GLOBE-Net, May 14, 2012 - "We are at a crucial
stage with respect to the United Nations Sustainable Development
Conference (Rio+20) next month and countries must make better
progress in negotiations on the outcome document to be endorsed at
the conference." This was the message given last week by UN
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to members of the UN General
Assembly.
"We have about 40 days - and 40 nights - to Rio. We must use
every moment," he said calling for all countries to show
flexibility to reach agreement on substantive issues ahead of the
conference scheduled for June 20-22.
"Quite simply, we need a negotiated outcome document before Rio
to ensure the high-level participation that we have worked so hard
to generate," he added.
His call for unity of purpose and progress in negotiations comes
at a time when expectations of success at Rio are at an all time
low. A recent poll of sustainable development experts by
GlobeScan/SustainAbility, showed a majority of those surveyed
(57%) saw the Rio+20 Summit as a critical opportunity for progress
on sustainability leadership, but few (13%) thought it will
succeed.
The 642 experts from business, NGOs, academia and government in
77 countries agreed the green economy and a new institutional
framework for sustainable development were the right themes for the
summit, but few believed significant progress would be made in the
transition to sustainable development.

What's at
Stake?
At the end of 2012 the first commitment period for the Kyoto
Protocol will expire, and despite some progress in forging a
consensus of sorts on the need for action, global greenhouse gas
emissions are still at an unacceptably high level. The climate
change challenge is as great today as ever according to many
climate experts, and world governments still cannot agree on what
to do about it.
Mr. Ban emphasized that deliberations over the next few weeks
will shape actions on the main issues to be addressed in Rio, such
as management and protection of oceans, universal access to
sustainable energy and water, and improving life in the world's
cities.
Others believe that a more fundamental issue is at stake, namely
the absence of a global governance regime and the failure to set
out a viable roadmap to guide actions by the business
community.
"Governments are going to have to make the tough decisions to
change the policies and the budgets that are now underwriting
unsustainable forms of development," says Jim MacNeill, secretary
general at the Brundtland Commission.
"They're going to have to develop a whole new framework of
incentives that support and encourage those business leaders that
want to move in more sustainable directions," he added.
Unless we can manage to move the public, the media, and the
businesses to see that we are interdependent and that we need to
make choices together, politicians in single nations have
difficulty even if they are good leaders, noted Gro Harlem
Brundtland, chair of the Brundtland Commission.
While a collaborative approach will be important, a shift in
governance on both a national and international level will be
crucial, she notes. For business to take the next step towards a
green economy, governments need to put in place regulatory
frameworks and systems that promote sustainable development and
give companies the confidence to make long-term decisions.
UN Secretary-General Ban also stressed the need for agreement on
Sustainable Development Goals that build on current anti-poverty
and social development targets that have a deadline of 2015.
"We must harness the power of partnership to shift the world
onto a more sustainable trajectory of growth and development. Rio
should be a concrete step forward in this regard," he said.
Ban's comments and those of other key principals reflect a
subtle but not insignificant shift in emphasis on the purpose of
the Rio+20 gathering, which is no longer directly addressing
climate change, focusing instead on other sustainable development
priorities, including doubling the share of renewable energy as one
of a series of 'Sustainable Development Goals'.
Sustainable development talks at next month's Rio+20 summit are
set to be "very helpful" for the UN climate change negotiations,
said Christiana Figueres, executive secretary of the UN Framework
Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) speaking to reporters this
week as the latest round of climate talks began in Bonn,
Germany.
"From our perspective, what is clearly a very important outcome
in Rio is the understanding of the very, very clear link that
exists between the pursuance of sustainable development and
addressing climate change," she said. "Both of those things
obviously go hand-in-hand, and so conversations like those in Rio
that actually aim at an aspirational picture of what kind of
society we want to construct are actually very helpful to this
convention."
Based on the timetable agreed to in Durban for a global accord
on climate change by 2015, the Rio+20 discussions most likely will
simply be one of several international dialogues that will take
place over the next three years leading to an agreement to put in
place a regulatory regime that in time will seek to limit
greenhouse gas emissions.
What is clear about the Rio+20 talks is the fact that the world
has changed considerably since 1992, year when the UN Conference
was last held in Rio and when the agreement on the Climate Change
Convention (which in turn led to the Kyoto Protocol) was
signed.
Speaking at a conference in Copenhagen last month organized by
the ethical investment research group EIRIS, Jacqueline McGlade,
Executive Director of the European Environment Agency, noted that
in the past 20 years the telecommunications and internet
revolutions, the financial crisis, and the rise of the developing
world have radically altered the foundations of policymaking that
existed in 1992.
"Is the idea of sustainable development still relevant in a
world where western countries lack money to invest", she asked? "Is
it relevant in a world where billions of people seek to enjoy the
comfort of middle class lifestyles, which so often involve
unsustainable consumption?"
"The answer is yes," she says. Sustainable development is more
relevant now than ever. In 1992 policy-makers were only starting to
link environmental problems with development issues. But we now
have ample evidence of just how interlinked these issues are and
have a growing awareness of our dependency on a dwindling stock of
natural resources, she noted.
In her view, Rio+20 is the ideal starting point for launching
the global 'Green Economy' - linking sustainable development
to:
- Maximizing resource efficiency, by reducing our use of
water, fossil fuels, and mined materials as much as possible;
- Ensuring greater 'resiliency' of our ecosystems and the
services they provide; and
- Providing jobs and opportunities for the world's growing
population and meeting their expectations of improved standards of
living.
By 2050 not only will the world's population grow to 9 billion
people (up from 7 billion today), there will be 3 billion extra
middle class consumers seeking to raise their living standards,
which will put additional strains on the planet's already
over-stressed resources.
"The green economy concept can provide a
framework for our future development in a world that is facing
ever-greater demand for food, land, water, materials and
energy." Jacqueline McGlade,
Executive Director of the European Environment
Agency
Rio+20 could provide an opportunity for the world's
policy-makers to adopt a green economy roadmap for sustainable
development for the next 20 years and beyond, as well as specific
goals and timetables for the policy actions these goals will
require.
This is very much the perspective of Achim Steiner, UN undersecretary-general and
executive director of the UN Environment Programme. "Following four
decades of UNEP initiatives on the environment and the green
economy, attention turns to the Rio+20 summit where the idea of a
true green economy could gain flesh and bones," says
Steiner.
Rio+20 may prove to be the opportunity for the green economy
initiative to be translated into a fresh and forward-looking way of
finally realizing true sustainable development, he added.
Long-term sustainability objectives such as proposed by UNEP
have moved up the policy agenda in recent years and are filtering
into traditional ways of doing business. But the challenge remains,
however for business and finance leaders, policy-makers, and
regulators to find effective ways work together towards a new more
sustainable economic development model.
This issue was addressed recently at GLOBE 2012 in a special
session on Sustained Growth and Sustainability:
Re-engineering the Economic Model chaired by Paul
Clements-Hunt, former head of the UNEP-FI initiative.
The Rio+20 conference may not achieve the breakthrough in
climate management that many once saw as crucial in the wake of the
demise of the Kyoto Protocol; but setting the global economy on a
green, inclusive and more sustainable footing may in the long run
be a more fitting legacy.