|
Published
by the International
Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD)
Vol. 05 No. 173
Monday, 16 April 2001
NINTH SESSION OF THE UN
COMMISSION ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT:
16-27 APRIL 2001
The ninth session of the
Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD-9) opens today at
UN Headquarters in New York and will meet until 27 April 2001.
Participants will consider the sectoral themes of energy and
atmosphere, the cross-sectoral themes of information for
decision making and participation and of international
cooperation for an enabling environment, and the economic
sector theme of transport. The session’s Multi-stakeholder
Dialogues, at which scientists will participate for the first
time as a major group, will be on sustainable energy and
transport.
After consideration of the
procedural items, the session will turn to the first of four
Multi-stakeholder Dialogues on sustainable energy and
transport (16-18 April). There will be a High-level Segment on
Wednesday, Thursday and Friday (18-20 April) with two thematic
interactive dialogues, a panel and general debate. Drafting
groups will commence work during the second week.
A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE CSD
The CSD emerged from Agenda
21, the programme of action adopted by the United Nations
Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED) in June
1992. Agenda 21 called for the creation of the CSD to ensure
effective follow-up of UNCED, enhance international
cooperation and rationalize intergovernmental decision-making
capacity, and examine progress of Agenda 21 implementation at
the local, national, regional and international levels. In
1992, the 47th session of theUN General Assembly (GA) set out,
in resolution 47/191, the CSD's terms of reference, its
composition, guidelines for the participation of NGOs, the
organization of work, its relationship with other UN bodies,
and Secretariat arrangements. The CSD held its first
substantive session in June 1993 and has since met annually.
In June 1997, five years after UNCED, the General Assembly
held a Special Session (UNGASS-19) to review the
implementation of Agenda 21. Negotiations produced a Programme
for the Further Implementation of Agenda 21. Among the
decisions adopted at UNGASS was a new five-year CSD work
programme, which identifies sectoral, cross-sectoral and
economic sector/major group themes for the subsequent four
sessions of the CSD. Overriding issues for each year are
poverty, and consumption and production patterns.
CSD-6 met from 20 April to 1
May 1998. Participants considered the economic theme of
industry and the sectoral theme of strategic approaches to
freshwater management. They also reviewed implementation of
the Barbados Programme of Action for the Sustainable
Development of Small Island Developing States and discussed
the cross-sectoral themes of technology transfer, capacity
building, education, science and awareness raising.
CSD-7 met from 19-30 April
1999 to consider the economic theme of tourism, the sectoral
theme of oceans and seas and the cross-sectoral theme of
consumption and production patterns. Participants also
prepared for the UNGASS review of the Barbados Programme of
Action.
CSD-8 met from 24 April to 5
May 2000. Participants deliberated on the economic theme of
sustainable agriculture and land management, the sectoral
theme of integrated planning and management of land resources
and the cross-sectoral themes of financial resources, trade
and investment, and economic growth. The conclusions and
proposals in the final report of the Intergovernmental Forum
on Forests were also discussed, as were preparations for the
ten-year review of UNCED.
INTERSESSIONAL HIGHLIGHTS
55TH UN GENERAL ASSEMBLY: On
20 December 2000, the GA adopted resolution 55/199, on the
10-year review of progress achieved in the implementation of
the outcomes of UNCED. In this resolution, the GA decided to
organize the 10-year review of UNCED in 2002 at the summit
level to reinvigorate the global commitment to sustainable
development, and accepted South Africa’s offer to host the
summit, which will be called the World Summit on Sustainable
Development. The review should focus on the identification of
accomplishments and areas where further efforts are needed to
implement Agenda 21 and other UNCED outcomes, on
action-oriented decisions in areas where further efforts are
needed, and on new challenges and opportunities within the
framework of Agenda 21. The Summit should result in renewed
political commitment and support for sustainable development.
Among other things, the
resolution decides that the meetings of CSD-10 will serve as
an open-ended preparatory committee for the Summit, and sets
out the activities that the preparatory committee should
engage in, as well as the schedule of preparatory meetings.
The organizational session will take place in 2001 and the
first and second substantive preparatory sessions will be held
in January and March 2002, respectively, with a third,
ministerial, session to be held in May 2002, in Indonesia.
21ST SESSION OF THE UNEP
GOVERNING COUNCIL AND SECOND GLOBAL MINISTERIAL ENVIRONMENT
FORUM: The 21st session of the
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) Governing Council
and Second Global Ministerial Environment Forum took place
from 5-9 February 2001 at UNEP headquarters in Nairobi, Kenya.
The Governing Council considered: a range of policy issues;
governance; UNEP's contribution to future sessions of the CSD;
follow-up to General Assembly resolutions; linkages among and
support to environmental and environment-related conventions;
and numerous programmatic, administrative and budgetary
matters, including UNEP's work programme and budget for the
biennium 2002-2003.
