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Chapter 2. Assessment of Progress Made Since the United Nations
Conference on Environment and Development 4/, 5/
7. The five years that have elapsed since the United Nations Conference on
Environment and Development have been characterized by the accelerated globalization of
interactions among countries in the areas of world trade, foreign direct investment and
capital markets. Globalization presents new opportunities and challenges. It is important
that national and international environmental and social policies be implemented and
strengthened in order to ensure that globalization trends have a positive impact on
sustainable development, especially in developing countries. The impact of recent trends
in globalization on developing countries has been uneven. A limited number of developing
countries have been able to take advantage of those trends, attracting large inflows of
external private capital and experiencing significant export-led growth and acceleration
of growth in per capita gross domestic product. Many other countries, however, in
particular African countries and the least developed countries, have shown slow or
negative growth and continue to be marginalized. As a result, they generally experienced
stagnating or falling per capita gross domestic product through 1995. In these and in some
other developing countries, the problems of poverty, low levels of social development,
inadequate infrastructure and lack of capital have prevented them from benefiting from
globalization. While continuing their efforts to achieve sustainable development and to
attract new investments, these countries still require international assistance in their
efforts directed towards sustainable development. In particular the least developed
countries continue to be heavily dependent on a declining volume of official development
assistance for the capacity-building and infrastructure development required to provide
for basic needs and more effective participation in the globalizing world economy. In an
increasingly interdependent world economy, the responsible conduct of monetary and other
macroeconomic policies requires that their potential impact on other countries be taken
into account. Since the Conference, the countries with economies in transition have
achieved significant progress in implementing the principles of sustainable development.
However, the need for full integration of these countries into the world economy remains
one of the crucial problems on their way towards sustainable development. The
international community should continue to support these countries in their efforts to
accelerate the transition to a market economy and to achieve sustainable development.
8. Although economic growth - reinforced by globalization - has allowed
some countries to reduce the proportion of people in poverty, for others marginalization
has increased. Too many countries have seen economic conditions worsen and public services
deteriorate; the total number of people in the world living in poverty has increased.
Income inequality has increased among countries and also within them, unemployment has
worsened in many countries, and the gap between the least developed countries and other
countries has grown rapidly in recent years. On a more positive note, population growth
rates have been declining globally, largely as a result of expanded basic education and
health care. That trend is projected to lead to a stable world population in the middle of
the twenty-first century. There has also been progress in social services, with expanding
access to education, declining infant mortality and increasing life expectancy in most
countries. However, many people, particularly in the least developed countries, still do
not have access to adequate food and basic social services or to clean water and
sanitation. Reducing current inequities in the distribution of wealth and access to
resources, both within and among countries, is one of the most serious challenges facing
humankind.
9. Five years after the United Nations Conference on Environment and
Development, the state of the global environment has continued to deteriorate, as noted in
the Global Environment Outlook 6/ of the United Nations Environment Programme, and
significant environmental problems remain deeply embedded in the socio-economic fabric of
countries in all regions. Some progress has been made in terms of institutional
development, international consensus-building, public participation and private sector
actions and, as a result, a number of countries have succeeded in curbing pollution and
slowing the rate of resource degradation. Overall, however, trends are worsening. Many
polluting emissions, notably of toxic substances, greenhouse gases and waste volumes are
continuing to increase although in some industrialized countries emissions are decreasing.
Marginal progress has been made in addressing unsustainable production and consumption
patterns. Insufficient progress has also been identified in the field of environmentally
sound management and adequate control of transboundary movements of hazardous and
radioactive wastes. Many countries undergoing rapid economic growth and urbanization are
also experiencing increasing levels of air and water pollution, with accumulating impacts
on human health. Acid rain and transboundary air pollution, once considered a problem only
in the industrialized countries, are increasingly becoming a problem in many developing
regions. In many poorer regions of the world, persistent poverty is contributing to
accelerated degradation of natural resources and desertification has spread. In countries
seriously affected by drought and/or desertification, especially those in Africa, their
agricultural productivity, among other things, is uncertain and continues to decline,
thereby hampering their efforts to achieve sustainable development. Inadequate and unsafe
water supplies are affecting an increasing number of people worldwide, aggravating
problems of ill health and food insecurity among the poor. Conditions in natural habitats
and fragile ecosystems, including mountain ecosystems, are still deteriorating in all
regions of the world, resulting in diminishing biological diversity. At the global level,
renewable resources, in particular fresh water, forests, topsoil and marine fish stocks,
continue to be used at rates beyond their viable rates of regeneration; without improved
management, this situation is clearly unsustainable.
