WSSD Info. News
ISSUE #
10 (B)
"A SNAP-SHOT OF THE SUMMIT" – GOVERNMENTS
Issue # 10 (A)
~ Issue # 10 (B) ~
Issue # 10 (C)
~ Issue # 10
(D) ~
Issue # 10 (E)
Compiled by
Richard Sherman
Edited by
Kimo Goree
Published by the
International Institute for
Sustainable Development (IISD)
Distributed exclusively to the
2002SUMMIT-L
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Richard Sherman.
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2002SUMMIT-L
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SOUTH AFRICA
-
JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT
GENERATES MORE THAN R8BN FOR SA ECONOMY MOOSA HAILS IMPACT OF WSSD 14
September 2002
-
SUMMIT SETS NEW AGENDA FOR
PRACTICAL ACTION A GLOBAL PARTNERSHIP TO FIGHT POVERTY 5 September 2002
-
CLOSING PRESS CONFERENCE BY
SOUTH AFRICA'S PRESIDENT 4 September 2002
-
MINISTER SKWEYIYA INFORMS
GLOBAL CIVIL SOCIETY THAT THE WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
WAS A SUCCESS South African Ministry of Social Development 4 September
2002
-
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
RELIES ON CO-OPERATION BY ALL: SHILOWA Office of the Premier, Gauteng 4
September 2002
-
ENERGY, SANITATION AND
RESOURCES ARE MAJOR FOCUS AT JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT Ministry of Trade and
Industry 1 September 2002
-
AGREEMENT REACHED ON MAJORITY OF SUMMIT'S PLAN OF IMPLEMENTATION
Ministry of Environmental Affairs and Tourism 3 September 2002
DANISH PRESIDECY OF THE
EU
-
DANISH EU PRESIDENCY: WSSD IS A SOUND AND SOLID SPRINGBOARD 4 September
2002
-
EUROPEAN UNION: NOW WE MUST TURN WORLD SUMMIT AGREEMENT INTO CONCRETE
RESULTS 4 September 2002
-
EUROPEAN UNION IS FULLY COMMITTED TO REDUCING TRADE-DISTORTING FARM
SUBSIDIES 28 August 2002
-
EUROPEAN UNION: 22 BILLION EXTRA ODA UP TO 2006 27 August 2002
EUROPEAN COMMISSION
-
THE WORLD SUMMIT ON
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT 16 September 2002
-
EUROPEAN COMMISSION PRESIDENT
ROMANO PRODI MET US SECRETARY OF STATE COLIN POWELL DURING THE WORLD
SUMMIT IN JOHANNESBURG 4 September 2002
-
EUROPEAN UNION: NOW WE MUST
TURN WORLD SUMMIT AGREEMENT INTO CONCRETE RESULTS 4 September 2002
-
EUROPEAN UNION REAFFIRMS
COMMITMENT TO REACHING GLOBAL DEAL AT WORLD SUMMIT 2 September 2002
-
"WATER FOR LIFE": EUROPEAN
UNION LAUNCHES GLOBAL INITIATIVE TO ACHIEVE WORLD SUMMIT GOALS 3 September
2002
-
EUROPEAN UNION LAUNCHES
COALITION OF LIKE-MINDED STATES TO DELIVER WORLD SUMMIT RENEWABLE ENERGY
GOALS 3 September 2002
-
EUROPEAN COMMISSION STRESSES COMMITMENT TO COMBAT ILLEGAL
LOGGING 31 August 2002
-
-
£7m BOOST FOR UK GLOBAL
BIODIVERSITY PROGRAMME 2 September 2002
-
FOLLOW UP NOTE ON THE WORLD
SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA, 26 AUGUST
- 4 SEPTEMBER 2002 DFID
-
POWELL SAYS SUMMIT OFFERS NEW
VISION OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENTDELEGATES ADOPT PLAN OF ACTION AIMED AT
FIGHTING POVERTY Washington File 4 September 2002
-
POWELL EMPHASIZES TRAINING AT
DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT EPA'S WHITMAN SEES PROMISE IN PARTNERSHIPS FOR
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT 4 September 2002
-
WORLD SUMMIT PLAN REFLECTS
COMMON VISION, SAYS DOBRIANSKY TIME NOW FOR ACTION TO MAKE SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT A REALITY by Closing Statement by Paula Dobriansky Under
Secretary of State for Global Affairs 4 September 2002
-
CLEAN WATER FOR POOR
Washington File 4 September 2002
-
U.S. OFFICIAL SAYS SUMMIT HAS
RAISED AWARENESS OF ENVIRONMENTAL CHALLENGE MINISTERS REACH AGREEMENT ON
ALL MAJOR ISSUES Washington File 3 September 2002
-
WORLD SUMMIT MAY PRODUCE
AGREEMENT ON GOOD GOVERNANCE, U.S. MAKES STRONG GOVERNANCE PROPOSAL AT
JOHANNESBURG MEETING Washington File 30 August 2002
-
U.S. DELEGATION ISSUES
STATEMENT ON SUMMIT PROGRESS SAYS DELEGATIONS NEGOTIATING "HARD AND IN
GOOD FAITH"
-
A STATEMENT BY THE HONOURABLE
DAVID ANDERSON, P.C., M.P. MINISTER OF THE ENVIRONMENT, GOVERNMENT OF
CANADA CLOSING PRESS CONFERENCE WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT 4
September 4, 2002
-
COUNTRIES TO DISCUSS
SUSTAINABLE MINING Natural Resources Canada 3 September 2002
-
CANADA'S POSITION ON HEALTH
AND HUMAN RIGHTS 2 September 2002
-
CANADA JOINS INTERNATIONAL
TREATY CONTROLLING TRADE IN HAZARDOUS CHEMICALS AND PESTICIDES 29 August
2002
-
GOVERNMENT OF CANADA
INCREASES FUNDING TO THE UNITED NATIONS ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME AND ITS
WATER QUALITY PROGRAM 29 August 2002
-
CANADA SUPPORTS SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT IN AFRICA 31 August 2002
-
OPENING STATEMENT BY PRIME
MINISTER JUNICHIRO KOIZUMI AT THE PRESS CONFERENCE ON THE WORLD SUMMIT ON
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT 3 September 2002
-
STATEMENT BY MR. KAORU
ISHIKAWA, AMBASSADOR FOR CIVIL SOCIETY, JAPAN IN THE 6TH PLENARY MEETING
ON THE THEME OF WATER AND SANITATION, INCLUDING AN INTERACTIVE DISCUSSION
World Summit on Sustainable Development 28 August 2002
-
PRESS CONFERENCE, AUGUST 26, 2002 AT WSSD BY KAORU
ISHIKAWA
-
KOIZUMI INITIATIVE (CONCRETE
ACTIONS OF JAPANESE GOVERNMENT TO BE TAKEN FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT -
TOWARDS GLOBAL SHARING) 21 August 2002
-
JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT ADOPTS
NEW GOALS AND IMPLEMENTATION PROGRAMMES FOR ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AND
POVERTY ERADICATION THROUGHOUT THE WORLD September 2002
-
JÜRGEN TRITTIN: RENEWABLE
ENERGIES THE KEY FOR A FUTURE-ORIENTED GLOBAL ENERGY SUPPLY 3. September
2002
-
BREAKTHROUGH: DRINKING WATER
AND BASIC SANITATION 2 September 2002
-
GERMAN PARTICIPANTS ARRANGE A
CO2-NEUTRAL TRIP TO JOHANNESBURG 26 August 2002
-
STATE SECRETARY FOR THE
ENVIRONMENT SATISFIED WITH RESULTS OF JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT September 2002
-
INTERVENTION OF THE PRIME
MINISTER OF THE KINGDOM OF THE NETHERLANDS, DR. JAN PETER BALKENENDE, at
the World Summit on Sustainable Development, Johannesburg, 3 September
2002
-
EXTRA DUTCH MONEY FOR GLOBAL
ECO-FUND 2 September 2002
-
CALL TO ROLL UP SLEEVES AFTER
JOHANNESBURG 26 August 2002
-
DUTCH INTENTIONS FOR
JOHANNESBURG 22 August 2002
-
JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT: FEDERAL
COUNCILLOR JOSEPH DEISS REPORTS MIXED RESULTS 5 September 2002
-
SWITZERLAND SUPPORTS THE
PROGRAMME FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF FUNDAMENTAL LABOUR STANDARDS IN SMALL AND
MEDIUM SIZED BUSINESSES (KMU) 4 September 2002
-
FEDERAL MINISTER DEISS OPENS
THE CLEANER PRODUCTION CENTRE IN SOUTH AFRICA 4 September 2002
-
JOHANNESBURG 2002: FEDERAL
COUNCILLOR JOSEPH DEISS SAYS SWITZERLAND IS PULLING ITS WEIGHT IN
NEGOTIATIONS 2 September 2002
-
JOHANNESBURG: BREAKTHROUGH ON
"PRODUCTION AND CONSUMPTION PATTERNS" 31 August 2002
-
WSSD IN JOHANNESBURG: WHAT
SWITZERLAND IS SEEKING TO ACHIEVE 22 August 2002
-
AUSTRALIA HIGHLIGHTS GLOBAL
ISSUES AT WORLD SUMMIT 5 September 2002
-
WSSD FROM TALK TO ACTION 4
September2002
-
US, AUSTRALIA JOIN ENERGY
PARTNERSHIPS 2 September 2002
-
AUSTRALIA SUPPORTS PACIFIC
ISLAND NEIGHBOURS 1 September 2002
-
AUSTRALIA'S PARTNERSHIPS PUT
PRINCIPLES INTO PRACTICE 1 September 2002
-
JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT: SWEDEN
PRESENTS PROPOSALS FOR SUSTAINABLE URBAN ENVIRONMENT Ministry for Foreign
Affairs 30 August 2002
-
SWEDEN LAUNCHES INT
ERNATIONAL TASK FORCE ON GLOBAL PUBLIC GOODS Ministry for Foreign Affairs
29 August 2002
-
SUMMARY OF THE WSSD September
2002
-
THE WORLD SUMMIT IN
JOHANNESBURG: PROGRESS FOR ENVIRONMENT AND DEVELOPMENT 5 September 2002
-
NORWAY GIVES NOK 375 MILLION
TO THE FIGHT AGAINST POVERTY AND ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION 3 September
2002
-
WSSD PLENARY SESSION -
BIODIVERSITY, Statement by the Norwegian Minister of the Environment,
Børge Brende 26 August 2002
-
PM CALLS FOR OCEAN PROTECTION
AT WSSD 3 September 2002
-
SPEECH BY H.E. ZHU RONGJI,
PREMIER OF THE STATE COUNCIL OF THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA AT ROUND
TABLE OF WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT 3 September 2002
-
PREMIER ZHU RONGJI OF THE
STATE COUNCIL OF THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA ANNOUNCED CHINA'S APPROVAL
OF THE KYOTO PROTOCOL 3 September 2002
-
VICENTE FOX PROMOTES
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT 4 September 2002
-
JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT BEGINS 26
September 2002
-
ON OUTCOME OF WORLD SUMMIT ON
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN JOHANNESBURG 6 September 2002
-
ON THE SPEECH MADE BY RUSSIAN
PRIME MINISTER MIKHAIL KASYANOV AT THE PLENARY SESSION OF THE WORLD SUMMIT
ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN JOHANNESBURG 4 September 2002
-
ON THE PARTICIPATION OF
RUSSIAN PRIME MINISTER MIKHAIL KASYANOV IN THE WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT IN JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA 2 September 2002
ON THE WEB
ARGENTINA WSSD WEB PAGE
PAKISTAN WSSD WEB PAGE
INDIAN WSSD WEB PAGE
GOVERNMENTS
SOUTH
AFRICA
Government of South Africa
http://www.gov.za
Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism
http://www.environment.gov.za
Department of Foreign Affairs: WSSD Web page:
http://www.dfa.gov.za/events/wssd.htm and
http://www.dfa.gov.za/events/wssd/docs.htm
1. JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT GENERATES MORE THAN R8BN FOR SA ECONOMY MOOSA HAILS
IMPACT OF WSSD
14 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.environment.gov.za/NewsMedia/MedStat/2002sept14/report_14092002.htm
SATURDAY, 14
SEPTEMBER 2002: The Minister of Environmental Affairs and Tourism, Valli Moosa,
today announced that more than R8 billion was generated by the World Summit on
Sustainable Development for the South African economy. This is based on an
interim research report conducted to estimate the impact of the Summit on the
country's economy. The research, which was commissioned by the Department of
Environmental Affairs and Tourism, was conducted by a team of professional
consultants from the Bureau for Market Research based at Unisa, Iklwa
Structured Financial Products and economists from UrbanEcon. More than 400
delegates attending the Summit were interviewed about their expenditure in the
country. The 500 parallel events that were held throughout the country as part
of the Summit were also analysed in terms of their impact. Welcoming the
findings, Moosa indicated that the "results exceeded all expectations. Over
and above the applause we received from the international community for the
excellent manner in which we, as South Africa, organised this massive event,
the study confirms the fact that the Summit generated a good return on
investment for the country." The 37 000 international delegates who attended
the Summit spent an average of between R27 000 and R39 000 in South Africa.
This money was spent mainly on accommodation, transport, food and beverages,
and other consumable products purchased within the country.
Government's
investment in this event amounted to about R449 million. This includes funding
from all three spheres of government. The leverage effect of government's
contribution from the private sector amounted to about R620 million, of which
about 60% came from international sponsors and donor agencies. Based on
delegates' expenditure of R1,53 billion, and the investment leveraged from the
private sector, it is estimated that more than R8 billion was generated for
the SA economy. This means that new business sales worth more than R8 billion
was generated by the Summit. "Based on these results, we can conclude that the
short and long-term effects of the Summit on South Africa as a tourist
destination of choice will be significant. The fact that the interim results
indicate that delegates gave a positive rating to our hospitality and
friendliness (84%), personal service (70%) and accommodation quality (60%),
means that we can expect more international tourists to visit our country.
Furthermore, the significance of the revenue generated by the Summit is that
whereas the contribution of tourism to the SA economy annually is about R24
billion, this event, which lasted for just two weeks, generated more than R8
billion." The report concludes by declaring "the economic impact of the WSSD
on the economy of South Africa was positive". A detailed final report will be
available by the end of November 2002.
http://www.environment.gov.za/NewsMedia/MedStat/2002sept14/report_14092002.htm
Download the
full interim report (MS Word document | 205KB).
http://www.environment.gov.za/Documents/Documents/word_documents/interim_final_14092002.doc
2. SUMMIT SETS NEW AGENDA FOR PRACTICAL ACTION A GLOBAL PARTNERSHIP TO
FIGHT POVERTY
5 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.environment.gov.za/NewsMedia/MedStat/2002sept5/outcomes_05092002.htm
THURSDAY, 5
SEPTEMBER 2002: The Ministers of Environmental Affairs and Tourism and Foreign
Affairs have hailed the Johannesburg Summit as an outstanding success.
Speaking at the end of the summit yesterday the ministers, in a joint
statement, said the World Summit on Sustainable Development had opened the way
for the world to take new strides in the foremost challenge of our time -- the
eradication of poverty and closing the gap between rich and poor, combined
with protection of the environment. The ministers' statement continued: "What
mattered as representatives of over 180 countries grappled with a whole range
of complex and interrelated issues was that there should, at the end of it
all, be a critical mass of agreement on a new agenda for practical action that
could decisively alter the global framework for sustainable development.
"Critical in managing Summit preparations and discussions, and in implementing
its decisions, is the active participation of civil society. Partnerships
between governments and civil society organisations, including NGOs, CBOs and
business, will be strengthened. "We set ourselves the task of ensuring a
balance of the three pillars of sustainable development -- economic, social
and environmental -- and a focus on poverty eradication. It was essential to
mobilise new resources and new energy behind a practical implementation plan.
"In the give and take of negotiations not all that everyone might have wanted
on particular issues was possible. But that critical mass of global agreement
and commitment has been won and with it far-reaching practical programmes, new
resources and strengthened means of implementation."
MAJOR NEW
AGREEMENTS
It is the view
of government that the biggest success of the Summit has been in getting the
world to turn the ambitious development goals of the Millennium Declaration to
halve world poverty by 2015 into a concrete set of programmes, and to mobilise
funds for those programmes. The Summit brought to the fore the need to pay
particular attention to the most marginalised sectors of society, including
women, youth, indigenous peoples and people with disabilities. The Summit
implementation plan includes programmes to deliver water, energy, health care,
agricultural development and a better environment for the world's poor.
New targets
will have enormous impact on the global agenda.
-
In addition
to the already agreed target of halving the number of people unable to
access safe drinking water by 2015, it was agreed also to halve the number
of people without basic sanitation by 2015.
-
Countries
agreed to reverse the trend in biodiversity loss by 2010 and to restore
collapsed fish stocks by 2015.
-
Chemicals
with a detrimental health impact will be phased out by 2020.
-
Energy
services will be extended to 35% of African households over the next 10
years.
Making it
happen to improve the lives of the poor
In a departure
from previous global conferences and summits, the Johannesburg Summit shifted
the focus of world leaders from policy debates to the real task of making it
happen and achieving high-level commitments by heads of state and leaders from
business and civil society to meet the goals set. As testimony to this many
concrete actions, partnerships and funding targets were announced by countries
and stakeholders. Over 300 partnerships were launched, including 32 energy
initiatives, 21 water programmes and 32 programmes for biodiversity and
eco-system management.
SOUTH AFRICA
AND JOHANNESBURG A PROUD HOST
Concluding the
statement, the Minister of Environmental Affairs and Tourism, Valli Moosa,
stated that we are proud as South Africans that we were able to host one of
the largest gatherings of the United Nations and the world's peoples, in
pursuit of objectives that are profoundly relevant to our own programme of
reconstruction and development. Some of our own programmes already surpass
targets and time frames set by the Johannesburg Summit. But our own reality of
stark poverty and inequality demands that we intensify all our programmes.
South Africa
can be sure that, as our guests return home, they will take with them special
memories of a warm people and a country alive with possibilities. The country
is also proud of those whose peaceful marches and other activities not only
highlighted the strong views they hold on global matters, but also showed the
practical meaning of our constitutional right to free expression.
Congratulations to all South Africans, the citizens of Johannesburg, the
security services and airport staff, employees of Jowsco and government, the
media, employers and employees in the hospitality and other industries, and
all who worked together to make the Summit a success. Special thanks and
congratulations to the thousands of volunteers, the performers and those whose
arts and crafts brought home to every visitor a graphic presentation of who we
are as a people. Finally, South Africa and other developing countries may not
have got everything they wanted. Nor can anyone be totally satisfied with the
outcome. But the most critical issue is that out of Africa and out of
Johannesburg has emerged a new agenda for practical action.
3. CLOSING PRESS CONFERENCE BY SOUTH AFRICA'S PRESIDENT
4 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.un.org/events/wssd/pressconf/020904conf2.htm
The critical
test of whether Johannesburg succeeded or not would be what happened from
here, South African President Thabo Mbeki told correspondents tonight at the
final Summit press conference. He said he was very pleased that the Summit had
been able to reach agreement. That was a big meeting, the biggest ever tried,
and everyone from world leaders to civil society, business and trade union
representatives had interracted in such a positive way. Even his ministers,
joining him at the press conference tonight, had become better ministers for
having engaged in that process. The conference had focused specifically on
making things happen, which was why matters such as targets had become so
important. He would interact with the United Nations closely to ensure that
decisions were implemented. Obviously, not everyone was happy with the
outcome, but a plan of implementation, with deadlines, targets and time frames
had been agreed. It was essential now to act on those. But, what had been
agreed upon should not be treated as a ceiling. Responding to a question
about the reasons for his satisfaction, he said one critical matter of
importance had been the clarification of the concept of sustainable
development. There was a much better understanding by the people across the
globe of the three pillars of sustainable development -- social development,
economic development and environmental protection -- and their integration.
After Rio, there had been correct attention to environmental issues, but
insufficient attention to those other pillars. The view now was much more
balanced. To a series of questions about how to achieve sustainable
development without peace, he said the Summit had taken the position that
issues of peace and stability were critical to development. So, the matter of
peace and stability and related matters of good governance were examined
together. Asked about the Kyoto Protocol on climate change and how successful
the United Nations might be in getting the United States to join it, he said
he could not answer the question about United States' accession to the Kyoto
Protocol. He was encouraged, however, at the forward movement towards its
coming into force. He certainly hoped that process would be accelerated. In
that world of globalization, the corporate world had an increasing impact on
humankind and the environment, he replied, to a question about corporate
accountability, as written into the outcome text. The business sector was a
major player with regard to all issues on the Summit's agenda. It was
important, therefore, to have a system by which accountability was
strengthened. The United Nations would have to look at that important matter
to see how to implement that decision. Asked about the omission of a
reference to human rights in the political declaration, after it had appeared
in an early draft, he said delegations decided it was better to handle the
declaration in a way that did not repeat the detail in the plan of
implementation. Thus, it was made more general and shorter in length. He
stressed that the declaration, which had placed emphasis on human dignity and
human solidarity and the rights that flowed from that, should be read with the
implementation plan. On monitoring implementation, he said a United Nations
conference had an obligation to monitor its outcome. At the same time, various
regions would also discuss the outcome. In Africa, for example, he was quite
certain that the African Union would look at that and consider what steps it
could take to implement it. The institutional responsibility flowing from the
Summit must be United Nations-led, but it might suggest that others join in
that monitoring process, he added. Replying to a question about the different
levels of commitment between nations, he said the participants were taking the
commitments made here very seriously. He would want to insist that everyone
was obligated to implement what had been agreed. It was critical that the
United Nations moved as quickly as possible to determine what mechanisms
should be established to oversee implementation. And, it would be very useful
if the media "kept an eye on this". "For us on the African continent, those
were very much matters of life and death," he added. There was no choice but
to address those as soon as possible. Africa did not have the resources of the
developed world, but certain decisions, such as about official development
assistance (ODA), had sought to bridge that divide. The African continent
would do as much as possible and the United Nations would do its part. There
was no guarantee about how other countries would act. Asked whether the
outcome had met Africa's expectations, he said, "I think so". It was important
that the conference come out in a straight and forthright manner in support of
the New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD) as the comprehensive
programme on the African continent with regard to development and the
environment. Indeed, the Summit had supported NEPAD, the process through which
the continent would communicate. To a related question, he said that Africa
had never treated the matter of good governance in partnership with the
developed world as a quid pro quo. The idea for the African partnership had
begun with everything that was wrong on the continent and the realization that
those things had to be addressed as Africans, and not to please anybody else.
NEPAD was born of the idea that Africans needed a mechanism to ensure that the
decisions made about political and economic governance were implemented. That
was where the notion of a peer review mechanism had originated. "So, we want
to define ourselves, we want to rate ourselves, we want to be able to correct
ourselves, he asserted." In the context of the Group of 8, they had accepted
that that was an African decision, which they would respect. Hopefully, the
inclusion of indigenous peoples in the outcome text had meant that their voice
had been heard, he said to a correspondent who noted that, for the first time
in more than 30 years, the United Nations had a document that used the term
"indigenous people" without qualification. Not everyone was happy with the
outcome, he said to a further question. And, that meant some governments as
well as non-governmental organizations (NGOs). It was not necessary to set up
a dichotomy that did not exist. He would not want to say that governments
thought with their heads and NGOs with their hearts -- both thought with their
heads and their hearts. A necessary element of negotiation was to go in with
all of one's demands, and be prepared that the result might not live up to
expectations.
4. MINISTER SKWEYIYA INFORMS GLOBAL CIVIL SOCIETY THAT THE WORLD SUMMIT ON
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT WAS A SUCCESS
South African
Ministry of Social Development
4 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.gov.za/search97cgi/s97_cgi?action=View&VdkVgwKey=%2E%2E%2Fdata%2Fspeech02%2F02090415461004%2Etxt&
DocOffset=93&DocsFound=6883&Collection=speech02&Collection=speech01&SortField=TDEDate&SortOrder=desc&ViewTemplat
e=gov%2Fdocview%2Ehts&SearchUrl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww%2Egov%2Eza%2Fsearch97cgi%2Fs97%5Fcgi%3Faction%3DSearc
h%26ResultTemplate%3Dgov%252Fdefault%252Ehts%26Collection%3Dspeech02%26Collection%3Dspeech01%26SortField%3DT
DEDate%26SortOrder%3Ddesc%26ViewTemplate%3Dgov%252Fdocview%252Ehts%26ResultStart%3D76%26ResultCount%3D25&
The South
African Minister of Social Development Dr Zola Skweyiya today (September 4,
2002) informed the Global Civil Society Forum that the World Summit on
Sustainable Development was a success because it was able to deal with the
most pertinent issues facing the majority of the World populace, particularly
poverty, water and sanitation as well as food and nutrition. "The World
Summit on Sustainable Development was indeed a major success in ensuring that
pertinent issues facing the poorest of the poor in the World are dealt with,
but most importantly targets to solve them are agreed upon as part of the
implementation programme. These issues are poverty, water and sanitation, food
security and corporate accountability," said the Minister. Dr Skweyiya was
addressing the closing plenary session of representatives of the steering
group on the Global Civil Society, which included NGO's and other civil
society structures from across the globe. The Minister reiterated the
commitment of the South African Government to strengthen and work closely with
civil society in South Africa and indeed the entire African continent in
ensuring that the political declaration agreed upon and the Implementation
Plan are realized. During the question period most of the participants
expressed support including a commitment to ensure that decisions taken are
implemented and they commended the South African Government for the
hospitality and assistance it gave to the civil society delegates especially
those from the African continent and the South.
5. SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT RELIES ON CO-OPERATION BY ALL: SHILOWA
Office of the Premier, Gauteng
4 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.gov.za/search97cgi/s97_cgi?action=View&VdkVgwKey=%2E%2E%2Fdata%2Fspeech02%2F02090415461001%2Etxt&
DocOffset=96&DocsFound=6883&Collection=speech02&Collection=speech01&SortField=TDEDate&SortOrder=desc&ViewTemplate
=gov%2Fdocview%2Ehts&SearchUrl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww%2Egov%2Eza%2Fsearch97cgi%2Fs97%5Fcgi%3Faction%3DSearch
%26ResultTemplate%3Dgov%252Fdefault%252Ehts%26Collection%3Dspeech02%26Collection%3Dspeech01%26SortField%3DTD
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The dire
situation of poverty, underdevelopment, inequality among and within nations,
the degradation of the environment and the continued wastage of resources
called for more action by governments, business, civil society and communities
to act with more urgency to implement a programme for the achievement of the
goals of sustainable development, Gauteng Premier Mbhazima Shilowa, said on
Tuesday night. "There is a ray of hope that the Johannesburg Summit will live
up to the expectations of billions of people all over the world by adopting a
time-focused practical programme of action for the full implementation of past
global agreements on sustainable development," He told guests at the Heads of
delegations to the 2002 World Summit on Sustainable Development. This year's
summit, held at the Sandton Convention Centre, ends on Wednesday, September 4.
Shilowa said there was reason to believe that Johannesburg would witness
history Wednesday when the Heads of State and Heads of government adopt and
commit their governments to the programme of action for sustainable
development. "When future generations read about the Johannesburg World
Summit on Sustainable Development they must say this is the summit that
changed the world for the better. They must say this is the summit that saved
the earth from humankind. " Noting the comments by the Secretary of Summit
Nitin Desai that action plans with targets and timeframes had been agreed
upon, the premier said, "We look forward to the announcements of projects and
funding mechanisms that have been agreed on". He, however stressed the
adoption of the programme only was not enough, adding that: "Evidence abounds
to show that world leaders are capable of breaking their promises and not
fulfilling their commitments. So, to ensure that we do not regress to the
pre-Rio period, we must identify the factors that led to the failure to
implement past agreements and put in place mechanisms to eliminate them. "The
success of this programme will also depend on the forging of strong
partnerships by all role-players as well as identifying specific functions
relevant to each of the role players. There must also be acceptance by all
role players of their responsibilities in the implementation of the programme
and that if they fail to fulfil them the whole programme would collapse."
Shilowa said he had also noted a series of partnerships announced by a number
of developed countries during the course of the summit and called on others
who had not done so to make available resources to assist poor countries as
well as open their markets to developing countries. "Your Excellencies,
Johannesburg cannot afford to fail. It must not be just another one of the
global gatherings that are held, where agreements are made and as soon as we
leave the venue we file them away only to retrieve them when we are asked why
there has not been any progress. "I have no doubt that gathered in this house
are leaders of integrity, who will do everything in their power to ensure that
Johannesburg does not go down in history as one of the talk shows that
produced nothing but nicely written resolutions which were not implemented,"
said the premier. He added: "We all look forward to the adoption of the
political statement as well as the Johannesburg programme of action on
sustainable development tomorrow."
