30 august 2002
johannesburg
media advisory
progress of negotiations
Corporate Accountability
Corporate accountability has become one of
the crunch issues of this Summit. The EU has
moved on this issue, we suspect under
pressure from the public and NGOs. The G77,
which originally proposed an international
framework on this issue, seems to have
weakened its stance. But FoEI is not giving
up on them – as many G77 countries continue
to see this as a key issue for the summit.
Environment, human rights, development NGOs
and labour organisations are unanimous in
condemning the failure of the voluntary
approach – i.e. letting corporations regulate
themselves on social and environmental
issues.
Today FoEI has published a remarkable
story about an outrageous deal between BP and
other oil companies and the Turkish
Government. A major new 1760km pipeline is
planned to run from Baku on the Caspian Sea
to Ceyhan on the Turkish Mediterranean coast.
The deal depends on what BP’s John Browne
shamelessly calls “free public money” and
exempts the corridor of the pipeline from
most Turkish environmental, social and human
rights law. Those who may have fallen for
BP’s “Beyond Petroleum” hogwash clearly need
to think again. The case for a binding
convention on corporate responsibility has
never been stronger. Full details of the deal
are available from FoEI and can be found
online at
www.foe.co.uk/resource/evidence/turkey-btc-agreement.pdf.
Trade (1)
On multilateral environmental agreements
(MEAs), dangerous text has been included (in
paragraph 20) that would privilege WTO rules
over MEAs. The EU has also tried to insist
that talks on MEAs should take place through
the WTO Doha process. 200 NGOs have called
for the reverse and for the Johannesburg
summit to clarify that environmental
agreements can never be overruled by trade
rules. On sustainability impact assessments
(SIAs) and the integration of environmental
and sustainable development principles into
trade agreements, the G77 has blocked further
progress. On sustainability and market
access, difficult negotiations continue – the
current text would bar all trade related
subsidies, even including the promotion of
research into local economic development,
sustainability and environmental
protection.
Yesterday night, the EU impeded progress
in negotiations by proposing a ministerial
meeting on a list of issues including the Rio
principles, water and sanitation, energy, a
10 year programme for sustainable development
and production, trade and finance. Other
negotiators insisted on continuing talks on
the precautionary approach.
Trade (2) WTO
The Summit is rapidly turning into an annex
of the Doha WTO talks. There are about 200
references to the WTO in the current text.
Language on globalisation for example has
been lifted straight from the Doha text.
FoEI has found that 18 countries present
in Joburg are not even WTO members –
Afghanistan, Algeria, Korea, Comoros,
Eritrea, Iran, Iraq, Kiribati, Liberia,
Libya, Maldives, Marshall Islands,
Micronesia, Monaco, Nauru, Palau, Moldova,
San Marino, Somalia, Sudan, Syria,
Turkmenistan. Yesterday, the Tobago delegate
said that his country was not a WTO member
and might like to talk about some of the key
issues here and not in Doha, only to find
that they in fact joined seven years ago.
FoEI wonders whether the Earth Summit is the
right place for further Governments
effectively to sign up to the WTO.
Finance
There are still no commitments to finally
achieve the 0.7% overseas aid target already
promised 30 years ago, and no substantive
text on environmental and social standards
for Export Credit Agencies.
Climate
Delegates await the US’s alternative
language on climate change, which will try to
take references to the Kyoto Protocol out of
the final text. Publication was expected
yesterday but it has yet to appear. Perhaps
the US has problems in trying to draft words,
which appear to be concerned about the issue
while removing all references to practical
action. The US Administration was slammed for
climate inaction at a Summit press conference
yesterday by Democratic Congressmen Miller,
Kucinich, and Blumenauer. The current text
proposed by Norway calls on all countries to
ratify Kyoto. Russia’s ratification (promised
by President Putin for months) is essential
if the Protocol is to enter into force. The
EU is backing the Norway text, but there is
rumoured to be some internal argument on
this. Japan has proposed new Kyoto language,
which we do not have yet.
Renewable Energy
Brazil proposed that 10% of global energy
supply should come from ne renewables (which
excludes large hydro and traditional biomass)
by 2010. They are backed by Norway,
Philippines, Mexico, Morocco and others. The
EU is under pressure to revise its much
weaker target. The issue will go to the
ministers. Saudi Arabia has tried to get
other Arab states to dump on this plan, and
denounced Morocco for selling out Arab
interests by being green on this question.
Morocco has domestic targets of 10% by 2011
and 20% by 2020. Last night the facilitator
proposed a new energy package including a
timetable to phase out subsidies and a role
for public/private partnerships in a “social
responsibility framework” (whatever that is)
and a target to be negotiated today. The G77
is also making a proposal today, reportedly
based around voluntary regional targets.
Common Responsibilities?
At Rio 10 years ago, the world’s Governments
signed up to the principle of “common but
differentiated responsibilities”. This means
that every state has a common duty to look
after the planet, but future action will vary
depending on their current economic power and
impact on the planet. At the Bali PrepComm
meeting for this year’s Summit, the US
insisted that these words be placed in
brackets, where they so far remain. To FoEI
all Rio Principles are not negotiable. If
they get watered down at Johannesburg the
Summit will be remembered as Rio Minus
10.
Other
Negotiations on many key parts of the text
seem to be heading away from any green
result. Language on sustainable consumption
and the Rio principles, for example, is being
weakened. Weasel words such as “moving
towards” and “if possible” are qualifying
targets, for example on fishing. On
chemicals, the text offers the feeble pledge
to move towards minimising the harmful use of
chemicals by 2020! Eco-labelling is in
trouble, with US and G77 combining against
the EU on the issue, and backing a “voluntary
approach”. Such a voluntary approach would
undermine the GMO labelling directive of the
EU.
Do not believe the UN and delegation spin
doctors claiming that progress in the talks
is good because 95% of the text has been
agreed. This is just a word counting trick,
that FoEI has heard before at failed
negotiations from the Seattle WTO talks to
the Hague climate talks. Rather important
words such as those on globalisation remain
entirely unagreed. This is not “rapid
progress” in any normal sense of these
words.
Some media are reporting that the total
cost of the Summit, estimated at around $50
million, is way too high. Remember that the
annual cost of the EU’s Common Agricultural
Policy is $60 billion. For that money, we
could hold more than a thousand Earth Summits
every year. Also $50 million is less than
half the cost of one B1 bomber … FoEI is also
suggesting that the UN and South Africa send
the bill of this Summit to the White House.
If President Bush can’t be bothered to show
up, but wants to wreck the process from afar,
the least he could do is foot the bill.
Tony Juniper, Vice Chair of Friends of the
Earth International, said: "The whole point
of this Summit is to tackle the huge problems
caused by environmental degradation and
poverty, which have worsened since the Rio
Earth Summit. At the moment, some
governments, notably the US, are even trying
to backtrack from commitments made 10 years
ago. This must not be allowed to happen. We
must see real action over the next few days -
world leaders owe it the people of the world
to make progresss here in Johannesburg."
CONTACTS:
Daniel Mittler (FoEI Summit Co-ordinator)
+27 72 401 5394
Ian Willmore (Media) +27 72 401 5386
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