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Published by
the International
Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD)
Vol. 22 No. 20
Monday, 25 March 2002
THIRD SESSION OF THE PREPARATORY COMMITTEE FOR THE
WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT:
25 MARCH – 5 APRIL 2002
The Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD),
acting as the Preparatory Committee (PrepCom) for the World Summit
on Sustainable Development (WSSD), begins its third session (PrepCom
III) today at UN headquarters in New York.
The session, which will run from 25 March – 5
April 2002, is expected to be primarily devoted to further
consideration, elaboration and negotiations on elements for
decisions contained in the Chairman’s Paper, which was
submitted to delegates during the CSD’s second preparatory session.
Delegates are expected to meet in three working groups throughout
PrepCom III to consider this document.
A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE WORLD SUMMIT ON
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
The WSSD will be held 10 years after the UN
Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED). UNCED, also known
as the Earth Summit, took place from 3-14 June 1992, in Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil. Over 100 Heads of State and Government,
representatives from 178 countries, and over 17,000 participants
attended the Conference. The principal outputs of the Earth Summit
were the Rio Declaration on Environment and Development, Agenda 21,
a 40-chapter programme of action on environment and development, the
UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), the Convention
on Biological Diversity (CBD), and the Statement of Forest
Principles.
Chapter 38 of Agenda 21 called for the creation
of a Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD) to: ensure
effective follow-up to UNCED; enhance international cooperation and
rationalize intergovernmental decision making; and examine progress
in the implementation of Agenda 21 at all levels. In 1992, the 47th
session of the UN General Assembly (UNGA) set out, in resolution
47/191, the terms of reference for the CSD, its composition,
guidelines for the participation of NGOs, organization of work, its
relationship with other UN bodies, and Secretariat arrangements. The
CSD held its first meeting in June 1993 and has since met annually.
UNGASS-19: At its 47th session in 1992, the
UNGA also adopted resolution 47/190, which called for a Special
Session of the General Assembly to review Agenda 21 implementation
five years after UNCED. The 19th Special Session of the UN General
Assembly for the Overall Review and Appraisal of Agenda 21, which
was held in New York from 23-27 June 1997, adopted the Programme
for the Further Implementation of Agenda 21 (A/RES/S-19/2). It
assessed progress made since UNCED, examined implementation, and
established the CSD’s work programme for the period 1998-2002.
RESOLUTION 55/199: In December 2000, the
General Assembly adopted resolution 55/199, in which it decided to
embark on a ten-year review of UNCED in 2002 at the summit level to
reinvigorate the global commitment to sustainable development. The
General Assembly accepted South Africa’s offer to host the event.
The resolution decided that the review should focus on
accomplishments and areas requiring further efforts to implement
Agenda 21 and other UNCED outcomes, leading to action-oriented
decisions, and resulting in renewed political commitment to achieve
sustainable development.
PREPCOM I: CSD-10, acting as the Preparatory
Committee for the WSSD, held its first session at UN headquarters
from 30 April to 2 May 2001. The session adopted decisions on:
progress in WSSD preparatory activities at the local, national,
regional and international levels, as well as by Major Groups;
modalities of future PrepCom sessions; tentative organization of
work during the Summit; provisional rules of procedure; and
arrangements for accreditation and participation of Major Groups.
NATIONAL, SUBREGIONAL AND REGIONAL PREPARATORY
PROCESSES: National Preparatory Committees for the WSSD have
been established to undertake country-level reviews, raise
awareness, and mobilize stakeholders. Subregional and regional
preparatory meetings for the Johannesburg Summit were held between
June 2001 and January 2002. Eminent Persons’ Roundtables on the WSSD
took place in all five UN regions, and regional preparatory meetings
were held for the Europe/North America (24-25 September 2001),
Africa (15-18 October 2001), Latin America and Caribbean (23-24
October 2001), West Asia (24 October 2001) and Asia-Pacific (27-29
November 2001) regions, as well as for the small island developing
States (SIDS) from 7-11 January 2002.
PREPCOM II: CSD-10, acting as the Preparatory
Committee for the WSSD, held its second session at UN headquarters
from 28 January – 8 February 2002. The Committee conducted a
comprehensive review and assessment of progress achieved in the
implementation of Agenda 21, including the Programme for the
Further Implementation of Agenda 21, as adopted in 1997 (A/RES/S-19/2),
and agreed that the Chairman’s Paper would serve as the basis
for negotiation at PrepCom III. The PrepCom also adopted its report
(E/ CN.17/2002/PC.2/L.1), which contains the Chairman’s Summary
of the Second Preparatory Session, the Chairman’s Summary of
the Multi-Stakeholder Dialogue Segment, and the Proposals for
Partnerships/Initiatives to Strengthen the Implementation of Agenda
21. During the session, preliminary informal consultations were
held on the issue of sustainable development governance, which were
continued during the intersessional period.
