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Towards Johannesburg
The Sustainable Development Summit 2002 held in Delhi draws the
world's attention to poverty alleviation as the means to a
sustainable future.

R. RAMACHANDRAN


THE best definition of the phrase 'sustainable development'
perhaps is the one arrived at by the Brundtland Commision set up
by the United Nations in 1987 as "development that meets the needs
of the present generation without compromising the ability of
future generations to meet their own needs." In 1992, the U.N.
Conference on Environment and Develoment (UNCED) in Rio de
Janeiro, the Earth Summit, called for sustainable development "to
ensure socially responsible economic development while protecting
the resource base and the environment for the benefit of future
generations". Ten years down the line, as the 21st century
confronts the world, it is time to take stock of progress in
achieving that goal. The U.N. World Summit on Sustainable
Development (WSSD), scheduled to take place in Johannesburg
between August 26 and September 4, is aimed to do that as well as
to evolve workable solutions to move ahead.

What had been initiated at the 1972 Stockholm U.N. Conference on
the Human Environment culminated in Rio with the global
realisation that environmental protection and natural resource
management must be integrated with socio-economic issues. The Rio
Summit was a landmark event that brought together governments
including more than 100 heads of state, international agencies and
non-governmental organisations(NGOs), where the international
community committed itself to secure economic well-being, social
development and environmental stabilty - the three pillars that
the world had come to realise need to be concurrently addressed if
sustainable development is to be achieved. Ignoring any one of
these, negates the achievements with regard to the other two.

The future agenda for sustainable development was clearly defined
at the conclusion of the Rio Summit when the assembled leaders
signed the Framework Convention on Climate Change (FCCC) and the
Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD); endorsed the Rio
Declaration on Environment and Development and the Forest
Principles; and adopted Agenda 21, a 300-page plan for achieving
sustainable development in the 21st century. Agenda-21 constitutes
the centrepiece of the Rio Summit.

As a follow-up, the Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD)
was created in December 1992 under the U.N. Economic and Social
Council (ECOSOC) in order to ensure the effective implementation -
at the local, national, regional and international levels - of
what had been agreed upon at UNCED. The five-year review of the
progress of the Earth Summit by a special session of the U.N.
General Assembly (UNGA) - called Earth Summit + 5 - held in June
1997 adopted a comprehensive document titled 'Programme for the
Further Implementation of Agenda 21' prepared by the CSD. It also
adopted the programme of work of the Commission for 1998-2002.

Year 2002, or Rio + 10, is upon us and Agenda 21 is up for its
second five-year review. The WSSD, being held under the auspices
of the CSD, will be the forum where progress on Agenda-21 will be
reviewed and decisions taken with regard to its implementation in
the 21st century. WSSD will also evolve measures to implement the
developmental goals of the Millennium Declaration adopted at the
Millennium Summit held in New York in September 2000, which
included the following resolve of the world leaders: "We reaffirm
our support for the principles of sustainable development,
including those set out in Agenda 21, agreed upon at the UNCED."
These Millennium Development Goals (MDG) supplement the objectives
set forth in Agenda 21.

Such a reiteration of the Rio objectives has become necessary as,
despite the global consensus and political commitment of
nation-states to a future of sustainable development, progress
towards the established goals has been tardy and in some respects
the conditions are worse than they were a decade ago. Indeed, in
one of the Millennium Summit preparatory sessions of the General
Assembly, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan expressed surprise at
the limited discussions on the subject of sustainable development
and remarked that "so little priority is accorded to these
extraordinarily serious challenges for all humankind". This
reaffirmation notwithstanding, the U.S. rejection of the Kyoto
Protocol on climate change was a significant pointer to the
growing concern that the developed countries are yet to
demonstrate their full commitment to end their unsustainable ways
of living.

In his comprehensive report "Implementing Agenda-21" presented at
the conclusion of the Second meeting of the Preparatory Committee
(PrepCom) for the WSSD held in New York between January 28 and
February 8, Kofi Annan identified four broad areas where "gaps in
implemention were particularly visible":

* A fragmented approach towards sustainable development: Policies
and programmes at both national and international levels do not
reflect the inextricable connections between economic, social and
environmental objectives;

* No discernible changes in the unsustainable consumption and
production patterns, which are putting the natural life-support
system at peril;

* Lack of mutually coherent policies or approaches in the areas of
finance, trade, investment, technology and sustainable
development, particularly in the context of a globalising world;

* The financial resources required for implementing Agenda-21 have
not been forthcoming and mechanisms for transfer of technology
have not improved.

