14th session of the United Nations Commission on Sustainable 
Development  -  Issue #1    

EARTH NEGOTIATIONS BULLETIN <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
PUBLISHED BY THE INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR 
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (IISD) <http://www.iisd.org>

Written and edited by:

Peter Doran, Ph.D. 
Twig Johnson, Ph.D. 
James Van Alstine 
Cecilia Vaverka 
Andrey Vavilov, Ph.D. 

Editor:

Pamela S. Chasek, Ph.D. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Director of IISD Reporting Services:

Langston James "Kimo" Goree VI <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


Vol. 5 No. 228
Monday, 1 May 2006

Online at http://www.iisd.ca/csd/csd14/ 

FOURTEENTH SESSION OF THE COMMISSION ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT:

1-12 MAY 2006

The fourteenth session of the United Nations Commission on 
Sustainable Development (CSD-14) will open today and continue 
through 12 May 2006, at UN headquarters in New York. 

The CSD meets annually, in two-year "Implementation Cycles," with 
each cycle focusing on thematic clusters alongside cross-sectoral 
issues. This approach was outlined in a multi-year programme of 
work (2004-2017), adopted at CSD-11 in 2003. Each cycle is 
comprised of a Review Year and a Policy Year. As this is the first 
year of the second implementation cycle (2006-2007) of the 
programme of work, CSD-14 will review progress in energy for 
sustainable development, industrial development, air pollution and 
the atmosphere, and climate change, together with cross-cutting 
issues. Specifically, CSD-14 has been tasked with evaluating 
progress in implementing Agenda 21, the Programme for the Further 
Implementation of Agenda 21, and the Johannesburg Plan of 
Implementation, while focusing on identifying barriers and 
constraints, lessons learned and best practices in implementation 
in the thematic cluster. 

There will be two main outputs from CSD-14: a Chair's summary of 
the opening and general statements on the progress of 
implementation and High-level statements; and a record of the 
Partnerships Fair, the Learning Center, and the Multi-stakeholder 
dialogue session.

The work of CSD-14 has been organized in four parts: opening and 
general statements, and a multi-stakeholder dialogue; thematic 
discussions and regional discussions; a day on Small Island 
Developing States (SIDS); and a High-level Segment. Following 
CSD-14's opening session, delegates will move to general statements 
on implementation of sustainable development, including reference 
to the Mauritius Strategy for the Further Implementation of the 
Programme of Action for the Sustainable Development of SIDS, 
reports on intersessional activity, and thematic discussions. The 
thematic discussions, in interactive format and led off by a panel 
of UN agencies, funds, programmes, intergovernmental organizations 
and Major Groups, will take place throughout the first week. 
Regional discussions will take place in parallel on Tuesday and 
Wednesday, 2-3 May. There will be a multi-stakeholder dialogue on 
the role of Major Groups in promoting implementation through 
education, raising public awareness and information dissemination, 
on Wednesday, 3 May. 

It was decided at CSD-13 that one day of each CSD review session 
should focus on the Programme of Action for the Sustainable 
Development of SIDS, with discussion guided by the CSD's mandated 
themes. SIDS Day at CSD-14 will be on Monday, 8 May. A three-day 
High-level segment will commence on Wednesday, 10 May, with an 
official opening to be addressed by Kofi Annan, the UN Secretary-
General and, via video link, Pascal Lamy, Director-General, World 
Trade Organization. 

A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE CSD AND THE INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENTS ON 
ENERGY FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, AIR POLLUTION AND CLIMATE 
CHANGE

The Commission on Sustainable Development emerged from Agenda 21, 
the programme of action for sustainable development adopted in 
June 1992 by the United Nations Conference on Environment and 
Development (UNCED), also known as the "Rio Earth Summit." Agenda 
21 called for the creation of the CSD to ensure effective 
follow-up of UNCED, enhance international cooperation, and examine 
progress in the implementation of Agenda 21 at the local, 
national, regional and international levels. In 1992, the 47th 
session of the UN General Assembly adopted resolution 47/191, 
which established the CSD's terms of reference and composition, 
organization of work, relationship with other UN bodies, 
Secretariat arrangements, and guidelines for the participation of 
Major Groups. The CSD held its first substantive session in June 
1993 and has met annually since. During its first five years, the 
CSD systematically reviewed the implementation of all chapters of 
Agenda 21. Agenda 21 highlights the fact that current levels of 
energy consumption and production are not sustainable. Many of the 
issues discussed in Chapter 9 of Agenda 21 on "Protection of the 
Atmosphere," are addressed in international agreements on the 
protection of the ozone layer, climate change, and regional 
instruments. 

UNGASS-19: In June 1997, five years after UNCED, the 19th Special 
Session of the UN General Assembly (UNGASS-19), also known as 
"Rio+5," was held to review the implementation of Agenda 21. 
Negotiations produced a Programme for the Further Implementation 
of Agenda 21. Among the decisions adopted at UNGASS-19 was a 
five-year CSD work programme. 