6. ENERGY, SANITATION AND RESOURCES ARE MAJOR FOCUS AT JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT
Ministry of Trade and Industry
1 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.gov.za/search97cgi/s97_cgi?action=View&VdkVgwKey=%2E%2E%2Fdata%2Fspeech02%2F02090212461006%2Etxt&
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South Africa's
Trade and Industry Minister, Alec Erwin, has reaffirmed that energy,
sanitation and natural resources are the primary focus points for the
Johannesburg Summit. Speaking at a media briefing at the Sandton Convention
Centre earlier today, Erwin said the Summit had afforded an opportunity for
representatives from countries and groups to come together and discuss
linkages between themselves. He said among the issues under discussion over
the past few days have been principles related to the Johannesburg text. As a
country, he said, the country has met some critical challenges in organising
the Summit. As the Summit leaders, it was a major challenge for South Africa
to facilitate discussions between the various groups and managing discussions
between them. On the substance of the discussions, Erwin said that 33 issues
had been agreed to in the text around sustainable development. Importantly,
one of these was that agreements attained Doha would not form part of
discussions at the 2002 WSSD. Erwin said that the negotiations at Doha were
complete and intact, and therefore it was unnecessary and unwise to open
discussions around the matter at the WSSD. The minister was upbeat about the
outcome of the Summit: "My understanding is that there is no delegation that
would want Johannesburg to be a failure." "We need to be realistic and
understand that everyone will have issues they would want to push very hard.
Realistically, no one will be able to say that they have gained everything,"
Erwin said.
7. AGREEMENT REACHED ON MAJORITY OF SUMMIT'S PLAN OF IMPLEMENTATION
Ministry of Environmental Affairs
and Tourism
3 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.gov.za/search97cgi/s97_cgi?action=View&VdkVgwKey=%2E%2E%2Fdata%2Fspeech02%2F02090409461002%2Etxt&
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TUESDAY, 3
SEPTEMBER 2002: Agreement has been reached on virtually all of the World
Summit on Sustainable Development's Plan of Implementation, with the notable
exception of several key provisions on energy. Among the provisions that were
agreed upon in the ministerial negotiating session last night (September 2nd)
was a commitment to set a goal for reducing by half the proportion of people
who lack access to proper sanitation by 2015. Also agreed to were efforts to
reduce the loss of biodiversity as well as good governance, the promotion of
corporate responsibility, and the reaffirming of the Rio Principles, including
the precautionary principle and the principle of common but differentiated
responsibilities. The remaining unresolved points involve energy issues,
including setting a target for achieving a certain level of renewable energy
use and whether countries should establish programmes to improve access to
reliable and affordable energy services. There is also an outstanding
paragraph concerning health care services. "The Summit has made some very
significant advances," commented the South African Minister of Environmental
Affairs and Tourism, Valli Moosa. "In some areas, it has made seminal
advances." Minister Moosa said the breakthroughs in the negotiations came
during three days of round-the-clock ministerial meetings. He described the
idea of ministers sitting for days dealing with the "nitty-gritty" of the
issues involved, as a surprise. "It represents the seriousness of which the
WSSD is taken by developing and developed countries." The high-level
negotiations (which have been taking place this week) were necessary, he said,
because the remaining issues needed to be resolved at the political -- not
technical -- level.
Countries have
agreed to establish a voluntary world solidarity fund to eradicate poverty and
to promote social and human development that, without duplicating existing UN
funds, would encourage the role of the private sector and individual citizens.
Also agreed to was a provision that encourages countries to develop a 10-year
framework of programmes to accelerate the shift toward sustainable consumption
and production pattern. This essentially asks countries to live within the
means of the supporting ecosystems. Another provision calls for policies to
improve products and services that reduce environmental and health impacts
using approaches such as life-cycle analysis. On Kyoto, countries agreed that
States that have ratified the Kyoto Protocol "strongly urge States that have
not already done so to ratify the Kyoto Protocol in a timely manner". A target
of 2010 was set for significantly reducing the current rate of biodiversity
loss, with an acknowledgement that additional financial and technical
resources would be necessary. Countries agreed to promote corporate
responsibility and accountability and exchange best practices through
multi-stakeholder dialogue such as in the Commission on Sustainable
Development, the UN body established to pursue implementation of sustainable
development.
DANISH
PRESIDECY OF THE EU
WSSD Web page:
http://www.um.dk/english/wssd/indexuk.asp
8. DANISH EU PRESIDENCY: WSSD IS A SOUND AND SOLID SPRINGBOARD
4 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.eu2002.dk/news/news_read.asp?iInformationID=21931
On 4 September
the World Summit for Sustainable Development comes to an end. After ten days
of intense negotiations the world has a sound and solid springboard for the
jump from boardroom talks to concrete actions in the streets and fields. The
EU is satisfied with the outcome of the Summit. Minister for the Environment
Hans Christian Schmidt of the Danish EU Presidency said: "The World Summit was
a kickoff. A lot of things have been set into motion, and now no more talks
are needed. Of course, the EU aimed even higher in certain areas, but in order
to make results you have to be flexible. And it doesn't change the fact that
we now have strong agreements and realistic timetables on crucial issues. The
future challenge will be to manoeuvre the development in a sustainable
direction. Just as the major EU Water Initiative and the EU Energy Initiative
aim to do." Mr. Schmidt continued: "The results from Johannesburg are part of
a package with the trade round that started in Doha and the commitments on
additional development aid from the EU and USA undertaken in Monterrey. It is
without doubt that countries with this package of agreements have committed
themselves to making substantial changes. To fight poverty and diseases, the
world needs clean water and safe sanitation. We need to provide access to
energy. We need democracy and free trade. And in these areas the world is now
far more ambitious than ever. Since we have made sure that it will be easy to
monitor our progress, I suggest that we get started." The main new results of
the Johannesburg Summit were the following:
-
Water and
sanitation: The Millennium Goal on water was confirmed, and the countries
agreed to halve the proportion of people that live without access to
sanitation by 2015.
-
Delinking:
The establishment of a ten-year framework of programmes on sustainable
consumption and production was decided.
-
Chemicals:
Countries are aiming to achieve that chemicals are used and produced without
significant adverse effects on humans or the environment by 2020.
-
Energy: The
use and production of renewable energy must be substantially increased.
Furthermore a regular review of this was agreed upon. Finally, the EU
launched a coalition of like-minded countries that wish to go even further
and establish specific targets and timetables for the increase of renewable
energy.
-
Climate:
Countries that have ratified the Kyoto Protocol strongly urge countries that
have not to do so in a timely manner.
-
Biodiversity: Depleted fish stocks will be secured and rebalanced by 2015.
By 2010 the loss of biodiversity must be substantially reduced.
-
Partnerships: Partnerships involving business and civil society will help
the implementation of the political agreement at the Summit.
The Political
Declaration of the World Summit has yet to be finalised, but the EU strongly
believes that it will support the focus from the Plan of Implementation.
9. EUROPEAN UNION: NOW WE MUST TURN WORLD SUMMIT AGREEMENT INTO CONCRETE
RESULTS
4 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.eu2002.dk/news/news_read.asp?iInformationID=21972
The European
Union (EU) today welcomed the results of the World Sustainable Development
Summit (WSSD) in Johannesburg as a success and underlined Europe's
determination to lead the way in turning the Summit's action plan into
concrete results on the ground.
Danish Prime
Minister and EU President Anders Fogh Rasmussen said: "I believe we can be
satisfied with the result. We have agreed an action plan and a set of
principles for sustainable development. We have concluded a global deal and
partnership recommending free trade and increased market access, increased
development assistance, a commitment to good governance and commitments to a
better environment. The EU has played a leading role in this." European
Commission President Romano Prodi said: "We came to Johannesburg to launch a
North-South pact which also encompasses the results of the Doha and Monterrey
conferences. I welcome this relaunch of multilateralism which puts sustainable
development firmly on the global agenda. Naturally we cannot be happy with
everything we achieved but the results take us in the right direction.
Reaching agreement is important but without implementation it means nothing.
The EU will take the lead in implementing the outcome of Johannesburg because
we are strongly committed to fighting poverty through trade and aid while
protecting the environment. We owe it to the world to deliver." The EU has
consistently worked for an ambitious, realistic, action-orientated outcome
with clear, measurable and time-bound targets directed to achieving the
Millennium Development Goals. The key targets include the following:
-
Halving by
2015 the number of people lacking access to basic sanitation, complementing
the Millennium Development Goal of halving the number of people without
access to fresh water by the same date.
-
A commitment
to minimize the harmful effects on human health and the environment from the
production and use of all chemicals by 2020.
-
A commitment
to halt the decline in fish stocks and restore them to sustainable levels no
later than 2015.
-
A commitment
by all parties to halt the loss of biodiversity by 2010.
-
A commitment
to set up a 10-year framework for programmes on sustainable consumption and
production.
The Summit
also agreed to increase urgently and substantially the global share of
renewable energy sources.
In support of
the Summit's goals, the EU has launched major partnership initiatives to bring
clean water, sanitation and clean energy to people in developing countries.
Yesterday it also launched a coalition of like-minded countries committed to
increasing their use of renewable energies through quantified, time-bound
targets. President Prodi said this 'coalition of the willing' would create a
strong force to go beyond the Summit agreement on renewable energy. The EU
welcomed the summit's acknowledgement that good governance is essential for
sustainable development. Experience has shown that lack of democracy, openness
and respect for human rights contributes to keeping countries in poverty.
Climate change again played a prominent role in the Summit with China, South
Africa and Poland announcing their ratification of the Kyoto Protocol. There
were also strong signals from Canada that it would ratify before the end of
the year. Following an appeal by President Prodi to President Putin for Russia
to ratify the Protocol so that it can enter into force, the Russia Government
made a positive statement about its ongoing ratification process. Mr
Rasmussen said: "The 1990s were the decade of mega-summits. We should make the
next 10 years the decade of action. We must secure effective implementation
through an effective monitoring mechanism. We should ask the UN General
Assembly to monitor implementation of the Johannesburg targets and the
Johannesburg agenda. We have the goals - now the promises must be kept. We
want results."
10. EUROPEAN UNION IS FULLY COMMITTED TO REDUCING TRADE-DISTORTING FARM
SUBSIDIES
28 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.eu2002.dk/news/news_read.asp?iInformationID=21759
The European
Union (EU) is fully committed to the World Trade Organization (WTO) process
for reducing trade-distorting agricultural subsidies, European Commissioner
for Development and Humanitarian Aid Poul Nielson underlined in Johannesburg
today. The EU also attaches great importance to promoting sustainable energy,
including concrete, time-bound targets on renewable energy, at the World
Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) under way in the South African city.
The achievement of the Millennium Development Goals on energy is among the
EU's top priorities. Energy is a key component of any poverty eradication and
sustainable development strategy. This was underlined by Danish Minister for
the Environment and head of the EU Presidency Hans Christian Schmidt at a
press briefing in Johannesburg today. Environment Minister Hans Christian
Schmidt said "More than two billion people live without access to proper
energy services. They are 'energy poor'. The lack of energy is often a
limiting factor in poor people's struggle for prosperity. Farmers and business
need energy for pumping water. Schools need light. Families need to be
relieved from dangerous smoke from wood when they are preparing food. Energy
is a vital part of poverty eradication. And renewable energy is a vital part
of sustainable poverty eradication. Governments and other stakeholders must
focus their efforts on these goals." Minister Schmidt continued: "Energy
efficiency must be enhanced. Cleaner and more efficient fossil fuel
technologies must be developed. And the contribution of renewable energies to
the overall energy mix must be increased. The EU as a whole is allocating
around 700 million per year in Official Development Assistance for
energy-related activities. He added: "The EU wants the WSSD to send a clear
signal to the world community on the need to promote renewable energy. This is
why we attach high priority to reaching agreement on achievable targets and
timetables as well as the implementation of these targets. The targets should
be to increase renewable energy sources' share of global primary energy supply
to at least 15% by 2010. Industrialized countries should also increase
renewables' share at national level by two percentage points by the same
date."
Turning to the
issue of agricultural subsidies, Commissioner Poul Nielson told the briefing
that current WTO rules already set limits on trade-distorting farm subsidies.
"At Doha an agenda for new negotiations was agreed, which sets a target of
substantial reductions in trade-distorting farm subsidies. Negotiations to
fulfill this commitment and to establish how big the cuts should be have to be
completed in time for new commitments to be tabled before the Fifth WTO
Ministerial in September 2003. This is a challenging timetable and it would be
in no one's interest to confuse the agreed mandate at this stage. Everyone
agreed in the run-up to the WSSD that the aim of the Summit was to support but
not to renegotiate Doha. Doha is the foundation stone for action on
subsidies." Commissioner Poul Nielson added: "Reforming agricultural policy
has to be done progressively, as current WTO rules recognize. Big leaps
forward may lead to major reverses. The EU has pursued a consistent policy of
reforms since 1992, leading most recently to last month's Commission proposal
for a mid-term review of the Common Agricultural Policy."
11. EUROPEAN UNION: 22 BILLION EXTRA ODA UP TO 2006
27 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.eu2002.dk/news/news_read.asp?iInformationID=21717
European
Commissioner for Development and Humanitarian Aid Poul Nielson underlined at a
press briefing today that the European Union (EU) has committed itself to make
available around 22 billion in extra official development assistance (ODA)
between now and 2006. The EU is already the developing world's biggest trade
partner and aid donor. The EU also wants economic and social development to be
accompanied by changes in consumption patterns in order to make development
sustainable. Waste and transport are two examples of areas where it is
becoming clear that trends must be broken. Danish Minister for the
Environment and head of the EU Presidency Hans Christian Schmidt said:
"Decoupling is a necessity, not just a possibility. The wealthy countries must
take the lead and show how consumption and production patterns can be changed.
The developing countries must be allowed more time. But it is extremely
important that Johannesburg heralds the transition from words to action,
including on this subject. We must put things into practice." Environment
Minister Hans Christian Schmidt continued: "We are facing urgent problems
which we must solve if economic growth is not to burden the environment even
more. We have to encourage efficient use of resources. We have to optimise
material flows. And not least, we must cut the consumption of dangerous
chemicals. This is why we must prepare a very specific plan for initiatives
over the next ten years. In order to achieve the existing goals in this area
our efforts have to be focused. Existing international organisations should
collaborate in developing a ten year work programme." the EU, the world's
biggest trade partner and aid donor to the developing world Commissioner Poul
Nielson set out how the EU committed itself at the Monterrey Conference on
Financing for Development in March to bringing its average ODA level up to
0.39 per cent of Gross National Income (GNI) by 2006, as a significant first
step towards reaching the UN target of 0.7 per cent. This commitment should
result in additional funding of around 22 billion up to 2006, and an extra 9
billion a year from 2006 onwards. The EU already contributes more than half of
the developed world's ODA - 26 billion in 2001 - making it the biggest donor
to developing countries.
Commissioner
Poul Nielson said: "With the Doha Development Agenda, the Monterrey Consensus,
the Global Environment Facility, the UN Environment Programme and other
international agreements the world has an organized agenda. This is why it
would be especially useful here in Johannesburg to reach agreements on adding
specific targets with timetables. Implementation of these commitments will be
better secured if we have timetables to accompany them".
EU STATEMENTS ON ILLEGAL LOGGING,
DELIVERED AT WSSD SIDE-EVENT ON FOREST LAW ENFORCEMENT, GOVERNANCE AND TRADE
by Ambassador Dan Nielsen 02/09/2002
http://www.eu2002.dk/news/news_read.asp?iInformationID=21863
WSSD - THE
DANISH PRIME MINISTER'S SPEECH IN CONNECTION WITH THE PRESENTATION OF EU
ENERGY INITIATIVE 1 September 2002
http://www.eu2002.dk/news/news_read.asp?iInformationID=21861
EU
INTERVENTION ON WATER AND SANITATION, delivered by Minister for the
Environment Hans Chr. Schmidt at WSSD on 28 August 2002
http://www.eu2002.dk/news/news_read.asp?iInformationID=21765
EU
INTERVENTION ON ENERGY by Minister for the Environment Hans Chr. Schmidt,
delivered at WSSD
28/08/2002
http://www.eu2002.dk/news/news_read.asp?iInformationID=21762
EU-INTERVENTION
ON BIODIVERSITY AND ECOSYSTEMS AT WSSD, delivered by Minister of the
Environment Hans Chr. Schmidt on 26 August 2002
http://www.eu2002.dk/news/news_read.asp?iInformationID=21705
EU-INTERVENTION
ON HEALTH AT WSSD, delivered by Ambassador Dan Nielsen on 26 August 2002
http://www.eu2002.dk/news/news_read.asp?iInformationID=21703
SPEECH BY MINISTER FOR THE
ENVIRONMENT HANS CHR. SCHMIDT ON SUSTAINABLE CONSUMPTION AND PRODUCTION,
DELIVERED AT A WSSD SIDE-EVENT 27/08/2002
http://www.eu2002.dk/news/news_read.asp?iInformationID=21733
EUROPEAN
COMMISSION
WSSD Web
page:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/press_room/presspacks/joburg/pp_joburg_en.html
12. THE WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
16 September 2002
Internet:
http://europa-eu-un.org/article.asp?id=1611
The EU
considers the results of the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) in
Johannesburg an overall success, and it has underscored Europe's determination
to lead the way in turning the Summit's action plan into concrete results on
the ground. Danish Prime Minister and current EU President Anders Fogh
Rasmussen said: "I believe we can be satisfied with the result. We have agreed
an action plan and a set of principles for sustainable development. We have
concluded a global deal and partnership recommending free trade and increased
market access, increased development assistance, a commitment to good
governance and commitments to a better environment. The EU has played a
leading role in this." Commented European Commission President Romano Prodi:
"We came to Johannesburg to launch a North-South pact which also encompasses
the results of the Doha and Monterrey conferences. I welcome this relaunch of
multilateralism, which puts sustainable development firmly on the global
agenda...The EU will take the lead in implementing the outcome of Johannesburg
because we are strongly committed to fighting poverty through trade and aid
while protecting the environment. We owe it to the world to deliver." The EU
has consistently worked for an ambitious, realistic, action-oriented outcome
with clear, measurable and time-bound targets to achieve the Millennium
Development Goals (MDG). The key targets include:
Halving by
2015 the number of people lacking access to basic sanitation, complementing
the MDG of halving the number of people without access to fresh water by the
same date.
A commitment
to minimize the harmful effects on human health and the environment from the
production and use of all chemicals by 2020.
A commitment
to halt the decline in fish stocks and to restore them to sustainable levels
by no later than 2015.
A commitment
by all parties to halt the loss of biodiversity by 2010.
A commitment
to set up a 10-year framework for programs on sustainable consumption and
production.
The Summit
also agreed to increase urgently and substantially the global share of
renewable energy sources. In support of the Summit's goals, the EU has pledged
major partnership initiatives to bring clean water, sanitation and clean
energy to people in developing countries. And it has also launched a coalition
of like-minded countries committed to increasing their use of renewable
energies through quantified, time-bound targets. Further, the EU welcomed the
summit's acknowledgement that good governance is essential for sustainable
development. Experience has shown that lack of democracy, openness and respect
for human rights contributes to keeping countries in poverty. Climate change
played a prominent role in Johannesburg, too, with China, South Africa and
Poland all announcing their ratification of the Kyoto Protocol. Canada also
gave strong signals that it would ratify before the end of the year, and the
Russian government made a positive statement about its ongoing ratification
process. (Once Russia ratifies, it is expected that the Protocol will enter
into force.)
13. EUROPEAN COMMISSION PRESIDENT ROMANO PRODI MET US SECRETARY OF STATE
COLIN POWELL DURING THE WORLD SUMMIT IN JOHANNESBURG
4 September
Internet:
http://europa.eu.int/rapid/start/cgi/guesten.ksh?p_action.gettxt=gt&doc=IP/02/1269|0|RAPID&lg=EN
European
Commission President Romano Prodi met US Secretary of State Colin Powell
during the World Summit in Johannesburg on Wednesday 4 September They welcomed
the results achieved at the Summit and agreed on the need to implement
Johannesburg Plan of Implementation fully and without delay. President Prodi
expressed his concern over the increasing divide between North and South. He
agreed with Secretary Powell that this must be a matter of common concern and
that the answer must be found through resolute implementation of a
multilateral agenda. President Prodi stressed that the old approach (Trade not
Aid) must be abandoned and replaced by Trade and Aid. They also discussed the
situation in the Middle East and Iraq. On the Middle East they shared their
concerns about standstill in the Peace Process and stressed the importance of
international cooperation. They agreed that Iraq must comply with relevant UN
resolutions and must allow the disarmament inspectors to operate without any
restriction. Secretary Powell agreed with President Prodi that this is a
multilateral problem. On The International Criminal Court there was common
understanding on the need to continue working together to find a solution to
American concerns without undermining the principles and objectives of the
Court.
14. EUROPEAN UNION: NOW WE MUST TURN WORLD SUMMIT AGREEMENT INTO CONCRETE
RESULTS
4 September
2002
Internet:
http://europa.eu.int/rapid/start/cgi/guesten.ksh?p_action.gettxt=gt&doc=IP/02/1268|0|RAPID&lg=EN&display=
The European
Union (EU) today welcomed the results of the World Sustainable Development
Summit (WSSD) in Johannesburg as a success and underlined Europe's
determination to lead the way in turning the Summit's action plan into
concrete results on the ground.
Danish Prime
Minister and EU President Anders Fogh Rasmussen said: "I believe we can be
satisfied with the result. We have agreed an action plan and a set of
principles for sustainable development. We have concluded a global deal and
partnership recommending free trade and increased market access, increased
development assistance, a commitment to good governance and commitments to a
better environment. The EU has played a leading role in this." European
Commission President Romano Prodi said: "We came to Johannesburg to launch a
North-South pact which also encompasses the results of the Doha and Monterrey
conferences. I welcome this relaunch of multilateralism, which puts
sustainable development firmly on the global agenda. Naturally we cannot be
happy with everything we achieved but the results take us in the right
direction. Reaching agreement is important but without implementation it means
nothing. The EU will take the lead in implementing the outcome of Johannesburg
because we are strongly committed to fighting poverty through trade and aid
while protecting the environment. We owe it to the world to deliver." The EU
has consistently worked for an ambitious, realistic, action-orientated outcome
with clear, measurable and time-bound targets directed to achieving the
Millennium Development Goals. The key targets include the following:
-
Halving by
2015 the number of people lacking access to basic sanitation, complementing
the Millennium Development Goal of halving the number of people without
access to fresh water by the same date.
-
A commitment
to minimize the harmful effects on human health and the environment from the
production and use of all chemicals by 2020.
-
A commitment
to halt the decline in fish stocks and restore them to sustainable levels no
later than 2015.
-
A commitment
by all parties to halt the loss of biodiversity by 2010.
-
A commitment
to set up a 10-year framework for programmes on sustainable consumption and
production.
The Summit
also agreed to increase urgently and substantially the global share of
renewable energy sources.
In support of
the Summit's goals, the EU has launched major partnership initiatives to bring
clean water, sanitation and clean energy to people in developing countries.
Yesterday it also launched a coalition of like-minded countries committed to
increasing their use of renewable energies through quantified, time-bound
targets. President Prodi said this 'coalition of the willing' would create a
strong force to go beyond the summit agreement on renewable energy. The EU
welcomed the summit's acknowledgement that good governance is essential for
sustainable development. Experience has shown that lack of democracy, openness
and respect for human rights contributes to keeping countries in poverty.
Climate change again played a prominent role in the summit with China, South
Africa and Poland announcing their ratification of the Kyoto Protocol. There
were also strong signals from Canada that it would ratify before the end of
the year. Following an appeal by President Prodi to President Putin for Russia
to ratify the Protocol so that it can enter into force, the Russia government
made a positive statement about its ongoing ratification process. Mr
Rasmussen said: "The 1990s was the decade of mega-summits. We should make the
next 10 years the decade of action. We must secure effective implementation
through an effective monitoring mechanism. We should ask the UN General
Assembly to monitor implementation of the Johannesburg targets and the
Johannesburg agenda. We have the goals now the promises must be kept. We want
results."
15.
EUROPEAN UNION REAFFIRMS COMMITMENT TO REACHING GLOBAL DEAL AT WORLD SUMMIT
2 September
2002
Internet:
http://europa.eu.int/rapid/start/cgi/guesten.ksh?p_action.gettxt=gt&doc=IP/02/1259|0|RAPID&lg=EN&display=
The European
Union (EU) today welcomed the progress achieved at the World Sustainable
Development Summit in Johannesburg towards a global deal between North and
South to eradicate poverty and protect the environment, and reaffirmed its
commitment to reach an overall agreement. Danish Prime Minister and current
EU President Anders Fogh Rasmussen said: "The documents coming out of
Johannesburg will have a lot of targets and good intentions, although we still
have to resolve the issue of making energy more sustainable. The EU has been
driving the issues and we can be satisfied. But the most important thing to
stress is that now is the time to act. Johannesburg should be remembered as
the summit of action." European Commission President Romano Prodi said: "We
are here in Johannesburg to forge a fresh pact between North and South on the
basis of trust and our shared goal of sustainable development. This pact is
about growth, development, sustainability and solidarity. The increasing
divide between North and South must become our new frontier, our new
challenge. We got rid of a wall in Europe. We cannot accept another wall which
cuts the world in two." Mr Prodi also issued a solemn appeal to President
Putin for Russia to ratify the Kyoto Protocol on climate change as soon as
possible so that the Protocol can enter into force. Prime Minister Rasmussen
said the key elements of the EU's call for a global deal were increasing aid
and trade between the developed and the developing world, good governance and
improving the environment. He added: "Let us make a deal which provides the
developing countries with better opportunities and our environment with a
better protection. Let us make a deal which could replace despair and darkness
with hope and light for hundreds of millions of people. "
16. "WATER FOR LIFE": EUROPEAN UNION LAUNCHES GLOBAL INITIATIVE TO
ACHIEVE WORLD SUMMIT GOALS
3 September 2002
Internet:
http://europa.eu.int/rapid/start/cgi/guesten.ksh?p_action.gettxt=gt&doc=IP/02/1265|0|RAPID&lg=EN&display=
In
Johannesburg the European Union today formally launched a major global Water
Initiative aimed at creating strategic partnerships to achieve the World
Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) goals on clean water and sanitation.
Within this new framework the EU has already reached "Water for Life"
agreements with Africa and with eastern Europe, the Caucasus and central
Asia. Water is essential for human health, eradicating poverty, protecting
the environment and economic development. Currently, over one billion people
lack access to safe drinking water and over 2.4 billion people do not have
adequate sanitation. More than 2.2 million people, mostly children, die each
year from water-related diseases. The EU Water Initiative has been developed
in a multi-stakeholder process and is open to all partners and regions. It
aims to improve the efficiency of existing financing mechanisms through better
coordination. EU funding should attract additional financial resources. A
priority is to increase the transfer of knowledge through institutional
capacity building, targeted research and scientific cooperation. Danish Prime
Minister and EU President Anders Fogh Rasmussen said: "Water and sanitation
are key to sustainable development, health, regional stability and economic
stability. I believe we have the moral obligation to do the right thing: to
provide clean drinking water and sanitation for every village, town and city
on the planet. By doing so, every year we can save many millions of lives and
prevent hundreds of millions of people from suffering from serious diseases."
European Commission President Romano Prodi said: "The global water crisis is a
major threat for our planet and the future of our children. Together with our
partners we are fully committed to achieving the WSSD's now-agreed targets to
halve the proportion of people without access to safe drinking water and
improved sanitation by 2015. The EU is already investing 1.4 billion a year
in water-related development aid and scientific cooperation. We are ready to
increase financial resources over the coming years, in response to the
priorities developing countries set themselves." The EU-Africa "Water for
Life" agreement was signed yesterday in Johannesburg between Nigerian
President Obasanjo and South African Water and Forestry Minister Ronny Kasrils,
on behalf of Africa, and Danish Environment Minister Hans Christian Schmidt
and President Prodi for the EU. The agreement with eastern Europe, the
Caucasus and central Asia will be signed soon. Mediterranean and South
American countries have signalled their intention to participate in the near
future. The global initiative promotes cooperation between countries sharing
an international river basin in managing their water resources. Europe's
experience shows that such cooperation stimulates economic development and
regional integration as well as preventing conflict over water. Africa alone
has 60 transboundary rivers. Through the initiative the EU will help its
partners to develop integrated water resources management plans by 2005 -
another WSSD goal and achieve a sustainable balance between human water needs
and those of the environment. All partners are committed to ensuring that
clean water and sanitation are given appropriate priority in future. The
creation of the African Ministers Council of Water is a historical step in
this respect. Mr Fogh Rasmussen said: "The water crisis is a crisis of
governance. This initiative promotes better water governance arrangements and
transparency, building stronger partnerships between governments, civil
society and the private sector. Effective public services are a basis for
sustainable water governance." Water is already a focal sector for the EU's
assistance programmes in many African countries and an important component of
EU cooperation with South Africa and in the SADC region. President Prodi
concluded: "Together with President Mbeki I am proud of what we have already
achieved to bring water and sanitation to the people of South Africa. We are
committed to giving our full political support to all those who are working
hard every day to achieve water security, in quantity and quality, for
everyone on Earth, today and for future generations."
