RIO GAP
One of the key obstacles to
achieving sustainable development is agreeing who will carry the burden.
Stopping environmental degradation requires resources. Some argue those
resources could be needed somewhere else, such as eradicating poverty. So it
could appear that the need to eradicate poverty and the need to stop
environmental degradation are in conflict.
ECO does not buy into this
argument. At all. Environmental degradation is fast becoming the
biggest contributor to increased poverty. If we want to eradicate poverty, then
we need to invest also in what is leading to more poverty, which includes
fighting environmental degradation.
The more scarce resources become,
the more sustainability must be at the center of poverty alleviation. The world
has no choice but to choose a path that would combine them. In fact, many
developed and developing countries are already providing a lot of good examples
on the national and subnational levels, such as developing efficient public
transport that reduces CO2 emissions and at the same time increase mobility and
affordability, which is needed for economic development.
Now that governments have agreed as
little as they have, given the existing and rather pathetic political will now
available, the question is what will they do when they go back home. The
current conference document, with all its weaknesses, has nonetheless indicated
many potential opportunities for further action. There are no hard numerical
commitments and actions in the text, but it provides processes for governments
to develop these commitments and actions. Such processes include:
- establishing an intergovernmental high level political forum that will follow up on the implementation of the sustainable development commitments contained in Agenda 21,
- committing to promote an integrated approach to planning and building sustainable cities and urban settlements,
- committing to maintain and restore marine resources to sustainable levels with the aim of achieving these goals for depleted stocks on an urgent basis by 2015,
- adopting the 10-Year Framework of Programmes (10YFP) on sustainable consumption and production (SCP),
- resolving to establish an inclusive and transparent intergovernmental process on SDGs that is open to all stakeholders.
There are many other opportunities
highlighted within the existing text for governments to take us forward.
Nevertheless, this will not happen unless political reality on the ground
changes.
The failure of the international
process is not because multilateralism is wrong. The process is good. What we
lack is political will. The international process can only work within existing
political will. If there is no new political will to capture, the process will
not do anything.
Political will is not created at
international venues, it is created back at home, and on the streets. It is up
to the youth and civil society movements to take it forward.
But reality can change, and we saw
it in the Arab Spring. What is needed is persistence, and continued action.
Civil society campaigned for years in Egypt to achieve political change
against harsh suppression, but they never gave up. Then a tipping point was
reached, and everything changed in only one day.
Civil society must use all the anger
that exists as a result of the Rio+20 reality check, and then alter that
reality. After all, we are running out of time.
So ECO is going home for now.
We are angry, but that will focus our energy, and we will organize. Because as
Nelson Mandela so wisely said: “it always seems impossible, until it is done.”
By Ivy rono
communications KYG.
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