In the run-up to the Johannesburg Summit, besides the PrepComs of
the CSD (of which two more will be held in March-April and
May-June), several national, regional and international
conferences are being held to identify the issues that will go to
supplement the official WSSD agenda arrived at by the CSD. One
such important international meeting was the one organised in New
Delhi between February 8 and 11 by the Tata Energy Research
Institute (TERI), a research-oriented non-governmental
organisation with its headquarters in New Delhi. Called the Delhi
Sustainable Development Summit 2002 (DSDS 2002) (the second in
TERI's sustainable development summit series), the conference was
titled: "Ensuring Sustainable Livelihoods: challenges for
governments, corporates and civil society at Rio + 10".

THE meeting brought together eminent personalities from India and
abroad concerned with issues related to sustainable development,
most notably Jan Pronk, the Special Envoy appointed by Kofi Annan
to the WSSD. Pronk, currently the Dutch Minister for Housing,
Spatial Planning and Environment, is also the Chairman of the
Seventh Conference of the Parties (COP) to the Kyoto Protocol
scheduled for November 2002 and the prime force behind the
Protocol's final text and its adoption. It is learnt that one of
the prime objectives of Pronk's visit to India was to extend a
personal invitation to Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee to
attend the Johannesburg Summit. "If the Summit is to be called a
Summit, heads of state and heads of governments must make every
effort to participate and for the summitto be a global summit, no
country should be absent so that a globally agreeable agenda must
be negotiated," Pronk remarked in his statement read out at the
inaugural of the conference as commitments back home prevented him
from reaching the meet in time.

Pronk wished to emphasise the fact that, though Johannesburg is
the follow-up to Rio, it is not a conference on environment, but
on sustainable development, including economics, social affairs
and the environment. "Too few people realise that even today," he
said. "In Johannesburg, apart from focussing on what went well and
what went wrong, we will have to decide on those aspects of Rio
that have been forgotten and simultaneously there is a need to
look forward. There are trends that were not prominent ten years
ago that need to be included today - the impact of globalisation,
new technologies in biotechnology and information and
communication, new violence such as new types of wars and
terrorism," he added. "Rather than issuing a list of
recommendations Johannesburg must reach concrete decisions," Pronk
stressed.

Pronk emphasised the fact that the question of access to
technology needed to be addressed more pointedly. In fact, at the
press briefing, Pronk lamented the fact that this aspect did not
receive sufficient attention even at the Delhi Summit. "In the
past, we paid lip service to this promise, but the finance was
always lacking. We need agreement on finance for technology access
as well as agreements on more lenient regulations in order to
facilitate access to poor countries," Pronk observed.

The summit background report circulated by TERI reflected the fact
that, in the lead-up to the WSSD, the U.N. and other international
development agencies shifted their focus to targeting poverty
alleviation as the overriding concern to achieve sustainable
development. The path followed until now by governments and
international institutions, giving priority to economic growth,
has given way to a realisation that this does not necessarily
bring about sustainable development, the alleviation of poverty in
particular. Every PrepCom meeting has voiced the concern that the
core developmental issues of eradicating poverty and meeting basic
human needs remain the prime challenge in the developing countries
and unless the needs of the weakest are put first, all efforts to
preserve the environment or promote sustainable development would
prove self-defeating.

The TERI background report quoted the observation by the World
Commission on Environment and Development (WCED): "A world in
which poverty and inequity are endemic will always be prone to
ecological and other crises." According to it, 20 per cent of
global population, living in high-income countries, accounted for
as much as 86 per cent of the total private consumption
expenditure, and the share of the poorest 20 per cent was only 1.3
per cent. The report said that there was a decline in overall
poverty rate in the developing countries, from 29 per cent in 1990
to 23 per cent in 1998 (based on poverty line of $1 per day) and
the absolute number of poor declined from 1.3 billion to 1.2
billion. While much of this improvement was concentrated in East
and Southeast Asia, with some progress in South Asia and Latin
America, there was no progress in sub-Saharan Africa where almost
half the population lived in poverty.

"Poverty alleviation measures," the report said, "have
traditionally focussed on enhancing per capita income and
consumption at the national level, as also manipulating sectoral
policies to direct subsidies to the poor. These approaches did not
pay adequate heed to the mileu, within which the poor exist and
resources they use for generating a livelihood. Poverty
eradication in the long run requires the poor to sustain enhanced
standards of living through promotion of opportunity, empowerment
and security, which in essence lays the foundation of the
sustainable livelihood approach. Sustainable livelihood
opportunities are shaped not only by local or endogenous factors
but also seemingly exogenous factors such as ecnomic and social
integration of the nations of the world." The report called for
reinvigorating the promises made at Rio regarding resources,
technology, capacity-building and market access.

