THE GLOBAL MINISTERIAL ENVIRONMENT FORUM AND
SIXTH SPECIAL SESSION OF THE UNEP GOVERNING COUNCIL
29 – 31 May 2000
The first Global Ministerial Environment Forum –
in the form of the Sixth Special Session of the Governing Council
(GC) of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) – opens
today in Malmö, Sweden. The purpose of the Global Ministerial
Environment Forum (the Forum) is to institute a process for
regaining policy coherence in the field of the environment, in
direct response to the need for such action emphasized in the 1998
report of the UN Secretary-General on environment and human
settlements. Environment ministers will discuss major global
environmental challenges in the new century as well as strategic
policy responses to such issues. Due consideration will also be
given to the need to ensure the effective and efficient
functioning of UNEP governance mechanisms, as well as possible
financial implications, and the need to maintain the role of the
Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD) as the main forum for
high-level policy debate on sustainable development. The outcome
of the Forum will be presented to the fifty-fifth session of the
General Assembly. Approximately 600 delegates are expected at the
Forum, including more than 100 environment ministers.
Forum discussions will cut across a number of
economic and social sectors and have three themes: (1)
Identification of the major environmental challenges of the 21st
century. The basis for this assessment will be UNEP’s second
Global Environment Outlook report (GEO-2000). (2) The role of the
private sector. Delegates will consider the importance of private
investment and trade to promoting development in an increasingly
globalized world and the potential role of the financial and
technology sectors in reorienting markets towards environmentally
sustainable development. And (3), the role of civil society. While
recognizing the importance of cultural diversity and differing
development paths, Forum participants may explore how local
communities, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), the media, and
the general public could promote a global consensus on tackling
shared environmental problems such as climate change, land
degradation, and the loss of biodiversity. The discussions on
these agenda items will be assisted by keynote statements from a
number of internationally recognized scientists, academics and
corporate and civil society leaders, who will also serve as
resource persons during the three days. The ministers will also
consider a report by UNEP Executive Director Klaus Töpfer on UNEP’s
activities and the organization’s contribution to the
implementation of Agenda 21.
A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE UNEP GOVERNING COUNCIL
In 1972, UNEP was established as a result of the
UN Conference on the Human Environment, held in Stockholm from
5-16 June 1972. Additionally, the conference created an action
plan for environmental policy, an Environment Fund, and a
declaration of 26 principles on the human environment. Established
to provide a forum for the international community to address
major and emerging environmental policy issues, the UNEP Governing
Council (GC) generally meets on a biennial basis with special
sessions convened in between. The GC consists of 58 States that
serve four-year terms on the basis of the following equitable
geographic distribution: 16 African, 13 Asian, 13 Western European
and Others, 10 Latin American and Caribbean, and 6 Eastern
European States. The GC reports to the UN General Assembly (UNGA)
and is charged with: promoting international environmental
cooperation and recommending policies to this end; providing
policy guidance for the direction and coordination of
environmental programmes in the UN system; reviewing the state of
the global environment; and promoting the contribution of relevant
scientific and other professional communities to the acquisition,
assessment and exchange of environmental knowledge and information
and to the technical aspects of the formulation and implementation
of environmental programmes within the UN system.
In addition to monitoring and assessing the state
of the environment and disseminating this information to
governments and NGOs, the GC’s achievements include the
initiation of negotiations on many major environmental
conventions, including the Montreal Protocol on Substances that
Deplete the Ozone Layer, the Basel Convention on the Control of
Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and Their Disposal,
the Convention on Biological Diversity and the Rotterdam
Convention on the Prior Informed Consent Procedure for Certain
Hazardous Chemicals and Pesticides in International Trade (PIC
Convention).
UNCED: The 1992 United Nations Conference
on Environment and Development (UNCED) reaffirmed UNEP’s mandate
and called for an enhanced and strengthened role for UNEP and its
GC. The GC was called on to continue its role with regard to
policy guidance and coordination, taking into account the
development perspective. Agenda 21 also listed 14 priority areas
on which UNEP should concentrate, inter alia, strengthening its
catalytic role in promoting environmental activities throughout
the UN system; promoting international cooperation; coordinating
and promoting scientific research; disseminating environmental
information; raising general awareness; and further developing
international environmental law.
19th GOVERNING COUNCIL: Initially, the 19th
session of the GC convened from 27 January - 7 February 1997.
