Outreach at UNCSD 2nd Intersessional Meeting - 16 December 2011

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inside: a multi-stakeholder magazine on climate change and sustainable development R IO+20 16 december 2011 www.stakeholderforum.org/sf/outreach Reinstating justice in the quest for a green economy Profile: Brice LaLonde - Executive Coordinator of Rio+20 Metrics for change - measuring what matters pic: Auro Queiroz

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Outreach published at the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development, 2nd Intersessional Meeting in New York

Transcript of Outreach at UNCSD 2nd Intersessional Meeting - 16 December 2011

Page 1: Outreach at UNCSD 2nd Intersessional Meeting - 16 December 2011

inside:

a multi-stakeholdermagazine on

climate changeand sustainable

development

RIO+2016 december 2011

www.stakeholderforum.org/sf/outreach

Reinstating justice in the quest for a green economy

Profi le: Brice LaLonde - Executive Coordinator of Rio+20

Metrics for change - measuring what matters

pic: Auro Queiroz

Page 2: Outreach at UNCSD 2nd Intersessional Meeting - 16 December 2011

OUTREACH IS PUBLISHED BY: OUTREACH EDITORIAL TEAM

Editorial Advisors Felix Dodds Stakeholder Forum

Farooq Ullah Stakeholder Forum

Co-Editors Georgie Macdonald Stakeholder Forum

Sabrina Chesterman Independent Climate Consultant

Sub-Editor Kirsty Schneeberger Stakeholder Forum

Design and Layout Jodie Davies-Coleman Independent Consultant

Online Design and Layout Tom Harrisson Stakeholder Forum

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS

Outreach is a multi-stakeholder publication on climate change and sustainable development. Outreach is the longest continually produced stakeholder magazine in the sustainable development arena and has been produced at international meetings on the environment, including the UN Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD) and at COP15 and COP16. Published as a daily edition, in both print and web form, Outreach provides a vehicle for critical analysis on key thematic topics in the sustainability arena as well as a voice of regional and local governments, women, indigenous peoples, trade unions, industry, youth and NGOs. To fully ensure a multi-stakeholder perspective, we aim to engage a wide range of stakeholders for article contributions and project funding.

If you are interested in contributing to Outreach, please contact the team ([email protected] or [email protected])

You can also follow us on Twitter: @OutreachLive

About Stakeholder ForumStakeholder Forum is an international organisation working to advance sustainable development and promote democracy at a global level. Our work aims to enhance open, accountable and participatory international decision-making on sustainable development through enhancing the involvement of stakeholders in intergovernmental processes. For more information, visit: www.stakeholderforum.org

1 We are all in this together…

2 Justice must be reinstated at the centre in the quest for a new green global economy

4 Metrics for change

6 Rio and the importance of Planetary Boundaries

7 Profi le: Brice LaLonde

8 Advancing reproductive rights: a win-win for women and sustainability

10 The role of water - The need for collective thinking for Rio+20

11 The Global Transition 2012

12 Review of the Global Sustainability Panel Briefi ng

13 Profi le: Janos Pasztor

13 Profi le: Geoff Lye

14 If Rio+20 ushers in the Green Economy, who will control it?

contents.

Emily Benson The Green Economy Coalition

ETC Group

Sarah Fisher Population and Sustainability Network

Oliver Greenfi eld

The Green Economy Coalition

Daniel Hale Progressio

Dr Victoria Johnson

nef

144

Brice LaLonde Executive Coordinator of Rio+20

Geoff Lye SustainAbility

Chukwumerije Okereke

University of Reading

Janos Paszto High Level Panel on Global Sustainability (GSP)

Peter Rodderick

WWF

Freya Seath BioRegional

1RIO+20

We are all in this together…

After a year of engaging in this process, we are pleased to now see a number of specific outcomes gaining traction and hopefully qualifying for a highly prized place in the final Rio+20 zero draft to be discussed by member states next June in Rio de Janeiro. These include Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and green economy roadmaps or action plans, which in our view can focus the broad debate at a practical level, going some way to frame how we can implement a fair and just green economy.

This Intersessional meeting also has the highest NGO participation in the Rio+20 process to date- more than 400 organisations have registered and yesterday the Major Group meeting had standing room only. There is truly a sense of expectation at the start of this second phase of the Rio+20 process, all stakeholders are determinedly seeking a strong and ambitious outcome and want to play their part.

In an informal consultation yesterday with Ambassador Andre Correa do Lago, Head of the Brazilian Delegation, the Ambassador said ‘civil society gave a special weight to the Rio Earth Summit 20 years ago… and at Rio+20, civil society participation is 1000 times more important- governments can’t do it all!’ This idea of strong partnership and civil society engagement was also echoed this morning by the Global Sustainability Panel (GSP) Secretariat who acknowledged this participation as key to any successful outcomes from Rio+20. There really is a strong sense that we are all in this together.■

Over the last two days at the UNCSD 2nd Intersessional on Rio+20 at UN Headquarters

here in New York negotiations began between member states

on the Zero Draft compilation text, and attempts will

begin to condense the rather extensive 6,000+ pages of

submissions from governments, Major Groups and UN agencies

into a coherent document that can deliver a strong outcome

at Rio+20.

