wssd end of term report not satisfactory:
must do better
1. Corporate Accountability 5/10
Governments opened the door to the
development of binding international rules to
require multinationals to improve practices,
but there was no clear commitment on a
follow-up mechanism and the US may have
secured an opt out. Any progress on this,
however, follows huge efforts from Friends of
the Earth, who have raised this issue
throughout the talks.
2. Trade and Globalisation 2
The free trade agenda dominated the
Johannesburg talks. Enshrining the
predominance of the WTO over trade,
environment and development was partially
averted following intense effort by Friends
of the Earth and others. But Governments
failed to affirm the authority and autonomy
of Multilateral Environmental Agreements and
merely agreed that negotiations on the
MEA-WTO relationship will continue – probably
at the WTO! The globalisation section does
not even mention the environment.
3. Ecological Debt 0
There has been no formal recognition of
the ecological debt owed by the rich
countries to the poorer ones, nor of those
who suffer as a result, let alone a schedule
for discussions on how the issue should be
handled. In Rio, the North agreed that they
had caused most environmental harm and had
therefore to lead the clean up effort.
Governments failed to move this forward.
4. Energy and Climate Change 3 so
far
The Kyoto Protocol has been reaffirmed but
there is unlikely to be a 10% target for new
renewable energy or recognition of the need
for more ambitious international targets.
Contentious discussions continue on this
issue.
5. Water and Sanitation 3
Governments inserted weasel words to their
much-trailed commitment to halve the number
of people without access to water and
sanitation by 2015. But they failed to ensure
water remains a public good and constrain
liberalization and privatisation.
6. Biodiversity 3
There is a weaker target on biodiversity
loss than was agreed six months ago in the
Hague Biodiversity Convention talks. Now
governments only aim to reduce the rate of
loss, not eliminate it altogether. There is
modest but useful progress on marine
protected areas.
7. Aid and Debt 1
No new finance, aid or debt relief targets
beyond this year’s Monterray finance Summit
were agreed. The long-standing aid-as-0.7% of
GDP target was not even mentioned.
8. Subsidies 1
Environmentally damaging subsidies are not
dealt with properly. The text on farm
subsidies is no different to that agreed in
Doha and fossil fuel and nuclear energy are
not even mentioned. There is, useful progress
on fisheries subsidies.
9. Consumption and Production 2
The Rio plan for a ten year action
programme to address over-consumption and
damaging production patterns has been dumped
in favour of a weaker ‘framework of
programmes’.
10. Rio Principles 2 so far
After much disagreement there was in the
end no substantial backsliding on commitments
such as the precautionary principle and
‘common but differentiated treatment’ so
hated by the US. But there have been no steps
forward either. Some text on this is still
being discussed.
TOTAL 22/100
Ricardo Navarro, Chair of Friends of the
Earth International, said:
"This Summit has failed the poor and
vulnerable peoples of the world. It has not
reached agreement on the radical action -
with clear timetables and targets - needed to
tackle the world's environmental problems,
from climate change and renewable energy to
forest and species loss. The world's
Governments must agree to meet again and
determine that next time they will do
better.
But campaigners from around the world can
be delighted that we have stopped the worst
efforts of the US and giant corporations to
subject the world's environment to the rules
of world trade. And Friends of the Earth
today celebrates its victory, in the teeth of
US resistance, in persuading the Summit to
agree that binding international agreements
between governments will be needed to control
the growing power of international
corporations."
contacts:
Ricardo Navarro +27 72 401 5392
Tony Juniper +27 72 401 5393
Niccolo Sarno (Media) +27 72 401 5387
Ian Willmore (Media) +27 72 401 5386
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