THE KYOTO PROTOCOL: In December 1997, delegates at COP 3 in Kyoto, 
Japan, agreed to a Protocol to the UN Framework Convention on 
Climate Change (UNFCCC) that commits developed countries and 
countries making the transition to a market economy to achieve 
emissions reduction targets. These countries, known under the 
UNFCCC as Annex I Parties, agreed to reduce their overall 
emissions of six greenhouse gases by an average of 5.2% below 1990 
levels between 2008 and 2012 (the first commitment period), with 
specific targets varying from country to country.

MILLENNIUM SUMMIT: The UN Millennium Summit, held from 6-8 
September 2000, in New York, adopted the Millennium Declaration, 
which contains, inter alia, a number of international development 
goals. The themes contained in the Millennium Declaration were 
elaborated and developed into the Millennium Development Goals 
(MDGs), as contained in the September 2001 Report of the 
Secretary-General on the Road Map towards the Implementation of 
the Millennium Declaration. The MDGs, which have become commonly 
accepted as a framework for measuring progress in development, 
comprise eight overarching goals, 18 targets and 48 indicators. 
The importance of energy security for achieving sustainable 
development and the MDGs was affirmed by the WSSD.

CSD-9: The ninth session of the Commission on Sustainable 
Development took place at UN headquarters in New York from 16-28 
April 2001.The session reviewed the sectoral themes of energy and 
atmosphere, the economic theme of transport, and the cross-
sectoral themes of information for decision making and 
participation and international cooperation for an enabling 
environment. This decision on energy contained six sections on 
general considerations, issues and options, overarching issues, 
regional cooperation and international cooperation, which dealt 
with diverse issues relating to, inter alia: energy efficiency, 
renewable energy and advanced fossil fuels, making markets work 
for sustainable development and international endeavors. When 
adopting the decision, text was deleted where consensus was not 
possible, including: energy efficiency codes and standards, the 
phase-out of harmful subsidies in developed countries, promotion 
of atmospheric pollutant reductions, and references to the 
development of policies supporting energy for sustainable 
development. 

WSSD: The World Summit on Sustainable Development met from 26 
August to 4 September 2002, in Johannesburg, South Africa, and 
adopted two main documents: the Johannesburg Plan of 
Implementation (JPOI) and the Johannesburg Declaration on 
Sustainable Development. The Johannesburg Plan of Implementation 
addresses energy in the context of sustainable development, and 
calls for action on access to energy services, recognition of the 
linkage between energy provision and poverty eradication, 
alternative energy technologies, and diversity of supply. 

CSD-11: The eleventh session of the CSD (CSD-11) took place from 
28 April to 9 May 2003, at UN headquarters in New York. The 
session set out the Commission's multi-year programme of work for 
the period 2004-2017 and decided on the modalities for reporting, 
partnerships, and enhancing both UN system coordination and Major 
Groups' contributions. A Partnerships Fair and Learning Center 
courses took place concurrently with the session.

CSD-12: CSD-12 was held from 14-30 April 2004, at UN headquarters 
in New York. The first three days of CSD-12 (14-16 April) served 
as the preparatory meeting for the International Meeting on the 
10-year Review of the Programme of Action for the Sustainable 
Development of Small Island Developing States (SIDS). The 
following two weeks (19-30 April) were devoted to the CSD-12 
Review Session. CSD-12 focused on identifying constraints, 
obstacles, successes and lessons learned with regard to water, 
sanitation and human settlements. The Commission also heard 
reports from the UN Regional Commissions. 

CSD-13: The thirteenth session of the United Nations Commission on 
Sustainable Development (CSD-13) took place from 11-22 April 2005, 
at UN headquarters. Building on the outcomes of CSD-12 (the Review 
Year of the first two-year cycle), CSD-13 focused on policies and 
options to expedite the implementation of commitments in the areas 
of water, sanitation and human settlements. 

INTERSESSIONAL HIGHLIGHTS

REGIONAL IMPLEMENTATION MEETINGS: Prompted by an invitation issued 
by CSD-11, reports of regional implementation meetings will be 
conveyed to CSD-14 by the Economic Commission for Africa region 
(meeting held in Addis Ababa, 26-28 October 2005), the Economic 
and Social Commission for Western Asia region (Cairo, 13-15 
November 2005), the Economic Commission for Europe region (Geneva, 
15-16 December 2005), the Economic and Social Commission for Asia 
and the Pacific region (Bangkok, 19-20 January 2006), and the 
Economic Commission for Latin America and Caribbean region 
(Santiago, 19-20 January 2006). 

UN SYMPOSIUM ON INTEGRATED IMPLEMENTATION OF SUSTAINABLE 
DEVELOPMENT GOALS: The UN Department of Economic and Social 
Affairs (UN DESA), in collaboration with the Provincial Government 
of Jiangxi, China, convened an international symposium on 
integrated implementation of sustainable development goals and 
targets in Nanchang, from 11-13 May 2005. The symposium explored 
practical ways and means of advancing integrated implementation by 
exchanging lessons learned and best practice, and by identifying 
gaps and weaknesses in current implementation policies.