FOLLOW UP EVENT

Bioregional will be hosting a side event on ʻSolutions for Rio+20 Outcomes: Sustainable Development Goals and Principles ,̓ for more information, please refer to the website - www.bioregional.com.

Freya SeathBioregional

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Justice must be reinstated at the centre in the quest for a new green global economy

There is no doubt that the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development

(UNCED) held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in 1992 was a critical landmark in the history of global environmental governance.

It continues to: (i) serve as an inspiration for

humane international co-operation and multilateral

environmental diplomacy; (ii) provide impetus for the

quest for an ecologically secure and sustainable

planet; and (iii) remind us of the need for a truly

democratic platform for bringing together governments

and civil society in the search for solutions to things that threaten our

common existence.

The three main agreements that came out of Rio 1992 were the UN Climate Change Convention, the Convention on Biodiversity and the Forest Principles. However, important as these three treaties are, it is probably fair to suggest that the most important outcome of Rio 1992 was the institutionalisation of the concept of sustainable development - the recognition that environmental protection and human welfare are inseparable parts of the development process and cannot be considered in isolation.

As an ethical concept, the intuitive appeal of sustainable development resides in the attention it gives to three key dimensions of justice: (a) justice between and across nations and political jurisdictions; (b) justice between present and future generations; and (c) justice between human and non-human nature.

Today, it remains the case that only careful attention to these three dimensions of justice can ensure the achievement of a lasting balance between economic, environmental and social dimensions of development which the concept of sustainable development envisages.

I have no doubt that the lack of attention to justice is the most important barrier against the design of effective policies and institutions for achieving national and global sustainable development. Inequity remains the greatest obstacle to sustainable development. As Gro Harlem Bruntland, said in 1987, “it is futile to attempt to deal with environmental problems without a broader perspective that encompasses the factors underlying world poverty and international inequality".

With COP17 concluded and attention turned towards Rio+20, the question that should be asked is what progress has been made in achieving these three dimensions of justice embodied in the concept of sustainable development. Here, it is important to note that the emphasis on “green economy” - one of the key themes of Rio+20 does nothing to vitiate

Chukwumerije OkerekeUniversity of Reading

2 RIO+20

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Chukwumerije Okereke is a Reader in Environment and Development, and the Director of Research in African Environment and Development for the School of Human and Environmental Sciences, University of Reading, UK.

the centrality of distributional justice in the quest for sustainability. There will certainly be winners and losers in transitions to a greener technology and economy, at least in the short term. Moreover, the move to a green economy would itself entail material costs, and green products and services may generate their own externalities and risks. States, businesses and the civil society gathering in Rio in 2012 must therefore ask how policies and institutions aimed at encouraging a greener economy can better take account of the full range of justice impacts and prospects that such a transition would generate.

My view is that lasting answers to this question can only be achieved in Rio if the three following perspectives are adopted:

To stand any chance of meeting the aspirations of the majority of the global population that has been clamouring for global sustainable development, international management approaches must strive harder to reflect responsible stewardship and the fact of our common inheritance and ownership of the planetary resources. In short for Rio to succeed, the idea of justice must be reinstated at the centre in the quest for new green global economy. ■

1. Distributional justice should not be seen as merely instrumental but at the heart of sustainable development.

2. Questions of environmental justice must be seen as questions about the mode of wealth creation and appropriation itself rather than as an add-on optional extra. Hence, achieving global sustainable development should be seen to require more radical interrogations of the basic structure of the international society and of patterns of social relations between the poor and rich.

3. Given our equal and common dependence on one single natural system, the idea of global environmental/planetary citizenship should not be seen as a mere preachment but one that deserves to be taken as the foundation upon which institutions for environmental governance should be built.

“ “

The lack of attention to justice is the most important barrier against the design of effective policies and institutions for achieving national and global sustainable development. Inequity remains the greatest obstacle to sustainable development.

pic: Kelvin Trautman

3RIO+20

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4 RIO+20

If you have been lurking around UN corridors for the

last few months you will have been aware of a rising clamour. The din is getting

louder. It is coming from all quarters of the world. It is

being voiced from a wide range of governments, communities

and sectors. The message is clear: for too long our

notions of progress have been dominated by economic success alone. The solution: we need different metrics. We need to

measure what matters.

Metrics for changeEmily Benson The Green Economy Coalition

Our snapshot analysis of the UNCSD Zero draft texts shows us that the calls for alternative metrics span different levels. At the corporate level, there is a consistent call for companies to measure their societal and environmental impact in addition to their profit margins. Our coalition member, the Global Reporting Initiative, is calling for companies to integrate material sustainability information within the reporting cycle in their Annual Report and Accounts – or explain why if they do not.

At the national level, there is also a widespread call for metrics that go ‘beyond GDP’ in order to measure societal and environmental well-being. A number of Member States, including the EU, Costa Rica, Nepal and Grenada, support the need for national accounting to measure human welfare and ecosystem services.