17. EUROPEAN UNION LAUNCHES COALITION OF LIKE-MINDED STATES TO DELIVER
WORLD SUMMIT RENEWABLE ENERGY GOALS
3 September 2002
Internet:
http://europa.eu.int/rapid/start/cgi/guesten.ksh?p_action.gettxt=gt&doc=IP/02/1264|0|RAPID&lg=EN&display=
The European
Union today announced that it is forming a coalition of like-minded countries
and regions committed to increasing their use of renewable energies through
quantified, time-bound targets. The initiative was announced at the World
Summit on Sustainable Develoment in Johannesburg by European Environment
Commissioner Margot Wallström and the EU Presidency, Mr Hans Christian
Schmidt, Environment Minister of Denmark as a key means of implementing
yesterday's Summit agreement that the global share of renewable energy sources
should urgently be substantially increased. Minister Schmidt and Commissioner
Wallström said: "The World Summit has shown that energy, like water, is at the
very core of the development agenda, but for development to be sustainable
that energy needs to be clean. Increasing the use of clean renewable energy
will have multiple benefits for rich and poor countries alike, from cutting
the emissions that are changing the global climate to improving the health of
millions in the developing world who have to breathe the smoke of their
wood-fired stoves." They continued: "Setting time-bound targets for boosting
the share of renewable energy, as the European Union and others have done,
will give us a clearer timeframe for delivering the substantial increase to
which the international community has committed itself here in Johannesburg."
They added: "The initial response to our initiative from those with whom we
have already discussed it has been extremely positive. African, Latin
American, Caribbean and other European countries have all shown interest, and
we will be talking to others in the coming days. I am extremely pleased to see
that so many are interested in forming a 'coalition of the willing' to
translate the Summit's commitment into firm targets." The renewable energy
initiative announced today is in addition to a major EU partnership initiative
on energy, launched on 1 September, aimed at improving access for people in
developing countries to adequate, affordable and sustainable energy
services.
See Also:
EU RALLIES
"LIKE-MINDED" NATIONS TO AGREE ON TIME-BOUND RENEWABLE ENERGY TARGETS
3 September 2002
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20020903/ap_wo_en_po/eu_energy_1
JOINT
DECLARATION BY EU, OTHERS: THE WAY FORWARD ON RENEWABLE ENERGY. IN RESPONSE TO
INACTION BY THE EARTH SUMMIT, A "COALITION OF THE WILLING" IS BEING FORMED TO
CARVE A PATH FORWARD TOWARD A
RENEWABLE ENERGY FUTURE.
http://a520.g.akamai.net/7/520/1534/release1.0/www.greenpeace.org/multimedia/download/1/25097/0/Eujointdeclaration.pdf
18. EUROPEAN
COMMISSION STRESSES COMMITMENT TO COMBAT ILLEGAL LOGGING
31 August 2002
Internet:
http://europa.eu.int/rapid/start/cgi/guesten.ksh?p_action.gettxt=gt&doc=IP/02/1254|0|RAPID&lg=EN&display=
At a side
event held today at the World Summit on Sustainable Development in
Johannesburg, the European Commission underlined its commitment to combating
illegal logging and trade in illicitly produced timber. Illegal logging and
the international trade in illegal timber are prominent among factors driving
the rapid rate of forest loss. Illegal logging also deprives governments of
vital revenues to spend on poverty reduction programmes. Every year more than
12 million hectares of natural forest are lost, according to the UN Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO). This rate of destruction adversely affects
many of the world's poorest people, who depend on forest resources for a
living. Poul Nielson, European Commissioner for Development and Humanitarian
Aid, called on wood-consuming countries to recognize the vital role they must
play in closing down the international trade in illegal timber. Commissioner
Nielson said: "The European Commission is committed to combating illegal
logging, by helping to improve law enforcement and governance in
wood-producing countries, and by working to stop the trade in illegally
procured wood and wood products." Margot Wallström, European Commissioner for
Environment, said: "We need to agree in Johannesburg on clear and ambitious
targets to halt and reverse the current loss of natural resources and
biological diversity. The European Union is strongly committed to playing its
part, including through implementing internationally agreed actions." The
European Commission is currently preparing an Action Plan on Forest Law
Enforcement, Governance and Trade, which aims to combat illegal logging and
related trade. Measures under discussion include instruments to verify the
legality of wood products and to address illegal wood product imports into the
EU market; co-operation and exchange of data between customs authorities;
promotion of EU consumption of legally produced products; improving due
diligence, transparency and standards for finance and export credit
institutions; and support to timber-producing countries to combat illegal
logging and help meet these new requirements.
UNITED KINGDOM
WSSD Web page:
http://www.sustainable-development.gov.uk/wssd/updates/index.htm
19. TONY BLAIR SAYS: WE'RE BACKING RENEWABLE ENERGY WITH £50 MILLION
EXPORT SUPPORT
2 September 2002
Internet:
http://213.38.88.195/coi/coipress.nsf/23937f532ce72424802566fa004a6ca5/469681b2b1e89ee780256c280056e04b?OpenDocument
The UK
Government's Export Credits Guarantee Department will help developing
countries limit greenhouse gas emissions by making available at least £50
million of cover for creditworthy exports from next year in the renewable
energy sector, Prime Minister Tony Blair has announced. Speaking in Mozambique
on his way to the United Nations World Summit on Sustainable Development in
Johannesburg, South Africa, Mr Blair said: "From next April, the UK's Export
Credits Guarantee Department will give developing countries better access to
renewable energy technology by making available at least £50 million of cover
each year for exports in the sector." The UK Government will also be working
in partnership with exporters, investors and overseas buyers to identify and
support new renewable energy opportunities as part of a Government-wide drive
to encourage the development of power generation from renewable resources both
in the UK and abroad.
Notes to
Editors:
1. From April
2003, ECGD will:
-
make
available support for at least £50m of exports each year that meets its
normal project and country underwriting criteria; and,
-
participate
in an outreach programme, run by DTI's Trade Promoters and the private
sector, to stimulate exports of renewable energy goods to emerging markets
to help overcome the low level of renewables applications.
2. This
initiative announced by the Prime Minister today will: - encourage UK
entrepreneurs to develop and then export renewable energy goods and services
and to offer them insurance against the risks of non-payment;
-
assist more
overseas countries to meet their power generation requirements in a
sustainable way by providing finance at attractive commercial rates linked
to UK involvement;
-
slow down
the onset of, and possibly reduce the impact of, climate change resulting
from greenhouse gas generation; and
3. The UK
Government's commitment to the promotion of sustainable development is
reflected in ECGD's operations. ECGD looks for social and economic development
combined with protection of the environment
in all the
projects to which it provides cover. Provided that emissions are controlled,
ECGD believes that the economic and social benefits resulting from the
availability of electrical power are usually sufficient to outweigh the
potential environmental impact of the associated greenhouse gas emissions, but
ECGD considers each case on its own merits.
4. The
Government has produced a guide to UK companies entitled "Exporting
Sustainable Energy Products and Services" which details how to get help with:
market and technology information, financial assistance; marketing support;
advice on markets abroad, and introductions into overseas markets. Copies of
this guide are available by clicking on the Department of Trade and Industry's
website
www.dti.gov.uk/renewable
5. ECGD, the
Export Credits Guarantee Department, is the UK's export credit agency. We are
a separate Government Department reporting to the Secretary of State for Trade
and Industry. We have more than 80
years'
experience of working closely with exporters, project sponsors, banks and
buyers to help UK exporters of capital equipment and project-related goods and
services. We do this by providing:
-
Insurance
against non-payment to UK exporters, and
-
Help in
arranging finance packages for buyers of UK goods by guaranteeing bank
loans, and
-
Overseas
Investment Insurance - a facility that gives UK investors up to 15 years'
insurance against political risks.
20. £7m BOOST FOR UK GLOBAL BIODIVERSITY PROGRAMME
2 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.defra.gov.uk/news/latest/2002/darwin.htm
The Prime
Minister's announcement that the Darwin Initiative - which supports
biodiversity projects around the world - will receive an extra £7m during the
next three years, was welcomed today by the chairman of the Darwin Advisory
Committee, Professor David Ingram.
Professor
Ingram, Master of St Catherine's College, Cambridge, said: "The Darwin
Initiative has had a major impact on the conservation of biological diversity
during the last ten years. This additional funding will enable us to achieve
even more in the future."
Prime Minister
Tony Blair announced the additional funding in yesterday's speech about the
World Summit on Sustainable Development to business leaders in Maputo,
Mozambique. Mr Blair said: "Environmental protection also means protecting
biodiversity, the ultimate source of our food, most of our medicines and much
else besides. This was the reason, for example, why the UK launched the Darwin
Initiative at Rio. "This innovative biodiversity grants programme puts UK
expertise together with local partners to improve the conservation and
sustainable use of biodiversity in countries poor in resources. "It has
delivered impacts well beyond the £27 million we have put into it, with over
270 projects in 100 countries funded to date. We will more than double the
money for Darwin over the next three years, to £7 million a year from 2005/6."
The current £3m annual budget will be boosted by £1m next year, £2m the
following year, and £4m in 2005.
Projects are
selected which would not take place without this funding and which will
continue to benefit the region after the UK contribution, which, typically,
runs for three years, has been completed. The UK provides not only financial
resources, but also skills and expertise.
Darwin
projects have focussed on countries, which have faced major problems of
species and habitat loss - half have been Asia and Africa, and several have
been established in South America and eastern Europe. They range from a
penguin-monitoring project off Cape Town, South Africa, to a snail survey in
Sri Lanka, the conservation of Colombian rainforest and preservation of
critically endangered vultures in India. Between 20 and 35 applications are
successful each year from organisations such as the Natural History Museum,
the Royal Geographical Society, the Eden Project, specialist units within
university departments, and Non-Governmental Organisations, such as WWF.
These organisations work closely with local Governmental and non-governmental
groups in the host country, and most projects include a substantial training
and education element to enable the work to continue after its conclusion. The
Darwin Initiative has already provided £27m funding for 270 biodiversity
projects in 100 countries since its inception at the Rio Summit a decade ago.
110 projects are ongoing.
DFID
21. FOLLOW UP NOTE ON THE WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT,
JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA
26 AUGUST - 4 SEPTEMBER 2002
DFID
Internet:
http://www.dfid.gov.uk/Pubs/files/follow_up_note_wssd.htm
"Development
for us is a priority. Africa for me is a passion. Proud of our leadership on
debt relief, we know there is more to do; proud of the extra resources we are
giving to aid and development, we want to give more in the future and we will;
proud that we will meet,
indeed exceed, our Kyoto targets,
we know we must do more." Speech by the Prime Minister at the World Summit on
Sustainable Development, 2 September 2002
1. The World
Summit on Sustainable Development took place in Johannesburg from 26 August -
4 September. The Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs,
Margaret Beckett, led the UK delegation. The Prime Minister, Tony Blair; the
Deputy Prime Minister, John Prescott; Secretary of State for International
Development, Clare Short; Minister of State (Environment), Michael Meacher;
and the leaders of the Devolved Administrations also spent time at the Summit.
Over 100 national leaders came, as did strong contingents from Parliament,
local government, business and NGOs.
2. The Summit
produced many things: a short political declaration; a detailed Plan of
Implementation; a range of new partnerships between governments, civil society
and the private sector. This note sets out the key achievements as they relate
to DFID's agenda. More information can be found at www.johannesburgsummit.org
.
DOHA, MONTERREY
AND NOW JOHANNESBURG
3. Taken
together, the series of recent international summits provide a strong basis
for action:
The Millennium
Summit (September 2000) gave us the Millennium Development Goals,
internationally-agreed targets against which progress can be measured. The
Doha meeting of the World Trade Organisation (November 2001) gave us an agenda
for a development-focused trade round. The Financing for Development
Conference (March 202) recognised the need to galvanise all sources of finance
- domestic savings, foreign direct investment, export earnings, debt relief
and aid - in order to eradicate poverty, achieve sustained economic growth and
promote sustainable development.
4. The World
Summit reaffirmed these commitments and integrated environment and a
commitment to sustainability into the agendas agreed at Doha and Monterrey,
adding access to sanitation to the Millennium Development Goals, and
emphasising the importance of implementation.
THE NEED TO
FOCUS ON IMPLEMENTATION
5. There is
now near universal acknowledgement that we do not need more summits, more
targets, and more initiatives. Instead the international community needs to
deliver on the agenda that has been agreed.
6. Speaking at
the conclusion of the Summit, Clare Short said: "We do not need more big
multilateral agenda-setting conferences, we need a real period of intensive
implementation."
THE
ENVIRONMENT, POVERTY AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: BRINGING THEM TOGETHER
7. Clare Short
consistently highlighted the Summit as an opportunity "to bring the
development and environment movements together in a systematic effort to both
reduce poverty and pursue sustainable development". This is very much what
happened in Johannesburg - Environment Ministers from developed countries took
on board the need to guarantee development to the poor if we were to achieve
sustainability. Northern environmental NGOs started to argue for more action
to achieve the Millennium Development Goals. Whilst Rio in 1992 focused on
environmental issues, Johannesburg brought together the commitment to poverty
eradication and sustainability.
8. The Summit
provided an opportunity to highlight the links between environmental issues
and achievement of the Millennium Development Goals. DFID's contribution to
this was the publication - jointly with the World Bank, UNDP and the EC - of a
paper entitled Linking Poverty Reduction and Environmental Management: Policy
Challenges and Opportunities. This was the source of lively debate at a number
of side events in Johannesburg.
BUILDING ON AND
REINFORCING EXISTING INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENTS
9. The Plan of
Implementation agreed at the Summit contained important sections on trade and
finance. These sections repeated the agreements made in Doha last November (at
the meeting of the World Trade Organisation) and in Monterrey in March (at the
Financing for Development conference). Some argued that the commitments made
at Doha and Monterrey should be exceeded at Johannesburg. But this was never
realistic. Delivering the Doha agenda will be a massive gain for developing
countries. Delivering Monterrey means a growth in aid resources of $12 billion
per annum and a development agenda based on partnership and developing
countries taking the lead in setting their development path.
NEW TARGETS
10. The Summit
agreed a new target to halve the proportion of people without access to basic
sanitation by 2015. This is an important achievement. The Summit process - and
the fact that we had to fight to gain agreement to this target - highlighted
the importance of sanitation to the lives of the poor. 2.4 billion people
currently lack access to sanitation. The challenge for now is to ensure that
the political momentum generated by this new target leads to action on the
ground.
11. The Plan
of Implementation agreed in Johannesburg is some 54 pages in length. Some
sections are more relevant to DFID's agenda than others.
BRIEF
HIGHLIGHTS INCLUDE:
Agreement to
take joint action to provide affordable energy services for the poor,
sufficient to achieve the MDGs.
Commitment to
restore depleted fish stocks urgently and, where possible, no later than 2015,
with enhanced action against illegal fishing. Commitment to establish a
network of marine protected areas.
Agreement to
elaborate a 10 year global framework to make patterns of consumption and
production more sustainable, and to bring development within the carrying
capacity of ecosystems. Focus on delinking economic growth from environmental
degradation. Action needed by all countries, but rich countries will lead.
Commitment to
national (including regulatory) and international action to encourage
accountable and responsible corporate behaviour.
Reaffirmation
of existing commitments on human rights and good national governance as a
cornerstone of sustainable development, with expansion of Rio commitments on
public participation and access to justice.
UNITED STATES
OF AMERICA
WSSD Web Page:
http://www.state.gov/g/oes/sus/wssd/
22. POWELL SAYS SUMMIT OFFERS NEW VISION OF SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENTDELEGATES ADOPT PLAN OF ACTION AIMED AT FIGHTING POVERTY
Washington File
4 September 2002
Internet:
http://usinfo.state.gov/topical/global/develop/02090403.htm
Johannesburg -
U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell says the World Summit on Sustainable
Development (WSSD) has cemented a new vision of sustainable development - one
in which action-oriented partnerships will help unleash the talents and
resources of developed and developing countries, civil society and the private
sector. In remarks delivered September 4 to more than 9,000 delegates on the
final day of the Johannesburg summit, Powell reiterated that reducing poverty
and preserving the environment require commitments to action.
Powell said
that the Johannesburg plan of action - adopted September 4 by summit delegates
following several days of nearly round-the-clock negotiations - provides a
common agenda that includes the best thinking on sustainable development.
"Plans are good," he added. "But (only) actions can put clean water in the
mouths of thirsty girls and boys, prevent the transmission of a deadly virus
from mother to child, and preserve the biodiversity of a fragile African
ecosystem." Powell said the United States is taking action by creating
effective partnerships, such as the South African Housing Initiative which
will help private contractors build 90,000 houses for a half million people
over the next five years. "We have unveiled at this conference four new
'signature' partnerships in water, energy, agriculture and forests," he said.
"These programs will expand access to clean water and affordable energy,
reduce pollution, provide jobs and improve food supplies for millions." He
invited other countries to join in these partnerships and in 15 others that
the U.S. delegation announced during the 10-day summit. Despite these U.S.
commitments, activists protesting U.S. policies interrupted Powell's speech a
number of times. Powell said that the Johannesburg summit is also an
important milestone on the road from the Doha World Trade Organization
ministerial that took place in November 2001, and the Monterrey Summit on
Financing for Development held last March. In Monterrey, Mexico, President
Bush announced the Millennium Challenge Account, which calls for an increase
in U.S. development assistance by $5,000 million per year within three years.
This new type of assistance will be offered only to developing nations that
are governed wisely and fairly, and are strongly committed to investing in
health and education. Powell said that developing countries are already
stepping up to the challenge of good governance, citing as an example the New
Partnership for Africa's Development, or NEPAD, in which African leaders have
pledged to promote peace, security and people-oriented development. Powell
also stressed that drought, wasteful land use and economic mismanagement
threaten to create famine, and that in one country, Zimbabwe, "the lack of
respect for human rights and rule of law has exacerbated these factors to push
millions of people toward the brink of starvation." Among the heads of state
who addressed delegates at the summit was Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe,
who defended his government's seizure of farms owned by whites for
redistribution to black Zimbabweans. The plan of action adopted at the summit
contains specific commitments aimed at fighting poverty and protecting the
environment. The delegates also adopted a political declaration by world
leaders reaffirming their commitment to achieving sustainable development.
The 10-chapter action plan calls for halving the proportion of people without
access to sanitation by 2015, restoring fisheries to their maximum sustainable
yields by 2015, establishing a representative network of marine protected
areas by 2012, reducing the loss of endangered plants and animals by 2010, and
reversing the current trend in natural resource degradation. The new
commitment to sanitation comes as a companion target to the already agreed
upon goal of halving the proportion of people who lack access to clean water,
which was one of the United Nation's Millennium Development Goals and which
has been reaffirmed in Johannesburg. More than 1,000 million people currently
lack access to clean drinking water, 4,000 million people lack access to
proper sanitation, and more than 7 million children die every year - 6,000 a
day - due to diarrheal diseases such as cholera and dysentery. The action plan
also calls for countries to act "with a sense of urgency" to substantially
increase the global share of renewable energy sources such as solar, wind and
hydropower. Klaus Toepfer, executive director of the U.N. Environment Program,
told delegates that while there will be disappointment that nations failed to
agree on global time tables and targets for boosting the level of renewable
energy, parties to the accord did agree that regional and national targets for
renewable energy are needed. The U.S. delegation, among others, opposed global
targets for renewable energy, arguing that such targets are unrealistic and
arbitrary. Toepfer said agreements in the area of chemicals are also
successes. He said governments have accepted the need for a new, international
approach for the management of chemicals and the harmonization of labeling and
classification of chemicals, which will be operational by 2008. Governments
also aim, by 2020, to produce and use chemicals in such a way that they do not
adversely affect human health. "This should benefit all people and especially
those in developing countries and regions like the Arctic where chemical
pollution is a real threat to the health of humans and wildlife," he said.
Summit Secretary-General Nitin Desai said the summit had achieved its main
objectives of putting sustainable development back on the world agenda and
creating a sense of urgency to protect the planet. He said that many of the
commitments made in the action plan are supported by more 100 partnership
initiatives between governments, civil society and industry. For example, he
said, the United States announced $970 million in investments over the next
three years on water and sanitation projects, and the European Union announced
the "Water for Life" initiative that will engage partners to meet water and
sanitation goals, primarily in Africa and Central Asia. On energy, Desai said
that the E-7 - the world's nine major energy companies - signed a range of
agreements with the United Nations to facilitate technical cooperation for
sustainable energy projects in developing countries, the European Union
announced a $700 million initiative on energy, and the United States announced
that it would invest up to $43 million in 2003. Other governments,
nongovernmental organizations and corporate entities announced similar
partnerships in the areas of health, agriculture, biodiversity and ecosystem
management, among others. "It's impossible to know just how many resources the
summit has mobilized," Desai said, "but we know they are substantial.
Furthermore, many of the new resources will attract additional resources that
will greatly enhance our efforts to take sustainable development to the next
level, where it will benefit more people and protect more of our environment."
23. POWELL EMPHASIZES TRAINING AT DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT EPA'S WHITMAN SEES
PROMISE IN PARTNERSHIPS FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
4 September 2002
Internet:
http://usinfo.state.gov/topical/global/develop/02090404.htm
U.S. Secretary
of State Colin Powell says that education and training are critical for the
world to achieve sustainable development and asserts that the process will
take many years. As the World Summit for Sustainable Development in
Johannesburg was winding down September 4, Powell and U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency Administrator Christine Todd Whitman delivered remarks at a
training center set up especially for the meeting by the U.S. government with
some partners. "We will not achieve sustainable development through meetings
alone," Powell said, "but only through sustained activity by committed,
empowered and educated individuals." Whitman said that partnerships among
governments, businesses and nongovernmental organizations are essential for
spreading the benefits of sustainable development widely. She said she was
pleased with the outcome of the Johannesburg summit in that it would lead to
real action to improve people's lives. "We are going to see action because we
have partnerships with the people who actually make things happen," Whitman
said.
24. WORLD SUMMIT PLAN REFLECTS COMMON VISION, SAYS DOBRIANSKY TIME NOW FOR
ACTION TO MAKE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT A REALITY
by Closing Statement by Paula
Dobriansky Under Secretary of State for Global Affairs
4 September 2002
Internet:
http://usinfo.state.gov/topical/global/develop/02090701.htm
Following is
the transcript of the closing statement to the World Summit on Sustainable
Development by Under Secretary Paula Dobriansky:
Delegation of
the United States of America to the World Summit on Sustainable Development
Johannesburg, South Africa
Mr. President,
We are now
completing a long road, part of a journey that will continue, that has gone
through virtually every continent - from Stockholm, to Rio, to Doha, to
Monterrey, to Bali, to Johannesburg. This journey is appropriate, because what
we have approved today is truly a global document. It reflects our common
vision to come together in defense of basic principles of assisting our fellow
men and women; protecting our earth's natural resources and habitats;
upholding human rights, fundamental freedoms and gender equality; and ensuring
basic human needs through economic development, or in the visionary words of
our South African host: People, Planet and Prosperity.
So far, these
are words. Words are good - actions are better. Only concrete actions can:
-
Prevent
children from contracting water-borne diseases;
-
Allow
families to cook meals indoors without risking fatal respiratory illnesses;
-
Protect
delicate African ecosystems;
-
Empower
small-hold farmers with the capacity to feed their families; and
-
Prevent the
transmission of deadly virus to children from HIV-positive mothers.
Mr. President,
you have brought us to the brink of a new era of sustainable development. The
world is in your debt. Let us move now from Rio to Johannesburg to the future.
Thank you.
25. CLEAN WATER FOR POOR
Washington File
4 September 2002
Internet:
http://usinfo.state.gov/topical/global/develop/02090504.htm
The
governments of Japan and the United States today launched the Clean Water for
People initiative -- a partnership to improve sustainable management of fresh
water resources. The initiative, announced jointly by U.S. Secretary of State
Colin Powell and Japanese Foreign Minister Yoriko Kawaguchi, will accelerate
and expand international efforts to achieve the UN Millennium Development
Goal, which aims to cut in half by 2015 the proportion of people who are
unable to reach or to afford safe drinking water and who lack access to
improved sanitation. Water is one of the main topics of the World Summit on
Sustainable Development (WSSD) and the focus of the Third World Water Forum
and the International Ministerial Conference, to be held in Japan next March.
Today, nearly one-third of the World's population lives with chronic shortages
of water that directly threaten human health, agriculture and economic
development. More than 1 billion people lack access to safe drinking water,
more than 2 billion to adequate sanitation. Some 6,000 children die every day
from water related diseases. By 2025, nearly two-thirds of the World's
population will experience some form of water-related stress. "Water is the
key to life," Secretary Powell said in remarks at today's rollout ceremony.
"Access to safe drinking water and sanitation is essential to life, dignity
and well being." Foreign Minister Kawaguchi said, "Rising from Johannesburg, I
am confident that this stream of partnership will become a big river, as it
runs through Asia and Europe next year." In June 2002, Prime Minister Koizumi
and President Bush jointly announced the "Partnership for Security and
Prosperity," in which they pledged to expand bilateral cooperation to tackle
global challenges. Beginning today, Japan and the United States will
strengthen their joint efforts to tackle the water issue. The U.S. will
provide more than $970 million over the next three years to improve access to
water and sanitation, promote watershed management and proper hygiene
practices, and increase the productivity of water. In addition to grant
support, the U.S. will provide local currency investment guarantees to
encourage private investment in water services. Examples of activities include
the "West Africa Water Initiative," the "Urban Water Initiative," and the
"Clean Water Investment Guarantee" program. Japan has provided more than 40
million people access to safe drinking water and sanitation in the past five
years. These efforts will continue with Japan's initiative to improve access
to safe and stable water and sanitary sewage systems. Japan will implement its
grant and loan aid as well as technical cooperation for this purpose in close
cooperation with local municipalities, NGOs [nongovernmental organizations]
and the business sector. Japan and the U.S. plan to strengthen their
cooperation and pursue joint or parallel projects whenever possible. To
facilitate these efforts, the governments will establish a working group to
discuss next steps and to formulate concrete proposals towards the Third World
Water Forum and the Forum's International Ministerial Conference. Japan and
the United States encourage other governments, international organizations,
NGOs and private industries to join as partners in this initiative.
26. U.S. OFFICIAL SAYS SUMMIT HAS RAISED AWARENESS OF ENVIRONMENTAL
CHALLENGE MINISTERS REACH AGREEMENT ON ALL MAJOR ISSUES
Washington File
3 September 2002
Internet:
http://usinfo.state.gov/topical/global/develop/02090308.htm
Johannesburg
-- The top U.S. environmental official says the World Summit on Sustainable
Development has helped to raise the awareness of people around the world to
the importance of taking action to alleviate poverty and protect the world
environment.
Christie
Whitman, administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and a
delegate at the summit, told reporters September 3 that the focus on these
issues would not have been the same "if there had not been a world summit --
if you hadn't gotten world leaders, if you hadn't gotten delegates from around
the world here to hammer out" an agreement. Whitman's remarks came after an
agreement was reached September 2 by high-level ministers -- following several
around-the-clock meetings -- on all the outstanding issues in the summit's
71-page plan of action. The plan of action is a non-binding text that is
expected to shape the environmental agenda for the next decade.
The plan of
action is expected to be formally approved at the end of the 10-day summit on
September 4, along with a statement of commitment by world leaders to the
principles of sustainable development. U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell is
scheduled to arrive in Johannesburg on September 3 and to address the summit
early on September 4, as well as to meet with leaders attending the summit.
The ministers
attending the summit agreed on action plan programs to halve the number of
people who do not have access to clean water and proper sanitation, to come up
with better trade and aid deals for developing countries, to maintain the
world's biodiversity and protect the global environment, and to emphasize the
need for good governance to achieve sustainable development, among other
steps.
"It may seem
on the surface that the text doesn't do as much as some people would have
liked, but it is very significant ... and it does help focus people and raise
awareness," Whitman said. Assistant Secretary of State John Turner called the
plan of action "a very positive statement and a message of hope to
impoverished areas of the world." He added that agreement on the action plan
reinforces the important work begun at the Doha trade ministerial in November
2001, which among other things launched a new round on agricultural trade
liberalization, and at the financing for development conference in Monterrey,
Mexico, in March of this year, where heads of states and governments from
developed and developing countries vowed to work in partnership to boost
financial flows. Turner said the U.S. delegation was also pleased that
negotiators in Johannesburg agreed to emphasize the role of good governance in
achieving sustainable development. He called this agreement a new compact, for
both developing and developed countries, which recognizes that economic
development assistance can be successful only if linked to sound policies in
developing countries. "It's the realization that we can't have sustainability
if we have violence, if we have corruption, if we don't have rule of law, and
if the public doesn't participate in the decisionmaking process. That
recognition has been a real breakthrough," he said. Summit negotiators have
also reached agreement on renewable energy sources, one of the major stumbling
blocks in the action plan. The agreed text includes a commitment to "urgently"
increase the global share of renewable energy sources, such as wind and solar,
with the objective of increasing their contribution to total energy supply. It
sets no percentage target or target date. The European Union had been pushing
for a target of 15 percent of global energy coming from renewable sources by
2015. The United States opposed the setting of targets, judging them
unrealistic and arbitrary.
