5 -
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Federal Ministry of Development Cooperation - BMZ). General Support for the
Bulletin during 2002 is provided by the Ministries of Foreign Affairs and
Environment of Finland, the Government of Australia, the Ministry of
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and Environment of Norway, Swan International, and the Japanese Ministry of
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If you like WSSD.info News, please thank them for their support.
1. ENVOYS FACE MORE MEETINGS TO SALVAGE
EARTH SUMMIT (Yahoo News 19 July 2002)
2. DEVELOPING NATIONS SUMMIT URGES U.S.
TO HELP (Associated Press 19 July 2002)
3. PLAN TO INCREASE ENVIRONMENTAL
AWARENESS USING CULTURE (Jamaica Observer 19 July 2002)
4. DEVELOPMENT-AFRICA: CIVIL SOCIETY
PREPARES FOR WORLD SUMMIT (Inter Press Service 18 July 2002)
5. OFFICIALS FROM 27 COUNTRIES REPORT
PROGRESS ON RESOLVING KEY ISSUES FOR UPCOMING POVERTY AND ENVIRONMENT SUMMIT
(Associated Press 18 July 2002)
6. US INCHING CLOSER TO CONSENSUS ON
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT (allAfrica.com 18 July 2002)
7. PREPARATIONS FOR THE WORLD SUMMIT ON
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: DANISH EU PRESIDENCY MEETING IN NEW YORK WITH SOUTH
AFRICAN MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS (Danish Presidency of the EU 18 July 2002)
8. BUSINESS URGED TO TAKE PART IN
SUMMIT (Business Day via All Africa 18 July 2002)
9. CASH FOR WSSD CIVIL SOCIETY FROM
CANADA (SABC News 18 July 2002)
10. REGIONAL MEETING LOOKS AT PROMOTING
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (Jordan Times 18 July 2002)
11. SOUTH AFRICA: EARTH SUMMIT AT RISK
(AENS 17 July 2002)
12. BRAZIL TO ESTABLISH WORLD'S LARGEST
RAINFOREST RESERVE (Agencia EFE S.A.17 July 2002)
13. MORE POVERTY THE ONLY FRUIT AS SA
EATS ITSELF (Independent Online 17 July 2002)
14. NGOS TO TAKE LEAD AT UN SUMMIT IN
JOHANNESBURG (Taipei Times 17 July 2002)
15. BRITAIN URGES JAPAN TO HELP RESOLVE
INDO-PAK. ROW The Hindu 17 July 2002
16. POVERTY TO TOP NAM AGENDA AT UN
SUMMIT (The Namibian (Windhoek) via All Africa 17 July 2002)
17. CIVIL SOCIETY PREPARES FOR WSSD (UN
Integrated Regional Information Networks via All Africa 17 July 2002)
18. FOREIGN MINISTER SEEKING PRE-WSSD
SUMMIT 'CONSENSUS' (All.Africa.com 17 July 2002)
19. DLAMINI-ZUMA TO SEEK RUSSIAN
ANALYSIS OF G8 AFRICA PLAN (BuaNews (Pretoria) via All Africa 17 July 2002)
20. STATES MUST SETTLE DIFFERENCES
BEFORE UN SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT - ANNAN (United Nations 17 July 2002)
21. WORLD'S LARGEST TENT ERECTED FOR
WORLD SUMMIT DELEGATES (SABC News 16 July 2002)
22. INCREASED WASTE OVERSHADOWS
RECYCLING SUCCESSES (The Yomiuri Shimbun 16 July 2002)
23. S KOREA ASKS JAPAN TO CUT IMPORT
TARIFFS ON 4 PRODUCTS –KYODO (Dow Jones 16 July 2002)
24. COMMERCE'S ALDONAS URGES NEW
THINKING ON TRADE (Washington File 16 July 2002)
25. WORLD'S POOREST NATIONS MOSTLY A
NO-SHOW AT FIJI SUMMIT (EuBusiness 16 July 2002)
26. UN MAKES FINAL TRY TO SAVE EARTH
SUMMIT (The Guardian 15 July 2002)
27. 'POOR PROSPECTS' FOR EARTH SUMMIT
(BBC 15 July 2002)
28. BUSH ADMINISTRATION MAY CAUSE
FAILURE OF ENVIRONMENTAL SUMMIT (Sierra Club 15 July 2002)
29. AFRICAN JOURNALISM INDABA JOINS
WORLD SUMMIT (East Cape News (Grahamstown) via All Africa 15 July 2002)
30. NET USERS SOUND OFF TO EARTH SUMMIT
(Ananova 15th July 2002)
31. SWEDISH PRIME MINISTER'S EMPLOYMENT
STATEMENTS CONFIRM KEY TRADE UNION PRIORITIES FOR POSITIVE WSSD OUTCOMES (ICFTU/TUAC
14 July 2002)
32. S&T CLIMBING ON MUSLIM COUNTRIES
AGENDA (Frontier Post 14 July 2002)
33. POWELL TO GO TO SOUTH AFRICAN
MEETING WITH MESSAGE OF HELPING REDUCE POVERTY AND GROW ECONOMIES (Associated
Press 12 July 2002)
34. LOBBYING FOR BUSH TO ATTEND THE
WORLD SUMMIT (IPS 12 July 2002)
35. LIB-DEMS CALL FOR ADDITIONAL
100,000 SOLAR ROOFS (Edie weekly summaries 12 July 2002)
36. UN STAGES 'RESCUE MISSION' TO HEAL
RIFT OVER EARTH SUMMIT (Independent 12 July 2002)
37. DLAMINI-ZUMA TO MEET POWELL ON WSSD
(South African Press Association via All Africa 11 July 2002)
38. SUMMIT PARTICIPANTS CAN PAY TO
OFFSET EMISSIONS (Environmental News Service 11 July 2002)
39. SCRAMBLE FOR CONSENSUS AS WORLD
SUMMIT LOOMS (Cape Argus 11 July 2002)
40. POVERTY, ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES TO
TOP NIGERIA'S AGENDA FOR WSSD: MINISTER (Xinhua News Agency 11 July 2002)
41. ARRANGEMENTS FOR WSSD PLEASING:
SHILOWA AND MAYORS (Office of the Premier, Gauteng 11 July 2002)
42. HUMANITY WILL PAY FOR ABUSE OF THE
ENVIRONMENT, WARNS (WWF Independent 10 July 2002)
43. UAE TO PUSH FOR ECOLOGY INITIATIVE
AT S. AFRICA MEET (Gulf News 10 July 2002)
44. WORLD LEADERS TO ATTEND U.N. SUMMIT
(Associated Press 10 July 2002)
45. BEHIND-THE-SCENE EFFORTS SEEK TO
BRIDGE DIFFERENCES OVER JOHANNESBURG OUTCOME: SUMMIT SEEN AS VITAL FOR FUTURE
OF MULTILATERALISM (United Nations 9 July 2002)
46. SOUTH AFRICA TO CONVENE FRIENDS OF
THE CHAIR MEETING TO HELP SPEED AGREEMENT ON JOHANNESBURG OUTCOME (United
Nations 9 July 2002)
47. GLOBAL STANDARD SOUGHT FOR
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION (The Yomiuri Shimbun 9 July 2002)
48. NGO DELEGATES TOLD TO PAY UP FOR
SUMMIT (Cape Times 8 July 2002)
49. JAPAN, EU AGREE ON CUTTING
GREENHOUSE GASSES, DEVELOPMENT AID AT SUMMIT (Associated Press 8 July 2002)
50. JAPAN AND EU DIFFER OVER
INTERNATIONAL AID: EU (EU Business 8 July 2002)
51. UN REPORT URGES AFRICA TO PROTECT
THE ENVIRONMENT (BuaNews via All Africa 8 July 2002)
52. COMMISSION TO SEEK MORE DEVELOPING
COUNTRY LINKS AT SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT (Cordis News 8 July 2002)
53. EARTH 'WILL EXPIRE BY 2050' (The
Observer 7 July 2002)
54. STRENGTHENED NEPAD OFFERS NEW HOPE
FOR WSSD SUCCESS (WWF International 5 July 2002)
55. EU AGENDA FOR THE WORLD SUMMIT ON
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT PUBLISHED (European Union 5 July 2002)
56. AFRICAN MINISTERIAL CONFERENCE ON
ENVIRONMENT CLOSES IN UGANDA (Xinhua News Agency 5 July 2002)
57. COMMISSION ANNOUNCES NEW CORPORATE
SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY STRATEGY TO PROMOTE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (EuropaWorld
5 July 2002)
EDITORIALS
58. RESPONSIBILITY VS. ACCOUNTABILITY
Counter viewpoint: Joshua Karliner and Kenny Bruno, CorpWatch, San Francisco
(International Herald Tribune 10 July 2002)
59. ROUTE TO JOHANNESBURG: RICH NATIONS
MUST CARE MORE FOR POOR NATIONS (The Asahi Shimbun 10 July 2002)
SPEECHES
60. WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT A 'TEST FOR MULTILATERALISM AND THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY', SAYS
SECRETARY-GENERAL (United Nations 17 July 2002)
61. ADDRESS BY PRESIDENT THABO MBEKI TO
THE 3RD SUMMIT OF THE ACP HEADS OF STATE AND GOVERNMENT, NADI FIJI (18 July
2002)
62. OPENING REMARKS BY H.E. DR. PER
STIG MØLLER, MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS, DENMARK World Summit on Sustainable
Development Friends of the Chair, (New York, 17 July 2002)
63. TEN PIECES OF ADVISE TO THE CHAIR
FOR THE JOHANNESBURG WSSD Opening remarks by H.E. Hans-Christian Schmidt,
Minister for the Environment, Denmark (17 July 2002)
64. MAKING SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
WORK: GOVERNANCE, FINANCE AND PUBLIC-PRIVATE COOPERATION Secretary Colin L.
Powell Remarks at State Department Conference, Meridian International Center
Washington, DC (12 July 2002)
65. THE EU AGENDA FOR THE WORLD SUMMIT
ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (European Union 1 July 2002)
ON THE WEB
66. ENVOYS MAKE HEADWAY AS JOHANNESBURG
SUMMIT NEARS (Reuters via Planet Ark 19 July 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16937/story.htm
67. EARTH SUMMIT MAY NOT YIELD CONCRETE
PLAN - US AIDE (Reuters via Planet Ark 18 July 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16920/story.htm
68. INTERVIEW - SOUTH AFRICA MINISTER
VOWS EARTH SUMMIT TO GO AHEAD (Reuters via Planet Ark 17 July 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16903/story.htm
69. EU, US SAY WANT CONCRETE RESULTS AT
EARTH SUMMIT (Reuters via Planet Ark 17 July 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16897/story.htm
70. SOUTH AFRICA, UN PRESS FOR EARTH
SUMMIT BLUEPRINT (Reuters via Planet Ark 12 July 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16829/story.htm
71. INTERVIEW - EARTH SUMMIT COLLAPSE
BETTER THAN TOOTHLESS PACT (Reuters via Planet Ark 12 July 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16811/story.htm
72. ANNAN URGES ACTION FOR EARTH SUMMIT
(Reuters via Planet Ark 10 July 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16780/story.htm
73. LIVING STANDARD SEEN SLUMPING AS
RESOURCES RUN OUT (Reuters via Planet Ark 10 July 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16777/story.htm
GENERAL NEWS
1. ENVOYS FACE MORE MEETINGS TO SALVAGE EARTH
SUMMIT
Yahoo News
19 July 2002
Internet:
http://in.news.yahoo.com/020719/64/1s7gd.html
JOHANNESBURG - Nations have moved closer to agreement
on a plan for eco-friendly development to be adopted at next month's global
summit in Johannesburg, and envoys may meet again just before the summit
begins, South African officials said on Thursday. "There is talk that smaller
meetings will start on August 24. But the official meeting will start as
scheduled on August 26," Thandi Davids, spokeswoman for the summit's
organizing company, told a media briefing. The World Summit on Sustainable
Development, to be held Aug. 26-Sept. 4 in Johannesburg, aims to hammer out a
detailed plan for global economic development that preserves the environment
while battling hunger and poverty. Envoys from a group of 27 countries
narrowed differences on the document on Wednesday at U.N. headquarters in New
York after preparatory talks in Bali, Indonesia, in June collapsed. The 27
were invited by South African President Thabo Mbeki. J.J. Tabane, the head of
communications in South Africa's environmental affairs and tourism ministry,
told Reuters that the New York meeting "had laid the basis for success...
opening up a possible early start for negotiators at the summit." U.N. and
South African officials said the New York talks made progress on some of the
most contentious issues. "There is more hope now than there was at the end of
Bali," South African Foreign Minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma said in New York.
"I do not see major differences in the positions of the delegations. It should
not take long to get an agreement in Johannesburg," Dlamini-Zuma said in a
statement. The envoys are trying to forge a conference declaration that all
189 U.N. member-nations can agree on. U.N. officials say so far delegations
have agreed on about 75 percent of the text.
Parts still under negotiation touch on fundamental
issues, such as setting of specific development targets and timetables for
achieving them, and the question of how to pay for the programs required to
achieve these goals. The Johannesburg summit also aims to lay out a path for
achieving the goals set at a U.N. Millennium summit. These include halving
world poverty and hunger, achieving universal primary education and halting
the spread of AIDS by 2015. Some critics say the summit is trying to solve too
many problems at one time -- an almost inevitable recipe for failure.
Representatives of the Group of Eight industrialized nations -- Britain,
Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia and the United States -- were
among those attending the New York meeting. Also present were Argentina,
Brazil, China, Denmark, Egypt, Ghana, India, Indonesia, Jamaica, Jordan,
Mexico, Nigeria, Norway, Samoa, Senegal, Spain, Sweden, Uganda and Venezuela.
2. DEVELOPING NATIONS SUMMIT URGES U.S. TO HELP
Associated Press
19 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.etaiwannews.com/Asia/2002/07/19/1027041835.htm
The leader of a major group of poor nations yesterday
called on the United States to use its wealth and power to fight poverty in
developing nations. Meeting at a tropical island resort near the Fijian town
of Nadi, the third summit of leaders from the 78-member African Caribbean
Pacific group is trying to build a unified front for crucial trade talks with
the European Union that begin Sept. 27. ACP member states, which comprise 650
million people, include the world's 40 poorest countries and some of its
tiniest and most fragile states. "Our people carry a large part of the world's
burdens," said Fiji's Prime Minister Laisenia Qarase, current ACP President.
Urging "the riches of the world to be spread with fairness," Qarase pointedly
thanked the European Union, Australia and New Zealand for favorable trade
deals in which they buy some exports from ACP nations at high prices without
ACP nations having to reciprocate. He contrasted their approach with that of
the United States, which would not agree to similar trade pacts. "When we look
to America we observe the most powerful country on earth at the peak of its
influence. With this comes enormous responsibility," Qarase said. "Will
America then consider forming the same kind of bonds with our 78 countries
that we have with Europe?" Milagros Ortiz Bosch, vice president of the
Dominican Republic, urged wealthy nations to consider the ways in which
globalization and the push for freer trade are affecting poor nations. But
Bosch also reminded the ACP states that they "need to improve their ability to
reap the benefits of this trade." Central to the summit and the September
trade talks is a bid by ACP members for compensation from the EU when it
abolishes favorable import quotas on ACP products such as sugar, rice and
bananas. Quotas on bananas will be phased out between 2002 and 2006, and sugar
and rice quotas will be phased out from 2006 to 2009. EU Trade Commissioner
Pascal Lamy told the leaders that Europe is looking for new types of
agreements with ACP members that link trade with aid, but said Brussels would
continue to give "generous access" to European markets. ACP Secretary-General
Jean Robert Goulongana urged European nations to ratify a 25-year agreement
signed with his member states which links trade, human rights and efforts to
root out corruption with 13.5 billion euros (US$12.7 billion) in aid over the
next five years. The much-needed aid money cannot flow until all European
countries have ratified the agreement signed two years ago.
3. PLAN TO INCREASE ENVIRONMENTAL AWARENESS USING
CULTURE
Jamaica Observer
19 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/html/20020718T180000-0500_29054_OBS_PLAN_TO_INCREASE_ENVIRONMENTAL_AWARENESS_USING_CULTURE.asp
THE first of two workshops being staged to heighten
environmental awareness among Caribbean nationals opened in Kingston Wednesday
with environmental professionals and artistes sharing ideas on how to use
popular culture as an educational vehicle.
Conference organisers, the Caribbean Regional
Environmental Programme (CREP), say they intend to utilise the talents of an
estimated 50 artistes from Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, Antigua, St Lucia,
The Bahamas, Belize, St Kitts, Dominica and Barbados in the programme. Charges
like "Culture is mostly a human adaptation to one's natural environment" and
"many people are not aware of the social and economic risks involved if the
environment is further depleted" were the logic of the day at the Jamaica
Conference Centre. Franklin McDonald, guest speaker and executive director of
the National Environment and Planning Agency (NEPA), noted the influence and
scope that artistes command in the region, and the benefits of using popular
culture in conveying the message of environmental organisations. He cited
NEPA's own use of local artiste Lovindeer in crafting an environmental song in
the past. Yesterday, the artistes were expected to formulate ideas, having
heard the environmental experts from the previous day. Presenter Winston Wirht,
of Wirht Consultancy Services, challenged the artistes "to show the trap of
excessive consumption, which is tied to the ideology of unlimited economic
growth as the solution to our problem".
He was alluding to the problems of the region's
consumption desires which are beyond the carrying capacity of the environment.
Artistes deemed eligible to produce what is being
termed 'envirocultural products' will be granted money to complete their work
for release in January 2003. Cathel Healy Sing, CREP programme manager,
quelled possible fears of insufficient funds, saying that 600,000 euros was
allocated to the artistes and that more cash would be generated from that
initial amount. "One needs money to make more money," Sing said. CREP is a
programme designed to strengthen regional integration through the awareness of
environmental issues in the Caribbean Forum of ACP States (CARIFORUM). It
seeks to demonstrate that the region's natural resources and biodiversity can
be better protected. CREP was implemented through the Caribbean Conservation
Association with a budget of approximately 8,900,000 euros. The conference
will continue in Trinidad and Tobago next week and is a forerunner to next
month's Environmental World Summit in South Africa where approximately 64,000
international delegates, including over 100 heads of government are expected
to gather. Sing said that if the artistes' creativity was stimulated, then the
conference would be a success.
4. DEVELOPMENT-AFRICA: CIVIL SOCIETY PREPARES FOR
WORLD SUMMIT
Inter Press Service
18 July 2002
Internet:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/oneworld/20020718/wl_oneworld/1032_1026994213
JOHANNESBURG, Jul 17 (IPS) - The Pan African
Conference of Civil Society Organizations will be looking for alternatives to
the New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD) - a program to kick-start
the economic and social development of the continent - during its meeting in
Abidjan, Cote d'Ivoire. The conference, which runs from Wednesday to Friday
(Jul 17-19), is being held to develop a political declaration and program of
action for African civil society organizations, ahead of the World Summit on
Sustainable Development (WSSD), scheduled to be held in South Africa in
August. The WSSD will look at ways to ease global poverty while protecting the
environment and conserving the world's natural resources. African civil
society is likely to insist that the WSSD must focus on ways to alleviate
poverty on the continent - if it wants to protect the environment, says Nzwana
Konco, the Africa Process Manager for the Global Forum - the meeting of
international community and non-governmental organizations at the summit. The
top issues for African civil society are poverty alleviation, access to water
and land for the poor, and the ending of hunger and conflict on the continent.
''We've included protecting the environment and other issues, but they are not
as prominent,'' explains Konco. The civil society declaration is also likely
to be very critical of NEPAD. African civil society has insisted that they
have not been thoroughly consulted about the program. South African President,
Thabo Mbeki - one of the driving forces behind NEPAD -- has acknowledge that
there could have been better consultation with civil society about the
program. However, he has sharply criticized them for not coming-up with
practical ideas on how to improve it, or what they will do to develop the
continent. Konco says African civil society organizations will be working out
practical alternatives at their conference - and these will be ready in time
for the WSSD. However, he points out that civil society is more concerned
about who will be funding NEPAD. In terms of the program, African countries
have to commit themselves to good political and economic governance in return
for better trade and aid deals from the developed economies. African civil
society fears that this will put the European Union ( news - web sites) (EU)
and the United States in a position to use their trade and aid packages to
force African governments to adopt conservative economic policies - which
normally include cutting spending on social development services. The chances
are that the African civil society conference will reject NEPAD - in its
present form. Many civil society environmentalists and economists are also
concerned that NEPAD is focusing on mega-infrastructure development projects
for the continent - often considered bad for the environment and not
financially sustainable. Standard Bank chief economist, Iraj Abedian, believes
the planned infrastructure is a necessity for economic and social development
of Africa. ''Unless Africa can compete in the global economy, there is not
going to be any economic growth or social development - and the two cannot be
separated,'' he says. He adds that it is inevitable that the development
projects must take place on a continent-wide scale. ''Africa was chopped up
into countries by colonial powers without any regard to economic
considerations. We need to look at the continent and see what makes economic
sense - and then development can filter down to smaller regional and district
blocs,'' he explains. In the meantime, Mbeki is one of a handful of heads of
state that has turned-up for the Third Summit of the African, Caribbean and
Pacific (ACP) Group of States. The ACP is meeting in Fiji from Jul 18 to Jul
19. South Africa sees the ACP Summit as an opportunity to further consolidate
the positions of the developing countries on ACP-European Union trade
negotiations, the WSSD, NEPAD and the use of subsidies on agricultural
products by the EU and the United States. The ACP is important for NEPAD
because it includes 48 Sub-Saharan African countries. There are also 16
Caribbean and 15 Pacific States in the grouping. South Africa's foreign
economic policy - which includes NEPAD - is attempting to secure access to the
markets of wealthy countries for goods and services from the developing world,
and boosting trade between ACP, South American and Asian countries.
5. OFFICIALS FROM 27 COUNTRIES REPORT PROGRESS ON
RESOLVING KEY ISSUES FOR UPCOMING POVERTY AND ENVIRONMENT SUMMIT
Associated Press
18 July 2002
Internet:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20020718/ap_wo_en_po/un_development_summit_1
UNITED NATIONS - High-level officials from 27
countries reported Thursday that they made progress in resolving key issues
ahead of next month's U.N. summit aimed at cutting poverty and protecting the
environment. The most important achievement of Wednesday's day-long meeting
"was the conclusion among many delegates that it was possible to reach an
agreement on the outstanding issues," said South Africa's U.N. Ambassador
Dumisani Kumalo. South African President Thabo Mbeki invited the 27 rich and
poor nations to suggest ways to clear up issues unresolved at the last meeting
of the commission preparing for the World Summit on Sustainable Development in
Johannesburg from Aug. 26 to Sept. 4. The summit is taking place 10 years
after the "Earth Summit" in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, first focused global
attention on the need to preserve the environment, but it has a broader
agenda. U.N. officials expect about 100 world leaders to attend. At the final
preparatory meeting in Bali, Indonesia, negotiators from nearly 200 countries
reached agreement on 75 percent of the blueprint for the next decade to
promote development and preserve the environment - including giving priority
to water and sanitation, energy, health, agriculture and biodiversity. But the
most difficult issues weren't resolved. The officials at Wednesday's meeting
tackled the sticky questions - including whether there should be timetables
and targets for action on issues ranging from sanitation to renewable energy
and how to address trade, finance, good government and access to technology
for developing countries. South Africa's U.N. Mission said in a statement
Thursday that the discussions "demonstrated that there was sufficient
flexibility in finding consensus on the outstanding differences." There was a
consensus that the princples adopted at the Earth Summit should be reaffirmed,
and that agreements reached at the World Trade Organization meeting in Doha,
Qatar, in November and at the U.N. aid financing conference in Monterrey,
Mexico, in March should not be reopened, the statement said. "On certain other
issues like targets and timetables, the dialogue helped by narrowing or more
clearly defining the differences," the statement said. "On trade and finance
issues, there seemed to be a broad measure of agreement and the differences
that remain seemed to be capable of resolution." Participants at Wednesday's
meeting included representatives from the seven major industrialized nations
and Russia, the European Union and countries from Africa, Asia, Latin America
and the south Pacific.