At the global level there is also a popular call for Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) from a huge array of different Member States including USA, Brazil, Japan, Colombia and Guatemala. There are still a myriad of questions to be asked about what the Goals would entail, and how they might relate to the MDGs, however, the consensus is that our global targets must have a much more integrated approach to the sustainable development agenda.

pic: Kelvin Trautman

5RIO+20

Intrigued by this unanimous call for different metrics we had a quick look at some of the different metrics already in action or in discussion. It is a dizzying landscape. At the ‘beyond GDP’ level alone there are any number of metrics, indicators and dashboards that claim to tackle different aspects of environmental, social and economic growth.

So, how can we navigate our way through all of these different conversations on metrics, goals and indicators?

First, as we consider some of the different metrics and sets of indicators on the table on the road to Rio 2012, we need to keep in mind some core principles. The lessons that we are learning from the series of national dialogues that our coalition member IIED has helped coordinate in Brazil (in partnership with Vitae Civilis), India (in partnership with Development Alternatives), Mali (in partnership with Mali Folk-centre) and the Caribbean (in partnership with CANARI), is that the goal of a green economy is sustainable development.

In order to achieve that goal, our idea of progress needs to be underpinned by core principles. These include:1) Resilience 2) Equity3) Accountability4) Inclusiveness5) Ecological limits. As our discussions on metrics evolve, then let’s keep these principles at the very forefront of our minds.

Second, let us not lose sight of the big picture. As we start engaging with discussions about metrics at different levels we need to consider how they all connect with one another. How might corporate reporting tie into our national goals? Similarly, how can we ensure that our national objectives align to global priorities in the shape of SDGs?

Third, in order for metrics to bring about change rather than merely measure change, then they need to be accompanied by political weight. The environmental and social performance of a company needs to be reported alongside its economic performance report, not relegated to a footnote or a CSR report. The environmental and social

performance of a country needs to be reported by our treasuries and ministers in the same breath as their economic performance. The corporate sector has already gone a long way towards building a persuasive case for how sustainable reporting not only drives investment but ensures that the company is more resilient and competitive. We need to make the same case at the national level.

Here at the Green Economy Coalition we are going to be tackling a different theme each month in the lead up to Rio 2012. As well as the conversations on metrics we will be looking at the following themes:1) Poverty alleviation in a green economy2) Economic sector transformation3) Valuing and managing natural capital4) Financial market reform.

In each case, we will be connecting different conversations into the big picture, we will be talking to leading thinkers from across different disciplines and we will be sharing the best work from within our coalition and beyond.■

“ “The lessons that we are learning from the series of national dialogues is that the goal of a green economy is sustainable development.

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6 RIO+20

Rio and the importance of Planetary Boundaries

“It has never been more important to heed the evidence of science that time is running out on our ability to manage successfully our impacts on the Earth’s

environmental, biodiversity, resource and life-support systems on which human life as we know it depends.” So said Maurice

Strong in his Statement to the Special UN General Assembly Event on Rio+20 on 25th

October 2011. And he should know.

The clarity brought by the planetary boundaries approach can help us make the most of the time we do still have. It posits that there are nine critical Earth-system processes and associated thresholds that we need to respect and keep at a safe distance from, in order to protect against the risk of irreversible environmental change at continental to global scales. Doing so would create a safe operating space for humanity, within which a sustainable and just society would be possible. According to the concept’s authors, boundaries for climate change, biodiversity and the nitrogen cycle have already been crossed.

The concept offers the Rio Conference a basis for framing the challenge of meeting the needs of present generations without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs. That is why the Planetary Boundaries Initiative has proposed that the Conference should adopt a Declaration on Planetary Boundaries, or at least prominently reflect its principles of recognising that boundaries do exist, committing to respect them, and taking responsibility for doing so.

As well as framing, we need commitments. The Rio Conference should at the very least establish a process for developing, by the time of the review of the Millennium Development Goals in 2015, a legal instrument reflecting these principles, and give that task to an over-arching, supra-sectoral international body. This body would also be given the tasks of coordinating global research and development of our understanding of the processes, and of reviewing the adequacy of international legal and governance regimes and structures for safeguarding them. Necessary legal improvements should follow.

Being responsible for safeguarding necessary Earth-system processes means establishing legal principles and duties to recognise and respect them. As the UNDP has argued, constitutionally recognising equal rights to a healthy environment promotes equity by no longer limiting access to those who can afford it; and embodying this right in the legal framework can affect government priorities and resource allocations.

This would be in line with Maurice Strong’s call for a system

Peter RodderickWWF UK

Climate change

Ocean acidifi cation

Stratospheric ozone depletion

Nitrogen cycle

Phosphate cycle

Global freshwater useChange in land use

Atmospheric aerosol loading

(not yet quantifi ed)

Chemical pollution(not yet quantifi ed)

Biodiversity low

Biogeochemicallow boundary

FOR MORE INFORMATION

For more information, visit www.planetaryboundariesinitiative.org. Feedback on the draft Declaration is welcome. Please send to: [email protected]

(Below) The 9 Planetary Boundaries

based on Principles 21 and 22 of the 1972 Stockholm Declaration for those who suffer environmental damage in one country, resulting from development in another country, being able to seek legal recourse and compensation for the damages they have suffered.

