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World Summit on Sustainable Development

 


Rio+10 initiatives

"The World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) was held in Johannesburg, South Africa, from 26 August to 4 September 2002, ten years after the Rio Earth Summit. It presented an occasion to assess progress made since 1992 and to define priorities for the future. Moreover, this meeting represented a unique opportunity for governments, civil society and international organisations to share experiences and to exchange views.

GCI Contact person:

  • To read the GCI report from the WSSD, click here


  • To read the Report on the Earth Charter Initiative at the WSSD, click here


  • To read the IISD Summary Report of the WSSD: click here


  • To download the Plan of Implementation, click here


  • To read the Political Declaration, click here


  • To read Head of State quotations on key Green Cross issues, click here

 

Recent News regarding the Johannesburg Summit:

 

Green Cross International position: Proposals for the wssd

Access to water:

Inadequate sanitation, permanent degradation of the quality of water, and non-access to water lifeblood of all human and natural systems_ diminish the quality of human life and contribute to human insecurity. Water scarcity and unsafe water have direct repercussions on populations, exacerbating poverty, wrecking havoc on health, and even causing conflicts as people may be forced to fight over this precious resource, or move to another region or country thus exerting pressure on bordering nations. Transboundary water should lead to co-operation between affected countries rather than tensions in their relations. Funds should be mobilized to guarantee the realisation of the human right of access to safe drinking water for all people.

Ethics:

The World Summit should launch the negotiation process for a new global code of ethics to guide human behaviour and decision making related to sustainable development issues and to inspire a positive vision for the new Millenium. To this end, the Earth Charter is a document that embodies fundamental values and principles and should be considered as an efficient tool to diffuse ethical considerations to people and throughout Nations. Efforts should converge on the essential task of linking globalisation, sustainable development and ethics. Global environmental issues need to be clearly reframed in the context of a new Global Deal, in order to consider related questions of justice, poverty, exclusion, democracy, peace, security, values and human rights and in order to adopt a truly integrated approach to sustainable development. In this context, good governance consists of an essential step to achieve sustainable development and poverty eradication. - Visit the Earth Dialogues website.

Education:

Environmental education elements should be included in education programmes during school years, as well as at higher levels of education. Development of learning programmes on sustainable development is absolutely essential, but environmental principles should not be taught separately from the other disciplines; they must be fully integrated in education systems to be an effective tool to sensitise and mobilise future generations. Values and principles should spread through education because today's youth is the thinking force of tomorrow and have the possibility to construct a sustainable future.

Environmental Legacy of Wars and Conflicts,  and Relief Operations:

Special attention should be given to the environmental legacy of wars, the clean-up of military bases, and the destruction of chemical and nuclear weapons in accordance with international conventions. The Chemical Weapons Convention has met great difficulties in implementation and has so far failed to eliminate much of the chemical weapons threat; the Summit should call for the full destruction of such weapons as a necessary prerequisite for global security. The continued presence of the nuclear, chemical and conventional remnants of wars, including the Cold War, in the soil and water in many regions plagues health and development for years, even generations, after the conflict has ended.

In the case of armed conflict, environmental rehabilitation should be carried-out under the framework of humanitarian assistance. Following a war or conflict, direct human impacts rightly receive the most immediate attention from the international community; it must be stressed that environmental consequences, especially contamination, can be the cause of both long and short-term suffering of local populations. How to construct a sustainable future on contaminated land? International humanitarian relief operations should therefore include both the human and the environmental dimension.

Deforestation:

Deforestation is one of the most acute environmental problems for Africa. African economic resources, essentially agricultural, are based on the exploitation of natural resources and land. Heavy trade in wood products, the population explosion and the debt crisis allow African countries no hope for rational management of forests and biodiversity. Conservation, rehabilitation and protection of forests need the commitment of development partners and of the international community. It is not the desert that is expanding in Africa, but rather the forest that is disappearing.

Debt relief:

Issues such as degradation of tropical forests, desertification or poor garbage management in big African cities cripple African populations. In spite of their political willingness, African states lack resources to face up to these big environmental challenges. More than half the resources of Africa are devoted to the repayment of external debts. The international community should give a chance to African populations by cancelling debts in favor of environmental management solutions.

Climate Change and Energy

The phenomenon of climate change threatens the health and future of society. We need binding commitments to reduce carbon emissions and other GHGs immediately. We must encourage developed societies to create an economy no longer based on fossil fuels and move toward a renewable energy based economy to power our buildings, transportation, and industry; furthermore, energy conservation and efficiency must be encouraged in all sectors. Developing countries should receive significant financial and technical assistance to use cleaner sources of energy through conservation, efficiency, and renewables.  Without adequate strategies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and prevent future emissions, we will be doomed to tremendous disruptions in terms of migration, access to water, desertification and other drastic results of climate change that also destabilize sovereign nations and allow fundamentalism to prosper.

Built Environment:

We must recognize that 40% of the world's energy and resources are used to construct and maintain our buildings and homes.  In order to promote sustainable development, all future construction and rehabilitation of buildings should adhere to standards that promote "green building" so as to create healthier, higher performance structures that are also lower in cost to operate and maintain.  Doing so will allow us to ensure more efficient use of natural resources (e.g., wood, water, etc.), improve public health (e.g., lower toxicity in homes and workplaces), improve productivity (e.g., workers, students, etc.), reduce energy use (e.g., efficiency, conservation, renewable energy), and lessen the impact upon the impoverished (e.g., reduce destruction of indigenous communities where resources are extracted, lower energy bills for low-income families in developed nations, etc.).

 

Green Cross International Participation in the Rio + 10 Preparation Process:

 Thanks to its 21 Green Cross National Organisations, GCI benefits from a North/South and East/West network of partners, which permits it to be committed in various national as well as regional preparations.