GLOBAL FORUM ON SUSTAINABLE ENERGY: The Fifth Meeting of the 
Global Forum on Sustainable Energy (GFSE-5) was held from 11-13 
May 2005, in Austria. The meeting considered the theme of 
"Enhancing International Cooperation on Biomass." In particular, 
GFSE-5 focused on strengthening the institutional capacity to 
promote South-South cooperation. GFSE-5 also brought together 
various energy-related partnerships announced at the WSSD. 

INTERNATIONAL RENEWABLE ENERGY CONFERENCE: The Beijing 
International Renewable Energy Conference, convened from 7-8 
November 2005, adopted the "Beijing Declaration on Renewable 
Energy for Sustainable Development." Highlighting CSD-14's focus 
on energy, the Declaration invites the CSD to consider 
arrangements to review and assess progress towards substantially 
increasing the global share of renewable energy.

ELEVENTH CONFERENCE OF THE PARTIES TO THE UNFCCC: The eleventh 
Conference of the Parties (COP 11) to the UN Framework Convention 
on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the first Conference of the Parties 
serving as the Meeting of the Parties to the Kyoto Protocol 
(COP/MOP 1) took place in Montreal, Canada, from 28 November to 10 
December 2005. The Conference reached agreement on the Protocol's 
operational details and on the process for discussing the post-
2012 period. 

INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON NATURAL GAS AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: 
The symposium was organized and hosted by the State of Qatar with 
UN DESA, from 6-8 February 2006, to prepare input to CSD-14. 
Participants discussed energy policy development with regard to 
impacts of ongoing energy and gas market reforms, environmental 
safeguards, projections on natural gas pricing, energy security 
and international cooperation.

Ninth Special Session of the UNEP Governing Council/Global 
Ministerial Environment Forum (GCSS-9/GMEF): The ninth Special 
Session of the UNEP Governing Council/Global Ministerial 
Environment Forum convened from 7-9 February 2006 in Dubai, United 
Arab Emirates. A major part of GCSS-9/GMEF was the ministerial 
consultations on several issues, including energy, and 
recommendations for UNEP and CSD-14. Several ministers emphasized 
the connection between energy and climate change. 

CLEAN ENERGY FOR DEVELOPMENT: Organized by the World Bank from 6-9 
March 2006, in Washington DC, this conference formed part of the 
Bank's Energy Week. The conference built on the G8 Plan of Action 
adopted at Gleneagles that outlines the way ahead on clean energy, 
infrastructure, climate change and Africa. Themes taken up at 
Energy Week 2006 included: energy security; clean energy and low 
carbon energy development; governance and anti-corruption in the 
energy sector; and energy for growth and poverty reduction in 
Africa.

Climate Change and Sustainable Development - An international 
workshop to strengthen research and understanding: This workshop, 
organized by the Ministry of Environment and Forests, India, UN 
DESA and The Energy and Resources Institute, took place from 7-8 
April 2006, in New Delhi. The workshop examined climate change and 
sustainable development linkages, with a view to informing 
discussion at CSD-14.




This issue of the Earth Negotiations Bulletin (c) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> is 
written and edited by Peter Doran, Ph.D., Twig Johnson, Ph.D., 
James Van Alstine, Cecilia Vaverka, and Andrey Vavilov, Ph.D. The 
Digital Editor is Leila Mead. The Editor is Pamela S. Chasek, 
Ph.D. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> and the Director of IISD Reporting Services 
is Langston James "Kimo" Goree VI <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>. The Sustaining 
Donors of the Bulletin are the Government of the United States of 
America (through the Department of State Bureau of Oceans and 
International Environmental and Scientific Affairs), the 
Government of Canada (through CIDA), the Swiss Agency for 
Environment, Forests and Landscape (SAEFL), the United Kingdom 
(through the Department for International Development - DFID), the 
Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Government of Germany 
(through the German Federal Ministry of Environment - BMU, and the 
German Federal Ministry of Development Cooperation - BMZ), the 
Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the European Commission 
(DG-ENV) and the Italian Ministry for the Environment and 
Territory General Directorate for Nature Protection. General 
Support for the Bulletin during 2006 is provided by the United 
Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), the Government of Australia, 
the Austrian Federal Ministry for the Environment, the New Zealand 
Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade, SWAN International, the 
Japanese Ministry of Environment (through the Institute for Global 
Environmental Strategies - IGES) and the Japanese Ministry of 
Economy, Trade and Industry (through the Global Industrial and 
Social Progress Research Institute - GISPRI). Funding for 
translation of the Earth Negotiations Bulletin into French has 
been provided by the International Organization of the 
Francophonie (IOF) and the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs. 
Funding for the translation of the Earth Negotiations Bulletin 
into Spanish has been provided by the Ministry of Environment of 
Spain. The opinions expressed in the Earth Negotiations Bulletin 
are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views 
of IISD or other donors. Excerpts from the Earth Negotiations 
Bulletin may be used in non-commercial publications with 
appropriate academic citation. For information on the Bulletin, 
including requests to provide reporting services, contact the 
Director of IISD Reporting Services at <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, +1-646-
536-7556 or 212 East 47th St. #21F, New York, NY 10017, USA. The 
ENB Team at CSD-14 can be contacted by e-mail at <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>.

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