However, the meeting was suspended on the final day when delegates
could not agree on a proposal for the creation of a high-level
committee to provide policy guidance to UNEP. As a result,
officials from 34 countries met in Geneva on 21 March 1997, and
decided to create a new multinational committee to mediate the
dispute and offer advice on UNEP’s future. The 19th session
resumed at UNEP Headquarters from 3-4 April 1997, where delegates
established the High-Level Committee of Ministers and Officials (HLCOMO)
as a subsidiary organ of the GC. The HLCOMO was given the mandate
to: consider the international environmental agenda and to make
reform and policy recommendations to the GC; provide guidance and
advice to UNEP’s Executive Director; enhance UNEP’s
collaboration and cooperation with other multilateral bodies,
including environmental conventions and their secretariats; and
help mobilize adequate and predictable financial resources for
UNEP. The HLCOMO consists of 36 members, elected by the GC from
members of the UN and its specialized agencies. Members serve for
two years and represent regions as reflected by the current
structure of UNEP’s GC. Currently, the Committee convenes
meetings at least once a year in Nairobi but may also convene
elsewhere in connection with major international environmental
meetings.
Delegates also adopted the Nairobi Declaration on
the Role and Mandate of UNEP, which, inter alia, revised the UNEP
Committee of Permanent Representatives’ (CPR) mandate to:
review, monitor and assess the implementation of decisions of the
GC on administrative, budgetary and programme matters; review UNEP’s
draft programme of work and budget; review reports requested of
the Secretariat by the GC on the effectiveness, efficiency and
transparency of the Secretariat’s work; and prepare draft
decisions for consideration by the GC based on inputs from the
Secretariat. The Nairobi Declaration was formally endorsed at UN
General Assembly Special Session for the review of the
implementation of Agenda 21 (UNGASS) in June 1997.
FIFTH SPECIAL SESSION: The GC held its
fifth special session in May 1998. This session adopted decisions
on the evaluation of UNEP’s management and administrative
support; revitalization, reform and strengthening of UNEP; the
contributions of UNEP to CSD-7; freshwater; the PIC Convention;
the Global Environment Facility; and land degradation. The session
decided to review the status of UNEP’s ongoing reform at the
20th session to provide the 55th session of the UNGA with its
policy conclusions on institutional arrangements within the UN
system and the role of UNEP in that context. The special session
also confirmed the member States elected to the HLCOMO.
UN TASK FORCE ON ENVIRONMENT AND HUMAN
SETTLEMENTS: At the 51st session of the UNGA, the
Secretary-General issued the results of a review of UN activities
entitled "Renewing the United Nations: A Programme for
Reform" (A/51/ 950). In the section on environment, habitat
and sustainable development, the report reviewed developments
since UNCED, including the proliferation of new actors in the
field, the emergence of the CSD as an important policy forum, the
augmented environmental capacities in UN organizations, and the
disappointing response to the needs of developing countries for
new and additional resources. The report concluded that there was
a need for a more integrated systematic approach to policies and
programmes throughout the range of UN activities in the economic
and social field by mainstreaming the UN’s commitment to
sustainable development. To initiate this process, the UN Task
Force on Environment and Human Settlements was established under
the chairmanship of the Executive Director of UNEP. In 1998, the
conclusions and recommendations of the Task Force were forwarded
to the 53rd session of the UNGA in the Report of the
Secretary-General on environment and human settlements (A/53/
463). The report contained recommendations for, inter alia: the
establishment of an Environmental Management Group; an annual,
ministerial-level, global environmental forum; universal
membership of the GC; and several measures to further incorporate
and involve civil society.
After months of informal consultations, on 28 July
1999, the General Assembly adopted resolution 53/242, which, inter
alia: requests the Secretary-General to strengthen the UN Office
in Nairobi; supports the establishment of an Environmental
Management Group to enhance inter-agency coordination in the field
of environment and human settlements; and welcomes the proposal to
establish an annual, ministerial-level, global environmental forum
under the UNEP GC.
20th GOVERNING COUNCIL: The 20th session of
the GC took place at UNEP headquarters in Nairobi, Kenya, from 1-5
February 1999, and marked the first meeting of the Council since
the adoption of the Nairobi Declaration on the Role and Mandate of
UNEP, the UN General Assembly Special Session to review the
implementation of Agenda 21, and the appointment of Dr. Klaus
Töpfer as UNEP Executive Director. Approximately 600 delegates,
including ministers and senior government officials from over 100
countries, as well as representatives from environmental NGOs, UN
agencies, international organizations, business and industry, and
youth organizations attended the week-long meeting. The meeting
demonstrated restored faith in UNEP as the prominent UN agency
with responsibility for the environment. The GC took some 30
decisions on a range of topics including: the Environment Fund and
administrative and other budgetary matters; policy issues,
including the state of the environment, coordination and
cooperation within and outside the UN; governance of UNEP and
emerging policy issues; preparations for CSD-7; and linkages among
and support to environmental and environment-related conventions.