6. US INCHING CLOSER TO CONSENSUS ON SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT
allAfrica.com
18 July 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200207180784.html
High-level officials from 27 nations who met in New
York Wednesday at the urging of South African president Thabo Mbeki, say
outstanding differences between developing nations and the U.S., Canada,
Australia and other industrial countries could now be bridged at the upcoming
World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD). "I left the meeting with the
belief that there is no reason to believe we will not be able to finalize the
outstanding issues when we get to Johannesburg," South African Environmental
Affairs Minister, Valli Moosa, told allAfrica.com. "Of course, keep in mind we
were not negotiating [here in New York] and sometimes the devil is in the
details." The WSSD will seek ways to reduce global poverty while protecting
the environment and conserving the world's natural resources. Anxious to chair
a smooth summit, Mbeki fostered creation of this "Friend of the Chair"
gathering during the G8 summit in Kananaskis, Canada last month. Developing
nations have been pushing for financial specificity on development goals and
for discussion on lowering trade barriers to expand market access. Developing
nations also want targets established for dealing with sanitation and water.
You cannot talk about "sustainable development" without tackling these issues,
they say. The U.S. and its allies, however, say this would reopen agreements
reached at the World Trade Organization meeting in Doha, Qatar and the summit
on financial development held in Monterrey, Mexico. "The US mantra was, 'no
new targets'," said one South African official participating in the New York
meeting. "We don't want to reopen the Doha consensus, but we do want a
reference to this." But both sides agree that "the tone has changed". The
recent fourth WSSD "Preparatory Conference" that was held in Bali, Indonesia
ended in bitter, unresolved dispute. The New York discussions "were
characterized by a constructive attitude and demonstrated that there was
sufficient flexibility in finding consensus on the outstanding differences,"
said South Africa's Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Dumisani
Kumalo in a statement, Thursday. "Everybody, those from the developed
countries and we, ourselves, was displaying a new spirit of constructiveness
which did not exist at Bali," said Valli Moosa. "It doesn't mean people agree,
but it is a good sign," he added. The New York meeting reaffirmed the
principles of the Earth Summit held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, a decade ago,
and "narrowed" the dialogue on timetables and targets. According to the South
African UN Mission in its statement, agreements reached at Doha and Monterrey
will not be reopened. "On trade and finance issues, there seemed to be a broad
measure of agreement and the differences that remained seemed to be capable of
resolution." Meanwhile in Johannesburg the Pan African Conference of Civil
Society Organizations has been meeting since Wednesday and says it is looking
for alternatives to Nepad which South African President Thabo Mbeki wants
adopted as the sustainable development program for Africa. A spokesperson for
the group told Inter Press service that it will have a political declaration
and program of action ready before the start of the WSSD.
7. PREPARATIONS FOR THE WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT: DANISH EU PRESIDENCY MEETING IN NEW YORK WITH SOUTH AFRICAN
MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS
Danish Presidency of the EU
18 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.eu2002.dk/news/news_read.asp?iInformationID=21009
The Danish Minister for Foreign Affairs, Mr. Per Stig
Møller, and the Danish Minister for the Environment, Mr. Hans Christian
Schmidt, had an early morning meeting with the South African Minister of
Foreign Affairs, Mr. Nkosana Dlamini Zuma, in New York on 17 July. The
occasion was the meeting the same day of the so-called "Friends of the Chair"
group, which South Africa and the UN Secretary-General, Mr. Kofi Annan, had
convened to discuss what further action should be taken to resolve the
outstanding issues relating to the World Summit on Sustainable Development,
which is due to commence in Johannesburg on 26 August 2002. The message
conveyed by the two Danish Ministers to the South African Minister of Foreign
Affairs, Mr. Zuma, was that they had come to participate in the informal
"Friends of the Chair" meeting, not in order to negotiate the wording of
documents, but to assist South Africa in taking the process forward to a
successful conclusion in Johannesburg. The Danish Ministers stressed that the
EU is well prepared for the Johannesburg Summit and that the EU in general has
ambitious goals regarding sustainable development. The Ministers confirmed
that the EU stands by the commitments it undertook at the WTO Ministerial
Conference in Doha and at the UN Financing for Development Conference in
Monterrey.
Viewed from the EU's perspective, the disagreements
relating to the Johannesburg Summit primarily concern those between the USA
and the developing countries (G77). On this basis, the Danish Ministers
indicated to South Africa that the EU is prepared to assume the role of
mediator in relation to the World Summit, provided the EU is requested to do
so by the host country and/or G77. South African Minister of Foreign Affairs
Zuma reacted positively to the Danish EU Presidency's offer of support.
8. BUSINESS URGED TO TAKE PART IN SUMMIT
Business Day
18 July 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FC20020718370000275.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
Johannesburg, Jul 18, 2002 (Business Day/All Africa
Global Media via COMTEX) -- FAILURE by business to be present in significant
numbers at the World Summit on Sustainable Development would render the
private sector ineffective and leave it isolated while others took crucial
decisions at the summit, Business Co-ordinating Forum chairman Tokyo Sexwale
said yesterday. He said although the summit was a gathering of world leaders,
business should play an important role. "There have been views that
governments alone cannot shoulder the responsibility for ensuring sustainable
development. Business, while being part of the problem, is increasingly being
seen as part of the solution," Sexwale said. He said business should challenge
the world on commitment to openness and good business governance. SA had
exceptional opportunities to showcase its products and services, many of which
were unique, Sexwale said. The forum consists of representatives from all
major business organisations and was established to co-ordinate and promote
business initiatives in preparation for the summit. The country would host a
business week from August 30 to September 2 as a parallel event to the summit,
said Liz Hart, RAI SA project organiser, yesterday. Hart said business week,
to be held at Gallagher Estate, had been accredited by the Johannesburg World
Summit Company, a government agency organising the United Nations summit. She
said business was partnering the summit in creating a path of sustainable
growth and development for Africa. Business week would consist of four
exhibitions. The exhibitions would explore trade opportunities with foreign
countries. In all 24 countries, including SA's biggest trade partners Germany
and Britain, would be represented by their foreign trade offices and
embassies, Hart said. The exhibition would also promote foreign direct
investment in various national and provincial investment agencies. It would
also help foreign business explore business links with public-private sector
partnerships, such as the Blue IQ. Blue IQ is a public-private initiative to
fund and promote strategic investment in Gauteng, which has been allocated
R1,7bn by the provincial government. The black economic empowerment exhibition
would create a vital platform for black business to show its products and
services to business decision makers.
9. CASH FOR WSSD CIVIL SOCIETY FROM CANADA
SABC News
18 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.sabcnews.com/world/summit/0,1009,38876,00.html
The Canadian government has donated more than R1,5
million to the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) Civil Society
Secretariat to enable NGOs to build a consensus before the Johannesburg
summit. The donation will be used to hold four provincial and one national
workshop in South Africa before the WSSD in August. Two sector specific
workshops for the youth and indigenous groups will be sponsored, because
Canada considers the participation of civil society central to making the
summit inclusive and representative. The workshops will enable South African
NGOs to play a leading role during the summit on issues such as Agenda 21,
Women and Development, Nepad and Globalisation. The donation will strengthen
the Secretariat's ability to co-ordinate the involvement of African and
International NGOs in the WSSD preparatory processes and to ensure an
effective communication strategy to make the voice of civil society heard.
10. REGIONAL MEETING LOOKS AT PROMOTING SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT
Jordan Times
18 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.jordantimes.com/Thu/homenews/homenews7.htm
AMMAN (Petra) - Minister of Municipal and Rural
Affairs and the Environment Abdul Razzaq Tbeishat on Wednesday opened a
regional meeting to discuss environmental and sustainable development issues
related to the Arab region with a call on Arab states to respect relevant
resolutions passed at recent meetings in Tunisia and Bahrain. During the
talks, Arab countries endorsed measures in the fight against poverty,
transferring modern technology to their countries and better managing natural
resources, said the minister, who deputised for Her Majesty Queen Rania at the
opening session. Addressing the delegates representing 14 Arab countries,
Tbeishat said Third World countries are focused on improving the living
standards of their societies, ensuring sufficient potable water resources and
meeting their people's needs for food and medicine. He said the rich
industrialised nations, which represent only 20 per cent of the world's
population and enjoy 80 per cent of the world's resources, should help poor
nations meet people's basic needs. In their two-day meeting, the delegates are
scheduled to discuss and prepare a regional paper on the relevant issues to be
submitted to the UN-sponsored Earth Summit due to take place in Johannesburg,
South Africa next month
11. SOUTH AFRICA: EARTH SUMMIT AT RISK
AENS.
17 July 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FE20020717720000082.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
JOHANNESBURG, Jul 17, 2002 (AENS via COMTEX) --
Concern is mounting over the possible non-attendance of key world leaders at
the World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg next month. The
Unites States, Japan, Canada, Australia and New Zealand have yet to commit the
attendance of their heads of state, threatening to scupper the credibility of
the summit.
The European Commission is the most powerful
territorial body to have committed itself to the WSSD to date, saying it
viewed the summit in a "very serious light" and would send at least 70
delegates. South African National Assembly environmental affairs and tourism
committee chairwoman Gwen Mahlangu told local media this week, however, that
the summit's noble goals were at risk unless key industrialised countries
committed themselves to attending. "We have very little time at our disposal
to bring these important countries on board," she warned. Environmental
affairs and tourism director-general Chippy Olver earlier briefed the
committee on a contentious presummit conference in Bali that ended in
disagreement between the developed northern hemisphere countries and poorer
nations of the south over issues of trade and finance. Olver said many heads
of state had held back on a final decision. "If we leave industrialised
countries out I don't see the summit achieving most of the issues they want
to," said Mahlangu. Roughly 90 heads of state have so far given tentative
confirmations that they might attend, with only 30 heads of state definitely
confirming . President Thabo Mbeki has meanwhile announced a personal
initiative to avert the threatened failure of the summit.
12. BRAZIL TO ESTABLISH WORLD'S LARGEST RAINFOREST
RESERVE
Agencia EFE S.A.
17 July 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FC20020717770000149.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
Brasilia, Jul 17, 2002 (EFE via COMTEX) -- Brazil is
to be home to the world's largest rainforest reserve, comprising an area
larger than the total land mass of Belgium, President Fernando Henrique
Cardoso said. "Tumucumaque Park represents our commitment to preserve a
significant percentage of our territory," Cardoso said Tuesday. Environment
Ministry spokespersons said the reserve would occupy almost 3.9 million
hectares (9.6 million acres), less than half of 1 percent of Brazil's 850
million hectares (2.1 billion acres) but an area larger than Belgium's 3
million hectares. Tumucumaque Park is to be inaugurated in August in the
northern state of Amapa and border French Guyana and Suriname. Cardoso said
the creation of the reserve stems from Agenda 21, a set of proposals that
emerged from the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro The agenda includes
measures aimed at countering pollution and at contributing to environmentally
sustainable development. Cardoso also said during the ceremony that he would
be pleased if every nation were to approve the 1997 Kyoto Protocol on climate
change prior to the 2002 U.N. World Summit on Sustainable Development, to be
held Aug. 26 to Sept. 4 in Johannesburg. The Kyoto Protocol is a treaty that
seeks to reduce the emissions of greenhouse gases blamed for global warming.
The United States, the world's top polluter, has refused to sign the measure.
Cardoso also said he hoped the Johannesburg meeting
"would not be dominated by the issue of poverty," adding that it was important
to also discuss the environment and sustainable development. The president
said South America would recommend that 10 percent of the energy used
worldwide come from renewable sources, a proposal he said was first floated by
Brazil.
13. MORE POVERTY THE ONLY FRUIT AS SA EATS ITSELF
Independent Online
17 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.itechnology.co.za/index.php?click_id=31&art_id=qw1026913321360B251&set_id=1
South Africans are devouring forests, grassland, fish
and food stocks faster than they are being replaced, says a new report
released on Wednesday by the World Wide Fund for Nature and the Endangered
Wildlife Trust. The report comes as South Africa is set to host a major global
summit on the environment next month and said the country has lost 46 percent
of its forests, 62 percent of its grassland, and more than 90 percent of its
original mangroves. Almost 10 percent of the country's plant species are
threatened with extinction, it added. South Africa is home to 227 mammal, 800
bird and over 23 000 plant species. But the report warned that the impact of
high consumption went beyond threats to flora and fauna. "Current water usage
by the human population in the Western Cape... will outstrip storage capacity
within 30 years," it said. Such scenarios, it said, would impact heavily on
the poor and deliver a blow to the fight against poverty. Using an index
measured in what the report called global hectares of "biologically productive
space" it showed South Africans were consuming natural resources at an average
rate of four global hectares per person per year. But biological productive
capacity was only 2,4 hectares per capita per year. "This means that South
Africa is currently exceeding the available biological capacity by more than
40 percent. We need to reduce this to zero before we can say that we are on a
sustainable path of development," it said. The report said "...a doubling of
the country's population over the past 30 years has resulted in a halving of
the amount of biological resources available per person". The report comes
less than six weeks ahead of the UN-sponsored World Summit on Sustainable
Development (WSSD), to be held in Johannesburg from August 26 to September 4.
Dubbed Earth Summit 2, it is a follow-up to the first mega-environment
conference in Rio de Janeiro 10 years ago and hopes to map out concrete
strategies to reduce poverty without inflicting irreparable harm to the
planet. The sustainable use of natural resources and protection of
biodiversity will be high on the summit's agenda.
14. NGOS TO TAKE LEAD AT UN SUMMIT IN JOHANNESBURG
Taipei Times
17 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.taipeitimes.com/news/2002/07/17/story/0000148555
STAND-INS: With Taipei excluded, NGOs are preparing to
play a leading role at events surrounding the upcoming World Summit on
Sustainable Development in South Africa
Aware of the diplomatic difficulties in the way of
Taiwan's participation in the UN's World Summit on Sustainable Development
(WSSD), being held next month in Johannesburg, South Africa, both
non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and the government are groping for a way
into one of its parallel events -- the Civil Society Global Forum. The
upcoming WSSD, from Aug. 26 to Sept. 4, is to be held on the the 10th
anniversary of the 1992 Rio Earth Summit, when the international community
adopted Agenda 21, an unprecedented global plan of action for sustainable
development. "Taiwan is a UN outsider. ... Let's face it and find a way out."
Lee Chia-lun, project manager of Taiwan Agenda 21Ten
years on, the Johannesburg Summit will bring together leaders of nations,
industry, NGOs and others to hash out concrete steps and identify quantifiable
targets for implementing Agenda 21.
Since Taiwan's government will not be permitted to
voice any of its views at the main WSSD conference, activists said, Taiwanese
NGOs should try harder to build international connections through unofficial
channels. For this reason, Taiwanese activists regard the Civil Society Global
Forum, scheduled to run from Aug. 19 to Sept. 4, as an excellent opportunity
to publicize Taiwan. The forum is slated to host approximately 60,000
delegates from around the world "The UN should pay more attention to Taiwan's
NGOs," said Sam Lin , head of the Ecology Conservation Alliance. "The degree
of NGO development in a country reflects its degree of democracy." Since
April, dozens of groups, with a diverse variety of missions, have been
integrated into a Taiwan NGO delegation named Taiwan Action NGOs (TANGOs),
which plans to systematically deliver messages pertaining to Taiwan's efforts
in sustainable development at forum. "Taiwan is a UN outsider," said Lee
Chia-lun , project manager of Taiwan Agenda 21, a member of the TANGOs. "Let's
face it and find a way out." At the forum, according to Lee, TANGOs will
establish four stands, where local grassroots activists, ranging from
anti-nuclear to forest preservation and endangered species protection, will
have multi-media displays with documentation in English. In addition, Lee
said, 25 TANGOs delegates would attend events held by influential foreign NGOS
such a the US Earth Island Institute, the Global Greens and Friends of Earth.
Juju Wang , a sociology professor at National Tsing Hwa University and one of
the 25 delegates, said that Taiwan has some distance in promoting sustainable
development, such as passing the Environmental Impact Assessment Law.
"However, we have to make our voices heard, informing others that Taiwan is
pursuing the same goals as they are," Wang said, adding that aggressive
participation would eventually pay off for Taiwan in the international
community. The TANGOs ideas to publicize Taiwan, however, do not include
better ways of raising funds.
Encouraged by the Cabinet's committee for promoting
sustainable development, which is run by Minister Without Portfolio Yeh
Jiunn-rong the TANGOs listed the government as one of its potential donors in
June. In doing so, the TANGOs were acting in accordance with Agenda 21, which
mentions that the UN and governments should initiate a process, in
consultation with NGOs, to review formal procedures and mechanisms for the
involvement of these organizations at all levels, from policy-making and
decision-making to implementation. Months of communication resulted in a
NT$2.3 million allocation to cover expenses of the activists' trip to South
Africa, according to the Environmental Protection Administration (EPA), the
secretariat of the government's task force for the WSSD. With the TANGOs
struggling to raise funds from the private sector, however, some in the local
media wonder whether local NGOs have lost their independence, something
essential for any NGO. Tu Wen-ling co-chair of the Taiwan Environmental Action
Network, a US-based environmental group composed of Taiwanese overseas
students and environmentalists, denied the charges, saying the government's
preparation for the WSSD was actually driven by the TANGOs.
"Our `Ten Years On' series of workshops held by the
TANGOs is to condense the views of civil society into a basis for people to
monitor the government," Tu said. The two-month long "Ten Years On" series
launched in June uses Agenda 21 as a basis to review Taiwan's handling of a
number of issues over the past decade, including controlling chemical
toxicants, water resources management, ecological preservation, the relation
between women and the environment, energy policies and the establishment of a
new partnership with Aboriginal people. Lai Wei-chieh , secretary-general of
the Green Citizens' Action Alliance, a Taipei-based anti-nuclear group and a
TANGOs member, said that NGOs are destined to be opposed to much of government
policy, regardless of any recent support from Taipei. It is a shame that
Taiwan's government rarely considers its diplomatic strategies from the
environmental angle, Lai said. "Even now," Lai said, "the government has no
strategy for the WSSD."
For NGOs, Lai told the Taipei Times, learning and
exchanging experiences with counterparts from other countries is more
important. Government officials, however, said the idea of incorporating the
strengths of all sectors of civil society into the government deserves
encouragement. "There are two kinds of NGOs," said Roam Gwo-dong, Director of
the EPA's Science and Technology Consulting Office. "One builds a partnership
with the government, while the other refuses to take a cent from the
government in order to ensure their independence." Roam stressed that a focus
of Agenda 21 is to strengthen the roles of different sectors of the
population, including women, children and youth, indigenous people, NGOs,
local authorities, workers, business and industry, scientific and
technological community, and farmers. Roam said that governmental officials,
including former EPA head Chang Lung-sheng would present academic articles at
workshops at the forum, in the name of representatives of NGOs. "We officials
will also enter the main conference of the WSSD [as representatives of NGOs]
to gather information about adopting concrete steps for better implementation
of Agenda 21 in Taiwan," Roam said. Eric Liou (secretary-general of the
Environmental Quality Protection Foundation which is not a TANGOs member, told
the Taipei Times that his group took no money from the government but would
work with government officials to raise Taiwan's profile at the main
conference of the WSSD.
15. BRITAIN URGES JAPAN TO HELP RESOLVE INDO-PAK.
ROW
The Hindu
17 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/holnus/01171810.htm
Tokyo, July 17. (PTI): Two days before his visit to
India, the British Foreign Secretary, Jack Straw, today urged Japan to play a
role in international efforts to settle the simmering tension between India
and Pakistan. Straw made the call during talks with Prime Minister Junichiro
Koizumi at the Premier's office in downtown Tokyo, a Japanese Foreign Ministry
official said. Straw told Koizumi that international efforts to ease tensions
between India and Pakistan had stumbled recently. (Reuters photo shows Jack
Straw, left, speaking during a joint news conference with Japanese Foreign
Minister Yoriko Kawaguchi.) Koizumi voiced his support for British involvement
in the problem, saying Britain has substantial influence on the two rivals,
the official said. Straw and Koizumi also discussed global efforts aimed at
facilitating sustainable global growth and how to boost Japan- Britain ties.
Straw also conveyed the British Prime Minister, Tony Blair's hope that the
Japanese leader will attend the World Summit on Sustainable Development in
Johannesburg in late August. Koizumi responded that he is now looking into
joining the summit, adding he believes it is important to make environmental
conservation and development compatible, the official said.
16. POVERTY TO TOP NAM AGENDA AT UN SUMMIT
The Namibian (Windhoek) via All Africa
17 July 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200207170259.html
POVERTY eradication, improved sanitation, land reform,
land degradation and employment creation are among the key issues to be tabled
for discussion by the Namibian delegation at the United Nations Summit on
Sustainable Development. The summit takes place in Johannesburg, South Africa,
from August 26 to September 4. Co-ordinator of Namibia's preparatory
committee, Anna Matroos, said yesterday that her committee had also developed
a national assessment report on challenges in achieving sustainable
development. "The report has been finalised and has been submitted to
Cabinet," she said. Namibia's slogan for the summit is 'Namibians Acting and
Striving with Vision for a Sustainable Future'. Members of Namibia's
preparatory committee are drawn from the Desert Research Foundation, which is
the secretariat, the Ministry of Environment and Tourism, which is the leading
agency, and Namibia Non-governmental Organisation (Nangof). The summit will
bring together heads of state, leaders from NGOs, businesses and other major
groups to focus the world's attention on actions to achieve sustainable
development.
17. CIVIL SOCIETY PREPARES FOR WSSD
UN Integrated Regional Information Networks via All
Africa
17 July 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200207170639.html
African civil society groups began a three-day meeting
on Wednesday in Abidjan, Cote d'Ivoire, to forge a common agenda for the World
Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD). The summit is to be held from 26
August to 4 September in Johannesburg, South Africa. The Abidjan meeting is
also aimed at working out a joint vision of sustainable development in Africa.
Organised under the auspices of the African Development Bank, the Network for
Environment and Sustainable Development in Africa, and the African Civil
Society Steering Committee for WSSD, it plans to examine key themes identified
during previous preparatory meetings and conferences. These include ending
poverty - considered the greatest challenge facing African governments and
worsened by the emergence of HIV/AIDS, the need for African civil society to
make inputs into the New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD),
governance, the management of natural resources, financing sustainable
development, and the relationship between Africa and globalisation. Ivorian
Minister for Environment Gilbert Bleu-Laine, who declared the conference open,
urged participants to look beyond the immediate objectives and seek
"strategies that will help develop other sectors in Africa" in addition to the
environment.
18. FOREIGN MINISTER SEEKING PRE-WSSD SUMMIT
'CONSENSUS'
All.Africa.com
17 July 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200207170149.html
Tough, unresolved issues keep the United States,
European Union, Canada, Japan and Australia far apart from developing nations,
a month before an "Earth Summit" formally called the World Summit on
Sustainable Development (WSSD), that will bring some 100 world leaders and
60,000 participants to Johannesburg. South Africa's foreign Minister Nkosazana
Dlamini-Zuma will chair an "informal" New York meeting of representatives from
25 countries today in an effort to bridge the gap of differences.