But planetary boundaries cannot be seen in isolation. Over-consumption on a finite planet where millions go without daily places the primary duty on developed countries to take the lead in staying within the boundaries – morally, and legally. Whatever goals emerge from Rio must address these deep inequalities at the same time as reflecting biophysical reality. As Strong pointed out, some of these ideas might be deemed unrealistic, “but denial cannot change the reality, only increase its dangers. What seems unrealistic today will become inevitable tomorrow, too late to change. The need for such actions is real and urgent. Rio+20 cannot do it all but it can and must set these processes in motion and give them the support and impetus they require”.■

How did you get to the role where you are today and what advice do you have for aspiring climate champions/or sustainable development champions?

I’ve been a climate change negotiator for thirty years, after having been an environmental specialist for the last 14 years. I began as an activist in 1972 and then became a minister in 1992. From 2007-2010 I was an ambassador. It was during this time that I thought that climate change negotiations lacked the view of the “big picture” and therefore I thought that Rio+20 was the right thing to organize.

What prompted your early interest in the environment?

My revelation, or “Road to Damascus” so to speak, began in 1969 when I saw the man walking on the moon and thought to myself “this is the curse that embraces the moon.” Additionally, I was an activist through being a cyclist. The President of the Republic of France, during that time, wanted to build a highway through the city and he said that you have to adapt cities to cars. With that, I decided to enter in the resistance in trying to say that you actually have to adapt cars to cities and by no means bring them into cities.

Describe your fi rst attempt to save the planet

My first attempt to save the planet was when I went on a boat to oppose the French nuclear tests in the pacific. I embarked with some of my Australian friends and went sailing in the hopes of opposing the tests. In addition I took part in a bicycle demonstration with 10,000 people. The demonstration was a symbol of a new lifestyle, one of freedom that promoted a new way of living together in cities. We also argued that cities should provide free

bicycles to all its inhabitants. The idea was to create a “velo-lution”

What is your favorite quote?

“Forests proceed humans, deserts follow.” (Chateaubriand)

What do you think should be achieved at RIO+20?

I believe that we have to create a new step in the history of international relations and this step is in terms of planetary policies and institutions. However, this cannot be accomplished in one day. Although global interests on mankind started back in 1972 and were carried on again in 1992, we have been struggling to invent new ways in managing global commitments while including the world population. The question of Rio+20 for me is “if we were one country, what would we do.” Would we be much more effective in helping people and in fighting the degradation of our territories? But the question then turns to how do you do that? That is where the negotiation process fits in. However, we cannot forget about the mobilisation of the planet and of the people of the planet. What we have to do is not only achieve a good outcome, but also gather and give hope to lots of people so that our children can have the same hope in the future.

How do you see your role in this process?

The way I see my role is to create as much enthusiasm as possible. My job is to get everyone engaged and to give a role and place to everyone. Additionally, it is to say that we are not only focusing on diplomatic missions within the U.N., but also focusing on all NGOs. Essentially, I’m here to see that in the headquarters we listen and try not to forget anything.

What does RIO+20 mean to humanity and its existence?

I’ve been around for both Stockholm and the first meeting in Rio in 1992 and for me these meetings have been a real pace of history, compared to the slow pace of business and politics. The whole world dove into an incredibly short-term media and technology “forget what has happened yesterday” system. The reality of history and society is on the pace and the reality with our relationship to planet earth. Thus, it is history in the making.

What do you think the priorities for action should be in Rio+20?I’m very excited by the idea of sustainable development goals and believe that it’s a real global move forward. Additionally, I think it’s important to concentrate all this into views because people want action-orientated outcomes. ■

7RIO+20

Nationality: French

Country of residence: USA

Brice LaLondeprofi le.EXECUTIVE COORDINATOR OF RIO+20UN ASSISTANT SECRETARY-GENERAL

“ “What we have to do is not only achieve a good outcome, but also gather and give hope to lots of people so that our children can have the same hope in the future.

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8 RIO+20

Advancing reproductive rights: a win-win for women and sustainabilitySarah FisherPopulation and Sustainability Network

Population dynamics and particularly world population growth were identified at the

1992 Earth Summit as pivotal to environmental sustainability.

Agenda 21 responded by setting out the urgent need to increase

access to reproductive health programmes to enable women and

men to plan the number and spacing of their children. These issues are now more

critical than ever, yet since the first Rio conference they

have commanded little attention as part of the sustainable

development agenda.

A zero draft submission from the Population and Climate Change Alliance (PCCA) seeks to highlight the substantial opportunities that exist to advance a wide-range of sustainable development goals through a focus on population dynamics in ways that advance and respect sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR).