Turner said
the U.S. delegation was very pleased with the final energy package. "The
United States has worked very hard in molding that package, which I think is
an excellent statement underlying that energy is an absolute essential
component for lifting people out of poverty," he said. "The energy package ...
recognizes that different countries will have to build energy security based
on different strategies and different fuels to meet their needs, rather than
demanding one narrow technological approach." Summit delegates have also
agreed that partnerships are the best way to implement the plan of action. The
United Nations has received about 220 proposals for development, poverty
alleviation and environmental protection projects calling for partnerships
between governments, businesses and non-governmental organizations. The United
States announced several proposed partnerships during the summit, including
one that pledges $970 million from the U.S. government over three years that
would leverage another $1,600 million from the private sector to expand access
to clean water and sanitation services, and another proposing a U.S.
government investment of $43 million in 2003 to leverage about $400 million
from government and private sources to provide millions of people with new
access to energy services and reduce respiratory illnesses associated with air
pollution. Calling the present model of development "fruitful for the few, but
flawed for the many," U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan said he hoped the
world summit would mark the opening to a new approach that includes
responsibility, partnerships and implementation. In remarks delivered
September 2 at the opening meeting of more than 100 world leaders attending
the summit, Annan said that action starts with governments. "But governments
cannot do it alone," he said. "Civil society groups have a critical role, as
partners, advocates and watchdogs. So do commercial enterprises. Without the
private sector, sustainable development will remain only a distant dream."
27. WORLD SUMMIT MAY PRODUCE AGREEMENT ON GOOD GOVERNANCE, U.S. MAKES
STRONG GOVERNANCE PROPOSAL AT JOHANNESBURG MEETING
Washington File
30 August 2002
Internet:
http://usinfo.state.gov/topical/global/develop/02083002.htm
Johannesburg,
South Africa -- The G-77 bloc of developing countries and China are showing
signs they will agree to U.S.-proposed language for an international plan of
implementation on good domestic governance, a member of the U.S. delegation to
the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) said. In a meeting with
reporters August 30 in Johannesburg, Kelly Johnson, deputy assistant attorney
general for environmental and natural resources at the Department of Justice,
said the United States hopes these countries can agree to "strong and clear
language" that calls on countries to strengthen their laws, institutions and
enforcement, fight corruption, ensure transparency, and promote public access
to information, decision-making and justice. "The bulk of the responsibility
for good governance is with national governments," particularly those that
wish to receive more foreign aid, said Sichan Siv, U.S. representative to the
United Nations Economic and Social Council at the same meeting. Good
governance requires cooperation at all levels of government -- local, state
and national, added John Garner, mayor of Hempstead, New York, and vice
president of the United States Conference of Mayors, at the meeting. Following
is the text of Johnson's prepared remarks:
Opening
Remarks of Deputy Assistant Attorney General Kelly Johnson Environment and
Natural Resources Division
U.S.
Department of Justice World Summit on Sustainable Development Johannesburg,
South Africa August 30, 2002
The United
States firmly believes that good domestic governance is key to achieving
sustainable development. By domestic governance, we refer to a broad range of
issues that support the ability of governments and the public to make sound
decisions about and act in the interest of promoting sustainable development
at the national level. These include:
-
Effective
institutions
-
Education,
science and technology for decision-making
-
Public
access to information about laws, policies and environmental releases
-
Stakeholder
participation in governmental decisions
-
Public
access to justice
The United
States has proposed strong and clear language in a draft Plan of
Implementation which would call on all parties to strengthen their laws,
institutions and enforcement, fight corruption, ensure transparency, and
promote public access to information, decision-making and justice. This
position directly supports principles agreed in 1992 at [the first World
Summit in] Rio [in 1992], is consistent with consensus reached at [the March
2002 UN Financing for Development conference in] Monterrey, and is reflected
in a wide variety of U.S. laws, programs and institutions. We continue to
press for inclusion of language on good governance and are hopeful of securing
positive language in the finally agreed test. (The G-77 [bloc of developing
countries] /China has recently shown some signs of being willing to accept
such text, even though they have traditionally opposed it. Therefore, success
is not guaranteed.) Outside the negotiations the U.S. has been pressing its
positions on good domestic governance throughout the summit. We have
participated in a number of side events sponsored by nongovernmental
organizations and countries on good domestic governance. Prior to the WSSD, we
also participated in judicial and enforcement capacity building events
sponsored by UNEP [United Nations Environment Program] and other partners.
There events were designed to create further opportunities to build capacity
for good domestic governance throughout the world after the Summit.
We will
continue to press our message on good governance and our positions in the WSSD
[World Summit on Sustainable Development] and beyond.
28. U.S. DELEGATION ISSUES STATEMENT ON SUMMIT PROGRESS SAYS DELEGATIONS
NEGOTIATING "HARD AND IN GOOD FAITH"
August 27, 2002
Washington File
Internet:
http://usinfo.state.gov/topical/global/develop/02082901.htm
The U.S.
delegation to the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) meeting now
through September 4 in Johannesburg, South Africa, issued the following
statement August 27 regarding the progress of the summit's negotiations:
Update;
Millennium Declaration Goals
Question: How
is the World Summit in Johannesburg proceeding? Have there been any
preliminary agreements regarding agricultural subsidies, greenhouse gas
emissions, deforestation, or other environmental concerns?
Answer [by a
Senior Member of the U.S. Delegation]: The summit opened officially yesterday.
Serious negotiations have begun on outstanding issues in the text of a summit
document. Our assessment at this point is that delegations are negotiating
hard and in good faith.
We are hopeful
that agreement can be reached on a text as early as possible so that
delegations can turn their attention to the results-oriented partnerships that
we and others are bringing to the summit and that will make a real difference
in peoples' lives.
Q: Can you
elaborate on Under Secretary Dobriansky's [Paula Dobrianski, under secretary
of state] reference to the UN Millennium Declaration goals?
A: The
internationally agreed 2000 US Millennium Declaration contains key development
goals drawn from UN development conferences of the 1990s.
The United
States supports the Millennium Declaration's broad political and economic
aspirations and the critical development goals set forth in that agreed
document.
We expect
these goals will be a focus of the Johannesburg summit. Some of these goals
are:
-
On poverty:
Halve by 2015 the proportion of people whose income is less than $1 per day;
-
On hunger:
Halve by 2015 the proportion of people who suffer from hunger; and
-
On safe
drinking water: Halve by 2015 the proportion of people who are unable to
reach or afford safe drinking water.
CANADA
WSSD Web page:
http://www.canada2002earthsummit.gc.ca/wssd/index_e.cfm
Press Releases:
http://www.canada2002earthsummit.gc.ca/media_room/news_releases_e.cfm
29. A STATEMENT BY THE HONOURABLE DAVID ANDERSON, P.C., M.P. MINISTER OF
THE ENVIRONMENT, GOVERNMENT OF CANADA
CLOSING PRESS
CONFERENCE WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
4 September 4, 2002
Internet:
http://www.canada2002earthsummit.gc.ca/media_room/speech_020904_e.cfm
To summarize
the major results of the Summit, I want to put the whole event in context. Why
did the world come here? Why did Canada come here? Because the Earth Summit in
Rio in 1992 set visionary goals, not the implementation roadmap to achieve
those goals.
Rio gave us
key framework conventions on biodiversity, climate change and desertification.
It set out the concept of sustainable development in Agenda 21. But Rio
couldn't give us a detailed roadmap. So, we needed to focus on implementation
- how to achieve those goals. We needed to focus on integration - how to get
everyone in our societies and economies and in our international institutions
working together to achieve those goals. The emphasis on implementation and
integration meant a different Summit than Rio. Certainly, we addressed issues
of sustainable development in the Plan of Implementation and the Summit
Declaration. For example, we set new targets for access to sanitation, the
production and use of toxic chemicals and on biological diversity. We also
made sure that existing commitments were reinforced. Canada stood up
successfully for human rights as an essential part of the sustainable
development equation. I know that many people went into this Summit wondering
about Canada's commitment to the Kyoto Protocol and to action on climate
change. The Prime Minister made our view clear when he told the Summit that we
will ask Parliament to vote on ratification before the end of the year. Our
approach to implementing our Kyoto commitments will be based on our extensive
consultations over the past five years with provinces and stakeholders. But
those elements were only part of the outcome. Implementation and integration
also were the point of the official side events like the local government
session. They were the point of so many of the innovations and examples on
display at the Ubuntu Village and the WaterDome. Many Canadians came here to
show how we are helping to create the roadmap I talked about, piece by piece.
We had a strong presence from Canadian businesses that are using innovative
ideas and investing in a cleaner, healthier future. We had provinces and
territories, Aboriginal leaders, municipalities, community-based organizations
and many others who demonstrated their own contributions. They came to learn
from others and to build partnerships, so we can all fill in more pieces of
the roadmap to the future. The Government of Canada came to WSSD with our own
specific objectives. The Prime Minister pointed out in his address to the
plenary that our goal was, "to achieve a global consensus on the concrete
steps we must take together to fulfill our most fundamental shared duty:
creating a cleaner and healthier world for our children and for generations to
come." Those three elements: "Concrete steps", a "shared duty" and a "cleaner
and healthier world" drove our efforts here in Johannesburg.
WSSD achieved
what we hoped it would. WSSD was a success. Now I should turn to some of the
highlights of the Summit.
ADDRESSING THE
DEVELOPMENT PRIORITIES
I want to
begin with the international development aspects the WSSD agenda. I want to
pay particular attention to a new and crucially important factor that has
emerged in the past two years - the visionary leadership of key African heads
of state, with our host, President Mbeki, central to this effort. These
leaders have demonstrated a commitment to one of the keys to sustainable
development - good domestic governance and respect for the rule of law. Prime
Minister Chrétien, as you know, is devoting his year as G8 chair to support
this effort and ensure it becomes broadly entrenched as a pillar of
development and poverty eradication. I say poverty eradication because it has
been a fundamental theme to this conference. A focus on good governance,
partnerships and country-driven approaches that respond to local priorities
and perspectives are at the heart of the work we have been engaged in over the
past 10 days. So has the focus on impediments to development, particularly
agricultural subsidies. We took a step forward in agreeing on the need for
action in the Doha round of talks through the World Trade Organization.
MAKING
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT A REALITY ON THE GROUND
A major
element in our expectations for WSSD was making sustainable development a
reality on the ground. And that often means partnerships, as I said that the
beginning of my remarks. There are still people who see every issue in terms
of what governments should do and what government should make others do. They
want governments way out in front, dragging others along - like it or not.
The truth is
governments are part of a dynamic trio with the private sector and the
non-governmental sector. Everyone in this trio has good, innovative ideas,
energy, commitment and financial and human resources to put to the task. For
example, the strong involvement of Canadian businesses here shows how much
they have become part of the solution through innovations, investments and
partnerships.
Indeed, so
much of what we accomplished was in the new partnerships that were launched
and the experiences and innovations that people shared. The Prime Minister
announced that Canada will extend our Sustainable Cities Initiative. Canadian
partners will expand their work with partners in cities in developing
countries and Central and Eastern Europe to identify and act on local
sustainability priorities.
My colleague,
Minister Whelan announced that Canada would contribute to a number of
partnerships, especially in Africa, aimed at sustainable development and
poverty reduction. She pledged our support for sustainable development
initiatives in the Nile Basin on for agricultural projects, for example. I
helped to announce a partnership with the United States, other developed
countries, a number of developing countries and other partners for improved
air quality in developing countries. And if you went to the Ubuntu Village or
the WaterDome, you had a chance to see an incredible range of projects. For
example, there was a children's playground ride, the kind that kids push to
get going then they jump on as it spins, that also pumps water. Kids playing
can pump the same amount of water it would take a woman half a day to get.
Canadian municipalities were here showing how they are moving to cleaner
energy. We had people showing innovative approaches to natural resources.
INTEGRATING
HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENT
I want to
underline that many of the practical results of WSSD integrated actions on the
environment with actions to improve the health of people. But those
commitments only work if we have the science and the tools to deliver. So, we
saw a range of partnerships that will put the tools in place to deliver on
those commitments. We agreed on tools to help countries and communities deal
with their health and environment priorities. For example, Canada provided $3
million to launch a new partnership to improve knowledge and understanding
about the links between the health of the environment and the health of
people. The impact will be better policies and more effective actions.
Canada also
increased support for the UNEP Global Environment Monitoring System (GEMS)
water program, headquartered in Burlington, Ontario by $1.5 million over three
years. The result will be improved water quality monitoring and assessment in
many countries.
These and
other outcomes built on the work Canada helped to lead well before the Summit
such as the meeting of the Health and Environment Ministers of the Americas in
Ottawa in March and the G8 Environment Ministers meeting in Banff in April.
STRENGTHENING
THE ENVIRONMENTAL PILLAR OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
The third area
of results that I want to mention was our work to strengthen the environmental
pillar of sustainable development.
We have seen
growing attention to the need to take the environment into account in
development. African leaders specifically highlighted this in their New
Partnership for Africa's Development last year, because they recognize the
price to be paid for environmental degradation for their peoples. We addressed
a long-standing issue when Canada played a major role in working out a deal on
biological diversity. The first part is to start work towards an international
regime on how to ensure an appropriate sharing of the benefits of the genetic
diversity of the world's plants and how to ensure access to that diversity.
The second part was a target of 2010 to get a significant reduction in the
current rate of biodiversity loss. We are very pleased with these outcomes.
That decision fits with the Prime Minister's announcement in his WSSD address
that we will add new national parks and new marine conservation areas as we
work to complete our national park system and meet our commitments on
protected areas. We also got agreement on how to build a stronger voice for
the environment in the United Nations system - including a stronger United
Nations Environment Programme. For our part, Canada more than doubled our
annual contribution to UNEP to help it play the role our environment needs.
HUMAN RIGHTS
There was much
more that the Government of Canada did here and that Canadians did here. But I
want to close with one last item - respect for human rights and fundamental
freedoms. Canada faced stiff opposition and procedural game-playing on this
issue until early on the final morning of the Summit. But we succeeded. Human
rights are a cornerstone of the UN Charter. As the Prime Minister said in his
plenary address, they are a fundamental pillar of sustainable development.
This applies across the board. In the case of access to health services, there
was a particular poignancy to getting it right. We were determined that this
Summit would not become the one where the rollback of human rights began. I am
proud of the role Canada played in ensuring all the nations of the world, in
the end, were able to mobilize around a consensus protecting human rights and
fundamental freedoms. That consensus is a foundation of all our efforts to
implement and integrate sustainable development through concrete actions. It
was the right note to end our negotiations and finalize the work of a
successful Summit.
30. COUNTRIES TO DISCUSS SUSTAINABLE MINING
Natural Resources Canada
3 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.nrcan.gc.ca/css/imb/hqlib/2002102e.htm
JOHANNESBURG,
SOUTH AFRICA - The Government of Canada, in partnership with South Africa,
today announced a Global Dialogue on sustainable development in the minerals
and metals sector as follow-up to the World Summit on Sustainable Development
(WSSD). This is the first time that governments have agreed to discuss, at the
global level, environmental, social and economic issues relevant to the
minerals and metals sector. "The sustainable development of minerals and
metals can contribute to economic growth and poverty alleviation in both
developed and developing countries," said the Honourable Herb Dhaliwal,
Minister of Natural Resources Canada. "Canada has worked hard to put this
critical aspect of sustainable development on the world agenda, and we are
pleased with the interest in this global dialogue." Governments with an
interest in mining will address a range of issues covering the entire life
cycle of minerals and metals, including building capacity, encouraging
transparent taxation and investment policies, developing sustainable
communities, contributing to poverty alleviation, and protecting the
environment. Stakeholders will be encouraged to participate. A global,
high-level meeting is planned for 2003, at which time governments will
determine the format of the Dialogue. The Global Dialogue will complement
processes taking place at the regional level in the Americas, Asia-Pacific and
Africa. It will also take into account industry-based activities such as the
Global Mining Initiative, which was a project undertaken by the mining
industry to examine how it could best contribute to the transition to
sustainable patterns of economic development, as well as work by other
stakeholders. As one of his first acts as Minister of Natural Resources,
Minister Dhaliwal promoted the Global Dialogue with his African counterparts
during his visit to South Africa in February 2002. In addition to Canada and
South Africa, the following countries are founding partners: Namibia, other
members of the Southern African Development Community (Angola, Botswana,
Democratic Republic of Congo, Lesotho, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique,
Seychelles, Swaziland, Tanzania, Zambia, Zimbabwe), Mexico, Morocco, Peru and
the Philippines. Indonesia and the Dominican Republic also declared at the
WSSD that they wish to be acknowledged as supporters. Also today, the
Government of Canada launched a new Web site - http://www.nrcan.gc.ca/mms/sociprac
- that catalogues social practices in the Canadian minerals and metals
industry. The Web site will contribute to the understanding and implementation
of the social dimension of sustainable development. The announcement of the
Global Dialogue and the Web site launch are part of a series of events held to
mark the "Sustainable Development of Natural Resources" theme day at the
Canadian pavilion at the Ubuntu Village in Johannesburg. The Government of
Canada's participation builds on its commitments to ensuring a clean, healthy
environment and supporting research and development, which are essential
elements of quality of life.
Prime Minister
Jean Chrétien is leading Canada's delegation to the World Summit on
Sustainable Development during the High-Level Session. He is being supported
by Environment Minister David Anderson, International Cooperation Minister
Susan Whelan and Secretary of State (Latin America and Africa) (Francophonie)
Denis Paradis. At WSSD, Canada is focusing on four key areas: health and
environment; partnerships; African development; and international sustainable
development governance.
31. CANADA'S POSITION ON HEALTH AND HUMAN RIGHTS
2 September
2002
Internet:
http://www.canada2002earthsummit.gc.ca/media_room/backgrounder_020902_b_e.cfm
Canada is
determined that human rights have a full place in the decisions made at the
World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD). In particular, Canada is
working to ensure the WSSD agreement on health and sustainable development in
the Draft Plan of Implementation (Paragraph 47) includes an explicit reference
to the need for countries to take action "in conformity with all human rights
and fundamental freedoms". Although other countries support Canada's position
on this issue, it is being claimed this matter cannot be addressed because the
text was supposedly agreed upon and it is contrary to UN procedures to
"re-open the text", despite the fact the Canadian wording or similar wording
is widely used in international agreements. Canada sees this as a broad and
fundamental matter of strong and unwavering international commitment to human
rights. Canada will continue to press strongly for the inclusion of human
rights wording in WSSD decisions.
32. CANADA JOINS INTERNATIONAL TREATY CONTROLLING TRADE IN HAZARDOUS
CHEMICALS AND PESTICIDES
29 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.canada2002earthsummit.gc.ca/media_room/news_releases_020829-2_e.cfm
JOHANNESBURG,
August 29, 2002 - Environment Minister David Anderson today announced Canada's
accession to the Rotterdam Convention on the Prior Informed Consent Procedure
for Certain Hazardous Chemicals and Pesticides in International Trade.
With
accession, a process similar to ratification, Canada is implementing new
regulations effective December 2002 that place tighter controls on exports of
designated hazardous chemicals and pesticides. In particular, exports will
require the prior informed consent of the countries destined to receive them
as well as federal government agreement. "This decision is an excellent
example of practical action and cooperation between industrialized and
developing countries," said Minister Anderson. "Canada will be more readily
able to safely manage and refuse exports of hazardous industrial chemicals and
pesticides. The Convention is an important tool, particularly for developing
nations, so that they may decide which chemicals they want to receive and to
exclude those that they cannot manage safely." Canada's accession represents
another example of the government's successful partnership with industry to
set up processes that allow economic progress and ensure respect for the
environment. "Most Canadian chemical manufacturers have been voluntarily
following the prior informed consent procedure since it was first drafted,"
said Minister Anderson. "Now we have a legally-binding procedure to show our
commitment to the world." Prime Minister Jean Chrétien is leading Canada's
delegation to the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) during the
High-Level Session. He is being supported by Environment Minister Anderson,
International Cooperation Minister Whelan and Secretary of State (Latin
America and Africa) (Francophonie) Denis Paradis. At WSSD, Canada is focusing
on four key areas: health and environment; partnerships; African development;
and international sustainable development governance.
33. GOVERNMENT OF CANADA INCREASES FUNDING TO THE UNITED NATIONS
ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME AND ITS WATER QUALITY PROGRAM
29 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.canada2002earthsummit.gc.ca/media_room/news_releases_020829_e.cfm
JOHANNESBURG,
August 29, 2002 - Canadian Environment Minister David Anderson and Canadian
Minister of International Cooperation Susan Whelan today announced Government
of Canada funding to strengthen international environmental protection. Canada
is increasing its contribution to the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)
by $5.7 million over four years, more than double its current contribution, to
influence environmental governance. Canada is also increasing its support for
UNEP's Global Environment Monitoring System (GEMS) Water Program in
Burlington, Ontario by $1.5 million over three years. "Over the past year and
a half, as President of the United Nations Environment Programme Governing
Council, I have led work with environment ministers from around the world,"
said Minister Anderson. "We determined how we can achieve more results from
the international environmental agreements, programs and activities that
already exist. We agreed that a stronger UNEP has to be one part of the
answer; more support for science and knowledge has to be another. Canada is
backing that up with investments in both." "Canada recognizes that a
sustainable way of life for all nations must be based on the effective and
environmentally responsible use of natural, human and economic resources,"
International Cooperation Minister Whelan said. "Canada's support for UNEP
will help developing countries address global environmental challenges such as
wildlife conservation, the impacts of global warming, protecting water
resources and coping with land degradation." Minister Anderson and UNEP
Executive Director Klaus Toepfer, who joined Minister Anderson for today's
announcement, also signed a Memorandum of Understanding outlining Canada's
increased contribution of $500,000 annually for three years for the GEMS/Water
Program. The GEMS/Water Program improves water quality monitoring and
assessment capabilities in participating countries. It determines water
quality status and trends internationally. The additional funding more than
doubles Canada's current contribution of $450,000 per year to GEMS/Water. This
reflects Canada's commitment to building the science and knowledge necessary
for effective policies. Dr. Toepfer expressed his appreciation for the
additional commitment from the Government of Canada. "We believe that UNEP is
going to have an increasingly important role in turning the decisions made
here at WSSD into action. This new support from Canada will play a valuable
role in generating results."
Prime Minister
Jean Chrétien is leading Canada's delegation to the World Summit on
Sustainable Development (WSSD) during the High-Level Session. He is being
supported by Environment Minister Anderson, International Cooperation Minister
Whelan and Secretary of State (Latin America and Africa) (Francophonie) Denis
Paradis. At WSSD, Canada is focusing on four key areas: health and
environment; partnerships; African development; and international sustainable
development governance.
34. CANADA SUPPORTS SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN AFRICA
31 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.acdi-cida.gc.ca/cida_ind.nsf/dccfe1952450f552852568db00555b47/29086221b3fd99cf85256c2500635600?OpenDocument
Johannesburg
(South Africa) - Susan Whelan, Minister for International Cooperation, today
announced that Canada, through the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA),
will contribute $28.5 million to help Africans improve their lives, the lives
of their families, and their communities. Today's announcement will help to
boost agricultural production in Ghana and Ethiopia, improve social housing in
South Africa, and foster economic growth and employment in the Southern Africa
region. "Having a job, food to eat, and a place to live - these are all key
to reducing poverty and improving the well-being of people in Africa,"
Minister Whelan said. "People in developing countries need the experience and
expertise to carry out initiatives that will create jobs and economic growth.
They need to improve their agricultural resources and technologies to increase
their food security. They also need their governments and communities to
recognize shelter as a human right. Canada is helping the governments and
populations of African countries to gain the skills and technology they need
to make development in Africa sustainable." Minister Whelan is in South
Africa to participate in the World Summit for Sustainable Development, being
held in Johannesburg from August 26 to September 4, 2002. Sustainable
development is about balancing human, economic, and environmental priorities,
an approach that brings about a higher quality of life and better access to
life's necessities for more individuals and communities all over the planet.
Agriculture has been identified by the United Nations as a priority at the
Summit talk. "Improving skills and sharing knowledge will help African
countries better use and conserve their natural and economic resources,"
Minister Whelan said. "Well-managed and productive agricultural and economic
activities and social services are essential to sustainable development
practices and key to providing for the needs of people today and in the
future." Funding for initiatives such as these was provided for in the
December 2001 federal budget and is therefore built into the existing fiscal
framework.
The funding
announced today will support the following initiatives:
-
$12 million
over 6.5 years to help three key Amhara National Regional State government
institutions (Ethiopia) - the Commission for Sustainable Agriculture and
Environmental Rehabilitation Amhara Region, the Bureau of Agriculture, and
the Amhara Region Agricultural Research Institute - as well as local farmer
associations to develop and promote the sustainable use of water for
irrigation. This initiative will train government technical staff and
officials in technical and organizational skills - how to plan, design,
build, and manage water harvesting and irrigation schemes. It will improve
the facilities and provide equipment for the Amhara institutions.
Agricultural techniques and technologies will be developed and taught to
farmers, and water users associations will be set up and their members
trained in water conservation and irrigation methods.
-
$10 million
to Ghana's Ministry of Food and Agriculture as well as key national research
institutes working in the north of Ghana through PARTNERS in Rural
Development and Agriteam Canada Consulting Ltd. to improve access to and use
of agricultural information and technology by local low-income and
resource-poor farm households, agro-processors, marketers and communities.
This initiative will help local farmers and farming communities to integrate
their needs into Ghanaian institutional agendas and priorities - making sure
that the farmers themselves participate in identifying, developing and
adopting more diversified, sustainable, and appropriate agricultural
technologies to help improve farm and household management.
-
$4.2 million
to the South Africa Banking Council to help stimulate private sector
investment in the Southern Africa region to foster economic growth and
employment. The Banking Council will work to strengthen the capacity of
Southern African governments, development agencies, and financial
institutions to design, assess, market and carry out public-private
partnership investment initiatives. This initiative will also help to
develop public-private partnership training programs that will be taught in
local institutions throughout the region. In Southern Africa, public-private
partnerships are an important part of encouraging foreign investment in the
region and promoting greater social and economic equity.
-
$2.3 million
to Rooftops Canada to help deliver subsidized housing to low-income groups
in South Africa. This initiative will provide Canadian technical assistance
to a number of local authorities, non-governmental organizations, and trade
unions that are innovators in social housing delivery in South Africa. They
will be better able to develop and manage an increasing number of housing
units. Other key stakeholders will have access to technical assistance to
integrate social, economic and environmental sustainability, gender
equality, youth engagement and HIV/AIDS prevention and responses into social
housing projects. This assistance will include: local, regional and
international exchanges and training placements; the expertise of local
consultants; and, Canadian technical know-how.
JAPAN
Ministry of
Foreign Affairs WSSD Web page:
http://www.mofa.go.jp/policy/environment/wssd/index.html
35. OPENING STATEMENT BY PRIME MINISTER JUNICHIRO KOIZUMI AT THE PRESS
CONFERENCE ON THE WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
3 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.mofa.go.jp/policy/environment/wssd/2002/kinitiative5.html
I came to this
Johannesburg World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD), to join other
distinguished world leaders in addressing the challenge of defining what must
be done in order to ensure sustainable development for all. We had our
consultations under the strong leadership of President Thabo Mvuyelwa Mmbeki
of the Republic of South Africa and I trust that tomorrow afternoon, with the
formal adoption of the relevant documents, the meeting will conclude
successfully. I am most gratified that such results are being achieved.
At this Summit
I strongly and repeatedly appealed to the gathering that the greatest cause
for Japan's development to date, although the country does not have much
natural resources, is due to human resource development. Japan, also in the
process of its growth, suffered serious pollutions. So, behind the successful
history of growth and development, we also cannot disregard this experience in
mistakes of serious pollution. How are we to overcome such serious
environmental pollution and achieve both environmental protection and
development? This is a question that is not just for Japan, not just for
developing countries and not just for the developed world. It is a challenge
for all peoples around the world, for all countries on all continents of this
globe. Cognizant of this, Japan wishes to share both the examples of
successes as well as failures of Japan's own experience, so that peoples in
developing countries will not again repeat the mistakes that Japan committed
in the past. This is another point that I stressed. Japan, also, throughout
has exercised its leadership in drawing up and concluding the Kyoto Protocol
because of this philosophy. Building on this philosophy, at the gathering I
also appealed strongly for the early conclusion of the Kyoto Protocol and
stepped-up efforts against global warming. To reduce poverty, in the first
instance, the developing countries themselves must achieve good governance,
promote the liberalization and promotion of trade and investment and act on
development with ownership. The international community also needs to extend
its helping as an equal partner. In doing this, we must recognize that there
are ways that are suitable for each country, ways that may not be suitable in
other countries that might be suitable in a particular country. We should
respect the ownership of each country, each recipient of assistance, and
provide assistance. This is Japan's assistance philosophy. In general I
believe that Japan's philosophy has gained the understanding and the
concurrence of other countries. As a result, these views will be reflected in
the result of the Summit meeting and I am most gratified.
