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Global Environmental Policy MOVING FORWARD WITH SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT HARI SRINIVAS ROOM: I-312 / 079-565-7406 Emergence of the Concept The concept of sustainable development emerged from the post-War environmental movement, which recognized the negative impacts of human growth and development on the environment and communities. 1962 - Rachel Carson and "Silent Spring" Rachel Louise Carson (1907 1964) publishes "Silent Spring". This book brings together research on toxicology, ecology and epidemiology to suggest that agricultural pesticides are building to catastrophic levels. It shatters the assumption that the environment has an infinite capacity to absorb pollutants and unleashes a new wave of environmentalism. Environmental Disasters Top 10 of anthropogenic and natural environmental disasters 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Bhopal: the Union Carbide gas leak Chernobyl: Russian nuclear power plant explosion Seveso: Italian dioxin crisis The 1952 London smog disaster Major oil spills of the 20th and 21st century The Love Canal chemical waste dump The Baia Mare cyanide spill The European BSE crisis Spanish waste water spill The Three Mile Island near nuclear disasters More incidents: http://www.lenntech.com/environmental-disasters.htm The Stockholm Declaration The United Nations Conference on the Human Environment in 1972 was the first major meeting to look at how human activity was affecting the environment. A declaration highlighted problems of pollution, destruction of resources, damage to the environment, danger to species and the need to enhance human social well being. The conference acknowledged the need for countries to improve the living standards of their population and stated twenty six principles that would ensure the development was sustainable. United Nations Environment Programme United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) Out of the Stockholm Conference, the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) was formed with a mandate to promote the idea of environmentallysound development. Based in Nairobi, Kenya, UNEP provided the UN with an agency to examine the world's growing environmental and development problems with a view to making recommendations to national governments and international bodies on appropriate actions. Brundtland Commission In 1987, the UN-sponsored Brundtland Commission released Our Common Future, a report that captured widespread concerns about the environment and poverty in many parts of the world. The Brundtland report said that economic development cannot stop, but it must change course to fit within the planet's ecological limits. It also popularized the term “sustainable development” Excerpt: Our Common Future Major, unintended changes are occurring in the atmosphere, in soils, in waters, among plants and animals. Nature is bountiful but it is also fragile and finely balanced. There are thresholds that cannot be crossed without endangering the basic integrity of the system. Today we are close to many of those thresholds. Limits to Growth Commissioned by the Club of Rome, the rerpot, “Limits to Growth” attempts to model the consequences of a growing human population in a world of finite resources, concluding that current patterns of growth cannot be sustained indefinitely. BALANCE Human Populations Natural Resources Rio Earth Summit In 1992, more than 100 countries met in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil for the first international Earth Summit. The meeting addressed the urgent problems of environmental protection, social and economic development. Several major agreements were made: • The Convention on Climate Change - limits emissions of the greenhouse gases carbon dioxide and methane • The Convention on Biological Diversity - gives countries responsibility for conserving species diversity and using biological resources in a sustainable way. • The Rio Declaration and the Forest Principles - sets out the principles of sustainable development and pledges to reduce deforestation. • Agenda 21 - a plan for achieving sustainable development in the 21st century. Rio Earth Summit: Agenda 21 The Rio Summit produced a major plan for sustainable development called Agenda 21. It proposes that poverty can be reduced by giving people access to the resources they need to support themselves. Nations agreed to assist others to develop in a way that will minimise the environmental impact of their economic growth. Agenda 21 calls on countries to reduce pollution, emissions and the use of precious natural resources. It called for partnerships between governments and other stakeholders to carry out these tasks Rio Earth Summit: Agenda 21 Some of the more important chapters are: • 5. Demographics & Sustainability • 7. Human Settlements (the foundation for "sustainable communities") • 10. Planning & Management of Land • 18. Management of Water • 30. The role of Business & Industry • 38. International Mechanisms & Institutions Agenda 21 calls for the creation of: "...National strategies, plans, policies, and processes which are crucial in achieving a sustainable world." Jo’burg Summit Johannesburg 2002 "Rio+10" Ten years after the Rio Earth Summit, countries met to review progress towards sustainable development. The conference focussed on poverty and the access to safe drinking water and sanitation. It agreed several aims, including: • To reduce the number of people that are not connected to clean drinking water supplies from over 1 billion to 500 million by the year 2015. • To halve the number of people without proper sanitation to 1.2 billion. • To increase the use of sustainable energy sources and restore depleted fish stocks. Rio Summit - 2012 Rio+20 was organized, 20 years after the first Rio Summit, again in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil for the 3rd United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development The Conference focused on two themes: (a) a green economy in the context of sustainable development; and (b) the institutional framework for sustainable development. Rio+20 highlighted seven areas for priority attention; these include decent jobs, energy, sustainable cities, food security and sustainable agriculture, water, oceans and disaster readiness. “The Future we Want” KEY POINTS: • launching a process to establish sustainable development goals; • detailing how the green economy can be used as a tool to achieve sustainable development; • establishing a new forum for sustainable development; • promoting corporate sustainability • taking steps to assess the well‐being of a country; • developing a strategy for sustainable development financing; • adopting a framework for tackling sustainable consumption and production; • focusing on improving gender equality; • stressing the need to engage civil society and incorporate science into policy; and • recognizing the importance of voluntary commitments on sustainable development. Sustainability Timeline 1972 Business and Sustainability Millennium Development Goals New Sustainable Development Goals United Nations activities on Sustainable Development Focus on economic growth only Initiatives by NGOs and civil society Millennium Ecosystem Assessment 2012 Green Economy UN Millennium Development Goals Agreed by 189 countries in 2000 to be achieved by 2015! Follow-up to the MDGs MDGs will end in 2015 • Bad news: not all the goals were achieved, particularly with respect to water, sanitation, environment and health • Good news: Discussions are now underway globally to develop a follow-up to the MDGs: • These new goals for the next decade – 2015-2025, will be called the “Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)” Green Economy What is a Green Economy? Increase in public and private investment in green sectors Increase in quantity & quality of jobs in green sectors Increase in share of green sectors in GDP • Decrease in Energy/resource use per unit of production • Decrease in CO2 and pollution level/GDP • Decrease in wasteful consumption Green Economy A number of themes and issues can be brought together within the overall concept of a “green” economy Sustainability Flow Multilateral Environmental Agreements Major Industrial Accidents Influential Books and Reports United Nations Conferences Activities by major international NGOs Emphasis on Sustainable Development and the intersection of economy, ecology and sociology National Government Commitments Activities by NPOs and Civil Society