Population dynamics, including growth, urbanisation and migration, interact with the environment to influence consumption of natural resources, biodiversity, climate change and other key Rio+20 priorities. Between now and the end of the century the world population is projected to increase from 7 billion to over 10 billion, with the vast majority of this growth taking place in developing countries. Such growth has considerable implications for issues such as water, energy and food security, and threatens to further undermine progress towards sustainable development, and the necessary transition to a green and fair economy. The challenges developing countries face in feeding and promoting prosperity for their growing populations, are even more daunting with the onset of climate change. Developing countries themselves are aware that population

pic: Tim McKulka

9RIO+20growth is exacerbating their vulnerability to climate change. Population pressures are heightening climatic effects and making adaptation harder by exacerbating key adaptation issues, including soil erosion, water scarcity, deforestation and migration to environmentally fragile areas.

While the implications of future population growth for resource demand receive some recognition, it is commonly assumed that nothing can be done to change the course of population projections. Or, that any interventions to do so would be intrinsically coercive, necessitating restrictions on women’s and couples’ individual freedom relating to their desired family size.

On the contrary, global population dynamics can and must be addressed in ways that respect and protect human rights. A vast unmet need for contraception exists in developing countries, meaning there are real opportunities to reduce population growth and the related environmental pressures, by reducing unplanned pregnancies. This can be achieved by giving women access to voluntary family planning services, which women want and need in order to plan and space their pregnancies as they choose. An estimated 215 million women in developing countries who say they are at risk of an unwanted pregnancy are not using contraception.

Investment in rights-based sexual and reproductive health services offers a ‘win-win’ approach: achieving universal reproductive health and increasing access to services facilitating reproductive choice, while easing population pressures and contributing to environmental sustainability. A focus on population dynamics and SRHR also offers the opportunity to advance other aspects of the neglected social pillar of sustainable development. As well as offering scope to achieve population stabilisation and contribute to environmental sustainability, addressing the unmet need for family planning contributes to health, poverty

alleviation, gender equality and other important factors for sustainable development and a green and fair economy.

Focusing on this approach, the PCCA’s zero draft submission sets out a number of recommendations for Rio+20 outcomes. We call for renewed commitment and greater investment to achieve the goals of the 1994 International Conference on Population and Development, and for rights-based sexual and reproductive health programmes to be recognized as essential components of new global initiatives to increase resources for sustainable development and adaptation to climate change.

Recognizing the links between population dynamics and sustainable development, governments should ensure universal access to sexual and reproductive health, including family planning, empowerment of women, and investment in education, particularly of disadvantaged children and youth, and girls and young women, with programmes that respect and protect human rights.■

FOR MORE INFORMATION

The Population and Climate Change Alliance (PCCA) is a loose umbrella coalition of non-profi t organisations that work together to advance SRHR through active awareness raising and advocacy work on the linkages between population and climate change. For further information, visit www.populationandsustainability.org or contact: [email protected]

Global population dynamics can and must be addressed in ways that respect and protect human rights. A vast unmet need for contraception exists in developing countries, meaning there are real opportunities to reduce population growth and the related environmental pressures, by reducing unplanned pregnancies.

pic: Bernardo Ghazi

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During World Water Day last year, UN

Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon commented

“water problems will figure prominently

at the forthcoming UN Conference on

Sustainable Development in Rio de

Janeiro, in 2012 – Rio+20.” Judging by

the number of Zero Draft submissions

that highlight water, it’s not only

Ban Ki-Moon who has ambitions to

tackle water issues next year in June

at the Rio+20 summit: there are 5,058

occurrences in 408 submissions. With

six months to go, it’s vital we get our

collective thinking right on water.

Water is an essential part of sustainable development; a fundamental resource that underpins both life and livelihoods. Yet environmental stresses such as water insecurity and scarcity affect a large proportion of the world’s population and are felt most prominently by poor people and communities. 2.8 billion people live in areas facing water scarcity. The poorest are at a particular disadvantage when there is competition over water resources. Balancing the need for water amongst poor populations, including the small-scale farmers who feed a third of the world’s population, must be at the heart of decision-making on the road to Rio+20. We might look to people like María Yolanda Rojas Ávila for some practical solutions to water problems. María Yolanda is 35 years old. She lives with her husband, Germán, and their three children, Eduardo, Wilson, and Silvia Rosalina. They live in the district of Antioquia, in the watershed of the Lurín River near Lima, Peru. “To me, water means life. Without water the people, animals and crops cannot live. If we didn’t have water for irrigation, we would depend on the rainy season and only have one harvest per year, which would mean less income for my family. “We pay to access water through the local irrigation committees. However, in this area, farmers use irrigation water very inefficiently and every time we have less water available. Sometimes this causes conflicts between neighbours. “To address the problems we have locally, I participate in activities such as the Concejo de Cuencas (the water users’