Johannesburg
should also be oriented, before anything else, towards concrete action. That
is why Japan is determined to provide US$2 billion in education assistance and
also human resource development in the environmental protection area for 5,000
people over a five-year period. These items constitute the so-called Koizumi
Initiative. Also, on the occasion of the Summit meeting, in the wings of the
meeting I also had bilateral meetings, one-on-one meetings, with President
Thabo Mmbeki, as well as Secretary-General Kofi Annan of the United Nations,
and engaged in very useful exchanges of views on the questions related with
environment and development. There will be no world stability and prosperity
in the 21st century without the resolution of the problems in Africa, where
poverty in particular, is particularly acute. This is a matter that my
predecessor Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori stressed from time-to-time, and I also
wish to stress this point. Japan should like to make use of its ability as
much as possible in the interest of sustainable development on our planet. And
through cooperation with the various countries concerned, we should like to
see to it that each country will play its part in making in this a reality.
I would like
to express my gratitude to President Thabo Mbeki and to the people of South
Africa, as well as all of the people involved in organizing this Summit
meeting for all of their efforts. Thank you very much.
36. STATEMENT BY MR. KAORU ISHIKAWA, AMBASSADOR FOR CIVIL SOCIETY, JAPAN
IN THE 6TH PLENARY MEETING ON THE THEME OF WATER AND SANITATION, INCLUDING AN
INTERACTIVE DISCUSSION
World Summit on Sustainable
Development
28 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.mofa.go.jp/policy/environment/wssd/2002/press/0828.html
Thank you,
Madame Chair, Japan came to Johannesburg for solidarity. I am going to share
with you, Japanese experiences on Water and Sanitation. In doing so, I will
talk not only on successes but also mainly on failures, because failures give
us more lessons than successes. Let me start from three success stories.
First, Japan is an archipelago, two thirds of which is covered by steep
mountains. Terrible typhoons, or cyclones, attack every year in summer and
early autumn, before the arrival of harsh snowy winter. These natural
conditions obliged us to be wise in how to ensure regular distribution of
water. Rice paddy terrace fields have been an answer to this question. Since
thousand years ago, through the work of paddy terrace fields, community-based
consensus building mechanism established rules on water right among
stakeholders. Second, typhoon also causes flood, and flood causes not only
material damages but also infectious diseases. Flood control works need to be
examined from this view point as well. Third, after the defeat of the World
War II, the first two things we did on the ashes were to rebuild schools and
to build simplified yet quickly realizable water distribution system in rural
areas. This simple and quick system enhanced public health and also gave more
free time to women, which led to women's participation in socio-economic and
political activities. Now, let me talk on the other side of coin. Indeed,
between mid 1950's and early 70's, Japan suffered from terrible water
pollution. Minamata disease caused by mercury, Itai-itai disease by cadmium.
These horrible diseases were caused by discharge of heavy metals from a
chemical factory and a mining company. Fortunately, now clear water and blue
sea are back. But, imagine high cost we spent to repair all this, including
human life. Dear Delegates, Please come to Ubuntu Village tomorrow at 10:30
in Japan Pavilion. Seminar on the Japanese experiences of pollution will be
held. Documentary video will be shown, followed by discussion, to share with
you what was wrong and what should have been done instead. Japan, as a true
friend, certainly will continue to extend hand of solidarity to developing
partners and friends, not to repeat our mistakes. In fact, these experiences
gave us conviction that Japan must lead the way in water and sanitation
sectors. Based on this conviction, we have been extending huge development
assistance in water and sanitation sectors. For example, more than 1.8 billion
US dollars in water and sanitation sectors were afforded from Japan in year
2000 alone. These Japanese 1.8 billion US dollars represented 54% of the total
assistance extended by DAC member countries. It is obvious, Madame Chair, that
Japan alone cannot fulfill all the needs of the world. That is why we support
3 partnerships. First, among stakeholders, government, private sector, NGOs,
civil society, etc. with concrete action and clear role of each of them.
Second, partnership between the water sector and other sectors: water is
multifaceted; water is closely related to poverty, growth, food supply,
biodiversity, health, education, etc. I cannot cite all. Third, cooperation
between countries and here I would like to reiterate the importance of sharing
each others' experiences. Madame Chair, The Third World Water Forum will be
held in Kyoto, Shiga and Osaka in Japan next March. It is an important
opportunity to follow up Johannesburg. I, together with Govenor Kunimatsu
sitting next to me here, sincerely hope that we can meet you again there and
to see concrete actions. Thank you, Madame Chair.
37. PRESS CONFERENCE, AUGUST 26, 2002 AT WSSD BY KAORU ISHIKAWA
Deputy Director-General,
Multilateral Cooperation Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
26 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.mofa.go.jp/policy/environment/wssd/2002/press/0826.html
Introduction
Ladies and Gentlemen of the Press, Thank you very much indeed for your coming
to my press conference in spite of your busy schedule.. I would like to share
with you today Japanese strategy to realize nation building and sustainable
development, and her concrete actions in the context of international
solidarity.
1. BASIC
STRATEGY FOR NATION BUILDING AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
(1) HOPE
In my country,
there is an old saying as follows: "People is the stone wall of castle, in
fact people is castle itself." As you may have heard of, my country has no
natural resources and built our nation based on human resources. This is why
we are optimistic about nation building of many of our partners. I may draw
your attention to the flow chart on the screen. As you see here, to build a
nation, peace and security are the basic starting point to build a better
future. At the same time, people should not go to jail unless he or she
breached law, and there should be no confiscation of goods without rule of
law. In such a society, ordinary people will be able to think about the next
day or next year, because predictability is there. Ordinary people will
realize political and economic participation, which means free election and
entrepreneurship. Thus, ordinary people can have hope. He and she may think
that 'Tomorrow can be better than today'. Indeed, this HOPE is the strongest
motivation for life. Ordinary people motivated by hope may invest in future
that is education, take care of their own and other's health, respect their
partner that is gender, and will speak using modern technology as necessary.
This will lead to materialize people's empowerment and ownership. BUT, here
we must remind ourselves of the sad historical facts that I call historical
handicap, imposed by external factors during centuries especially in this
continent. Most unfortunately, there are also geographical handicaps, if I may
call so, such as tropical diseases. These are the reasons among others why we
must extend hand of solidarity to developing countries. It is especially so in
Africa, where countries decided to launch NEPAD, based on ownership and
partnership. My country highly appreciate the courageous decision and will
support NEPAD. In fact, the spirit of NEPAD is in line with TICAD, Tokyo
International Conference on African Development launched in early 1990's, when
western countries were talking about aid fatigue. Indeed since Rio Summit,
Japan alone has been supporting one fifth of total world ODA. Some years it
was one fifth, the others more than one fourth.. In this context, I
personally welcome that those countries which reduced ODA since Rio Summit
talking and justifying themselves by a notion of 'aid fatigue', are now coming
back to the scene..
(2) CONCRETE
ACTIONS
Japan is also
an action-oriented country. With no natural resources, the only way to build
our nation was concrete actions led by people, as I said earlier. Now, if you
could look at the upper row of the conceptual flow chart, you will see the
importance we put on water and science. You may be aware that in March next
year, Japan will host the 3rd Water Forum and related ministerial meeting in
Kyoto. We all know that the four largest ancient civilizations were all born
thanks to water, and modern civilization is based on science. In Ubuntu
village you can see concrete projects on science. We are also launching an
energy education campaign following WSSD. Economic sectors in the flow chart
reflect the reality, for example 70% of labor force is in agriculture. We have
been supporting since several years a development experiment of hybrid rice
between Asian rice and African rice, and now we have successful result. WARDA,
West Africa Rice Development Association in Cote d'Ivoire is promoting the New
Rice for Africa or NERICA with Japanese support both in terms of finance and
technology. Some of the main characteristics of NERICA are: high yield (three
times more than African rice), dry resistant, resistant to insects and weed
competitive, quick growth (30-50 days) giving crops in Western Africa in
August. August is the most difficult month for the local farmers in Western
Africa. We are now moving forward to a new stage of expanding the new rice
together with local farmers. Needless to mention, NERICA is not a GMO. Forest
certainly is another sector, which we will push forward concrete actions, in
this case with Indonesians.
Transportation
sector is important infrastructure, not only for farmers but also for the
whole economy. It is also an important sector for environment, and you can
visit Japan Pavilion in Ubuntu Village to see environmentally friendly cars,
which is very well sold in Japanese market. This is to show that
environmentally friendly technology is not a dream but a reality. I will not
mention all of the sectors because of the time constraint, but I would like to
emphasize that our actions are based on this kind of strategic approach. Thus
we will be able to realize recycling society, and also robust growth with
equity.
2. KOIZUMI
INITIATIVES
Prime Minister
Koizumi in his inauguration speech mentioned a historical episode in Japan
about hundred barrels of rice. A defeated clan in Meiji revolution war was
starving and received hundred barrels of rice from their supporters. Instead
of eating, they sold them and with the money gained they built a school from
which many legendary leaders later graduated. Three pillars of KOIZUMI
initiatives are all centered around human capacity building, based on our
conviction that ordinary people is the treasure of a nation and in fact they
are the protagonists of sustainable development. They are: (i) People and
Hope: we propose "the decade of education for sustainable development" to be
declared in the United Nations so that each and every child of the world
become sustainable development conscious. We will further continue our 3
billion dollars 5 year health initiatives launched in Okinawa two years ago,
to fight back HIV, TB and malaria.
(ii) Ownership
and Solidarity: we will train thousands of trade samurai in developing
countries. We will extend training plan for AU integration. (iii) Today's
complacency, Tomorrow's plight: this is to enhance environmental preservation
through human capacity building of 5000 persons. Of course we will continue to
pursue diplomatic leadership for the entry into force of Kyoto Protocol.
In other
words, we also believe in the African wisdom saying that "To learn how to
catch fish is more important than to receive fish."
Please refer
to the paper on KOIZUMI initiatives, which I distributed for you. One
emergency is the starvation in Southern Africa. Japan offers 30 million US
Dollars to seven affected countries. My last comment is about the sharing of
experiences. Japan had nothing left in August 1945, because almost all cities
and town were in ashes because of carpet bombing. We had to rebuild our nation
in a great hurry, and the first thing we did was to reconstruct schools. That
was a good decision. Wrong side of the coin of the economic miracle was
pollution. In the mid 1950's, through 1960's and early 70's, our once
beautiful archipelago became a kind of collection of pollution of water, air
and soil. We paid very high price including human life. We will show all these
mistakes and lessons learnt in a seminar to be held in Ubuntu village Japan
Pavilion, on Thursday 29th at 10:30. After the seminar, video will be
continuously shown there all day long until the end of WSSD. This is to tell
our developing friend: Dear friend, do not repeat our mistakes. We will help
you as necessary to chose another way to realize growth, i.e. sustainable
development where environmental objectives and development goals can be both
realized.
This is the
real friendship. We are happy to be the real friend of the developing world.
Thank you for
your attention.
38. KOIZUMI INITIATIVE (CONCRETE ACTIONS OF JAPANESE GOVERNMENT TO BE
TAKEN FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT - TOWARDS GLOBAL SHARING)
21 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.mofa.go.jp/policy/environment/wssd/2002/kinitiative.html
1. BASIC
CONCEPT
In order to
realize sustainable development, simultaneous achievement of development and
environmental protection is indispensable.
All
governments, organizations and stakeholders should share their understanding,
strategies, responsibility, experiences, and information. "Global Sharing"
(Equal Partnership) It is important to pursue concrete action in order to
implement the existing agreements based on Doha, Monterrey, etc. towards
achieving the Millennium Development Goals. Japan will implement the
following concrete measures in order to assist the self-help efforts of
developing countries (ownership), while seeking to expand partnership within
the international community.
2. IMPORTANT
AREAS AND CONCRETE MEASURES
Japan's Own
Initiative (New)
Japan's Own
Initiative (Continued)
Initiatives
based on partnership (New)
1) PEOPLE AND
HOPE (HUMAN RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT) -
In order to
realize sustainable development, it is indispensable that the ordinary people
of the world are motivated with hope to make full use of their ability under
good governance.
- To that end,
human resources development (in the fields of education, health and gender) is
an area of the greatest importance. In other words, investing in people and
sharing knowledge and technology are the keys to sustainable development.
A) INVESTING IN
PEOPLE: "HUMAN RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT IS THE BASIS OF NATION BUILDING"
EDUCATION
Propose " the
Decade of Education for Sustainable Development"
Provide
assistance totaling more than 250 billion yen (approx. $2 billion) over the
next five years for education in low income countries. Promote "Basic
Education for Growth Initiative (BEGIN)" (assistance for girl's education, for
teacher training, and for science and mathematics education, etc.)
HEALTH
Reinforce
efforts to combat infectious and parasitic diseases with the target of
allocating a total of $3 billion over a five-year period beginning in FY2000
(Okinawa Infectious Diseases Initiative)
B) KNOWLEDGE
Share Japan's
experiences on tragic pollution and its recovery therefrom as well as its
successful experience of cooperation with other Asian countries, with Africa
and other regions
Promote the
Initiative for Development in East Asia (IDEA) and share East Asia's
successful experience of development with other countries and regions
C) SCIENCE &
TECHNOLOGY: AS A BREAKTHROUGH FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
Promote Global
Environment Monitoring through the Integrated Global Observing Strategy (IGOS)
Partnership and Global Mapping
Implement
environmental science & technology cooperation
2) OWNERSHIP
AND SOLIDARITY - DEVELOPMENT -
-
Mobilization of various resources (Solidarity) is essential in order for
developing countries to promote sustainable development and poverty reduction
through self-driven economic growth (Ownership).
A)
TRADE & FOREIGN INVESTMENT: Promote trade and private investment to
realize sustainable development. (Japan's imports from developing countries
amount to about $150 billion per year.)
Expand support
for trade-related technical assistance and capacity building by JICA and other
bodies
(Hold Japan-WTO
Joint Seminars in Geneva. Expand Japan's initiative, announced at UNCTAD X, to
provide 2,500 persons from developing countries with trade- related capacity
building training in the five-year period from FY2000, to cover 4,500 persons
for the same period (2,000 persons added). (including capacity building by
AOTS))
Work towards
the objective of duty-free and quota-free market access for all least
developed countries' products
(Immediately
examine to expand coverage under duty-free and quota-free treatment for LDC's
products by the revisions of tariff-related laws for the next fiscal year
which begins on 1 April 2003.)
Make efforts
toward establishing multilateral investment rules
(Establishing
multilateral investment rules is crucial for creating an international
environment in which investment in developing countries can increase. Japan
will take a leading role in establishing such rules.)
Encourage
African countries to participate in multilateral trading systems (WTO)
(Welcome the
announcement of the intention of African countries to promote the regional
integration through the African Union (AU), support such integration by such
means as capacity building support, and encourage Africa's further
participation in multilateral trading systems (WTO).)
B) ENERGY:
Promote efficient and environment-friendly use of limited energy resources,
which forms the very basis of economic activities.
Host the 8th
International Energy Forum in Osaka towards the end of September (to promote
dialogue between energy-producing and consuming countries)
Propose and
promote the Energy Literacy Initiative
C)
AGRICULTURE AND FOOD: Contribute to improving food security through Green
Technology Innovation
Promote the
development and dissemination of NERICA (New Rice for Africa)
Extend approx.
$30 million grant aid to tackle the food crisis in the southern Africa
D)
DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE: Over the past ten years, Japan, as the largest
donor country, has provided approximately $120 billion - one fifth of the
total ODA contributions of all DAC countries. Japan has extended $4.8 billion
- one fourth of the G8 contributions to the enhanced HIPC initiative. Japan
continues to play a positive role as a leading donor, while ensuring effective
and efficient implementation of ODA.
(It is worth
noting that East and Southeast Asian countries, which were poorer than African
countries in the 1960's, have experienced rapid growth since then.)
E) AFRICA:
"There will be no stability and prosperity in the world in the 21st century,
unless the problems of Africa are resolved." Support NEPAD (New Partnership
for Africa's Development) as a clear indication of Africa's Ownership.
Steadily
implement "Solidarity between Japan and Africa - Concrete Actions" -and
endeavor to follow up the "G8 Africa Action Plan"
Further
strengthen support for Africa through TICAD III
3) TODAY'S
COMPLACENCY, TOMORROW'S PLIGHT - ENVIRONMENT -
A)
ENVIRONMENT-RELATED ASSISTANCE FOR DEVELOPING COUNTRIES: In addressing
environmental issues, further enhance environmental cooperations, mainly
through ODA, including capacity building in the field of environment.
Establish and
announce "Environmental Conservation Initiative for Sustainable Development (EcoISD)"
Implement
environment-related human resources development for 5,000 persons in the
five-year period beginning in FY 2002
Host "the 2005
World Exposition, Aichi, Japan", which has as its theme "Nature's Wisdom"
B) CLIMATE
CHANGE: For effective action against global warming, it is important to
seek a set of common rules for the future by which all countries, including
developing countries, will abide.
Take a leading
role for the entry into force of the Kyoto Protocol (Japan became a party to
the Kyoto Protocol on 4 June 2002.)
Aid capacity
building in human resources and sharing of information to promote Clean
Development Mechanism (CDM)
C) FOREST:
Promote sustainable forest management, including tackling illegal logging, in
recognition of the many benefits of forests (e.g. preservation of ecology,
prevention of global warming, conservation of water, provision of forest
products)
Propose and
promote Asia Forest Partnership (AFP)
Cooperate on
forest conservation and other activities in the Congo Basin area
D)
BIODIVERSITY: Contribute to full enjoyment of gifts from natural
environment through protection of living organisms in danger of extinction as
well as conservation of "hotspots" in various regions.
Intensify the
initiative towards conservation of "hotspots"
Work towards
early ratification of the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety to the Convention on
Biological Diversity
E) WATER:
Progressively work on the issue of water resources from various viewpoints
such as drinking water, public health, agriculture, economic activities,
natural environment protection and disaster prevention.
Assist in
creating safe and stable water supply and development of hygienic facilities
(Japan which
has provided safe and stable supply of drinking water and access to hygienic
sewage for more than 40 million people in the past five years, continues such
efforts. Moreover, promote model projects exploiting water resources,
including ground water supplies, and promote the transfer of technology to
neighboring countries.
Strengthen
co-operation with NGOs and Women
(Support the
capacity building for appropriate water resource management (management in
cooperation with NGOs, establishment of the management systems by local
people, promotion of technical cooperation taking women's role into
considerations, etc.)
Convene "the
Third World Water Forum" and its International Ministerial Conference in March
2003
F)
ENVIRONMENT-RELATED TREATIES: Take a leading role for the early entry into
force of the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants
Work toward
early ratification of the Rotterdam Convention on Prior Informed Consent
Procedure for Certain Hazardous Chemicals and Pesticides in International
Trade.
GERMANY
WSSD Web
Pages:
http://www.weltgipfel2002.de/ and
http://www.bmu.de/english/sustainability/fset800.php
39. JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT ADOPTS NEW GOALS AND IMPLEMENTATION PROGRAMMES FOR
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AND POVERTY ERADICATION THROUGHOUT THE WORLD
September 2002
Internet:
http://www.bmu.de/english/topics/sustainability/index_johannesburg.php
Commenting on
the results of the World Summit for Sustainable Development in Johannesburg,
Federal Environment Minister Jürgen Trittin said: "The outcome of the World
Summit is a respectable one, even if as expected, we have not achieved all our
objectives. Important environmental and development goals were laid down and
the route towards implementation mapped out. The decisions are important steps
forward, particularly those regarding preservation of biological diversity,
chemicals safety and wastewater management. Heavy opposition, particularly
from the USA, Japan and the OPEC countries, prevented the setting of specific
targets for the consistent development of renewable energies. However, for the
first time the international community reached agreement on clearly increasing
the global share of renewables and on taking concrete and coordinated measures
for improving access to energy and thus reducing of poverty. Regular reviews
will be carried out to ensure compliance with the agreement to increase the
share of renewables. The Johannesburg Summit corroborates the multilateral
approach of environmental and development policy."
The main
results of the World Summit include the following:
DRINKING WATER
/ BASIC SANITATION
The proportion
of the world population without access to basic sanitation, especially
wastewater management and to safe drinking water will be halved by the year
2015. A specific action programme will implement this objective. This will,
for example, prevent the continued daily occurrence of 6000 deaths from the
effects of polluted drinking water.
RENEWABLE
ENERGIES / ACCESS TO ENERGY
The global
share of renewable energies in the total energy supply will be clearly
increased and regular reviews carried out in coming years to ensure
implementation of this objective. Specific targets could not be set for this
due to opposition primarily from the USA, Japan and the OPEC countries. It was
agreed to facilitate access to energy especially for people in developing
countries. Around two billion people currently have no connection to an
electricity supply, particularly in rural areas of developing countries.
Access to energy is one of the most important prerequisites for economic and
social development. In the final phase of the conference, the European Union
submitted a declaration of like-minded countries on increasing the share of
renewable energies. In this declaration, the signatory states commit
themselves to ambitious objectives at global, regional and national level,
with clear schedules, for the increased use of renewable energies. Besides the
European Union, supporters include a large number of other countries such as
Egypt, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Switzerland,
Czech Republic and the group of island states particularly affected by climate
change. The international conference on renewable energies, which was
announced by federal Chancellor Gerhard Schröder in Johannesburg, can play an
important part in the implementation of this initiative.
CLIMATE
PROTECTION
Those
countries which have ratified the Kyoto Protocol call expressly on the
remaining states to ratify the Protocol too. The USA and Australia reject the
Protocol. China, Canada and Russia, however, announced in Johannesburg their
intention to ratify. The Protocol can enter into force when Russia has
ratified.
TRADE AND
GLOBALISATION
Environmentally harmful subsidies will be phased out. It was prevented that
international environmental agreements are subordinate to WTO rules.
Furthermore, calls were made for effective implementation of inter-state
agreements, international initiatives and national regulations with regard to
company responsibility.
Closed cycle
economy / eco-efficiency
A ten-year
framework programme for sustainable consumption and production patterns
(eco-efficiency, closed cycle economy, eco-labels, etc.) will be set up.
CHEMICALS
Achieving, by
the year 2020, a minimization of the adverse effects of chemicals on human
health and the environment.
Biological
diversity Aim to achieve by 2010 a significant reduction in the rate of loss
of biological diversity. Furthermore, the Summit decided to commence
negotiations aiming at implementing an international regulation for the fair
and equitable sharing of benefits in the use of genetic resources.
NATURAL
RESOURCES
The loss of
natural resources will be stopped as soon as possible.
FISHERIES
Aim to reverse
the decline in fish stocks by 2015. This however, could only carried with the
addition of a weakening phrase ("where possible, not later than by 2015").
HEALTH SERVICES
The
health-care sector should be strengthened. This made it clear that human
rights have priority over cultural and religious values.
40. JÜRGEN TRITTIN: RENEWABLE ENERGIES THE KEY FOR A FUTURE-ORIENTED
GLOBAL ENERGY SUPPLY
3. September 2002
Internet:
http://www.bmu.de/english/topics/sustainability/index_johannesburg.php
Two billion
people in the world are not connected to an electricity supply and are thus
cut off from any economic development. A drastic development of renewables is
imperative in order to solve our energy problems and give energy supply a
viable basis for the future. Solar thermal power is one element of this
strategy. Countries with high solar radiation have very favourable conditions
for the use of solar thermal power plants. An international event hosted by
Federal Environment Minister Jürgen Trittin and Development Minister
Heidemarie Wieczorek-Zeul at the World Summit in Johannesburg examined solar
thermal power and the possibilities for increasing power plant efficiency.
"Renewable energies and efficient management of energy are pillars of the new
direction in energy policy introduced by the Federal Government," said Trittin.
" Germany has shown that a new energy policy is possible in a major
industrialised country. We must correct our own errors with regard to
development, so that the countries of the South do not repeat our mistakes."
The Minister added that a drastic development of renewables is needed in order
to provide the people of developing countries with access to energy. Solar
thermal power plants can also play a role. Such power plants cannot be used in
the North. The technical potential for solar thermal power plants is already
available. The conditions enabling their use must now be created, through
financing and infrastructure measures. Topics such as these formed the
discussion at the event, which was also attended by the head of the Global
Environment Facility Mohammed El-Ashry, bank representatives and experts in
solar energy. The Federal Government is committed to making the use that solar
thermal power plants possible. The Federal Environment Ministry presented an
international initiative to develop a market introduction strategy for solar
thermal power plants. This partnership was initiated by the Federal
Environment Ministry. "The development of renewable energies will not only
benefit the climate, but also the economy, and will create jobs at a local
level," said Trittin. "The use of solar thermal power plants can give
countries with high solar radiation independence from expensive energy
imports. In the medium term, solar power would represent a valuable export for
these countries."
41. BREAKTHROUGH: DRINKING WATER AND BASIC SANITATION
2 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.bmu.de/english/topics/sustainability/index_johannesburg.php
Another
success story from the UN Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg:
The summit action programme will incorporate the goal to halve the proportion
of people lacking access to drinking water and basic sanitation such as waste
water treatment and waste disposal by 2015. Last night a Ministers' meeting
chaired by South Africa's Environment Minister Valli Moosa managed to agree on
the respective wording. This meets with a requirement pushed in particular by
the German government through the EU. Heidemarie Wieczorek-Zeul, German
Minister for Economic Cooperation and Juergen Trittin, German Minister for the
Environment both welcomed this breakthrough: "Worldwide 2.4 billion people are
without access to drinking water, sanitation or waste water treatment. This
causes serious diseases and the death of hundreds of thousands of people, in
particular children. The decision taken today is both another concrete step
towards combating poverty worldwide and a critical contribution to protecting
the world's natural resources."
42. GERMAN PARTICIPANTS ARRANGE A CO2-NEUTRAL TRIP TO JOHANNESBURG
26 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.bmu.de/english/topics/sustainability/index_johannesburg.php
Minister
Trittin: offset achieved by means of emissions credits. For most delegates and
participants in the World Summit on Sustainable Development, the journey to
South Africa is a long-distance one. This is also the case for the German
delegation, who rather than being able to sail or cycle to the Summit, will
also have to fly. Nevertheless, the CO2 balance of their trip will be
practically offset. As Minister Trittin announced, the journey of around 180
German participants will be 2-neutral. This is possible with emissions
credits. On average, each participant and member of the German delegation will
generate 7.11 tonnes of carbon dioxide during the trip to Johannesburg. In
order to balance out these emissions, the German Environment Ministry has
applied for emissions credits from a climate protection project in South
Africa, and will withdraw these credits permanently from the market. Minister
Trittin highlighted that this project, as part of the Clean Development
Mechanism, is fully in line with the Kyoto Protocol. One tonne of carbon
dioxide emissions equals a price of 8 euro, which means a cost of almost 57
euro for each German participant. "This corresponds to the previously
uncalculated costs of our Western standards of living", explained Minister
Trittin. The flight for 180 German participants and the transport and energy
consumption in Johannesburg will produce a total atmospheric pollution of 1280
tonnes carbon dioxide. The proceeds from the emissions credits total more than
10,000 euro and will contribute to a project involved in the construction of
energy-saving houses in South-African townships. This project provides
low-income families with access to loans to finance additional insulation
measures. Not only do these families save on heating costs, the carbon dioxide
emissions are reduced per house per year by 250 kilograms. Minister Trittin
emphasised that "the amount of CO2 generated by our journey to Johannesburg
will be recouped in South Africa itself."
Further
information (in German) can be found at
www.klimabalance.de.
NETHERLANDS
WSSD Web page:
http://www2.minvrom.nl/pagina.html?id=5218
43. STATE SECRETARY FOR THE ENVIRONMENT SATISFIED WITH RESULTS OF
JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT
September 2002
Internet:
http://www2.minvrom.nl/pagina.html?id=5239
The Dutch State
Secretary for the Environment, Mr. van Geel has said he is satisfied with the
results of the Johannesburg World Summit on Sustainable Development concluded
last week. Mr. Van Geel has said that although he would have preferred binding
and concrete agreements on all fields covered by the summit he thinks that the
Johannesburg conference marks a progress. Mr. Van Geel thinks the conference
managed to formulate concrete goals on issues regarding drinking water and
sewerage cleaning. According to the closing document of the conference the
number of people that have no access to proper sewerage and clear drinking
water has to decrease by 15% by the year 2015. Mr. Van Geel regrets however,
that the conference has not set concrete goals on sustainable energy. The
closing document of the conference calls for the utilization of more
sustainable energy but does not elaborate on a percentage. Mr. Van Geel has
said he would have preferred if the conference had taken over the norm
approved by the European Union, 15% by the year 2010. State Secretary Van Geel
stressed that Johannesburg did not mark a final point but was actually the
start of several activities in this country. "This was the top of inspiration
now comes the time for transpiration" - Mr. Van Geel said. The State
Secretary will present an action-program that defines how the results of the
conference will be implemented in Dutch National Policy coming October.
