaration was supposed to be.
The idea of such a weak declaration disturbed Hajj, who said that Greenpeace
preferred the "collapse of Johannesburg" over the production of another
United Nations sponsored list of theories and unattainable visions. Other
fields of disagreement were in the energy sector and the reduction of
emissions, a core issue of sustainable development which the United States
sabotaged by withdrawing from the follow-up of the Kyoto Protocol to limit
global warming. "The EU was trying to include clauses on introducing
renewable energy sources like solar and wind energy, but the axis of evil
countries aggressively opposed any mentioning of such terms," Hajj said.
"You know until now, it is unknown if President (George W.) Bush will attend
the conference. He bluntly stated, and I quote: 'You need to convince me to
go there, I will only go to benefit the American people and not necessarily
the world,'" Hajj added. For the head of the Arab NGO Network for
Development, Ziad Abdul Samad, the main disagreement, which will lead to the
failure of the summit, is between the G77 and the G8 countries over
international financial aid.
Abdul Samad said that while G77 countries argued that financial assistance
from rich to poor countries will help development and the eradication of
poverty, G8 powers were pushing the idea that the key to growth was more
free trade and neoliberal policies.
"The G8 are pushing forward the new slogan of 'no aid, more trade,' whereas
G77 countries argue that trade will put more pressure on natural resources
and will increase the unwise exploitation of energy," Abdul Samad said. G77
countries had a legitimate demand, according to Abdul Samad, as
industrialized countries were not fulfilling the promises they made in Rio
to give seven-tenths of 1 percent of their gross domestic product in
international aid. Despite the fact that the GDP of rich countries has grown
over the past 10 years, development aid to poor countries has actually
plummeted from 0.35 percent of national income in 1990 to 0.22 percent in
2000. Abdul Samad added that governance was another conflicting issue
between industrialized and developing countries as rich states argued that
good governance, which covers principles of democracy and transparency,
should be a condition underlying financial assistance. "But G77 countries
say that good governance signifies improvement of international democracy
and transparency and does not pertain to individual countries," Abdul Samad
said. "In any case we, as NGOs, will lobby against any injustice or clauses
that don't advance sustainable development."
37. WORLD SUMMIT TAKES SHAPE IN JOHANNESBURG
Environment News Service
13 August 2002
Internet:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/oneworld/20020813/wl_oneworld/1032_1029245017
JOHANNESBURG, August 12, 2002 (ENS) - With just two weeks before the start
of the World Summit on Sustainable Development, United Nations
Secretary-General Kofi Annan has sent world leaders a letter strongly
encouraging their active participation at the summit in Johannesburg. "Your
presence would send a strong message of global solidarity and signal
commitment at the highest level to a sustainable future for all," the
Secretary-General wrote. To date, 106 heads of state and heads of
government have indicated that they will attend the high level segment of
the conference September 2-4, but U.S. President George W. Bush is not among
them. In his letter, Annan told the leaders that the summit will be an
opportunity to reinvigorate a global commitment to sustainable development
and to maintain the positive momentum generated at the World Trade
Organization meeting in Doha, Qatar, and the UN's International Conference
on Financing for Development in Monterrey, Mexico. South Africa has so far
raised 80 percent of the money needed to host the summit the Johannesburg
World Summit Company (Jowsco) has announced. The official summit opens at
the Sandton Convention Centre August 26 and concludes on September 4. The
total budget is estimated at R550 million ($US55 million), of which the
South African government is expected to contribute R200 million (US$20
million). Jowsco CEO Moss Mashishi told reporters at the National Press
Club in Pretoria last week that contributions from governments and private
corporations were "looking quite good" in terms of initial predictions, but
he did not give exact figures. Mashishi said, "We just had advance team
briefings which were attended by 109 countries - a pretty high number."
About 6,000 delegates are expected to attend the official UN meeting. An
estimated 5,000 media representatives will cover the event, according to the
South African Press Association. About 10,000 representatives of nine key
interest groups will also get accreditation to enter the official conference
at Sandton.
Another 15,000 people are expected to attend a civil society conference at
the Nasrec Expo Center south of Johannesburg, while 800 business people will
gather for a forum at Sandton's Hilton hotel. At least 500 events parallel
to the summit are planned in an around Johannesburg, from arts exhibits and
cultural performances to a Water Dome based close to the official conference
center. Sponsored by the Africa Water Task Force and endorsed by African
Water Ministers, the Water Dome will be active from August 29 through
September 2. It aims to create water awareness by allowing all stakeholders
to showcase their water related activities, policies, initiatives, new
technologies, and products.
If participants at the World Summit on Sustainable Development ever feel
they have lost touch with the world outside the meeting, a Virtual Exhibit
webcast during the summit will restore the connection, bringing real world
problems and solutions to the Sandton Convention Center. The exhibit will
allow live links to sustainable development projects all across the globe,
and will allow people at the summit - presidents, prime ministers, leaders
of nongovernmental organization and businesses - to talk to people in the
field. Anyone with access to the Internet, anywhere, can watch. Johannesburg
Summit Secretary-General Nitin Desai has called Johannesburg "the first
truly interactive world summit." "We hope to bring the world to
Johannesburg. We want to make the thousands of summit delegates aware that
there are people in the field doing innovative things in the pursuit of
sustainable development and give those people a chance to participate in the
summit process." Local governments from all over the world will make their
views known at a four day session August 27 to 30. More than 500 mayors and
representatives of local authority associations will meet in the summit
district of Sandton during the first week of the event to challenge summit
delegates and agreements. About half of the world's population, an
estimated 2.7 billion people, live in urban areas. Increasing fossil fueled
transport, declining water and air quality as well as poverty and
unemployment are issues challenging local governments throughout the world
today. A strategic plan known as "Local Action 21" is planned to be
launched at the end of the local government session in Johannesburg. It will
be presented by the local government representatives in concert with the
United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). "Local authorities are already
moving from agenda to action - despite the difficulties," reports Konrad
Otto-Zimmermann, secretary general of the International Council for Local
Environmental Initiatives (ICLEI), the association leading the local
government preparations for Johannesburg. The main obstacles - the lack of
access to financial resources, the inflexibility of tax structures, weak
decision making power, and lack of capacity - have continued to keep local
governments from exploiting their high potential to address key sustainable
development issues. Still, in Johannesburg local governments will be
highlighting their accomplishments since the last UN environment and
development summit, in Rio de Janeiro in 1992. Since then more than 6,000
municipalities worldwide have addressed issues of sustainable development
within Local Agenda 21 processes agreed at the Rio summit. "Achievements on
the local level could be even more impressive, if cities did not face so
many obstacles in taking local action," says Otto-Zimmermann. UNDP
Administrator Mark Malloch Brown expressed his conviction that local
governments will play a key role in Johannesburg. "Only if we succeed in
convincing national governments and organizations that the crucial and
heaviest workload for sustainable development is to be done at the local
level, do we have a chance at leading the summit to a successful end."
38. DIVISIONS REMAIN AHEAD OF EARTH SUMMIT, SOUTH AFRICA SAYS
Associated Press Writer
13 August 2002
Internet:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20020813/ap_wo_en_po/south_africa_earth_summit_1
CAPE TOWN, South Africa - Less than two weeks ahead of a world summit on the
environment, rich and poor nations remained deeply divided over how to
develop the planet on a sustainable basis, South Africa's environment
minister said Tuesday.
The World Summit on Sustainable Development, due to take place from Aug. 26
to Sept. 4 in Johannesburg, is a follow up to the 1992 Earth Summit held in
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It will aim at stemming the depletion of the
planet's resources and extending basic services to billions of poor people.
Four preparatory meetings have failed to produce consensus on a draft
declaration to be adopted at the U.N. summit. South African Environment
Minister Valli Moosa told reporters while there "had been some movement,"
there was still disagreement about the degree of responsibility developed
and developing nations should take for conserving the environment, and who
should pay for it. While countries had agreed to goals such as halving the
number of people who lacked clean water by 2015, there was no unanimity on
proposals to set similar targets to widen access to proper sanitation and
commit countries to using renewable energy sources, he said. Countries also
disagreed whether the summit should address the issues of market access and
distorting subsidies, and whether sustainable development should be linked
to good governance.
Government negotiators hoped to reach an acceptable compromise during
informal negotiations scheduled for Aug. 24-25.
Moosa was optimistic of a favorable outcome, saying he was unaware of a
single country that planned to boycott the summit. "I think countries can
find each other," he said. "What we want the summit to achieve is to emerge
with an implementation plan and program" to conserve the environment. In
the buildup to the summit, U.N. agencies and other organizations have
released a series of new reports warning that the earth's resources are
being eroded at an unprecedented rate, and detailing how billions of people
lack clean water, sanitation and other basic services.
39. BLEAK OUTLOOK FOR SUMMIT TO CURE SICK PLANET
SABC News
13 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.sabcnews.com/world/summit/0,1009,40643,00.html
The biggest attempt to tackle the Earth's worsening environment problems and
help the planet's poorest gets underway in less than two weeks, but already
the prospect of failure hangs over the Johannesburg summit. Wrangling over
textual nuances, squabbling over financial commitments and a doctrinal row
between Europe and Washington could hollow out the summit, transforming the
second Earth Summit into a ludicrous exercise in hot air."Johannesburg
should be the opportunity for a decisive change of direction," says Crispin
Tickell, director of the Green College Centre for Environmental Policy and
Understanding at Oxford University. "(But) so far the progress has been
unsatisfactory, and the prospects... do not look good." Between 40 000 and
60 000 people are scheduled to attend the August 26-September 4 meeting,
whose last three days will climax with a summit of heads of state or
government. The gathering is a 10-year follow-up to the fabled Earth Summit
on sustainable development at Rio de Janeiro.Trumpeted as mankind's new
dawn, the Rio Summit gave birth to an array of agreements on staving off
climate change, preserving bio-diversity and curbing pollutant chemicals
that linger in the environment for decades. A decade down the track, none of
these accords has been implemented. And the most important of them - the
Kyoto Protocol on global warming - has been almost gutted by the
astonishingly complex rulebook that took almost four years to negotiate. It
has also been snubbed by the United States, the worst carbon polluter of
all. Agenda 21, the "action programme" of 2500 proposals on sustainable
development set down in Rio, has been a bible that has gathered dust on
bureaucrats' shelves. In the meantime, a mountain of evidence, from UN
agencies, scientists and credible environment groups, highlights the effects
of man's parasitic use of the Earth. Johannesburg will seek to put Agenda 21
back on track and also push ahead with another lofty goal, set down at the
UN's Millennium Summit, to halve the number of poor and hungry by 2015 and
boost access to clean water and power. How to achieve this is of course the
big problem, for the New Age generosity that prevailed in Rio has melted
like an alpine glacier faced with atmospheric warming. "At discussions on
global finance and the economy, the environment is still treated as an
unwelcome guest," UN Secretary General Kofi Annan said last month. US
President George W. Bush's administration is opposing all attempts for
anything other than voluntary, rather than binding, summit text on matters
such as aid and incentives for alternative energy. In Rio, rich countries
pledged to contribute 0,7% of their gross national product (GNP) in
development aid. Today, the European Union's share remains under half of
that - 0,33% of GNP - while that of the United States is a mere 0,11%. The
wealthy nations club, the OECD, spends six times more on farming subsidies
than it does on development assistance. Non-government groups are holding
their own "Global Forum", from August 19 to September 4, where criticism of
the wealthy West will be fierce. "The decisions (at Johannesburg) must yield
clean air, clean water, renewable energy and a healthier environment, not
rhetoric," says Marcelo Furtado of Greenpeace International. - Sapa-AFP
40. WORLD SUMMIT MAY FACE ELECTRONIC ATTACKS
Business Day
13 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.bday.co.za/bday/content/direct/1,3523,1150804-6078-0,00.html
PROTESTERS seeking to disrupt the World Summit on Sustainable Development
may decide to make their mark electronically. SA has not yet experienced
the severity of cyber attacks suffered by some foreign firms. But the summit
will put local companies in the firing line from protesters using hackers to
cause chaos, warns Martin May, the regional director of Enterasys. "This is
SA's chance to show we are capable of hosting a worldclass event, but we
have to be aware of the possible threats and make sure we have the necessary
protection in place. Invaluable data will be flooding into our country's
networks and we have to protect it," May said. Prime targets for hack
attacks are likely to be the official summit websites, agrees Mohammed
Haffejee, IT executive of the Johannesburg World Summit Company (Jowsco).
"We are expecting people to try to hack us to make a name for themselves.
Some could be malicious and some will be thrillseekers, but we are preparing
for both," Haffejee said. May believes attackers will also try to disrupt
local power and telecommunications services, as well as corporate networks.
But even an attention-grabbing move to deface a website could cause major
headaches for delegates. Jowsco is working with national intelligence
agents to install security measures. However, the technologies will not be
disclosed to avoid alerting hackers to the barriers they will encounter,
which include firewalls to prevent unauthorised access, and intrusion
detection software to sound the alarm if security is violated. One likely
form of electronic sabotage is a denial of service attack, where thousands
of computers can be hijacked and harnessed to bombard a network with
queries. The combined effect can be sufficient to cause a collapse. Such
attacks have brought down Yahoo and eBay.
41. DESAI URGES YOUTH TO COME TO JOHANNESBURG AND MAKE A DIFFERENCE
United Nations
12 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.johannesburgsummit.org/html/whats_new/otherstories_youth.html
New York, 12 August-Youth representatives will have a chance to make a major
contribution at the World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg
later this month, according to Summit Secretary-General Nitin Desai, and
will have a seat at the meetings that shape action as well as the
roundtables with Heads of State and Government. With the focus of this
year's International Youth Day on sustainable development, Desai told an
audience in New York that youth are far more willing to show a personal
commitment to sustainable development than others since "they will live in
the future. They have to worry." "One of the reasons," Desai said, "why we
are not getting what we want is due to very short-term political thinking
over long-term considerations. This is one area where youth groups can come
in with strong convictions, not theoretical, to demand that action must be
taken. Youth can make a very powerful contribution here." Noting that youth
groups had already been involved in the preparations for Johannesburg, and
have held extensive preparations of their own, Desai called on the youth
representatives to "come to Johannesburg and make a difference." Desai said
that youth could play an especially big role on the cutting edge of
sustainable development, which is at the local level, where largely abstract
policy formulations are boiled down to the point where people are forced to
take certain decisions. Youth are well placed to make a difference in
Johannesburg, as Ghazal Badiozamani, from the Summit Secretariat, said 40
countries will have youth representatives on their delegations. United
Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan, in his message for the commemoration,
said the engagement of young people "is crucial" to the preparation and the
follow-up to the Summit. "While it is the responsibility of governments to
ensure these commitments are translated into action, they cannot do it
alone. They need to be spurred on by the voices of people everywhere. That
is where young people come in. Just as youth have been active in the
preparations for the Johannesburg Summit, so must they remain active in the
follow-up, and keep making their voices heard as the main stakeholders in
our planet's future." This is the third year that International Youth Day
will be observed, and the theme for the Day is "Now and for the Future:
Youth Action for Sustainable Development." Youth--defined by the United
Nations as the age group between 15 and 24 years old -- make up one sixth of
the world's population. The majority of these young men and women live in
developing countries, and their numbers are expected to rise steeply into
the twenty-first century. Since the 1992 Earth Summit, youth have been
recognized as a major group in all sustainable development conferences. The
Rio Conference found that "The creativity, ideals and courage of the youth
of the world should be mobilized to forge a global partnership in order to
achieve sustainable development and ensure a better future for all."
42. EARTH SUMMIT GUEST LIST GROWS
BBC
12 August 2002
Internet:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_politics/2188098.stm
Delegations from the Welsh, Scottish and Northern Ireland administrations
are to attend the Earth Summit later this month - although they have no
seats at the conference table. The members - including Wales' First
Minister Rhodri Morgan and Scotland's Jack McConnell - will be included in
the official UK party. More than 60,000 delegates from 174 nations are
expected at the summit in South Africa. 'Lavish junket' UK Environment
Minister Michael Meacher was initially not included in the official UK
party, but was included after protests. Downing Street was said to be
concerned the trip would be seen by the press as a lavish junket at the
taxpayers expense. A Downing Street spokeswoman told BBC News Online there
would be "no more than 70" delegates from the UK in Johannesburg "at any one
time" during the two week summit. But she refused to say how many UK
delegates would be attending in total. 'Valuable lessons' Rhodri Morgan,
who is taking three officials with him to Johannesburg, has defended his
decision to attend. He said Wales had "valuable lessons" to share with
other countries about "sustainable development".
We have to learn to live differently, and we have a key role to play in
sharing the lessons we have already learned with other nations . "We also
know all about the alternative - unsustainable development if you like," he
added. "Our communities and landscape still bears the scars of that kind of
development, which didn't consider the long term future. "We have to learn
to live differently, and we have a key role to play in sharing the lessons
we have already learned with other nations." Mr Morgan is sponsoring an
event at the summit aimed at creating a global network of regional
governments to promote sustainable development. He is also due to give a
speech on corporate trust and responsibility and meet representatives of
other regional governments.
'Small delegation'
Scotland's first minister, Jack McConnell, is to head a 10 strong delegation
from Scotland, including environomental campaigners and business leaders. A
spokesman said Mr McConnell would be taking three officials with him,
including a special adviser and private secretary and would be "paying for"
two other members of the delegation. Mr McConnell said: "The Scottish civic
delegation will make sure that the views of Scottish people are heard and
that Scotland's participation brings real benefits on the ground in
Scotland."
Mr McConnell plans to visit to a township school to promote an eco-schools
programme.
He will also make a speech on environmental justice and promote overseas
investment in Scottish higher education. A spokesman for Northern
Ireland's First Minister, David Trimble, said the Stormont administration
would be present at the earth summit but no decisions have been taken about
who specifically will go. He stressed that the delegation would be
"small". Meanwhile, in an apparent swipe at Mr Meacher, International
Development Secretary Clare Short insisted the Earth Summit was primarily
about tackling Third World poverty and not environmental issues. 'Lone
voice' The row comes as Mr Meacher launched an attack on the government's
record on sustainable development.
Mr Prescott will lead the delegation
He claims Labour has failed to put the issue at the heart of its policies.
In an interview in the Sunday Times Mr Meacher claimed that he was a "lone
voice in the wilderness" of the cabinet when it came to the environment. He
said: "I make no bones about it. I don't think the government as a whole is
yet ready to take the magnitude of decisions I think are necessary." He
indicated the sort of direction that he wanted to take policy by pointing to
a little publicised European initiative to ban big engine cars from city
centres. Mr Meacher also expressed deep reservations about a new airport
planned for wildlife haven Cliffe in north Kent.
'Catastrophic' Friends of the Earth director Charles Secrett praised Mr
Meacher's stance. But Clare Short told BBC Radio 4's the World This
Weekend: "This isn't an environmental summit. It's a summit about
sustainable development. "The biggest challenge to the world is to
guarantee to the poor of the world development in a planet that we keep
sustainable."
43. U.N. ENVIRONMENTAL CHIEF CALLS FOR ACTION TO PREVENT GLOBAL WATER CRISIS
Associated Press
12 August 2002
Internet:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20020812/ap_wo_en_ge/sweden_water_conference_2
STOCKHOLM, Sweden - A top United Nations official on Monday called for world
leaders to move "from declarations to action and implementation" in helping
developing countries manage scarce water resources. U.N. Environment
Program head Klaus Toepfer said 1.1 billion people still lack access to safe
drinking water and 2.4 billion lack access to adequate sanitation.
Meanwhile, he said, water use is expected to increase by 40 percent and 17
percent more water will be needed for food production to meet the needs of
the world's growing population by 2020. "Without adequate clean water,
there can be no escape from poverty," Toepfer said in opening remarks at an
annual symposium on water issues in the Swedish capital, Stockholm. Water
is one of five central issues on the agenda of the World Summit on
Sustainable Development, which opens Aug. 26 in Johannesburg, South Africa,
according to a news release. Toepfer said water pollution, poor sanitation
and water shortages will kill millions of people this year and leave
millions more "in bad health and trapped in poverty." Leaders at the
Johannesburg summit, which has been billed as the largest U.N. convention
ever, should "take decisions that move us from declarations to action and
implementation," he said, calling for increased funding to help developing
countries manage water in an environmentally sustainable manner. About 900
business leaders, academics and activists from 100 countries were discussing
issues like water pollution and resource management at the four-day
Stockholm Water Symposium, which is part of the annual World Water Week.
This year, a final conference declaration was expected Thursday with
recommendations for the Johannesburg summit. South African Waters Affairs
Minister Ronnie Kasrils warned against taking water for granted, pointing to
the link between poor sanitation and diseases like cholera and diarrhea.
"Water generally hasn't been singled out (as an issue) because water is
everywhere," Kasrils said at a news conference.
44. INDIA TO ATTEND SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
AsiaPulse
12 August 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FG20020812580000073.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
NEW DELHI, Aug 13, 2002 (AsiaPulse via COMTEX) -- India is looking forward
to the forthcoming World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg
for the global community to come out with an action plan to ease the growing
pressure on scarce natural resources. India's Environment Minister T R
Baalu will lead the Indian delegation for the summit which has on its agenda
issues ranging from poverty eradication to unsustainable pattern of
consumption and production. The summit to be held later this month will be
attended by nearly 160 countries. The federal Environment Ministry has
prepared a document "Agenda 21 -- An assessment" outlining India's
performance on sustainable development approaches as agreed at the 1992 Rio
Earth summit.
The document to be soon released by Baalu highlights the challenges
regarding improving the quality of life while at the same time ensuring
sustainable management of natural resources. It paints a grim picture on
how at the present level of production and consumption the oil reserves of
the country would last only for another 18 years and the natural gas
reserves for 25 years.
On the water front, the current estimated surplus of about 500 billion cubic
metres of water may be a short lived affairs since the water demand of about
1,180 billion cubic metres could overtake the availability by 2050.
45. WORLD LEADERS AIM HIGH AT EARTH SUMMIT
Xinhua News Agency
12 August 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FF20020812140000134.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
NAIROBI, Aug 12, 2002 (Xinhua via COMTEX) -- With only two weeks to the
second Earth Summit in South Africa's Johannesburg, leaders from both
developing and developed countries have voiced high expectation for the
event, hoping that the summit will map a way forward for a planet battered
by poverty, diseases and depletion of natural resources. "The Johannesburg
summit offers a great opportunity to give new energy to international
cooperation and to strengthen global solidarity, " says Swedish Prime
Minister Goran Persson in an article contained in a special edition of Our
Planet magazine published Monday by the UN Environment Program (UNEP). "It
is an opportunity to make real progress in achieving the goals set out in
Rio ten years ago. It is an opportunity that we are not allowed to miss," he
notes. The UN summit, also known as World Summit on Sustainable
Development, is a follow-up to the first Earth Summit in Brazil's Rio de
Janeiro in 1992. It is scheduled to open on Aug. 26 and end on Sep. 4.
During the meeting, some 60,000 delegates including over 100 heads of state
and governments will examine the progress the world has made in sustainable
development over the past ten years and are expected to endorse action plans
on water, energy, health, agriculture and biodiversity. "The world has
changed since the Rio Earth Summit in 1992, but unfortunately, in many
respects, not for the better," Brazilian President Fernado Henrique argues
in the magazine. He cites global environmental degradation, unchanged
pattern of production and consumption in the developed world and the
reluctance of developed countries to transfer clean technologies to
developing countries among others. The president also pointed to the fact
that the Kyoto Protocol which aims at curbing greenhouse gas emissions to
check the trend of global warming has not been ratified by chief polluters
of the world. "Africa, a continent dear to us all, symbolizes how much
people can suffer because the world has failed to find an alternative way of
achieving development," he says, stressing that the Johannesburg Summit must
launch innovative initiatives for sustainable development. "We need to
promote the sustainable use of water, to find new sources of renewable
energy, and to clarify the link between poverty and the depletion of natural
resources," the president notes.