Last Friday, she met with U.S. Secretary of State
Colin Powell, who in a statement said he plans to attend the WSSD and stress
partnerships involving governments, civil society and the private sector. "We
will also carry the message that sustainable development must begin at home,
with sound policies and good governance," said Powell. Today's New York
meeting, being held at the request of South African president Thabo Mbeki,
grew out of discussions between Mbeki and UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan
during the G8 summit in Kananaskis, Canada last month, according to a United
Nations press release. It "is part of intensified behind-the-scenes [efforts]
aimed at building a framework for finding agreement on the remaining
outstanding issues."
According to U.N. Undersecretary-General Nitin Desai
the meeting will not be a negotiating session but an effort to come up with an
"approach" that will aid negotiations expected to take place at the WSSD in
Johannesburg. Mbeki, said the South African Mission to the United Nations in a
statement, "remains convinced that a focused political discussion of the
outstanding issues could result in an approach that can help expedite the
process in Johannesburg." Desai says negotiators from nearly 200 countries
have reached agreement on 75 percent of the development blueprint for the next
decade - including giving priority to water and sanitation, energy, health,
agriculture and biodiversity. But he acknowledges that the most difficult
issues remain to be settled:
* Whether there should be timetables and targets for
action on issues ranging from providing proper sanitation to increasing the
use of renewable energy and phasing out toxic chemicals, and if so, whether
they can be linked.
* What action to take on issues such as climate change
before there is complete scientific certainty - and should countries have
different responsibilities to act on such issues?
* How to tackle the broad issues of trade, finance,
good government and access to technology for developing countries
Developing nations want summit agreement on ending
unfair trade terms, especially protective agricultural subsidies which many
poor nations complain prevent their farmers from selling to the markets of
wealthy nations, and an "action plan" tied to a timetable for providing money
for development and programs aimed at fighting poverty.
South Africa's Mbeki is pushing for the WSSD to adopt
the New Partnership for African Development (Nepad) as the program for
sustainable development on the African continent. The U.S. and EU fear this
agenda reopens and begins to rework what they consider the broad agreements
that have been reached at past meetings such as the World Trade Organization
meeting in Doha, Qatar and the summit on financial development held in
Monterrey, Mexico. The fourth WSSD "Preparatory Conference" that ended in
Bali, Indonesia last week collapsed in disagreement over these issues. "This
is a battle," said the chair of that meeting, Indonesian Environment Minister
Emil Salim, afterward. "There is still considerable divide between the
developing and developed world." South Africa does not want the meeting it
will host to collaspe in such disarray. Already some voices are suggesting
that if a meaningful response to the concerns of developing nations can't be
found, perhaps the WSSD should be called off. "At some point when things are
not really moving, it's better to have a failure than a foul compromise,"
Greenpeace Executive Director, Gerd Leipold told Reuters News Agency on
Monday. That is out of the question, said South African Environmental Minister
Valli Moosa before flying out to the New York meeting. "Everyone wants this
meeting to succeed."
19. DLAMINI-ZUMA TO SEEK RUSSIAN ANALYSIS OF G8
AFRICA PLAN
BuaNews (Pretoria) via All Africa
17 July 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200207170440.html
Foreign affairs minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma is
expected to jet off to Russia tomorrow, to meet with her counterpart, Igor
Ivanov, to get the Federation's interpretation of the Group of Eight (G8)'s
Africa Action Plan. The plan is the G8's response to Africa's recovery plan,
the New Partnership for Africa's Development (Nepad), to provide with aid,
trade opportunities and help to resolve conflicts to African nations that
commit themselves to reform. Addressing the media in Pretoria yesterday,
foreign affairs deputy minister Aziz Pahad said the Friday meeting was
expected to give a broader view of Russia's interpretation of the plan 'not in
their capacity as members of the G8 but as an individual country.' Last month,
at its 28th meeting in Kananaskis in Canada, the group, which comprises eight
of the world's richest nations, earmarked for Africa six billion of the 12
billion dollars they promised all poorer countries, at a conference in Mexico
recently. Mr Pahad said Russia's membership to the G8 and its Working Group
that focused on Nepad, and President Vladimir Putin's support of the Action
Plan, were vital for Africa's development and progress. 'Given Russia's close
involvement with these processes, minister Dlamini-Zuma and Dr Ivanov will
exchange views on further practical cooperation between Africa and the Russian
Federation,' he explained. The minister is currently in New York, US, where
she is co-leading together with UN secretary-general Kofi Annan, the
discussions aimed at resolving outstanding issues relating to the draft
implementation plan of the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) to
be held in Johannesburg next month. During her Russian visit, the minister is
also expected to meet with President Putin, where she will convey a personal
message from President Thabo Mbeki and also inform him (Putin) of developments
in the country, the region and the continent. Dr Dlamini-Zuma and Dr Ivanov
will also discuss bilateral, political and multilateral issues. The bilateral
talks will encompass political and economic issues whereas multilateral talks
will pay more attention to international issues such as the reform of the
United Nations, cooperation in conflict resolution and disarmament in Africa,
the situation in the Middle East as well as international terrorism. 'Other
issues, such as the next meeting of the Intergovernmental Committee on Trade
and Economic Cooperation (ITEC) as well as further progress in the field of
science and technology, will be discussed,' the deputy minister said.
20. STATES MUST SETTLE DIFFERENCES BEFORE UN
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT - ANNAN
United Nations
17 July 2002
Internet:
http://www0.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=4212&Cr=Johannesburg&Cr1=summit
17 July - The United Nations Secretary-General, Kofi
Annan, today voiced hope that countries could find a way in the weeks
remaining before the World Summit on Sustainable Development to resolve
differences on outstanding issues in the conference's draft plan of
implementation. "Progress since the [1992] Earth Summit has been slower than
expected and - more important - slower than what was needed. A setback now
would be a tragic missed opportunity," the Secretary-General said in remarks
this morning to a meeting of the so-called Friends of the Chair of the
preparatory process for the World Summit, which is set to begin on 26 August
in Johannesburg. Over the last two years, significant strides have been made
in addressing the challenges of development, particularly at the 2000
Millennium Summit, which not only defined the major goals but also galvanized
political commitment at the highest level, Mr. Annan told today's meeting,
which is being chaired by South African Foreign Minister Nkosazana Dlamini
Zuma. "That commitment helped lay the groundwork for successes at Doha and
Monterrey," the Secretary-General said, referring to recent international
conferences on trade and financing for development. "Johannesburg must
maintain this momentum, and show that in the face of a quintessential global
challenge - the challenge of raising living standards while protecting the
environment - multilateralism works and international cooperation is the way
to go." Turning to the impasse over the Johannesburg document, Mr. Annan urged
the meeting's participants to reach an understanding on a common approach "to
resolving these undoubtedly complex and politically sensitive issues." The
Secretary-General said the Summit should seek to implement the existing global
consensus on sustainable development, and avoid revising or re-interpreting
the principles and agreements of this consensus. In addition, he said efforts
to build on the recent achievements in critical areas such as finance, trade
and good governance should be "grounded in existing agreement or work that is
already in progress in these areas."
Mr. Annan also warned that the Summit should not be
sidetracked by talks on issues that were already under discussion by other
relevant forums, and urged that a greater focus on specific actions be placed
in the five key areas of water and sanitation, energy, health, agriculture and
biodiversity.
21. WORLD'S LARGEST TENT ERECTED FOR WORLD SUMMIT
DELEGATES
SABC News
16 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.sabcnews.com/world/summit/0,1009,38709,00.html
Tensile 1, the world's biggest portable tent, has
finally been erected. The giant tent will house exhibitions during the
upcoming World Summit on Sustainable Development. It is erected at Ubuntu
Village in Rosebank, the recreational hub of the summit. Ubuntu Village will
be able to accommodate about 22 000 people, including 170 exhibitors. It will
serve as a hub for meetings and conversations on sustainable development. The
10 800 square meter tensile is anchored by 16 poles and its fabric is fully
fire resistant. One worry could be the windy and dusty season, but Rudi Enos,
the canvas's original designer, has faith in it saying the structure can
withstand winds of up to 180 miles per hour. Jowsco satisfied. Meanwhile, the
Johannesburg World Summit Company, Jowsco, says it is so far satisfied with
the preparations. The village will host a variety of events including the
Ubuntu Exhibition, SA Pavilion and Conference Centre. The venue will also be
the central transport interchange for participants to the Summit. Renovations
are also under way at the Wanderers Complex with maintenance of roads and
installation of storm water system. Legislation and best practice standards
are also being applied to ensure that all construction and renovations are
safe. A comprehensive Environmental Management Plan has also been developed to
ensure safety. The massive structure will also house social activities and
SABC broadcast facilities.
22. INCREASED WASTE OVERSHADOWS RECYCLING SUCCESSES
The Yomiuri Shimbun
16 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/newse/20020716wo72.htm
When temperature soars above 30 C, shoppers flock to
electrical appliance stores across the nation to buy the latest air
conditioners. Advertising copy for many of the air conditioners on display at
one store in Tokyo features claims such as "save money on your electricity
bill" and "super energy conservation." According to a study conducted by the
Energy Conservation Center, Japan, the sales of such energy-efficient air
conditioners has seen a sharp increase. Meanwhile, the energy consumption of
major appliances such as air conditioners and refrigerators, has reportedly
been halved over the past decade.
It seems many households are now seeking to conserve
energy. Without doubt, the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change,
adopted at the Earth Summit in 1992, and the Kyoto Protocol of 1997 have
helped accelerate such efforts.
Nevertheless, the household energy use throughout the
nation increased by 15 percent in the period from 1991 to 2000.
The increase is mainly due to an expansion in the
number of households and an increase in the size of many electrical
appliances. The average size of refrigerators, for example, has increased from
386 liters to 430 liters over the past 10 years. Another factor has been the
spread of information technology, namely a dramatic increase in the use of
personal computers and fax machines.
Energy conservation resulting from greater efficiency
has been outshadowed by an increase in sales volume and the expansion of
appliance sizes. A similar trend has also been observed in the automobile
industry. The amount of waste produced by households is also on the rise.
"Even now, there is still way too much packaging," said Miho Nemoto, a
28-year-old instructor of a cooking school in Tokyo. Just preparing dinner
with ingredients bought at a grocery store now produces enough packaging waste
to fill a small plastic bag. In the industrial sector, awareness of the need
for energy conservation has also grown. Yet, this increased awareness has also
failed to materialize into major reductions in energy consumption. While
industrial output has declined, levels of energy consumption remain almost
unchanged. This trend indicates that energy consumption per unit of output has
actually increased. The amount of investment in energy conservation is about 3
percent of total capital investment.
In Japan, daily life depends heavily on mass
production and mass consumption. Society seems unable to rid itself of its
20th-century materialistic values. The action plan adopted at the Earth Summit
in 1992 urged developed countries to move away from this cycle of production
and consumption, a cycle based on a wasteful use of natural resources. If the
environmental measures taken by developing countries are viewed as a temporary
stopgap, the measures undertaken by developed countries should be more
indicative of humankind's vision of how it will coexist with nature in the
21st century. Are developed countries fulfilling their obligations? Hama Arba
Diallo, executive secretary of the U.N. Convention to Combat Desertification
said he was not satisfied with their efforts. One reason for the
dissatisfaction is their handling of global warming, which he gives an
evaluation of about 20 points out of a possible 100. After the Earth Summit,
Japan established such laws as the Basic Environment Law and the Basic Law for
Establishing a Recycling-Based Society. A government official said Japan had
the best legal framework in place for protecting the environment. Several
projects have started in the private sector as well. President Naoyuki Akikusa
of Fujitsu Ltd. said environmental issues are becoming a major factor in
determining whether a company can stay in business. This sentiment appears to
have spread throughout the industrial sector as a whole. However, according to
Saburo Kato of the Japan Association of Environment and Society for the 21st
Century, "While all the accessories are ready, there's no engine" to promote
environmental activities. Kato indicated that the pace and diffusion of change
remained too slow. Also, Prof. Masaharu Yagishita of Nagoya University said,
"Until now, the results of (environmental) measures have not been satisfactory
because of an overemphasis on the voluntary nature of such efforts. This is
due to a lack of clear vision and specific objectives." The advancement of
recycling technology has created the illusion that the problem of waste has
sorted itself out, although reality shows that the technology has not been
effective in reducing the creation of waste. Yagishita said: "We have to think
about what we want the Earth to be like in the future. For this reason, we
have to make clear decisions about what should be done now. We are in a
situation that calls for strong policies combined with regulation and
incentives." These are points that will be central to the success of the
Johannesburg Summit.
23. S KOREA ASKS JAPAN TO CUT IMPORT TARIFFS ON 4
PRODUCTS -KYODO
Dow Jones
16 July 2002
Internet:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/dowjones/20020717/bs_dowjones
/s_korea_asks_japan_to_cut_import_tariffs_on_4_products__kyodo
TOKYO -(Dow Jones)- South Korea again asked Tuesday
that Japan lower import tariffs and work to eliminate non-tariff barriers on
four products so as to make up for its trade deficit with Japan , a Japanese
official said, Kyodo News reported. The South Korean government reiterated its
request during the one-day high- level economic talks with Japan in Tokyo ,
saying its trade deficit with Japan remains above the $10 billion mark, the
official told reporters, according to Kyodo. Tokyo explained only that a
bilateral trade imbalance and the microeconomics of setting or lowering
tariffs are different matters, the official said. The four products South
Korea mentioned are oil products, leather goods, textiles and foods. South
Korea also asked about Japan 's study into whether to impose antidumping
customs duties on South Korean-made discontinuous polyester fiber. Tokyo
stressed that it will consider the matter based on World Trade Organization
rules. Concerning China , which has been experiencing rapid economic growth of
late, the Japanese team members said that while there are some domestic views
of China as a threat, they see the country's development as an opportunity for
Japan , the official said. The South Koreans also said they consider the
presence of China - South Korea's No. 3 trading partner after the United
States and Japan , and its No. 2 export recipient country following the U.S. -
as a chance for South Korea to attain greater economic growth. On the recently
launched joint feasibility study over a bilateral free trade agreement,
involving government, business and academic representatives, Japan expressed
hope it would help reinforce Japan -South Korea ties, boost their economies
and contribute to East Asian economic development as a whole. The South Korean
delegation said the current atmosphere between the two neighbors, exemplified
by the closeness attained following the joint hosting of last month's World
Cup soccer finals, is important for moving forward with FTA talks. The two
sides agreed to continue cooperating on the regional and international stages,
such as in the new round of WTO multilateral trade talks, in the framework of
the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum, and in terms of the World Summit
on Sustainable Development slated to open late next month in South Africa. The
talks, the fourth such held annually since 1999, were attended by foreign
affairs, finance, trade, agricultural and other senior officials from the two
countries. Deputy Foreign Minister Shotaro Oshima headed the Japanese team,
and Deputy Trade Minister Kim Kwang Dong led the South Korean delegation,
Kyodo reported.
24. COMMERCE'S ALDONAS URGES NEW THINKING ON TRADE
Washington File
16 July 2002
Internet:
http://usinfo.state.gov/cgi-bin/washfile/display.pl?p=/products/washfile/latest&f=02071603.clt&t=/products/washfile/newsitem.shtml
Washington -- Efforts to expand world trade with
developing and transition economies should focus on facilitating lawful
commerce within the countries themselves, says U.S. Under Secretary of
Commerce for International Trade Grant Aldonas. In brief opening remarks to a
July 16 workshop on capacity building for trade, development and the
environment, Aldonas noted that these countries generally have enormous "black
and gray" markets that eclipse their formal economies, and cited research
showing that in some of them as much as 88 percent of commercial activity is
conducted informally. "This means that trade isn't going to be the answer" to
development, he said. "The ability to exchange legally inside an economy is
probably more important." Barriers to internal exchanges often take the form
of inadequate – or non-existent -- laws and institutions to protect commercial
interests, he indicated. There is a "clear need" for rules and legal systems
"so that people can lawfully engage in exchange," Aldonas said. "It all boils
down to rights and to the premises that underlie a market economy."
The workshop, co-sponsored by the Carnegie Endowment
for International Peace and the United Nations Environment Programme, was
designed to evaluate capacity-building services for developing and transition
countries in advance of the upcoming World Summit on Sustainable Development
(WSSD), scheduled for August in Johannesburg, South Africa. Aldonas said the
WSSD would provide an opportunity to build on the growing consensus in favor
of trade as a means of spurring development. But he stressed that policy
makers should combine discussion of international barriers to trade with
analysis of the internal barriers that keep many people outside the formal
economy. "If global trade doesn't speak to the five billion [5,000 million]
people who live on less than two dollars a day, then we've lost that
opportunity," he said.
25. WORLD'S POOREST NATIONS MOSTLY A NO-SHOW AT
FIJI SUMMIT
EuBusiness
16 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.eubusiness.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=86254&d=101&h=240&f=56&dateformat=%o%20%B%20%Y
NADI, Fiji, July 16 (AFP) - Only 18 leaders of the
worlds 78 poorest nations will attend a summit here defining their relations
with the European Union (EU), Fiji Foreign Minister Kaliopate Tavola told
reporters Tuesday. The summit, which starts on Wednesday, involves the
African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) group and its links to the EU, mostly old
colonial masters. The Cotonou Agreement, the result of the ACP meeting in
Benin in 2000, includes 15.2 billion euros (dollars) in aid and a new trade
deal which ultimately will end preferential tariffs many of the ACP countries
have with Europe. Tavola said delegations from 62 countries were on the way
but only 18 heads of state would attend. "It can change tomorrow... and some
one can turn up unannounced," he said.
He said it was expected that many leaders would not be
able to attend because the meeting was only just scheduled seven months ago.
"In fixing the summit we were aware there would be problems... Eighteen is a
good number and the heads of other delegations are ministers, deputy prime
ministers, and so we will achieve the objective of the summit." The major item
on the agenda is a progress report on a new trading agreement the ACP has to
reach with the EU by 2008. The worry for ACP members, particularly the smaller
Pacific countries, is that their struggling economies will get lost in
globalisation. Tavola said it was clear in a free trade world that most of the
ACP countries were being marginalised. He said while the ACP subscribed to
liberal world trade, it still wanted to hang on to its preferential access to
European markets and that World Trade Organisation rules should reflect that.
While he acknowledged that the world was moving towards free trade, he said
some countries still needed help to compete in the global market. "The
direction it is taking, it is obviously to remove all the barriers, to have
freer trade, but the more we have free trade, the more we have trade
liberalisation, the more marginalised our economies become," he said.
"Maybe there is a need for preferential markets to
prevail, so that those who have been left behind, those that have been
marginalised, can catch up with others and be able to trade with others in
this competitive world." Fiji has a vested interest in the issue as special
market tariffs for its troubled sugar industry which employs 30 percent of the
population end in 2008.
Tavola said the key issue was to agree an ACP position
that could be taken onto the world stage. "The first focus is to look at the
concerns that we encounter and to come up with some positions that the ACP
group can take in unity and solidarity so that we can, as a group, become a
force to be reckoned with." He said it would take five years of negotiations
to reach a new trade agreement. The meeting is being held under the slogan
"solidarity in a globalised world" and Tavola agreed it was difficult to
appreciate the common ground between members which range from Niue with less
than 2,000 people living on a single Pacific island to Nigeria's 127 million
people. "We have 27 years of solidarity which we can show as evidence... We
have been operating as a group and the group is enlarging. "We have been able
to work and maintain our consistency in working with the European Union."
26. UN MAKES FINAL TRY TO SAVE EARTH SUMMIT
The Guardian
15 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/globalisation/story/0,7369,755366,00.html
Twenty five countries, including all G8 members, have
been asked to meet today in New York in an attempt by the UN to salvage next
month's Earth Summit in Johannesburg. Governments were due to reach consensus
over a month ago on drafting a detailed plan for global economic development
but the final preparatory meeting of the world summit on sustainable
development in Bali, Indonesia, broke up in June without agreement in the most
contentious areas. These include finance and trade commitments, targets for
renewable energy, health, education, a poverty fund and debt reduction With
the possibility that UN and world leaders will be condemned at Johannesburg
for not commiting themselves to tackling the problems of global poverty and
environmental degradation, President Mbeki of South Africa has approached the
UN secretary general, Kofi Annan, to help bridge the yawning gaps. The UN was
yesterday insisting that the New York meeting, which could run until the
summit begins on August 26, did not mean the conference was in crisis. Nitin
Desai, UN undersecretary general for economic and social affairs and chair of
the Earth summit, said countries had so far agreed on about 75% of the text
and predicted that differences could be overcome before the summit began - if
delegates showed the necessary will. "I would not describe the conflict as
insurmountable," he said. "Bali took the negotiations as far as they could go.
The remaining issues require a political resolution". The success of the
summit, expected to be the largest ever with more than 60,000 delegates and
100 heads of state, is being seen as a test for the future of multilateral
diplomacy. But cynicism amongst international non government groups is high.
Gerd Leipold, the head of Greenpeace International, said at the weekend he
would prefer to see its collapse rather than a "a pact of toothless promises".
27. 'POOR PROSPECTS' FOR EARTH SUMMIT
BBC
15 July 2002
Internet:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_2129000/2129583.stm
The Earth Summit, the World Summit on Sustainable
Development (WSSD) in Johannesburg, faces a high risk of failure, according to
a leading British environmental thinker. He is Sir Crispin Tickell, former UK
ambassador to the United Nations.
Sir Crispin says it is "hard to be optimistic" about
what will happen in Johannesburg. Little, he says, will change "unless and
until we think differently". Sir Crispin is now director of the Green College
Centre for Environmental Policy and Understanding at the University of Oxford.
Speaking to the Society for Conservation Biology, he said the summit's agenda,
sustainable development, meant "treating the Earth as if we intended to stay".
Affecting evolution He said humans were changing the Earth in several ways: by
increasing their numbers, through the loss of land quality and the build-up of
wastes, by changing atmospheric chemistry, and by continuing to destroy other
living species. Coral reefs are being destroyed. He said our destruction of
other species had reached "rates comparable to those caused by
extraterrestrial impacts in the long-distant past. One in four mammal species,
which are key indicators of ecosystem health, are facing a high risk of
extinction in the near future. "The future course of evolution will be
substantially changed by current human activity. "Bacteria and viruses learn
how to react to almost any drug we may throw at them. Humans take 20 years to
reproduce. Bacteria do the job in 20 minutes. How we are changing the Earth
We are multiplying "at a giddy rate"
65% of all arable land may have already lost some
biological and physical functions
60% or more of world fisheries are judged to be fully
exploited or over-fished
27% of coral reefs are thought to have been lost, with
another 32% at risk by 2032
Freshwater demand doubles every 21 years
"Nor can we yet assess the effects of the introduction
of genetically modified organisms."
Sir Crispin said an occasional visitor from space
would find more change in the Earth's surface in the last 200 years than in
the preceding 2,000, and more in the last 20 years than in the preceding 200.
The need to conserve biodiversity, the Earth's wealth of life, was hard to get
across to people. There was an ethical reason to do so, but we seldom realised
our vocation to be stewards of the Earth. Sir Crispin quoted the judgement of
Professor James Lovelock, that "humans are as qualified to be stewards as
goats are to be gardeners". There were strong economic arguments for
conservation, from the range of drugs derived from plants to the need to
cherish genetic diversity. Ecologically, we relied on forests and vegetation
to produce soil, regulate water supplies and recycle waste. But Sir Crispin
said inertia was immensely strong, and that was why little would change until
we learnt to think differently, and why he was not optimistic about the WSSD.
He said: "For change we need three factors: leadership from above, pressure
from below, or some exemplary catastrophe. "Do we know where we are going? Not
yet: the juggernaut of conventional wisdom rolls on.
"Can we cope with the problems raised by the unstable
and unsustainable society we have created for ourselves? My answer is also:
not yet."