44. INTERVENTION OF THE PRIME MINISTER OF THE KINGDOM OF THE
NETHERLANDS, DR. JAN PETER BALKENENDE, at the World Summit on Sustainable
Development, Johannesburg
3 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.minaz.nl/data/1031046018.doc
Mahatma Gandhi
once said, "You must be the change you wish to see in the world." It is up to
us to make the difference. The difference between poverty and development.
Between destroying the earth and sustaining it. To make the difference we must
be clear and decisive. Clear about the future we want. And decisive to make
it happen. Let us first of all be clear about our ambitions. We set ambitions
for this Millennium. We now added crucial targets on sanitation and
chemicals. Let's be clear about biodiversity as well. We must stop looting
the treasure house of the Creation. Let us also be clear about our
principles. The Rio-principles and human rights and fundamental freedoms, for
men or women, are non-negotiables. And let's be decisive. Education is a right
and our best investment in the young generation. Boys and girls alike must be
able to finish primary school. Within our ODA budget we will increase the
allocation to education from 6 to 15 %.
Next we have
our commitment to solidarity. Again nothing to negotiate, but something to be
pursued decisively. Put your money where your mouth is. It is possible, as we
know. The Netherlands has been living up to it for years already. We will
continue to dedicate 0.7 percent of the Dutch GNP to development aid, and 0.1
percent to international environmental policy. Let us also be clear about
business. Business can generate financial flows many times greater than
development aid. The investment schemes must be sustainable. Employers must
offer decent terms of employment, comply with environmental norms and denounce
corruption in all its forms. We should encourage business to commit them to
accountability. Not because they have to. But because they want to, inspired
by sustainable development. Inspiration that might be drawn from the Earth
Charter. We share the responsibility for the future. Therefore, I favour
partnerships and involvement of civil society. They can support actions by
governments. Responsibilities can also be differentiated. The degradation of
the environment is largely on our account. So we will have to encourage
sustainable production and consumption. The reform of unsustainable subsidies
is a contribution to that end. To achieve food security and poverty reduction
we have to reform our agriculture. Developing countries must be able to
benefit from increased access to our markets. We have to take decisive
actions. The Netherlands together with other countries will launch a
public-private partnership to improve market access in the form of institution
and capacity building, especially in the field of food safety standards and
quality control systems. I talked about being decisive. We've done the
talking, so let's start walking!
The
Netherlands will focus on water and energy and continue to support measures in
the field of sustainable agriculture and bio-diversity. We support these goals
by raising our contributions to the Global Environmental Facility adding up to
93 million dollars. There is a wind of change in Africa, expressed by NEPAD.
We must all stand together to support this new leadership, committed to good
governance and poverty reduction. Only in this way Africa can deal with the
challenges of famine, conflict and AIDS. I salute President Mbeki for his
crucial role in making these changes happen. More than ever before, the choice
facing the world is a united future, or no future at all. The prospect of that
united future, free of poverty and environmental degradation, is what has
brought us here to Johannesburg. We know what we have to do. So let's do it.
45. EXTRA DUTCH MONEY FOR GLOBAL ECO-FUND
2 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.minbuza.nl/english/Content.asp?Key=458716&Pad=257569,459431,257774
The
Netherlands is to give an extra US$ 3 million to the Global Environment
Facility, an international fund that finances activities to tackle
cross-border environmental problems. The Facility enables developing countries
to fight desertification and adapt to the impact of climate change. The
Minister for Development Cooperation, Agnes van Ardenne, announced the extra
money at the Johannesburg summit.
In early
August, the Facility concluded negotiations for financial pledges worth more
than US$ 2.9 billion over the next four years. The Netherlands will contribute
around US$ 90 million and, with its EU partners, is trying to persuade other
rich countries to give more in order to help the Facility raise the US$ 3
billion total it needs.
46. CALL TO ROLL UP SLEEVES AFTER JOHANNESBURG
26 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.minbuza.nl/english/Content.asp?Key=458100&Pad=257569,459431,257774
The World
Summit on Sustainable Development, which starts in Johannesburg next week,
will be a golden opportunity for agreeing on action and carrying it out. Dutch
development minister Agnes van Ardenne believes that delegates must sign a
political declaration and an action plan. But what happens next is equally
important. Says Ms Van Ardenne: "It really is time to roll up our sleeves and
do what we say we're going to do." The summit, which will last from 26 August
to 4 September, needs to give new impetus to sustainable development
agreements made in Rio de Janeiro ten years ago. And further agreements need
to be made on previous action plans concerning trade, the climate, and the
funding of development. "At Johannesburg, we must ensure that these agreements
are carried out on schedule," says Ms Aardenne, "that no one backs out and
everyone sticks to their commitments." Despite scepticism about what the
summit will achieve, it will provide a great opportunity for donor countries,
multilateral institutions, the private sector, and NGOs to launch new
partnerships for working with developing countries and tackling
sector-specific problems. Partnerships are already being discussed in five
areas: water, energy, health, agriculture, and biodiversity. The Netherlands
is keen to join partnerships on water and energy, especially in Africa, the
poorest continent. On Friday 23 August, Ms Van Ardenne gave a joint press
conference with Pieter van Geel, the new State Secretary for the Environment
and Sustainability. The two government members promised that the Netherlands
will join a partnership for providing sustainable energy in rural areas and in
deprived parts of towns and cities. The Netherlands will also work with fellow
EU member states to improve sustainable energy services - knowledge transfer,
assistance in developing markets, and advice and assistance to institutions -
and make such services more accessible to the poor. As to water, the
Netherlands wants to take part in activities to improve sanitation, protect
natural water sources, and promote sustainable water consumption. The Dutch
delegation to Johannesburg is being led by Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende,
accompanied by Minister Van Ardenne and State Secretary Van Geel.
47. DUTCH INTENTIONS FOR JOHANNESBURG
Press Release from the
Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Netherlands Ministry of Housing,
Spatial Planning and the Environment
22 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.minbuza.nl/english/Content.asp?Key=457760&Pad=257569,459431,257774
From 26 August
to 4 September, Johannesburg will be the scene of the World Summit on
Sustainable Development. The Dutch delegation will be led by Prime Minister
Jan Peter Balkenende. He will be accompanied by the Minister for Development
Cooperation, Agnes van Ardenne, and the State Secretary for the Environment,
Pieter van Geel. The conference is intended to give new impetus to agreements
on sustainable development made 10 years ago in Rio de Janeiro. Some 50,000
people are expected to attend, including many heads of state and government.
The basis for the Dutch contribution to the Johannesburg summit will be the
agreements reached at Doha (the fourth ministerial conference of the World
Trade Organisation) and Monterrey (the Financing for Development Summit),
respectively on trade and development and on development funding. The
Netherlands will focus on water and energy, two essential sectors of
sustainable development, and will target Africa in particular. In addition,
the Dutch delegation will draw attention to a number of themes: sustainable
production and consumption patterns, poverty reduction, sustainable use of
natural resources and biodiversity, health and safety, effective global
governance and development funding. At an event for young people in the
lead-up to the summit, it indicated that it would also emphasise the
importance of education in developing countries. The Netherlands feels that
sustainable development must be a high priority on the political agenda. It
follows that a programme of action must be agreed and implemented. The
Netherlands believes that the summit must work within the framework of the
Millennium Goals (identified in the United Nations' Millennium Declaration),
Agenda 21 (the action plan agreed at the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio) and the
priority goals for sustainable development and poverty reduction. It is
determined that there should be no renegotiation of Agenda 21 and no
compromises on the Millennium Goals and the agreements made at Doha and
Monterrey. The Netherlands is looking for three results from the Johannesburg
summit:
-
a political
declaration on sustainable development;
-
a programme
of action endorsed by every government;
-
partnerships
in which governments, business and civil society organisations work together
to carry out the programme of action.
SWITZERLAND
WSSD Web page:
http://www.umwelt-schweiz.ch/fokus/2002_05/johannesburg_e.htm
48. JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT: FEDERAL COUNCILLOR JOSEPH DEISS REPORTS MIXED
RESULTS
5 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.eda.admin.ch/eda/e/home/recent/press/09#0003
Federal
Councillor Joseph Deiss drew mixed conclusions on the Johannesburg World
Summit on Sustainable Development: Although the results of the conference do
not meet our expectations, Switzerland was able to use the event to make its
presence felt through the high quality of its commitment. The Johannesburg
Summit thus represents a new step, putting to the test the declared will to
promote sustainable development and to translate this will into reality.
Switzerland committed itself to a clear and precise plan of action and to a
substantial political declaration. Mr. Deiss noted: "The results of the Summit
do not meet our expectations, and not all of our objectives were achieved. I
am thinking in particular about the negotiations on health and sustainable
development, where the chapter on preventive health in effect amounted to a
step backwards. I am also thinking about the question of renewable energy,
where the quantitative targets which Switzerland fought hard to include in the
action plan were not adopted. I regret that the results do not come up to our
expectations. In such collective undertakings, progress is determined by the
slowest participant. I would have preferred things to have advanced more
rapidly.' On a more positive note, he pointed out that both China and Russia
announced their intention to ratify the Kyoto Protocol. This could come into
effect soon. In the negotiations on trade, Norway and Switzerland prevailed in
imposing the principle of equality between WTO agreements and international
environmental rules and thus succeeded in avoiding a hierarchy becoming
established between these two types of treaty.
The
Johannesburg Summit is a new step in the process embarked upon 10 years ago in
Rio: 'The movement started in Rio must be irreversible. It is now incumbent on
us to implement the commitments made in Rio and Johannesburg.' Switzerland
will very soon make an analysis of the Conference and of the many partnership
initiatives with a view to setting its own priorities. The IDO RIO
interdepartmental group has already been instructed to carry out this task.
The Federal Council's strategy on sustainable development, which it adopted
last March, will be submitted to Parliament this autumn. At the international
level, accession to the UN will enable Switzerland to closely follow
implementation. In particular, the commitment to 'Partnership for the
Mountains', launched by Switzerland in Johannesburg, will be followed-up and
given concrete shape. Joseph Deiss was very positive about Switzerland's high
profile in Johannesburg and about the quality of the Swiss delegation's
engagement: 'The platform, Sustainable Switzerland, was a great success,' he
said. 'It showed that in Switzerland the issue of sustainable development is
discussed democratically between all interested parties and with
representatives of government and civil society. Concerning the negotiations
on the action plan and the political declaration, the Swiss delegation played
a very constructive role, and this was acknowledged. The partnerships that we
have launched are initiatives for the future. They will enable us to mobilise
both the public and private sectors around a common interest.' Finally, it can
be noted that five days before becoming a member of the UN, the quality of
Switzerland's work at this major UN conference shows that Switzerland is
capable of giving new momentum to its foreign policy.
49. SWITZERLAND SUPPORTS THE PROGRAMME FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF FUNDAMENTAL
LABOUR STANDARDS IN SMALL AND MEDIUM SIZED BUSINESSES (KMU)
4 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.eda.admin.ch/eda/e/home/recent/press/09#0003
In
collaboration with the International Labour Organization (ILO), Switzerland
has launched a programme at the World Summit on Sustainable Development in
Johannesburg for the advancement of fundamental labour standards in small and
medium sized businesses. The State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (seco) is
giving the programme US$2.2 million support on behalf of Switzerland.
Producers in developing countries are increasingly being confronted by the
situation that their products must be in compliance with the environmental and
social standards in consumer countries. In collaboration with the UN
Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO), Switzerland has for a
considerable time already been supporting the development of centers for the
advancement of environmentally friendly production methods (Cleaner Production
Centers, CPC). With the ILO, Switzerland has worked out a supplementary
programme for the advancement of fundamental labour standards in small and
medium sized businesses (KMU) in developing countries. The aim of the
programme is to provide the KMU with advisory and educational services in the
area of labour standards. It is for this reason that the existing Cleaner and
Production Centers are being expanded with a service for labour standards. The
IAO will function as a center of competence and will assist the centers in an
advisory capacity with regards to labour issues.
50. FEDERAL MINISTER DEISS OPENS THE CLEANER PRODUCTION CENTRE IN SOUTH
AFRICA
4 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.eda.admin.ch/eda/e/home/recent/press/09#0003
On Tuesday,
Federal Minister Joseph Deiss opened the Cleaner Production Centre in South
Africa within the framework of the World Summit on Sustainable Development in
Johannesburg, together with Benita Ferrero-Waldner, the Austrian Minister of
Foreign Affairs; Alec Erwin, the South African Minister of Trade and Industry
and the General Secretary of the United Nations Organization for Industrial
Development (UNIDO). The State Secretariat for Economics (seco) is supporting
the centre on behalf of Switzerland with US$ 950 000 over the first three
years. The aim of the Cleaner Production Centre(CPC) is the promotion of
sustainable production models in small and medium sized businesses (KMU). It
is managed in accordance with entrepreneurial criteria. It supports companies
and experts through targeted advice to create operational production processes
that are more environmentally friendly and caring of our resources and thus
also more efficient and cost effective. In this way, the Cleaner Production
Centre not only makes a contribution to sustainability but also to the
increase of competitiveness by local businesses and the preservation and
creation of jobs. Export oriented companies and suppliers can contribute far
better in the international production chain and participate more actively in
the global market. The Cleaner Production Centre in South Africa serves as a
launching site for the concrete conversion of activities within the framework
of international environmental agreements such as the Kyoto Protocol (climate)
or the Stockholm Agreement for the Reduction and Elimination of Persistent
Organic Chemicals. Technically, the Cleaner Production Centre is accompanied
by a network of international experts from various countries, including
Switzerland. Since the World Summit for Development and Environment in Rio ten
years ago, Switzerland has supported the development of ten such centres in
Latin America (Colombia, Costa Rica, Guatemala, El Salvador, Brazil, Peru),
Asia (Vietnam, India, China) and Africa (Morocco).
51. JOHANNESBURG 2002: FEDERAL COUNCILLOR JOSEPH DEISS SAYS SWITZERLAND IS
PULLING ITS WEIGHT IN NEGOTIATIONS
2 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.eda.admin.ch/eda/e/home/recent/press/09#0003
Switzerland
has strengthened its commitment to sustainable development. 'We have come here
to take an active part. So far we have been successful.' noted Federal
Councillor Joseph Deiss at the press conference held today in the Swiss
pavilion, 'Sustainable Switzerland', in Johannesburg. He called for a global
partnership between industrialised, developing and transition countries. In
the remaining negotiations, Switzerland will continue to work towards
achieving a binding action plan and a clear final declaration. 'I call for a
global partnership. The industrialised, developing and transition countries
must combine their efforts. Switzerland is prepared to contribute its share to
a global partnership. We expect this of all other countries.' This is one of
the main messages of Federal Councillor Joseph Deiss' speech to the heads of
state and government assembled at the World Summit for Sustainable Development
in Johannesburg. In particular, he invited the United States, Russia and all
other leading countries to assume and to demonstrate their responsibilities.
At the press conference, Federal Councillor Deiss took stock of the
negotiations to date. 'We have come here to take an active part. So far we
have been successful. We have been able to have our position accepted in a
number of areas.' Deiss took the negotiations on trade as an example, where
Switzerland together with Norway were able to prevent a backward step by
successfully pushing through the principle of equality of WTO agreements and
international environmental regimes. In the negotiations on production and
consumption patterns a solution was found which can also be attributed to a
Swiss proposal. In Johannesburg, Switzerland has launched a number of
international initiatives. Among these, it presented together with other
partners the Bio Trade Facilitation Programme. The aim of the partnership is
to promote trade and investment in biological products. More than 20 countries
and other partners responded positively to Switzerland's appeal and together
launched the Partnership Initiative for Sustainable Development in Mountain
Regions. The Initiative offers a platform to enable other countries to benefit
from Switzerland's experiences in the field of sustainable development in
mountain regions. Furthermore, Switzerland invited other countries to
participate in a global conservation fund with the aim of setting up seed
banks and thereby ensuring the diversity of plants. This will make an
important contribution to food safety world-wide. Deiss concluded the press
conference with the words: 'In the last phase of the negotiations, I expect
all of us to finalise negotiations on a workable action plan and to adopt a
powerful political declaration.
52. JOHANNESBURG: BREAKTHROUGH ON "PRODUCTION AND CONSUMPTION PATTERNS"
31 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.umwelt-schweiz.ch/buwal/eng/news/artikel/20020831/00859/index.html
Shortly after
midday on Saturday, a breakthrough was achieved at the World Summit on
Sustainable Development in Johannesburg. In the talks on "Production and
Consumption Patterns", the negotiating partners found solutions to the
contentious issues and reached a compromise. The Swiss delegation is
supporting the compromise in its totality - all the more so as it is based on
a proposal submitted by Switzerland in the course of the negotiations. In
particular, agreement was reached on four areas:
1. In the area
of eco-labelling, a formula was found which also permits binding labelling
requirements.
2. A clear
objective was formulated to decouple economic growth from environmental
degradation.
3. It was
decided to develop a 10-year framework for national and regional programmes to
promote sustainable patterns of consumption and production.
4. Life-cycle
analysis was recognized as an instrument for the promotion of sustainable
consumption and production patterns.
53. WSSD IN JOHANNESBURG: WHAT SWITZERLAND IS SEEKING TO ACHIEVE
22 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.umwelt-schweiz.ch/buwal/eng/news/artikel/20020822/00855/index.html
Switzerland
wishes to make sustainable development once again a key topic on the
international political agenda.
This was
stated by Federal Councillor Joseph Deiss, Head of the Swiss delegation, at a
press conference devoted to Switzerland's participation at the Johannesburg
Summit. He announced that the Swiss delegation would be focusing on the issues
of mountains, water, poverty, the environment, trade and governance. Walter
Fust, Director of the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC) and
Deputy Head of the Swiss delegation, said that the "SustainableSwitzerland"
information platform, which will provide a forum for events and contacts,
underlined Switzerland's wide-ranging involvement in the area of sustainable
development. SAEFL Director Philippe Roch, another leading member of the
delegation, welcomed the Summit as an outstanding opportunity to put the
spotlight on international sustainability and environmental policy.
AUSTRALIA
WSSD Web page:
http://www.ea.gov.au/commitments/wssd/index.html
54. AUSTRALIA HIGHLIGHTS GLOBAL ISSUES AT WORLD SUMMIT
5 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.ea.gov.au/minister/env/2002/mr05sep02.html
Australia has
contributed to important global outcomes at the World Summit on Sustainable
Development, the leader of Australia's delegation, Environment and Heritage
Minister, Dr David Kemp, said today. "Australians can be proud of our
contribution to real progress towards sustainable development, particularly in
developing countries," Dr Kemp said. "The protection of the planet's
remaining biodiversity and the wise use of its natural resources are
fundamental to a sustainable future. To survive and prosper, humankind must
have access to clean water and sanitation, clean energy and sustainable
agricultural systems. "This has been Australia's goal as we have debated
targets and timetables, developed strong, practical partnerships and
contributed to the Summit's political declaration. "Agreements have been
reached on global targets for basic sanitation, for minimising the adverse
impacts of chemicals on health and the environment, for halting biodiversity
loss, restoring fish stocks, reducing land based pollution in small island
developing states, and eliminating gender disparity in education. "Australia
has highlighted the importance of better management of the world's oceans -
their deep sea biodiversity, their coral reefs and coastal habitats - to the
health and wealth of more than three quarters of the world's people. "We have
strongly supported developing countries in their campaign for access to
energy. Australia is at the forefront in the move to renewable energy, with
national targets and one of the world's first guaranteed markets for renewable
energy. "But with more than 1.2 billion people living on less than $US1 a day,
a huge number having no access to electricity and with firewood accounting for
90 per cent of energy consumption in some African nations, a global target for
renewable energy becomes an unachievable, unrealistic imposition on developing
countries. "This is just one area where we have worked with developing
countries towards meeting what we believe is the most important target of the
Summit - to halve the number of people living in poverty by 2015.
"International and national good governance and international trade and
investment will be critical to meeting this target, which is why we have
supported the Summit's emphasis on the establishment and maintenance of solid
democratic institutions, the rule of law, peace and security, fair and
transparent legal systems, open and transparent financial markets and sound
macroeconomic policy. "We have backed up our beliefs with action: we will
provide $355 million in 2002-03 to address governance in developing countries
as part of our $1.8 billion aid programme." Dr Kemp said the 15 partnerships
Australia had entered into with developing countries focus on enabling
communities to make decisions for themselves rather than having them imposed
from the outside.
55. WSSD FROM TALK TO ACTION
4 September2002
Internet:
http://www.ea.gov.au/minister/env/2002/sp04sep02.html
Australia's
Plenary Statement to the World Summit on Sustainable Development Speech by
the Federal Minister for the Environment and Heritage The Hon Dr David Kemp,
MP World Summit on Sustainable Development Johannesburg South Africa
Mr President I
thank you for inviting me to close the debate. Australia came to this Summit
to work for practical ways to reduce poverty, advance human dignity and health
and mend the environment. Rio identified the problems and set out a grand
vision for global treaty instruments as well as national and local objectives.
Johannesburg has helped craft practical goals and actions to accelerate our
movement toward sustainability. This gathering of the world community has been
a deeply impressive event. The Plan of Implementation and the Political
Declaration are benchmarks of mankind's humanity in their recognition of the
issues that confront the world's peoples and the world itself. Some have
painted the decade between the Summits as one of failure and lost opportunity.
It is true that we have not solved the problem of global sustainability. But
we should not ignore the progress that has been made. Hundreds of millions
have been lifted out of poverty by economic progress. Millions more have
access to clean water and health services. In many parts of the world
stewardship of natural resources has improved. And we have started work on
more effective measures to address global warming and biodiversity loss.
That said, we
all agree that it is simply unacceptable that 1.2 billion people live on less
that one dollar a day, that HIV/AIDS is decimating so much of the world, that
too few have access to good education, health services, clean water and clean
air. And if we fail to deal effectively with the depletion of natural
resources and biodiversity, to manage our fresh water and oceans more
sustainably, and to find a globally effective framework for tackling climate
change, we know that this will reinforce the cycle of poverty, social stress
and environmental damage. This Summit has placed the interdependence of action
on social frameworks, the environment and economic development at the core of
our decisions. Balancing social cohesion and governance, environmental
protection and economic development is a dynamic art. It is simply impossible
to sustain improvement in any one of these areas by acting on it alone. There
is an important role for global action and aspirations and Official
Development Assistance, but national governments have to be at the center of
delivering change, because only they can bring their people with them. Only
they can create the conditions in which investment and job creation will
occur. Only they can guarantee the rule of law that underpins human rights and
an economy that sustains investment and jobs. Only national governments can
maintain the governance frameworks in which environmental protection can
receive its proper priority as integral to sustainable economic development
and poverty eradication. That is why Australia has listened so closely to the
words of the G77 leaders throughout this Summit. I have been impressed by
their logic and passion. Australia has strongly supported their emphasis on
the importance of trade and market access as a path to economic
sustainability. And we have strongly endorsed their call to be allowed to set
their own goals for balancing environment, health, and economic objectives in
energy production. But of course we also recognise an important role for the
international community, for practical multilateral goals and for coordinated
action among states. And nowhere is that more important than in relation to
the oceans - the high seas are a global commons and we must act together if
they are to be protected. We were delighted at the priority given by this
Summit to ensuring the sustainable development of the oceans, as well as the
special needs of Small Island Developing States. This group includes
Australia's Pacific neighbours and partners, and we have been pleased to work
with them to secure these commitments. This Summit has agreed a huge agenda
for action. We have set or reaffirmed 37 time-bound targets as part of the
Plan of Implementation. Central to these are the core commitments to halve the
number of people in poverty, halve the number of people without access to safe
drinking water and halve the proportion of people without access to basic
sanitation by 2015. We have also set a goal of achieving a significant
reduction in biodiversity loss by 2010 and to restore fish stocks urgently and
not later than by 2015 where possible.
And the
Partnerships that have been announced over the past two weeks will add great
momentum to achieving them. Australia has been proud to announce 15
partnership initiatives in areas ranging from high seas biodiversity to
HIV/AIDS and climate change. Mr President, we have done good work here at
Johannesburg. We must maintain this momentum in the Doha negotiations on trade
liberalisation and agricultural subsidies and through implementing the
Monterrey consensus. In the long run this is more important to the dignity,
development, independence and environmental sustainability of developing
countries than official development assistance. The search for a genuinely
effective global framework to tackle climate change must continue, and we must
each take action to reduce our greenhouse signature. For its part Australia
will be working hard to meet the target it committed to at Kyoto. Mr
President, it is a privilege to bring this debate to a close. We must leave
this wonderful country with the passion to act on the agenda we have set here
as a global community, and total determination as national governments to meet
our obligations to our people, to govern wisely in the interests of not just
of this generation but of those to come - for the world's sake.
56. US, AUSTRALIA JOIN ENERGY PARTNERSHIPS
2 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.ea.gov.au/minister/env/2002/mr02sep02.html
Australia has
joined the United States in a partnership to alleviate poverty and protect the
environment in developing countries by promoting energy efficiency.
Australia's Minister for the Environment, Dr David Kemp, and the Under
Secretary of the US Department of Energy, Bob Card, announced the voluntary,
'Type 2' partnership agreement at the World Summit on Sustainable Development
in Johannesburg.
The US
initiative, Powering Sustainable Development from Village to Metropolis,
builds on another partnership led by Australia and Mexico at the Summit on
behalf of the APEC Energy Working Group - Fostering Regional Energy
Cooperation in APEC: Energy for Sustainable Development. These two projects
will focus on empowering communities to determine the best ways to provide for
their energy needs in the most efficient and environmentally sound way.
Together, these partnerships will create synergies of expertise and resources.
One of the major purposes of the partnerships will be to leverage additional
resources from the private sector, which will be essential to tackle the
energy needs of developing countries. "Access to energy is critical to social
and economic development and the alleviation of poverty," Dr Kemp said. "These
partnerships will help bring these energy services to some of the nearly two
billion people - mostly in rural areas - who still have no access to modern
energy." "Such energy savings are assets that support broader social and
development goals, such as better schools, good health care, cleaner water,
responsible stewardship of environmental resources and higher living
standards," Undersecretary Card said. "The provision of efficient energy to
rural communities in countries like Vietnam, Thailand, Chile and Peru will
help transform them," Dr Kemp said. "It is essential to an infrastructure
that provides greater food security, access to basic medicines, clean water
supplies and greater economic development. "For example, in the Philippines,
stand alone power systems are being developed for schools, while biomass from
intensive pig farming is generating electricity in Thailand, with technicians
trained to support village power. Meanwhile, solar power is connecting remote
communities to the internet to enable micro-enterprise in China, with
Indonesia and other nations soon to follow. "Australia has already made major
gains in energy efficiency and is keen to share its experience in the global
effort to combat poverty. Examples of best practice in Australia include the
development of a bakery expected to make energy savings of 40 per cent, a 35
per cent cut in refrigeration energy consumption at a major brewery, and up to
20 per cent energy savings at a large beverage producer. "The Australia-US
energy partnership will enable these successful approaches to be spread beyond
the APEC region.
"It will help
to alleviate environmental damage caused by phenomena like the Asian brown
cloud, by helping to replace traditional biomass fuels for cooking.
"Australia's Remote Renewable Energy Program has shown how reliable, clean,
renewable power can be provided to remote communities. "These are exactly the
sort of practical outcomes Australia wants to see emerge from the Summit.
"Energy efficiency is a win-win for developing countries and is a critical
component of sustainable development. Some developing countries spend nearly
70 per cent of their budgets on energy, with up to half of that energy going
to waste. "If they achieve even modest efficiencies, they can redirect
billions of dollars to essential services like health, education and
sanitation. At the same time, they will be conserving their natural resources
and protecting the environment for future generations," Dr Kemp said. The
energy partnerships bring together governments, industry, international
organisations and non-government organisations, with the APEC proposal focused
on improving regional energy security, access to energy, promote clean and
efficient technologies and the development of energy infrastructure. "Our
booming environment industries are equally keen to join the private sector's
participation in these projects. The partnerships forged and the networks
strengthened here in Johannesburg mark the beginning of the real work plan for
sustainable development," Dr Kemp said.
"Australia
will be working with the United States to attract more partners to increase
access to energy and improve its efficiency."
Dr Kemp paid
tribute to the work of the Minister for Industry Tourism and Resources (ITR),
Ian Macfarlane, and his department in establishing the APEC partnership. ITR
will have the major role in carrying the initiative forward.