10. While there has been progress in material and energy efficiency,
particularly with reference to non-renewable resources, overall trends remain
unsustainable. As a result, increasing levels of pollution threaten to exceed the capacity
of the global environment to absorb them, increasing the potential obstacles to economic
and social development in developing countries.
11. Since the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development,
extensive efforts have been made by Governments and international organizations to
integrate environmental, economic and social objectives into decision-making by
elaborating new policies and strategies for sustainable development or by adapting
existing policies and plans. As many as one hundred and fifty countries have responded to
the commitments established at the Conference through national-level commissions or
coordinating mechanisms designed to develop an integrated approach to sustainable
development.
12. The major groups have demonstrated what can be achieved by taking
committed action, sharing resources and building consensus, reflecting grass-roots concern
and involvement. The efforts of local authorities are making Agenda 21 and the pursuit of
sustainable development a reality at the local level through the implementation of
"local Agenda 21s" and other sustainable development programmes.
Non-governmental organizations, educational institutions, the scientific community and the
media have increased public awareness and discussion of the relations between environment
and development in all countries. The involvement, role and responsibilities of business
and industry, including transnational corporations, are important. Hundreds of small and
large businesses have made "green business" a new operating mode. Workers and
trade unions have established partnerships with employers and communities to encourage
sustainable development in the workplace. Farmer-led initiatives have resulted in improved
agricultural practices contributing to sound resource management. Indigenous people have
played an increasing role in addressing issues affecting their interests and particularly
concerning their traditional knowledge and practices. Young people and women around the
world have played a prominent role in galvanizing communities into recognizing their
responsibilities to future generations. Nevertheless, more opportunities should be created
for women to participate effectively in economic, social and political development as
equal partners in all sectors of the economy.
13. Among the achievements since the United Nations Conference on
Environment and Development have been the entry into force of the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change, 7/ the Convention on Biological Diversity 8/ and the United
Nations Convention to Combat Desertification in those Countries Experiencing Serious
Drought and/or Desertification, particularly in Africa; 9/ the conclusion of the Agreement
on the Implementation of the Provisions of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the
Sea of 10 December 1982 Relating to the Conservation and Management of Straddling Fish
Stocks and Highly Migratory Fish Stocks; 10/ the adoption of the Programme of Action for
the Sustainable Development of Small Island Developing States; 11/ the elaboration of the
Global Programme of Action for the Protection of the Marine Environment from Land-based
Activities; 12/ and the entry into force of the United Nations Convention on the Law of
the Sea. 13/ Implementation of these important commitments and of others adopted before
the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development by all the parties to them,
remains however, to be carried out, and in many cases further strengthening of their
provisions is required as well as the mechanisms for putting them into effect. The
establishment, restructuring, funding and replenishment of the Global Environment Facility
were a major achievement. However, its levels of funding and replenishment have not been
sufficient fully to meet its objectives.
14. Progress has been made in incorporating the principles contained in
the Rio Declaration on Environment and Development - including the principle of common but
differentiated responsibilities, which embodies the important concept of and basis for
international partnership; the precautionary principle; the polluter pays principle; and
the environmental impact assessment principle - in a variety of international and national
legal instruments. While some progress has been made in implementing United Nations
Conference on Environment and Development commitments through a variety of international
legal instruments, much remains to be done to embody the Rio principles more firmly in law
and practice.