In his article, Thabo Mbeki, president of South Africa, flags up the need to
address the world's existing patterns of production and consumption. "If
the Chinese citizen is to consume the same quantity of crude oil as his or
her United States 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," says the summit' s host. A global consensus has been established
that sustainable development rests on three interdependent pillars: the
protection of the earth, social development and economic prosperity. The
period since the Rio Earth Summit has been one of unprecedented global
economic growth. Growth in the world economy in the year 2000 alone exceeded
that during the entire 19th century. "Yet people continue to die of hunger;
babies are 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, " he notes. He pointed to the fact that the gulf between rich and
poor members of the human race continues to widen. Meanwhile, there are
fewer fish in the seas, more carbon dioxide being pumped into the
atmosphere, more desertification, more soil erosion and more species
extinction, he says. "The Johannesburg World Summit must take further our
pledge at the Millennium Summit to eradicate poverty. It must also speak to
he who consumes more than the earth can give," Mbeki notes.
Colin Powell, the US secretary of state, writes in the magazine that
delivering environmentally-friendly development is vital for delivering a
more stable world. He claims that sustainable development is a "compelling
moral and humanitarian issue", adding that it is also a "security
imperative." "Poverty, environmental degradation and despair are destroyers
of people, of societies, of nations. This unholy trinity can destabilize
countries, even entire regions," he says. Powell, who is expected to head
the US delegation to Johannesburg, says that the summit "is a time of
great opportunities to expand peace, prosperity and freedom."
But even before the meeting starts, environmentalists have accused a group
of nations led by the US of blocking plans to set
any targets and effectively emasculating a draft text on proposed actions.
Many fear that any failure of setting targets in the final Plan of
Implementation to be endorsed by world leaders at the summit will make the
plan nothing but empty rhetoric.
Klaus Toepfer, executive director of UNEP, noted that failure in
Johannesburg cannot be contemplated as the risks are too great.
"What has to be achieved at the summit is a concrete plan and targets of
implementation," He said in an exclusive interview with Xinhua, noting that
there must be absolutely clear commitments from governments. " Unless a new
course is chartered for planet Earth, we risk a new 'Iron Curtain', dividing
not East and West, but the haves and the have-nots, with all the
ramifications of increased tensions, jealousies and hatreds between and
within countries," he said. He revealed that more than 70 percent of the
Plan of Implementation has been agreed by countries of the world, and what
has not been agreed mainly link with means of implementation such as setting
timetables. "It is extremely necessary to have concrete targets and
timetables for implementation and link them with means of implementation,"
he noted. Toepfer called on developed countries to back and cooperate
with developing countries to fight against poverty to give them the means
of implementation. This should include increasing official development aid,
market opening, decreasing trade subsidies, debt reduction, speeding up
clean technology transfer and helping developing countries in their capacity
building, he noted. "What we are doing in Johannesburg is to develop this
world toward peace, cooperation and solidarity," the UNEP boss said.
46. WWF LAUNCHES SOS PLANET CAMPAIGN FOR EARTH SUMMIT
Xinhua News Agency
12 August 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FF20020812040000044.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
NAIROBI, Aug 12, 2002 (Xinhua via COMTEX) -- The World Wild Fund for Nature
( WWF) Monday launched a global multi-media campaign to urge political
leaders to take action at the upcoming second Earth Summit in Johannesburg,
South Africa.
The campaign, tagged "SOS Planet," consists of a website ( www.wwf.org/sosplanet)
which allows visitors to send their personal SOS message to world leaders,
television and print advertising. The campaign aims at alerting global
audiences to the urgent need for action, said the conservation organization
in a statement. On Aug. 23, a concert, dubbed SOS PLANET: Concert for
People and the Environment, will be held in the Johannesburg Stadium, which
forms part of the opening ceremonies of the Earth Summit, also known as the
World Summit on Sustainable Development. Artists performing include Mandoza
of South Africa, Salif Keita of Mali, Femi Kuti of Nigeria, the Pretenders
of Britain, Siamoon of Germany, DJ Jean of the Netherlands and Mumiy Troll
of Russia. Through this concert, the WWF expects to reach the youth with
messages of hope and a call to action, said the statement. "With
governments being slow and reluctant to commit to any concrete action to
secure sustainable development, alleviate poverty and agree measures to save
the environment, the WWF gives people from around the world the opportunity
to urge world leaders to take action now," said Claude Martin, director
general of the WWF. The summit presents an excellent opportunity to tackle
some of the most urgent challenges for the survival of the planet, he said.
"World leaders need to know that people want to see them commit to a
concrete agenda to ensure poverty is reduced and nature will be saved," he
said. The WWF is asking that governments commit to enabling access to
clean, affordable and reliable energy services, and to ensuring that 10
percent of primary energy supply comes from new, renewable sources by 2010,
said the statement. The organization also asks that governments commit to
securing water for people and nature by conserving the world's sources of
water, increasing peoples' access to water and sanitation, and improving the
efficient use of freshwater. "SOS Planet is a wake-up call to world leaders
letting them know that people around the world want them to act now," said
Martin.
47. WSSD SUCCESS DEPENDS ON GOVERNMENT, CIVIL SOCIETY
BuaNews
12 August 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FE20020812750000069.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
Pretoria, Aug 12, 2002 (BuaNews/All Africa Global Media via COMTEX) -- The
success of the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) will depend on
the commitments of governments, civil society and business, says transport
minister Dullah Omar. Speaking at the Fifth Annual Africa Rail Conference
in Midrand today, Mr Omar said concrete outcomes from the summit were
imperative for the world's economic development. The minister was
addressing delegates at the conference held to explore ways of developing
railways in Africa. 'Africa is currently faced with the challenge of
eradicating poverty and halving the number of impoverished people by 2015,
governments alone cannot achieve that, the partnership of civil society and
business is needed,' said minister Omar. He said governments; business and
civil society had no choice but to make this partnership a reality.
He added the gathering in Johannesburg from 24 August to 4 September should
restore hope and certainty among people of the world. Ten years from now
governments should be able to look back at the summit with pride and say it
was a landmark in their efforts to create a sustainable future for all. The
summit is expected to draw more than 65 000 delegates from around the world.
48. UN CALLS FOR GREATER ROLE OF YOUTH IN SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT POLICIES
Xinhua News Agency
12 August 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FE20020812710000167.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
UNITED NATIONS, Aug 12, 2002 (Xinhua via COMTEX) -- Marking the
International Youth Day, United Nations officials called on young people
Monday to be fully engaged in sustainable development policies in order to
foster a world free of poverty, disease and war for future generations. In
his message on the International Day, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan said
the involvement of young people is "crucial" to the success of the World
Summit for Sustainable Development, which is to open in Johannesburg, South
Africa, later this month. Annan noted that although governments were
responsible for ensuring that international commitments on the issue were
translated into action, they must rely on young generations to participate
in this effort.
"I call on all of us to make the best possible use of young people's
imagination, energy and indomitable spirit, in the cause of sustaining the
future for succeeding generations," he said. Echoing this view, the UN high
commissioner for human rights, Mary Robinson, said that the cause of
sustainable development, a key concern among young generations, could be
reinvigorated by their attendance at the Johannesburg summit. Robinson
added that youth should continue to campaign for peace and the respect of
human rights while demanding action on poverty, education, food, adequate
housing and a safe environment. "I would like to encourage young people to
continue their inspirational efforts," she said. "To campaign now for human
rights and equality for all is to lay the groundwork for sustainable
development for all, development that will not compromise the needs, dreams
and possibilities of future generations." The International Youth Day has
been commemorated worldwide on Aug. 12 every year under a resolution adopted
in 1999 by the UN General Assembly.
49. NATION'S NGOS NOW IN COALITION FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
Daily Trust (Nigeria)
12 August 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FC20020812700000110.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
Aug 08, 2002 (Daily Trust/All Africa Global Media via COMTEX) -- All
non-governmental organisations (NGOs) with special concern and interest on
the environment and sustainable development in the country have entered a
coalition, forming the Nigerian NGOs for Sustainable Development (NNSD),
with a view to monitoring and implementing the ideals of a global
development agenda.
This formation became necessary following the need to bring to practical
reality, Agenda 21, a national and global policy for sustainable development
which was formulated by the Rio '92 UN conference on Environmental and
Development, but which failed to integrate environment issues into
development process. The NNSD which has N94, 500.00 as contribution by
member organisations for the immediate take off, has been given the mandate
by the Federal Ministry of Environment to monitor and implement the ideals
of the forthcoming World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) billed to
take place in Johannesburg (South Africa) from August 26 to September 4,
2002. In a statement made available to Daily Trust and signed by the
secretary general and chairman of the steering committee of NNSD, Uche
Agbamisi and Priscilla Achakpa respectively, the mandate became necessary
"due to the fact that there can be no sustainable development without full
involvement of all stakeholders," adding that NNBD will monitor and
implement the WSSD Agenda 21 during and after the Johannesburg summit.
Other highlights of the NNSD formation according to the statement includes
lobbying for debt relief, reparation of state fund, NEPAD, poverty, youths
and gender issues, HIV/AIDS and the dissemination of information and
empowerment of the generality of the population.
50. CHINESE PREMIER TO VISIT FOUR AFRICAN NATIONS, ATTEND UN SUMMIT
Xinhua News Agency
12 August 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FB20020812240000026.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
BEIJING, Aug 12, 2002 (Xinhua via COMTEX) -- Chinese Premier Zhu Rongji will
visit Algeria, Morocco, Cameroon, South Africa, and attend the UN World
Summit on Sustainable Development from Aug. 25 to Sept. 6. Chinese Foreign
Ministry spokesman Kong Quan made the announcement here Monday. According
to Kong, Zhu is to pay an official visit to Algeria, Morocco, Cameroon and a
working visit to South Africa, at the respective invitations of Prime
Minister Ali Benflis of the Democratic People's Republic of Algeria, Prime
Minister Abderrahmane Youssoufi of the Kingdom of Morocco, President Paul
Biya of the Republic of Cameroon and the government of the Republic of South
Africa. He will also head the Chinese government delegation to attend the
UN summit to be held in Johannesburg from Sept. 2 to 4, in which he will
make remarks in the general debate and roundtable conference, Kong said.
Zhu will exchange views with leaders of relevant countries on international
and regional issues of common interest to enhance friendship, expand common
consensus, strengthen mutual trust and promote cooperation, he said
51. BUSH SET TO SKIP EARTH SUMMIT
Reuters
12 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.reuters.com/news_article.jhtml;jsessionid=ZBEIQFBOOCGBCCRBAELCFEY?type=politicsnews&StoryID=1320232
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - When the United States' delegation heads to the
Johannesburg Earth Summit this month President Bush will probably still be
on holiday at his Texas ranch. The U.S. delegation faces international
anger over Bush's rejection of the Kyoto treaty to combat global warming and
other moves seen as isolationist and out of step with world concerns.
Delegates to the August 26- September 4 meeting will debate ways to raise
living standards in the developing world without destroying what is left of
the planet's resources. But the United States will emphasize deals with the
private sector and stress the importance of economic growth over binding
global treaties to fight environmental problems and poverty. "If the
president takes a vacation while the rest of the world works on the
environment and sustainable development, it will be a pretty clear signal,"
of disinterest, said Kalee Kreider, global warming program director for the
National Environmental Trust in Washington.
"He'll be pilloried if he does come and pilloried if he doesn't," said Steve
Sawyer, climate policy advisor at the environmentalist group Greenpeace.
Bush left Washington for his ranch in Texas on August 6 and is planning to
stay until early September. He has given no indication that he will attend
the summit. U.S. officials decline to confirm his absence and say the
delegation has not been announced, although Secretary of State Colin Powell
is planning to attend. U.S. officials are hoping a flurry of announcements
on new "partnerships" among governments, the private sector and other groups
will pave the way to progress on issues including clean drinking water,
forests and food security. "The preparations and the U.S. strategy have had
the attention at the highest level within the White House," said a senior
Bush administration official. "It's something that strikes at the core
values of the president."
"The Bush administration is committed to its success," assistant Secretary
of State John Turner said in Senate testimony July 24.
The World Summit on Sustainable Development is billed as the largest U.N.
summit ever with an estimated 60,000 participants from more than 100
countries. French President Jacques Chirac and British Prime Minister Tony
Blair are among the world leaders expected to attend the meeting which will
seek ways to reach goals set earlier of curbing pollution and halving global
poverty by 2015. Environmentalists accuse the Bush administration of
ignoring international desire for progress on issues such as global warming
and energy conservation, and of hijacking the sustainable development theme
to promote a trade agenda.
"There's...an effort by the administration to turn this conference about
protecting the environment and reducing poverty into a conference about
trade," said Stephen Mills, international program director of the Sierra
Club. "What the Bush administration will find in Johannesburg is the
priority of many countries is sustainable development and protecting the
environment," he said. "This is another example of the United States
withdrawing from global cooperation." Bush pulled out of the Kyoto
agreement last year, saying it would cripple the U.S. economy and gave
unfair exemptions to developing countries. Washington signed the pact in
1997 after Bush's father, former president George Bush, agreed to limit
greenhouse gases in a last-minute trip to the first Earth Summit in Rio de
Janeiro in 1992.
Environmentalists say the current Bush administration's policies mark a
retreat from long-time global leadership on the environment -- demonstrated
by steps such as creation of the Cabinet-level Environmental Protection
Agency 1970. Greenpeace's Sawyer said Washington had abandoned leadership
in most environmental areas with the exception of some ocean issues such as
whaling and fisheries. "U.S. environmental policy has been atrocious,
retrograde and unfitting of a country that claims any type of moral
political leadership in the world," he said. U.S. Senator James Jeffords of
Vermont, a political independent and chairman of the Senate Environment and
Public Works Committee, scolded Bush administration officials at a hearing
last month. "We're not trying very hard to keep up with the spirit of some
of our (environmental) commitments," he said. Powell underscored the U.S.
emphasis on economic growth and partnerships at a conference on sustainable
development on July 12. "Sustainable development begins at home," he said.
"We must work together to unleash human productivity, to reduce poverty, to
promote healthy environments. "Growth is the key," he said.
PARTNERSHIPS
Powell continued:"Partnerships are key -- we are already deploying the power
of partnerships." He cited a Congo Basin Forest Partnership launched by
South Africa and the United States as an example of the sort of agreements
envisioned by Washington.
The initiative aims to enlist private companies, non-governmental
organizations and other governments to fight deforestation in the Congo
Basin and establish national parks. Powell was quoted this month by the
U.N. Environment Program as saying the environment was a key issue in global
political stability. "An unholy trinity of poverty, ecological degradation
and despair threatens to destabilize whole regions," he said. U.S.
officials say Washington remains interested in the formal declarations and
agreements that may emerge from the summit, but its focus was on "concrete
results" demonstrated by the partnerships. Involving private companies, the
senior U.S. official said, would open the door to "hundreds of billions" of
dollars in investment. He said global efforts were still needed in areas
including the battle against AIDS. Environmentalists say such partnerships
are likely to become more common -- they have received support within the
United Nations and other countries. But broad international agreements are
still needed to meet specific targets on issues such as pollution and
poverty. The World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) said it was worried that the
U.S. stress on partnerships could be a way of dodging commitments by
governments. "The risk with the U.S. approach is that there won't be any
way of measuring the achievements of partnerships. There may be businesses
who are not very serious in their commitments," said Kim Carstensen, deputy
head of the WWF delegation to Johannesburg. Recent U.S. corporate scandals
raise questions about whether firms involved in partnerships could be
trusted without strict disclosure requirements and accountability measures,
said the Sierra Club's Mills. "This idea of corporate self-policing doesn't
work," he said.
52.EARTH SUMMIT MUST NOT FAIL - UN'S TOEPFER
Planet Ark
12 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/17260/story.htm
LONDON - The Johannesburg "Earth Summit", seen by many environmentalists to
be a flop even before it starts, must be made a success for the sake of
world security, United Nations environment chief Klaus Toepfer said.
"Johannesburg must be a precautionary peace conference. We are not allowed
to fail," he told a news conference. The World Summit on Sustainable
Development starts on August 26 and runs to September 4. It is expected to
attract some 60,000 delegates including more than 100 heads of state and
government who will be asked to agree and endorse action plans on water,
energy, health, agriculture and biodiversity. But even before the meeting
starts, environmentalists have accused a group of nations led by the United
States of blocking plans to set any targets and effectively emasculating a
draft text on proposed actions. Toepfer said the security of the world was
at stake at the summit because the gap between rich and poor - north and
south - had widened considerably in the decade since the first earth summit
in Rio de Janeiro. "That creates tensions and instability," he said, noting
that even U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell had accepted the connection
between sustainable development and world security.
53.M'SIA AND OTHERS ATTEND SOUTHEAST ASIAN DEVELOPMENT MEET
The Star
12 August 2002
Internet:
http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2002/8/12/latest/6707Msiaand&sec=latest
TOKYO (AP) - Ministers from 13 nations, including Malaysia, met Monday in
Tokyo to discuss ways to cooperate in the development of East Asian
countries as part of Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's efforts to promote
regional growth.
Foreign Minister Yoriko Kawaguchi hosted the one-day meeting of foreign and
development ministers from the 10 members of the Association of Southeast
Asian Nations (ASEAN). Officials from Japan, China and South Korea also
attended. The meeting stems from Koizumi's hope that East Asia can become a
model for the rest of the world by coordinating development across a region
- an initiative he proposed during official visits to Southeast Asian
countries in January, an official from Japan's Foreign Ministry said on
condition of anonymity. Japan - the world's second biggest aid donor -
slashed its development aid budget by a record 10 percent due to a prolonged
economic slump. But such aid is still considered a cornerstone of Japanese
diplomacy. At the meeting, ministers will discuss the role of development
assistance in promoting economic progress and ways countries can cooperate
to ensure that aid is used more efficiently, a Foreign Ministry press
release said. Their conclusions will be drawn up in a document at the end
of the session, some of which may be presented at the World Summit on
Sustainable Development at the end of August in South Africa, the ministry
said. The ASEAN countries are Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia,
Myanmar, the Phillippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. - AP
54. LAND REFORM TO TAKE CENTRE-STAGE AT SUMMIT
The Herald (Harare) via All Africa
12 August 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200208120412.html
ZIMBABWE'S Land Reform Programme, expected to be emulated by most African
countries as a means of ending poverty, will take centre-stage at the World
Summit on Sustainable Development in South Africa later this month. The
discussion of the issue at the world summit might become a springboard to
ending the world's discontent over agrarian land reforms in Africa.
Over 100 world leaders have confirmed their attendance at the summit. United
Nations Development Programme director of communications Mr Djibril Diallo
told The Herald last week that the land redistribution issue and the
Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) would be high on the agenda at the
World Summit. The priority areas on Agenda 21, which were not deliberated
fully during the last four United Nations preparatory committee meetings
attended by ministers, would be debated at the highest level by more than
100 leaders in Johannesburg, South Africa, later this month. In a draft plan
of implementation for the summit, the Commission on Sustainable Development
said Africans should be encouraged to invest in the land by giving them
ownership and providing access to resources, financing and means to market
their produce. "Sustainable land use policies should encourage planning on a
scale large enough to maintain healthy ecosystems. Advice and training is
also needed in technologies and farming systems that conserve and
rehabilitate land. Hunger is already a constant threat to many people and
the world's long-term ability to meet the growing demand for food and other
agricultural products is uncertain. "Increasing human demand for land and
its natural resources is creating competition and conflicts. If we are going
to meet human requirements in a sustainable manner we must resolve these
conflicts and find more effective ways of using land and its natural
resources." Mr Diallo said by doing so, Africa would manage land capably to
achieve sustainable agriculture and rural development. In Africa, the main
tenets of UNDP's strategy for the summit preparatory process include
assisting the countries to adequately prepare for global negotiations so
that they could exploit opportunities offered by the summit and to form
partnerships with governments, private sector, donors and central
statistical offices for the implementation of key priority areas. UNDP is
also seeking global endorsement and a broad range of partners' support for
Capacity 2015, a programme to promote sustainable development. Agenda 21 is
a blueprint for sustainable development adopted by heads of state who
attended the historic United Nations conference on environment and
development in 1992. Zimbabwe is the first African country to embark on an
aggressive land resettlement and agrarian reform exercise, which has
benefited thousands of land hungry people. Individual countries are expected
to present their national plan or country reports on achievements in
sustainable development during the last 10 years. These include issues of
health, education, poverty alleviation, the environment, agriculture, land
distribution, water and other areas of priority, Mr Diallo said.
"Agriculture plays a crucial role in addressing the needs of a growing
global population and is inextricably linked to poverty eradication,
especially in developing countries. Sustainable agriculture and rural
development are essential to the implementation of an integrated approach to
increasing food production and enhancing food security and food safety in an
environmentally sustainable way. "The Johannesburg summit offers a historic
opportunity to confront growing threats to human well-being. A third of the
world's people live on an income less than a dollar a day, use of fossil
fuels is rising rapidly, patterns of production and consumption continue to
eat up natural resources faster than they are being replenished.
"The summit will call upon States to implement the comprehensive plan for
sustainable development on Agenda 21, a resolution adopted at the Earth
Summit in Rio. Each country is expected to present its plan on its
achievement in sustainable development over the past 10 years," said Mr
Diallo. He was speaking at a world summit's preparatory meeting for African
journalists.
The meeting aimed at ensuring multi-media coverage of the summit, an Africa
media declaration on the Earth Summit and a strategy and plan of action on
the media and sustainable development in Africa. Mr Diallo said UNDP was
committed to ensuring that the summit provided fresh impetus for the
international sustainable development process. UNDP Capacity 21 regional
co-ordinator for Africa Ms Ndey-Isatou Njie said there were a number of
processes that have created an ever-increasing demand for land. She urged
journalists to push an African agenda and ensure that the summit adopted
Africa's Millennium Development Goals. The goals include promoting gender
equality and empowerment of women, reduction of child mortality, improving
maternal health, combating HIV/Aids, ensuring environmental sustainability
and developing a global partnership for development. Ms Njie said it was
hoped that the summit would develop further an open, rule-based,
predictable, non-discriminatory trading and financial system. It should also
deal comprehensively with the debt problems of developing countries through
national and international measures in order to make debt sustainable in the
long term. Since 1990, 10 million people became poor annually in Africa. In
Zimbabwe about 25,1 percent of adults were HIV/Aids carriers and more than
900 000 children were orphaned by Aids, according to a UNAIDS study. The
director of environment in the Ministry of Environment, Youth and Public
Health (Senegal) Mrs Fatima Dia Toure said her country was behind
redistributing land to poor people. "Although I may say land problem in
Zimbabwe is a national issue, we believe the whole continent needs to
empower the indigenous people by sharing natural resources to the people to
improve lives. This issue needs to be tackled in a big way. In a big way, I
mean the summit should support our need to distribute these natural
resources to our people. "Until our people have been empowered in such a
manner, Africa will remain under developed. And as such we are going to the
summit with all our eyes open to ensure we get practical on some of these
issues," she said.
55. ASIAN BROWN CLOUD' MENACES THE WORLD
International Herald Tribune
12 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.iht.com/articles/67366.html
PARIS A vast blanket of smog has been documented over much of Asia and the
Indian Ocean, with alarming implications for the global climate, regional
weather patterns, agricultural crops and economic progress, according to a
study being released Monday by the UN Environment Program. Scientists call
it the Asian Brown Cloud. It is an accumulated cocktail of pollution from
Asia's great cities, a dramatic increase in the burning of fossil fuels in
vehicles, industries and power stations, forest fires in Indonesia and the
emissions from millions of inefficient cookers burning wood or cow dung.