organisation at watershed level). This organisation gives small water users an equal voice in the management of our watershed, because until now it is the big companies and the State who make all the decisions, and we are not even told about what they decide.” At a local level, small-scale water users like María Yolanda are working together to solve their water problems. The work is supported by Aquafondo, an innovative NGO which charges organisations using water downstream in Lima a small fee. The money is used upstream to bring farmers together locally, to train them in water conservation and to reforest the watershed. This work helps water to be released slowly throughout the year, meaning fewer floods and less severe droughts. María Yolanda also shows that women’s knowledge counts. Women are generally the main water managers at a household level in developing countries, both for consumption and for productive use. Women’s knowledge and participation must be acknowledged, and women must be provided with adequate support according to their needs. A Green Economy cannot function without water; water is a fundamental part of agriculture and energy production. Consequently it’s essential that Green Economy policies ensure water-related impacts are fully understood and accounted for, including knock-on impacts. Community- and ecosystem-based management, recognising local knowledge and with poor people at the centre of decision-making, will go a long way to ensuring local sustainability. In short, the Green Economy must be truly ‘waterproof’. María Yolanda has high hopes for the Rio+20 process and her future. “My hope is for a good future for my children, in a healthy environment; I hope we will have enough water in the future. “World leaders meeting in June should really listen to all the poor people in the world and not ignore us, because I think everybody in the world should have the same chance to have a good and decent life.”■

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Daniel Hale is Campaigns Offi cer at Progressio, an international charity with Catholic roots that works in 11 developing countries. Progressio supports Aquafondo. Visit www.progressio.org.uk

The need for collective thinking for Rio+20The role of water -

10 RIO+20

Daniel HaleProgressio

The ultimate vision of the initiative is a global green and fair economy that maximises well-being, operates within environmental limits and is capable of coping and adapting to global environmental change.

Stakeholder Forum for a Sustainable Future, nef (the new economics foundation) and New Economics Institute are working in partnership to achieve this. Working with other partners such as the Green Economy Coalition and Bioregional, we are aiming to grow the network of organisations from now, in the lead up to Rio+20 and beyond.

Why do we need a Global Transition?

The path we are currently on is unsustainable. But, putting the brakes on consumption will, in the current economic system, trigger further unemployment, injustice, and a major decline in human wellbeing. Hence, the tremendous appeal of business as usual and the unwillingness to address the huge systemic problems we face.

However, we are convinced that there is an alternative. This alternative is not just necessary, but both desirable and possible. It means moving to a new economy that delivers well-being and social justice for all without stretching the Earth’s resources beyond breaking point. This requires a Global Transition.

The Earth Summit in Rio in June 2012, with its focus on the green economy in the context of poverty eradication, offers a unique opportunity to develop a global roadmap or pathway to achieve this transition and with additional ‘toolkits’ that can support the implementation of these pathways civil society and governments alike can work together to achieve the transition.

Challenge Papers and Dialogues

A number of leading economic and ecological thinkers have written ‘challenge papers’ or think pieces for the Global Transition initiative, which tackle many of the key sectors that are being discussed in the Rio +20 preparatory meetings and are referenced in numerous zero draft submissions. They include papers on the Blue Economy, Access to Energy, the role of the Finance and Banking Sector, and Ecosystems Services. The purpose of the papers was to stimulate debate on the key areas that make up the green and fair economy and they address barriers to change as well as proposals for a way forward – in Rio and beyond.

In October, ahead of the zero draft submission deadline, we organised a Dialogue to bring together the authors and peer reviewers of the challenge papers to debate the key themes of the papers as well as synthesise the essential principles and policy outputs that would form the foundations of a Global Transition. These were then fed into the green economy section of the Stakeholder Forum zero draft submission.

Looking ahead

Future activities of the initiative include a high-profile media event in March 2012, as well as additional Dialogues (in advance of and post Rio +20). We are currently working on an interactive map that will join up the dots of all the initiatives that are already underway to building the resilient, green and fair economy, and through ‘joining up these dots’ the coalition and global community of the transition will be able to share stories, connect up and help spread the seeds of the transformation that will deliver the vision of a healthy, positive and above all ecologically resilient future.■

The Global Transition 2012 is an

international network of organisations and

leading thinkers from the Global North

and South that is catalysing a ‘Global

Transition’ by building a community of

civil society organisations across the

globe to promote and deliver a rapid

transition to the desirable and beneficial

economy that we aspire to.

11RIO+20

The Global Transition 2012Kirsty Schneeberger, Stakeholder ForumDr Victoria Johnson, nef

FOR MORE INFORMATION

If you are working in this area and would like to see your project or work put on the map; or if you would like to submit an article or blog post, please email: [email protected] or see the contact form on the Global Transition 2012 website: http://globaltransition2012.org

Page 8: Outreach at UNCSD 2nd Intersessional Meeting - 16 December 2011

Janos Pastoz (Executive Secretary of the GSP) reported that the meeting of the Panel finished on an upbeat note after resolving difficult, but key, issues. He acknowledged that given the complexities of sustainable development, more time was needed as the Panel did not feel it had adequately finished its task. An additional meeting is being planned for the New Year, and the publication of the final report is to follow later than expected. In particular, the Panel is seeking to articulate its vision for sustainable development along with key recommendations as drivers of change at Rio+20.