15. A number of major United Nations conferences have advanced
international commitment for the achievement of long-term goals and objectives directed
towards sustainable development.
16. Organizations and programmes of the United Nations system have played
an important role in the progress made in the implementation of Agenda 21. The Commission
on Sustainable Development was established to review progress achieved in the
implementation of Agenda 21, advance global dialogue and foster partnerships for
sustainable development. The Commission has catalysed new action and commitments and has
contributed to the deliberations on sustainable development among a wide variety of
partners within and outside the United Nations system. Although much remains to be done,
progress has also been made at the national, regional and international levels in
implementing the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development Forest
Principles, including through the Commission's Ad Hoc Intergovernmental Panel on Forests.
17. Provision of adequate and predictable financial resources and the
transfer of environmentally sound technologies to developing countries are critical
elements for the implementation of Agenda 21. However, while some progress has been made,
much remains to be done to activate the means of implementation set out in Agenda 21, in
particular in the areas of finance and technology transfer, technical assistance and
capacity-building.
18. Most developed countries have still not reached the United Nations
target, reaffirmed by most countries at the United Nations Conference on Environment and
Development, of committing 0.7 per cent of their gross national product to official
development assistance or the United Nations target, as agreed, of committing 0.15 per
cent of gross national product as official development assistance to the least developed
countries. Regrettably, on average, official development assistance as a percentage of the
gross national product of developed countries has drastically declined in the
post-Conference period, from 0.34 per cent in 1992 to 0.27 per cent in 1995, but official
development assistance has taken more account of the need for an integrated approach to
sustainable development.
19. In other areas, results have been encouraging since the United Nations
Conference on Environment and Development. There has been a sizeable expansion of private
flows of financial resources from developed to a limited number of developing countries
and, in a number of countries, efforts have been made in support of domestic resource
mobilization, including the increasing use of economic instruments to promote sustainable
development.
20. In many developing countries, the debt situation remains a major
constraint on achieving sustainable development. Although the debt situation of some
middle-income countries has improved, there is a need to continue to address the debt
problems of the heavily indebted poor countries, which continue to face unsustainable
external debt burdens. The recent World Bank/International Monetary Fund Heavily Indebted
Poor Countries Initiative could help to address that issue with the cooperation of all
creditor countries. Further efforts by the international community are still required to
remove debt as an impediment to sustainable development.
21. Similarly, technology transfer and technology-related investment from
public and private sources, which are particularly important to developing countries, have
not been realized as outlined in Agenda 21. Although increased private flows have led to
investments in industry and technology in some developing countries and economies in
transition, many other countries have been left behind. Conditions in some of these
countries have been less attractive to private sector investment and technological change
has been slower, thus limiting their ability to meet their commitments to Agenda 21 and
other international agreements. The technology gap between developed countries and, in
particular, the least developed countries haswidened.
Notes:
4/ As provided in Agenda 21, the term "Governments", when used
therein, will be deemed to include as well the European Economic Community (now the
European Union) within its area of competence.
5/ All references in the present document to the platforms for or programmes of
action of major conferences should be considered in a manner consistent with the reports
of those conferences.
6/ Oxford, United Kingdom, Oxford University Press, 1997.
7/ A/AC.237/18 (Part II)/Add.1 and Corr.1, annex I.
8/ United Nations Environment Programme, Convention on Biological Diversity
(Environmental Law and Institution Programme Activity Centre), June 1992.
9/ A/49/84/Add.2, annex, appendix II.
10/ A/CONF.164/37; see also A/50/550, annex I.
11/ Report of the Global Conference on the Sustainable Development of Small
Island Developing States, Bridgetown, Barbados, 25 April-6 May 1994 (United Nations
publication, Sales No. E.94.I.18 and corrigenda), chap. I, resolution 1, annex II.
12/ A/51/116, annex II.
13/ Official Records of the Third United Nations Conference on the Law of the
Sea, vol. XVII (United Nations publication, Sales No. E.84.V.3), document A/CONF.62/122.
(This document has been made available in electronic format
by the United Nations.)
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