Klaus Toepfer, the executive director of the environment program, said that
the thick haze illustrates the challenge facing the World Summit on
Sustainable Development in Johannesburg later this month: How can developing
nations grow economically without overburdening Earth's environment and
creating an uninhabitable planet for future generations? "The huge
pollution problems emerging in Asia encapsulate the threats and challenges
that the summit needs to urgently address," Toepfer said. Residents in Asia
know by their stinging eyes and itchy noses that pollution has been building
up for several years. Just how much has now been revealed by the study by
200 scientists involved in the Indian Ocean Experiment, started in 1995,
using data from ground stations, balloons, aircraft, two ships, satellites
and computer models. The blanket of pollution, 3 kilometers, or nearly 2
miles, thick, hovers over most of the tropical Indian Ocean, South,
Southeast and East Asia. It consists of sulfates, nitrates, organic
substances, black carbon and fly ash, among several other pollutants. The
report said that Asian megacities with "unacceptably high emissions of
health-endangering gaseous and particulate matter" such as Calcutta, Delhi,
Bombay, Karachi and Dhaka were responsible for much of the cloud. These
cities are among the most polluted in the world. "More research is needed,
but these initial findings clearly indicate that this growing cocktail of
soot, particles, aerosols and other pollutants is becoming a major
environmental hazard for Asia," Toepfer said. "There are also global
implications not least because a pollution parcel like this, which stretches
3 kilometers high, can travel half way around the globe in a week."
The report cautioned that scientists were only at the very early stages of
their understanding of regional climate changes, and that it would take at
least a decade of further observations and studies to complete a full
picture. But the initial findings indicate that the cloud not only
significantly reduces the amount of solar radiation reaching the surface,
with a consequent decline in the productivity of crops, but also traps heat,
leading to warming of the lower atmosphere. It suppresses rainfall in some
areas and increases it in others, while damaging forests and crops because
of acid rain. The haze also is responsible for hundreds of thousands of
premature deaths from respiratory diseases, the report said. Other effects
may include a cooling of the land surface, an increase in the frequency and
the strength of thermal inversions that trap more pollution, and the
disruption of monsoon rainfall. In recent years, the report notes, "there
have been two consecutive droughts in 1999 and 2000 in Pakistan and the
northwestern parts of India" accompanied by "increased flooding in the high
rainfall areas of Bangladesh, Nepal and the northeastern states of India. In
Bangladesh, there have been severe floods at intervals of seven to 10 years,
most recently in 1988 and 1998. During the 1998 floods, as much as two-
thirds of the land area was inundated and nearly 1.6 million hectares, or
nearly 4 million acres of cropland was damaged."
More research is needed, the study said, to find out:
Whether the cloud contributes to or diminishes global warning.
How it affects global concentrations of ozone and other pollutants.
What effect it has on soil moisture and water supplies.
The report likened the Asian pollution to the infamous London smogs of the
past caused by coal-burning, and the petrochemical smogs of Los Angeles. It
said great improvements had been made in both those cities either by strict
emission controls or by switching from coal to natural gas, and it said
similar steps would have to be taken in Asia to prevent the pollution
getting out of hand.
56.BETTER WATER ACCESS KEY TO POVERTY FIGHT, EXPERTS
Reuters
12 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.miami.com/mld/miami/news/world/3848735.htm
STOCKHOLM - Efforts to halve the number of people worldwide living in
poverty by 2015 will fail unless access to clean water is radically
improved, a group of leading scientists and politicians said Monday. Klaus
Toepfer, head of the United Nations Environment Program, said 2.2 million
people die each year due to diseases such as cholera and dysentery caused by
contaminated water. "Without adequate clean water, there can be no escape
from poverty," Toepfer said at the World Water Symposium, a gathering of
some 900 politicians, scientists and industry representatives from 100
countries.
The five-day conference, organized by the Stockholm International Water
Institute (SIWI), is due to end a week before the massive United Nations
"Earth Summit" on sustainable development starts in Johannesburg. Water is
one of the five key themes United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan has
picked for Johannesburg. The importance of clean drinking water has been
stressed many times, but now other demands for water such as irrigation and
sanitation are rising up the international agenda, experts said.
"In Johannesburg we're going to have an almighty struggle for targets and
timeframe for sanitation... I think we will probably win on that," South
Africa's Water Minister Ronnie Kasrils told a news conference. After decades
of uneven water distribution during the apartheid era, South Africa has
included the right to water in its constitution, and is now finding ways to
improve water distribution such as fixing badly leaking pipes. In many
cities across Africa, plumbing is so outdated and the infrastructure is so
weak that 40 to 60 percent of the water may easily leak away, Kasrils said.
The United Nations set a target to halve the number of people living in
poverty by 2015 in its millennium declaration.
57. SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT STILL TOPS WORLD AGENDA
The East African Standard (Nairobi) via All Africa
12 August 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200208120125.html
World Summit for Sustainable Development, dubbed Johannesburg 2002 Summit,
due late this month through to September, will be an important opportunity
for African biotechnology stakeholders. Decisions made at the summit will
result in new initiatives that could create climate for further development
of biotechnology. Such decisions will include:
Better access for developing countries to global markets;
Increased investment for developing economies;
Resource commitment such as support for the New Partnership for Africa's
Development (Nepad);
Technology development and transfer from developed to developing countries
to facilitate the strengthening of the local industry to achieve the goals
of poverty alleviation.
Emphasis needs be placed national and global strategies to ensure;
Appropriate caution and judgement in the developing and application of
biotechnology.
The implementation of suitable risk assessment systems to minimise the
potential risk in human and animal health and environment resulting from the
commercial use of biotechnology and resulting products.
The establishment of appropriate and enforceable regulatory systems at
national and global levels to ensure safe international trade and the use of
biotechnology products.
This includes the ratification and implementation of bio-safety protocol and
an increased level of public awareness and acceptance of the process and the
products of biotechnology.
The summit is also likely to discuss genetically modified foods/crops, which
many African countries are now adopting.
Experts confirm that these products provide higher nutritional value better
taste, longer conservation and above all they are drought resistant. In 1992
during the Rio Earth Summit, important issues were raised and conclusions
reached on sustainable development.
Two major conventions were reached and signed, including the Convention on
Climate Change and Bio-diversity. Furthermore, participating governments and
other interested parties accepted the blueprint for achieving sustainable
development.
There was a consensus that northern hemisphere countries would allocate
resources and technology to the poor southern hemisphere countries to enable
them build their capacity in more effective way. But little has been
achieved a decade later.
The year 2000 General Assembly of the United Nations adopted the awaited
resolution on the holding of ten-year review of the Rio Summit and called it
WSSD. This month's meeting will, therefore, set the stage for the
development of fresh policies which will be implemented in the years to
come. The 2000 summit was to ensure a balance between economic, social
development and environmental protection as components of sustainable
development. The choice of an African city as the venue for the WSSD is
significant in the sense that the continent is in need of sustainable
development. It also signifies the role South Africa has played in trying to
establish partnership between Africa and the rest of the world.
58. TOP BOSSES 'HIJACKING' ECO-SUMMIT
The Observer
11 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.observer.co.uk/politics/story/0,6903,772643,00.html
Tony Blair's delegation to this month's Earth Summit in Johannesburg
includes senior company bosses whose firms have repeatedly been accused of
polluting the environment. The news triggered uproar from green groups last
night amid renewed concern that the summit was being hijacked by big
business. Included in the Prime Minister's official delegation to
Johannesburg are UK multinationals that have been involved in rows over
important wildlife habitats globally and even allegations they ignored human
rights abuses. Among the delegation is Bill Alexander, chief executive of
Thames Water, Sir Robert Wilson, executive chairman of mining company Rio
Tinto, and Chris Fay, non-executive director of Anglo American, another of
the world's mining giants. Campaigners warned that the decision to include
multinational companies as part of a UK delegation designed to help save the
planet seriously risked undermining its green credentials. Downing Street,
still smarting from criticism over its misguided attempt to drop Environment
Minister Michael Meacher from the delegation, has refused to release the
entire official line-up for fear of further attack. The three companies,
among Britain's largest firms, have been involved in a number of
high-profile and damaging accusations over their environmental record.
Thames Water, the largest water company in the UK with 12 million customers,
has been prosecuted by the Government's Environment Agency watchdog for
pollution on more than 20 occasions since 1996.
During 2000 the firm appeared in court five times for six offences and was
fined a total of £288,000. Earlier this year it was fined £12,000 after it
admitted polluting tributaries in Gloucestershire. Thames Water has also
been fiercely criticised in the past for operating in Indonesia while
President Suharto - whose rule was marked by allegations of human rights
abuses - was in power.
Meanwhile Rio Tinto, the largest mining conglomerate in the world, is the
focus of one of Australia's highest profile environmental rows ever. The
company's plans to mine uranium in one of the planet's most valuable
wildlife sites - Kakadu National Park, a World Heritage Site - has enraged
environmentalists. Clashes involving protesters have led to more than 500
arrests.
And mining giant Anglo American has also been embroiled over claims
concerning its planned operations in Peru and alleged pollution in Zambia.
A spokesman for Friends of the Earth said: 'This is further evidence that
Blair is determined to cosy up to big business at whatever cost.'
Supporters of the summit argue that, for the negotiations to succeed,
delegates from all backgrounds must be present; 1 September has been
designated as business day at the summit where leaders will meet to discuss
issues on global trade. Britain's delegation also includes members from
non-governmental organisations campaigning over environmental and
sustainable development issues. A spokesman for Thames Water last night
confirmed that Bill Alexander was scheduled to arrive in Johannesburg on 2
September and would be making a speech outlining how private water companies
could make a contribution to the environment. He said: 'We are committed to
sustainability. The Suharto regime played no part in Thames Water's
operations in Indonesia. We are there helping some of the poorest people in
Jakarta have access to cheap water.' A spokesman for Rio Tinto said: 'We
are performing pretty well in the environment, although we haven't always
done so and we would be the first to admit that.' He said that Wilson would
be outlining an action plan to help clean up the mining industry at the
summit. A spokeswoman for Anglo American said: 'I don't think we have been
particularly targeted for our environmental performance. We take our
environmental performance extremely seriously.'
59. HE PROMISED LEADERSHIP. NOW BLAIR SNUBS THE EARTH SUMMIT
Independent
11 August 2002
Internet:
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/environment/story.jsp?story=323402
A government too concerned with headlines will scupper the planet. Tony
Blair is planning to snub the vital Earth Summit in Johannesburg by paying
it only a fleeting visit in three weeks' time. The Prime Minister will stay
at the conference barely long enough to make his own speech, despite having
repeatedly promised to "provide leadership'' at it. The disclosure - which
Downing Street refused to confirm or deny last night - follows attempts to
stop Michael Meacher, the Environment minister, from attending the summit.
But Downing Street had to back down after Friends of the Earth offered to
pay the fare of the minister, regarded as the member of the Government with
the best grasp of the issues at Johannesburg. The World Summit on
Sustainable Development, as it is officially called, offers the best chance
in 20 years of tackling increasing world poverty, which condemns one billion
people to live on less than one dollar a day and is responsible for the
deaths of three million children a year from the effects of drinking dirty
water. Ministers warn that if the summit fails it will set back progress for
decades, with incalculable repercussions for world stability. Mr Blair was
the first leader to commit himself to going to the Earth Summit two years
ago, when he spoke of his determination to ensure its success. He has since
encouraged his deputy John Prescott to visit more than 30 heads of
government and nearly a hundred environment ministers to urge them to
attend. He has insisted that the issues at the summit "demand leadership'',
pledging Britain to provide it. At a similar summit five years ago, Mr Blair
said, in a speech credited with changing government policy: "If there is one
summit my children would want me at, it is this one. They know our decisions
here will have a profound effect on the world they inherit." Yet he is
planning to visit the conference in Johannesburg for just a few hours on
Monday 2 September before leaving for a photo opportunity at an energy or
water project in South Africa. Mr Blair's plans will particularly disappoint
other delegates because Britain has played a constructive role in the run-up
to the summit. The Prime Minister and Mr Prescott have both pushed President
Bush to take a more positive attitude, and Gordon Brown has campaigned for
cuts in Third World debts and increases in aid. But the Mr Blair's
enthusiasm has cooled in recent months as the negotiations have run into
difficulties. Officials say that he is wary of being associated with
anything less than a resounding success and that he now has other
preoccupations, notably the impending war with Iraq. Last night Mike Childs
of Friends of the Earth said: "Tony Blair has been saying how important the
summit is and how it needs real leadership. But after trying to stop Michael
Meacher from going, it now emerges that the Prime Minister will only be
there for a few hours. It is time he brought his actions into line with his
words.''
60. IN DISARRAY BEFORE IT HAS EVEN BEGUN
Independent
11 August 2002
Internet:
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/environment/story.jsp?story=323402
Many observers believe the Johannesburg summit marks the moment when the
environment movement matures, when "green" politics embraces global poverty,
world trade and fair access to resources. Now, 10 years after the Rio summit
put climate change and environmental decline on the world agenda, the
Johannesburg summit will embrace water rights, fisheries, HIV/Aids,
chemicals, corporate responsibility and energy. The effects of globalisation
are central to the summit. More than 1,000 scientists commissioned by the
United Nations reported that unchecked global free trade would produce a
series of environmental and political crises, including mass migration and
further conflicts over resources such as water.
Yet faced with such challenging questions, the Earth Summit is already in
disarray, even before it has begun. Environmentalists and anti-poverty
campaigners have clashed with the globalisation lobby, led by President
George Bush and the World Trade Organisation, with Tony Blair in an
increasingly uneasy position as their cheerleader in Europe. The so-called
G77 group of nations, which includes countries such as Norway and Sweden,
supports calls for the summit to draft treaty obligations on corporate
responsibility requiring companies to meet basic standards on green, labour
and social issues. The reformers also want industrialised states to accept
that they owe an "ecological debt" to the South, based on the North's much
higher use of resources. Under such proposals, the WTO's free trade rules
will no longer be allowed to override environmental or social treaties. Yet
the resistance by the US bloc to these measures is likely to be fatal. The
US is pressing for "partnerships" based on private sector-led voluntary
deals - a proposal the UK appears to support. Although the Government
insists it wants deals on poverty, water, energy use, education, tourism and
forestry, a strong global treaty is very unlikely to emerge.
61. INDIA LOOKING FORWARD TO JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT
Xinhua News Agency
11 August 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FA20020811600000012.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
NEW DELHI, Aug 11, 2002 (Xinhua via COMTEX) -- India is looking forward to
the forthcoming World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg for
the global community to come out with an action plan to ease the growing
pressure on scarce natural resources. Environment Minister T.R. Baalu is
schedule to lead the Indian delegation for the summit, which has on its
agenda issues ranging from poverty eradication to unsustainable pattern of
consumption and production. The summit to be held later this month will be
attended by nearly 160 countries. The Indian government has prepared a
document "Agenda 21 -- An Assessment," outlining India's performance on
sustainable development approaches as agreed at the 1992 Rio Earth summit.
The document to be soon released by Baalu highlights the challenges
regarding improving the quality of life while at the same time ensuring
sustainable management of natural resources. It paints a grim picture on
how at the present level of production and consumption the oil reserves of
the country would last only for another 18 years and the natural gas
reserves for 25 years.
On the water front, the current estimated surplus of about 500 billion cubic
meters of water may be short lived since the water demand of about 1,180
billion cubic meters could overtake the availability by 2050.
The critical forest cover in the country has remained stagnant around 20
percent of the geographical area against the norm of 33 percent. Besides
270 million tons of fuelwood, 280 million tons of fodder and 12 million
cubic meters of timber are being removed from forests annually which are far
beyond sustainable limit, asserts the document. Even as the urban civic
infrastructure is bursting at seams with an annual production of 36 million
tons of urban waste, seven to eight million people are being added to urban
population every year. In urban areas, diarrhea accounts for 28 percent of
mortality, respiratory infections accounts for 22 percent and nearly 50
percent of urban child mortality is due to poor sanitation and lack of
access to clean drinking water, reveals the document. Forty percent of
households living in urban slums are without access to safe drinking water
and 90 percent have no access to sanitation facilities. Water and
sanitation is assessed to be contributing 13 percent of Disease Adjusted
Life Years lost due to adverse environmental factors with indoor air
pollution contributing 7 percent and urban air pollution 2 percent. With
population going up by about three times from 1947 and 2000, the per capita
availability of land declined from 0.89 hectares (HA) to 0.30 HA during this
period even as the country was supporting 16.5 percent of the world
population on only 2.5 percent of world's geographical area.
62. ALEX URGED TO PUT OUT WELCOME MAT FOR SUMMIT
The Star
11 August
Internet:
http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?sf=2668&art_id=ct2002081120361184S536741&click_id=2668&set_id=1
Alexandra residents should open their hearts and show hospitality to
overseas visitors during the World Summit on Sustainable Development. This
was the message from government leaders who participated in a unique
mini-world summit in the township on Sunday. The WSSD, which begins next
week, takes place in Sandton, about 3km from Alex.Organisers said the aim of
the mini-summit was to inform the residents about the agenda of the WSSD and
its relevance to the people of Alexandra.'We are delighted that our leaders
have committed themselves' One of the organisers, Pule Phalatse said: "What
we are saying is that while heads of countries will be here discussing
issues such as access to water and sanitation, under-development and health,
we are affected by the same problems. "We are saying they must come and see
the work we are already doing, such as the cleaning of the Jukskei River and
greening of the area. "We are delighted that our leaders have committed
themselves to helping us as long as we come up with clear projects." Gauteng
Premier Mbhazima Shilowa urged ordinary people to identify issues that
leaders could raise at the main summit.Social Development Minister Zola
Skweyiya said it was the most significant event since 1994 and that Alex
residents had to strive to be hospitable and show a good image of the
country to visitors.
ALEX HOLDS MINI-SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
http://library.northernlight.com/FF20020812060000049.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
63. NIA SPOOKS GRILL SUMMIT PROTESTERS
Sunday Independent
11 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?sf=2668&art_id=ct20020810195135922N000963&click_id=2668&set_id=1
The National Intelligence Agency (NIA) is on a mission to scuttle the plans
of activists to disrupt the world summit, to take place in Johannesburg at
the end of this month. The agency is particularly concerned about the plans
of the Landless People's Movement (LPM), a South African land rights group.
The group's senior leaders, spread across all provinces, have repeatedly
been questioned by NIA agents about the goals and intentions of the LPM over
the last three months.
'We are going to protest'
The movement, which does not align itself with any political party - much
along the lines of social movements in Latin America - says it will be
assembling its 10 000 members, along with activists who will fly in from
other countries, at the summit to protest against the failure of South
Africa's land reform process. The activists plan to set up a large camp at
Shareworld near Soweto for the duration of the summit. Lorna Daniels, a
spokesperson for the ministry of intelligence, said all the agency's
security efforts were "aimed at ensuring the World Summit on Sustainable
Development (WSSD) takes place in a secure environment with as little
disruption as possible." "Of course we support people's constitutional right
to demonstrate, but we are concerned that protests remain legal." She said
the NIA expected a range of organisations to lodge protests. "We want to
encourage and ensure that protests, including that of the LPM, are conducted
peacefully. We must ensure the safety of heads of state." 'I don't want
that'
Activists have been told by provincial NIA agents that the intelligence
ministry has asked them to prepare a report, at very short notice, on the
LPM's plans to disrupt the gathering. The agents have also been asking
questions about the links between the LPM and the National Land Committee,
an NGO affiliated to the South African NGO Coalition (Sangoco). Andile
Mngxitama, the NGO's fiery land rights co-ordinator, is widely regarded as
the brains behind the movement. Letitia Solomons, the LPM vice-chairperson
and former New National Party councillor in Leeu-Gamka in the southern Cape
Karoo region, was first visited by agents Helen Pio and Freddy Afrika in
March. She has been questioned on four occasions since then. "They asked
about what the LPM was doing, and I said we will definitely be at the summit
and we are going to protest." The NIA's centralised monitoring system
certainly seems to be working - activists have been told by NIA agents about
the activities of their colleagues in provinces thousands of kilometres
away.
Security measures have been significantly stepped up ahead of the summit,
expected to be attended by some 60 000 delegates and hundreds of heads of
state. Mangaliso Khubeka, the LPM's chairperson and son of labour tenants
who were evicted after generations on a farm in Ingogo, near Newcastle, was
questioned in Pietermaritzburg, 300km away, last month. "They asked me what
it is I want. I want to plough. How can they say they're having a summit on
sustainable development? What development are they talking about? "We don't
have land," he said. "We see no sustainable development; people are hungry.
We have no land or jobs." The LPM has been calling for government to convene
a land summit to debate the land reform process since last year.
While Thoko Didiza, the land affairs and agriculture minister, has agreed to
do so, there is no indication yet of when a land summit will take place.
"Everyone is seeing what happened in Zimbabwe," said Solomons, whose
farmworker parents were evicted from a farm near Leeu-Gamka in Western Cape
in 1997 after 33 years. "If they are not going to speed up the land reform
process, the same thing is going to happen here. And I don't want that." The
holiday leave of South African Police Service (SAPS) members has been
cancelled for the period of the summit, and stop-and-search operations and
roadblocks will be determined by tactical intelligence on a daily basis,
according to a statement released by the SAPS this week. Barricades and
access control points will be put in place around the Sandton Convention
Centre from August 21 to September 5.
People and vehicles entering the area bordered by Rivonia Road, Alice Lane
and West and Fifth streets will be screened. A "mega-search park" will be
created in which vehicle inspections will be conducted to ensure security in
Sandton, at 21 hotels, at the Ubuntu Village at the Wanderers and at Nasrec
in Soweto. All flight plans of flights in Gauteng will be required to be
submitted 24 hours in advance to air traffic notification services, and
security at all major airports, especially Johannesburg International, has
already been increased. Notification for gatherings and marches will have to
be provided to the Johannesburg metropolitan council in advance, and must
take place along a predetermined, 1,8km route in Sandton. "We aim to change
misperceptions about safety and security in South Africa in general and in
Gauteng in particular and hope that our efforts will help to attract the
attention of foreign tourists and investors," said Perumal Naidoo, the
provincial police commissioner. "Should an illegal gathering or march take
place, the security forces will take the necessary action," Naidoo said.
64. TRADE UNIONS REQUEST WSSD NEGOTIATORS TO HELP REFOCUS NEW GEF
MULTI-BILLION DOLLAR FUND TOWARD 'THREE PILLAR' STRATEGY.
ICTFU
10 August 2002
Trade unions were quick to communicate with the WSSD government negotiators
today in response to the recent positive news that 32 donor nations have
pledged almost $3 billion to replenish the Global Environmental Facility
(GEF), an unprecedented amount of money, as a major boost to the
Johannesburg Summit. While the replenishment will significantly increase the
capacity of regions and organizations to implement 'environmental' outcomes
of the WSSD, trade unions warn of the danger that the eventual GEF
expenditures could merely reinforce RIO92 mistakes by failing to integrate
the agency's programmes
with the social and economic pillars of sustainable development.
Replenishing the GEF must usher a new vision to make the Facility a prime
mover of sustainable development in its broadest sense, they say, inviting
the WSSD Governments to heed what they have already agreed to in the Action
Plan text, adopted last June in Indonesia, which called for the integration
of the three pillars, and for poverty eradication, as well as measures to
address the stark inequalities that have hindered sustainable development
since RIO92.
A trade union delegation of more than 300 members is expected to participate
in WSSD deliberations later this month, as representatives of the
International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU), the Trade
Union Advisory Committee to the OECD (TUAC) and the Global Union Federations
(GUF). Delegation representatives said statements that the new GEF funds
would meaningfully address poverty issues were unfounded because there are
NO CONCRETE MEASURES in place to ensure such outcomes. They
say:
** NEW INSTITUTIONAL LINKAGES TO THE INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGNANISATION
(ILO) are required to ensure proper implementation of the social dimension.