28. BUSH ADMINISTRATION MAY CAUSE FAILURE OF
ENVIRONMENTAL SUMMIT
Sierra Club
15 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.sierraclub.org/pressroom/
Washington, DC -- The Sierra Club today expressed deep
concern that the Bush Administration's approach to the upcoming World Summit
on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg may seriously undermine the global
community's efforts to protect clean air and water, and fight global warming.
The Sierra Club is stressing to the Administration that working with other
countries at the Johannesburg Summit to hold enormous global corporations
accountable for their environmental impact will help protect the
environment both here at home and around the world.
"The Administration has consistently blocked attempts to protect the global
environment by promoting plans that benefit large
corporations rather than the billions of citizens who have to deal with
environmental crises, like dirty water and air, and global climate change,"
said Sierra Club Director Michael Dorsey, who has represented the Club during
the preparatory meetings and will attend the Johannesburg Summit. "People
around the
world are seriously concerned that the Bush
administration is undermining the World Summit instead of working with other
countries to benefit everyone." In 1992, heads of state, including President
George H. W. Bush, attended the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. They
were asked to support binding international treaties on forest protection,
climate change and
biodiversity protection. President Bush Sr. agreed to
the Rio Declaration and its Principles on Sustainable Development "with the
goal of establishing a new and equitable global partnership through the
creation of new levels of cooperation among States."
A decade later, George W. Bush is attempting to
reverse his father's legacy and turn back the clock. Instead of a partnership
among nations, he proposes to eliminate oversight of corporations on the
10-year anniversary of the Earth Summit slated to begin in August in South
Africa. The President is ignoring in this approach, the very lesson he has
just affirmed with regard to domestic corporations for "standards enforced by
strict laws and upheld by responsible business leaders." At the final
preparatory meeting held in May in Bali, the US government delegation,
following the directive of the Bush Administration, repeatedly resisted any
serious steps to address a host of global environmental problems, especially
global warming. The Administration steadfastly
opposes international efforts to hold multinational
corporations accountable for their business practices. The head of the US
delegation criticized environmental targets and timetables as "theater" and
"fiction" not worthy of serious consideration. Already more than 200
non-governmental organizations have signed a critique of the Johannesburg
meeting entitled, "A Disaster in the Making". "What is fiction is not the
concept of the global community holding global corporations accountable," said
Sierra Club Executive Director Carl Pope, "but the idea that voluntary actions
by these corporations will protect the world's citizens from pollution,
destruction of their communities and the natural resources upon which they
depend." "Unfortunately, this appears to be another attempt by President Bush
to withdraw from global cooperation," said Stephen Mills, Director of the
Sierra Club's International Program, who will also be attending the summit for
the Sierra Club. "Americans want to be part of a country that acts as a
responsible neighbor, and they know we need to cooperate with other nations to
protect the environment if we expect them to cooperate with us." The Sierra
Club will be asking the Administration to promote efforts to shift policy away
from an approach that benefits corporations but rarely protects the
environment. At the summit, the Sierra Club will be advocating for the
Administration to:
Represent public interests before corporate
interests by supporting binding corporate accountability measures, including
public release of corporate environmental performance data. The Administration
supports voluntary, non-binding environmental agreements that rely on
corporations policing themselves.
Reverse its position that World Trade Organization
rules should trump international environmental agreements.
Seriously address climate change and air pollution:
So far the Administration has shown a lack of commitment to curbing climate
change and protecting clean air, as evidenced by withdrawal from the Kyoto
Protocol on climate change, and domestic efforts to weaken the Clean Air Act.
Respect the basic human right to clean drinking
water - not undermine it by privatizing water services. In March, during its
testimony on the Water Investment Act of 2002 the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency stated that the Administration did not support additional
funding to help the country's crumbling water systems, but instead believed
that privatization is a better solution. The Administration is expected to
support a similar position in Johannesburg. As we have just seen with Enron
and Global
Crossing, unregulated private companies cannot be
relied upon to provide basic public services at a fair and just cost. We
should not add drinking water as yet another vital public service that will be
open to corporate manipulation and profiteering.
Protect Agriculture and Biodiversity. The
Administration must resist pressure from huge agri-businesses and instead
support calls for biosafety in order to prevent the widespread production and
use of genetically modified organisms in agriculture.
29. AFRICAN JOURNALISM INDABA JOINS WORLD SUMMIT
East Cape News (Grahamstown) via All Africa
15 July 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200207150266.html
Rhodes University's Highway Africa conference has
secured official status as part of the World Summit on Sustainable Development
in Johannesburg next month. Highway Africa is a six-year-old annual event
focussing on African journalism and Internet, combining high-level discussions
and hands-on training. Convened by Rhodes and SABC for 21-23 August, it is
sponsored by the Department of Communications and hosted by the National
Electronic Media Institute of South Africa. Along with 40 students from
Rhodes, about 60 African journalists will stay on after highway African to
report on the Summit. Under the theme of "wiring journalism for international
development" the three-day programme at Highway African will analyse the role
of media in defining the digital divide and how new technology can help
journalists bridge it. Topics include the Internet revolution, the role of a
free press and making technology affordable to Africa. Workshops will cover
internet research skills, web publishing and the use of Geographical
Information Systems for reporting on sustainable development. Speakers and
delegates have been confirmed from Gambia, Kenya, Nigeria, Ethiopia, the SADC
countries and the USA. Highway Africa has won a nomination for the prestigious
Tech Awards run by The Tech Museum of Innovation in San Jose, California in
the category of using technology to promote equality.
30. NET USERS SOUND OFF TO EARTH SUMMIT
Ananova
15th July 2002
Internet:
http://www.ananova.com/news/story/sm_628406.html?menu=news.technology
Thousands of sound messages will be sent to next
month's Earth Summit via a new Friends of the Earth audio website.
Radiohead singer Thom Yorke and writer Arundhati Roy
will be helping launch radioearthsummit.org.Friends of the Earth has created
the site to provide people with the chance to send a noise to the summit in
South Africa. It aims to show world leaders that action is needed to protect
the environment and people from exploitation by global corporations. The
sounds sent to the site will provide a soundscale for Friends of the Earth
International's giant art installation outside the Earth Summit. Noises
reflecting the situation already on the site include the sound of a mother
crying, a scream of frustration, the sounds of clock ticking, a kookaburra
calling, a beer bottle opening, the whirr of a chainsaw, a tiger's roar and
the sound of silence. Radio Earth Summit will also provide news, features and
interviews in the run up to the conference, which takes place in Johannesburg
from August 26 to September 4.
Messages so far include a hard-hitting interview with
Booker prize-winning author Arundhati Roy, a message of support from Radiohead
lead singer Thom Yorke and Ricardo Navarro of Friends of the Earth
International talking about the impact of corporations in El Salvador. Noises
people have recorded and sent in include the sound of the Sumatran gibbon -
under threat from logging activities in Indonesia - and the hissing sound of
polluting gas released by petrochemical plants in South Africa.
Liana Stupples of Friends of the Earth said: "We want
people to send their messages to world leaders via Radio Earth Summit - but
most of all, we want government leaders around the world to listen to what
they have to say and take action to protect the planet."
31. SWEDISH PRIME MINISTER'S EMPLOYMENT STATEMENTS
CONFIRM KEY TRADE UNION PRIORITIES FOR POSITIVE WSSD OUTCOMES
ICFTU/TUAC
14 July 2002
Trade union officials are applauding recent statements
by Swedish Prime Minister Göran Persson which reinforce the view that
employment and socio-economic security are crucial to the success of the World
Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) which is due to open in Johannesburg,
South Africa at the end of August. Persson made his statements to a "Passing
of the Torch" ceremony last 25 June in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, which was held
to officially signal the inauguration of the WSSD, after the first Earth
Summit in that city ten year ago. The statements focussing on employment
issues, were only recently made public, and trade unionists believe they
reflect a welcome and growing change in perspective among key players who will
be attending the WSSD, including governments. Most notably, Persson
highlighted the importance of investments and policies in both the social and
environmental arenas, saying that they "offer exceptional opportunities" for
ensuring that basic welfare and decent jobs for all is a prerequisite in
promoting popular commitment to protection of the environment. "Economically,
it helps to build new markets and create jobs," he said. "Socially it brings
people in from the margins and politically, it reduces tensions and potential
conflicts over resources." Since Rio 1992 trade unions have contended that the
lack of just employment transition programmes constitutes an enormous barrier
to worker involvement for implementing sustainable development targets, at the
workplace level. They say that promoting change in tandem with better
employment impact assessments, twinned with programmes for re-employment,
training, education and compensation are the only way to secure the willing
participation of workers, in the longer term.
Persson also used the opportunity to reinforce a
related trade union priority, when he called for stronger organizations and
instruments for global governance. "There is a need to establish a better
balance between global market forces
and international governance for sustainable
development," he said. "The international trade rules within the WTO,
multilateral agreements and international conventions in the social area, such
as core labour standards, must be mutually supportive."
Trade unions are still assessing gains made at the
WSSD Prepcom IV in Bali, Indonesia last May, in which governments agreed on
the need to promote decent work and workplace-based partnerships as the key to
more complete integration of the social dimension into development decisions.
They have called upon the WSSD to strengthen its commitment - in both words
and
concrete action - to ensure that employment and social
integration become central features of sustainable development, in particular,
as it concerns poverty eradication. The world's two leading trade union
organisations, the Internationational Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU),
and the Trade Union Advisory Committee to the OECD (TUAC) have called on the
governments of both South Africa and Indonesia to strengthen social and
employment provisions of the text that will be negotiated at the WSSD in
August. In particular, they are seeking improvements in the wording relating
to worker participation issues, corporate accountability, roles of
governments, and sector linkages to production/consumption patterns. (Copies
of suggested amendments available upon request.) Trade unions also believe
that the release of the Swedish Prime Minister's statements will lend force to
the decision by South African Prime Minister Thabo Mbeki to invite a number of
countries to assist him, when he Chairs the World Summit. He has asked 25
countries to serve as 'Friends of the Chair', and invited them to a meeting on
July 17 "to find an approach to resolve outstanding differences that stand in
the way of a global consensus at the Summit."
Trade unions expect to monitor these meetings closely,
and will aim to be in direct contact with the countries involved to lobby for
employment and social issues to receive the attention they deserve
32. S&T CLIMBING ON MUSLIM COUNTRIES AGENDA
Frontier Post
14 July 2002
Internet:
http://frontierpost.com.pk/main.asp?id=19&date1=7/14/2002
ISLAMABAD: The governments of Islamic countries from
Kuala Lumpur to Sarajevo are attaching increasingly high priority to science
and technology, recent events suggest. Issues of promoting science and
technology-and sustainable development-figured high at the Twenty-Ninth
Session of the Islamic Conference of Foreign Ministers (ICFM) late last month.
The conference encouraged the leaders of the Islamic states to work for
promotion of science of technology for the good of humanity and for the
socio-economic development of states. The foreign ministers were apt to
reaffirm that science and technology must be shared and harnessed for peaceful
purposes. They commended the activities of OIC Committee for Science and
Technology (COMSTECH), ISESCO, and the Islamic University of Technology in
Dhaka for their efforts in serving the cause of the Islamic Ummah and
encouraged support to them. As well, the Khartoum conference stressed the need
for cooperation and adoption of effective measures to protect the environment.
Protection of environment, the ministers said, is essential for the
sustainable development of the Member States. The conference adopted the
resolution and the declaration adopted by the First Islamic Conference of
Islamic Environment Ministers (ICEM) held in Jeddah on 10-12 June 2002. It
urged the members states to take a united stand at the World Summit for
Sustainable Development to be held in Johannesburg from 26 August to 4
September, and thanked the government of Saudi Arabia for hosting the first
ICEM; and ISESCO for its part in that conference. The conference also agreed
to update the memorandum of understanding (MoU) between the OIC and the UN
Environment Programme (UNEP).
33. POWELL TO GO TO SOUTH AFRICAN MEETING WITH
MESSAGE OF HELPING REDUCE POVERTY AND GROW ECONOMIES
Associated Press
12 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.boston.com/dailynews/193/economy/Powell_to_go_to_South_African_:.shtml
WASHINGTON (AP) The United States will emphasize at a
U.N. summit next month that it is committed to help reduce poverty and promote
economic growth in poor countries, Secretary of State Colin Powell said
Friday. If those countries are to grow, however, their governments must rule
justly, invest in their people and preserve the environment, the secretary
told a State Department-sponsored conference. ''We will ask developing
countries to join us in opening their economies and societies to growth, for
growth is the key to raising people out of poverty,'' Powell said. Leaders
from more than 100 countries are expected Aug. 26 to Sept. 4 at the meeting in
Johannesburg, South Africa, sponsored by the United Nations to try to come up
with ideas for cutting poverty and protecting the environment. Powell said he
plans to attend, but a final decision has not been made on his role there. He
met Friday with South Africa's foreign minister, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, to
discuss preparations for the meeting, called the World Summit on Sustainable
Development. Powell said such development is a ''compelling moral and
humanitarian issue but also a security imperative, because poverty,
destruction of the environment and despair are ... an unholy trinity that can
destabilize countries and regions.'' He said the United States would stress at
the Johannesburg meeting its commitment to helping nations develop. ''We will
also carry the message that sustainable development must begin at home, with
sound policies and good governance,'' Powell said. In addition, he said, the
United States will emphasize partnerships involving governments, civil society
and the private sector to mobilize the financial resources needed for
development. On the environment, he said the United States would seek concrete
action in seven areas essential to development: health, energy, water,
agriculture and rural development, education, ocean and coastal management and
forests
34. LOBBYING FOR BUSH TO ATTEND THE WORLD SUMMIT
IPS
12 July 2002
Internet:
http://athena.tbwt.com/content/article.asp?articleid=1166
JOHANNESBURG - South African Foreign Affairs Minister,
Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, who is in Washington this week, is expected to lobby
for U.S. President George W. Bush to attend the World Summit on Sustainable
Development (WSSD) scheduled for Johannesburg next month. But diplomatic
sources in South Africa say it is very doubtful for Bush to attend the summit.
Bush is not considered a great champion of
environmental or development issues, and he is not likely to attend a summit
that may adopt a programme he will find difficult to support. The attendance
of the leaders of the Group of Eight (G-8) wealthy countries is an informal
measure of the success of an international summit in some UN circles. If it
looks like the WSSD may get bogged in controversy, many key international
leaders are likely to simply skip the gathering. It was initially expected
that more than 150 heads of state would attend the summit, called to look at
how the social and economic conditions of the world's poor could be improved,
while at the same time the global environment is protected from the negative
effects of development. Now, the UN reportedly only expects about 100 leaders.
Dlamini-Zuma and the U.S. Secretary of State, Colin Powell, were expected to
meet in Washington, on Friday ''The minister's visit is part of a national
effort led by South African President, Thabo Mbeki, to find consensus ahead of
the WSSD, to be hosted by South Africa from August 26 this year,'' said
Foreign Affairs spokesperson, Ronnie Mamoepa. He added that Dlamini-Zuma has
already held meetings with her counterparts in Canada, Denmark and London.
Dlamini-Zuma is a close confidant of Mbeki and her
dispatch to build support for the WSSD is one of the first signs that the
South African president is turning his attention to the summit. Until now,
Mbeki has been focussed on securing African and international support for an
economic and social development programme for the continent, and clearing the
way for the launch of the new African Union (AU). The African Union was
launched in South Africa, this week, and Mbeki elected its first chair.
The last preparatory meeting before the summit - held
in Indonesia last month - failed to reach agreement on a ''Draft plan of
implementation for the WSSD''. While some South African officials play-up the
fact that there are only limited areas of disagreement, the reality is that
the sticking points are fundamental to the success of the summit. In a
nutshell, there is no agreement on the trade and financing provisions of the
plan of action - the so-called ''economic platform'' of the WSSD.
Developing countries insist that the document should
not ignore the most important causes of poverty -- among them unfair terms of
trade and the lack of market access for agricultural products from poor
countries. They also want the action plan tied to a timetable for providing
finance for development and poverty alleviation programmes. But the advanced
economies argue that ''financing for development'' agreements should not be
part of the summit, which should rather focus on environmental and ''good
governance'' issues. They are also reluctant to tie promises of development
aid to target amounts and a timetable.
As host country, South Africa will have to broker a
compromise - preferably ahead of the WSSD. This explains the latest round of
meetings by Dlamini-Zuma. As part of the developing world, the country is also
pushing for the United States and the European Union (EU) to do more to open
their markets to goods and products from Africa, Asia and Latin America.
More specifically, South Africa wants the WSSD to
adopt the New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD) as the programme
for sustainable development on the continent, and to help generate financing
for its projects.
NEPAD is a programme to kick-start the social and
economic development on the continent, which has been developed by Mbeki, and
other African leaders. In return for building political and economic stability
on the continent, African countries are promised better trade and aid deals
from the wealthy nations of the world. This week, the African Union as the
economic development programme of the continent adopted NEPAD. Dlamini-Zuma
would most likely try to convince Powell that by launching the African Union
and adopting NEPAD, the continent's leaders have made a practical commitment
to political and economic good governance.
In return, the United States and EU should show their
support for the African programme, by attending the WSSD and making additional
financial commitments to its social and economic development goals. Africa
will be a special focus of the WSSD.
There are fears among international environmental and
civil society organisations that to secure the participation of the United
States and the European Union, South Africa may try to water down the summit
plan of action until it is more palatable to the advance economies - but
ineffective in alleviating global poverty. The environmental group Greenpeace
has reportedly said it will fight any face-saving compromise deal that omits
concrete poverty alleviation goals and methods to finance them
35. LIB-DEMS CALL FOR ADDITIONAL 100,000 SOLAR
ROOFS
Edie weekly summaries
12 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.edie.net/gf.cfm?L=left_frame.html&R=http://www.edie.net/news/Archive/5740.cfm
The Liberal Democrat Party is calling for the
Government to be more proactive in promoting renewable energy, calling for
100,000 solar roofs by 2010 as part of the party's Solar Charter, launched on
9 July as part of the Lib-Dems 'environment week'. On the same day, the Lib-Dems
also submitted an Early Day Motion in Parliament stating that "this House
notes with concern that the UK remains at the bottom of the European league
table on the environment". The motion also notes that the Government's 'doing
your bit' campaign has been dormant in 2002, despite the forthcoming World
Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg this August, which should be
encouraging everyone to 'think globally and act locally'. The Motion also
urges Parliament and all government departments to 'do their bit' by
increasing recycling, use of recycled materials, reduce energy use and sign up
to renewable energy supplies. "It is essential that the Government takes more
responsibility for Britain's future and moves towards increasing our renewable
sources of energy," said Liberal Democrat Shadow Environment, Food and Rural
Affairs Secretary Malcolm Bruce at the launch of the Solar Charter. "The
Government's target of 10% of electricity to be renewable by 2010 is
unambitious and unimpressive." According to Bruce, the Government has set only
a very modest target for solar energy - for solar panels on 3,000 domestic
roofs and 140 non-domestic roofs in the next three years, with no targets
beyond this date. "If the Government does not take the lead and provide
incentives for the public to sign up for renewable energy, Britain will lag
even further behind environmentally responsible countries such as Denmark, as
well as playing reckless games with Britain's future," Bruce.
The Lib-Dems are also calling for a long-term solar
strategy for the country, with targets beyond 2010 increased at a rate of 1%
per year, up to a target of 50% of energy use by 2050. Noting that the UK is a
"classical electricity-profligate country", Jeremy Leggett, Chief Executive of
Solar Century, the company that hosted the launch, acknowledged that solar
technology has too often been overlooked as a viable renewable option. "But
solar PV is uniquely suited to our largely urban, densely populated
environment, as well as providing innovative off-grid electricity solutions,"
said Leggett. "It is the only renewable that is also a building material in
its own right, and as such can play a significant role in the regeneration of
Britain's town and cities." With regard to other environmental issues, Bruce
went on to criticise an apparent lack of interest by the current Government.
"Since the general election there have been no government debates on the
environment," he said. He also noted that although Prime Minister Tony Blair
was the first world leader to agree to go to the Johannesburg Summit, he still
has not announced what issues he will be raising there.
"A failure at Johannesburg would generate such a depth
of despair among developing nations," which could produce a torrent of
economic migrants, explained Bruce. Bruce also announced that he is the first
MP to sign up to the Johannesburg Climate Legacy, run on a non-profit basis by
the carbon offset company Future Forests. In order to ensure that the
Johannesburg Summit does not damage the environment by producing excessive
greenhouse gas emissions, the emissions produced by delegate travel and
accommodation are being offset by the development of projects that reduce
emissions in South Africa. These projects include increasing energy efficiency
at Baragwanath Chris Hani Hospital - the largest hospital in the southern
hemisphere - which will reduce costs as well as emissions, allowing more money
to be spent on treating patients. A second project is the installation of
biogas generator digesters for waste in order to produce methane that can be
used in cooking, lighting and refrigerators in rural homes in Maphenphetheni,
South Africa. The project is calling for individuals and companies to sponsor
carbon offsets, at US$10 per tonne of carbon dioxide.
36. UN STAGES 'RESCUE MISSION' TO HEAL RIFT OVER
EARTH SUMMIT
Independent
12 July 2002
Internet:
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/environment/story.jsp?story=314261
The prospects for embarrassing failure at next month's
Earth Summit in Johannesburg will dominate a preparatory meeting at the United
Nations next week in which delegates from 25 countries will attempt to forge
an agenda for heads of government.
"Basically, this will be a rescue operation for the
summit," one Western diplomat conceded yesterday.
The South African hosts are growing increasingly
concerned that the meeting will unravel even before it starts, with the
possibility that some heads of government will stay away rather than
participate in a meeting that threatens to embarrass them.
Billed as the World Summit for Sustainable
Development, the meeting is meant to be the largest United Nations gathering
in history. It was designed to give new momentum to a process that began with
the Rio de Janeiro Earth Summit in 1992.
However, disagreements over proposals to set concrete
targets for protecting the environment from the effects of industrial
development led to deadlock at a preparatory ministerial meeting in Bali in
June. It is those differences that delegates will try to overcome next week.
Gerd Leipold, the head of Greenpeace, suggested yesterday that his group would
rather see the summit collapse than adopt a compromise text without proper
teeth. "At some point when things are not really moving, it's better to have a
failure than a foul compromise," he said. Already, the summit is shaping up as
yet another showdown between the United States and the rest of the world.
While European nations support clear targets to contain the impact of
development on the environment, notably global warming, the US is resisting
them. It prefers a vaguer formula that would leave it to groups of countries
to set their own environmental standards. The White House indicated that it
might be five years before the US has completed research into the effects of
global warming and finalised a strategy of its own. A senior official also
defended the decision by President George Bush to withdraw from the Kyoto
Protocol on curbing global warming. James Connaughton, chairman of the White
House council on environmental quality, said: "The Kyoto Protocol would have
cost our economy up to $400bn [£257bn] and caused the loss of up to 4.9
million jobs." Next week's meeting will involve senior officials, but not
ministers, from 25 countries deemed "friends of the chair" by South Africa
37. DLAMINI-ZUMA TO MEET POWELL ON WSSD
South African Press Association via All Africa
11 July 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200207120020.html
Foreign Affairs Minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma will
meet United States Secretary of State, Colin Powell, in Washington on Friday,
to discuss the upcoming Johannesburg summit, her office said on Thursday. "The
minister's visit is part of a national effort led by President Thabo Mbeki to
find consensus ahead of the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD), to
be hosted by South Africa from August 26 to September 4 this year," a
statement said. "In this context, the minister has already held meetings with
her counterparts in Canada, Denmark and London." Foreign affairs spokesman
Ronnie Mamoepa told Sapa the visit was intended to seek agreement on key
sticking points that emerged at the final WSSD preparatory conference, held on
the Indonesian island of Bali last month. These included matters pertaining to
human rights, democracy, agricultural subsidies, market access, and good
governance. Mamoepa was reluctant to comment on whether US President George W.