CRITICISING the developed world for not fulfilling the "lesser
obligation" of just one-third of the financial resources required
to implement Agenda-21, Prime Minister Vajpayee in his inaugural
address said: "Clearly, they must give more resources, directly
through higher aid and indirectly by opening their markets to
poorer nations. Therefore, imposing environmental or labour
restrictions on free movement of goods and services, in the name
of selective aspects of sustainable development... will only
intensify poverty in the developing world."

Vajpayee made some proposals for raising resources by using the
instruments of sustainable development and globalisation
innovatively. He proposed special multilateral levies on global
natural resources used by rich countries such as the
electromagnetic spectrum or marine fisheries. He also suggested a
levy on capital transactions across industrialised countries and
capital repatriations from developing countries for several
specific poverty alleviation initiatives. "We need to make both
sustainable development and globalisation work for the poor... We
cannot make the poor and the deprived wait any longer in their
aspiration to live a better life. This is the first and foremost
task in sustainable development," the Prime Minister added. He
urged the summit to present the issues on the agenda for
Johannesburg in as clear and unambiguous terms as possible.

The summit was to result in a 'Delhi Declaration' and a report on
the conference was to be presented to the CSD for considertaion at
Johannesburg. For some unstated reason, the much-touted
declaration has not been issued yet and the report is yet to be
finalised.

The summit's deliberations were organised into 10 thematic
sessions. For the poor, the session on ensuring sustainable
livelihoods observed, globalisation was both an opportunity and a
threat. On the upside, globalisation could make economic
activities and institutions more efficient, develop human capital,
enhance employment opportunities, provide access to cleaner and
more efficient technologies, promote environmental awareness and
create market self-regulation of industrial activities. On the
down side, the exacerbation of inequities in the distribution of
benefits among world's population had been an impediment to
sustainable livelihoods.

The session also expressed concern on the rapid changes in
lifestyles and cultural upheaval that it has led to in developing
countries. The developed countries, on the other hand, had
selectively tapped trained human resources from the developing
countries, noticeably in the fields of health, education and
information technology, often resulting in exploitation of assets
with no returns to the source countries. While Agenda-21 had
underscored the importance of such issues, and they had been
reiterated at various forums, they were yet to find effective
expression in national strategies for development or in bilateral
and multilateral commitments.

Rio had held out the promise of 'new and additional' financial
resources for sustainable development; to the tune of $600 billion
to implement Agenda 21. On the contrary, the session on financing
noted, Official Development Assistance (ODA) flows had declined
significantly over the past 10 years. Domestic and foreign private
capital had proved inadequate in engendering sustainable
development. Further, domestic action towards correcting market
and policy failures and making more efficient use of available
resources left much to be desired.

The meeting called for not only an increase in the quantum of
financial resources - ODA, FDI and domestic - but also more
effective use of available resources. It also called for major
increases in the funding levels for the Global Environmental
Facility (GEF). The session observed that financing a larger
number of smaller projects may be more successful than a few large
projects in using available resources to ameliorate poverty. The
International Conference on Financing and Development to be held
in March in Monterrey, Mexico, is expected to discuss ways and
means to promote coherence and consistency in the global financing
system.

The session underscored the need to restructure financial services
to serve the poor better. Citing the example of the Grameen Bank
in Bangladesh, it said that monetary systems needed to design
special instruments to attract microsavings of the poor into the
corporate sector, particularly where these can be structured to
serve the poor. The session noted that the Clean Development
Mechanism (CDM) introduced under the Kyoto Protocol offered
opportunities to tap private capital for sustainable development
activities while at the same time providing access to technology
to developing countries and enabling industrialised countries to
meet their commitments to reduce green house gas emissions
flexibly and effectively.

"Since everyone is a potential stakeholder, the Johannesburg
Summit will need to strengthen the mechanism for involving all
stakeholders, especially the vulnerable groups, in decision
making. At the discussion on 'engaging stakeholders', it was
observed that the business community should be recognised as an
important stakeholder in the pursuit of sustainable development.

The Delhi Summit has come out with a list of recommendations that
will presumably form part of the report to be submitted to the
WSSD. If there is one common threat that runs through the rich
fabric of the proceedings, it is the resolve to go beyond
deliberations and focus on determined action.

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