Unlike the economic and environmental pillars, which each have
inter-governmental bodies to oversee their implementation, the social pillar
remains an only orphan. Trade Unions at WSSD will also urge governments to
draw in the new "WORLD COMMISSION ON SOCIAL DIMENSION OF GLOBALISATION",
into the WSSD framework and for it to help oversee the integration of
programmes for sustainable development, over the next decade.
**GREATER COOPERATION AMONG ILO, UNEP, WHO, and the GEF are a prerequisite,
given the nature of the 'poverty /health /environment' triad at WSSD, and of
the need for strategic cross-sectoral planning combined with financial
backing. These agencies must be given a clear mandate to cooperate during
the post-WSSD period in joint approaches to foster three-pillar integration
into their respective implementation plans."
**EMPLOYMENT, WORKPLACE STRATEGIES, and SOCIAL IMPLEMENTATION must be placed
on the GEF's radar screen. While a primary environmental focus for GEF can
remain, in practice its programmes must be made to function in tandem with
the goals of addressing poverty, social exclusion and employment for women,
youth and vulnerable groups.
In their communication to WSSD negotiators, the trade unions urged that
Governments support the development of 'sustainable impact assessments', as
a remedy to current segmented 'environmental' or 'economic' impact
assessment approaches. They also said the GEF could become more involved in
research and development to promote a better understanding of the social
impacts of changes and to foster integrated planning with environmental
implementation. The unions said that the GEF could play a facilitating role
in the development of social and employment indicators and to promote them,
along
with national environmental reporting and in peer reviews of progress.
This, they say, would go a long way toward identifying 'Just Transition'
measures for the purposes of addressing the impacts of change on the
most vulnerable sectors of society, in the decade to come.
WSSD POLITICAL DECLARATION
The trade unions proposed the inclusion of the following text for the
eventual WSSD Political Declaration.
They urge it to say:
"We set these agreements in the context of an integrated approach to
ecosystems management to encourage greater international coherence. As to
the social dimension of sustainable development, we call on all governments
to ratify and fully implement currently agreed international Instruments,
which address issues of social inequalities, poverty, and lack of access to
resources, services and employment, in particular those adopted by the
International Labour Organisation and by other Intergovernmental bodies. We
also commit to working with the World Commission on the Social Dimension
of Globalisation to implement the social dimensions of WSSD outcomes".
65. NHEMA MUM ON ZIM'S WSSD AGENDA
Zimbabwe Independent
10 August 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FB20020810200000016.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
Aug 09, 2002 (Zimbabwe Independent/All Africa Global Media via COMTEX) --
Zimbabwe is likely to use the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD)
meeting to be held in South Africa this month for political grandstanding
and to promote its internationally-condemned agrarian reform programme, the
Zimbabwe Independent heard this week. The final list of participants at the
summit and Zimbabwe's standpoint at the conference have not yet been
concluded although other countries sent their position statements as early
as last month. The Ministry of Environment and Tourism has sub-contracted a
number of non-governmental organisations to carry out the awareness campaign
for the summit to be held at the Sandton Convention Centre in Johannesburg.
Pro-government organisations are understood to be lobbying for inclusion.
Publicity awareness is being carried out by ZERO, a regional NGO dealing
with environmental issues, and the contract for production of campaign
materials such as T-shirts and posters has been awarded to Action Magazine.
Sources privy to the preparations for the summit said the final list of
participants would be drawn up early next week. Other NGOs that have so far
indicated their intention to attend the summit include the International
Union of Conservation Networks and ITDG. Although Tourism minister Francis
Nhema had initially indicated last week that the country would be defending
its land reform programme at the summit, yesterday he said the final
position would only be known next week. "We are in the process of
finalising the actual document we will be taking to South Africa," he said.
He could not be drawn into revealing if the country would incorporate its
land reform programme in its draft. "At the moment I do not know who is
going, since we are currently working on the document which will be made
public next Thursday," he said.
However, it is thought likely that government hardliners will press for the
inclusion of a reference to land reform and allow pro-government NGOs to do
the talking. Observers say the government's approach to land distribution
violates sections of the principles of Agenda 21, which was adopted at the
Rio de Janeiro Earth Summit in 1992.
Principle 15 of the Rio Declaration states that: "In order to protect the
environment, the precautionary approach shall be widely applied by states
according to their capabilities. Where there are threats of serious or
irreversible damage, lack of full scientific certainty shall not be used as
a reason for postponing cost-effective measures to prevent environmental
degradation."
Britain is thought to be looking at this provision to respond to any attempt
by Zimbabwe to engage in populist posturing.
Zimbabwe's agrarian reform has seen new settlers destroying forests and
poaching game.
66. SECURITY ACCOUNTS ONE THIRD OF S. AFRICA'S BUDGET FOR EARTH SUMMIT
Xinhua News Agency
10 August 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FA20020810710000019.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
JOHANNESBURG, Aug 10, 2002 (Xinhua via COMTEX) -- South Africa has earmarked
one third of the total budget to tighten security to keep world leaders and
delegates safe and secure in the forthcoming World Summit on Sustainable
Development, The Citizen reported Saturday. Johannesburg World Summit
Company's communications executive, Thandi Davids said about 33 percent of
the total budget of 551 million rand (about 55.1 million US dollars) was
being used in security, the report said.
What will be tightly secured during the summit are the Convention Center and
the 23 hotels where the leaders of states are going to live, the report
said. The South African security authority has made every possible means to
create a safe environment for the summit, the report said. Sean Tshabalala,
director of the VIP Protection Unit of the South African Police Service,
said at a press conference in June, that South Africa would deploy a bomb
disposal unit, a dog unit, dedicated detectives and other special task
forces in a bid to prevent any possible airborne attacks, mortar attacks and
sniper attacks.
"Four concentric rings of security will be established around the Convention
Center in Sandton, Johannesburg, and 23 safe island sites would be located
within the zone," he said. And UN security guards will also join in the
mission, he added.
It is reported that 8,000 policemen, soldiers and intelligent agents would
protect the safety and security of leaders and delegates.
Johannesburg is known for its high crime rate in the world. Therefore, it is
a hard job for the South African security authority to take various kinds of
measures to ensure the safety and security on the occasion. The issues of
combating crime, detection, prosecution and corrections are the mandate of
the national government with the various agencies undergoing transformation
and undertaking major initiatives to improve the performance of the criminal
justice system. As part of crime prevention efforts, Tshabalala said, "We
will keep foreign criminals out, make it extremely difficult for local
criminals to commit crime and catch the criminals at the shortest possible
time if crime is committed." However, the toughest job for the South
African government may not be the crime, but the protests and demonstrations
during the summit. Tshabalala said that South Africa is a democratic
country and the people have the right to express their ideas and are free to
hold demonstrations. However, he said, they should get the special
permission two weeks in advance. Till now, the South African government
remained tight-lipped on what demonstration would take place during the
course of the summit. According to Director Henriette Bester of the South
African Police Service, five applications for marches have been received,
and four of them have already been approved. The fifth was still on
negotiation.
67. ANNAN HEADS TO AFRICA FOR FIVE-NATION OFFICIAL VISIT LATER THIS MONTH
Xinhua News Agency
9 August 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FE20020809430000059.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
UNITED NATIONS, Aug 9, 2002 (Xinhua via COMTEX) -- UN Secretary-General Kofi
Annan is scheduled to pay an official visit to five African countries later
this month, culminating at the World Summit for Sustainable Development in
Johannesburg, South Africa, a UN spokesman announced here Friday. The
spokesman, Fred Eckhard, told a press conference here that the official trip
to Africa will begin with the secretary-general' s arrival in Angola on Aug.
25. The UN chief will then head to Botswana on Aug. 27 before traveling to
Lesotho on Aug. 28-29. He is scheduled next to visit Mozambique from Aug.
29 to Sept. 1 before attending the world summit on Sept. 1-4., the spokesman
said. Annan, a native of Ghana, will spend two weeks there on vacation
before the tour begins, Eckhard said. On his way back from Africa, the
secretary-general will on Sept. 5-6 stop in Paris, where he is expected to
hold talks with Glafcos Clerides, the Greek Cypriot leader, and Rauf
Denktash, the Turkish Cypriot leader, Eckhard said.
68. CANADA RELEASES NATIONAL REPORT TO THE WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT
Canada NewsWire
9 August 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FE20020809130000219.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
OTTAWA, Aug 09, 2002 (Canada NewsWire via COMTEX) -- The Government of
Canada today submitted to the United Nations Canada's National Report to the
World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD). The Summit will take place
in Johannesburg, South Africa, from August 26 to September 4, 2002.
Sustainable Development: A Canadian Perspective outlines Canadian actions on
sustainable development over the past 10 years and highlights remaining
challenges and some of the current efforts to meet those challenges.
Canada's report was released jointly by Environment Minister David Anderson,
International Cooperation Minister Susan Whelan and Foreign Affairs Minister
Bill Graham. The report was prepared following an extensive process of
consultation with Canadians to determine the major issues for Canada to
pursue at the Summit. "Canada's National Report provides an accurate
assessment of our national progress towards sustainable development over the
past decade," said Minister Anderson. "It involved collecting the views,
accomplishments and challenges of the different segments of society to
determine how Canada as a whole has done in meeting our sustainable
development goals and what challenges remain."
Report highlights include:
- governments, private sector firms and Canadians from all walks of life
have become more environmentally conscious than ever before;
- on average, Canadian quality of life has increased and Canada has recorded
sustained economic growth accompanied by low inflation;
- governments at all levels have introduced important changes and policy
initiatives to promote sustainable development;
many private sector firms have become leaders in environmental stewardship;
and Canada has done well according to the United Nations Development
Program's Human Development Index - ranking first in the world for six
consecutive years from 1995 to 2000.
The report also features Canada's international assistance programs that
contribute to advancing sustainable development abroad.
"Canada recognizes that real sustainable development progress must ensure
that environmental, economic and social programs are integrated and mutually
reinforcing," said Minister Whelan. "We work in partnership with developing
countries to make sure that their development is effective and
sustainable." Canada will increase its international assistance budget by
$1 billion over the next three years, including $500 million to promote
sustainable development in Africa. Canada has committed to an 8 per cent
annual increase in its aid budget which will double Canada's contribution to
development assistance by 2009-2010. "The WSSD is largely centred on the
recognition that sustainable development is everyone's responsibility,"
stated Foreign Affairs Minister Graham. "That's why Canada is promoting the
importance of partnerships to provide innovative Canadian approaches and
technologies and to work hand-in- hand with developing countries to advance
sustainable development." Canada has shown leadership in advancing key
international agreements and conventions such as the protection of
biological diversity and the ozone layer, climate change, and the sound
management of chemicals and persistent organic pollutants. Canada paved the
way for the adoption of the Africa Action Plan at the recent G8 Kananaskis
Summit and hosted meetings of G8 Environment Ministers and Health and
Environment Ministers of the Americas that promoted the integration of
initiatives involving the environment, health and development.
The WSSD is an opportunity for the world to deliberate on steps needed to
advance sustainable development. It will bring together heads of state and
government, national delegates and leaders from non-governmental
organizations, industry, media and others.
Canada is focusing on areas where it can contribute the most. These include:
global sustainable development with an emphasis on Africa, strengthening
international environmental governance, exploring the links between health
and environment, promoting sustainable development of natural resources, and
promoting partnerships to achieve sustainable development, in particular
with the private sector, civil society and developing countries.
An independent third party was commissioned to coordinate public input to a
first draft of Canada's National Report. Further contributions were then
received from provinces and territories, members of the public, stakeholder
organizations, a Reference Group of experts and stakeholder representatives,
and federal departments. These comments were considered during preparation
of the final report. The full text of Sustainable Development: A Canadian
Perspective can be viewed at
www.wssd-smdd.gc.ca.
69. WORLD SUMMIT EXPECTED TO PRODUCE WORKABLE, SUSTAINABLE PLANS
BuaNews
9 August 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FD20020809730000023.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
Pretoria, Aug 09, 2002 (BuaNews/All Africa Global Media via COMTEX) -- The
upcoming World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) will have to produce
workable and sustainable plans to eradicate poverty, social and economic
development backlogs facing the world, especially developing countries.
Environmental and tourism minister Mohammed Valli Moosa said this in
Parliament in Cape Town yesterday, during his address on the country's state
of readiness to host the summit later this month.
The summit to draw a workable plan for global sustainable development will
be held in Johannesburg from 24 August to 4 September. Outlining the agenda
for the United Nations' largest summit, Minister Moosa said a series of
agreements had been reached on key areas. These included environment
protection, food security, healthcare, biodiversity and eco-system
protection.
He said for the summit to succeed, the delegates needed to address
outstanding issues such as defining the link between sustainable development
and good governance, the provision of adequate sanitation and the use
renewable forms of energy, among others. Mr Moosa said with the current
unfair development trends, the world was on a suicidal path if the leaders
and civil society could not come up with plans to save the planet and its
resources for future generations. Inequalities between the rich north and
the poor south should also be addressed, he said, adding that the world
consumption of natural resources left much to be desired.
'The great economic advance of Europe and other countries of the north have
been accompanied by an unprecedented destruction of the global environment
for the benefit of few people.' According to him, many of the world's fish
stocks have been depleted, while large quantities of carbon dioxide are
pumped into the atmosphere by industrial plants and motor vehicles, leading
to global warming. 'Many plants and animal species are becoming extinct,
river and underground water resources are being polluted and forests are
being destroyed,' he said.
70. EUROPE STRIVES TO MAKE EARTH SUMMIT SUCCESSFUL: PRODI
Xinhua News Agency
9 August 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FC20020809960000099.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
PARIS, Aug 9, 2002 (Xinhua via COMTEX) -- The upcoming Earth Summit must not
fail and the European Union is engaged in numerous fields so as to make it a
success, European Commission President Romano Prodi said in an article
published Friday.
"The world cannot live with a crippled summit that presents mediocre
results, even less with a failure," Prodi said in the article printed in the
French daily Le Monde. The United Nations Summit for Sustainable
Development will be held from August 26 to September 4 in Johannesburg,
South Africa. "In Johannesburg, a confirmation is expected from the
European Union of its constant engagement in the pursuing with multilateral
solutions, of its willingness to protect the environment and of its interest
in the problems of the Third World," said Prodi. "The European Union is
ready to be engaged in numerous initiatives that we envision to take thanks
to the technic and savoir-faire of our enterprises, the enthusiasm of our
non- governmental organizations and the association with the developing
countries and regions," he said. These initiatives concern potable water
and its treatment, energy and health, said the president of the executive
body of the 15-nation bloc. Without the engagement of Europe, he said, the
Earth Summit would not be a success, because "Europe alone has both the
political conscience and the necessary economic means for this end. " The
European Union, which has promised to "considerably increase its development
aid" at the Monterrey summit in Mexico earlier this year, must answer to the
expectations to show that it does not intend to leave the globalized world
economy governed by the unique force of the market, he said. "It is time to
re-establish the confidence between the North and the South through concrete
associations and controlled engagements," Prodi said. The Earth Summit in
Johannesburg, the second of its kind since the Summit in Rio de Janeiro 10
years ago, will discuss how the world will face major challenges to reverse
the ecological degradation and falling living standards that afflict much of
the world. Some 65,000 people, from heads of state to representatives from
civic organizations, will attend the summit, the largest ever held by the
United Nations.
71. HUMANITY LOSES $250 BILLION A YEAR IN WILD HABITAT
Environment News Service
9 August 2002
Internet:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/oneworld/20020812/wl_oneworld/1032_1029152408
WASHINGTON, DC, August 9, 2002 (ENS) - The economic value of wild ecosystems
far outweighs the value of converting these areas to cropland, housing or
other human uses. A study in Friday's issue of the journal Science says
habitat destruction costs the world the equivalent of about $250 billion
each year. The research team estimates that a network of global nature
reserves would ensure the delivery of goods and services worth at least $400
trillion more each year than the goods and services from their converted
counterparts. This means the benefit to cost ratio is more than 100 to one
in favor of conservation - a "strikingly good investment," the researchers
wrote. "The economics are absolutely stark. We thought that the numbers
would favor conservation, but not by this much," said lead author Andrew
Balmford of the University of Cambridge Zoology Department.
Although habitat destruction continues unabated throughout the world,
mounting evidence suggests that this trend is a bad economic bargain. From
tropical forests to ocean reef systems, about half of an ecosystem's total
economic value is lost when that ecosystem is converted from its wild state
to human use, according to the Science study. Balmford and colleagues
compared the difference in the value of economic benefits provided by
relatively intact ecosystems and by converted versions of those ecosystems.
Although they reviewed more than 300 case studies of such conversion, they
only identified five examples that met their rigorous standards for
comparing benefits.
"A single year's habitat conversion costs the human enterprise, in net
terms, on the order of $250 billion that year, and every year into the
future," the team concludes. The economic value of an ecosystem can be
measured in terms of the "goods and services" - including climate
regulation, water filtration, soil formation, and sustainably harvested
plants and animals - that the ecosystem provides. Pricing these goods and
services is difficult, since they include items that are not bought and sold
as part of a market driven, conventional economy. Economists assign values
to non-marketed services using a range of techniques, from estimating the
cost of replacing these products to assessing how much individuals and
nations would be willing to pay for each ecosystem service. Balmford and
his team analyzed the case of a tropical forest in Cameroon converted to
small scale agriculture and commercial plantations, another of a mangrove
system in Thailand converted for shrimp farming, and another case of a
Philippine coral reef dynamited for fishing.
In each case, the loss of ecosystem services such as storm and flood
protection, atmospheric carbon sinks, sustainable hunting, and tourism
outweighed the marketed benefits that came with conversion. The total
economic value of the intact ecosystems ranged from 14 percent to almost 75
percent higher than the converted ecosystem values. For example, the study
cites a project in Canada, which converted freshwater marshes into one of
the country's most productive agricultural areas. The study team calculated
that the area would be worth about 60 percent more if the wetlands were
maintained for the social benefits of hunting, trapping and fishing.
According to the Balmford model, the value of sustainable management of a
logging operation in a Malaysian tropical forest for flood protection,
carbon stocks and endangered species assets was worth 14 percent more than
the benefits of high intensity timber harvesting. Despite these figures,
the net benefit to the public of conservation is generally ignored, compared
to the short term, private economic gains that often accompany conversion,
the team wrote. "We've been cooking the books for a long time by leaving
out the worth of nature," said Robert Costanza, an ecological economist at
the University of Maryland and an author of the "Science" study.
Costanza was one of the first scientists to draw attention to the concept of
estimating dollar values for natural habitat. He and a team of researchers
estimated in 1997 that the average global value of wild nature was $33
trillion a year. But Constanza said even he was surprised by the results of
this new study. "We concluded that there is at least a 100 to one global
benefit cost ratio to maintaining wild nature instead of developing it. None
of us guessed it would be that high," Costanza said. "Every year we continue
to convert habitat, it's costing us $250 billion over any profit that comes
from development." Lack of information about the economic worth of
ecosystem services, the failure of markets to capture and value these
services, and tax incentives and subsidies that encourage land conversion
all contribute to continued habitat destruction, wrote the "Science"
authors. "We need to tackle all three of these, and there's no reason not
to tackle all three at once," said Balmford. "However, in terms of immediate
bang for buck, directly challenging subsidy schemes is a good way to improve
both economic efficiency and the environment."
Researchers and policy makers are exploring several different ways to bring
nature into the marketplace, Balmford said. Devices such as carbon taxes and
credits, premium prices for certified, eco-friendly products, and even
direct payments to the communities that live in globally significant
conservation areas are under consideration. The last proposal is somewhat
controversial, but it may provide a way to compensate those communities for
their reduced opportunities to exploit ecosystem resources, while reflecting
the major global benefits of conservation, Balmford explained. "There's a
growing feeling that if what you're really after is conservation benefits,
you may sometimes need to pay for that directly," Balmford notes.
The study estimates that by spending about $45 billion a year to conserve
natural habitat on land and in the oceans, the net return on the services
produced by nature would be between $400 and $520 trillion. About $6.5
billion is now spent to sustain natural areas around the globe. Half of that
is shelled out by the United States. "We have to keep track of our natural
capital. We've been liquidating it and not including the costs in our
calculations," Costanza said. "The environment and the economy are tightly
interdependent." The Science study highlights the need for further data on
the economic worth of wild nature, as there are few signs that global
ecosystem loss is slowing down. On the eve of the World Summit on
Sustainable Development in Johannesburg, South Africa, natural systems are
changing from their intact state at a rate of 1.2 percent per year, or 11.4
percent in the decade since the last sustainable development summit in Rio
de Janeiro. "People are hearing a message that nature is being eroded, but
it takes a while to sink in, even for me," Balmford said. "One third of the
world's wild nature has been lost since I was a child and first heard the
word conservation - that's what keeps me awake at night."
72. MANY DISASTER DEATHS PREVENTABLE, UN SAYS
Reuters
9 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.philly.com/mld/philly/living/health/3831562.htm
GENEVA - Natural disasters ranging from earthquakes to cyclones kill some
90,000 people a year but many lives could be saved with better precautions,
the United Nations said Friday. Early warning systems and better planning of
land use could mitigate both human and economic losses from such hazards,
which take the hardest toll on poor countries, it said in a report.
The United Nations hopes the report, "Living with Risk--A Global Review of
Disaster Reduction Initiatives," will be endorsed by the World Summit on
Sustainable Development, which it will host in Johannesburg, South Africa,
later this month, and become a blueprint for disaster planning and risk
reduction. "There is nothing inevitable about death in an earthquake," said
Kenzo Oshima, UN undersecretary-general for humanitarian affairs.
"Earthquakes don't kill people, unsafe buildings kill them."
"Tragically too many people who have perished in a so-called 'natural'
disaster did so because they, or their leaders, failed to see the hazard and
take steps to avert tragedy," he added. Risk assessment, proper land use and
education could prevent deaths and property losses, according to the
400-page report, released a day after landslides and floods in Nepal,
central China and Russia killed more than 50 people. Based on interviews
with some 200 experts, the report catalogs lessons learned from the United
Nations' International Decade for Natural Disaster Reduction, which ended in
1999. While earthquakes, hurricanes, droughts and floods had terrible
consequences--killing some 880,000 people, affecting the homes, health and
livelihoods of a further 1.88 billion and inflicting $685 billion of damage
on the world's economies in the last decade--they were often predictable, it
said.
Poverty and crowded living conditions, with poor communities in particular
living in high-risk locations such as flood plains and seismic areas,
increased human vulnerability to their effects, it warned. Around six times
as many people are affected by natural disasters each year than by armed
conflicts around the world. Asia suffers disproportionately. Some 43% of all
natural disasters over the past decade took place in the region, according
to the UN report. But Africa comes off worst in per capita terms,
particularly when drought and famine are included, it said.
73. HIGH HOPES FOR AGREEMENT AT WORLD SUMMIT
Daily Dispatch
9 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.dispatch.co.za/2002/08/09/southafrica/BHOPE.HTM
CAPE TOWN -- Despite a lack of international consensus in several key areas,
the World Summit on Sustainable Development will prove to be an "event of
deep significance to humanity", says Environmental Affairs Minister Valli
Moosa. The summit, the biggest gathering of its kind ever held, starts in
Johannesburg in just over two weeks. Speaking in the National Assembly
yesterday, Moosa said that following a meeting of a group of countries in
New York last month, he was confident all outstanding matters could be
resolved at the summit. As many as 65000 delegates and over 100 heads of
state are expected to attend the mammoth event, aimed at producing a global
action plan to bring about environmentally sensitive development and the
eradication of poverty.