The briefing examined three key areas of the GSP report; empowering people; the economy & markets and institutional governance:

• Empowering People – Fortunato Albrinho of Mozambique commented that the world is facing tremendous socio-economic difficulties and challenges propagated by economic crisis and climate change between and within countries. However, the GSP’s vision of sustainable development is one that puts people at the centre of priorities. The challenge is how to empower people to make sustainable choices. A key, actionable recommendation will be that government and international partners should join forces to achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) to eradicate poverty and reduce inequalities. The GSP acknowledge that it is crucial to act urgently to improve people’s access to education, health, food, water and energy. Gender equality, coupled with resilience and social safety nets, is fundamental to achieving these aims. Furthermore, it will be important to create jobs and skills to drive sustainable growth, while helping consumers make sustainable choices and responsible decisions. The aim must be to meet all peoples’ needs.

•Economy and Markets – Varad Pande from India stated that the value of the panel comes from the diversity of the panellist; this is not just different geography but diversity of approaches and ideas. He went on to note that the process of engagement has been very valuable to Panel.

Review of the Global Sustainability Panel Briefi ngFarooq Ullah, Head of Policy and Advocacy, Stakeholder ForumOliver Greenfi eld, Convenor, Green Economy Coalition

The UN Secretary General’s High-level

Global Sustainability Panel (GSP) gave

a briefing of its upcoming report in

a special side event at the second

Rio+20 intersessional yesterday. The

panel is comprised of renowned world

figures to formulate a new blueprint

for a sustainable future on a planet

under increasing stress resulting from

human activities. It co-chaired by

President Tarja Halonen of Finland and

President Jacob Zuma of South Africa.

However, this area of the Panel’s report sought to tackle complex issues, such as sustainable consumption patterns. He acknowledged the clear link between the way we live and the security of our livelihoods. An issue for the Panel is the need to price externalities; this includes scaling up of trading schemes based on market-based mechanisms. Another area of action is the need to address harmful subsidies and the importance of disclosure to promote change. The importance of innovative finance and scaling up public finance and Official Development Aid (ODA) must also be addressed. Lastly, measuring progress and what matters has clear links to the Beyond GDP agenda and the need from more inclusive indicators.

• Institutional Governance – Hannu Kyrolainen from Finland commented that the Panel has always attempted to be transparent and recognised the need to strengthen governance. He stated strongly that good governance is a foundation to sustainable development, and what is needed is a whole of government approach. To that end, the Panel is focusing on recommendation to promote horizontally integrated to cut across silos. Governance to bring together all relevant actors, not just government. He went onto highlight four themes for institutional governance:1) Coherence and accountability at the national and local level which addresses: i. The role of Prime Ministers and Heads of Government putting into place more proactive coherence with a whole government approach; ii. The use of budgets based on sustainable development criteria; and iii. Role of Parliaments in promoting sustainable development and creating accountability.2) Coherence and accountability at the regional and global level which addresses: i.The fragmentation of all three elements in sustainable development in global institutions and systems; and ii. The role of UNEP in the post-Rio world.3) Sustainable Development Goals.4) A Global Sustainability Outlook as a Secretary General’s report which undertakes a cross-sectorial assessment of sustainable development at the global level.

The briefing did raise some concerns. Firstly, the fact that the Panel has not published yet is not ideal. The delays may diminish its influence on the Zero Draft document and the larger Rio+20 process. Furthermore, there was little mention on managing natural capital, and planetary boundaries only came up in the Q&A section. Lastly, the big challenge of Rio+20 will be on implementation. Therefore, it would be beneficial to have a cost and benefit analysis of the Panel’s big ideas in order prioritise action.

However, the Panel’s work remains of huge importance. Its report will be the culmination of a long consultation and the views of some of the biggest names in sustainable development. And so we are encouraged to hear that the Panel Members ended on a high note with enthusiasm and momentum to carry them to a strong finish.■

12 RIO+20

FOR MORE INFORMATION

For more information, visit http://www.sustainability.com/blog/author/geoff-lye

profi les.

Geoff Lye

Nationality: British

Country of residence: UK

Current Position: Chairman, SustainAbility; and Research Fellow, Green Templeton College, Oxford

What prompted your early interest in the environment? My daughter was diagnosed with asthma and the doctor said ‘Don’t worry – it is caused by Oxford’s polluted air’. That made me really worry…. and then decide to act.

Describe your fi rst attempt to ʻsave the planetʼ: A video I made at the Earth Summit in 1992. It headlined the issues and how business could help. I could play it at Rio+20 and you would think little had changed over the last 20 years.

What is your view on the COP 17 outcome? Mixed. It was never possible that we would get an agreement equal to the challenge of staying below 2 degrees of global warming. But the outcomes are well above (the admittedly low) expectations and will definitely be helpful in encouraging the unilateral, bilateral and multilateral voluntary actions which are our only hope of avoiding catastrophic climate change.

What do you believe should be achieved at Rio+20? Should or will be achieved? Given that virtually all environmental and social indicators have progressively worsened over the last 20 years, it is unlikely that we will see any substantive outcomes. We need to take stock and acknowledge that UN processes are a welcome but inadequate response to the multiple urgent challenges we face in achieving remotely sustainable ecological and sociological systems. We need to find new ways of delivering the scale of changes needed.