Bush would attend the summit himself. However, the subject might also be
discussed during her visit. The foreign affairs statement said Dlamini-Zuma
would also participate in a conference, "Making Sustainable Development Work:
Governance, Finance and Public Private Cooperation", while in the US.
38. SUMMIT PARTICIPANTS CAN PAY TO OFFSET EMISSIONS
Environmental News Service
11 July 2002
Internet:
http://ens-news.com/ens/jul2002/2002-07-11-19.asp#anchor4
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa, July 11, 2002 (ENS) - Each
of the some 60,000 people expected to attend the World Summit on Sustainable
Development taking place in South Africa later this summer will generate
greenhouse gas emissions. Transport from their homes to the conference site in
Johannesburg, and electricity used to stage the gathering are among the uses
of fossil fuels that will emit the gases linked to global warming. South
African officials will compensate for these emissions, and conference
participants can help. Mary Metcalfe of the MEC Department for Agriculture,
Conservation, Environment and Land Affairs, of Gauteng Province, where the
conference is taking place, is asking participants to pay for their carbon
dioxide (CO2) emissions by joining the Johannesburg Climate Legacy. "I urge
all delegates to take responsibility for their own CO2 emissions that will be
caused by attending the World Summit on Sustainable Development, by supporting
the Johannesburg Climate Legacy Project," she said. "It is one small step
towards a sustainable climate and will be an important contribution to
innovative alternate energy projects in South Africa." "We are measuring the
carbon dioxide emissions of the Summit," she said. "These emissions will be
offset through investments in carbon reducing sustainable projects across
South Africa. "Companies, individuals, and governments can sponsor this offset
by making donations to a dedicated Trust Fund and, in so doing on this world
stage, make one of the most important commitments in modern history to a
sustainable future." There is a website where delegates can calculate how much
CO2 their trip will generate and offset it. $10 will offset one tonne of CO2
emitted by the summit.
http://www.climatelegacy.org/
39. SCRAMBLE FOR CONSENSUS AS WORLD SUMMIT LOOMS
Cape Argus
11 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.itechnology.co.za/index.php?click_id=13&art_id=ct20020711103018862S530655&set_id=1
Envoys from 25 nations gather in New York next week in
search of an elusive last-minute accord on a global blueprint for sustainable
development, South African and United Nations officials said on Wednesday. The
July 17 meeting will be chaired by UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan and Foreign
Minister Dr Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma. South Africa is hosting the World Summit
on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg from August 26 to September 4.
Following the collapse of preparatory talks in Bali, Indonesia, in June,
agreement has yet to be reached on the summit's main goal - the drafting of a
detailed plan for global economic development that preserves and protects the
environment while battling hunger and poverty. Nitin Desai, UN under
secretary-general for economic and social affairs, said representatives of the
UN's 189 member-nations had so far agreed on about 75 percent of the
blueprint's text. He predicted differences could be overcome before the summit
began if delegates showed the necessary will. "I would not describe the
conflict as insurmountable," he said. The group of 25 nations designated by
President Thabo Mbeki as "friends of the chair" would be working between now
and the summit's start to try to resolve the remaining differences, he added.
Desai was heading to Paris on Wednesday for talks with
Environment Affairs Minister Valli Moosa and Emil Salim, the former Indonesian
environment minister who chaired the summit's preparatory meeting in Bali. The
25 nations due to attend next week's wider gathering in New York include the
Group of Eight industrialised nations - Britain, Canada, France, Germany,
Italy, Japan, Russia and the United States - as well as Argentina, Brazil,
China and Denmark. Others due to attend were Egypt, Ghana, India, Indonesia,
Jamaica, Jordan, Mexico, Nigeria, Norway, Senegal, Sweden, Uganda and
Venezuela
40. POVERTY, ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES TO TOP NIGERIA'S
AGENDA FOR WSSD: MINISTER
Xinhua News Agency
11 July 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FE20020711690000120.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
LAGOS, Jul 11, 2002 (Xinhua via COMTEX) -- Poverty
alleviation and environmental issues will top Nigeria's agenda at the World
Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) scheduled for Aug. 26 to Sept. 4 in
South Africa, the News Agency of Nigeria reported on Thursday. The agency
quoted Environment Minister Alhaji Kabir Sa'id as saying that the summit will
offer Nigeria the opportunity to interact with other nations on how to tackle
poverty and environmental issues. As environmental problems are on the
increase, the summit will assess the progress and challenges since the last
meeting in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in 1992 the minister said. "We shall look at
what has happened and are happening since the last summit and find ways on how
to collectively address them," Sa 'id said. He said the summit will work out
appropriate measures for a peaceful resolution of the issue arising from the
Kyoto agreement, which the United States has refused to endorse. "You can not
leave the US out of issues concerning green house gases as they are
responsible for 25 percent of the emission, and we shall try to ensure that
all parties to the agreement ascent to it," the minister said. The African
continent is at the receiving end of such disagreement due to its technical
inability to manage such emission, he added.
41. ARRANGEMENTS FOR WSSD PLEASING: SHILOWA AND
MAYORS
Office of the Premier, Gauteng
11 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.gov.za/search97cgi/s97_cgi?action=View&VdkVgwKey=%2E%2E%2Fdata%2Fspeech02%
2F02071209461008%2Etxt&DocOffset=8&DocsFound=6149&Collection=speech02&Collection=speech
01&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%3
DTDEDate%26SortOrder%3Ddesc%26ViewTemplate%3Dgov%252Fdocview%252Ehts%26ResultStart%3D1%26ResultCount%3D25&
Gauteng Premier Mbhazima Shilowa on Thursday met
metropolitan and district municipal mayors in Johannesburg and assessed the
province's readiness to host the United Nations' World Summit on Sustainable
Development (WSSD) next month.
They expressed satisfaction that Johannesburg World
Summit Company had made the necessary arrangements for the gathering that
would bring together more than 60 000 delegates to Johannesburg late in
August. The meeting noted the economic benefits that would immediately accrue
to Gauteng, particularly investment in infrastructure, development of the
hospitality and tourism industry and the increased economic activity during
this period. It also identified issues that were critical to sustainable
development and to the improvement of the quality of life of the poorest
people in Gauteng, in particular access to water and sanitation, energy,
improved health care and food security. These will be realised as government
continues with its programme of sustainable development. The Premier and
mayors stressed that the WSSD must also contribute to transformation of trade
relations so that the developing world could gain fair access to the markets
of rich nations.
Shilowa and mayors welcomed WSSD's contribution
towards achieving goals of the Millennium declaration to half the number of
the world's poor by 2015. "This must become the target of government at every
level, and municipalities have a key role to play," a statement issued after
the meeting stressed. The meeting further resolved to create an awareness
throughout Gauteng "so that ordinary people in Gauteng can understand the
importance of the summit for their own lives, and for the lives of their
children".
42. HUMANITY WILL PAY FOR ABUSE OF THE ENVIRONMENT,
WARNS WWF
Independent
10 July 2002
Internet:
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/environment/story.jsp?story=313583
Future generations can expect to see a severe fall in
living standards as humanity begins to pay for its huge environmental
"overdraft" with planet Earth, a leading conservation group has claimed. Human
development will begin to plummet within 30 years because we are fast running
out of space and resources to sustain the turbo-charged lifestyle of the
developed world, says WWF International. Unless governments take urgent action
to encourage a more sustainable way of life, human welfare will go into
drastic decline by 2030 with falls in average life expectancies, lower
educational levels and a shrinking economy, the WWF's Living Planet Report
2002 says. Exploitation of the Earth's renewable resources has grown by 80 per
cent in the past 40 years and is now 20 per cent higher than the natural
capacity of the planet to replenish itself, the report, published yesterday,
says. Since the 1980s the use of natural resources has consistently
outstripped supply and yet the rate at which resources are being depleted is
increasing because more people are chasing a higher standard of living at the
expense of environmental degradation. Within 50 years we will be exploiting
the renewable resources equivalent to two planet Earths - which is clearly
impossible to maintain. Jonathan Loh, the author of the report, said the
current rate at which the human population was growing and using natural
resources was fundamentally unsustainable and, without further change, a point
would come when development would go into reverse. "We do not know exactly
what the result will be of running this massive overdraft with the Earth. What
is clear, though, is that it would be better to control our own destiny,
rather than leave it up to chance," Mr Loh said. According to the report, the
Earth has about 11.4 billion hectares of productive space on land and sea,
which means about 1.9 hectares for each of the 6 billion people on the planet.
Yet the average consumption per head of population is equivalent to about 2.3
hectares per person. This "ecological footprint" varies enormously when
differences in lifestyle are taken into account. The typical African, for
instance, consumes resources equivalent to 1.4 hectares of land, whereas for
the average European it is 5 hectares, rising to 9.6 hectares for the typical
American.
Claude Martin, the director general of WWF
International, says in the report's foreword that improvements in the quality
of life for many people in the world since the Rio Earth Summit of 1992 have
exacted an "unacceptable price" from the global ecosystem.
"The past decade has witnessed fires on an
unprecedented scale in the tropical forests of Brazil and Indonesia, coral
bleaching that has left vast areas of reef in the Caribbean, Indian and
Pacific oceans as ghosts of their former selves, the collapse of commercially
viable fish stocks in the Atlantic, the ecological devastation of the Black
Sea, Aral Sea and Lake Chad, and the continual loss of precious wetland and
freshwater ecosystems around the world," Mr Martin said. "By continuing to
abuse the biosphere, and through the inequitable sharing of the Earth's
resources, we undermine the chances of eradicating poverty, and put the whole
of humanity under the threat of global climate change." A spokesman for the
WWF said that where once each generation could expect to be financially better
off and have a higher standard of living than their parents and grandparents,
scientists were now predicting a reversal of fortunes. The report was
published 50 days before the start of the World Summit on Sustainable
Development, which begins in Johannesburg on 26 August.
43. UAE TO PUSH FOR ECOLOGY INITIATIVE AT S. AFRICA
MEET
Gulf News
10 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.gulf-news.com/Articles/news.asp?ArticleID=57207
The UAE will push for the enforcement of its landmark
global environment initiative at an international conference in Johannesburg
this year within a drive to bridge the existing development gap in the world,
a top UAE environment official said yesterday. Sheikh Hamdan bin Zayed Al
Nahyan, Minister of State for Foreign Affairs and Deputy Chairman of the
Environment Research and Wildlife Development Agency (ERWDA), said the Global
Environment Data Initiative (GEDI) announced by the UAE this year had already
been supported by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP). "We will
press for the implementation of this brave initiative at the Johannesburg
summit on sustainable development," Sheikh Hamdan told the Lebanese monthly
magazine, Al Bia Wal Tenmia (Environment and Development). "ERWDA and UNEP
will then work together to find new partners in this initiative, including
academic and non-government organisations to put the final touches for an
implementation mechanism...a board of directors and a secretariat will also be
created." Sheikh Hamdan said the initiative is intended to bridge the large
gap in environment information in many countries and upgrade environmental
data needed by decision-makers on "national, regional and international
levels." "The initiative is aimed at developing and upgrading environment
control and surveillance and devising suitable policies in this field in
addition to tackling the financial, technical and manpower problems in some
countries," he said.
Sheikh Hamdan blamed the lack of accurate environment
data for the existing obstacles to sustainable development in several
countries, mainly the developing nations. "All social, economic and
environment sectors in some countries are suffering because of this." "There
has been a gap in environment data gathering between the developing world and
industrial countries and the gap has even largely widened...only a few
developing nations have managed to develop their data infrastructure and this
has created a pressing need for taking measures on the global front to bridge
this data gap." Sheikh Hamdan said Arab states need to give more attention to
scientific research, particularly in the environmental field to tackle
relevant problems. "Research centres in the Arab world are still in their
first stages...we need to give more attention to such activities, which
receive only two per cent of allocations for scientific and educational
research in the Arab world," he said.
44. WORLD LEADERS TO ATTEND U.N. SUMMIT
Associated Press
10 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.miami.com/mld/miami/news/world/3633161.htm
UNITED NATIONS (AP) - The United Nations is expecting
about 100 world leaders at a summit next month aimed at cutting poverty and
protecting the environment - but there's no word yet whether President Bush
will attend. Ten years after the Earth Summit in Brazil first focused global
attention on the need to preserve the environment, the leaders will gather in
Johannesburg, South Africa, from Aug. 26 to Sept. 4 with a much broader
agenda. The aim of the World Summit on Sustainable Development is to solidify
commitments made in the past year on opening markets to developing countries
and increasing financing. Participants are to adopt a program that will
achieve concrete results while preserving the environment. U.N.
Undersecretary-General Nitin Desai told a news briefing Tuesday that the
United Nations is hoping to match the turnout of about 100 presidents and
prime ministers at the 1992 Brazil summit. Among those who have accepted
invitations to the summit include British Prime Minister Tony Blair, French
President Jacques Chirac, Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi, Chinese
Premier Zhu Rongji, Mexican President Vicente Fox, Brazilian President
Fernando Henrique Cardoso and most African leaders, Desai said. The United
States has not yet announced who would head its delegation. The Johannesburg
summit is expected to focus on the ambitious goals adopted by world leaders at
the U.N. Millennium Summit in September 2000. By 2015, the leaders pledged to
halve the number of people living on less than a dollar a day, achieve
universal primary education, reduce child mortality, improve maternal health,
and start to reverse the HIV/AIDS epidemic. But Johannesburg will also focus
on other threats: a third of the world's more than 6 billion people live on
less than two dollars a day, use of fossil fuels is rising rapidly, natural
resources are being consumed faster than they can be replaced, three-quarters
of the world's fishing areas are fished-out, mountain glaciers are slowly
melting away, and the world's forests are shrinking. Desai, who is
secretary-general of the Johannesburg summit, said negotiators from nearly 200
countries have reached agreement on 75 percent of the development blueprint
for the next decade - including giving priority to water and sanitation,
energy, health, agriculture and biodiversity. But he said the most difficult
issues remain to be settled, including disagreements over requirements for
good government in developing countries and whether people should be asked to
take action on issues such as climate change before there is complete
scientific certainty.
45. BEHIND-THE-SCENE EFFORTS SEEK TO BRIDGE
DIFFERENCES OVER JOHANNESBURG OUTCOME: SUMMIT SEEN AS VITAL FOR FUTURE OF
MULTILATERALISM
United Nations
9 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.johannesburgsummit.org/html/whats_new/feature_story16.html
New York, 9 July-Informal discussions between
countries aimed at bridging the remaining differences in the outcome document
for the World Summit on Sustainable Development have intensified since the end
of the fourth and final preparatory meeting in Bali, Indonesia, and Summit
officials are hopeful that the behind-the-scene efforts will pave the way for
a successful Summit.
From the Group of Eight meeting near Calgary, Canada,
to Rio de Janeiro, where Brazil passed the Earth Summit "torch" to South
Africa, to the inaugural meeting of the African Union in Durban, the
high-level talks have centered on finding an approach to resolve the remaining
outstanding issues, which make up about a quarter of the outcome document.
At South Africa's request, high-level representatives
of about 20 countries will meet in New York on 17 July to map out such an
approach that will allow negotiators to find common ground on some of the most
difficult issues, which include finance and trade issues along with
disagreements over setting targets and timetables. The meeting will be led by
South African Foreign Minister Dr. Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma and United Nations
Secretary-General Kofi Annan. The meeting in New York will not be a
negotiating meeting, as it does not involve the whole membership of the United
Nations. Nevertheless the talks can provide the foundation for agreement at
the Summit.
Interest is growing among Heads of State, according to
Johannesburg Secretary-General Nitin Desai, who added the Summit was "getting
some pretty big names. Part of the reason for increase in interest, Desai
said, was that the Summit is now seen as a major test for the future of
multilaterism. "Johannesburg should not be seen as only the follow-up for the
implementation of the Earth Summit-it is also vital for the whole framework of
multilateralism."
In addition, Desai said, the Summit should take
multilateralism to the "next step" by including all the stakeholders, such as
the corporate sector, the NGOs, and the science community to participate in
implementation efforts.
According to Desai, many of the concerns of developing
countries were "taken on board" at the World Trade Organization meeting in
Doha, Qatar, and at the International Conference on Financing for Development
in Monterrey, Mexico, where, he said, donor countries announced the largest
increase in official development assistance that has ever been seen. And in
Africa, Desai said the NEPAD initiative represented a positive step for
multilateralism.
"In Johannesburg, we have to consolidate these gains,"
Desai said. "We have to take multilateralism to the next step. We have to
connect the commitments made in Monterrey with the programme areas where the
Summit is focusing. The whole climate of multilateralism has changed." "The
real test is whether we can convince the world that great world conferences
can make a difference on the ground," Desai said.
Most of the text dealing with programme issues, such
as water and sanitation, health, energy, agricultural production, and
biodiversity, has been agreed upon, Desai said. The outstanding issues involve
the differing ways people interpret various concepts from Rio, such as "common
but differentiated responsibilities," which acknowledges that countries have
different capacities and resources to act, and the precautionary principle,
which asks people to take action before the risks are scientifically
ascertained.
In addition, there are disagreements on finance and
the follow-up of Monterrey, on globalization and trade, good governance, and
on targets and timetables. But according to Desai, none of the disagreement is
insuperable. Many disagreements, he said, involved the formulation of language
and the placement of text.
For example, Desai said, there are competing proposals
over whether to raise the share of renewable energy to 5, 10 or 15 per cent
over the coming years. "Even if the phrase says 'substantially increase,' it
is enough of a mandate to go forward."
46. SOUTH AFRICA TO CONVENE FRIENDS OF THE CHAIR
MEETING TO HELP SPEED AGREEMENT ON JOHANNESBURG OUTCOME
United Nations
9 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.johannesburgsummit.org/html/whats_new/otherstories_friends_of_the_chair.html
New York, 9 July-South African President Thabo Mbeki
has invited 25 countries to serve as "Friends of the Chair" for the World
Summit on Sustainable Development in an effort to find an approach that will
help resolve the remaining differences and achieve a global consensus at the
Summit. The group will hold its first meeting in New York on 17 July.
The South African initiative grew out of discussions
between President Mbeki and United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan during
the Group of Eight Summit in Kananaskis, Canada last month. According to South
African UN Ambassador Dumisani Kumalo, the leaders of the G8 were among the
first to accept President Mbeki's invitation.
The 25 countries were selected based on geographical
representation as well as "their common interest in the pending issues, and
their overall commitment to the success of the Johannesburg Summit," Kumalo
said.
South Africa assumed the chairmanship of the Summit
after the last preparatory meeting in Bali, Indonesia last month. The Bali
meeting concluded with agreements on about three-quarters of the Summit's
implementation plan, and the remaining issues, which include some of the most
difficult, were left for Johannesburg. The Chairman of the Preparatory
Committee for the Summit was Dr. Emil Salim of Indonesia. The 17 July meeting
will be led by South African Minister of Foreign Affairs, Dr. Nkosazana
Dlamini Zuma, and by the UN Secretary-General. It is South Africa's hope that
the meeting will be attended by Ministers or "sherpas" who report directly to
the Heads of State and Government of the invited countries.
President Mbeki, according to a press release issued
by the South African Mission to the United Nations, "remains convinced that a
focused political discussion of the outstanding issues could result in an
approach that can help expedite the process in Johannesburg."The Friends of
the Chair meeting will not be a negotiating session, which must be open to all
Member States. Rather, it provides an opportunity for key players to find an
approach or a mechanism that would facilitate the negotiations to be held in
Johannesburg. Still to be resolved are issues concerning trade and finance,
globalization, setting targets and timetables, and differences over the
interpretation of principles adopted at the Earth Summit.
South African representatives noted that the Bali
PrepCom was successful in reducing the number of outstanding issues in the
implementation plan, and expressed their appreciation for Indonesia's efforts
in hosting the meeting.
The countries invited by President Mbeki to serve as
Friends of the Chair include Argentina, Brazil, Canada, China, Denmark, Egypt,
France, Germany, Ghana, India, Indonesia, Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Jordan,
Mexico, Nigeria, Norway, Russian Federation, Senegal, Sweden, Uganda, United
Kingdom, United States and Venezuela.
47. GLOBAL STANDARD SOUGHT FOR ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION
The Yomiuri Shimbun
9 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/newse/20020709wo72.htm
In recent years, the world has seen the spread of
economic globalization. The trend promotes free trade and the abolition of
regulations that obstruct the operations of multinational companies.
Globalization is emerging as a major issue on the agenda of the World Summit
on Sustainable Development, to be held in Johannesburg in August. Developing
countries believe globalization without consideration for the environment has
not only damaged the environment, but also accelerated poverty. The basic
rules on globalization are set at meetings of the World Trade Organization.
Recently, a controversial provision called the Multilateral Agreement on
Investment has attracted widespread public attention because of its possible
introduction into WTO rules.
The provision gives priority to the liberalization of
trade and investment set by the WTO instead of to environmental policies set
by central or regional governments. The provision is based on the North
American Free Trade Agreement signed by the United States, Canada and Mexico.
Murray Dobbin, a senior official of the Council of Canadians, said people in
the three countries know from experience with NAFTA the ways in which the
provision could negatively affect human health and local environments.
One example is a dispute between the state of
California and Canada-based Methanex Corp., a worldwide distributor of
methanol.
In 1999, California Gov. Gray Davis ordered the
elimination of a fuel additive known as MTBE from gasoline supplies in the
state. The move followed a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency report saying
that animal testing had shown the additive to be carcinogenic. Nevertheless,
Methanex insisted that there was no sufficient scientific evidence to support
the MTBE ban. The company filed a lawsuit based on the investment provisions
of NAFTA, seeking 970 million dollars in damages.
Meanwhile, the Canadian government banned the import
of another fuel additive known as MMT, on suspicion that it was a neurotoxin.
In response, the U.S. manufacturer of the additive, Ethyl Corporation, filed a
lawsuit against the Canadian government based on the same NAFTA provisions. In
the end, the Canadian government withdrew the ban and paid 13 million dollars
to the company in an out-of-court settlement. In Mexico, the construction plan
for an industrial waste disposal facility by a U.S. company was interrupted by
local governments due to increasing concern over the project's negative impact
on the environment. Again, the company filed a lawsuit under the NAFTA
provisions and received 16 million dollars in compensation. These examples
show that consideration has been given to promotion of free trade before local
environments. In the last preparatory meeting for the Johannesburg summit held
in Bali in June, some participants pointed to the necessity of creating a
standard for preventing damage to the environment at the same time as
promoting free trade. However, developed countries said the matter should be
discussed at WTO meetings rather than the summit. At the same time, developing
countries appeared hesitant to strongly oppose promotion of free trade among
developed nations out of fear that too much concern for the environment could
interfere with their own economic growth. Caught in the middle of the dispute
are ordinary people whose environments are being threatened.
It is likely that economic globalization will continue
for some time yet, making it necessary to create a global standard for
protecting the environment.
48. NGO DELEGATES TOLD TO PAY UP FOR SUMMIT
Cape Times
8 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?sf=2668&click_id=2762&art_id=ct20020708105944801W231862&set_id=1
The estimated 45 000 non-governmental delegates to the
United Nations' World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg next
month will have to pay a R1 500 registration fee to contribute to the upgrade
of the Nasrec conference centre and to cover administration costs. The UN does
not charge registration fees for conferences. The charge is being levied by
the Civil Society Secretariat, which was set up to facilitate non-governmental
participation at the summit. Some NGOs believe the fee will exclude some of
the poorer delegates at a conference where one of the main issues is poverty
alleviation. The United Nations' official conference venue will be in Sandton,
where government delegates from around the world will meet. The expected 45
000 non-governmental delegates will meet at Nasrec. NGOs believe the fee will
exclude some. The Civil Society Secretariat evolved out of a mandate given by
the UN to the South African NGO Coalition (Sangoco) to facilitate NGO
participation at the summit.