Four United Nations preparatory conferences held over the past year have
failed to produce an agreed-upon working document for the summit. Moosa
told MPs that one outcome of the New York meeting, convened by President
Thabo Mbeki and UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, was that negotiations would
start in Johannesburg two days ahead of the official August 26 opening.
"At the meeting, it became clear that while tough negotiations will take
place at the summit, there is a genuine commitment on the part of most
countries to a constructive search for solutions. "As a result of these
consultations, South Africa accepted a proposal made by, among others, the
G77 group, that negotiations begin two days before the actual start of the
official summit, on 24 August. "We are confident that all the outstanding
matters can be resolved," he said.
At this point, there was broad consensus that the summit should:
* focus mainly on the eradication of poverty;
* primarily be about implementation and delivery;
* strike a "balanced emphasis" on the three pillars of sustainable
development, namely social development, economic development and the
protection of the environment;
* have as its main areas of action access to water and sanitation, access to
energy, health care, food security, and biodiversity and ecosystem
protection.
* agree that implementation must involve partnerships between governments of
the North and the South, and between governments and the private sector and
civil society;
* agree that Africa must enjoy priority in the action plans, with Nepad
serving as the delivery vehicle; and,
* endorse and rededicate itself to the decisions of the Rio Earth Summit,
including Agenda 21.
However, there are several outstanding areas of disagreement. "These
include the application of the principle of 'common but differentiated
responsibility' among countries for sustainable development; the setting of
targets for the provision of adequate sanitation, and the use of renewable
forms of energy." They further included the phasing out of environmentally
harmful and trade distorting subsidies; the mobilisation of already
committed funds and the need for new and additional resources; and the link
between sustainable development and good governance. Moosa said the world
was on a development path that was "unsustainable". "If we all consume as
much as the average American citizen does, the world will implode."
Patterns of consumption were not just unsustainable, they were also unfair.
"The entire African continent is responsible for a mere three percent of
carbon emissions into the atmosphere, yet pays the same high price for
climate change as the rest of the world. So poor Africans are subsidising
rich Americans, Europeans and Japanese." -- Sapa
74. UK SET FOR EARTH SUMMIT PAY BACK
BBC
9 August 2002
Internet:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/2182195.stm
Britain is set to become the first country sending delegates to the
Johannesburg Earth Summit to agree to help cover the environmental cost.
Green campaigners say this month's 10-day summit on how to encourage
sustainable development may do the environment more harm than good. So now
each delegate is being asked to contribute to the Johannesburg Climate
Legacy, which aims to raise £3m to be spent on saving energy and reducing
carbon dioxide emissions across South Africa.
The Earth Summit, also known as the World Summit on Sustainable Development
(WSSD), runs from 26 August to 4 September.
A total of 60,000 delegates from more than 170 countries are due to visit
South Africa for the continent's biggest ever international gathering. As
well as burning thousands of gallons of fuel, their long-haul flights will
generate 500,000 tons of carbon dioxide gas - a major contributor to global
warming. The environmental pay back contribution for Britain's delegation
would total £3,000. But the government is likely to donate more in an
attempt to pre-empt unfavourable publicity. Fears of repeats of the
criticism of government "junkets" which accompanied pre-summit talks in Bali
apparently prompted Number 10 to cut the delegation's numbers from 100 to
70. The delegation will be led by Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott, with
environment minister Michael Meacher, Rural Affairs Secretary Margaret
Beckett and International Development Secretary Clare Short joined for the
signing ceremony by Tony Blair. With the ministers will be 45 officials and
five security officers. Chairman of the Green Party in England and Wales
Penny Kemp said video-conferencing could have cut the numbers "Meeting in
small numbers you get a lot more done."
Mike Childs from Friends of the Earth, warned: "If politicians go there and
have not got the ability or guts to get a decent deal, questions will be
asked about whether it was all worth while."
75. SECRETARY-GENERAL CALLS ON WORLD LEADERS TO SIGNAL COMMITMENT TO
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT BY ATTENDING JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT
United Nations
8 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.johannesburgsummit.org/html/whats_new/otherstories_sg_johannesburg.html
New York, 8 August- With less than a month before the start of the World
Summit on Sustainable Development, United Nations Secretary-General Kofi
Annan has sent world leaders a letter strongly encouraging their active
participation at the Summit in Johannesburg. "Your presence would send a
strong message of global solidarity and signal commitment at the highest
level to a sustainable future for all," the Secretary-General wrote. More
than 100 world leaders have already indicated that they will attend the
Summit, which Mr. Annan said will be an opportunity to reinvigorate a global
commitment to sustainable development and to maintain the positive momentum
generated at the World Trade Organization meeting in Doha, Qatar, and the
UN's International Conference on Financing for Development in Monterrey,
Mexico. The Summit will take place from 26 August to 4 September, with the
world leaders assembling in Johannesburg for the last three days, from 2-4
September. The world leaders are expected to adopt a political declaration,
that, Mr. Annan said, should be visionary and sets out the international
community's commitment to protect the planet and promote the well-being of
its people." It is also expected that many Heads of State and Government
will announce specific initiatives to promote sustainable development during
the Summit. Calling the progress in implementing the outcomes of the 1992
Earth Summit "slower than desired," Mr. Annan wrote, "I think you will agree
that stronger and more vigorous action is needed, which is why the
Johannesburg Summit is of critical importance." The Secretary-General
acknowledged that more work was needed to resolve several issues on the
draft Plan of Implementation remaining from the last preparatory meeting,
but said that a 17 July meeting in New York was constructive and positive,
and that "a broad measure of agreement was reached on several of these
issues." He added that some differences remained but "there was renewed
confidence and optimism that they would be overcome." About three-quarters
of the Plan of Implementation have been agreed to in negotiations so far,
but the remaining issues are considered critical to achieving the consensus
on the Plan. These issues include questions relating to trade and finance,
globalization and good governance.
76.STATEMENT ON THE WORLD SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT
UK
8 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.number-10.gov.uk/output/Page5863.asp
The Deputy Prime Minster, John Prescott, has said that speculation,
misinformation and inaccurate reporting has reached new heights, even for
the British press over the critically important 'earth summit' in
Johannesburg. The Deputy Prime Minister's statement reads as follows:
"Speculation, misinformation and inaccurate reporting has reached new
heights, even for the British press over this critically important 'earth
summit' in Johannesburg. "Debate on the printed page over which ministers
are going, how big the delegation is and whether the Prime Minister's
Director of Communications has intervened will not deter the UK delegation
from the real issues. "This is the first time ever that an international
conference, involving nearly 180 countries, has looked at such a broad
spectrum of issues. At Johannesburg we will cover a huge range of matters
under the heading of sustainability - from development issues, like poverty
reduction, through to finance, from trade through to environment. "Because
of the complexity of the conference, this is the very reason we need the
most effective delegation. Led by the Prime Minister, the UK delegation
always punches above its weight and influences final outcomes. We have been
working for months and years towards this summit, from Kyoto, through Doha,
Monterrey and now on to Johannesburg."
77. JAPAN CONSIDERS AID TO 7 ASIAN NATIONS TO LOWER GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS
Associated Press
8 August 2002
Internet:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20020808/ap_wo_en_po/japan_environment_1
TOKYO - Japan will offer an aid package to help seven Asian countries lower
emissions of greenhouse gases and stem global warming over the next few
years, an official said Thursday. Environment Ministry official Soichiro
Seki said Tokyo's proposal will mostly consist of training and joint
research projects in anti-pollution measures for China, India, Indonesia,
Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam and the Philippines. Details are to be worked
out in talks with each country after the plan is unveiled at the World
Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg, South Africa, later this
month, Seki said. He declined to say how much Tokyo planned to spend.
Environmental issues are expected to figure prominently in discussions at
the conference, which aims to combat poverty and promote economic growth in
developing nations. With its proposal, Japan hopes to win credit for cutting
back greenhouse gases that would put it closer to its own emissions
reduction targets under the 1997 Kyoto protocol. The international accord,
negotiated in Japan, commits industrialized countries to reduce
heat-trapping gases blamed for warming Earth's atmosphere. Nations that sign
on agree to roll back emissions to 1990 levels. Fifteen European Union
formally signed the Kyoto protocol in May and Japan ratified the accord in
June. The United States opposes the accord, calling it too burdensome for
American industry
78. WORLD'S LEAST DEVELOPED COUNTRIES APPEAL FOR HELP FIGHTING POVERTY
Associated Press
8 August 2002
Internet:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20020808/ap_wo_en_po/benin_poorest_countries_1
COTONOU, Benin - Government ministers from the world's least developed
countries are urging development partners to intensify efforts to fight
poverty ahead of a U.N. conference on sustainable development. The ministers
from 49 countries wrapped up a three-day meeting Wednesday in this West
African country with an appeal for a "reinforced partnership" between
wealthy and impoverished countries. A joint statement appealed for greater
access to loans to finance key development programs in poverty-stricken
countries. "No country is poor by choice," Benin President Mathieu Kerekou
said in closing remarks. "Our countries have once again expressed publicly
their political will to organize themselves methodically to get out of the
category to which their historical heritage has confined them." The meeting
was organized ahead of the World Summit on Sustainable Development, due to
take place from Aug. 26 to Sept. 4 in Johannesburg, South Africa. It was
attended by World Trade Organization Director General Mike Moore and U.N.
Undersecretary-General Anwarul Chowdhury
79. SUMMIT MUST YIELD TIME FRAME FOR GOALS
Business Day
8 August 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FB20020808450010558.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
Johannesburg, Aug 06, 2002 (Business Day/All Africa Global Media via COMTEX)
-- A challenge will be how to implement Rio's Agenda 21 on development and
environmental issues . THE World Summit on Sustainable Development should be
a success in terms of its sheer scale as the biggest United Nations (UN)
event on record. An estimated 45000 participants and more than 100 leaders
are expected to descend on Johannesburg at the end of this month to attend
the gathering, say the organisers, the Johannesburg World Summit Company .
But the question remains what criteria should be used to judge the outcome
of the summit as the entire exercise, the summit and its 500 side events,
makes it a massive multipronged affair. Coming up with a benchmark for
success is difficult. It could be anything from raising consciousness on
environmental issues to a project implementation list. A benchmark by which
some environmental and business groups will be assessing the summit is
whether or not the implementation plan and the final political declaration
break new ground, and if specific time frames and responsibilities are
allocated for certain actions. But Crispian Olver, environmental affairs
and tourism department's director-general, says that it is not whether new
ground is broken that should be the benchmark of success.
It is, instead, the extent to which the existing international agenda on the
environment, development, aid and trade can be linked and implemented. He
says that in view of the extensive agenda on the environment that came out
of the Rio summit 10 years ago and subsequent agreements there is a need to
consolidate the agenda and to ensure that commitments are not only kept, but
that the focus is on implementation. Olver says SA has already successfully
drawn a link between the Rio summit, World Trade Organisation meeting in
Doha and the "development" round to trade negotiations, the UN's Financing
for Development conference in Monterrey, Mexico, earlier this year. Its
importance, he says, is that it can become the basis for implementation.
With the US's new protectionist measures on steel imports as well as its
increase in agricultural subsidies there is mounting concern about whether
the promised development trade round will materialise. Olver said SA has
already been successful in meeting its four foremost goals for the summit.
In the 77-page draft implementation plan for the summit, it says it has been
able to inject what he calls a "balanced approach to sustainable
development", which includes the social, economic and environmental
dimensions. The balanced approach means that the implementation plan is not
overwhelmingly about the environment, but also makes poverty a primary
focus. He says the plan also places Africa and the New Partnership for
Africa's Development on the agenda and finally ensures that the summit is
about implementation of what has been decided. Olver says one aspect of the
summit is finding ways to implement the ambitious Agenda 21, which covers a
range of development and environmental issues, that came out of the Rio
summit 10 years ago and finding ways to ensure that the UN's eight
millennium development goals on basic means of reducing poverty are met.
One of the few extra goals that could come out of the summit is access to
improved sanitation, which could be added to the objective of halving the
proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water. As
it would inevitably mean a commitment of extra resources, the US has been
reluctant to add new development goals, but there are signs that it might
now be willing to consider adding the goal of sanitation. Saliem Fakir, the
SA director of the World Conservation Union, which consists of business,
environmental groups and nongovernmental organisations, says the extent to
which the international agenda can be advanced and new issues introduced,
will be the most practical measure of the summit's success. He says that
the push for compromise threatens to water down the outcome of the summit.
If the summit is to be considered a success there is a need for a new target
on renewable energy generation, and a big push needs to be given to trade
liberalisation under the Doha round.
The more strident environmental groups want greater discussion on corporate
accountability, targets and time frames on halting the loss of biodiversity,
preventing the collapse of fish stocks and protection of ecological
systems. On the fringes of the summit, business through Business Action for
Sustainable Development, will be keen to get across that it is part of the
solution and has set standards on reporting on environmental and social
issues. A summit declaration might not be sufficient for any definition of
success if it does not contain targets, goals, and resource commitments as
an allocation of responsibilities, if the exercise is indeed about
implementation. That might be the most crucial part of the summit, says a
close observer from business, Laurrain Lotter of the SA Chemical and Allied
Industries Association.
80. ECOJARGON THE LINGUA FRANCA AT JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT
Reuters
8 August 2002
Internet:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20020808/lf_nm/environment_summit_jargon_dc_1
AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - The 50,000 delegates from nearly 200 countries set to
throng the Johannesburg summit this month will have no problem finding a
common language to thrash out a strategy for sustainable development.
They'll be immersed in the eco-jargon that splits experts from the lay
community -- most of whom have no idea what the broad, vague phrase
"sustainable development" actually means. Virtually every discipline comes
with its own code words designed to divide the uninitiated from the seasoned
pro. "Often they are carefully designed words with specific meanings. Some
become part of language and some fail to get there," said Nick Nuttall, head
of media services at the United Nations ( news - web sites) Environment
Program in Nairobi.
"They're an attempt to define very big subjects in very short words which
can really mean nothing. They're a compromise."
Most people may not consider themselves "stakeholders" in the summit, but
the wide-reaching impacts are likely to go far beyond the governments who
sign any pact agreed to in Johannesburg to the companies and communities who
will benefit from -- or pay for -- sustainable development. "I avoid using
'stakeholder' and use 'all sections of society'," UNEP's Nuttall said.
"There's a lot of corporatization of the language. It sounds a lot like
'shareholder'." With half the world's leaders and hundreds of NGOs
(nongovernmental organizations) attending, the U.N. conference officially
titled the World Summit on Sustainable Development, but nicknamed Earth
Summit 2 or Rio+10, may set new standards.
And that's not to mention the alphabet soup of acronyms at what will be the
largest ever MSP (multi-stakeholder process) on WEHAB (water, energy,
health, agricultural biodiversity and sustainable ecosystem management).
The term "sustainable development" first emerged from the 1970s
environmental movement, but it languished in obscurity for a decade until a
United Nations commission took up the task of linking environmental
responsibility to economic growth. "We looked for a joint phrase and came
up with 'sustainable development'," said Gro Harlem Brundtland, who led the
group that produced the landmark 1987 U.N. report "Our Common Future." The
team led by Brundtland, a former Norwegian prime minister and current head
of the World Health Organization ( news - web sites), defined sustainable
development as "development that meets the needs of the present without
compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs."
TRANSLATION TERROR
But squeezing the term into the international environmental lexicon was
another matter. "We spent a long time translating it into all the languages
of the world -- it was especially difficult in German," she told Reuters.
Whatever its early problems, "nachhaltige Entwicklung" has become common
currency in environmentally progressive Germany, which voted its Green party
into power in 1998. The Brundtland commission and "Our Common Future" laid
the groundwork that led to the 1992 Rio "Earth Summit" and the guiding
"Agenda 21" action plan that sought to guide policy makers trying to reduce
world poverty, improve access to water and energy, yet spread the social
benefits of economic growth. Despite the early U.N. efforts, the
"sustainable development" moniker failed to catch on with either the public
or development groups, according to the forthcoming book "Walking the Talk"
from the Geneva-based World Business Council on Sustainable Development.
"Environmental groups do not appear to like the concept because they did not
'invent' it and because it has the word 'development' in it," wrote author
Stephan Schmidheiny.
Development groups dislike it for "being too green, feeling that all the
emphasis is on the needs of the future rather than the needs of the
present."
ECOBABBLERS VERSUS GREENWASHERS
Critics have derided the U.N. bureaucracy and green groups for engaging in
'ecobabble', a derogatory term defined as using the technical language of
ecology to make the user seem ecologically aware. Environmental groups, for
their part, accuse companies and states of "greenwashing" -- disseminating
disinformation to create an environmentally responsible public image. In
the hands of partisans, even a common, everyday word can become political
dynamite. No word has sparked more controversy than "partnership" -- an
issue high on the Johannesburg agenda, with some governments promoting it in
a bid to share the responsibility and costs of any new activities with the
hundreds of companies or nongovernmental groups expected to swarm the
conference.
"I learned in (pre-conference meetings) just how loaded some of these terms
are. It turns out the word 'partnership' is suspect in a lot of circles,"
said Frances Seymour, a program director at the Washington environmental
think tank World Resources Institute.
Green groups say countries such as the United States have seized on the
'partnership' label to push for more business openings for companies instead
of signing on to new multilateral development and environmental agreements.
"It's code that the U.S. is using to avoid intergovernmental agreements and
binding targets and timetables," said Steve Sawyer, climate adviser for
Greenpeace International. Countries and companies in Johannesburg will also
parade advances in "ecoefficiency," another broad term they use to signify
"efforts to optimize energy and raw material efficiency to produce an
economic and ecological benefit derived from a reduction of environmental
impact." While companies such as German chemical giant BASF and Mexican
cement maker Cemex tout their gains in ecoefficiency, not everyone is
convinced. "It sounds like doublespeak to me, where people try to attribute
some environmental qualities to something, but can't get specific about what
they really mean," Sawyer said.
81. UN GATHERING IN JO'BURG ACID TEST OF WILL TO REFORM
Business Day (Johannesburg) via All Africa
8 August 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200208080321.html
Summit could be a springboard to end global development's winter of
discontent. AS OUR winter ends, the people of the world will gather in
Johannesburg at the United Nations World Summit for Sustainable Development.
This massive event which is one of the most ambitious attempted in the
world, but undertaken with confidence by democratic SA needs to answer a
number of questions, practically. One of these is whether it is possible for
the rich and the poor in the world to share and pursue common objectives,
for mutual benefit. Another is whether the rich are willing to agree that
the priorities of the poor are also their priorities. Yet another question
is whether the rich will moderate their immediate material gratification, to
protect the global environment as a public good for the benefit of present
and future generations.
Another is whether the rich are ready to use the considerable means at their
disposal to underwrite with actual resources the positive answers to these
questions. There are many in the world who believe the rich are unwilling to
answer these questions in the affirmative. Some among these made their point
forcefully and sometimes in a disturbing manner, in demonstrations at
Seattle, Prague, Davos, Genoa and elsewhere. They demand practical responses
to deeply felt concerns. They will not be satisfied merely by good
declarations, such as may emerge from the Johannesburg summit. The daily
hunger and human pain of the poor of the world also lead these billions to
make the same demand. They ask that out of Johannesburg must come a real
message of hope and not a mirage. Those who have spoken out put on the
credit side of their balance sheet the fact that the World Summit on
Sustainable Development will be held on a continent that exemplifies the
global challenge of poverty and underdevelopment that all humanity faces.
As a country that shares and is inspired by the potent and humanising
feeling of hope, we agreed to host the summit. We were, and are, convinced
that the people of the world are determined to achieve global sustainable
development.
The balanced and successful combination of social, economic and
environmental objectives constitutes the aim of sustainable development.
These goals cannot be compartmentalised or separated one from the other.
They are three sides of the same triangle.
The summit will be the culmination of determined efforts to confront
critical issues facing humankind. These have been discussed since the Rio
Earth summit of 1992 and beyond. Johannesburg stands at the apex of these
global activities, which focused on building a better world for all.
These initiatives are represented by such conventions as the United Nations
Millennium Summit, the Rome World Food Summit and the Monterrey Summit on
development financing. They include the World Trade Organisation's Doha
development round and the Group of Eight summit in Kananaskis, Canada. At
these conferences, the leaders of the countries of the world committed
themselves to shared global prosperity, the eradication of poverty and
underdevelopment, and sustainable development.
Given this build-up, the ordinary people of the world expect that out of
Johannesburg will emerge a credible plan of action that is inclusive,
relevant, practical and implementable. They expect this action programme
will be expressive of a new and durable global partnership for human dignity
and a healthy relationship between human beings and the natural world. They
expect action now.
For its part, Africa as the host continent, will present its united view
about itself in the form of Nepad, the New Partnership for Africa's
Development. It will therefore speak of the imperative for its people to
enter into a partnership among themselves, for peace, democracy, human
rights, the rule of law and prosperity.
It will speak of the need for Africa to enter into a mutually beneficial
partnership with the rest of the world. It will speak of a partnership
involving governments, the private sector, the labour movement and civil
society. It will speak of the requirement for mutual accountability within
Africa and between Africa and the world. Even as we hope that something new
will come out of Johannesburg, we are mindful of what has happened globally
since Rio 1992. Since 1990, every year, 10-million more people have joined
the ranks of the poor. More than 1-billion fellow human beings remain
undernourished. No fewer than 1,5-billion people live in water-scarce areas.
Every year fish stocks decline by about 660000 tons. Rising oceans
increasingly threaten island states.
In some parts of Africa the desert is advancing by 10km a year. The gap
between rich and poor continues to widen at a faster pace. Even as you read
this, millions in southern Africa face death from famine, despite the
existence of huge food stocks elsewhere in the world. Johannesburg provides
a rare opportunity, which will not come again soon. This is a time for all
humanity and all leaders to get together, to engage in an historic act of
creative human solidarity and intelligence, to build a truly peoplecentred,
caring world community. The banners that will soon adorn Johannesburg will
proclaim people, planet, prosperity. Will they be the trumpet of a prophecy
that heralds spring, or will they be mere banners flapping in the wind?
Mbeki is President of SA and inaugural African Union Chairman. He will be
World Summit Chairman.
82. NEARLY 100 FINNS TO TAKE PART IN THE JOHANNESBURG SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT
Helsingin Sanomat International Edition
8 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.helsinki-hs.net/news.asp?id=20020808IE7
Businesses more involved than before in development projects. Nearly 100
people from Finland will attend the World Summit for Sustainable Development
which takes place in the South African city of Johannesburg in late August
and early September. The official Finnish delegation of 40 people will be
led by President Tarja Halonen. Another group of 40 Finns will go as
experts representing non-governmental organisations, businesses, and
research institutes. In addition there will be security guards and other
assistants. Three government ministers will also participate: Environment
Minister Jouni Backman (Soc. Dem.), Development Cooperation Minister
Suvi-Anne Siimes (Left Alliance), and Foreign Trade Minister Jari Vilén
(Nat. Coalition). In addition to the three ministers, about a dozen Members
of Parliament will be travelling to the summit. A total of about 70,000
guests are expected at the Johannesburg summit. In addition to the official
meeting there will be an NGO event and a business forum. he topics are at
least as massive as the meeting itself: ways to reduce poverty, getting a
grip on the globalization of the economy, protection of the environment and
natural resources, as well as the problems faced by Africa.
