TABLE
OF CONTENTS
Volume 7, No. 55, October 2002
|
8
|
An Arab Statement
to the Earth Summit (Editorial
by Najib Saab)
|
|
|
16
|
When
Shall We Start Taking Initiatives Rather Than Reacting to the
Initiatives of Others? (by Mostafa Kamal Tolba) |
|
18
|
The Earth
Summit (cover story): Johannesburg: An action plan for sustainable
development or buying time to delay the catastrophe?
|
|
24
|
The Lost Opportunity |
|
28
|
From Johannesburg
with Love: auditing the summit
|
|
34
|
Zaranik
Natural Reserve: a refuge for migrating birds in Sinai |
|
38
|
African
Antelopes |
|
46
|
Impacts
of Wars on Arab Development (review of ESCWA report) |
|
50
|
Clean Energy
Production: high prospects for Lebanon
|
|
52
|
Peru's Cloud
Forests Destroyed by Mining
|
|
54
|
Ubuntu
Exhibition: sustainable development programmes of governments,
companies and organizations exhibited during the Earth Summit |
|
Supplement:
The Young Environmentalist
Environment
Forum, 10 - Arab Environment News, 12 - World Environment News,
42 - Environment Market, 56 - Time for Action, 59 - Calendar,
60
|
Editorial
An
Arab statement to the Earth summit
Editorial,
issue 55, October 2002
by
Najib Saab
One-hundred heads
of state will kick off the biggest international talkshow in history
on Monday morning in Johannesburg. The official name of the show
is World Summit on Sustainable Development. While most Arab leaders
won't be attending the Earth summit, one might still hope that one
of them will arrive Monday on a white horse, unscheduled, to deliver
this speech.
Mr. Chairman, 10 years ago, the Earth summit in Rio diagnosed the
impasse of environment and development, unanimously prescribed sustainable
development as the magic cure, and presented us with an ambitious
agenda. Yet the human and financial resources fell short. As the
UN secretary-general has said, the results achieved in implementing
Agenda 21 have been rather disappointing.
In many areas environmental conditions have worsened and development
efforts could not improve living conditions for growing populations.
The disappointments of the last decade are not, however, reason
to abandon the principles and spirit of Rio; rather, they are a
challenge to exercise extra effort to translate these principles
into realistic actions.
This summit should meet the challenge and demonstrate our commitment
to find common ground to advance sustainable development, not as
mere intellectual luxury, but as a path to mankind's survival.
This summit is an opportunity to draw conclusions from past failures
and agree on an action-oriented work program, setting clear targets
and timetables. A basic requirement is that this summit should reaffirm
and deliver on the commitments of the Rio summit and on the Millennium
development goals, to eradicate poverty.
Developed countries should also realize that changing lifestyles
and consumption patterns at home is a prerequisite to achieving
sustainable development. What is happening instead is that those
patterns are being exported to developing countries under the cover
of free trade and globalization. Whereas we fully recognize that
deals can be fine-tuned to ensure better implementation in view
of changing conditions, international environmental agreements with
global ramifications cannot be unilaterally revoked to protect national
short-term interests.
International law cannot be selectively applied. Developing countries
rightly complain that industrialized countries have fallen short
of fulfilling the pledges they made at Rio. Official development
assistance has since declined by one-third, to 0.22 percent of the
gross domestic product of the rich countries, instead of increasing
to the promised 0.7 percent. While developing countries are willing
not to pursue the same development patterns followed by industrialized
countries, which have caused environmental havoc, they must be helped
to follow alternative and sustainable patterns of development without
compromising their own national resources and sovereignty.
This summit should send a signal that rich countries will deliver
on their global commitments to help poorer ones achieve balanced
development. We in developing countries have recognized many rules
imposed in the context of globalization, to secure open markets,
import liberalization and the free flow of trade. For those measures
to succeed, they cannot be one-sided. Industrialized countries still
impose import tariffs on developing countries that are four times
higher than those applied to each other. Although there are international
rules against subsidies, some countries still heavily subsidize
exports, causing social and ecological disasters for developing
countries and destabilizing local and international markets. Such
practices deny developing countries a fairer share of the benefits
of globalization.
The answer to globalization's failure to benefit the poor is not
isolationism, but more global integration, based on fair and equitable
distribution of resources and responsibilities.
The core foundation of sustainable development is global partnership
based on the principles of economic, social and environmental development.
By barring poor countries from effectively participating in global
economic decisions, the whole structure is bound to collapse. Economic
talks should not be kept off-limits in this summit: That would betray
sustainable development and delay solutions.
Sustainable development should be accepted as a goal in itself,
not a negotiating item lost in talks on governance and aid. Selective
interpretations of good governance by some developed countries should
not be used as an excuse to deprive poor countries of needed aid.
Simultaneously, insufficient aid from rich countries does not absolve
developing countries of the obligation to ensure good governance
and fight corruption. Good governance based on the principles of
quality management is in the interest of developing countries, regardless
of the levels of foreign aid, as much as delivering aid is an obligation
of developed countries.
Any discussion outside this framework is a cover-up to defy national
and international obligations.
Allow me to share some of our experiences in the decade after Rio:
Like other countries, we have established an Environment Ministry,
enacted laws, ratified major international agreements and cooperated
with international agencies to implement various environmental projects.
Our civil society became vibrant and active on environmental matters.
The Rio decade was, however, characterized by ready-made solutions
which resulted in projects often designed to fit the measurements
and requirements of donor agencies and the international bureaucracy,
rather than the actual needs of local communities.
While these projects delivered good results, many benefits were
lost due to poor coordination. The global aspect of the Rio decade
often ignored basic local requirements, allocating vast budgets
for topics such as introducing alternatives to substances responsible
for the ozone hole, while overlooking pressing issues such as air
pollution killing thousands of people in cities.
We note with gratification that an agreement has recently been reached
to expand the scope of the Global Environment Facility to finance
efforts to combat desertification, another subject that was unfairly
considered as being regional, thus deprived from financing under
the global scope of GEF.
We support the commitment of the implementation plan to promote
renewable energy sources and cleaner use of fossil fuels, which
require proper transfer of technology; however, as part of a developing
region that depends heavily on oil for income, I caution against
selectively imposing new tariffs under the guise of environmental
protection, as they could hamper the whole region's development.
Oil tariffs, under the name of carbon tax or others, if they were
for true environmental concerns, should be shared with producers
mainly developing countries who need the income to advance cleaner
production technologies. Coming from a region trying to achieve
sustainable development under war, occupation and the daily threat
of Israeli aggression, I can testify that ending foreign occupation
and respect for human and national rights are prerequisites to proper
development. We support the call for eliminating weapons of mass
destruction, but not in a selective manner.
Global partnership, required to implement sustainable development,
calls for a meaningful dialogue among civilizations, one based on
mutual respect and understanding of different cultures. We cannot
win a "war on terror" if we fail to achieve peaceful coexistence
and wage a determined war on poverty and injustice. Thank you.
|