What is your role in this process? Challenging and guiding the corporate sector to play an active role in addressing the massive challenges we face in a globalised and privatised world. This has to shift from lessening negative environmental, social and economic impacts to using corporate economic power, innovative skills and global scale to generate positive societal outcomes.

How important is the Rio+20 process? Sadly, I suspect not very important. I fear it will be positioned as a celebration of progress when the reality is continuing degradation of the environment and effectively a generation of potential solutions completely lost.

What do you think the priorities for action should be in 2012 in the run up to Rio+20? Bringing together government, civil society and business to recognise that future solutions need to be fundamental rather than incremental; collaborative rather than competitive; and working to shift systems rather than parts of it.■

13RIO+20

What do you think should be achieved at Rio?For me, the most important point is that Rio+20 achieves what the first Rio Conference did not. The first Rio did not go beyond the environment and integrate the 3 pillars of the environment, the economy and the social sector. The concept is not just about the environment, yet we still continue to focus on the environment. However, this has not worked and therefore we need to look at the social issues and the economic issues and how these tie in together. I firmly believe that Rio+20 can accomplish this integration.

Can you explain the work of the sustainability panel?The sustainability panel was set up by the Secretary General to look at sustainable development and see why, after 20 years, that we’re still far way from sustainable development in terms of the world. The question we’re trying to analyse is ‘why is sustainable development so hard to implement?’ The panel is trying to find solutions that are implementable. In doing so, we’ve found that life is far more complex than just the three pillars. It is also about other global issues such as water, energy and health. The inclusion of all these other factors has helped shape the panels thinking about Rio as well.

How infl uential will the work of the panel be?When the panel was set up we made it very clear that it would not formally be about the Rio+20 process alone. It would also be meant for other processes as well. The Secretary General intends to use the panel for many different forums. Additionally, the issues covered by the panel depend on two things. The first is the quality of the report and how far reaching and how feasible those recommendations will be. The second is how member states are going to commit to their promises and try to implement them while simultaneously engaging their peers to do the same.

What do you believe are the priorities in the run up to Rio+20.I believe that Rio should achieve outcomes in many different levels. It should be a place where constituencies can share their experiences and gain from building bridges. Rio can also be the place where partnerships are created and things can be concretely achieved. I also hope that there are many intergovernmental agreements established and that institutional processes are addressed in depth, for which the panel will make solid recommendations. ■

Nationality: Hungarian

Residence: USA

Current position: Executive Secretary to the Secretary General’s High Level Panel on Global Sustainability (GSP)

Janos Pasztor

Page 9: Outreach at UNCSD 2nd Intersessional Meeting - 16 December 2011

Outreach is made possible by the generous support of

14 RIO+20

If Rio+20 ushers in the Green Economy, who will control it?

From the 2nd Intersessional on Rio+20, the ETC Group launched Who Will

Control the Green Economy?, a report warning that the world’s largest

companies are riding the coattails of the green economy while gearing up for the boldest coup to-date – not

just by making strategic acquisitions and tapping new markets, but also by

penetrating industrial sectors outside their traditional business.

Corporate concentration – where fewer and fewer companies control more and more of the market – is a trend of the last several decades and it’s still the name of the game. Now the world’s 10 largest seed companies control 73% of the commercial seed market, up from 37% in 1995; the top 10 pesticide companies control a whopping 90% of the market; the top six pesticide companies control almost three-quarters of the market; and five of those six companies are also among the top 10 seed companies. Ten chemical firms account for 40% of the chemical market; and 10 forestry companies control 40% of the forestry market.

But increased corporate concentration is just part of the story. Since the turn of the millennium, the vision of a bio-based economy has been taking shape; with its promise to solve the problems of Peak Oil and climate change and to usher in an era of sustainable development, it quickly acquired a patina of green. Like many others, ETC Group sees technology as the green economy’s driving force, but we are less optimistic than others that the outcome of the “great green technological transformation” will be the one we had in mind.

Forget Windmills, Think Grain Mills: The green economy may evoke iconic images of wind turbines and solar panels, but these aren’t the focus of corporate activity. According to the BP Statistical Review of World Energy, “renewables” (e.g., wind, geothermal, solar) accounted for just 1.8% of global energy consumption in 2010. It is new technologies, including advanced bioinformatics, genomics and synthetic biology, which takes genetic engineering a step further, that are turning out to be the green economy’s real engine (its fuel is plant biomass). In

a strategic move, the world’s biggest players in seeds, pesticides, pharmaceuticals and food – including Monsanto, Syngenta, Dow, DuPont, BASF, Novartis and Unilever – are making investments in the field of synthetic biology and forming R&D collaborations in hopes of turning plant biomass into all kinds of high value products – and profit.

While seductive, the new green techno fixes are dangerous because they will spur even greater convergence and concentration of corporate power and unleash proprietary technologies into countries that have not been consulted about – or prepared for – their impacts. If “the green economy” is endorsed without a good look at the corporations who stand to benefit from it and its impacts on the ground, the Earth Summit risks becoming the biggest Earth Grab in more than 500 years. The green economy and the technologies which are expected to deliver it must be properly assessed before they are globally adopted.■

ETC Group