This is one of the most significant international meetings ever held. This
is why I feel that it is good that many people take part in it. It shows
that there is genuine interest", said Environment Minister Jouni Backman on
Wednesday at a seminar of the preparatory committee in Helsinki. In
addition to talks between national governments, there are plans to introduce
new models of action involving companies and NGOs. Suvi-Anne Siimes said
that Finland will be taking part in a few partnership projects. She said
that there is to be cooperation on energy and climate questions in Central
America, and forestry cooperation in Brazil. The Ministry for Foreign
Affairs is also involved in the projects. In addition, three universities
are to take part in EU cooperation with the universities of developing
countries. The Ministry of the Environment has been involved in preparations
for a project on consumption issues. Most projects are still looking for
partners, and all agreeements are purely voluntary.
The United States has been the most enthusiastic in promoting partnerships,
and the developing countries are concerned that the US might be trying to
evade the commitment of raising development cooperation funding to 0.7% (of
GDP)", Siimes said. This new method of operations raised a good deal of
interest in the seminar of more than 100 people. "How can we keep out big
corporations, such as the water company Vivendi, who only want to expand
their markets", pondered Kaarin Taipale, an architect and the chairwoman of
an international environmental organisation of municipalities. On the other
hand, Juhani Santaholma, head of the energy group of the International
Chamber of Commerce, warned that there may not be extensive formation of
these partnerships if they are not made more attractive from a business
point of view. Finland has been involved in the preparation of the part of
the programme of the meeting aimed at pushing consumption in a more
sustainable direction. At the seminar, there was no answer forthcoming to a
question from the audience concerning whether or not there are any plans
underway to adapt the standard of living prevailing in the West to a more
internationally fair level.
83. JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT: WHAT'S MISSING FROM THE WSSD?
The Earth Times
8 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.earthtimes.org/aug/johannesburgsummitwhatsaug8_02.htm
At the end of the last millennium, the United Nations tackled important
development issues that promised to help end human misery. Foremost among
these were human rights, population, the environment, women's rights, human
settlements, food security and children's welfare. Having completed a
warm-up of conferences on these issues in the l990's, member states have
scheduled an Olympic-scale grand finale at the World Summit on Sustainable
Development. Nearly 60,000 participants are expected to gather from August
26 to September 4 in Johannesburg so that nations can showcase their
achievements. In strictest terms, this meeting will not simply be a
follow-up to the 1992 Earth Summit held in Rio, a landmark event that first
brought critical issues like global warming to the world's attention. The
intersection between the environment and development is the central theme of
the WSSD, but its aim is much more ambitious: to steer the world on a new
course toward equitable, sustainable development. Since experts generally
agree that the topic covers almost every known social, economic and
environment problem, Johannesburg could turn into a disorderly free-for-all,
but there are easily identified ways to steer the summit in the right
direction.
Nitin Desai, Secretary General of the WSSD, is keenly aware that refereeing
a global consensus on sustainable development requires a strong hand.
Governments will finalize negotiations on a Johannesburg Political
Declaration and a policy document based on Agenda 21, the vision for the
21st Century agreed upon in 1992. Taking new trends such as globalization
and HIV/AIDS into account, delegates will assess past achievements and plan
a new course of action. They must avoid renegotiating international
agreements such as the Kyoto Protocol while responding to NGO calls for a
new treaty on corporate accountability. A wide range of concerns such as
poverty, education, health, tourism, energy and transport, oceans,
freshwater resources and natural disasters will get due attention while
controversial ones like finance and trade are likely to be the main
attractions of late-night negotiations.
Thus far, a pragmatic tone has dominated the preparatory committee meetings
and is in tune with the UN's call for the summit to focus on deliverables to
accelerate progress. Secretary General Kofi Annan has identified key areas
where concrete results can be obtained. All of his recommendations make good
sense and are strategic actions affecting a variety of development
processes. For example, progress has been achieved in the last decade in
improved access to clean water and sanitation, but accelerating
implementation would bring additional benefits far beyond health, such as
extending working life and raising the living standards of the poor. Equally
important is Annan's call to reduce over-consumption of energy resources,
reverse climate change and provide modern energy to more than two billion
people. Another strategic action would be to increase investments in health,
including management over toxic and hazardous materials, air pollution and
tackling tropical disease like malaria. Annan further advocates a renewed
commitment to preserve biodiversity.
NGOs will have an opportunity to add to this list during the Civil Society
Global Forum to be held from August 19 to September 4 less than ten minutes
away from the official meeting. Trade unions will very likely push harder
for corporate accountability on indoor environmental problems likes
occupational health and safety-an issue that has generally been skirted in
official documents. NGOs from the South will present their Algiers
Declaration that claims racism is an obstacle to sustainable development.
They site the trans-boundary shipment of toxic waste to poor developing
countries as evidence of post-colonial practices. Children will have a
collective voice as representatives present a consensus statement based on a
Children's Environment Conference held in Canada. Among their demands is a
ban on CFCs and other toxic chemicals. High on the list of priorities for
the indigenous peoples will be control over customary land. The oil
exploration pending in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge is an example of
a priority issue. REDEH, a Brazilian-based communications NGO, and the
Women's Environment and Development Organization will facilitate a Women's
Action Tent devoted to a wide range of concerns including sexual and
reproductive rights and women's political representation. Responding to
calls for businesses to become more environmentally responsible, the World
Business Council for Sustainable Development will plunge into the
controversies with evidence that businesses too are eco-friendly. The
Council plans to commit businesses to redress child labor and uphold high
environmental standards.
Attempting to provide some coherence to these debates, the UN has outlined
three themes, or "pillars," of sustainable development. These are: 1)
combating poverty and promoting sustainable livelihoods, 2) sustainable
consumption and production and 3) protecting the integrity of life-support
eco-systems. These topics help focus attention on how environment and
development interrelate and suggest useful pathways for the future. For
example, the comprehensive UN progress report on Agenda 21 states that
environmental degradation, natural disasters and disease have
disproportionately affected people in poverty. Without additional resources
to protect their sea walls and coral reefs and as climate change contributes
to rising sea levels, small islands like Tuvalu can expect the majority of
its rural population to become environmental refugees. The report also notes
that sustainable development cannot be achieved without major changes in the
world's consumption and production patterns. Industrial societies,
particularly the US, currently consume a disproportionate share of the
earth's natural resources and contribute the major portion of green house
gases. Closely related to this problem is the accelerated damage to forests,
fisheries and watersheds due in part to changing land-use and poor ocean
management.
Given the near universal scope of the WSSD agenda, it may appear ludicrous
to suggest that there is something missing. Yet that is clearly the case.
Put bluntly, the WSSD is precariously balanced on three pillars with a weak
foundation. The call to make this conference "practical" is driving some
governments to play by traditional rules and backtrack on past international
agreements like the Rio principle of "common but differentiated
responsibilities." The grand mission of setting the world on a new course
toward sustainable development has been trivialized in many instances as
technocratic solutions while attention to mobilizing political will and
finances fall by the wayside.
The Johannesburg summit can still succeed, but delegates must turn their
attention back to basics and keep an eye on the big picture. The first
challenge is to make sure that the public grasps the main message of the
WSSD: Earth and all its living creatures are heading for ground zero, and
everyone must start behaving "as if human beings intended to stay on this
planet." Then, they need to be convinced that a UN summit will help set
things right in the world. The urgency of the matter was well expressed by
Secretary General Kofi Annan in his lecture at the London School of
Economics earlier this year when he said, "Sustainable development may be
new conventional wisdom, but many people have still not grasped its meaning.
One important task is to show that it is far from being as abstract as it
sounds. It is a life-or-death issue for millions upon millions of people and
potentially the whole human race." Thus far, in many countries, the WSSD has
failed to build a foundation for the most important element of sustainable
development-a broad-based political leadership with popular support. But
there is a more serious rift in the structure of the conference; even among
the faithful attending the event, a mistrust of the UN's call for
partnerships persists. Partly in response to criticisms that UN meetings are
little more than one-time events that are quickly forgotten, the UN designed
events to promote networking. Citing successes such as the Global Health
Initiative it has encouraged partnerships involving stakeholders including
businesses, youth and women's groups. However, the organization is facing a
standoff with some NGOs for brokering forced relationships. For example,
Friends of the Earth has accused the UN meeting of being hijacked by
corporations pursuing the WTO trade agenda. Other NGOs have shown their
disdain for partnerships based on what they perceive to be "unequal power
relations" by turning their backs on the private sector altogether. They
argue that in the absence of a serious redistribution of power, community
groups that join hands with dominant allies will carry the burden of
development projects while having little say in decision-making. Before all
partners give up hope, there is still a chance to build teamwork. Taking the
stakeholders' reluctance to heart and addressing the issue head-on may be
the only way to bridge this growing chasm.
The WSSD process must also be better grounded in scientific knowledge about
how to make sustainable development work. International conferences can, and
often do, contribute to an essential body of "how-to" knowledge. Out of the
international exchange of views and review of the global condition, a
clearer picture of why policies succeed or fail should emerge. But to date,
few country reports provide the in-depth policy analyses required to make
that happen. Part of the problem is poor funding for research to help
governments analyze the impact of their policies on social change. Another
concern is the paucity of scientific tools for understanding the interaction
between global processes and human behavior. We are years behind in
preventing the spread of HIV/AIDS and the looming epidemic of
tobacco-related diseases in developing countries is hardly recognized.
Economics, the preferred policy tool, is still a poorly tuned craft. Even
the World Bank with its elite corps of economists would not claim to have
the power to predict the final scenerio of globalization. Invoking the
Precautionary Principle is a major step forward, but governments and the UN
also have to put more financial resources into filling in the knowledge
gaps. Researches on sustainable development and the environment require
comprehensive, longitudinal methodologies and should include political and
social as well as scientific analyses. For example, more research is needed
to discover cheap energy resources that can be used to replace the current
carbon-based ones, but little is known about which policies would make them
acceptable to manufacturers or consumers, particularly in developing
countries. Science and technology policies also need serious rethinking
about how knowledge is generated, protected, and shared globally. If nations
are heading for global interlinking eco-systems, then governments need to
keep the flow of knowledge circulating freely. That means overcoming
barriers that prevent major groups like women, indigenous peoples and
farmers from contributing to and accessing information and enlisting their
help to solve the sustainable development puzzle. Although the WSSD draft
plan acknowledges the importance of increased investments in science and
technology, few governments are forthcoming with the political will to
achieve these goals.
Finally, delegates need to place greater faith in the power of a human
rights approach to sustainable development. The human rights concept has
evolved from a narrowly defined legalistic, "western" approach to an
international standard of conduct with far reaching legislative
implications. Although often appearing in different guises, the ethical
basis of sustainable development has been on the UN agenda for decades. We
need to draw upon this rich tradition and rethink human rights so that it
lays the intellectual foundation to tackle such problems as the environment,
self-determination, peace and corporate accountability. Human Rights
Covenants clearly state that all people have the right to economic
development and that this right is universal as well as indivisible from
other civil and political rights. Other sources closer at hand are the 27
core principles of the Rio Declaration adopted at the 1992 Earth Summit. The
Rio Declaration stands out for its clarity of vision and anticipation of the
21st century challenges to sustainable development. Yet this important
historic document has struggled to stay alive in this WSSD process.
Principle 1 states that "Human beingsâ?|are entitled to a healthy and
productive life in harmony with nature." Principle 3 expresses that "The
right to development must be fulfilled so as to equitably meet developmental
and environmental needs of present and future generations." And it notes
that States should cooperate in a spirit of "global partnership to conserve,
protect and restore the health and integrity of the Earth's ecosystem." It
is time to invite the spirit of the Rio Declaration to Johannesburg so as to
breathe life back into the proceedings. A world summit that is devoted to
changing the course of human history must rally the moral consciousness of
every citizen, and this particular world summit is still a potential winner.
84. EARTH SUMMIT NUMBERS UNKNOWN BUT PLANS ON TRACK
Reuters
7 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.macon.com/mld/macon/news/nation/3817166.htm
PRETORIA, South Africa - With 19 days to the start of the biggest U.N.
gathering in history, organizers still don't know how many people will
arrive for the Johannesburg Earth Summit nor what it will cost to stage. But
Moss Mashishi, chief executive of the Johannesburg World Summit Company,
told reporters he was confident the 10-day event would go off smoothly and
within the $52.2 million budget. U.N. officials have said the World Summit
on Sustainable Development, also known as the Earth Summit, will be the
biggest gathering of its kind in history. The summit will examine progress
since the first Earth Summit in Brazil 10 years ago and will seek to map a
way forward for a planet battered by disease, poverty, pollution and the
overuse of resources including water.
"Today it's 19 days to the summit. We are under a huge amount of pressure,"
Mashishi said. Arrangements ranging from the deployment of 8,000 additional
police and soldiers, transport and even entertainment for participants
ranging from environmental activists to heads of state, were in place and
needed only to be implemented, he said. Bookings had accelerated over the
past week and organizers were still working on a projection of around 60,000
participants and officials. "Nobody can really tell you an exact number of
how many people are coming," Mashishi said. "We work on projections and in
our consultations with the U.N. and various other parties...we are around
the 60,000 mark for the number of people we expect to take part in the
summit." A summit official said privately that the latest internal estimate
was that around 45,000 people actually would arrive in Johannesburg on
summit-related business between the start of preparatory talks on August 24
-- the official opening is on August 26 -- and the closing ceremony on
September 4. But with hundreds of parallel events planned at five separate
venues around Johannesburg, it was impossible to know in advance how many
people would turn up, the official said. Mashishi declined to give details
of the fund-raising drive, but said organizers had commitments for 75 to 80
percent of the estimated cost of the event and plans to raise the rest. "We
will be able to rework post-summit what the total figures will look like,
but both the corporate and government responses have been good. On the whole
it looks quite good in terms of the initial projections we had," he said
85. UN BAN ON FEASTS DURING FAMINE
BBC
6 August 2002
Internet:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/2176653.stm
Senior United Nations managers have been warned not to engage in lavish
entertaining during the forthcoming environment summit in Johannesburg. UN
Secretary-General Kofi Annan's chief of staff S Iqbal Riza urged his senior
staff to remember that the conference was being held as famine threatened
southern Africa. Some 65,000 people have registered to attend the
conference in South Africa and about 100 heads of state are due to attend at
the end of this month. The UN appear determined to ensure the summit does
not appear too lavish It is being held 10 years after the first Earth Summit
in Rio de Janeiro, but is already being dismissed as the biggest talking
shop in history, with doom-mongers predicting the summit has little success
in achieving the sustainable development goals it will set. Some 20 UN
bodies will be attending, each with their own delegation, and the UN is
clearly keen to pre-empt any criticism that might come their way from any of
the 6,000 journalists expected to cover the event.
In the memo, a copy of which was secured by BBC News Online, there was also
a warning to managers not to allow an unnecessarily large number of UN staff
to attend the summit "which could be perceived as an obvious waste of
personnel and financial resources". "We must keep in mind that this
conference is taking place in the midst of a major food crisis in southern
Africa, affecting 13 million people," Mr Iqbal Riza said further down the
memo. "It would be wise to refrain from excessive levels of hospitality,
and any event sponsored by the United Nations should be of modest, even
frugal, dimensions," he said.
The recent UN World Food Summit held in Rome was criticised for the lavish
food and hospitality available at the event.
About 13 million people are at risk of starvation in seven countries across
southern
86. THE BIGGEST TALKING SHOP IN HISTORY OR A MASS GATHERING TO SAVE THE
WORLD?
The Guardian
6 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldsummit2002/story/0,12264,769848,00.html
Delegations from 174 countries which are meeting for nine days to try to
cure the world's environment and development problems later this month will
have to do it without the help of Britain's environment minister, Michael
Meacher. The conference, seen by many as a talking shop and too unwieldy to
produce concrete results, takes place 10 years after the first Earth Summit
in Rio and is designed to assess progress and give new impetus to the
political process. A staggering 65,000 people have registered to attend the
conference in Johannesburg, which will be turned into a fortress for nine
days with 27,000 police enforcing security. Every hotel room and boarding
house and many holiday flats have been taken over by the government to
squeeze everyone in.
At least 10,000 of those attending will be government officials, and 6,000
will be journalists. Each head of government will be allotted 10 minutes to
speak. There are 20 UN bodies, each with their own delegation. A second
parallel conference attended by environment groups, big business, the
landless poor, and hundreds of lobby groups, from bird-watchers to the oil
industry, has already attracted 15,000 registrations. Each of these groups
will also send separate delegations to lobby the main conference. It is so
complex that no one is sure it will work, still less achieve anything. But
the conference takes place against an alarming backdrop of famine in
Southern Africa, caused partly by climate change which is reducing rainfall,
and the steady destruction of the earth's natural resources, and lack of
clean water and sanitation. The failure to reach many of the UN's
development targets and reduction in world poverty by promoting development
and education will be top of the agenda.
Poverty targets
More than 100 heads of state will arrive in the last two days of the
conference to sign a declaration designed to set new targets on poverty and
development aid. Among the issues that Tony Blair will be pushing is the
plight of two billion people in the world who are without electricity, many
in rural Africa. The problem is that unlike Rio there are no great new
conventions to be signed. At the first summit the Climate Change Convention,
designed to combat global warming, and the Biodiversity Convention, to
protect vulnerable species and protect the natural world, were agreed and
signed, giving high hopes of a brighter future. In addition developing
countries got together and set up an agreement to combat the spread of the
world's deserts. An attempt was made to get a forest convention, but this
proved impossible and despite years of subsequent talks failed to
materialise. Apart from those agreements, a vast document called Agenda 21,
a blueprint for the environment and development in the 21st century, was
agreed and signed. Every local authority was supposed to create a plan for
sustainable development under the slogan "think globally, act locally". Many
in Britain have adopted Agenda 21 policies with varied success. This time
the agenda has changed. Big businesses, particularly multinationals, are now
charged with pouring money into developing countries and creating
partnerships with local people to aid development. The idea is to improve
social, environment and economic advancement all in one go, under the
catch-all phrase of sustainable development. This is really what the summit
is supposed to be about, how to encourage economic development of the
poorest countries without further damaging their environment and destroying
yet more natural resources like forests. A phrase that will be repeated
again and again in Johannesburg will be "not leaving the earth for our
children in a worse state than we found it".
As at Rio the main problem will be seen as the role of the US. There have
been many preparatory meetings, but the US delegation, numbering more than
130, has been accused by environment groups of obstructing any attempts to
impose new targets and timetables on relieving poverty and promoting
development.
So little progress had been made after the "last" preparation meeting in
Bali in June that many feared that Johannesburg would be a complete failure.
Another meeting was hastily arranged for New York last month to try to pin
down some concrete proposals.
Still undecided is whether George Bush will attend. The conference, which
was to have been in the first two weeks in September, was moved back to run
from August 26 to September 4, to avoid the September 11 anniversary and
allow the president to attend.
Like his father, who was US president during the Rio conference, Mr Bush is
less than enthusiastic about the environment and development aid. In 1992
George Bush senior refused to sign the Biodiversity Convention in case it
cost the US money but he did go to Rio and endorsed the Climate Change
Convention. His son is even more antagonistic towards the environment, and
although the US remains part of the climate convention, the new president
pulled out of the subsequent Kyoto agreement which would have given the
convention teeth. The rest of the world has continued with Kyoto, a snub to
the US, which is now seen as an international environmental pariah, at least
in the eyes of the green movement. As at the Rio summit there will be a
split between the northern developed countries which regard Johannesburg as
a vital step to safeguarding the environment as well as promoting
development, and the developing world, which looks on it as an opportunity
for more aid to promote industry and clean technology.
Leap forward
But in the 10 years since Rio the aims of development and environment groups
have got much closer. There has been a vast growth in the environment
movement in developing countries. They do not want to repeat the mistakes of
the industrial revolution of Europe and the US where air pollution and toxic
wastes wrecked large areas. The developing countries want to leap from the
19th century to the 21st without the mess in between. To this end they find
a sympathetic ear in Mr Blair, who wants to switch the lights on in Africa
using technologies like wind and solar power. This will have the dual effect
of allowing a leap forward in education using computers and other
technology, and at the same time prevent the further destruction of trees
used daily for fuel.
The other great issues are lack of clean water and sanitation, which cause
millions of deaths a year among children from avoidable diseases. Africa is
particularly prone to virulent forms of malaria, which is spreading to ever
increasing areas of the globe because of climate change. Biodiversity and
its continued destruction are again on the agenda and how to keep the food
supplies going for ever increasing human populations. The world's population
of 6 billion population will grow to 8 billion in less than 50 years.
With multinationals and environment groups sending delegations as large as
any government's, trade and globalisation will be a simmering issue. Many
see the greater emphasis in Johannesburg on big business helping to solve
the world's problems as a further erosion of the power of governments, and a
lack of political will to make the summit a success.
On a global scale
· Proper name World Summit on Environment and Development
· Also billed as The world's largest ever conference
· Held in Johannesburg, South Africa, to review progress 10 years after the
first Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in 1992. Runs August 26 to
September 4
· Second conference for environment, development and industry groups runs
alongside
· Total of 65,000 delegates
· Security is provided by 27,000 police.
· Currently 174 countries are represented
· 106 heads of government will attend, including Tony Blair
· British delegation cut from 100 to 70
· The BBC is expected to send a team of 100
· George Bush still undecided whether to attend
87. WELSH POLITICIANS AT JOHANNESBURG WORLD SUMMIT
NewsWales
6 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.newswales.co.uk/?section=Politics&F=1&id=5823
Two leading Welsh politicians will be taking Wales' message to the
Johannesburg summit later this month. Plaid Cymru MP Simon Thomas and
European Parliamentary leader Jill Evans MEP will be taking Wales's message
to the Johannesburg World Summit on Sustainable Development which starts on
26 August, but will first discuss its implications for Wales, and also
Wales's role in the summit, in an open meeting on the Eisteddfod Maes, on
Thursday, August 8. Invitations have been sent out to a variety of
organisations and societies in Wales, including the National Assembly for
Wales's First Minister, Rhodri Morgan, to attend the discussion on the Maes.
It is also open for the public to participate. The Johannesburg Summit is a
follow up to the first earth Summit held at Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, ten
years ago, and aims to review the progress made over the last ten years.
Simon Thomas MP said: "Rio was full of goodwill and good intentions but has
subsequently lacked in action and results. "The summit needs to recognise
the importance of smaller nations such as Wales - the success of the summit
depends on the goodwill and cooperation of these smaller nations and
regions. This summit is therefore an opportunity to turn globalisation and
world politics on its head, and for leading nations to empower smaller ones
to take action on sustainable development." Jill Evans MEP said: "There has
been limited progress since Rio. Hopes for success at the Johannesburg
Summit have declined every time the parties to international agreements
failed to fulfil their promises and powerful countries like the United
States try to highjack the process. So a great deal is at stake in
Johannesburg and only political will can make it successful. "The debate on
sustainable development in Johannesburg must focus on respect for all people
- their values, cultures and environment. It is not just about economic
growth but about changing the global agenda so that economic and trade
policies serve rather than dictate social, environmental and cultural
objectives. It is a unique opportunity to improve the conditions of life for
people everywhere in the world, including Wales. "Wales has an important
role to play in promoting environmental, social, economic, linguistic and
cultural diversity. Sustainable Development is more than just the
environment - it also includes cultural developments." The open meeting will
be held at the Societies Tent on the Eisteddfod Maes, 2.30-4pm, Thursday,
August 8.
88. NATIONS PLEDGE ENVIRONMENT FUNDS
Associated Press
7 August 2002
Internet:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20020807/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/environment_fund_1
WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States and 31 other countries pledged a total
of $2.92 billion on Wednesday to support the work of an environmental fund
over the next four years. The Bush administration's pledge of $500 million
to the Global Environmental Facility will go to support the organization's
work to promote clean and efficient energy, biodiversity programs and water
cleanup efforts. The U.S. commitment includes support of $107.5 million
annually plus an additional $70 million in 2006, the fourth year, if the
fund meets various performance targets. "This pledge and the policy reforms
and performance targets that have been agreed by donors are vitally
important steps forward," said John Taylor, Treasury undersecretary, in a
statement. The environmental fund, based within the headquarters of the
World Bank in Washington, has allocated $4.2 billion over the past decade to
support 1,000 environmental projects in 160 developing countries. Mohamed
T. El-Ashry, the head of the organization, said Wednesday that the level of
financing demonstrated by the United States and other major donors was
"strong evidence of the participants' commitment to the global
environment." He said it would set the stage for a successful World Summit
on Sustainable Development to be held at the end of August in Johannesburg,
South Africa.