  • CSD 10 meeting. 29 April 2 May 2001, New York        
    GCI took part in this first global PrepCom. This meeting was devoted to the organisational side of the process.



  • Preparatory process for Europe and North America: UNECE meeting
    GCI report: Open-ended drafting group, 3-4 September 2001, Geneva, Switzerland
    GCI report: Regional Ministerial Meeting 24-25 September 2001, Geneva, Switzerland
    Document: Ministerial Statement - Document: NGO Statement



  • Preparatory process for Africa
    Green Cross Ivory Coast participates actively in the Special Commission created inside the Ministry of the Environment. It also takes part in sub-regional meetings in Africa. Mr. Mahika Koffi Mathieu, its Executive Director, attended the African Regional PrepCom Meeting in Nairobi, from 15-18 October 2001.
    GC Ivory Coast report: African Regional PrepCom Meeting, 15-18 October 2001, Nairobi.  
    Document: Ministerial statement.

    The delegates of the Southern Summit for Partnerships in Sustainable Development, representing 10,000 Civil Society Organizations (CSOs) in developing countries of the world, met in Algiers on the 16th and 17th of March 2002.

    They evaluated the first decade since the adoption of Agenda 21, described our present conditions, and proposed solutions and action plans. Gomé Hilaire, Green Cross representative, acted for the recognition of Earth Charter.

    The final declaration mentioned the Earth Charter as follows: ìÖWe, the more than 5000 Civil Society Organisations representatives, that actively participated directly in the National and Regional Consultations leading up to the Southern NGO Summit, Envision a world: Where peace with justice prevails; where wars instigated to exploit the resources of the South cease, and where the Earth Charter and other culturally diverse values frameworks, and the Indigenous Platform for Human Rights that adopted ethical foundations for human interaction, are considered

    Click here to read the full declaration.





  • Green Cross Russia initiatives
    Mr. Sergei Baranovsky, President of Green Cross Russia, is member of the Managing board for the national ecological doctrine /Rio+10 Working Group. This entity was nominated by President Putin to prepare his speech in Johannesburg. GC Russia is in charge of the « Environmental culture and education » part of the National doctrine. GC Russia also prepared the National environmental forum to share its ideas with the NGO community and the media. It was held from 16-24 September 2001. And it organizes the VIII International Conference on Environmental Education, which will be devoted to Rio+10. Informations here.

 

Third and Four Preparatory Committee Meeting for the WSSD

  • Green Cross participated in Prepcom III in New York from March 25 to April 5, 2002.
    To read the GCI report on the Prepcom, click here


  • Green Cross participated in Prepcom IV in Bali, Indonesia from May 27 to June 7, 2002, and particularly followed developments in regard to targets and commitments for energy and water, and the role of an ethical framework for sustainable development.
    To read the IISD report on the Prepcom click here for html or pdf .

 

Rio +10 preparatory process: general information

  • Global level
     The second, third, and fourth global PrepCom are scheduled as follows:
    • Second PrepCom: New York, New York, 28 January - 8 February 2002;
      click here for more information on the second PrepCom


    • Third PrepCom: New York, 25 March - 5 April 2002
      click here for more information on the third PrepCom,


    • Fourth PrepCom: Indonesia, 27 May - 7 June 2002.
      click here for more information on the fourth PrepCom,

     Click here for Major groups accreditation and registration

  • Regional level
    This level is composed of Regional Roundtables of Eminent Persons and of Regional PrepCom Meetings:

   

  • Local level
    The local level consists of implementing « local Agenda 21 ». Local action plans have been taken since 1992. The International Council for Local Environment Initiatives (ICLEI) and the Secretariat of the UN Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD) produced a joint survey for the five-year anniversary of the Rio Summit. They identified over 1800 local Agenda 21 initiatives. Results were submitted to the Special Session of the General Assembly to review progress in implementing Agenda 21. A second international survey has been produced for the ten-year anniversary in co-operation with UNDP. The aim of this survey is the following: to measure the scope of local Agenda 21 activity around the world, to assess the impact of on going local Agenda 21 activities, to identify tangible outcomes of local Agenda 21, and to identify regional and global trends in the context of key sustainable development issues. This survey was distributed in Fall 2000 to more than 2000 local authorities. It should also be noted that extensive consultation process among local authorities has been implemented since July 2000 and will continue until the end of 2001.

 

 

Useful addresses:

National Focal Points: click here

Regional Focal Points:

Africa;

Asia Pacific;

Europe and North America;

Latin America and the Caribbean;

Western Asia.

 

 

Links and Resources

Johannesburg Summit 2002. The official United Nations website   (www.johannesburgsummit.org)

South African Government, Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism (http://www.environment.gov.za/)

UNED Forum (http://www.earthsummit2002.org)

Johannesburg World Summit Company(http://www.joburgsummit2002.com)

Sustainable Development in Switzerland (http://www.johannesburg2002.ch)

International Institute for Sustainable Development(http://www.iisd.ca)

European Rio + 10 Coalition(http://www.epe.be/obejctive2002)

International Institute for Environment and Development- World Summit on Sustainable Development page (http://www.iied.org)

NGO Steering Committee to the UN Commission on Sustainable Development  (http://www.igc.org/csdngo/anped.org)

ANPED, the Northern Alliance for Sustainability(http://www.anped.org)

ECO-Accord (http://www.accord.cis.lead.org)

The Earth Council(http://www.ecouncil.ac.cr)

International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives (http://www.iclei.org)

Southern NGO Summit on Sustainable Development (http://www.southngosummit.org)

 

 

 
 
 
 
Copyright Green Cross International - Last update June 17, 2003