57. AUSTRALIA SUPPORTS PACIFIC ISLAND NEIGHBOURS
1 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.ea.gov.au/minister/env/2002/mr01sep202.html
Special
recognition of Pacific Island countries is a major achievement of the World
Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD), Australia's Minister for the
Environment and Heritage, Dr David Kemp, said today. Detailing a $7.2 million
package of partnership initiatives with our Pacific neighbours, Dr Kemp
congratulated the countries on their success in raising awareness of their
particular reliance on oceans for sustainable development, and their
vulnerability to natural disasters. "Australia is the largest donor to the
independent Pacific Island states and throughout the WSSD process we have
strongly promoted their special circumstances," Dr Kemp said. "We are
particularly pleased that one of the early outcomes of the Summit has been to
reach formal agreement on actions to assist small island developing states in
the plan of implementation in areas including oceans, health, water, energy,
tourism and related environmental vulnerability. "This is a significant
outcome, especially as Africa is the only other region to have been given
special international recognition at the Summit. "Australia has committed $A4
million for a Pacific Island adaptation and vulnerability initiative to help
Pacific Island countries adapt to the future impact of extreme weather and
other events. We have also set aside $A2.2 million to help improve their
weather forecasting and climate prediction services. "In the area of health,
the potential impact of HIV/AIDS on Asian and Pacific island countries is
huge. We are pleased to provide over $A1 million - part of our $A200 million
commitment to address the epidemic in the region - to establish the Asia
Pacific Leadership Forum for HIV/AIDS and Development. The Forum will provide
important political leadership to fight this epidemic. "Oceans are life to
Pacific Island countries and Australia's oceans partnerships are designed to
improve the way we manage the oceans for all. They will help address regional
capacity for coral reef and oceans management and further our collective
efforts to tackle the very serious problem of illegal fishing. "These are
issues of vital concern to the livelihood of the Pacific, which is home to
some of the world's great coral reef and ocean ecosystems. Our global
leadership to manage the unique biodiversity of deep oceans will also benefit
a region that contains many of the world's seamounts - areas rich in marine
biodiversity, much of it found only in the Pacific. "As the first country to
develop an integrated oceans policy, we are also delighted with Pacific Island
countries' efforts to develop their own regional oceans policy and are looking
forward to sharing our experience and expertise with our island neighbours
through another of our ocean partnerships." Dr Kemp congratulated the Council
of Regional Organisations of the Pacific on the partnerships they had
initiated and said Australia looked forward to exploring them further.
58. AUSTRALIA'S PARTNERSHIPS PUT PRINCIPLES INTO PRACTICE
1 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.ea.gov.au/minister/env/2002/mr01sep02.html
Australia will
be continuing to promote sustainable development beyond Johannesburg, leading
12 voluntary partnerships and participating in more than six others. The
partnerships include global and regional initiatives, involve more than 50
countries and scores of international, national and regional bodies and will
impact on most parts of the world - particularly developing countries in the
Asia Pacific.
They cover
issues ranging from energy efficiency, air pollution, sustainable agriculture
and forestry, marine biodiversity and illegal fishing to HIV/AIDS. Announcing
Australia's partnerships at the World Summit on Sustainable Development,
Australia's Minister for the Environment and Heritage, Dr David Kemp, thanked
the many governments, businesses, non-government organisations, research
bodies and others who had agreed to work with Australia to put the principles
of sustainable development into practice. "These partnerships are where the
real progress will be made in implementing sustainable development," he said.
"They will make a difference where it matters and go a long way towards
combating poverty in the developing world. "Australians can be proud of the
fact, for example, that at Johannesburg we have made major progress in
sustainable fishing and in protecting marine biodiversity. We have arranged to
work with our Pacific Island neighbours to help them deal with the effects of
climate change, and with the US and Mexico on working for major energy gains
in developing countries. And across South Africa, farmers are joining our
joint South African-Australian landcare programs. "These are just some of the
areas in which Australia is taking a lead by sharing expertise and bringing
bodies together to make a combined assault on global problems," Dr Kemp said.
Australia's Summit partnerships have a strong focus on oceans management, with
seven partnerships to conserve biodiversity in the high seas, protect
migratory shorebirds, crack down on illegal fishing, protecting coral reefs,
and help Pacific nations develop oceans policy. They also reflect Australia's
commitment to the Asia Pacific region, with proposals to help Pacific Island
countries deal with the effects of climate change and an HIV/AIDS program in
Southeast Asia. "Each of these partnerships relates directly to and gives
effect to a formal commitment of the Summit," Dr Kemp said. "In many ways, the
real work of the Summit begins once delegates return home to put these
partnerships into effect."
SWEDEN
WSSD Web Page:
http://www.ud.se/johannesburg/index.htm
WSSD Press Releases:
http://www.ud.se/johannesburg/tal_pressmeddelanden.htm
59. JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT: SWEDEN PRESENTS PROPOSALS FOR SUSTAINABLE URBAN
ENVIRONMENT
Ministry for Foreign Affairs
30 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.regeringen.se/galactica/service=irnews/action=obj_show?c_obj_id=46414
Today, on
Friday, at the UN Summit in Johannesburg, Sweden will present "The Sustainable
City" - a project in which innovative solutions for a sustainable urban
environment will be shown. What it will demonstrate are environmentally sound
solutions for such facilities as water supplies and sewage, traffic planning,
energy and waste management. The Government has contributed SEK 300 000 to
the project in order to market Swedish expertise in the field of sustainable
urban development. "In many cases, Sweden is a world leader in producing
solutions for a good urban environment and can contribute to an important
exchange of expertise in Johannesburg", says Minister for Trade Leif Pagrotsky.
"In the long term, this project may also lead to greater business
opportunities for Swedish companies in such fields as environmentally sound
technologies and skills". The project is based on a Swedish-Chinese
partnership involved in presenting proposals for planning a satellite city for
Shanghai, using a Swedish model with environmentally sound solutions. "The
Swedish-Chinese project will pave the way for other Swedish companies in
China", says Leif Pagrotsky. "Swedish companies are at the cutting edge of
environmental technology".
60. SWEDEN LAUNCHES INTERNATIONAL TASK FORCE ON GLOBAL PUBLIC GOODS
Ministry for Foreign Affairs
29 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.regeringen.se/galactica/service=irnews/action=obj_show?c_obj_id=46380
This evening
Sweden, along with France and UNDP, will launch an international task force on
global public goods. This will take place at a seminar at the World Summit on
Sustainable Development in Johannesburg at 18.00-20.30. "The international
community must adopt a more concordant approach to the increasingly complex
international cooperation on various global public goods such as clean air,
water, financial stability, health, peace and security. At UN conferences such
as the ongoing one in Johannesburg there is a lot of talk on what we want to
achieve. But how do we actually do it? On a national level we have our public
sector. Internationally we have to find other ways to identify and tackle
global problems, State Secretary for International Development Cooperation Ms.
Gun-Britt Andersson says. Sweden, France and UNDP are therefore launching an
"International Task Force on Global Public Goods". Its task will be to
investigate how the most important global public goods are provided today and
to propose how these crucial issues can be more effectively handled and
financed to combat poverty and contribute to sustainable development. The
group will consist of 10-15 experts from governments, international
organisations, civil society, the business sector and the academic world. The
work is estimated to be ongoing for about 2 years. Ernest Zedillo, former
president of Mexico, will lead the work with one other person to be appointed
in the near future. A secretariat, under the leadership of a Swede, Sven
Sandström, a former Managing Director of the World Bank, will be established
in Stockholm. A reference group under the leadership of State Secretary
Gun-Britt Andersson - "The Friends of the Task Force" - will also be linked to
the task force.
A press
conference will take place at 17.30 in the Sandton Convention Center press
center and an informal press meeting will take place after the launching event
at 20.30.
NEW ZEALAND
Ministry of
Environment WSSD Web page:
http://www.mfe.govt.nz/new/sustainable_development_summit.htm
Ministry of
Foreign Affairs WSSD Web page:
http://www.apec.govt.nz/foreign/env/worldsustain.html
61. SUMMARY OF THE WSSD
September 2002
Internet:
http://www.apec.govt.nz/foreign/env/worldsustain.html
In contrast
with the idealism and environmental focus of the Rio "Earth Summit" ten years
ago, expectations for the Johannesburg World Summit on Sustainable Development
were practical rather than visionary. There was progress on all areas of
priority interest for New Zealand - energy, oceans, small island developing
states, poverty eradication, sustainable patterns of production and
consumption and trade liberalisation. New targets were set for sanitation,
the restoration of fish stocks and the safe use and production of chemicals.
There was agreement on the need to remove environmentally harmful subsidies
and to remove too subsidies in the energy and fisheries sectors. Partnerships
for development were launched. The Summit served to raise awareness of the
concept of sustainable development as a coherent approach to environmental,
economic and social policy. The Prime Minister's and Minister's active
participation ensured good profile for New Zealand.
REPORT
OVERVIEW
Opening the
Summit, President Mbeki described social and economic divides as a form of
"global apartheid" which could cause the world's poor to lose confidence in
democratic systems. But despite the dividing lines between the privileged and
the developing world, there was a mood of inclusiveness in Johannesburg, and a
willingness to work constructively toward a programme of implementation. The
magnitude of change all societies are experiencing, or anticipating, produced
something of a commonality of interest. Regional group dynamics were a good
deal more positive than at the Bali Prepcom. South African Foreign Minister
Zuma, Trade Minister Irwin and Environment Minister Moosa were at the centre
of negotiations. Their performance was impressive. Several sensitive issues
had to be negotiated in the last days of the summit, all with the potential to
have disrupted proceedings and destroyed the positive atmosphere that had
evolved. The most difficult of those issues were subsidies, renewable energy,
health and human rights and African land reform, which could have opened the
way to divisive debate of the situation in Zimbabwe. Despite these pressures,
South African ministers remained accessible to regional groups. It is a
triumph for the South African government that such a logistically as well as
politically complex exercise was managed with no major problems or
disruptions. Security precautions were at the highest level. There were only
two significant protests where SA security forces responded, but no injuries
resulted.
PRIME
MINISTER'S AND MINISTER'S INVOLVEMENT
The Prime
Minister had the opportunity for targeted bilateral meetings with key
leaders. These were complemented by a wider range of networking opportunities
facilitated by the convention attracting over 100 heads of state and
government. The Prime Minister addressed the Plenary on the first day of the
High Level Segment of the Summit and participated in a round table on the
theme of cultural diversity, chaired by President Chirac. A second round
table event on the problems of poverty, indebtedness, health care and
sanitation, water supply and trade related issues offered a further occasion
for the Prime Minister's direct participation as did the Summit's closing
plenary, which she chaired. Opportunities were provided for ministers to
engage actively in the negotiation of the Plan of Implementation and the
Political Declaration, through ministerial level "Vienna process" meetings (ie
speaking arrangements for the EU, G77, and those among the JUSCANZ group who
felt compelled to take the floor). Minister Hobbs made influential
interventions on renewable energy, health and human rights, the precautionary
approach and other issues of importance to New Zealand. As one of the elected
Vice Presidents of the Summit, the Minister also chaired a Plenary session.
POLITICAL
DECLARATION
The
Johannesburg Declaration on Sustainable Development emerged as a four page
text which commits to building a "humane, equitable and caring global society
cognisant of the need for human dignity for all" and recognises that humankind
is at a crossroad, confronting challenges of poverty, environmental
degradation and loss of biodiversity. The Declaration contains references to
women's empowerment and emancipation and gender equality; to special attention
to the development needs of Small Island Developing States; to the water and
sanitation targets and to strengthening governance at all levels. In
addition, it includes a reference to "the vital role of... indigenous peoples
in sustainable development".
PLAN OF
IMPLEMENTATION
The following
commentary is in order of the component chapters of the Plan of Implementation
(POI):
POVERTY
ERADICATION
Given the role
of South Africa in hosting and facilitating key aspects of the meeting, the
Johannesburg Summit was destined to have poverty eradication among its focal
points. The Plan of Implementation states that eradicating poverty is the
"greatest global challenge facing the world today", and recommits countries to
the Millennium Declaration Goals of halving by 2015 the proportion of the
world's people living in abject poverty, suffering from hunger, and without
access to safe drinking water. The Summit underlined the importance of
national ownership of poverty reduction strategies, enabling environments at
both the national and international levels; gender equality; sound management
of natural resources, and access to energy services in the fight against
poverty. Some emphasis was put on the need for capacity building and
technology transfer for improved industrial productivity in ways that were
supportive of long-term resource management. In terms of wholly new
commitments, there was agreement to establish a World Solidarity Fund for
poverty eradication. This was seen by the G77 as an important concrete target
to emerge from the Summit, and was achieved in spite of opposition from a
number of developed countries. Concerns centred around the fact that the Fund
would duplicate the recently established UNDP Thematic Trust Fund for Poverty,
although the agreed texts mollifies this to a certain extent. There was also
some resistance on a procedural level to agree to the establishment of the
Fund in the WSSD context, given that the issue is due for formal consideration
in next month's UN General Assembly.
UNSUSTAINABLE
PATTERNS OF PRODUCTION AND CONSUMPTION
The debate on
sustainable patterns of production and consumption centred on the need for a
ten year global programme to delink economic growth from environmental
degradation. With its emphasis on national level actions, the US promoted the
concept of multiple programmes, while the EU pressed for work at the global
level. Earlier attempts to include references to eco labelling were
eventually abandoned because of the trade risks of references to mandatory
labels and the inadequacy of references to voluntary ones. The level of
general discomfort over the reference to the life cycle approach to product
management delivered consensus on including the more familiar concept of "life
cycle analysis". One of the most difficult debates was about global energy
market reform. While it proved reasonably straightforward to get early
agreement on improved access to energy, the cleaning up of dirty technologies
and the need for improved efficiencies, the meeting was deeply divided on the
proposal to create a global target for renewable sources of energy and over
the phasing out of subsidies. The debate split the G77 and pitted OPEC
states, the US, Australia, Japan and Canada against the EU, NZ, Brazil,
Mexico, South Africa, Switzerland, Iceland, Norway and the central European
countries. Venezuela and the US led arguments against a renewables target,
claiming that it would be meaningless and that developing countries would need
large financial and technology transfers to help achieve it. In the
corridors, the World Wide Fund for Nature attacked the proposed target as
inadequate. Target proponents countered with the need for clear signals and
planning horizons for business. Over the course of debate the US moved to
accommodate national actions to phase out energy sector subsidies, permitting
middle ground to form around a less specific target for renewables in exchange
for strong commitments on subsidy reform. The final deal on energy contains
four important elements: a commitment to improve access including through
partnerships; the diversification of energy supply systems by developing
cleaner, more efficient and cost effective energy technologies; a "substantial
increase" in the share of renewables (recognising the role of regional and
national targets and regular reviews of progress); and the "phasing out"
"where appropriate" of subsidies in this area. The debate on chemicals
management concluded with agreement that countries should aim to manage and
produce chemicals in ways that minimise significant adverse effects on the
environment and health, by 2020. It also reaffirmed international work
underway on chemicals - including the Bahia programme of action and UNEP's
study on a strategic approach to chemicals (which the WSSD called for
completion by 2005) and its study on mercury.
PROTECTING AND
MANAGING THE NATURAL BASE
Themes of most
interest to NZ during the debate on natural resources included a linkage
between water and sanitation targets, biodiversity loss, natural resource
degradation, oceans and fisheries management, climate change, and land
degradation as a GEF focal point.
The US
registered early resistance to a separate sanitation target. It advocated
weakly linking references to sanitation to the pre-existing Millennium
Development Goal to halve by 2015 the number of people lacking access to safe
drinking water. Over the course of negotiations, consensus developed around a
strong linkage that made clear that improved sanitation should be achieved by
the same date.
The WSSD
confirmed a 2010 target for significantly reducing biodiversity loss -
rephrasing the target to reverse losses which was pronounced at the 2002
meeting of the parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity. The G77's
call for new legally binding instruments to protect biodiversity was averted.
But the WSSD did charge the CBD with negotiating an international regime to
promote the fair and equitable sharing of benefits - something which NZ had
thought to be adequately covered by existing work programmes in the CBD and
elsewhere. A separate call to reverse natural resource loss was modified to
become a (more realistic) call to reverse the trend in natural resource
degradation. Earlier recommendations to include the ecosystem based approach
to resource management and to precaution were dropped as too contentious.
Oceans issues were settled early in the piece. An EU/US face off on the
restoration of fish stocks by 2015 was defused by NZ's encouragement to
establish timetables for species specific recovery. Our suggestion was
modified to achieve agreement to maintain or restore stocks on an urgent basis
and where possible no later than 2015. The G77's call to the WSSD to
recognise the rights of coastal developing states in fisheries allocation was
accommodated in language that recognised rights established in international
fisheries treaty law. Agreement was reached on the elimination of destructive
fishing practices and the establishment of marine protected areas consistent
with international law, including representative networks by 2012. Other
"natural resource" issues of interest included radioactive materials
transport, climate change and the GEF as a focal point for land degradation.
NZ's proposal that the WSSD recognise the need for improved regulation of
nuclear materials transportation was confirmed, including prior notification,
safety and liability aspects. A text on climate change and entry into force of
the Kyoto Protocol was brought closer into line with New Zealand objectives to
secure clear references on the need for ratification and entry into force of
the Protocol. There was agreement on the GEF taking up land degradation as a
focal point.
SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT IN A GLOBALISING WORLD
The initial
Johannesburg text was seen as too negative by some in its portrayal of
globalisation and its negative affects on developing countries. Elements such
as financial crises, insecurity, poverty, exclusion and inequality, were
subsequently recast as "challenges" to overcome, rather than "concerns".
Action-oriented references were directed at technical assistance and capacity
building to facilitate "full and effective participation of developing
countries" in the globalised economy, and to help them respond effectively to
its challenges. References to corporate responsibility and accountability in
the text ("actively promote corporate responsibility and accountability
including through the full development and effective implementation of
intergovernmental agreements and measures... and support continuous
improvement in corporate practices in all countries") proved extremely
contentious. The G77 promoted such references, with the support of some
developed countries in the wake of Enron and World.com scandals. The US
accepted the text on the basis that the Chair would make an interpretative
statement to explain that the agreed formulation was intended to refer to
existing instruments and agreements only, and was not intended to imply new
international measures.
HEALTH
The treatment
of health and access to health care services in the Plan of Implementation
proved controversial, so much so that this issue was the last to be resolved.
References to "health care and services" were interpreted by some as including
abortion services, and were therefore unacceptable to them. The substantive
debate was run in parallel with a procedural debate in the margins about
whether agreement had been reached in Bali on chapeau paragraph (47) in the
health section which also dealt with access to health services, including
reproductive healthcare. Canada, together with others, including New Zealand,
campaigned effectively to ensure that the paragraph was recognised by the
formal meeting process as still open for discussion. This was important from
a human rights perspective, as the text "agreed" in Bali without the
endorsement of the full UN membership referred to the provision of health care
services "consistent with national laws and cultural and religious values".
The standard balancing reference to "and in conformity with human rights and
fundamental freedoms" was omitted, although very late in the negotiations this
phrasing was successfully reinserted into the text.
SMALL ISLAND
DEVELOPING STATES
The inclusion
of a substantive chapter on Small Island Developing States (SIDS) was
significant for the Pacific region. It covers key Pacific Island objectives
including on water, energy, health and oceans priorities. It calls for a
review in 2004 of the Barbados Programme of Action for SIDS, capacity
building, trade access, and the finalisation and operationalisation of
environmental vulnerability indices. The Johannesburg meeting finalised
references to delimiting extended continental shelf areas and undertaking
waste and marine pollution initiatives by 2004.
SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT FOR AFRICA
The Africa
chapter focuses on the region's development challenges, including HIV/AIDS.
It gives prominence to the New Partnership for African Development (NEPAD) as
a route towards sustainable development on the continent, and calls for donors
to support the initiative.
The reference
to land tenure reform at para 61b was contentious because of its potential
connection with the Zimbabwe land reforms. After intense discussions a text
was agreed ad referendum. A key point is that it ensures that land tenure
reform should take place in accordance with the rule of law. There are other
valuable concepts in the rest of the paragraph, especially on gender issues
including women's right to inherit land.
MEANS OF
IMPLEMENTATION: FINANCE
The G77
generally considered that the Johannesburg process should build on the
financing commitments agreed recently in Monterrey. Others considered that the
Financing for Development (FfD) outcomes were wholly appropriate, and that the
task in the WSSD was to focus on ways and means to commit this financing to
sustainable development objectives. With the Millennium Development Goals held
up as clear financing benchmarks, the challenge in Johannesburg was to find
the middle ground. This was successfully achieved from the New Zealand
perspective, with satisfactory references to harnessing domestic resources for
sustainable development; facilitating greater flows of foreign direct
investment to developing countries; the role of ODA in development (including
the need to enhance its effectiveness); the recent successful replenishment of
the GEF; and reform of the international financial architecture in order to
foster a more transparent, equitable, and inclusive system. References to
debt cancellation, debt relief, the HIPC initiative, and debt restructuring
mechanisms were in line with recently agreed Monterrey commitments. As
expected, some states sought to nuance FfD language on innovative sources of
financing, particularly on the issue of Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) for
development purposes.
MEANS OF
IMPLEMENTATION: TRADE
Responding to
the highly bracketed text coming out of Bali Prepcom IV, a non-paper on trade
was circulated following South Africa's soundings among G77. It was accepted
as the basis for Johannesburg negotiation. There was a general view that the
final text could not go beyond Doha, and this eventually proved to be the
case. Crucial parts of the text emerged as verbatim reflections of Doha text,
particularly Doha paras 13,14 and 16. As such, New Zealand interests were not
compromised. References to market access, technical assistance, capacity
building and WTO accession were acceptable. Subsidies proved to be a
difficult issue, with eventual consensus on "support the (Doha) work programme
on subsidies, and encourage reform of subsidies that cause considerable
negative effects on the environment..." The last phrase was EU language which
took the place the more preferable direct and comprehensive formulation
"environmentally harmful and/or trade distorting subsidies". One sticking
point proved to be in the chapeau of the trade/environment paragraphs, where
the words "while ensuring WTO consistency" had been inserted following
"enhance the mutual supportiveness of trade, environment, and
development...". Ministerial discussion led to the caveat being dropped on
the basis that it placed WTO at the head of a hierarchy of interests.
INSTITUTIONAL
FRAMEWORKS AND GOVERNANCE
Chapter X
brings together international, national and CSD governance. Most debate
centred on human rights and international vs national level governance.
Process rather than substance dominated much of the lengthy debate on this
part of the POI. Governance debate lagged behind progress on the rest of the
POI throughout the process. Human rights reference and emphasis on the social
pillar of sustainable development were key points of contention, including
references to the ILO and core labour standards which the G77 resisted.
Positive references to the ILO were however retained elsewhere. In the end
the standoff between diverging emphases on international and national level
governance was resolved by moderated texts submitted by each as concessions to
the general process.
"RIO
PRINCIPLES"
A cross
sectoral debate ran throughout negotiations on two of the 27 principles
enunciated in the 1992 "Rio Declaration on Environment and Development".
There were concerns not to recast the principle of "common but differentiated
responsibilities" so that it would imply weaker obligations on the part of
some countries to take responsibility for economic, social, or environmental
planning, at any level. References to common but differentiated
responsibilities that were retained in the text have been captured in a
balanced way and in conformity with the spirit of "Rio" and its intentions.
The debate on precaution centred on how far, and in what way, the WSSD could
recognise that precaution has become more widely accepted as a device to
protect human health as well as the environment. The US led the argument that
science based decision making is the essential hallmark of current practice
and that it ought to underpin the future of precaution. The EU led the counter
argument that drew on the "further development" of Rio principle 15 in
international "instruments". NZ's pitch for the middle ground, which might
have recognised precaution being practised for the protection of health as
well as for the protection of the environment, and in line with applicable
international law, failed to attract consensus. References to precaution
eventually reflected the emphasis on science based decision making.
PARTNERSHIP
INITIATIVES
CSD
GOVERNANCE
Negotiations
on the CSD governance text constituted the only formal discussion on type 2
partnership initiatives during the conference. The detail of the CSD role in
managing and monitoring type 2s has been minimised in the final compromise
text - the concern being that too much of a role for CSD would challenge the
voluntary nature and stakeholder ownership of initiatives. There is no
obvious process for developing this role, instead the text simply gives
general guidance that: CSD should be strengthened, particularly in "promoting
and facilitating partnerships; and "serve as a focal point for the
discussion of partnerships that promote sustainable development, including
sharing lessons learned, progress made and best practices." It is likely that
the role of the CSD will be developed at the next session of the Commission
(2003) when it is directed to elaborate its work programme. Regional and
sub-regional implementation of CSD roles is to be "pursued...through the
regional commissions and other regional institutions and bodies". In the
Pacific there is a strong desire to see a revitalised Council of Regional
Organisations in the Pacific (CROP) process as opposed to ESCAP having any
management and monitoring role under CSD. This will need to be argued for in
the next session of the Commission. In any case the CROP mechanism will be
likely to have at least a monitoring role for the Pacific.
TYPE 2
INITIATIVES
Many
initiatives were launched by donors with varying degrees of consultation
involved in their development. A common view is that most of these are work
in progress rather than packages ready to roll. The emphasis for most will
now be on firming up genuine stakeholder partnership in initiatives, and in
developing procedures for their coordination, implementation and monitoring. A
number with potential Pacific application were presented. The CROP process
for further development of Pacific partnership initiatives will involve their
refinement in the light of recently completed national assessments. This is
intended to ensure that national and local needs are clearly identified and
addressed. At the regional level the CROP committee on sustainable
development will assist by analysing the initiatives in relation to both the
national assessments and the partnerships being selected/offered by donors.
This process will also consider the mechanisms by which the umbrella
initiatives will be managed. NZ stands ready to assist this process.
ENERGY
PARTNERSHIPS AND DECLARATION
In addition to
NZAID partnership initiatives for sustainable energy in the Pacific, New
Zealand joined an EU-sponsored Declaration on the way forward on renewable
energy, launched at the final Plenary. The "coalition of the willing" includes
Iceland, Hungary, Switzerland, Norway and others. In the Declaration,
countries commit to the promotion of renewable energy and announce their
intention to go beyond the POI in the area of renewable energy. They agree to
cooperate internationally, and to set ambitious time bound national targets.
New Zealand
also joined the UK-sponsored initiative Implementing the Renewable Energy and
Energy Efficiency Partnership (REEEP). It brings together progressive
Governments, businesses, and organisations that are committed to accelerating
the development and deployment of renewable energy and energy efficiency
systems.
STAKEHOLDER
PERSPECTIVES AND SIDE EVENTS
Ten members of
the delegation represented civil society in New Zealand, and Hon Nick Smith
represented the Opposition. They made an invaluable contribution to the New
Zealand delegation in informal negotiations, as well as participating in a
wide range of the side and parallel events that took place.
FOLLOW UP
Next steps at
the multilateral level will centre on the response of multilateral agencies to
the agreements reached in Johannesburg. The UN's Commission on Sustainable
Development is charged with monitoring implementation of outcomes. But
clearly it will be necessary for other agencies to consider their roles,
especially major UN agencies such as the UN Environment Programme and the FAO,
the WTO, the IEA, and the International Financial Institutions. At national
level, agencies that have been involved in the WSSD are planning debriefing,
further outreach, and the factoring of lessons learned and policy outcomes
into domestic sustainable development activities.
CONCLUSION
We are
unlikely in future to look back on the Johannesburg Summit as a direction
changing event the way the Rio Summit appears in retrospect. The foundations
laid in Rio remain solid ten years on, but the challenge for WSSD was to bring
greater global attention to the concepts of sustainable development which have
evolved over the last decade. Expectations around any summit are difficult to
contain, and it is inevitable that not only international NGOs but governments
will need to be convinced of the utility of an event on this scale.
While there
will be questioning as to whether the results justify the commitment of
resources to the Summit, we consider that there were significant gains made.
Agreements on energy, on sanitation, on attention to fish stocks, the needs of
Small Island Developing States and on the reduction of subsidies all serve to
take the global agenda forward. In addition to the agreements reached in the
POI, there were the intangible benefits of having a large number of ministers
(development as well as environment portfolios) present in Johannesburg to
debate with each other what sustainable development means in practical terms,
and the policy coherence it requires.
DAILY UPDATES:
Johannesburg
Chronicle #3 - update on WSSD (4 September)
http://www.mfe.govt.nz/new/johannesburg_chronicle_3.pdf
Johannesburg
Chronicle - update on WSSD (3 September)
http://www.mfe.govt.nz/new/johannesburg_chronicle_2.pdf
Johannesburg
Live - Update on WSSD (Friday 30 August)
http://www.mfe.govt.nz/new/johannesburg_chronicle_1.pdf
NORWAY
Environment
WSSD Web Page:
http://odin.dep.no/md/joburg2002/' and
http://www.odin.dep.no/ud/norsk/bistand/p10003047/index-b-n-a.html
62. THE WORLD SUMMIT IN JOHANNESBURG: PROGRESS FOR ENVIRONMENT AND
DEVELOPMENT
5 September 2002
Internet:
http://odin.dep.no/smk/engelsk/aktuelt/pressem/001001-070654/index-dok000-b-n-a.html
On Wednesday
the world's heads of state and government endorsed the Plan of Implementation
adopted at the World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg. Norway
has helped to achieve good results in a number of areas, although the Plan of
Implementation falls far short of what is needed to meet the challenges facing
the world today. "I am reasonably satisfied with the results achieved in
Johannesburg. We feared setbacks and a much poorer result, so I have no
problem endorsing this document," said Prime Minister Kjell Magne Bondevik. He
expressed particular satisfaction with the role Norway played at the summit,
and especially the efforts of Minister of International Development Hilde F.