On the Net: Global Environment Facility:
http://www.gefweb.org
89. RUSSIAN PREMIER TO HEAD TEAM AT TALKS
Business Day
6 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.bday.co.za/bday/content/direct/1,3523,1146286-6078-0,00.html
MOSCOW's Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov will lead the Russian delegation to
the World Summit on Sustainable Development, SA and Russian sources have
confirmed. This will be the first visit to Africa for Kasyanov, and the
first time a Russian official of his rank has visited SA. President Vladimir
Putin is expected to visit SA next year, Russian officials say. The high
Russian profile for Africa was unveiled during meetings which Foreign
Minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma held in Moscow last month. She delivered a
personal message for Putin from President Thabo Mbeki. Dlamini-Zuma also
confirmed that a much-delayed meeting of SA and Russian economic and trade
officials had been scheduled for November 18 in Pretoria. The two-day
session will address tariff and nontariff obstacles affecting SA meat and
fruit exports. Last year, trade turnover between SA and Russia was R620m, a
19% drop from the R795m recorded in 2000. SA exports to Russia were worth
R284m, down 30% from their 1999 level of R406m. A new session of the
SA-Russia joint commission on space and technology is also planning to
develop projects in laser medicine, telescopy and rocket launches, which
experts from the two countries have been discussing.
90. SUMMIT WILL BOOST TRADE TALKS'
Business Day
5 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.bday.co.za/bday/content/direct/1,3523,1145342-6078-0,00.html
TRADE and Industry Minister Alec Erwin expressed confidence at the weekend
that the World Summit on Sustainable Development starting this month would
reinvigorate talks on securing a fairer trade deal for developing nations.
Recent worrying protectionist tendencies were discussed at the last cabinet
brainstorming session, with concern expressed about the danger that the
global economy was entering "a period of greater protectionism". Erwin said
if this was so, the Doha round of World Trade Organisation talks might be
affected. This round is intended to correct imbalances in global trade to
give a fairer deal to developing countries. The summit will bring together
many key players. A discussion on the WTO negotiations is expected to take
place as well as a reference to the round in the summit conclusions. Erwin
said SA ministers would devote "considerable energies" to the summit, and a
number of ministers had cleared their schedules so they could devote time to
the gathering. He said that recent US farm legislation and President George
Bush's tariffs to protect America's steel industry had sent a negative
signal and "made it more difficult for an efficient producer like SA to
enter those markets". The European Union (EU) recently tabled agricultural
proposals that went in the right direction, but these were "relatively
cautious". Erwin expressed concern that even these modest proposals received
some negative response. On the positive front, the US and the EU had
publicly committed themselves to the WTO agenda "and we need to keep them to
that". A key aim of the summit would be to get players to recommit
themselves to the Doha round "in intent and in content". Erwin hoped that
multilateral institutions and nongovernmental organisations could be
persuaded to help build up the capacity of developing nations to participate
fully in the complex WTO negotiations, as well as in the development of the
African Union and in debt relief. Following recent discussions with the EU
and the US "tentatively we have very positive wording" for the conclusions
of the summit. It would not go beyond commitments made at Doha, but would
reinforce the commitment to the spirit and content of Doha.
91. JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT: ACHIM STEINER SAYS IUCN WILL OFFER A HELPING HAND
ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
The Earth Times
5 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.earthtimes.org/aug/johannesburgsummitachimaug5_02.htm
The World Conservation Union (IUCN) Environment Centre in Johannesburg will
host a series of 100 events during the World Summit on Sustainable
Development, from August 26 till September 4. The events, designed to enable
and encourage discussion on issues of major concern, will feed into the
formal WSSD proceedings, and develop new ways of implementing sustainable
development. The objective of IUCN is to help in achieving meaningful
results at the summit. IUCN is the largest science-based environmental
organization. "It will be offering a variety of strategic events during the
WSSD in an effort to provide delegates, NGOs and the public at large with
sound information on how different forms of development can relieve both
poverty and environmental stress," said Achim Steiner, the IUCN Director
General, in a statement released on Monday. "Kofi Annan's five priority
areas for action at the 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," Steiner said. The
highlight of each day at the IUCN Environment Centre will be a high-level
"Features Dialogue" that will feature provocative and informed speakers to
address the key issues of relevance to the negotiators attending the summit,
such as water and the rest of priorities outlined by Annan. These dialogues,
coupled with round-tables, workshops and partnership negotiations will be
open to registered delegates. IUCN is a worldwide partnership of 72 states,
107 government agencies, 743 NGOs, 34 affiliates and some 10,000 scientists
and experts from 181 countries. Its mission is to influence, encourage and
assist societies throughout the world in conserving the integrity and
diversity of nature and to ensure that any use of natural resources is
equitable and ecologically sustainable. Steiner said that IUCN has helped
over 75 countries to prepare and implement national conservation and
biodiversity strategies. It will draw from its field experience gathered
from over 300 projects currently implemented in Africa, Asia, Europe, Latin
America and North America to showcase at the summit how conservation and
development go hand in hand
92. SUMMIT 'SHADOW' FOR FIRST MINISTER
BBC
5 August 2002
Internet:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/2172013.stm
Robin Harper will be shadowing Mr McConnell. Scotland's only Green MSP has
promised to "keep a beady eye" on the country's first minister at the world
summit in South Africa. Robin Harper said he would be attending the World
Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) to "shadow" First Minister Jack
McConnell. The event is being held in Johannesburg between 26 August and 4
September. Mr McConnell will represent Scotland at the gathering, which will
bring together tens of thousands of participants.
The summit marks the 10th anniversary of the first world summit on the
environment, which was held in Rio de Janeiro in 1992. Mr Harper, a list
MSP for the Lothians, said: "This is the most important event for the future
of the planet there has ever been. "I feel it is important to be there to
represent the 85,000 Scots who voted Green at the last election and to keep
a beady eye on the executive delegation." He said he was disappointed at
the "slow progress" on tackling environmental issues in Scotland and the
UK. "I'm hoping the summit will be a wake-up call to governments," said Mr
Harper. "They seem to think they can get away with business as usual as the
global environment collapses about us."
93. SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT VITAL FOR SECURITY: POWELL
SABC News
5 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.sabcnews.com/world/summit/0,1009,40127,00.html
Global efforts for environmentally friendly development are vital in
creating a more stable world, Colin Powell, the US Secretary of State, said
in a UN publication released today. Sustainable development is a "compelling
moral and humanitarian issue", Powell said in an article to be published
ahead of the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) in Johannesburg
later this month. "But sustainable development is also a security
imperative. Poverty, environmental degradation and despair are destroyers -
of people, of societies, of nations," Powell wrote. "This unholy trinity can
destabilise countries, even entire regions."
About 65 000 delegates, observers and campaigners and 58 heads of state are
expected at the meeting - a follow-up to the first Earth Summit in Rio de
Janeiro in 1992 - from August 26 to September 4. Powell, writing in a
special edition of the UN Environment Programme's Our Planet magazine, said
that since the last summit there had been "ups and downs" and uneven
progress but also some "real improvements". The proportion of people living
on less than $1 a day has fallen from 29% to 24%, while infant mortality has
dropped by more than 10%, he said. He also noted reason for optimism. "The
spread of democracy and market economies, combined with breakthroughs in
technology, permits us to dream of a day when, for the first time in
history, most of humanity will be free of the ravages of tyranny and
poverty," Powell said.
Focus
Kofi Annan, the UN Secretary General has recommended the Johannesburg summit
focus on five key areas: water, energy, health, agriculture and
biodiversity, Klaus Toepfer, the UNEP Executive Director, said. "We expect
as an outcome in Johannesburg altogether a clear plan of implementation with
concrete targets and timetables and means of implementation," Toepfer told
reporters today. However, some countries are reluctant to include fixed
targets at the South African conference, worried that overly ambitious
timetables could lead to the risk of disappointment, he added. Delegates
have been asked by the host country to arrive two days before the summit
opens to try to "expedite the negotiations". The US vision for the
Johannesburg conference is based on three pillars - "commitment, good
policies and partnerships", Powell said. "Sustainable development requires
institutions, policies, people and effective partnerships to carry our
common effort beyond Johannesburg and far into the future," he added. The
Powell article is among a number of written contributions by politicians,
heads of state and other leading figures for the magazine, expected to be
published on August 12. - Sapa-AFP
OPINIONS
94. FREEDOM MAKES ALL THE DIFFERENCE A TASK FOR JOHANNESBURG BY AMARTYA SEN
International Herald Tribune
15 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.iht.com/ihtsearch.php?id=67699&owner=(Los%20Angeles%20Times%20Syndicate%20International)&date=20020814171624
The writer, master of Trinity College, Cambridge, was awarded the 1998 Nobel
Memorial Prize for economics. This comment was distributed by Los Angeles
Times Syndicate International.
CAMBRIDGE, England: The Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro 10 years ago, which
did a lot to advance environmental consciousness in public discussion, also
helped to generate the understanding that environment and development are
inextricably linked.
The need to think about the environment cannot really be dissociated from
the nature of the lives that people, especially deprived people, live today.
If people have a miserable living standard, then the promise of sustaining
that pitiable standard in the future can hardly be very thrilling. The goal
has to include rapid reduction of today's deprivations, while making sure
that what is achieved today can be sustained in the future. Global
cooperation is needed both to alleviate today's deprivations and to
safeguard our future. And that is exactly what the World Summit on
Sustainable Development, which begins Aug. 26 in Johannesburg, is trying to
achieve. But do the prospects of effective global cooperation look
promising? One issue that has received much attention is the need for
development aid, and the extent to which richer countries are willing to
help poorer ones. On this front, things do not look particularly promising.
The International Conference on Financing for Development, held in Mexico
last March, produced a document quite upbeat on powerful rhetoric but rather
bashful on the likely magnitudes of financial assistance. The chasm between
expectation and delivery is beginning to look big. In general, from the
financial perspective, the outlook for the Johannesburg summit meeting
cannot be seen as rosy.
But fruitful global cooperation can take many different forms - not just
general financial assistance. On the environmental side, we need to make up
ground that has been lost by the slowing down of international agreements
and the reneging on past understandings (for example, by the United States
on the Kyoto Protocol). On the economic side, the importance of reducing
entry barriers in the richer countries for products from the poorer ones
deserves much greater practical acknowledgment. Johannesburg offers an
excellent opportunity for both. There are also many institutional reforms
urgently needed for the global economy. To illustrate, there is a strong
case for making patent laws more efficient as well as less contrary to
equity. The existing laws do not facilitate the actual use of desperately
needed medicines in less affluent countries. There are also many positive
things that the poorer countries can do for themselves, without any
financial help from the rich, who need not be seen as the moving agents of
change. We can even question the general strategy of defining sustainable
development only in terms of fulfillment of needs, rather than using the
broader perspective of enhancing human freedoms on a sustainable basis. The
essential freedoms must, of course, include the ability to meet crucially
important economic needs, but there are also many others to be considered,
such as expanding political participation and broadening social
opportunities. Indeed, it is not at all obvious why the enhancing of
democratic freedoms should not figure among the central demands of
sustainable development. Not only are these freedoms important in
themselves, but they can contribute to other types of freedoms. Open public
discussion, often stifled under authoritarian regimes, may be pivotally
important for leading a fuller human life and also for a better
understanding of the importance of environmental preservation. There are
many rewards of seeing people as "agents" who can exercise their freedoms
rather than merely as "patients" whose needs have to be fulfilled. Being
less anxious about getting big financial assurances from richer countries is
among those rewards. Important as financial assistance may be, there are
also other ways forward, which can be helped by more focus on agency.
Johannesburg offers a major opportunity for that approach as well. Our
relations with the world depend crucially on our view of ourselves.
95. SEASONED THOUGHTS OF THE GREEN KING
The Guardian
15 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldsummit2002/story/0,12264,774920,00.html
Ahead of the UN Earth summit, Mark Tran finds the seminal thinker on
sustainable development Alexander King pessimistic about the future of the
planet
The summit on sustainable development in Johannesburg will be the biggest UN
convention ever; the cast of presidents, prime ministers, and development
experts has the task of coming up with concrete plans to reduce global
poverty without irreparably damaging the environment.
Noble as that goal is, Alexander King, a pivotal figure in the sustainable
development movement, holds out little hope for success. King, 93, may not
be a household name these days, but he was highly influential in
popularising sustainable development.
In the 1960s, King co-founded a thinktank called the Club of Rome with
Aurelio Peccei, an Italian businessman. The thinktank of scientists,
economists, businessmen, international civil servants and politicians would
probably have stayed an obscure club of the great and the good had it not
been for the publication of its first and most famous report: Limits to
Growth.
The study was based upon the first research to make serious use of computers
in modelling the potentially destructive consequences of rapid world
population growth. Not only was Limits a publishing phenomenon, selling 12m
copies in 37 countries, it also created a furore among the chattering
classes that rippled to the wider public.
"The press, particularly in the Netherlands, misread it and put it forward
as a plea for zero growth," King said. "The message was in fact less
dramatic. It warned that unless important changes of policy were made, the
continuation of existing trends would lead to catastrophic events. Its
intention was thus essentially prophylactic."
The report had its origins in a series of discussions organised by King and
Peccei, who were unsure that the market or technology could overcome
environmental problems. They then asked a group of computer scientists at
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to run models to examine what
would happen if people continued to consume resources at a rapid pace. The
study became the basis of Limits to Growth.
The report ranks up there with Rachel Carson's Silent Spring, written in
1962, in its significance for the environmental movement. Silent Spring
exposed the hazards of the pesticide DDT, questioned humanity's faith in
technological progress and laid the seeds for the green movement.
Ironically, King helped coin the abbreviation for DDT, dichlor dethyl
trichlorethane, when he and a group of British scientists were working on
mosquito repellents during the second world war.
"The adoption of these three letters into the common usage worldwide is, no
doubt, my greatest claim to fame as well as infamy," King writes in his
unpublished autobiography, Let the Cat Turn Round - One Man's Traverse of
the 20th Century.
King now lives quietly in a block of flats in Notting Hill, London. A stroke
down his right side means he walks with a cane and is sometimes hard to
understand, but the Glaswegian accent still comes through. Since his wife,
Sally, died two-and-a-half years ago after suffering from Alzheimer's, he
has written two autobiographies, one about his public life, one about his
personal life.
"What else is an old man of 93 to do," he says. "I have a very good memory
and remember my school and university days."
The professional and personal lives intersect in the career paths of his
children. King may not be sanguine about the future of the environment, but
his children and grandchildren are carrying on the fight that he started 30
years ago. Jane, his first daughter, now works on a computerised world
model, Ecco, which is many times more complex than that used for Limits to
Growth.
A second daughter, Catherine, is head of the department of public health and
epidemiology at the Institute of Child Health at Great Ormond Street
hospital and leads a European team on the transmission of Aids from mothers
to babies. One of her sons, named Alexander, founded the Institute for
Environmental Management, to which most important UK firms adhere.
It is the relationship with his wife that forms the core of the second,
personal autobiography, which he finished six months ago. But naturally our
conversation circles the famous tome that has been translated into several
languages, including Japanese, Korean and Spanish. To this day, he insists
that Limits to Growth, pilloried by economists and academics as a prophecy
of doom, was misunderstood.
King says some of the report's contents started leaking six months before
publication, with its findings plastered in the papers and on TV. Headlines
such as "Zero growth necessary to avoid world collapse" ignited the debate.
Seizing on what he assumed was the report's conclusions, Sicco Mansholt
wrote an open letter to the president of the European commission, Enrico
Malfatti, whom he was soon to succeed.
Mansholt called for radical reforms that virtually amounted to a plea for
zero growth. In April 1972, one month after Limits was published, King and
Peccei sent a letter to the commission making clear that Mansholt had got
the wrong end of the stick. But by then, the zero growth label had stuck
like glue.
"Long before the physical limits were reached," King wrote in a recent
essay, "the global system would encounter serious social, political and
cultural problems; before non-renewable resources became critically scarce,
the world would experience great difficulties from population pressures and
migrations and environmental disasters. Alas; despite all our disclaimers
the club's image continued to be dominated by its supposed zero-growth
advocacy."
King still remembers the derision directed at the Club of Rome at the time.
"The Economist magazine said at the time: 'The Club of Rome wants to
increase its membership by 100. Can there be 100 people that stupid,'" he
recalls.
Thirty years after the publication of the report, King admits three
shortcomings. First, Limits was far too pessimistic about the shortage of
raw materials, a fact now underlined by the low price of commodities like
coffee, copper and even oil.
In a related second point, Limits to Growth underestimated the positive
effects of technology, which was able to find substitutes for raw materials.
Third, the report did not sufficiently take into account market forces and
their influences.
On the plus side, King thinks the report made an important contribution:
trends such as population growth and environmental problems interact and
lead to effects that could not be understood if looked at separately. The
rather fancy word for this holistic approach to growth was the
Problematique, which does not denote just a single, specific problem, but a
cluster of interrelated and mutually interacting problems.
Despite all the conferences the UN has organised on the environment and
sustainable development, dating back to the late 1960s, King is pessimistic
about the chances of progress from these grand meetings.
"There is still so much disagreement about such things as global warming,"
King says. "The world is heating up, that is pretty obvious, but many people
believe it is a cyclical phenomenon rather than something more permanent.
Kyoto [the accord on reducing greenhouse gases] is only the beginning and
wouldn't do much in practice even though it is highly desirable."
If governments and environmentalists have proved unable to promote
sustainable development to any considerable degree, with whom does King
think are we left? Surprisingly, he believes the biggest hope lies with the
large oil corporations.
"The big oil companies are likely to see the problem sooner than
governments," King argues, although he thinks that little will be done until
there is a crisis or when "we have really bad effects from global warming".
96. HOW TO SAVE THE WORLD IN JOHANNESBURG By Jeffrey Sachs
Financial Times
14 August 2002
The writer is
director of the Earth Institute and professor of sustainable development at
Columbia University
The cynics are already deriding the World Summit on Sustainable Development
that opens in Johannesburg at the end of the month. Another expensive
gabfest, they complain. But it is important to note that much of this
criticism comes from rightwing US politicians who have worked for more than
a decade to undermine almost every United Nations initiative. The subject of
the summit is deadly serious. No amount of US hostility should deflect the
world from a serious consideration of our environmental future. The right
wing seeks to cast doubt on the dangers posed by global climate change,
species extinction and ecosystem degradation, presenting such fears as a
rehash of old, failed forecasts. Haven't we been warned about the risks of
famine, disease and environmental collapse since Malthus's predictions at
the end of the 18th century, it asks; and hasn't technology always bailed us
out? The answer is complicated.
Technology has indeed averted disaster, but only for those who have access
to modern technologies built around first-world science. For a billion or
more people in the poorest regions of the world, Malthusian catastrophes are
a frequent visitation. Millions every year die prematurely as a result of
poverty. Climatic shocks such as this year's drought in southern Africa,
delayed monsoons in south Asia and an emerging El Niýo cycle put hundreds of
millions more at risk. Moreover, technology does not arrive as manna from
heaven. It is the result of significant investment by the public sector as
well as the private sector. It was US government-led efforts of the National
Institutes of Health, the Centers for Disease Control, the US Department of
Agriculture
and the universities that contributed indispensably to US food productivity
and a string of breakthroughs in medical technology and public health. But
these scientific advances have not reached the impoverished peoples of much
of tropical sub- Saharan Africa and south Asia, where disease and agronomic
conditions are very different. Nor have scientific advances yet resolved the
global bind over energy use and climate change.
Free-market fundamentalists are right to deny erroneous claims that we are
about to run out of energy on a global scale. The world consumes about 6bn
tons of fossil fuels a year worldwide and still has perhaps 10,000bn tons of
coal reserves alone, not to mention other fuels. The problem, of course, is
that reliance on coal dramatically exacerbates the risks of man-made climate
change. Technological advances here too could bail us out - for example, if
the carbon emissions from coal burning could
be captured in magnesium ores and stored beneath the earth's surface, as
Klaus Lackner, professor of geophysics at Columbia University, has
ingeniously suggested. But this too would require considerable research and
development from government as well as private sources, and current levels
of investment have been tiny. The other great hope for heading off
ecological catastrophe is the slowing of rapid population growth. It took
thousands of generations of our species to arrive at the billionth human
being in about 1830, but just 170 years more to add an additional 5bn. The
sheer momentum created by the current young age structure of the world's
population will carry the total up another 2bn or so by mid-century, even
if, from now on, every woman were to give birth to just two children. Of
course, the world's population is likely to grow faster than this: hundreds
of millions of women in the developing
world are still having more children than the replacement rate. Here, again,
the US right wing undercuts policies that could promote
sustainable development. The attacks on family planning programmes not only
threaten 30 years of US efforts but aim to torpedo the invaluable work of
the UN as well, by crippling the United Nations Population Fund.
Family planning is not, to be sure, the only policy tool for reducing rapid
population growth in poor countries. Extensive experience and research has
shown that poor women have fewer children when they are literate, have
opportunities for market employment, and have access to health care for
their children. High child survival rates give the parents enough confidence
to limit the number of children. In this sense, increased education
opportunities for girls, expanded healthcare coverage of the world's poor,
as well as expanded family planning programmes, should all take centre stage
at Johannesburg.
A successful summit in Johannesburg would therefore undertake a number of
commitments. The governments would commit to take seriously the challenges
of sustainable development - not only for the one-sixth of humanity living
with high income but also for the five-sixths of humanity in the developing
world - and especially the one-sixth of humanity whose lives are a daily
struggle for survival. They would acknowledge the real risks that population
growth and economic activity have generated, ranging from man-made climate
change to the depletion of fisheries to the degradation of fragile
ecosystems around the world. They would pledge to pay careful attention to
the emerging scientific knowledge that is increasingly documenting these
risks. For the poorest of the poor, they would pledge food aid, expanded
access to healthcare and family planning services, clean water and
sanitation, and a scientific effort to address the problems of tropical
disease and agriculture. And for the world as a whole, they would declare a
global effort to mobilise science and technology to ease the harsh trade-off
between energy use and climate change so that the still bountiful reserves
of fossil fuels could be used safely while other clean technologies are
adopted during the century.
All of this the world should do with or without the US at the table, just as
it has decided to move forward with the Kyoto Treaty - limiting carbon
emissions - despite Washington's arrogant disregard. Sooner or later, the
Americans too will wake up to global realities.
97. THE EXPANDING REACH OF NONGOVERNMENT AID
Barry James International Herald Tribune
14 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.iht.com/articles/67653.html
Although the decade between the World Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro and its
successor in Johannesburg later this month is marked by the failure of
governments to prevent the degradation of the environment or to rescue
humanity from poverty and hunger, the last 10 years have seen an enormous
upsurge in civic groups concerned about these critical global issues. The
groups are broadly known as nongovernmental organizations, or NGOs. They
will participate in a giant Global Forum parallel to the World Summit for
Sustainable Development, seeking to put pressure on government leaders, and
will account for a large proportion of the more than 60,000 people expected
to be drawn by the event, which runs from Aug. 26 to Sept. 4. "As citizens,
we have a lot of power and influence that we can use for the benefit of
society," said Serryn Janson, international director of the worldwide
program of the Earthday network. "Our lack of coordination is a problem, but
that reflects social chaos." She said many NGOs would use the summit
conference as "a trigger point to create networks around critical issues,"
to prevent these issues from falling into "a black hole" once the conference
is over. "There is a lot of disillusion about the process," she said. "But
change has to come from the bottom up, not the top down. As citizens we have
a lot of power and influence that we can use for the benefit of society."