INTERSESSIONAL HIGHLIGHTS
SEVENTH SPECIAL SESSION OF THE UNEP GOVERNING
COUNCIL/THIRD GLOBAL MINISTERIAL ENVIRONMENTAL FORUM: The
Seventh Special Session of the UNEP Governing Council (GCSS-7) and
Third Global Ministerial Environment Forum (GMEF-3) took place in
Cartagena, Colombia, from 13-15 February 2002. The Session was
preceded by the final meeting of the Intergovernmental Group of
Ministers or Their Representatives (IGM) on International
Environmental Governance (IEG), held at the same venue on 12
February 2002. The IGM failed to reach agreement on a number of
critical issues, in particular, on strategies to ensure predictable
and stable funding for UNEP and on according universal membership to
the UNEP GMEF. However, these issues were resolved during the
GCSS-7/GMEF-3, at which delegates adopted the IGM report on IEG and
agreed to transmit it to PrepCom III. Delegates also agreed to take
note of a statement by the President of the Governing Council on
UNEP’s contribution to the WSSD, and to transmit it to PrepCom III,
together with the report and policy statement prepared for the
GCSS-7/GMEF-3 by UNEP’s Executive Director.
INFORMAL CONSULTATIONS ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
GOVERNANCE: An informal one-day consultation on sustainable
development governance was conducted on 28 February 2002 at the UN
Headquarters in New York. The consultation was based on an informal
paper prepared by the Bureau Vice-Chairs assigned this task, Lars
Göran-Engfeldt (Sweden) and Ositadimna Anaedu (Nigeria). There
appeared to be general support for focusing on existing institutions
rather than creating new ones. Delegates also supported the
consideration of the role of the World Bank, International Monetary
Fund (IMF) and World Trade Organization (WTO) in sustainable
development governance, although there were no specific proposals
presented. Ideas put forward include: focusing on the CSD;
broadening the scope of international sustainable development
governance beyond the CSD; considering the role of ECOSOC;
considering a structure similar to the Collaborative Partnership on
Forests as one way of involving other organizations in sustainable
development governance and implementation; and incorporating the
results of the UNEP IEG process into sustainable development
governance. Based on the discussions, the Co-Chairs produced a paper
that will be presented at PrepCom III.
UNFF-2: The second session of the United
Nations Forum on Forests (UNFF-2) took place from 4-15 March 2002,
at UN headquarters in New York. Delegates addressed progress in
implementation of the Intergovernmental Panel on
Forests/Intergovernmental Forum on Forests proposals for action and
the UNFF Plan of Action. During a High-Level Segment, the Forum
developed and adopted a Ministerial Declaration and Message to the
WSSD.
The Declaration, inter alia, re-affirms
commitment to the Forest Principles and Agenda 21, but notes that
much remains to be done. It invites the WSSD to: advance sustainable
forest management as a means to eradicate poverty and reduce
land and resource degradation; enhance political commitment to
achieve sustainable forest management by endorsing it as a political
priority; call for immediate action on domestic forest law
enforcement and illegal international trade in forest products; call
for immediate action to promote sustainable timber harvesting; call
for initiatives to address the needs of areas suffering from poverty
and high rates of deforestation; create and strengthen partnerships
and international cooperation to facilitate the provision of
increased financial resources; and strengthen international
cooperation for financing and technology transfer. The Declaration
also calls on countries and the Collaborative Partnership on Forests
to accelerate implementation of the proposals for action and
intensify reporting efforts to the UNFF in order to contribute to an
assessment of progress in 2005.
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON FINANCING FOR
DEVELOPMENT: More than 50 heads of State, along with other
senior government officials from around the world, met in Monterrey,
Mexico from 18-22 March 2002, at the International Conference on
Financing for Development. Governments adopted the Monterrey
Consensus (A/CONF.198/3) and a number of developed countries
pledged to increase foreign aid. In Monterrey, many governments
highlighted that "the Millennium Summit consists of ‘goals’,
Monterrey is the venue for mobilizing ‘resources’ for financing
development, and Johannesburg will be the ‘ideas’ and action plan."
The goal of the Monterrey Consensus is to
"eradicate poverty, achieve sustained economic growth and promote
sustainable development as we advance to a fully inclusive and
equitable global economic system." The leading actions are divided
into sections on: mobilization of domestic financial resources for
development; mobilization of international resources for
development, foreign direct investment and other private flows;
international trade as an engine for development; the augmentation
of international financial and technical cooperation for
development; external debt; and economic issues, and the coherence
and consistency of international monetary, financial and trading
systems in support of development. More coordination and interaction
is called for between ECOSOC, the World Bank, the IMF and the WTO. A
follow-up conference to review implementation of the Monterrey
Consensus has been called for, with the modalities to be decided
no later than 2005.
THINGS TO LOOK FOR TODAY
OPENING PLENARY: PrepCom III will begin at
10:00 am in Conference Room 1. Delegates are expected to hear
opening statements, adopt the agenda and address other
organizational matters (A/ CONF.199/PC/1 and Add.1,
A/CONF.199/PC/8); and deal with the accreditation of
intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations
(A/CONF.199/PC/6).
WORKING GROUP I: Working Group I will
commence its work in Conference Room 1 immediately following the
conclusion of the opening Plenary. The Group will begin
consideration of sections I-IV of the Chairman�s Paper
(A/CONF.199/PC/L.1): introduction; poverty eradication; changing
unsustainable patterns of consumption and production; and protecting
and managing the natural resource base for economic and social
development.
WORKING GROUP II: Working Group II will
commence its work in Conference Room 4 immediately following the
conclusion of the opening Plenary. The Group will begin
consideration of sections V-IX of the Chairman�s Paper
(A/CONF.199/PC/L.1): sustainable development in a globalizing world;
health and sustainable development; sustainable development of small
island developing States; sustainable development initiatives for
Africa; and means of implementation.
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