Johnson and Minister of the Environment Børge Brende. It is particularly in
the areas of sanitation, biological diversity and chemicals that concrete
progress has been made. And commitment to the Rio principles has been
reaffirmed. Norway played a major role in preventing WTO rules from being
given precedence over multilateral environmental agreements. It is also
encouraging that the pledges made by the USA and the EU in the Monterrey
Consensus have now been incorporated into the Johannesburg Plan of
Implementation as specific commitments. As regards climate, the Plan of
Implementation includes a passage where countries that have ratified the Kyoto
Protocol strongly urge others to do the same. Taken together with the fact
that China, Russia, Canada and India all announced during the summit that they
intend to ratify the Protocol, this constitutes real progress. Sanitation was
a high-priority issue for Norway. Our ambition was for the summit to set a
target of halving the number of people without access to basic sanitation by
2015. This is closely related to the goal of halving the proportion of people
without access to safe drinking water. "And we did achieve our ambition. This
is an important breakthrough that will benefit a great many poor people,"
said the Prime Minister. Norway played a major role in preventing wording in
the Plan of Implementation that could have been interpreted as meaning that
WTO rules should take precedence over other multilateral agreements on
environment and development. "In my opinion, Norway and Switzerland did the
summit a great service by pushing this through," said the Prime Minister. As
regards biodiversity, countries have undertaken to bring about a significant
reduction in the current rate of loss of biodiversity by 2010. Norway fought
for the target of complete elimination of biodiversity losses, but the
specific commitment to a significant reduction is nevertheless an important
step forward. Norway fought for the target of phasing out entirely the
production and use of chemicals that have significant adverse effects on
human health and the environment, but is nevertheless satisfied that a
specific commitment was reached to minimize the production and use of such
chemicals by 2020.. Norway also helped to highlight the health and
environmental damage caused by heavy metals and the need for international
efforts in this field.
For much of
the summit, there was a risk that the precautionary principle laid down by the
Rio summit might be weakened. "This would have been an unacceptable step
backwards," said the Prime Minister. Norway was actively involved in ensuring
that this did not happen.
"We knew that
energy would be a difficult issue, and are disappointed that it was not
possible to achieve more in this field. Nevertheless, the initiative to form a
coalition of countries to promote energy efficiency and increase the use of
renewable energy sources was an encouraging development. Norway will take part
in this work," said the Prime Minister. Norway also sought to achieve an
action plan to increase access to energy for the poorest groups and to
increase the global share of renewable energy to at least 15 per cent of the
primary energy supply by 2010, and the proportion of new renewables to 10 per
cent. We were not able to achieve these goals. "The social dimension has not
received the prominence Norway would have liked to see in the Plan of
Implementation. For example, it lacks references to the ILO conventions on
labour standards and social standards. This is disappointing," the Prime
Minister said. In his statement to the summit, Prime Minister Bondevik
pledged NOK 375 million from Norway to follow up the Plan of Implementation in
the key areas Secretary-General Kofi Annan has identified, i.e. water, energy,
health, agriculture and biodiversity. This funding will be additional to what
Norway is already providing for these areas. "Now the world must follow up
the decisions that have been made in Johannesburg. We must act effectively.
This will require strong international institutions that can monitor
implementation and ensure that the Plan of Implementation remains a fully
viable document. In response to the Johannesburg summit, the Norwegian
Government will draw up a national plan of action describing how we plan to
follow up the decisions made there. Those of us who have endorsed the Plan of
Implementation must also follow up on our commitments," said Mr Bondevik.
63. NORWAY GIVES NOK 375 MILLION TO THE FIGHT AGAINST POVERTY AND
ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION
3 September 2002
Internet:
http://odin.dep.no/smk/norsk/aktuelt/pressem/001001-070651/index-dok000-b-n-a.html
Prime Minister
Kjell Magne Bondevik said in his statement at the World Summit on Sustainable
Development in Johannesburg on Tuesday//yesterday*** that Norway is pledging
NOK 375 million to following up the action plan adopted at the Summit. In his
statement Mr. Bondevik emphasized that it is not possible to fight poverty
unless we also tackle the major environmental problems. Every year close to
three and a half million people, most of them children, die from water-related
diseases. The NOK 375 million allocation will be used for priority tasks to be
carried out in developing countries in the water, energy, health and
agricultural sectors and in the field of biodiversity.
The Prime
Minister commented that Norway has already allocated considerable resources to
these areas, but that even more is needed.
"The Summit
has reminded us of the enormous scale of the problems the world is facing. It
is now important to fulfil the commitments we have agreed on here in
Johannesburg," he said. In his statement Mr. Bondevik also said that we must
respect the rights of indigenous peoples, and this is being included in the
Summit action plan. Norway has attached great importance to climate change and
the ratification of the Kyoto Protocol in its preparations for the Summit. In
his statement the Prime Minister expressed his satisfaction at Russia's
announcement that it will ratify the Protocol.
64. WSSD PLENARY SESSION - BIODIVERSITY
Statement by the Norwegian
Minister of the Environment, Børge Brende
26 August 2002
Internet:
http://odin.dep.no/md/engelsk/aktuelt/taler/022021-090040/index-dok000-b-n-a.html
[Mr.Chairman,
Honourable Ministers, We are gathered at a Summit that could and should become
the most important international meeting of this decade. Since we met in Bali
we have been reminded again why we cannot afford not to make it happen:
13 million
people are threatened by drought and hunger in southern Africa. Millions have
been struggling to fight the damaging consequences of extreme weather
conditions in Asia, North America and Europe. A vast blanket of pollution
threatens food security and human health in South Asia. Since we met in Bali
we have been reminded again why our natural resources are the very foundation
on which human welfare and health depends.] Mr.Chairman, Honourable Ministers
[Despite the fact that we are repeatedly reminded and have made numerous
decisions to do something about it], the alarming rate of biodiversity loss is
not slowing down. We have learned that natural ecosystems are changing from
their intact state at about 1,2% annually. That is 11,4% since the Rio
Summit. We have learned that an estimated 40% of the global economy is based
on biological products and ecosystem processes, and that humanity loses about
250 billion US dollars through habitat destruction in a single year. We have
learned that the people who are most severely affected by water pollution and
land degradation are the poorest people of the world, living in rural areas
highly dependent on local biodiversity for their survival. We know that
sustainable management of ecosystems and biodiversity is crucial both in the
short and long term; that they are our ultimate source of food, water and
shelter. We know that loss of biodiversity undermines the potential for
poverty eradication and sustainable development. Now is the time to take real
action to change this trend. We must be ambitious and concrete. We must
confirm our commitment to have measures in place to stop the loss of
biodiversity by 2010. We should point out how we are going to reach this goal
and we should monitor the achievements. We should establish a scientific
panel for biodiversity similar to the one that is in place for climate. The
need for integrating biodiversity concerns in all sectors of society should be
acknowledged and acted upon. Economic and environmental policies should be
pursued in a mutually supportive way. WTO rules should accommodate necessary
environmental measures like efforts to root out trade in illegally logged
timber. The Convention on Biological Diversity was a major achievement in
Rio. To be a really effective instrument, the CBD must be followed up by
concrete action. We urge all countries to implement recent CBD decisions on
access and benefit sharing, alien species and forests. I will also strongly
emphasize the need for early ratification of the Carthagena Protocol on
Biosafety. This protocol will be an essential tool for ensuring that
biotechnology is developed in a safe and sustainable manner in harmony with
the precautionary principle. Mr. Chairman, Poverty eradication is impossible
without safeguarding the resources that peoples` livelihoods depend upon.
UNEP`s focus on poverty eradication through ecosystem management deserves
broad support.
I am therefore
pleased to announce here that UNEP and Norway together are launching an
international partnership to strengthen environmental management capacity as a
contribution to poverty eradication in Africa. Mr.Chairman, Honourable
Ministers
The Secretary
General used the phrase "a chance to secure our future" when the WEHAB
initiative was proposed. Biodiversity is in fact our insurance for the future;
biodiversity is the life insurance of life itself. Now it is up to us to
transform words into action.
[We have the
mandate to use the ecosystem approach and strengthen our commitment to the
precautionary principle in order to safeguard biodiversity for future
generations. I can't see why we should need any more reminders before we do
so. We have the mandate to undertake ambitious actions and commit to ambitious
goals to protect human welfare and health from environmental degradation.
We have the
mandate to deliver concrete results here in Johannesburg. We cannot afford to
fail!]
See Also:
WSSD PLENARY
SESSION - HEALTH, 26 August 2002 Statement by the Norwegian Minister of the
Environment, Børge Brende
Internet:
http://odin.dep.no/md/engelsk/aktuelt/taler/022021-090039/index-dok000-b-n-a.html
FIJI
Internet:
http://www.fiji.gov
65. PM CALLS FOR OCEAN PROTECTION AT WSSD
3 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.fiji.gov.fj/press/2002_09/2002_09_03-01.shtml
Prime Minister
Qarase has made an earnest plea for a committed partnership for the protection
of Oceans, at the World Summit on Sustainable Development in South Africa
today . Mr. Qarase said Oceans have to be kept safe and healthy not only for
this generation but the future generations as well, and he called on the
Leaders at the Summit to take an oath of allegiance for our planet Earth. Mr.
Qarase urged the leaders at WSSD to go from the conference with a fresh vision
of the future - one of partnership for humanity that will create a new world
where poverty is defeated, peace reigns and new hope blooms. The Prime
Minister told the assembly that as members of the smallest countries of plant
earth, we are proud of our heritage as the people of the mighty Pacific Ocean.
"We are few in numbers, but we are united in our determination to protect it,
as custodians of the Pacific not only for our people but also for all the
countries represented at the conference", Mr. Qarase said. "Unhappily the
Pacific Ocean is being threatened from many quarters. Radioactive materials
are being trans-shipped across the Pacific against our wishes," Mr. Qarase
told the assembly. He added that the Region is seriously concerned about this
because many generations of the Pacific Islanders are still suffering from the
after affects of nuclear weapons testing in the Pacific. "As a region
dependant on marine resources for our livelihood, indiscriminate commercial
exploitation of the rich tuna resources by distant water fishing fleets is a
major concern in the Pacific." Mr. Qarase said there is a greater awareness
now of the environment and why it must be protected, adding that at the recent
Summits in Fiji of the 78 ACP countries and the 16 members of the Pacific
Island Forum, their leaders issued declarations on the environment as their
common and sacred heritage. He says the condition of the world today can be
seen as a wounded and bleeding planet. "The degradation, the poisoning and
pollution continue. Natural resources and wildlife are still butchered,
plundered and devastated. People starve and live in crushing poverty. HIV/AIDS
and other lethal ailments take a frightening toll. Wars, killings and violence
add to the misery and destruction." In this regard Mr. Qarase told the
conference that we all guilty and should ask ourselves whether our
civilizations have turned into monsters bent on laying waste to, and
devouring, that which gives us life. Mr. Qarase we should ask forgiveness for
desecrating the gifts handed to us by GOD for safekeeping and sustenance.
"Here in Johannesburg, we have another opportunity to atone, and turn disaster
into HOPE." Mr. Qarase urged World Leaders to try and see planet earth in its
totality, and be dedicated to renewing it. "Only than we can live in harmony
with its beauty and natural riches." "We come to this meeting in the name of
sustainable development - a rather fashionable phrase with a comforting,
almost reassuring ring to it, however its really about the salvation of the
planet Earth," said Mr. Qarase. "It's about stopping mankind from grossly
abusing and destroying Earth's resources." Mr. Qarase said that for the
affluent North, sustainable development at its most basic, means finding a
less destructive way of maintaining and increasing the greatest accumulation
of wealth in history. "For the South its different; it's more likely to mean
giving a man a chance to own two good shirts and a digging fork and the money
to buy a kilogramme of rice. It's about listening to the cry of the distressed
masses: help us to sustain ourselves and then we can sustain our countries and
the world." Mr. Qarase also paid tribute to the host nation of South Africa.
"This great
country of South Africa gave us Nelson Mandela a towering icon of our age who
inspired millions of people across the world," he said. "His outstanding
contributions in drawing the different communities together sends a powerful
massage to us all that while we may be citizens of different countries, we are
all children of the same mother earth. "We will do homage to his legacy if in
this conference we can all find the courage and the will to come together in
unity and make the right decisions to safeguard our collective future here on
planet earth." Mr. Qarase also paid tribute to countries that have ratified
the Kyoto Declaration and urged those who have yet to display the courage,
generosity and largeness of spirit the world needs from them. Mr. Qarase was
addressing the Summit in his capacity as the President of the African,
Caribbean Pacific countries and as the Chairman for the Pacific Islands Forum
as well as the Prime Minister of Fiji.
CHINA
Internet:
http://www.fmprc.gov.cn
66. SPEECH BY H.E. ZHU RONGJI, PREMIER OF THE STATE COUNCIL OF THE
PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA AT ROUND TABLE OF WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT
3 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.fmprc.gov.cn/eng/35078.html
Mr. Chairman,
Today I am delighted to be with you here to discuss issues relating to global
sustainable development. The speeches of previous speakers were full of
wisdom and most enlightening. The question of how to implement the plan of
action of this summit and to honor our commitments in real earnest bears not
only directly on the success of the summit, but even more on the future of
human society.
As the world's
largest developing country in terms of population and land area, China
attaches great importance to sustainable development. In handling the
relations between economic development and population, resources and
environment, we have learned the following from experience:
----Emphasis
on harmony between economic development and resource and environmental
protection. The primary task of developing countries is to develop the
economy and eradicate poverty. Without economic growth, there would be no
material basis for a better life or better environment for the people. But
economic growth must not be achieved at the cost of environment or resources.
In the absence of proper resource and environmental protection, there could be
no sustainable economic development.
----Adherence
to the road to human-oriented development. Economic development and
environmental protection are both aimed at improving the level and quality of
people's life and ensuring an all-round and long-term development of human
beings. We should strive to find a civilized road to development featuring
higher productivity, a well-to-do life and sound ecosystem.
----Continued
reliance on scientific and technological advancement and stronger management.
Science and technology, hi-tech in particular, gives strong backing to
sustainable development. We should focus on enhancing our capacity for
sustainable development, further increase our input in science and technology,
intensify our efforts in the development of environmental infrastructure,
apply clean manufacturing technology, develop the industry of environmental
protection and improve the resource and environment management system. We
should improve the mechanisms and the legal system through institutional
reforms so as to facilitate the effective implementation of sustainable
development strategies.
----Continued
active participation in international environment and development
cooperation. In today's world, a country could not fully ensure its economic
development and environmental protection without international exchanges and
cooperation. Through bilateral and multilateral cooperation in environment
across the world, it could introduce capital, advanced technology and
managerial expertise to enhance its capacity for sustainable development,
while assuming responsibilities and honoring commitments.
Mr. Chairman,
To realize global sustainable development is a common task for all countries.
Both developed and developing countries should undertake obligations.
However, developed countries should shoulder greater responsibilities. The
implementation of the global sustainable development strategies hinges, to a
considerable extent, upon the materialization of the principle of "common but
differentiated responsibilities" set forth at the Rio Conference (UNCED). In
the past decade, there have been both progress and setbacks in this regard.
Some commitments have not been honored in earnest. The Chinese Government
maintains that the international community should strive to make greater
headway in international cooperation on environment and development under the
continued guidance of this principle. Now we wish to make the following
appeal:
1. Efforts
should be made to enhance the capacity building of developing countries for
sustainable development. The international community should vigorously
support their efforts in taking their own road to development, so that the
diversified development of countries will help realize global sustainable
development strategies. Developed countries, while resolving their own
domestic environmental problems, should assist developing countries in such
areas as technical consultancy, personnel training and mechanism building. As
education plays a vital role in promoting sustainable development, the
international community should take effective action to help developing
countries improve their level of education so as to enhance the awareness and
the quality of the general public with regard to sustainable development.
2. Multiple
channels should be utilized to raise funds of all kinds for sustainable
development. Adequate financial resources are a prerequisite for the
implementation of Agenda 21 by various countries. Constrained by their level
of economic development, developing countries lack financial resources. We
hope that developed countries will honor their commitments by taking effective
action in respect of financing and technology transfer. At the International
Conference on Financing for Development held in Monterrey early this year,
gratifying progress was made on the question of giving financial assistance to
developing countries. It is hoped that the UN and other relevant
international agencies will step up coordination and ensure the
materialization of what was achieved at the conference.
3. Great
efforts should be made to boost international cooperation in science and
technology as well as trade. More exports from developing countries will help
spur economic development and lead to better protection of the environment.
It is imperative to remove restrictions currently imposed on exports from
developing countries under the pretext of environmental protection. It is
essential to fully understand the difficulties facing developing countries in
such fields as trade and technology transfer and to remove trade and technical
barriers.
Mr. Chairman,
To carry out the strategy of sustainable development involves the economy,
social development, population, resources, environment and many other fields.
We should cooperate with one another in all sincerity, stress practical
results and do a good job in every sector of work. Above all, we should give
priority to resolving such issues as poverty, hunger, shortage of water
resources, urban air pollution, soil erosion, energy and health, which are of
concern to the vast number of developing countries. The international
community should understand and support the reasonable requests of developing
countries on these issues. Otherwise it would be impossible to ultimately
achieve the goal of global sustainable development. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
67. PREMIER ZHU RONGJI OF THE STATE COUNCIL OF THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
CHINA ANNOUNCED CHINA'S APPROVAL OF THE KYOTO PROTOCOL
3 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.fmprc.gov.cn/eng/34867.html
The Premier of
the State Council of the People's Republic of China His Excellency Zhu Rongji
announced on September 3 at the World Summit on Sustainable Development, that
China has approved the Kyoto Protocol to the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change. The approval manifests China's positive stance
towards international environmental cooperation and world sustainable
development. The Permanent Representative of China to the United Nations
Ambassador Wang Yingfan deposited the instrument of approval of the Kyoto
Protocol with the UN Secretary-General on August 30. The Kyoto Protocol was
opened for signature on December 11, 1997. China signed the Protocol on May
29, 1998. The Chinese Government believes that the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change and its Kyoto Protocol set forth the fundamental
principles and provide an effective framework and a series of rules for
international cooperation in combating climate change, and as such they
deserve worldwide compliance. As Japan, the European Union and its member
states have ratified or approved the Protocol, China hopes that other
developed countries will ratify or approve the Protocol as soon as possible so
as to enable it to enter into force within this year. China is a low-income
developing country with a large population. Poverty eradication and economic
development are its top priorities. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Chinese
Government attaches great importance to climate change. In recent years, the
Chinese government at all levels has exerted tremendous efforts to address
this problem. China has made significant achievements in improving energy
efficiency, which has helped to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and
contributed considerably to the objective of the Convention. These
achievements have won worldwide recognition.
MEXICO
Presidents WSSD Web page:
http://www.presidencia.gob.mx/?Orden=Leer&Tipo=PP&Art=3618 and
http://www.presidencia.gob.mx/?Art=3595&Orden=Leer
Ministry of
Environment:
http://www.sre.gob.mx/cmds/
68. VICENTE FOX PROMOTES SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
4 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.presidencia.gob.mx/?P=243&Orden=Leer&Tipo=Ee&Art=3635
September 4,
2002, Mexico City.- President Vicente Fox has been able to boost various
agreements and international commitments in favor of sustainable development
for the world. Mexico's leader shared with other Heads of State and
representatives of international organizations his conviction that economic
growth can no longer be based on the abuse of natural resources or social
exclusion. "We require development with a human face, based on the fight
against poverty and environmental degradation", and he added that despite the
commitments adopted by the international community ten years ago, the
environment and natural resources continue to deteriorate alarmingly. As a
sign of his conviction and commitment to the path nations must take in their
search for development, Vicente Fox said that Mexico was the first country in
the Americas to ratify the Kyoto Protocol --an agreement established to reduce
the burning of fossil fuels and atmospheric emissions of the polluting gases
that cause global planet warming. He added that the Mexican State has
"stopped burning 70% of the natural gas associated with oil exploitation, we
have stopped emitting 6.3 million tons of carbon dioxide and sharply cut
emissions of methane". Mexico's leader also said that an exclusive maritime
zone has been decreed as a refuge for whales and dolphins, "converting our
country into the most extensive sanctuary in the world for these marvelous
marine mammals, protecting them from commercial exploitation and any other
activity that may threaten them." In the social field, he said the world must
fight to alleviate inequality and poverty in all regions of the globe,
especially in the less developed countries. "Without doubt, the foreign debt
of those countries constitutes one of the biggest impediments in their advance
towards sustainable development. We must deal with all these problems jointly,
and achieve a new world Alliance in favor of sustainable development", he
said. He also called for the protection, in an international legal framework
of equity and justice, of the biodiversity, culture and biological heritage of
indigenous communities, who are not acknowledged nor rewarded for their
contributions to natural knowledge and resources. "It must be clear to all of
us: the only way to protect and save the biological diversity of the world is
by directly benefiting the local and indigenous communities that, in spite of
inhabiting these areas of great natural resources, are generally the most
impoverished and marginalized inhabitants of the planet", he said. In his
participation at the "Future of Multilateralism" high-level dialogue --at the
side of the UN Secretary General and the President of South Africa--, Vicente
Fox affirmed that achieving these aims is going to be difficult with the
current world institutional structure, and said he was in favor of reforming
world financial organizations. "Financial institutions must be ever more
effective facilities for the promotion of sustainable development and
correction of the deep asymmetries among economies at different stages of
development". He said that according to the agreements reached at the
Monterrey Conference, the developed economies must make an effort to make
sustainability a global development model, while emerging nations must commit
themselves to applying resources more efficiently and transparently.
69. JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT BEGINS
26 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.presidencia.gob.mx/?Orden=Leer&Tipo=Ee&Art=3573
August 26,
2002, Mexico City. Today sees the start to the Johannesburg Summit, where
Mexico's President Fox will present an initiative for the creation of a block
of the countries most vulnerable to the climate change caused by the emission
of polluting gases. The block will ask those countries most responsible for
global warming to address the damage caused by droughts, hurricanes, and
floods, as well as to commit to seeking future development that does not
deplete the world's environmental resources. Mexico will ask the United
States, responsible for 25% of the world's greenhouse gases, to sign the Kyoto
Protocol, a binding international accord in the terms of which its members
must reduce the emission of pollutants. President Fox has said that he will
not only seek international agreement to reduce the emission of pollutants,
but that work must also begin on the task of confronting the effects world
pollution has created so far. Approximately 90 countries, mainly in the
Caribbean, Central America, and Southeast Asia, along with southern India and
80% of African nations, suffer the negative effects on the environment of the
abuse and misuse of natural resources most acutely, and face them with the
smallest budgets.
Mexico, the
first country in the Americas and the first OECD member to ratify the Kyoto
Protocol, will lead this block of the earth's countries most vulnerable to
climate change and will insist on the need for sustainable development "with a
human face", as President Fox calls it.
The summit
will also be an appropriate setting for Mexico's leader to reaffirm the need
for developed economies to make contributions to financing for development,
specifically targeting the poorest countries. As regards financing, President
Fox will also submit a proposal to private enterprises, especially those in
the energy sector, to set aside grant money for environmental projects and to
create the World Fund for Sustainable Development. Mexico will undertake to
achieve a significant increase in the use of renewable energies, planned to
reach 5% by 2010
RUSSAIN
FEDERATION
Internet:
http://www.ln.mid.ru/
70. ON OUTCOME OF WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN JOHANNESBURG
6 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.ln.mid.ru/bl.nsf/900b2c3ac91734634325698f002d9dcf/0d212b26dd6fafe943256c2c003feb63?OpenDocument
On September
4, the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) concluded its work in
Johannesburg. The forum had considered the results of the fulfillment of the
Agenda for the 21st Century, as adopted by the United Nations Conference on
Environment and Development in Rio de Janeiro in 1992, identified new global
challenges and determined priorities in further movement towards sustainable
development. Russia supports the commitment of the leaders of the
international community to the objectives of sustainable development and their
determination to build up joint efforts in this direction that were stated in
the documents adopted in Johannesburg - the Political Declaration and the Plan
of Implementation. The Chairman of the Government of the Russian Federation,
Mikhail Kasyanov, who headed the Russian delegation, set out Russia's position
on dealing with the most urgent global problems, and emphasized its
determining role in maintaining the global ecological equilibrium. Russia, he
said, will ratify the Kyoto Protocol in the near future. Kasyanov also noted
the efforts of our country to improve the terms of trade with developing
countries, and the measures taken by it to ease the debt burden of poorest
states. The forum in Johannesburg has demonstrated the comprehension by the
leaders of the world's states and the whole international community of the
essence of the mounting problems and challenges. At the same time the Summit
has also revealed the continuing differences in views on how to solve them.
This sets for the UN system and all the states of the world the task of
building up efforts after the summit in Johannesburg towards rapprochement of
positions and the deepening of mutual understanding and cooperation so as to
turn the decisions adopted by the WSSD into practical actions. Russia will
continue to assist these efforts in every possible way.
71. ON THE SPEECH MADE BY RUSSIAN PRIME MINISTER MIKHAIL KASYANOV AT THE
PLENARY SESSION OF THE WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN JOHANNESBURG
4 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.ln.mid.ru/bl.nsf/900b2c3ac91734634325698f002d9dcf/cfbb6aed762dda4743256c2a005dfae4?OpenDocument
Russia in the
near future intends to ratify the Kyoto Protocol, which means to limit the
emission into the air of harmful chemical substances, Mikhail Kasyanov, the
Chairman of the Russian Government, said as he spoke during the plenary
session of the World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg.
Russia has played and will continue to play a determining role in the
observance of the ecological balance on the planet, Kasyanov noted. In
particular, Russia currently ensures the preservation of almost 20 percent of
the world's fresh water and will readily provide the appropriate technologies
to developing countries. He also announced that in the autumn of 2003 a World
Conference on Climate Change will be held in Moscow on President Vladimir
Putin's initiative. The head of the Russian Government stressed that the
determinant factor in carrying out ecological policies is providing economic
foundations of independent, sustainable development for each state. He also
noted the necessity to remove the discrimination existing in trade with the
developing countries, reporting that Russia is already moving in this
direction by reducing the amounts of import duties and maintaining special
trade regimes with a number of Third World countries. In addition, Kasyanov
said that Russia as a member of the Big Eight is playing a serious role also
in resolving the debt crisis of developing countries. Since 1996 the volume of
this debt has been reduced by Russia by $35 billion, which is comparable with
the volume of the Third World debt write-off by all the other developed
countries. "Further efforts in this direction must be linked with the
conversion of the financial obligations of developing countries into
technologies relating to sustainable development and ecological projects,"
Kasyanov stressed. He announced that Russia is also planning to increase the
number of scholarships in the fields of education and medicine for students
from Third World countries. The Prime Minister expressed the confidence that
the outcome of the Johannesburg summit will attract the attention of all
mankind to the problem of sustainable development and make the modern world
more friendly and safer.
72. ON THE PARTICIPATION OF RUSSIAN PRIME MINISTER MIKHAIL KASYANOV IN THE
WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA
2 September 2002
Internet:
http://www.ln.mid.ru/bl.nsf/900b2c3ac91734634325698f002d9dcf/e3b9dc33b233566843256c29005a6f81?OpenDocument
Russia is
interested in the development of the countries of the African continent and
will render them assistance in the training of health and education
specialists, Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov told journalists. He is
taking part in the World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg,
South Africa. Speaking of assistance to the development of the economies of
the Third World countries, the head of the Government of Russia stressed that
our country is one of the largest donors. He noted that Russia has written off
African debts totaling 35 billion dollars, which constitutes approximately
half the whole amount written off by the other donor nations. Touching on the
course of the debate at the UN Summit on Sustainable Development, Kasyanov
said that its participants' vision practically coincides on all the issues. In
particular, according to him, the position of Russia fully coincides with the
opinion regarding the need to finance development projects in the fields of
environment and education, as well as access for goods from developing
countries to the markets of Europe and North America. He also said that soon
the Government of Russia at its meeting again intends to return to the
question of ratifying the Kyoto Protocol to fight the greenhouse effect.
ON THE WEB
ARGENTINA WSSD
WEB PAGE:
http://www.medioambiente.gov.ar/acuerdos/convenciones/johannesburgo/default.htm
PAKISTAN WSSD WEB PAGE:
http://www.wssd.gov.pk/index.htm
INDIAN WSSD WEB PAGE:
http://www.wssdindia.org