The groups form part of what is broadly referred to as "civil society," to
distinguish it from governments or international governments. The voluntary
organizations flourish best in open societies where citizens contribute to
the common good on their own time and with their own money, independently of
the actions or desires of the state. That is why independent NGOs always
have a tough time in totalitarian countries, and still are considered
subversive in China. Some, like anti-slavery organizations or women's
suffrage groups, have been around for more than a century. Most have sprung
up in recent years to deal with the issues of environment, development,
poverty and human rights that will discussed at the summit meeting. The
Union of International Associations in Brussels counts nearly 17,000
internationally operating organizations and thousands more of a national,
religious or single-issue nature. The United States has about 2 million
voluntary organizations, most created since the 1970s, and about 100,000
associations have sprung up in Eastern Europe since the fall of communism.
Some of the groups are concerned with single issues, others are multifaceted
organizations like the World Wide Fund for Nature, which has 5 million
members.
The NGOs have gained influence with the spread of information technology.
Jody Williams, who won the Nobel Peace Prize for her work in heading an
international coalition to ban land mines, said her main weapon was e-mail.
There are thousands of Web sites devoted to environmental and development
issues. One of the biggest global organizations, Friends of the Earth, is
heading a coalition of groups at the summit meeting demanding that
multinational corporations be regulated to prevent environmental and social
abuse. Since the business lobby rejects any such controls, there could be a
showdown. According to Worldwatch Institute, the environmental and societial
research organization, "it is clear that the Earth Summit ushered in a new
era of global transnational citizen activism that is radically transforming
the landscape of international diplomacy." "Once the staid province of
diplomats, UN negotiating sessions now attract a diverse and colorful crowd
of participants-from NGOs and business representatives to farmers and local
officials," Worldwatch noted. "Innovative new forms of global governance
have emerged since Rio that tap into the dynamism of these different
groups."
Volunteers from civil organizations like the International Red Cross or
Doctors Without Borders are often ahead of national or UN forces in getting
aid to conflict zones, and they often lose lives in the process. Kofi Annan,
the secretary-general of the United Nations, calls the NGOs "the conscience
of humanity." But the organizations are often criticized, too. Their role in
nearly three-quarters of official aid projects arouses concern among some
developing countries that rich countries are relying on the volunteers to
wriggle out of intergovernment agreements. The international NGOs are
sometimes criticized in poor countries as being a new way for the rich
countries to perpetuate their influence. Critics in the developing countries
say the organizations create dependencies, and distort economies by hiring
the best local staff at salaries government and business cannot afford to
pay.
Nor is the NGO movement immune from scandal, blame and sectarian taint. A
report earlier this year said humanitarian workers from about 40
organizations had used their power and bribes of food to obtain sexual
favors from minors among refugee communities in Sierra Leone, Liberia and
Guinea. American religious or missionary charities have been widely
criticized for cultural insensitivity. Some NGOs are criticized for using
most of their income on pay for senior staff, and for selecting missions
according to their profitability. Three organizations affiliated with the
Unification Church, which is headed by the Reverend Sun Myung Moon, have
been granted NGO status by the United Nations. Another Moon group, the World
Association of Non-Government Organizations, falsely poses as the world
voice of the voluntary associations. While Friends of the Earth demands
regulation of the big corporations, the NGOs themselves are unregulated.
Apart from a Council of Europe convention signed by only a few countries,
they are covered by no international law. But Adlai Amor, the spokesman for
the World Resources Institute, said the NGOs do a pretty good job of keeping
an eye on one another. The scandal in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea, for
example, was uncovered in a joint report by the Save the Children Fund and
the UN High Commissioner for Refugees. Given their diversity, it would be
difficult to devise regulations that fitted all the NGOs. The International
Union for the Conservation of Nature, for example, is partly an
intergovernmental body. At the other end of the spectrum are groups that are
radically anti-establishment. Some of the organizations are the acknowledged
scientific leaders as well as agitators in their field. The Climate Action
Network, for instance, has been an important voice in international climate
negotiations Some governments will include NGOs among their delegations, and
the bigger civil associations will be closely associated with the summit
meeting through formal partnerships with the United Nations or its agencies.
But most of the smaller NGOs will be at the Global Forum, on the opposite
side of Johannesburg from the main conference - kept at a distance from the
government leaders, who will be isolated behind an impenetrable security
barrier.
Nevertheless, the NGOs have an influential role because they are frequently
more effective than big international organizations on the ground in their
own countries in combating environmental and social threats. "Some NGOs are
inside the tent and directly influencing the process," said Seymour of the
World Resources Institute. "Others are outside the tent, but they exert
influence through their publications and in hallway interventions. They will
be an important element in how the conference is spun to the general public.
There the NGOs are going to play a critical role." Trade unions, as well as
NGOs, deal with issues like poverty eradication and development, and the two
are natural allies in opposing sweatshop and child labor, and in some cases
the expansion of multinational corporations, whose power has grown
enormously since the fall of the Berlin Wall and the onrush of
globalization. The NGOs sometimes take on the role of unions where these are
corrupt, inefficient or under government control, or left powerless by the
freedom of capital to move around the world without restraint and without
contributing to the good of society. In Canada, four unions have created
their own NGOs to support development work, and unions play an important
role in national development programs in several European Countries.
The NGOs and the unions often share common environmental aims. For example,
the Vienna-based International Friends of Nature, founded in 1895 to enable
workers to spend their leisure time in a healthy, natural environment and
present in 20 countries, is closely associated with both the environmental
organizations and the trade union movement. While many NGOs are willing to
participate in partnerships with business and international or government
organizations, others are viscerally opposed to what they see as a corporate
takeover of the development process and creeping privatization of "common
goods" like water and health services. This means that Johannesburg is
probably going to see the same kind of anti-globalization protests that have
dogged other international meetings in recent years. In addition, South
Africa has some of the world's liveliest NGOs, and they are likely to be
vociferous in protesting problems that not only will be discussed at the
summit conference, but which can be found in abundance on the very doorstep
of the meeting, such as access to clean water.
98. ON THE ENVIRONMENT, IT ISN'T ALL BAD NEWS by Mohamed T. El-Ashry
International Herald Tribune
13 August 13, 2002
Internet:
http://www.iht.com/articles/67466.html
The writer is chief executive officer and chairman of the Global Environment
Facility, which works through United Nations agencies and the World Bank to
provide grants to developing countries. He contributed this comment to the
International Herald Tribune.
WASHINGTON As leaders prepare for the World Summit on Sustainable
Development in Johannesburg later this month, some critics argue that
progress on environmental problems has been elusive. There is some truth in
that. In the last decade, environmental problems have mounted across the
globe. Yet over the same 10 years, society has marshaled its resources to
address these challenges. The original response was slow. But it is
gathering speed, with technological breakthroughs and a growing awareness
that a clean environment is essential for development.
Of course, we should greatly intensify efforts to tackle poverty and
environmental degradation. They endanger our health, security and the
innumerable benefits that come to us from nature. But we should also
remember our real accomplishments. We have slashed emissions of chemicals
that deplete the ozone layer and threaten human health. Industrialized
nations largely eliminated chlorofluorocarbons and halons, the major
ozone-threatening gases, by the end of 1995. Fourteen countries in Eastern
Europe and Central Asia have reduced their consumption of ozone-depleting
substances by more than 90 percent. And many developing countries are ahead
of the timetable that gives them until 2010 to phase out those gases.
We are relying less on dirty fuels. Five million energy-efficient lights
have been installed in poor countries and those with transitional economies.
Wind power generation capacity has increased from near zero to 1,700
megawatts. Virtually unknown in 1992, solar home systems using photovoltaic
technology now provide power to more than a million rural households. At
least 30 major companies have committed to investing $10 to $15 billion in
renewable energy over the next five years. Countries are also appreciating
the value of working together to solve their common problems, instead of
competing against each other. In an unprecedented collaboration, 17 Black
Sea and Danube basin countries have pledged to reduce organic and toxic
discharges into their waters by 30 percent in the next decade. Similarly,
six Central American countries and Mexico are linking their national parks,
biological and forest reserves to form the Mesoamerican Biological Corridor,
the first biological preserve to traverse an entire region.
The private sector is playing an increasingly constructive role. This is an
acknowledgment that preserving the environment is both good business and a
moral obligation. Companies such as Royal Dutch Shell, Dupont and BP Amoco
are working to reduce their negative impact on climate change and increase
the options for cleaner energy. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has
helped to launch the global alliance for improved nutrition, an innovative
public-private partnership that seeks to fortify food in a cost-effective
way to improve the health, cognitive development and productivity of people
in poor countries.
One of the linchpins of these innovative, cooperative efforts is the Global
Environment Facility. As the official financing "engine" for the
international agreements on biodiversity, climate change, and persistent
organic pollutants, the agency earmarks funds for projects with global
environmental benefits in 160 countries. It has provided $4.2 billion in
grants and leveraged $12 billion in additional financing. The agency has
also given 3,000 small grants of up to $50,000 each directly to
nongovernmental organizations and community groups in 60 countries for
projects that reconcile global environmental benefits with sustainable
livelihoods for local people. The Johannesburg summit meeting should set
firm commitments to reform inappropriate policies and mobilize additional
financial resources to improve the environment. It should also set clear
goals and targets for action, and identify means for monitoring progress.
With this kind of impetus from the international community, we can build on
the strengths we have developed over the past 10 years and move ahead with
confidence that sustainable development goals are indeed achievable.
99. STATEMENT OF THE UNITED NATIONS HIGH COMMISSIONER FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
INTERNATIONAL YOUTH DAY by Mary Robinson
UNHCR
12 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.unhchr.ch/huricane/huricane.nsf/view01/E0B1D6A9FF5255BAC1256C13004638CA?opendocument
Sustainable Development - the theme of International Youth Day 2002-is a
theme at the heart of youth concerns. Young people, North and South, acting
in solidarity, play a critical role in advocating for and contributing to
sustainable development in all societies. Young people, with their own
worldview can influence decision-makers to implement the deep changes that
are needed to guide our world to a sustainable future. It is vital that the
World Summit on Sustainable Development, which opens in Johannesburg in two
weeks time, reinvigorates the global commitment to sustainable development
first laid out ten years ago in Agenda 21 of the Earth Summit in Rio de
Janeiro.Sustainable development was defined at Rio as: "development that
meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future
generations to meet their own needs."
If we are to achieve that vision of development we must eradicate poverty
and hunger, change unsustainable modes of production and reverse
environmental degradation. Young people have the energy and commitment to
make it happen. They know that if development policies are to work for them
and their children, they must be based on the principle of equal human
dignity and the universal acceptance of all human rights and freedoms. Young
people should continue to campaign for peace and against the widespread
denial of human rights and freedoms, including to the most vulnerable of
today's youth. They should demand action on poverty, on the rights to
education, food, adequate housing, and a safe environment. They should
demand action also on health including on HIV/Aids, a pandemic that affects
them disproportionately. They should continue to press for the elimination
of discrimination against any member of our single human family. And they
should claim their rights to participate and to be heard at the national and
international level. The impact of the work that young people are doing
around the world, and around the clock is being felt. I witnessed the power
of youth at last year's World Conference against Racism in Durban. The
global youth movement against racism formed there is spearheading
anti-racism action in many countries. Young people in Guyana, for example,
have convinced shops, businesses, schools, sports clubs and the police force
to turn their buildings into "race-free zones." Their entrepreneurial spirit
has transformed the consciousness of their community and laid the foundation
for eradicating racism and promoting tolerance. On this third International
Youth Day I would like to encourage young people to continue their
inspirational efforts. To campaign now for human rights and equality for all
is to lay the groundwork for sustainable development for all, development
that will not compromise the needs, dreams and possibilities of future
generations.
100. CHALLENGES OF DEVELOPMENT Learning to manage urban sprawl
International Herald Tribune
12 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.iht.com/articles/67365.html
PARIS This is the second of five articles leading up to the World Summit for
Sustainable Development, which begins Aug. 26 in Johannesburg. A broad
avenue in Madrid and a place name are all that remain today of a radical
project to revolutionize city living. The avenue is named after Arturo Soria
and the place is Ciudad Lineal - the Linear City. Soria envisaged cities
that would one day stretch along central transit spines from Cadiz to
Leningrad and from Brussels to Beijing, with everyone within easy reach of
trolleys or trains on one hand and the countryside on the other. He thought
the key factor in urban living was not distance but traveling time. "We have
to urbanize the countryside and ruralize the towns," he used to say.
His city started out in the direction of Paris in the 1890s, but the project
was abandoned after only a few kilometers for lack of investment, and Ciudad
Lineal has long since been swallowed up by the capital city spreading over
the Castilian plain. The Linear City would have provided an alternative
model to the one that is invading most of the inhabited world today: an
unstoppable blight called urban sprawl, affecting rich and poor countries
alike. Urbanization begs big questions about society, the economy and the
environment for the 10-day World Summit for Sustainable Development, which
begins Aug. 26 in Johannesburg. The UN conference is expected to draw
government leaders and senior officials from more than 180 countries, with
tens of thousands of delegates representing international organizations,
nongovernmental issue groups, local governments and businesses. In Soria's
time, there were only 16 cities with more than 1 million people - the
biggest was London with 7 million -and only about 7 percent of the world's
population could be described as urban. In the last 40 years, the world's
population has doubled, but in urban areas it has increased five-fold, and
this expansion is speeding up exponentially.
Within the next five years, well over half the world's population will be
living in cities, according to the United Nations, and by 2030 nearly 5
billion people will live in urban areas. Developed countries already are
highly urbanized, and the most striking phenomenon today is the rapid growth
of urbanization in poor countries with inadequate infrastructures. As the
global population expands from 6.2 billion to nearly 8 billion in the next
quarter century, 90 percent of that increase will occur in the urban areas
of poor countries. Africa is on the way to having more than 70 cities with
more than 1 million inhabitants. Within a few years at least 23 cities will
count more than 10 million people and several - including Bombay, Lagos,
Dhaka, Sao Paulo and Karachi - will be snapping at the heels of Tokyo for
the title of the world's biggest metropolis. Tokyo has more than 26 million
residents but appears to have reached a peak, and some cities in the
developed world are actually losing population. Soria's vision is becoming a
reality only to the extent that cities are merging into vast metropolitan
areas along transportation links such as the northeast corridor in the
United States, or the Tokyo-Osaka-Nagoya complex, of more than 40 million
inhabitants. The shift toward urbanization, accompanied by the massive
migrations now taking place, is so swift and total that there is still no
adequate conceptual apparatus to manage the process. As David Harvey, an
American theorist on urban planning, said in a lecture to the Megacities
Foundation in the Netherlands a couple of years ago, "The qualities of urban
living in the 21st century will define the qualities of civilization."
Judging by the present state of cities, he said, people may not find the
coming civilization particularly congenial. A deadly mixture of concentrated
poverty, social strife, violence, wasteful consumerism and crumbling
infrastructure conjures up for many "a dystopian nightmare in which all that
is judged worst in the fatally flawed character of humanity collects
together in some hell-hole of despair." The first question for the
Johannesburg summit meeting: How can the trend toward megacities coexist
with the need to protect the global environment? Cities contribute in an
important way to global warming. Satellite studies show that megacities
create large zones of heat that encourage smog, trigger thunderstorms and
reduce the productivity of the land. At the same time, the rise in sea
levels that is likely to ensue from climate warming will threaten the
coastal areas and river deltas where most of the biggest cities are
situated. Cities produce about 80 percent of the carbon dioxide emissions
responsible for warming, according to a report by Johns Hopkins University's
Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore. Other questions for
Johannesburg: Are there better models for urban development than
automobile-induced sprawl? Can new cities in regions painfully short of
resources and cash develop sewage and waste disposal systems in time to
avert serious outbreaks of communicable disease? Is there any hope of
finding work for urban youth and averting the social tinderbox caused by
frustration and poverty? How can "governance," the management of society, be
strengthened to ensure that the expansion of cities is an orderly process
rather than an uncontrollable chaos. To keep up with urban growth, the
equivalent of 1,000 cities of 3 million inhabitants will have to be built
over the next 40 years -almost as many cities as exist today.
Urbanization has often meant a rejection of the crowded city, as in the
suburbs of America or the "garden cities" of England, communities built in
harmony with their natural landscape. "When we get piled upon one another in
large cities, as in Europe, we shall become as corrupt as Europe," said
Thomas Jefferson. In fact, North America is about 77 percent urbanized, only
slightly behind Europe, but its extensive conglomerations of single homes
and malls swallow up thousands of square miles of farmland every year, and
suburbs are still expanding at a much faster rate than central cities. But
the American suburban model is ultimately the least sustainable in the
world, according to the British architect Lord Richard Rogers. In a speech
to the Megacities Foundation, he said that a sustainable city is not a
suburban sprawl based on the automobile, but is "compact, polycentric,
ecologically aware and based on walking." "Above all, it promotes social
inclusion," he said. "This is no utopian vision. Cities that are beautiful,
safe and equitable are within our grasp."
At the UN's Habitat conference in 1996, governments agreed that cities
cannot be successful economically, politically or culturally if divisions
between rich and poor continue to widen, and if the poor are disfranchised
with no rights to their land. The key to sustainable development, the
conference found, was to allow city dwellers, particularly poor people, to
organize to provide their own services and infrastructure. One of the big
subjects of debate at Johannesburg will be about partnership, a word that
has various levels of meaning. A powerful corporate lobby takes the word to
mean greater opportunities for trade and privatization. But non-governmental
organizations say partnership means giving ordinary people a joint role in
making decisions and setting policies, whether or not corporations are
involved in providing services. Given good planning and an eye for the
aesthetic, high-density living in the future does not have to be bleak.
Europe, which has the highest proportion of urban dwellers in the world,
shows that a high degree of urbanization is not incompatible with a high
standard of living. Barcelona is a densely populated city but is widely
regarded as an example of successful urban planning. In 1999, it became the
first and so far the only place to be awarded the prestigious Royal Gold
Medal of the Institute of British Architects for its intelligent use of
architecture and high-quality urban planning to revitalize city life.
101. STEERING ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES BACK ON THE POLITICAL AGENDA
DW World
8 August 2002
Internet:
http://dw-world.de/english/0,3367,1446_A_602885_1_A,00.html
Klaus Töpfer has directed the U.N. Environmental Program since 1998. In an
interview with DW-WORLD, Germany's former environmental minister explains
how environmental issues can get back on the world's political agenda. At
the end of August the largest international conference on the environment
will convene in Johannesburg, South Africa. It is the most important meeting
of environmentalists and politicians since Rio in 1992. In the weeks
leading up to the World Summit on Sustainable Development, environmental
leaders around the world will be reflecting on many of the issues on the
conference's agenda. But many are also asking what the summit will actually
achieve and how much of an impact it will have on the way countries deal
with their environment. Klaus Töpfer, the director for the United Nations
Environmental Program (UNEP), is an outspoken proponent of the conference.
The former environmental minister under Helmut Kohl's Christian Democrats
(1994-1998) is convinced that -- regardless of changing political parties
and international conflicts -- environmental issues should remain an
integral part of global policy-making discussions. In an interview with
DW-WORLD, Töpfer expressed his firm belief in the success of the
Johannesburg Summit.
Interview with Klaus Töpfer:
In the aftermath of September 11th, the focus of world politics is on the
fight against terror and on security. How can environmental issues be
brought back on the agenda of international politics?
Environmental politics are an absolute necessity in the fight against those
conflicts. We are aware that to overcome poverty - the most toxic element in
the world - we need to combine economic development with environmental
considerations. We at the United Nations Environmental Program therefore
decided to change our motto to "UNEP: Environment for Development". We
believe that environment is instrumental in development. And development, on
the other hand, is instrumental in decreasing tensions - the conflicts in
the world.
Therefore, more than ever, this Johannesburg summit is important for the
world. And I sincerely believe that this summit is something like a peace
summit in that we have to do whatever is possible to make it a success.
How could the conference in Johannesburg achieve these goals in concrete
terms?
Rio de Janeiro 10 years ago gave us clear and wonderfully visionary texts
and declarations. Unfortunately, it was not clear enough how to implement
these goals. And therefore Johannesburg must be the summit of implementation
and not of another declaration. That means we need concrete targets,
concrete timetables and concrete conclusions with regard to the means of
implementation.
One example is the need for developing renewable energies. Let's make a
concrete target out of it and say 10 percent, 12 percent, 15 percent of
energy consumed worldwide should come from renewable sources in the next 10
years. This is a concrete target and timetable. If we agree on this, then
Johannesburg really makes a difference.
Are these targets realistic?
I think so, yes. We have to be realistic. What is really missing in this
world of globalization right now is accountability and responsibility. I
don't want to go into day-to-day politics. But you see the decrease of
credibility, for example, in the economic field. You see all the
developments now on the stock markets, that people are convinced that this
is unaccountable behavior. So it's important that we go into this summit
saying: This is not only the far-reaching target we need. But this is also
achievable. And we want to monitor it, we want to benchmark it. Then people
can say: They're not only going to another conference, another summit where
they spend a lot of money and wield a lot of papers.
I really believe more than ever that in Johannesburg it's the clear signal
that's important: Don't be visionary alone, do it as well, but link it with
concrete and achievable targets.
Don't you sometimes become frustrated in light of the U.S. administration's
policy, which doesn't seem to really care about environmental issues?
Frustration is not a reaction. Frustration is also not a chance to solve
problems. We have to analyze the problems and ask what is possible to do.
And the first and foremost: do your "homework". It's good, for example, that
the EU ratified the Kyoto Protocol. That this was done in Japan, as well,
and that now Russia has also started the ratification process, so that the
Kyoto Protocol can enter into force.
We see in the U.S. that there's much more going on than one or the other is
aware of. You can see differences between the different states. If you go,
for example, to California, you'll see what is happening there, and in other
states as well, and that's fascinating, that's quite forward-looking. And
also if you see this on the federal level, there is a new stimulation for
renewable energy, there is a new stimulation for increasing energy
efficiency.
All this seems to me not to be enough. But they are steps in the right
direction and I sincerely hope that it will be very clear in the near future
that doing this does not weaken the economic basis, but strengthens it.
And which means of control and sanctions should be put in place to make
governments respect the environment and obey international environmental
agreements?
Indeed, we have to do much more in this field. We have quite a lot of
different conventions, legally binding, ratified by parliaments. We have
protocols - legally binding, ratified by parliaments. But the mechanisms of
enforcement and compliance are weak. There was a lot of discussion in the
Kyoto Protocol. There is a solution, which is better than what one or the
other expected. But we have to do more in this field. So let's go further in
globalizing these control instruments.
Historical and cultural traditions lead to different approaches to
environmental care. Japan, for example, doesn't want to cease whale hunting
because it regards whale fishing as part of its cultural tradition. How
could a common denominator be defined in international environmental
politics?
First and foremost, it's a very important and a good development that more
cultural diversity is integrated into the topic of sustainable development.
People don't want to be linked with their language; they want to be linked
with their behavior, their traditions. If you see the development of
indigenous knowledge, how can we handle this wisdom of indigenous people
with regard to medicine and the knowledge of biodiversity? These are
positive signals that cultural diversity is a stabilizing factor for
globalization and exactly this is necessary.
I'm very happy that UNEP can have an event in Johannesburg under the title
"Cultural Diversity, Biodiversity and Sustainable Development." And I am
extremely happy that President Chirac and other presidents accepted our
invitation and we will do a lot in this direction.
Oliver Schilling conducted this interview.