Liz McDaid of Earthlife Africa said the effect of the
registration fee was likely to be that some delegates from poorer countries,
particularly in Africa, would not be able to attend. "It is imperative that
representatives of civil society attend the conference. The UN acknowledges
that, when it comes to the implementation of sustainable development,
governments cannot succeed without civil society's help," McDaid said. Ralph
Shepard of Novalis and Globenet 3, an international civil society organisation,
said he had heard of several NGO members who would not attend the summit
because they were unable to afford the R1 500 registration fee.
49. JAPAN, EU AGREE ON CUTTING GREENHOUSE GASSES,
DEVELOPMENT AID AT SUMMIT
Associated Press
8 July 2002
Internet:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20020708/ap_wo_en_po/japan_eu_summit_4
TOKYO - Japan's Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi and
Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen, representing the European Union
agreed Monday to push for greenhouse gas reductions and provide substantial
aid to the developing world. The two leaders, joined by European Commission
President Romano Prodi, met for several hours in Tokyo Monday afternoon in the
11th annual EU-Japan summit. Koizumi said the talks focused on global warming,
international trade and peace in the Middle East and Afghanistan In a joint
statement issued after the summit, the two sides stressed their commitment to
development aid. "As providers of approximately three-quarters of total funds
available for development assistance, we reiterate our commitment to assist
the developing countries in the efforts to ensure long-term sustainable
development and poverty reduction," it said. Although few specific agreements
were made, Fogh Rasmussen, who assumed the EU presidency earlier this month,
said the summit was an important chance for the two leaders to meet
face-to-face. "All in all, our meeting has reconfirmed the close ties between
the European Union and Japan," he said. Aid is a sensitive issue for Tokyo.
Japan was for more than a decade the world's largest single donor, but was
surpassed last year by the United States as Tokyo tightened its budget and the
yen weakened against the dollar. At the annual Group of Eight summit in Canada
last month, Koizumi said it would be very difficult for Japan to increase its
development aid and stressed seeing the aid which is already provided used
effectively. In the statement, the leaders also urged other countries to
ratify the Kyoto Protocol an international accord aimed at reducing greenhouse
gas emissions. Japan and the European Union back aggressive limits on carbon
dioxide emissions, but are at odds with the United States and could be heading
for a confrontation at an upcoming global conference on the environment to be
held from Aug. 26-Sept. 4 in Johannesburg, South Africa. While in Japan, Fogh
Rasmussen was to meet with Danish business leaders and other members of the
Danish community here, and hold a separate meeting with Koizumi to discuss
bilateral ties. The Japan-EU summit has been held since 1991.
50. JAPAN AND EU DIFFER OVER INTERNATIONAL AID: EU
EU Business
8 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.eubusiness.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=85476&d=101&h=240&f=56&dateformat=%o%20%B%20%Y
TOKYO, July 8 (AFP) - Japan and the European Union
presented a united front in public following a summit meeting here Monday, but
a senior EU source admitted differences had emerged over international aid in
the run-up to next month's World Summit on Sustainable Development in
Johannesburg. "There are differences over increasing international aid, where
we want to be much more generous (than Japan), and over market access for
products from developing countries," a European diplomat told AFP.
During a press conference marking the 11th EU-Japan
summit, there was complete agreement on all issues, ranging from
counter-terrorism post-September 11, to engaging North Korea in dialogue and
commitment to increased development aid.
Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi, European
Commission President Romano Prodi and Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh
Rasmussen took part in the summit. Denmark currently holds the EU's six-month
rotating presidency.
"We recognise that a substantial increase in ODA
(official development assistance, the Japanese term for development aid), and
other resources will be required if developing countries are to achieve the
internationally agreed development goals and objectives," the post-summit
joint statement said. The declaration was in stark contrast to Japan's policy
of cutting aid spending along with overall government expenditure. Japan's
overall ODA budget fell 3.0 percent in the year to March 2002 to 1.015
trillion yen (8.5 billion dollars), while its budget for the year to March
2003 is to dip another 10.3 percent to 910.6 billion yen.
For years, Japan was the world's biggest aid donor in
absolute terms, although Denmark, Norway and the Netherlands were all more
generous in terms of the proportion of national wealth they give. But Japan
has now ceded first place to the United States and could even be overtaken by
Germany. The question of improved market access for developing countries,
especially in the agricultural sector was still politically sensitive in
Japan, the EU diplomat said. "They are afraid that rice from poor countries
will invade the Japanese market," where domestically grown rice is many times
higher than world prices as the heavily subsidized but uncompetitive industry
is protected. During the press conference, Prodi recalled that: "Japan has
been among all the developed countries the most helpful for foreign aid and we
(Europe and Japan) must go on." "If we want some results (at the Johannesburg
summit), we have to stick together - only an agreement between the European
Union and Japan can make it possible."
51. UN REPORT URGES AFRICA TO PROTECT THE
ENVIRONMENT
BuaNews via All Africa
8 July 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200207080570.html
A groundbreaking report has called on Africa to take
urgent action to save its environment and create a path for sustainable
development. The African Environment Outlook (AEO) report, released by the
Nairobi-based United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) on Thursday,
observed that unless urgent action was taken to deliver
environmentally-friendly development to millions of Africans, there would be
sharp increases in air and water pollution, land degradation, droughts and
wildlife losses facing the continent. Such action should, it said, include
deeper cuts in the continent's debts burden, a boost in overseas aid,
empowering local communities, enforcing environmental agreements and
introducing 'green and clean' technologies.
Titled 'Hard Facts, Tough Choices, 30 Years,' the
report calls for a grated effort by countries both within and outside Africa
to the steer the continent on a prosperous, environmentally sustainable
course.
The report said rapid population growth; wars and high
levels of national debt, disasters and disease have all taken their toll on
the people and the rich natural environment of Africa in the past thirty
years. It warned that over the coming three decades new and emerging threats
such as climate change, the unchecked spread of alien, introduced species,
uncontrolled expansion of cities and pollution from cars and industry, were
likely to aggravate levels of poverty, environmental decline and ill-health.
The report was issued to coincide with the two-day
African Ministerial Conference on the Environment (AMCEN), which ended on
Friday in Uganda, Kampala. Mr Klaus Toepfer, executive director of UNEP said
the report 'is pioneering assessment of the state of Africa's environment and
will be invaluable for governments on the continent and across the world in
prioritising efforts to achieve a new dawn for these lands.' 'It will also be
a vital report for nations meeting at the World Summit on Sustainable
Development later this year,' he said. The WSSD will be held in Johannesburg
from 26 August to 4 September
52. COMMISSION TO SEEK MORE DEVELOPING COUNTRY
LINKS AT SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT
Cordis News
8 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.eubusiness.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=85493&d=101&h=240&f=56&dateformat=%o%20%B%20%Y
The European Commission will use the World summit on
sustainable development (WSSD) to explore ways of increasing the participation
of developing country researchers in EU research projects, according to
Christian Patermann, Director of the Research DG's 'preserving the ecosystem:
research actions for the environment' directorate, speaking at the University
of East Anglia, UK, at the beginning of July. The Commission will take a
number of 'concrete proposals and projects' to Johannesburg, South Africa for
the 'Science forum' meeting organised by the South African government to run
in parallel to the main WSSD meeting on 2 and 3 September Mr Patermann
highlighted the fact that 'sustainable development' is one of the Commission's
thematic priorities in the Sixth Framework programme (FP6), and that FP6 will
also operate on a cost sharing basis to researchers from outside the EU.
'This is something of a revolution,' said Mr Patermann.
'It means an enormous leap forward. We will have to do a lot to find the right
customers, colleagues and partners.' Mr Patermann said that the Commission is
participating in the Science forum to promote the role of science and
technology in sustainable development, demonstrate the openness of FP6 and the
European research area (ERA) to the rest of the world and to gain an
understanding of developing countries' needs in this area.
'We feel that we can offer a lot in these areas, and
see important brokerage possibilities with our colleagues in the Third World,'
said Mr Patermann. 'We want to bring a variety of very concrete proposals and
projects to Johannesburg to show what can be done. In addition, I can be
pretty sure that there is also a lot of adaptive innovation in these countries
that the 'North' can learn from,' said Mr Patermann. Meanwhile the lack of
science in the preparations for the WSSD has been criticised by Jonathon
Poritt, chair of the UK Commission on sustainable development. 'Science plays
no part in most of the policies being promulgated by the World trade
organisation and many national governments,' said Mr Poritt at a briefing on
the WSSD in London on 1 July. This point was echoed by Tony Juniper, director
designate of Friends of the Earth: 'Science is not what is driving the summit,
but rather domestic political issues. There is a disconnection between
politics and science,' he said.
53. EARTH 'WILL EXPIRE BY 2050'
The Observer
7 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.observer.co.uk/international/story/0,6903,750783,00.html
Earth's population will be forced to colonise two
planets within 50 years if natural resources continue to be exploited at the
current rate, according to a report out this week. A study by the World
Wildlife Fund (WWF), to be released on Tuesday, warns that the human race is
plundering the planet at a pace that outstrips its capacity to support life.
In a damning condemnation of Western society's high consumption levels, it
adds that the extra planets (the equivalent size of Earth) will be required by
the year 2050 as existing resources are exhausted. The report, based on
scientific data from across the world, reveals that more than a third of the
natural world has been destroyed by humans over the past three decades. Using
the image of the need for mankind to colonise space as a stark illustration of
the problems facing Earth, the report warns that either consumption rates are
dramatically and rapidly lowered or the planet will no longer be able to
sustain its growing population. Experts say that seas will become emptied of
fish while forests - which absorb carbon dioxide emissions - are completely
destroyed and freshwater supplies become scarce and polluted. The report
offers a vivid warning that either people curb their extravagant lifestyles or
risk leaving the onus on scientists to locate another planet that can sustain
human life. Since this is unlikely to happen, the only option is to cut
consumption now.
Systematic overexploitation of the planet's oceans has
meant the North Atlantic's cod stocks have collapsed from an estimated
spawning stock of 264,000 tonnes in 1970 to under 60,000 in 1995. The study
will also reveal a sharp fall in the planet's ecosystems between 1970 and 2002
with the Earth's forest cover shrinking by about 12 per cent, the ocean's
biodiversity by a third and freshwater ecosystems in the region of 55 per
cent. The Living Planet report uses an index to illustrate the shocking level
of deterioration in the world's forests as well as marine and freshwater
ecosystems. Using 1970 as a baseline year and giving it a value of 100, the
index has dropped to a new low of around 65 in the space of a single
generation. It is not just humans who are at risk. Scientists, who examined
data for 350 kinds of mammals, birds, reptiles and fish, also found the
numbers of many species have more than halved. Martin Jenkins, senior adviser
for the World Conservation Monitoring Centre in Cambridge, which helped
compile the report, said: 'It seems things are getting worse faster than
possibly ever before. Never has one single species had such an overwhelming
influence. We are entering uncharted territory.'
Figures from the centre reveal that black rhino
numbers have fallen from 65,000 in 1970 to around 3,100 now. Numbers of
African elephants have fallen from around 1.2 million in 1980 to just over
half a million while the population of tigers has fallen by 95 per cent during
the past century. The UK's birdsong population has also seen a drastic fall
with the corn bunting population declining by 92 per cent between 1970 and
2000, the tree sparrow by 90 per cent and the spotted flycatcher by 70 per
cent.
Experts, however, say it is difficult to ascertain how
many species have vanished for ever because a species has to disappear for 50
years before it can be declared extinct. Attention is now focused on next
month's Earth Summit in Johannesburg, the most important environmental
negotiations for a decade. However, the talks remain bedevilled with claims
that no agreements will be reached and that US President George W. Bush will
fail to attend. Matthew Spencer, a spokesman for Greenpeace, said: 'There will
have to be concessions from the richer nations to the poorer ones or there
will be fireworks.' The preparatory conference for the summit, held in Bali
last month, was marred by disputes between developed nations and poorer states
and non-governmental organisations (NGOs), despite efforts by British
politicians to broker compromises on key issues. America, which sent 300
delegates to the conference, is accused of blocking many of the key
initiatives on energy use, biodiversity and corporate responsibility. The WWF
report shames the US for placing the greatest pressure on the environment. It
found the average US resident consumes almost double the resources as that of
a UK citizen and more than 24 times that of some Africans.
Based on factors such as a nation's consumption of
grain, fish, wood and fresh water along with its emissions of carbon dioxide
from industry and cars, the report provides an ecological 'footprint' for each
country by showing how much land is required to support each resident.
America's consumption 'footprint' is 12.2 hectares per head of population
compared to the UK's 6.29ha while Western Europe as a whole stands at 6.28ha.
In Ethiopia the figure is 2ha, falling to just half a hectare for Burundi, the
country that consumes least resources.
The report, which will be unveiled in Geneva, warns
that the wasteful lifestyles of the rich nations are mainly responsible for
the exploitation and depletion of natural wealth. Human consumption has
doubled over the last 30 years and continues to accelerate by 1.5 per cent a
year.
Now WWF wants world leaders to use its findings to
agree on specific actions to curb the population's impact on the planet.
A spokesman for WWF UK, said: 'If all the people
consumed natural resources at the same rate as the average US and UK citizen
we would require at least two extra planets like Earth.'
The world's ticking timebomb
Marine crisis: North Atlantic cod stocks have
collapsed from an estimated 264,000 tonnes in 1970 to under 60,000 in 1995.
Pollution: The United States places the greatest
pressure on the environment, with its carbon dioxide emissions and
over-consumption. It takes 12.2 hectares of land to support each American
citizen and 6.29 for each Briton, while the figure for Burundi is just half a
hectare.
Shrinking Forests: Between 1970 and 2002 forest cover
has dwindled by 12 per cent.
Endangered wildlife: African elephant numbers have
fallen from 1.2 million in 1980 to half a million now. In the UK the songbird
population has fallen dramatically, with the corn bunting declining by 92 per
cent in the past 30 years.
See also: WWF International -
http://www.panda.org
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20020709/ap_on_he_me/wwf_global_environment_1
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/oneworld/20020710/wl_oneworld/1032_1026305542
54. STRENGTHENED NEPAD OFFERS NEW HOPE FOR WSSD
SUCCESS
WWF International
5 July 2002
Internet:
http://panda.org/news/press/news.cfm?id=3012
Kampala, Uganda - The New Partnership for Africa's
Development (NEPAD) offers one of the last few possibilities for turning
around the upcoming World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) to yield
real results for people, WWF says.
WWF believes the New African Partnership provides "a
good vision and framework" for delivering sustainable development by
integrating environmental and economic issues in addressing poverty and other
social issues.
The Partnership also provides a basis for developing
concrete, time-bound, and measurable action programmes that can finally
kick-start the implementation of Agenda 21 and the various conventions
initiated at the 1992 Earth Summit.
"We see a lot of potential in NEPAD turning the WSSD
into a success. It stands a fairly good chance for international recognition
and support if it evolves a solid implementation programme," said WWF Director
General, Dr Claude Martin.
Dr Martin, speaking at the 9th session of the African
Ministerial Conference on the Environment (AMCEN), asked African governments
to show leadership and commitment, unlike some of their counterparts in the
North.
"So far the reluctance to commit to action by certain
OECD countries has thrown into jeopardy the very essence of multi-lateralism
upon which we rely," the WWF Director General commented. "It is essential that
the WSSD does not simply end up with declarations and voluntary pledges, but
instead concrete commitments with targets and time-frames."
Dr Martin urged African countries to strengthen the
NEPAD Environment Initiative by mainstreaming environment issues within all of
NEPAD's programmes, from the planning to implementation stages, rather than
treating them as isolated sectoral issues.
"The fact that there is no mention of environment in
NEPAD's final sections on implementation is a cause for concern. WWF
encourages African governments to integrate environmental concerns in all of
its programmes and to adopt concrete targets in order to ensure that Africa's
growth and development are based on good environmental stewardship," Dr Martin
said.
WWF has tabled comprehensive proposals on how to
strengthen the NEPAD Environment Initiative before the high-level Ministerial
segment of the AMCEN meeting. WWF is further petitioning African governments
to make a strong case for the WSSD conference.
55. EU AGENDA FOR THE WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT PUBLISHED
European Union
5 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.europaworld.org/week89/euagenda5702.htm
The European Commission has set out the agenda that it
intends to pursue at the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) which
begins in Johannesburg at the end of next month. The challenge of the World
Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD), it says, is to deliver on the
promises of the Rio Earth Summit and on the Millennium Development goals, in
order to eradicate poverty, improve living standards based on sustainable
patterns of production and consumption, and to ensure that the benefits of
globalisation are shared by all. The EU supports the proposals of the UN
Secretary General that the WSSD should make progress in five key areas -
water, energy, health, agriculture and bio-diversity. As regards globalisation,
finance and trade, the EU wishes to agree on a positive agenda. Important
steps to ensure that globalisation benefit all have recently been taken
through the Doha Development Agenda and the Monterrey Consensus. "We should
now identify ways and means to build upon them: as an example, in
Johannesburg, the EU will be putting forward a number of positive and
supportive measures on trade and investment, outside the scope of Doha
Development Agenda and the Monterrey Consensus, which specifically would
contribute to sustainable development in developing countries," it says. The
EU is suggesting supportive measures on a wide scale, ranging from the
integration of sustainability parameters into regional and bilateral
agreements and preferential trade schemes, commitments from all countries to
duty- and quota free market access for all products originating in least
developed countries, the promotion of markets for organic produce,
environmentally friendly products and "fair trade", measures to enhance the
transparency of domestic trade procedures, the reform of environmentally
harmful subsidies and the further development and support for sustainable
impact assessments (SIAs). In addition, the EU is also suggesting a number of
actions to enhance the benefits for sustainable development that developing
countries can draw from foreign direct investment (FDI), including the
promotion of corporate social responsibility and export credits to encourage
environmentally and socially sound investment.
"As a major supplier of aid the EU is determined to
deliver on commitments made at Monterrey and to work with all partners to
ensure a successful outcome at the WSSD," it says.
56. AFRICAN MINISTERIAL CONFERENCE ON ENVIRONMENT
CLOSES IN UGANDA
Xinhua News Agency
5 July 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FE20020705240000026.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
KAMPALA, Jul 5, 2002 (Xinhua via COMTEX) -- The ninth
session of the African Ministerial Conference on Environment (AMCEN) closed
here Friday, with determination to make more efforts on environment issues. In
the Kampala Declaration adopted during the two-day meeting, more than 48
environment ministers or their representatives from African countries pledged
to commit themselves to make every effort to integrate environment concerns
into national pursuit of economic development in Africa. They promised that
their respective governments will implement the multilateral environment
agreements, and strengthen cooperation with all regional and sub-regional
bodies, including external partners to pursue sustainable human, social and
economic development that is in harmony with the environment. The ministers
agreed that they will transmit to the African Union the decisions taken by
this AMCEN session on the revised Algiers Convention, which is a legal basis
for environmental protection in Africa.
During the meeting, the participants also endorsed the
framework of the action plan for the environment initiative of the New
Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD). The delegates also endorsed the
African common position on the World Summit for Sustainable Development, and
agreed to attend the summit, which will be held in South Africa from August 26
to September 5.
Ugandan Minister of Water, Lands and Environment
Ruhakana Rugunda was elected new president of the AMCEN at this meeting.
The tenth session of AMCEN will be held in two years,
but the location of the meeting is still undecided.
57. COMMISSION ANNOUNCES NEW CORPORATE SOCIAL
RESPONSIBILITY STRATEGY TO PROMOTE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
EuropaWorld
5 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.europaworld.org/week89/commissionannonces5702.htm
The European Commission adopted a new strategy on
Corporate Social Responsibility ('CSR') this week. This aims to take forward
the contribution of business to sustainable development, and calls for a new
social and environmental rôle for business in the global economy. The
Commission intends to set up a 'European Multi-Stakeholder Forum' for all
players social partners, business networks, civil society, consumers and
investors to exchange best practice, to establish principles for codes of
conduct and to seek consensus on objective evaluation methods and validation
tools such as 'social labels'. The strategy seeks to complement existing
initiatives by companies themselves and by public organisations such as the
OECD and the UN. CSR is defined as voluntary social and environmental
practices of business, linked to their core activities, which go beyond
companies' existing legal obligations. The strategy will also support CSR in
small and medium-size undertakings ('SMEs'), in particular by identifying the
business case for CSR and by awareness raising of SMEs. The Commission has an
important role to play in CSR, bringing together businesses across Europe to
share best practice and to establish common principles for evaluation.
Finally, the Commission will work towards building CSR principles into all
other EU policies, for example by promoting better understanding of CSR in
developing countries. The Commission will publish a report on the work of the
European Multi-stakeholder Forum in 2004. Anna Diamantopoulou, Commissioner
for employment and social affairs said : "Corporate social responsibility can
play an important role in advancing sustainable development. Many businesses
have already recognised that CSR can be profitable and CSR schemes have
mushroomed. However, the EU can add value in at least two key ways: by helping
stakeholders to make CSR more transparent and more credible and by showing
that CSR is not just for multinationals : it can benefit smaller businesses
too. Corporate social responsibility and corporate governance are two sides of
the same coin: 'greenwashing' your social and environmental performance is as
bad as 'whitewashing' your profits. CSR is no longer just a job for marketing
departments."
Erkki Liikanen, Commissioner for Enterprise and the
Information Society said: "Corporate social responsibility has a valuable
tradition in Europe. Enterprises of all size-classes now manage it
strategically to reach a balance between economic interests, societal
expectations and environmental needs. If managed properly, CSR can support the
long-term competitiveness of individual enterprises, improve the
entrepreneurial climate in society and bring us closer to the strategic goal
for the Union of 2010. The Commission's strategy to promote CSR builds on the
voluntary nature of these enterprise efforts. The Forum will help to increase
the consensus between enterprises and the other stakeholders. This will help
businesses to fully reap the benefits from their efforts."
EDITORIALS
58. RESPONSIBILITY VS. ACCOUNTABILITY
Counter viewpoint: Joshua Karliner and Kenny Bruno,
CorpWatch, San Francisco
International Herald Tribune
10 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.iht.com/ihtsearch.php?id=64051&owner=(IHT%20/%20EBF)&date=20020710090709
The world has moved backward on environment and
development since Rio. Governments surely bear primary responsibility for this
failure. However, global corporations are at the root of many of the most
intractable problems and have hamstrung governments preparing for Earth Summit
II in Johannesburg, South Africa. The stinging reality is that in the 10 years
since Rio, sustainable development has languished on the margins of an
international politics dominated by institutions such as the World Trade
Organization. This has coincided with the emergence of an age of global
"corporate environmentalism" that began in earnest at the first Earth Summit.
Governments in Rio embraced big business, allowing corporations to avoid a
binding legal framework on their activities, opting instead for a voluntary
approach to sustainable development. As a result, the first Earth Summit
failed to confront the central corporate role in environment and development
problems in any meaningful way. Instead, some of the world's worst corporate
polluters were given special access to the Earth Summit process, establishing
a trend of UN-corporate collaboration that has intensified since that time. At
the core of this issue is a conflict between two approaches to sustainable
development. The first approach, favored in the Earth Summit processes, the UN
Global Compact and the International Chamber of Commerce, is ''corporate
responsibility.'' Corporate responsibility refers to any attempt to get
corporations to behave responsibly on a voluntary basis, out of either ethical
or bottom-line considerations. The second approach is ''corporate
accountability'' (or compliance), which refers to requiring corporations to
behave according to societal norms or face consequences.
