EDITORIAL: Beyond Rio+20
by Sunita
Narain
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It was
June of 1992. The location was Rio de Janeiro. The occasion was the world
conference on environment and development. A large number of people had come out
on the streets. They were protesting the arrival of George Bush senior, the then
president of the US. Just before coming to the conference, Bush had visited a
local shopping centre, urging people to buy more so that the increased
consumption could rescue his country from financial crisis. Protesters were
angered by his statement that “the American lifestyle is not negotiable”. People
wanted change in the way the world did business with the environment. They
demanded that Bush should sign the climate convention and agree to tough
emission reductions. The mood was expectant, upbeat and pushy.
For the
first time environmental issues were put on the world table. Till Rio 1992,
environment was considered a local or national issue. But science and fears of a
changing climate altered all that. Emission limits were needed for all
industrialised countries. For this, global rules were essential and global
cooperation imperative. The Rio conference saw the birth of global conventions
on climate change, biodiversity and desertification.
Inevitably, Rio 1992
witnessed the first showdown between the North and the South on global rules for
environmental management. Developing countries were firm they needed ecological
space to grow. But they were also willing to say they should grow differently so
that they do not add to pollution. They wanted money and technology to secure
the new growth strategy. The big take home was that the environment was about
socially equitable development.
Now 20 years later, world leaders will
meet again in the same city of Rio de Janeiro. But this time there is no
apparent excitement in the run up to the conference. It seems world leaders,
lost in managing financial crisis, have no time for environmental issues. It
seems the world has run out of ideas to safeguard a common future.
So,
the conference is ridden with the usual polemics. The old rich, mostly European
countries, are preaching the virtues of environment to the new rich, comprising
India, China, Brazil and the rest. The new rich are resisting efforts to remove
the differentiation in the contribution of different countries to the creation
of the problem. They want their right to development secured. But now the old
rich want to wriggle out of this differentiation. They want action from all.
They are missionaries for the environment. The rest, they project, are
renegades.
The question is what more can be done at the global level? The
fact is that all global environmental problems—from climate change to hazardous
waste—have separate agreements. International rules of engagement and
cooperation are being discussed in parallel processes and institutions. So what
can a conference like Rio achieve?
A new bogey was created: Rio+20 would
be about green economy and not about the 1992’s concept of sustainable
development. But this was said without clarifying what is true green economy?
Does it mean the world will invest in technologies to green the current economy?
Or will it seriously reinvent growth so that it is not driven by cheap
consumption that is costing us the earth?
The question is too
inconvenient, so, instead, negotiators drew up a list of actions to meet green
targets called sustainable development goals. Thus the fight has shifted to a
new goal. The European Union proposed a set of environmental targets—from
renewable energy to forest and biodiversity. The G-77 proposed a counter set of
development goals—from consumption patterns to poverty eradication. At Rio 2012,
the fight will be about whose goal makes it to the priority list. Rio 2012 will
most probably set up a process to negotiate the specifics of the sustainable
development goals. The fight will be postponed for another day.
In all
this nobody is asking why the world remains so deeply divided over the
definition of environment. The fact is the world has changed since 1992. The
fact also is that the developing world has by now seen the pain of environmental
mismanagement. There is proactive national action. It is not as if countries
like India must be converted to environmentalism. They understand the need for
action. They are working to fix environmental problems. But they find that like
much of the already rich world they remain behind the problem; they fix
something, but much more gets out of control.
The bottom line is that
environmental concern and action at the national and the local level has
blossomed since 1992. But when countries meet at the global level distrust
prevails. Environmental issues are divisive because the already rich have
reneged on their commitments to secure growth for all. Now they want to start
afresh to build a new world. But this is not the commitment that will give us
back the earth.
The hard truth is that unless the world sorts out its
deep divisions, global action will be weak and meaningless. So instead of
focusing on things we cannot do, Rio 2012 should celebrate, loudly and boldly,
that people (and nations) are not waiting for global consensus to emerge. They
have taken matters in their hands. They are committed to change—change we can
believe in.
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