On the meeting's final two
days, a high-level ministerial dialogue was held to discuss
implementation of the Nairobi Declaration on the Role and
Mandate of UNEP and the Malmö Ministerial Declaration. Topics
included energy policy issues, governance, the specific needs
of Africa, UNEP's contribution to the World Summit on
Sustainable Development, the linkages between environment,
health and poverty, and environmental vulnerability to natural
and man-made disasters.
The Governing Council
concluded its work by adopting over 30 decisions on issues
including global governance, environmental law,
desertification, biosafety, climate and atmosphere, the
chemicals agenda, and UNEP's budget for the biennium
2002-2003.
Two decisions of particular
relevance to CSD-9 include decision 21/6, on lead in gasoline,
and decision 21/21, on international environmental governance.
Decision 21/6 calls upon governments who have not yet done so
to eliminate the use of lead in gasoline, and urges
governments, intergovernmental organizations, the
Intergovernmental Forum on Chemical Safety, and civil society
to participate actively in assisting governments in this
phase-out.
Decision 21/21, inter
alia, establishes an open-ended intergovernmental group of
ministers or their representatives to undertake a
comprehensive policy-oriented assessment of existing
institutional weaknesses, as well as future needs and options
for strengthened international environmental governance. The
decision also requests the President of the Governing Council
to inform the CSD, at its first session as the preparatory
body of the World Summit on Sustainable Development, of this
decision of the Council, and of the views expressed by
Ministers of the Environment on international environmental
governance at the February 2001 Governing Council session.
ENERGY EXPERTS GROUP: The
Ad Hoc Open-Ended Intergovernmental Group of Experts on
Energy and Sustainable Development was formally established at
CSD-7 to prepare inputs to CSD-9. Governments, civil society
and other major groups, including the private sector, were
called upon to actively participate in the preparatory
process. The first session of the Expert Group met in New York
from 6-10 March 2000, and considered reports of the UN
Secretary-General on "Energy and sustainable development:
Key issues" and national submissions, and produced a
Co-Chairs' summary of the discussions. Delegates also agreed
on an intersessional programme of work and a provisional
agenda for their second session. The second session was held
in New York from 26 February to 2 March 2001, and focused on
key issues relating to energy, energy efficiency, renewable
energy, advanced fossil fuel technologies, rural energy,
energy-related issues in transportation, and regional and
international cooperation. Delegates failed to reach agreement
on a number of contentious issues, most notably nuclear energy
and international cooperation, and agreed to forward to CSD-9
a heavily-bracketed, revised Co-Chairs' proposal for elements
for the draft decision.
INTERSESSIONAL WORKING GROUP
ON TRANSPORT AND ATMOSPHERE: The
CSD-9 intersessional working group on Transport and
Atmosphere, which met in New York from 6-9 March 2001,
considered the Secretary-General's reports on transport and on
protection of the atmosphere, and prepared two documents on
each theme, one summarizing the discussions and the other
outlining possible elements for decisions to be taken at
CSD-9. Both draft elements highlight aspects relating to
international cooperation and recommendations for action at
the national level. Delegates considered these draft elements
as a good basis for CSD-9 negotiations.
INTERSESSIONAL WORKING GROUP
ON INFORMATION FOR DECISION MAKING AND INTERNATIONAL
COOPERATION: The CSD-9
intersessional working group on information for decision
making and participation and on international cooperation for
an enabling environment met in New York from 12-16 March 2001.
Delegates prepared two documents for each theme, one
summarizing the discussions and the other outlining possible
elements for decisions to be taken at CSD-9. Delegates were
unable to conduct a second reading of the two Co-Chairs�
draft elements, and these were forwarded to CSD-9, as revised
during the closing plenary. The Co-Chairs� draft decision on
international cooperation for an enabling environment proposes
action areas at the international level, including on official
development assistance, the debt problem, market access and
trade practices, reforming multilateral financial
institutions, and the role of the UN. National level proposals
deal with poverty eradication, an enabling domestic
environment and programme and policy formulation. The draft
decision on information for decision making and participation
addresses: guidance to the multilateral system, indicators of
sustainable development, and recommendations at the national
level. During the closing plenary, several delegations opposed
including text on indicators in the draft decision.
THINGS TO LOOK FOR TODAY
OPENING OF THE SESSION:
The first Plenary meeting of CSD-9 will commence at 10:00 am
in Conference Room 2. The agenda includes election of
officers, adoption of the agenda and other organizational
matters (E/CN.17/2001/1), and presentations on the outcomes of
the intersessional working groups and other intersessional
activities.
MULTI-STAKEHOLDER DIALOGUE: The
first Multi-stakeholder Dialogue on achieving equitable access
to sustainable energy will take place from 3:00-6:00 pm in
Conference Room 3.
NGO AND MAJOR GROUP
MEETINGS: Various Major Group
caucuses in support of the work of CSD-9 will meet throughout
the day in Conference Room B and at the Church Center. See the
daily list of events for the updated schedule. |