Corporate responsibility and corporate accountability
may be mutually supportive in some circumstances. But in critical moments, the
purpose of corporate responsibility is often to avoid accountability
mechanisms that would be more difficult for corporations to control. In the
Earth Summit negotiations, corporate responsibility has won out. The records
of leading corporate environmentalists in the energy, chemicals, agriculture,
extractive, technology and transportation sectors over the past decade show
that there needs to be more democratic control over corporate activity - not
less. Shell, for example, appeared to take its global responsibilities very
seriously at the first Earth Summit in 1992. But by the mid-1990s the global
oil giant was embroiled in human rights and environmental scandals in the
Niger Delta. This controversy continues today in the form of a pending lawsuit
in a U.S. federal court concerning the death of Nigerian environmental leader
Ken Saro-Wiwa. Shell's high-profile sustainable development advocacy in Rio
also evolved into a major environmental public relations campaign on climate
change. Yet, despite its recent efforts, as the 21st century begins, Shell
remains one of the world's leading climate offenders. Based on an analysis we
published in 1999 using data from leading scientific organizations, as well as
environmental groups such as Greenpeace and the Natural Resources Defense
Council, it is clear that today, oil produced by Shell emits about the same
amount of CO as all of Britain. Given Shell's and other self-proclaimed
corporate environmentalists' record post-Earth Summit I, it makes their
rhetoric ring somewhat hollow on the eve of Earth Summit II. The Enron debacle
and all its consequences make it patently obvious that something is terribly
wrong with the self-regulatory route (albeit Enron's case is much broader in
scope than just environment and development). Voluntary measures,
best-practices case studies, wishy-washy partnerships and multistakeholder
dialogues are not the solution.
In many respects, the worldwide movement challenging
corporate-driven globalization has generated the most clarity on this issue.
Part of the vision of this movement is for the UN to become home to a binding
legal framework to hold corporations accountable across the globe. In this
way, the UN could begin to fulfill its potential to serve as a counterbalance
to corporate globalization and help move the world forward toward truly
sustainable development.
59. ROUTE TO JOHANNESBURG: RICH NATIONS MUST CARE
MORE FOR POOR NATIONS.
The Asahi Shimbun
10 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.asahi.com/english/op-ed/K2002071100679.html
World leaders will gather in Johannesburg in late
August for the 2002 World Summit on Sustainable Development, or Rio Plus 10, a
mammoth global summit on poverty reduction and the environment. It comes just
10 years after the U.N. Conference on Environment and Development, known as
the Rio de Janeiro Earth Summit, in June 1992. Those attending the
Johannesburg Earth Summit will examine progress under Agenda 21, a
comprehensive action program to avert looming environmental and social
disaster, as agreed upon in Rio de Janeiro, and try to formulate a new action
plan and a political declaration of its objectives.
So far, though, four preparatory meetings for the
conference have failed to generate a draft action plan because of the wide
disparity between industrial nations and developing nations over economic aid
and other issues. The leaders will be going to the South African city
uncertain about what will come out of the meeting and its declaration.
Discussions in the preparatory meetings have uncovered a strong sense of
frustration among developing nations that nothing has really changed in the
past decade. The Rio summit addressed ways toward development without harming
the environment. While there have been some significant achievements on the
environmental front, among them the Kyoto Protocol to curb global warming,
economic development in poor countries has been stalled during the past
decade, and poverty has been as acute as ever in those countries.
The 2000 U.N. Millennium Summit adopted a
poverty-busting action program with the goal of reducing by half in 15 years
the number of people scraping by on a meager existence at $1 (120 yen) or less
a day. There are 1.2 billion people in the world in that situation. But the
World Bank has predicted that developing countries won't be able to secure the
level of growth necessary to achieve this target because of slumping commodity
prices and other factors. Developing nations of Africa and elsewhere want
industrial nations to scrap tariffs on products from the least developed
nations to help them expand exports. They also demand a mandate in the new
action program that would implement targets set in Agenda 21-aiming for a rise
in devekoped countries' official development assistance (ODA) to 0.7 percent
of their gross national product.
Leaders of the Group of Eight major powers who held
their annual summit last month in Canada decided to commit more than half
their new ODA to Africa, but pledged no specific amount of aid. It will
undoubtedly be difficult to tackle all these challenges at once. One of the
thorniest thickets in trade negotiations before the World Trade Organization
is how to avoid having developing nations be at a disadvantage in promoting
free trade. Industrial countries must increase ODA by more than three-folds to
achieve the target of 0.7 percent of GNP. But it is natural that developing
countries are irritated at the lack of progress in programs worked out at
summits. It is probably time to consider new ways to raise funds for aid to
developing countries outside the ODA framework. One idea that merits serious
consideration is the the Tobin tax, a uniform tax on all foreign currency
transactions, an idea first proposed in the 1970s by Nobel Prize-winning U.S.
economist James Tobin. The approaching Johannesburg summit is expected to
produce a special document that describes partnerships and initiatives
committed independently by governments and organizations, plus an
implementation document based upon accord by all the negotiating countries.
The partnerships and initiatives document should be filled with projects
intended to improve living conditions of people in developing countries. One
such project is the Asia Forest Partnership, in which Japan and Southeast
Asian nations work to stop illegal logging, prevent forest fires and restore
damaged forest land. This partnership is gaining support from several other
nations in the region. In the decade since the Rio Earth Summit, public
awareness of environmental problems has grown measurably in Japan. But the
problems of development and poverty elsewhere are not drawing much attention.
Rio Plus 10 could be a good opportunity for Japanese to learn of the problems
of poor, developing countries and people and to start supporting efforts to
solve these problems
SPEECHES
60. WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT A 'TEST
FOR MULTILATERALISM AND THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY', SAYS SECRETARY-GENERAL
United Nations
17 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2002/sgsm8307.doc.htm
Following are Secretary-General Kofi Annan's remarks
to the "Friends of the Chair" of the Preparatory Committee of the World Summit
on Sustainable Development:
It gives me great pleasure to welcome all of you here
to United Nations Headquarters for these crucially important consultations on
the Johannesburg Summit. I know you are well aware of the high expectations
among the world public that the Summit should be a decisive step forward in
the quest for sustainable development. So I hope you come here ready to work
hard, as the Minister said, listen to each other's points of view, and find a
way to ensure that, when we get to the Summit, your Government is clearly seen
to be taking this challenge seriously. Over the last two years, significant
strides have been made in addressing the challenges of development. The
Millennium Summit not only defined the major goals, but also galvanized
political commitment at the highest level. That commitment helped lay the
groundwork for successes at Doha and Monterrey. Johannesburg must maintain
this momentum and show that in the face of a quintessential global challenge
-- the challenge of raising living standards while protecting the environment
-- multilateralism works and international cooperation is the way to go. I
would like to convey my great appreciation to Dr. Emil Salim of Indonesia for
his dedication and outstanding work as Chairman of the Preparatory Committee.
A great deal has already been accomplished, in Bali and elsewhere, and that is
reflected in the draft plan of implementation.
As you know, negotiations on several critical issues
have reached an impasse, and thus require further political engagement and
dialogue before the opening of the Summit just six weeks away from now. That
is why President Mbeki and I felt the need to bring you together. As "Friends
of the Chair", this group is not expected as the Chair to negotiate text on
the outstanding issues. Rather, the hope is that you will suggest ways to
bridge the gaps on those issues, leaving actual negotiations to the full
membership of the United Nations.
Therefore, the purpose of this meeting is twofold.
First is to identify the core remaining issues. It
seems that six clusters of issues hold the key to agreement on a plan of
implementation: the first, the Rio principles; then finance, including
replenishment of the Global Environment Facility (GEF); globalization and
trade; good governance; time-bound targets; and technology transfers. South
Africa has circulated a paper containing details on each of these.
The second reason we have gathered is to reach an
understanding on a common approach to resolving these undoubtedly complex and
politically sensitive issues. Allow me to suggest a few points and principles
that could help guide your efforts.
First, the Summit should seek to implement the
existing global consensus on sustainable development, and avoid revising or
reinterpreting the principles and agreements of this consensus.
Second, efforts to build on the recent achievements in
critical areas such as finance, trade and good governance should be grounded
in existing agreement or work that is already in progress in these areas.
Third, the Summit should not be sidetracked by
discussions on issues that are already under discussion by other relevant
forums.
Fourth, there should be a greater focus on specific
actions in the five key areas of water and sanitation, energy, health,
agriculture and biodiversity -- or WEHAB, the acronym that many people are
using.
And fifth, States should give us assurances that there
will be an adequate replenishment of the GEF.
I believe that flexibility and mutual understanding
should be possible for this group of "friends" to find a common approach that
can bridge the differences and produce a broad-based agreement. Needless to
say, this common approach should be found before the Summit, so that Member
States arrive in Johannesburg with a clear idea of how the negotiations can
succeed and, in turn, result in the launch of concrete initiatives.
Let me now turn briefly to the political declaration.
Dr. Salim has proposed elements, which I am sure will prove very useful as
South Africa proceeds with preparation of a draft. That draft will be
presented to the Summit for its consideration. I know you share my hope for an
inspiring declaration that speaks to the needs of real people. And I know you
all join me in thanking Dr. Salim for his contribution.
The United Nations Secretariat, for its part, has
begun to develop technical frameworks for partnerships in the five areas, and
will, of course, continue to provide all necessary assistance as the Summit
approaches. I myself will continue to take every opportunity to speak out on
the issues and urge leaders at the highest political levels to attend and give
the agenda their strong support.
Johannesburg is a test for multilateralism and for the
international community. It is a test for all leaders who profess to care
about the well-being of our planet and its people. Johannesburg must send a
message of solidarity and concern, and must produce real change, on the ground
in people's lives, where it matters most.
Progress since the Earth Summit has been slower than
expected and -- more important -- slower than what was needed. A setback now
would be a tragic missed opportunity. Your work here can help avert the worst,
and restore the hope for the future of all humankind. I wish you all the best
in your deliberations.
61. ADDRESS BY PRESIDENT THABO MBEKI TO THE 3RD
SUMMIT OF THE ACP HEADS OF STATE AND GOVERNMENT, NADI FIJI
18 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.dfa.gov.za/docs/mbek187a.htm
Prime Minister Laisenia Qarase, Vice President of the
Dominican Republic, Madame Ortiz Bosch, Your Excellencies, Heads of State and
Government, Ministers and Ambassadors; Secretary General of the ACP, Mr Pascal
Lamy, Member of the European Commission; Madame Glynis Kinnock, Members of the
European Parliament; Distinguished delegates:
We are honoured to bring you the greetings and best
wishes of the African Union, which held its first Assembly of Heads of State
and Government only last week. We fully support the decision to hold this 3rd
Summit of ACP Heads of State and Government under the theme – "ACP solidarity
in a globalised world." This theme recognises two critical elements that have
to inform the important work we have met to carry out. One of these is the
reality that the world is involved in a far-reaching process of globalisation
that inevitably draws all our countries into a global village from which we
cannot secede. Accordingly, we have no choice but to determine our future
within the context of that village. The other is that we enter this village in
a disadvantaged position, having to carry the burden of many of the negative
consequences of the process of globalisation, which does not benefit all
countries and peoples equally. Some of this reality is that of the member
states of the ACP, about 60 per cent have each populations that are less than
5 million, with the majority being less than 3 million. The negative impact of
the small size of our markets is compounded by the fact of our
underdevelopment, both of which underline the extent of our disadvantage
relative to the developed countries of the North. As pointed out by the theme
of the Summit, for us to succeed in our quest to overcome the imbalance
between these countries and ourselves, we have to act together in solidarity,
using our combined strength to make our voices heard. These are the sentiments
that informed the decisions of the peoples of Africa to form the African Union
and to adopt its development programme, the New Partnership for Africa's
Development (NEPAD). Our continent has taken this matter seriously on board,
that we share a common destiny. Our peoples understand that the development
and success of each of our countries depend on the success and development of
the rest of our continent. None of us need educating about the fact that our
development partner, the European Union, represented here by its distinguished
Commissioners, is a very powerful force in the world economy, in global
politics and all other areas of human activity. The partnership we seek to
build with this community of nations is one whose central goal must surely be
the eradication of poverty in our countries and ending our condition of
underdevelopment. Together with others in the world, we are convinced that the
resources and know how exist within human society to achieve these objectives.
Indeed, the determination to attain these goals was stated and agreed
specifically at the year 2000 UN Millennium Summit, which set specific
time-bound targets. Surely, the negotiations we are about to start with the
European Union must be informed by the same focus and intent, to achieve
specific time-bound targets with regard to the two central matters of poverty
and underdevelopment. By setting these targets, the peoples of the world also
made the important statement that it would be unrealistic for us to expect
that the market alone would operate in a manner that would produce the results
we seek. Conscious, purposeful interventions are therefore required. A
critical commitment was also made by those more developed than ourselves, that
they would draw on the resources at their disposal to direct them towards the
achievement of the kind of goals agreed at the Millennium Summit, acting in a
spirit of global human solidarity.
We believe that all these considerations will help to
inform our forthcoming negotiations with the European Union.
As developing countries, we have our own duty to
determine what we ourselves must do to address the challenges of poverty and
underdevelopment that confront us. These are the things that we will bring
into the partnership with the European Union and the rest of the developed
North, helping to define the relationship with the richer part of our common
globe as one of partnership and not dependence. It was these sentiments that
drove us on the African continent as we elaborated and adopted the New
Partnership for Africa's Development. First and foremost, this is a
partnership among the peoples of Africa. It is a partnership among countries
and a partnership between governments, the private sector, the labour unions
and civil society.
It represents a commitment to use our own resources to
address the challenges of poverty and underdevelopment. As you would expect,
NEPAD focuses on the same matters that are central to the agenda of the ACP
Group of countries. These include human resource development, with a specific
focus on education, health and gender equality, agriculture, diversification
of production, increased capital inflows, market access, debt relief,
infrastructure, technology and capacity building.
Further to this, it is based on a common resolve to
solve the problems and remove the obstacles that have blocked our path to
development. Accordingly, we have taken the necessary decisions to act
together to create a continent of peace and stability, democracy and human
rights, the rule of law and accountable government, and the necessary
conditions that will facilitate meaningful economic growth and development. As
a token of the seriousness of our intent and to ensure the observance of
decisions that we have already taken, we also adopted a declaration covering
matters relevant to good political and economic governance. We have agreed on
our own African Peer Review Mechanism as an African-owned instrument to assist
ourselves as we work together to build the kind of Africa for which the masses
of our people throughout the continent yearn.
We have taken all these decisions not because anybody
has asked us to. They are the result of our own experience, which has informed
us about what we should do and what we should avoid, in our own interest. The
decisions we have taken also help us to engage the second element of the New
Partnership for Africa's Development correctly. This is the partnership
between Africa and the developed countries of the North. We are determined to
rebuild this partnership in a manner not defined by a relationship between
donor and recipient, but one driven by the achievement of agreed goals.
We are pleased that the North, including the European
Union, the G8 and the Nordic countries, has accepted the priorities set by the
African peoples themselves and committed itself to work with us to pursue a
programme of action that is made in Africa. We are happy that all sides have
also accepted the principle of mutual responsibility and accountability.
We are now faced with the task together to translate
these common commitments into a practical set of actions focused on the task
of ending poverty and underdevelopment on our continent. We must also make the
central point that the intensification and consolidation of the process of
African solidarity constitutes an important part of the movement towards
greater South-South solidarity, such as represented by this collective of
African, Caribbean and Pacific countries. Both the African Union and NEPAD
enhance our possibility to pursue this goal with even greater vigour. I have
mentioned all these matters because they have a direct bearing on the work we
have gathered to carry out during the next two days. I am convinced that the
positive developments in Africa, and the involvement of the EU in these
processes, will help to enhance the quality of our interaction during the
forthcoming negotiations. They certainly increase the capacity of the African
continent to act in even greater solidarity with our sister countries of the
Pacific and the Caribbean.
Reference has also been made to the fact that in a few
weeks the people of the world will gather in Johannesburg at the UN World
Summit for Sustainable Development. It is good that this matter features on
the agenda and the draft decisions of this important Summit Meeting. I would
also like to take this opportunity to thank those ACP Heads of State and
Government present here who agreed to work with us as friends of the Chair of
the Johannesburg Summit. We value their inputs that will help to define the
outcome of that Summit. I trust they will also find time to consult with the
regions from which they are drawn, to ensure that the voice of the peoples of
the ACP countries is heard clearly in Johannesburg. As the Summit is aware, we
have sought to insist that the Johannesburg Summit must both build on the 1992
Rio Earth Summit and Agenda 21, and truly and practically address sustainable
development properly understood. In this regard it is important that we reach
a common global understanding that sustainable development is made up of a
triangle of three spheres of human existence – the social, the economic and
the environmental. The Johannesburg Summit must therefore focus on issues of
the sustainable social and economic development of the poor of the world, as
well as the important issues of the environment that correctly serve on the
agenda of this Summit. In addition, we are firmly committed to the view that
the World Summit for Sustainable Development should result in a concrete
programme backed by the necessary resources, to achieve the objectives that
the peoples of the world want to advance within the context of sustainable
development. Inevitably therefore, the World Summit, the WSSD, will discuss
many of the important matters that are on the agenda of this ACP Summit.
Consequently, it is important that as the ACP, we pay the closest attention
possible to the WSSD, bearing in mind the disappointing results of the Bali
Preparatory Committee meeting. I would urge that all our Heads of State and
Government should attend the Summit to give the necessary impetus for an
outcome that will address our concerns and interests in a real way.
Necessarily we must also mention the WTO and the
Development Round negotiations scheduled to be concluded by the beginning of
2005. We all recognise and welcome the important and positive results we
achieved in Doha, arising from the fact that we were able to act together on
the basis of a clear set of agreed objectives. We will have to sustain this
approach and manner of working as we engage the WTO and other international
negotiations, including those with the EU. The Johannesburg Summit will
represent the culmination of a number of international conventions of major
importance to us as developing countries. These include the Millennium Summit,
the Monterrey Summit on Financing for Development, the World Food Summit, the
Children's Summit, the Doha Ministerial Meeting and the recent G8 Summit held
in Kananaskis, Canada. Clearly, we should keep close track of all these
important meetings and their outcomes to ensure that none of them results in
regression in terms of advancing our objectives.
They also demand of us that we should make our inputs
into these processes addressing both the framework agreements and the detailed
programmes that should characterise the outcomes of these engagements.
It is also clear that where such detailed programmes
emerge that seek to address our concerns, we owe it to ourselves to push for
the practical implementation of these programmes as speedily as possible.
After all, we are the ones that bear the burdens of poverty and
underdevelopment. All these matters draw sharp attention to the need for us,
collectively, to attend to the central matter of the capacity of our
governments and countries successfully to engage in the necessary regional and
global dialogue and implementation processes that are an integral part of the
process of the growth of the system of global governance.
I am certain that Africa would be very keen to
strengthen the partnership within the ACP Group for us to share and build the
resources that will help to improve the effectiveness in shaping the global
human map. South Africa is also ready to work with our ACP partners to meet
this challenge. We are pleased that at the end of this month, South Africa
will host the ACP Forum on Research for Sustainable Development. Let us use
that opportunity to develop partnership programmes that will provide
consistency and certainty on the path we have chosen, to improve the quality
of the lives of our people, and to enhance the outcomes out of our interaction
with our development partners. I believe that we should also approach the
forthcoming negotiations with the EU to elaborate the Economic Partnership
Agreements in the context of the Cotonou Agreement, informed by the need to
pool our resources, to lend strength to one another by acting in unity and
solidarity. Without this, it will be more difficult for us to realise the
objectives of poverty eradication, ending underdevelopment and achieving the
global integration of our economies.
We have embarked on the journey of sustainable
development with determination. The African Union and its regional groupings
stand ready to strengthen bridges of co-operation with the Caribbean and
Pacific States. We would also be pleased if, as requested by Mozambique and
the region of Southern Africa, the next ACP Summit were to be held in Maputo,
Mozambique.
On behalf of South Africa I would also like to
re-affirm our commitment to share our own experiences in negotiating with the
EU. As you will recall we hosted the first ACP Trade Ministers' Committee
meeting in April 2001 and we continue to work closely with the ACP Secretariat
in Brussels. We look forward to receiving you in Johannesburg in August and
September for the WSSD, where we should further our collective work to provide
better lives for our peoples. I am certain that we will ensure that we come to
Johannesburg fully prepared to articulate our views in one undivided voice.
I thank you.
62. OPENING REMARKS BY H.E. DR. PER STIG MØLLER,
MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS, DENMARK
World Summit on Sustainable Development Friends of the
Chair, New York,
17 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.eu2002.dk/news/news_read.asp?iInformationID=21009
Madame Chairperson, Let me on behalf of the EU thank
you for the initiative to convene this "Friends of the Chair" group.
We want to assist you in bringing this process to a
successful conclusion in Johannesburg. The EU has, at the level of Heads of
State and Heads of Governments as well as at the level of Foreign, Finance,
Development and Environment Ministers, positioned itself on issues related to
Johannesburg.
We are committed to work towards a comprehensive
outcome for the Summit including
- the need for a focused and action oriented plan of
implementation with targets and time frames
- a political declaration framing the renewed
commitment by world leaders to achieve sustainable development
- and to initiate complementary partnership
activities.
We are facing six main challenges in relation to the
global dimension of sustainable development:
- to eradicate poverty and to promote social
development as well as health
- to make globalisation work for sustainable
development
- to introduce sustainable patterns of production and
consumption [in order to minimize the resource pressure and preserve our
environment]
- to conserve and manage natural and environmental
resources in a sustainable way
- to strengthen governance for sustainable development
at all levels, in particular international environmental governance and public
participation
- to promote capacity building and technical
cooperation, in particular in the fields of trade and finance.
We are reacting to the challenges by positive measures
and priorities to support action, building on the Doha Development Agenda and
Monterey Consensus. Your background paper adequately reflects the major
outstanding issues, and I hope that the Presidency and member countries
present, during today, without entering into negotiations on texts, can
indicate how solutions to these issues may be presented in Johannesburg.
We are preparing specific EU initiatives in the spirit
of partnership in the areas of drinking water and sanitation, energy, as well
as activities in fields such as trade and development, health and sustainable
consumption and production. We are investing considerable resources in these
areas of international development cooperation. The EU's annual budget on
water related development amounts to 1,5 billion . The 2003 budget on energy
amounts to 700 million . In 2002, the EU has set aside up to 120 million to
combat the spread of communicable diseases.
Madam Chairperson, The Summit offers a unique
opportunity to achieve ambitious agreements, including clear targets,
timetables as well as on specific work programmes. We see the combined outcome
of the Doha Development Agenda, the Monterey Consensus, the Johannesburg plan
of implementation, the political declaration and the complementary partnership
activities as a Global Deal. Thank you, Madam Chairperson.
63. TEN PIECES OF ADVISE TO THE CHAIR FOR THE
JOHANNESBURG WSSD
Opening remarks by H.E. Hans-Christian Schmidt,
Minister for the Environment, Denmark
17 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.eu2002.dk/news/news_read.asp?iInformationID=21009
TEN PIECES OF ADVISE TO THE CHAIR FOR THE
JOHANNESBURG WSSD
1) WSSD should reaffirm and deliver on the commitments
made at Doha and Monterrey
2) WSSD should recognize and emphasize the Rio
principle on common but differentiated responsibilities and the precautionary
principle
3) WSSD should deliver on the promises of the Rio
Earth Summit and on the Millennium Development goals in order to eradicate
poverty based on sustainable patterns of production and consumption
4) WSSD should recognize and build upon the ground
that protecting the environment from degradation is an integral part of an
effective and lasting reduction of poverty and that the environmental
dimension of sustainable development must receive equal attention as the
economic and social dimensions
5) WSSD should adopt an action oriented plan of
implementation with clear targets and timetables on water and sanitation,
energy efficiency and renewable energy, health and biodiversity and natural
resources
6) WSSD should decide on a ten years work programme
for promoting sustainable production and consumption patterns with the aim of
decoupling economic growth from environmental degradation and use of resources
and with the industrialized countries taking the lead.
