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Late Breaking Eco News . . .
by Vinit Chouraria
Hi Green Home,
The UN World Summit on Sustainable Development is nearing the halfway
point. I've learned a lot about the current state of the world, what
needs to be done, and what the obstacles are.
Sustainable development is being defined as the ability of the present
generation to meet its needs without compromising the ability of future
generations to meet their own needs.
I have been moved to tears many times here. It is very inspiring to
be amongst many who are clearly willing to do whatever it takes to create
a world where everyone has access to the basics of a healthy life, and
where the earth's natural eco- and bio-systems are protected for those
in the future. Those of us that are here seem well aware of what is
at stake--our entire planet and life as we know it.
It is the largest international conference in world history (65,000
attendees), one that involves not only virtually every nation, but virtually
every element of society within those nations. It is truly a real cross-section
of the entire planet, all here to tackle the big issues confronting
us all. In order to succeed, we must learn to work out our differences
together in dialogue and focused action with a scope beyond anything
that's been dealt with before. And not succeeding is not an option for
anyone.
The thing that has most impressed me here is the level of agreement
about what needs to be done. In spite of the complexity and enormity
of the problems, and the vast array of organizations, there is a lot
of clarity about the direction we as a global society need to take.
And indeed, solutions and progress will require the same enormity of
commitment from all parties to work together, and to keep at it for
a long time to come.
In fact, the agreements that came out of the original Earth Summit at
Rio de Janeiro in 1992 remain the basic blueprint that is being used
now, with some updating and strengthening. Agenda 21 is the primary
set of agreements that were hammered out there, and most of them have
specific targets and timelines by which the different national delegates
were committing themselves. In addition to this were the separate agreements
for Biodiversity (which the US didn't sign) and Climate Change (later
strengthened with the Kyoto protocol--which the US signed and pulled
out of on once Bush was in power).
The US government (and its close ties to corporate interests) remains
one of the biggest obstacles to progress, and the source of much frustration
here. The current administration has consistently refused to sign key
major international environmental agreements, stating that it would
hurt the US economy. It is a given that grappling with the big global
issues is going to cost everyone, and much of it is cleaning up the
mess that we collectively have made of things.
Now Bush is choosing not even to bother attending the Summit (106 heads
of state are attending, and virtually every other head of state from
developed nations). Despite the fact that the US is by far the biggest
consumer of resources and the biggest overall polluter, the government
continues to communicate through its actions that it is not concerned
with the results of its policies on other countries. The arrogance and
irresponsibility is breathtaking. And very painful, as time is running
out for countless species and entire eco-systems.
That being said, the fact is also that many other governments are not
following through on the commitments they made in Rio ten years ago,
which is why most of the issues being dealt with such as pollution,
poverty, climate change, etc.--are substantially worse now than they
were ten years ago. The long-term sustainability of the planet has not
been much of a priority in general worldwide until now,and it is our
fervent hope that this is changing with the scary evidence of rapid
destruction.
Next week, I will give you a summary of the specific issues being dealt
with and the solutions being proposed.
In Peace,
Vinit Chouraria
Read
more late-breaking news on the Earth Summit . . .
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