7) WSSD should give strong emphasis to implementation
of environmental agreements and to monitoring implementation and enforcement
of such agreements
8) WSSD should encourage the implementation of the Rio
principle on access to information and of public participation in
environmental and sustainable development issues
9) WSSD should encourage the development of
partnerships between governments, the private sector and civil society as one
supplementary mechanism for implementation of the political goals of the plan
of implementation
10) WSSD should conclude a political negotiation of
the outstanding issues with the aim of achieving a global deal.
64. MAKING SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT WORK:
GOVERNANCE, FINANCE AND PUBLIC-PRIVATE COOPERATION
Secretary Colin L. Powell Remarks at State Department
Conference, Meridian International Center
Washington, DC
July 12, 2002
Internet:
http://www.state.gov/secretary/rm/2002/11822.htm
Well, thank you very much, Paula, for that warm
introduction, and let me also take this opportunity to thank you as well for
the superb leadership that you have been giving to this effort, especially as
we prepare for next month's World Summit on Sustainable Development in
Johannesburg. And I'm very pleased to follow my dear friend and fellow Vietnam
vet Chuck Hagel. We are members of a mutual admiration society, and he does an
absolutely great job up in the Senate on these kinds of issues. He is as
committed as anyone in our Congress to trying to do everything we can to help
people in need and to push the whole concept of development for all the
peoples of the world. I would like to welcome all the participants who are
here today, from the NGO community, the business community, international
financial institutions, partner governments and the United States Government
as well, and especially the ambassadors who are here representing their
countries. And I hope, although I don't see her, that my dear friend and
colleague from South Africa, Foreign Minister Zuma, may be somewhere in the
audience. And if she is not here at the moment, I'll be seeing her later this
afternoon in my office so we can continue our discussion on the run-up to the
World Summit on Sustainable Development in South Africa. We are very pleased
to be working closely with South Africa in the run-up to the summit. For
example, we are providing funding to South Africa for the Enviro-Law
Conference, and we are co-sponsoring the Summit Institute for Sustainable
Development. And we look forward to working even more closely with Minister
Zuma and all of her colleagues in South Africa as we get closer to the summit.
I thank Paula for making reference to the fact that this is an important issue
for me and for President Bush and for all of us in the Bush Administration. I
come to it from a perspective of having been a soldier for many, many years,
and in that capacity traveling to many places in the world, fighting in wars
where people were suffering, seeing suffering in its many forms. And then
after leaving the military, I spent part of my life working with young people
who were in need, young people here in the United States, young people who
need sustainable development just a few blocks from here. And as rich as we
are, as powerful as we are as a nation, we still have pockets of poverty,
pockets of people who are living in despair and wondering whether or not their
nation cares about them. We have to deal with that.
But in the course of doing that, it brought home to me
that these same conditions are even more prevalent around the world, and I
have seen it in so many different ways and so many manifestations. And now for
the last 18 months as Secretary of State, I have once again not only seen this
in my travels around the world, but now I'm in a position to work on it in a
more direct and aggressive way. And I want to assure you that I and my
colleagues in the Department of State will work hard with our other colleagues
in government to do everything we can -- as an administration, as a
government, as a nation, and as a people -- to help those in need around the
world.
There is a growing consensus on sustainable
development, and we could not have achieved this growing consensus that more
has to be done without the contributions of the United Nations and its
distinguished leader, Secretary General Kofi Annan, and the leadership of
Indonesia. Their painstaking efforts have helped us move along the path from
the Rio Earth Summit of some years ago through the Bali Prep Com, and now on
to Johannesburg and beyond. It's so important for all of you to have made the
time to come to this conference, a conference that we titled, "Making
Sustainable Development Work." And I'm sure that is what Paula and John Turner
are making you do today: work. Work on practical measures to support
sustainable development, and to do everything we can to make sure that
Johannesburg is a success. The Johannesburg Summit comes barely 20 months
after we welcomed in a new century. Despite the stories and images of trouble
we read in our newspapers and view on our television screens, we should also
at the same time see this as a time of great opportunity, great opportunity to
expand peace, to expand prosperity and expand freedom around the globe. Part
of my day, no matter what else is going on, whether it's a Middle East problem
or a problem in South Asia or some other crisis that intrudes on my morning,
part of my day really is set aside every day to think about these
opportunities, to think about the good things that are going on in the world,
and to think about what more we could do as a nation, as a government, working
with our friends to take advantage of these opportunities, the march of
democracy, the march of the free enterprise system as systems that work. And
how can we do everything possible to expand peace, prosperity and freedom?
Because only when we achieve those conditions can we really talk about
sustainable growth.
The spread of democracy and market economies, combined
with breakthroughs in technology, permit us to dream of a day when, for the
first time, for the first time in history, most of humanity may be free, or
can be made free, of the ravages of tyranny and poverty.
We live in a century of promise. Our responsibility
now is to turn it into a century of hopes fulfilled, a century of sustained
development that enriches all our peoples without impoverishing our planet.
When we talk of sustainable development, we are talking about the means to
unlock human potential through economic development based on sound economic
policy, social development based on investment in health and education, and
responsible stewardship of the environment that has been entrusted to our care
by a benevolent God. Sustainable development is a compelling moral and
humanitarian issue. But sustainable development is also a security imperative.
Poverty, destruction of the environment and despair are destroyers of people,
of societies, of nations, a cause of instability as an unholy trinity that can
destabilize countries and destabilize entire regions.
A decade ago, at the United Nations Conference on
Environment and Development in Rio, some 172 countries adopted a blueprint to
achieve sustainable development worldwide. While there have been ups and downs
and progress has been uneven, we have seen real improvements since Rio. For
example, over the past decade, the proportion of people in developing
countries struggling to make ends meet on less than one dollar a day has
dropped from 29 percent to 24 percent. Not nearly enough, but it's a
beginning. It's a start. Infant mortality has declined by more than 10
percent, and mortality among children under five is nearly 20 percent lower.
Countries that have opened their economies have done better than those who
have remained closed. It's as simple as that. A World Bank study found that
over the course of the 1990s, the 24 developing countries that increased their
global trade and investment the most, those that did the most with respect to
increasing global trade and investment, also increased income per person much
more than those that did not move in this direction. In those countries, the
number of people living on less than one dollar a day dropped by 120 million
people between 1993 and 1998.
We have also seen the conclusion and implementation
since Rio of important environmental agreements, such as those to reduce
substances harmful to the air we breathe and to control the spread of deserts.
But while we have progressed along the road to hope, we have far to go in a
world where one person in five still suffers in extreme poverty, and where a
baby's chances of surviving to adulthood still depend on the accident of where
he or she is born. Over the past nine months, a series of major conferences
and negotiations have helped to map the way forward. The Doha Development
Round of World Trade Organization negotiations, the World Food Summit Review
Conference in Rome, and the G-8 Summit in Canada all forged stronger agreement
on the path to development. It also proclaimed the Monterrey consensus was an
historic affirmation of the need to mobilize all sources of development
financing, and the Monterrey consensus also proclaimed the importance of sound
policies, good governance at all levels, and the rule of law to sustainable
development. As our Peruvian colleague Hernando de Soto has so aptly said,
"The hidden architecture of sustainable development is the law." The law. The
law. The rule of law that permits wonderful things to happen. The rule of law
that permits people to be free and to pursue their God-given destiny, and to
reach and to search and to try harder for their country, for their family. The
rule of law that attracts investment. The rule of law that makes investment
safe. The rule of law that will make sure there is no corruption, that will
make sure there is justice in a nation that is trying to develop.
The next stop on this long road is the World Summit in
Johannesburg. The United States will be taking three very important messages
to Johannesburg. First and foremost, we are totally committed to supporting
sustainable development. President Bush left no doubt on this score in his
March 14th speech at the Inter-American Development Bank when he stated on
behalf of the American people that the advance of development is a central
commitment of American foreign policy.
We will also carry the message that sustainable
development must begin at home, with sound policies and good governance. Both
official assistance and private capital are most effective when they go to
governments that rule justly, invest in their people, and encourage economic
freedom. Official assistance is important -- there's no doubt about it -- and
that is why President Bush announced that his administration will seek
congressional approval to increase America's core development assistance by 50
percent over the next three years, resulting in $5 billion annual increase
over current levels. And I'm confident we will be able to sell it to our
Congress. I have been deeply moved in my 18 months as Secretary of State by
the support Congress is giving to this kind of effort. We have some financial
and fiscal problems that are on the table. That is always the case. But I have
been getting solid support with real growth in my own foreign affairs budget,
and now with the Millennium Challenge Account coming along, we will see a
major increase in the funds that will be available for this kind of activity.
As Chairman Hubbard of the President's Council on
Economic Advisors and Deputy AID Administrator Schieck explained earlier,
these additional funds will be used for a special purpose within this
Millennium Challenge Account. The new account will fund initiatives to help
developing nations with sound policy environments. That means you put in place
in these nations at home the right environment so that the money will go to
the kind of infrastructure development that will set the stage for takeoff
with respect to attracting trade and attracting additional funds of both a
private and official nature. A strong commitment to good governance, a strong
commitment to the health and education of their people, and economic policies
that foster enterprise and foster entrepreneurship. But as important as
official assistance is to improving people's lives, the reality is that it is
trade and private capital flows that will make the real difference that are
more, more, much more significant. Trade dwarfs aid. America alone buys $450
billion in goods from the developing world every year, some eight times the
amount that developing countries receive in aid from all sources. Attracting
that kind of private money isn't easy. Private capital is a coward, a chicken.
It flees from corruption and bad policies. It doesn't want to go where there's
a conflict. It doesn't want to go where there is corruption. It doesn't want
to go where there is unpredictability. Private capital stays away from
ignorance, disease and illiteracy, and it especially stays away from those
places where it seems that no one is doing anything about ignorance, disease
and illiteracy. And now that we're breaking down trade barriers, now that the
Cold War is over and the Iron Curtain, the Bamboo Curtain are all gone, relics
of history, capital can go many places without restrictions. And it will go to
those places that reflect the right kinds of policies. It will go where it is
welcomed. It will go where investors can be confident of a return on the money
they have put at risk, usually other people's money. It goes to countries
where women can work, where children can read, and where entrepreneurs can
dream. But good policies alone are not enough. People must be able to seize
the opportunity. So the third message we will take to Johannesburg is that
governments, civil society and the private sector must work in partnership to
mobilize development resources. We must work together to unleash human
productivity, to reduce poverty, to promote healthy environments and foster
this kind of sustainable growth. We've got to help young people get the skills
they need, the education they need, the motivation they need to take part in a
changing economy and a changing political environment in these countries as we
move forward. Partnerships are key, and we are already deploying the power of
partnerships. For example, the United States and South Africa have initiated
the Congo Basin Forest Partnership. This innovative partnership with NGOs,
industry and other governments, will help slow and even reverse deforestation
in the Congo Basin. The initiative will not only create national parks where
none before existed, it will also ensure the livelihoods of those living in
and around the forests and strengthen the ability of governments to enforce
their forest conservation laws.
Our vision for Johannesburg is to build on these three
messages: commitment, good policies, and partnerships. We will build on these
three messages by inviting developed and developing nations to join us in
opening economies and societies to growth. For growth, growth, growth is the
key to raising people out of poverty. We will also invite developed and
developing nations to join us in providing freedom, security and hope for
present and future generations while providing all our people with the
opportunity to live healthy and productive lives. And recognizing that we have
only one home, one home -- Planet Earth -- we will invite developed and
developing nations to join us in serving as good stewards of our natural
resources and our environment. To this end, we will initially work for
concrete action in seven areas that we believe are essential to sustainable
development: health, energy, water, sustainable agriculture and rural
development, education, oceans and coastal management, and forests. We will
work to unite governments, the private sector and civil society in partnership
to strengthen democratic institutions of governance, open markets, and
mobilize and use all development resources more effectively. We are already
doing a great deal in all of these areas. The United States has provided half
a billion dollars to the Global Fund to fight HIV/AIDS, TB and malaria. We've
launched a $500 million Mother-Child HIV/AIDS Prevention Initiative for Africa
and the Caribbean, doubled funds for the African Education Initiative for
Training and Scholarships, and increased funding for agricultural development
assistance programs by some 25 percent. And in our budget request for Fiscal
Year 2003, we have asked for $4.5 billion for climate spending, an increase of
$700 million over this past year. This request includes funding for basic
science, technology research and development, business and agricultural
incentives and international activities. President Bush has also taken the
lead in increasing the use of grants instead of loans for the poorest
countries, especially in assistance from multilateral development banks. This
approach, which was endorsed by the recent G-8 Summit, will complement
existing initiatives to help alleviate the crushing burden of debt that faces
so many highly indebted poor countries.
But in all of these areas, we can and must do more,
especially I might highlight, HIV/AIDS, once again brought home to us by the
meeting we have been watching on television for the last day or so. So we have
established the Global Development Alliance to combine the assets of
government, business and civil society to work in partnership on implementing
sustainable development programs. And that's where you come in. We need you --
governments, businesses, and the organizations of civil society -- to work in
support of these pressing human needs, individually in your daily actions, and
together in effective goal-oriented partnerships. Sustainable development, as
you all know better than I, is a marathon, not a sprint. It does not follow
from a single event like the Johannesburg Summit, important as that meeting
may be, but from a sustained global effort by many players working together
over a long period of time. Sustainable development requires institutions,
policies, people and effective partnerships to carry our common effort beyond
Johannesburg and well into the future. I hope you will come away from today's
sessions with a deeper appreciation of our commitment to building a world
where children can grow up free from hunger, disease, and illiteracy; a world
where all men and women can reach their human potential, free from racial or
gender discrimination; and a world where all people can enjoy the richness of
a diverse and healthy planet. I hope you will come away with a greater
understanding of our partnership-based approach to improving the lives of men,
women and children in developing countries. And most of all, I hope you will
come away with an even stronger commitment to work together with us to help
realize the promise of this new century and make it truly a century of hope, a
century that will allow us to fulfill the dreams of all of God's children.
Thank you so very much.
65. THE EU AGENDA FOR THE WORLD SUMMIT ON
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
European Union
1 July 2002
Internet:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/trade/csc/pr_020702.htm
The World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD)
presents both an opportunity and a responsibility for world leaders. The
challenge is to deliver on the promises of the Rio Earth Summit and on the
Millennium Development goals in order to eradicate poverty, improve living
standards based on sustainable patterns of production and consumption and to
ensure that the benefits of globalisation are shared by all.
Developed and developing countries share the
responsibility for implementing these goals which will require a substantially
increased effort, both by countries themselves and by the international
community. In the Doha Development Agenda and the Monterrey Consensus a
framework was agreed for improving market access, for upgrading multilateral
rules to harness globalisation, and for increasing financial assistance for
development. The developed countries must now deliver on the commitments they
made at Monterrey and the EU, as a major supplier of aid, is fully determined
to do so. All WTO members should fully respect the commitments made in Doha,
including the Doha timetable, and the EU has been prominent, both in the run
up to Doha and in the subsequent negotiations, in driving the process forward.
The developing countries must also take their responsibilities by improving
internal policies and domestic governance and creating an enabling climate for
trade and investment. All countries must work together, recognising their
common but differentiated responsibilities, to ensure that growth is decoupled
from environmental degradation and that the needs of the present generation
are satisfied without destroying the capacity of future generations to cater
for their needs.
At their recent meeting in Seville on 21/22 June the
EU's Heads of State and Government re-affirmed the EU's commitment to a
successful outcome at the WSSD and the EU's willingness to continue playing a
leading role in the preparation of the summit with a view to reaching a global
deal building upon the successful steps of Monterrey and Doha.
What does the EU want from the WSSD?
The EU wants the WSSD to take - after Doha and
Monterrey - further steps towards the implementation of the Millennium
Development Goals, and to build upon them in areas such as sanitation and
energy. The WSSD should adopt quantifiable targets and timetables for their
implementation. There should be mechanisms for monitoring progress towards
these targets. One of the implementing mechanisms could be well-developed
partnerships between governments, the private sector and civil society. There
should however be a clear link between the political goals and the
partnerships decided by the WSSD so that everyone can see how the political
goals are being achieved. The EU wants the WSSD to send a clear political
message on the need to make globalisation more sustainable for all and to
agree on measures aimed at promoting this goal.
What is the EU proposing to the WSSD?
The EU supports the proposals of the UN Secretary
General that the WSSD should make progress in five key areas - water, energy,
health, agriculture and biodiversity. More specifically the EU proposes the
following targets and actions, in support of the Millennium Development Goal
of halving the number of people living in extreme poverty by 2015:
To halve the number of people without access to clean
water and sanitation by 2015. To help deliver this target the EU has developed
an EU Water Initiative, which, in partnership with countries and regions, can
bring together public and private funds, stakeholders and experts to provide
long term, sustainable solutions to problems of water management. Meeting the
political goal would make a major contribution to improved health and economic
development. The EU has already allocated 1.4 bn Euro for 2003 and is ready to
increase this figure for the following years within the context of partners
poverty reduction strategies.
To enhance the use of cleaner, more efficient fossil
fuel technologies, to improve energy efficiency and to increase the share of
renewable energy sources to at least 15% of primary energy supply by 2010.The
provision of affordable, sustainable energy services will have a major impact
on poverty, health, economic and social development. The WSSD should adopt an
action plan to achieve this goal. The EU is preparing an Energy Initiative to
develop partnerships with interested developing countries to identify their
energy needs and ways to meet these needs, by making use of EU development
co-operation programmes as well as through the involvement of financial
institutions and the private sector. The EU has already allocated 700 m Euro
for 2003 and is ready to increase this figure for the following years within
the context of partners poverty reduction strategies.
To combat the spread of communicable diseases and
increase investment in health care. The EU will increase the volume of
development assistance targeting improved health outcomes over the next five
years and has already up to 120 m available for this purpose for 2002.
Within the Doha Development Agenda, WTO members should resolve differences on
compulsory licenses and work for pharmaceutical products to be made available
to the developing world at the lowest possible prices. The EU invites the
international community to join partnerships for research on new generations
of products. It will continue to actively participate in the Global Fund to
fight HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis.
To develop a ten-year work programme to accelerate the
shift towards sustainable consumption and production. Industrialised countries
should take the lead in changing their unsustainable behaviour towards more
resource efficient production processes and lifestyles. Life-cycle approaches,
Eco-labelling and environmental impact assessments are useful tools in that
regard. Appropriate means should be made available to help developing
countries to move towards the same objective.
To halt and reverse by 2015 the current loss of
natural resources/biodiversity and to manage natural resources in a
sustainable and integrated manner. This clear global objective should lead to
incentives for local communities, in particular in developing countries, to
benefit from the conservation and sustainable use of their rich variety of
natural resources. The EU is in the process of reforming its fisheries policy,
with the aim of reducing fleets and total catch, and calls on other countries
to do the same in order to restore stocks to sustainable levels at the latest
by 2015.
To agree on a positive agenda for globalisation,
finance and trade. Important steps to ensure that globalisation benefit all
have recently been taken through the Doha Development Agenda and the Monterrey
Consensus. The achievements of these Conferences should not be put into
question in Johannesburg but we should identify ways and means to build upon
them. As an example in Johannesburg, the EU is putting forward a number of
positive and supportive measures on trade and investment, outside the scope of
Doha Development Agenda and the Monterrey Consensus, which specifically would
contribute to sustainable development in developing countries.
The EU is suggesting supportive measures on a wide
scale ranging from: the integration of sustainability parameters into regional
and bilateral agreements and preferential trade schemes, commitments from all
countries to duty- and quota free market access for all products originating
in least developed countries, the promotion of markets for organic produce,
environmentally friendly products and "fair trade", measures to enhance the
transparency of domestic trade procedures, the reform of environmentally
harmful subsidies and the further development and support for sustainable
impact assessments (SIAs). In addition, the EU is suggesting a number of
actions to enhance the benefits for sustainable development that developing
countries can draw from foreign direct investment (FDI), including the
promotion of corporate social responsibility and export credits to encourage
environmentally and socially sound investment.
The EU and its Member States have pledged - as a first
significant step towards reaching the 0,7% target - to bring the average of
ODA/GNI ratio to 0,39% by 2006, which should result in additional annual ODA
of about 9 bn Euro as of 2006 and about 22 bn Euro between now and 2006. We
have initiated steps to make available the increased ODA announced at the
International Conference for Financing for Development and hope that other
donors will equally make good on their pledges. We recognise that there is a
need to agree on a process through which the follow-up to those pledges can be
monitored and evaluated. Recipient and donor countries, as well as
international institutions, also have to make a common effort to make ODA more
efficient and effective. The EU will intensify its efforts in that regard.
The EU will pursue efforts to restore debt
sustainability in the context of the enhanced HIPC initiative, so that
developing countries, and especially the poorest ones, can pursue growth and
development unconstrained by unsustainable debt dynamics. The EU remains
committed to fully fund the HIPC initiative and pursue debt-swaps as
appropriate
The EU is ready to engage with all partners in
exploring ways, on top of opening markets and increasing the level and
effectiveness of ODA, of generating new public and innovative sources of
finance for development purposes. A further discussion and exploration of the
issue of global public goods will be crucial in that context.
To develop an effective institutional framework for
sustainable development at international, regional and national levels. At
international level, it is necessary to strengthen the role of ECOSOC in the
follow-up to the WSSD, to give more emphasis to implementation issues in the
work of the Commission for Sustainable Development (CSD) and to reinforce
co-operation on sustainable development between UN bodies, the Bretton Woods
institutions and the WTO. The EU also attaches high priority to the
establishment and implementation of national strategies for sustainable
development, such as poverty reduction strategies, to the implementation of
Rio Principle 10 on access to information and to the development of more
effective institutional frameworks for sustainable development at regional and
sub-regional level.
The EU wishes to work with all partners to ensure a
successful outcome at the WSSD. Further details on the EU initiatives
mentioned in this note are available by following this link.
ON THE WEB
66. ENVOYS MAKE HEADWAY AS JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT NEARS
(Reuters via Planet Ark 19 July 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16937/story.htm
67. EARTH SUMMIT MAY NOT YIELD CONCRETE PLAN - US AIDE
(Reuters via Planet Ark 18 July 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16920/story.htm
68. INTERVIEW - SOUTH AFRICA MINISTER VOWS EARTH
SUMMIT TO GO AHEAD (Reuters via Planet Ark 17 July 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16903/story.htm
69. EU, US SAY WANT CONCRETE RESULTS AT EARTH SUMMIT
(Reuters via Planet Ark 17 July 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16897/story.htm
70. SOUTH AFRICA, UN PRESS FOR EARTH SUMMIT BLUEPRINT
(Reuters via Planet Ark 12 July 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16829/story.htm
71. INTERVIEW - EARTH SUMMIT COLLAPSE BETTER THAN
TOOTHLESS PACT (Reuters via Planet Ark 12 July 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16811/story.htm
72. ANNAN URGES ACTION FOR EARTH SUMMIT (Reuters via
Planet Ark 10 July 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16780/story.htm
73. LIVING STANDARD SEEN SLUMPING AS RESOURCES RUN OUT
(Reuters via Planet Ark 10 July 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16777/story.htm
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