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Delhi Sustainable Development Summit 2002
Ensuring sustainable livelihoods:

challenges for governments, corporates, and civil society at Rio+10
8 - 11 February 2002, New Delhi

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8 Feb. 2002 9 Feb. 2002 10 Feb. 2002 11 Feb. 2002
                                   
    11 February 2002: Plenary session 10
          
  
  Ministers of the environment: challenges at Rio +10
        
                                 
Chairperson

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Dr Jan P Pronk
Hon’ble Minister of Housing, Spatial Planning, and Environment, The Netherlands

 

          
Speaker

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Dr R K Pachauri
Director-General, TERI

"It is not enough to protect natural resources, the time has come to expand and invest in them."
   

                              
Speaker

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Mr T R Baalu
Hon’ble Minister for Environment and Forests, Government of India

"We must ensure that Johannesburg creates awareness so as to initiate global action."
   

           
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Ms Margaret Beckett
The Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, UK

"The Johannesburg conference should be forward looking and should bring about concrete results."
       

           
Speaker

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Mr Pekka Haavisto
Former Minister for Environment and Development Cooperation, Finland

"There is a certain lack of mandate to deal with environmental issues."
   

                   
Speaker

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Mr Tzachi Hanegbi
Minister of the Environment, Israel

"Decisions regarding the environment must be accepted in consensus."
   

                    
Speaker

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Ms Rejoice Mabudafhasi
Deputy Minister, Minister for Environmental Affairs and Tourism, South Africa

"'Global deal' must achieve renewed commitment to implementation of Agenda 21."
   

                 
Speaker

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Mr Hans Christian Schmidt
Hon’ble Minister for Environment and Energy, Denmark

"Stronger networks to fight poverty should be built."
   

            
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Mr Roberto Tortoli
Minister of State, Ministry of Environment, Italy

"Environmental policies must become an integral part of every government's policy."
   

            
Speaker

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Mr Simon Upton
Chairman, Round Table on Sustainable Development, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, France & former Minister for the Environment, New Zealand

"Leaders should not cover their ineffective actions with words."
   

                                             
Session summary
The discussions were modelled around three questions posed by the chair to the speakers.

1. What do you expect from the WSSD as a politician?
2. What are you offering or committing yourself to on behalf of your country?
3. How different is Johannesburg going to be after 11 September?

Dr Pachauri said that TERI would summarize the DSDS 2002 recommendations to feed into the WSSD. Globalization must work for the poor, encompass environmental concerns, and derive from good governance.

Ms Beckett said that the WSSD should look ahead and achieve concrete social, environmental, and economic goals. The UK government is considering projects in water, energy, forestry, and tourism. The 11 September event reinforces the fact that we are one world and can together make a success of it or ruin it.

Mr Baalu said that it is time to make the right choices since Rio is behind us and Johannesburg is imminent. Specific issues to be addressed at the WSSD include climate change, biodiversity loss, water pollution, public awareness, and institutional frameworks.

Mr Haavisto said that the pre-Johannesburg spirit of scepticism is not justified, as 10 years is too little time for real long-term achievements. Though the climate convention has not really taken off, we now have many more instruments in place and a much more active civil society. The Kyoto Protocol should be ratified despite US opposition. ODA should be increased and specific funding/tools for sustainable development should be earmarked.

Mr Pronk accentuated the necessity of civil society alliances to mobilize necessary support to urge heads of states to make serious commitments for operationalizing sustainable development; they should get away with simply nice words. The ministers accepted the importance of nurturing confidence between developed and developing countries. The latter should also be provided adequate financing.

Mr Hanegbi said that the WSSD ought to be concerned with implementing promises made by governments at Rio. Israel has provided its people a better quality of life through various environmental measures including education and awareness and formulation of a 'green' police. Israel is voluntarily committed to promoting environment at the WSSD.

Mr Upton said that in Rio, government leaders managed to strike several deals, which crystallized as the Agenda 21, and to agree on binding conventions. In contrast, no plans are on to negotiate any binding conventions in Johannesburg. He presented stark figures, which must be balanced to bring about parity between developed and developing countries.

Mr Tortoli said that half the battle would be won if countries got anywhere close to achieving Agenda 21. To combat unsustainability, Italy has devised a comprehensive strategy incorporating poverty reduction, civil society participation in decision making, broad-based financial support, and debt relief and market access to least developed countries.

Mr Schmidt spelt four key aspects of global sustainable growth—trade liberalization (crucial for capital flows into developing countries); free market access; good, effective governance; and sound environmental strategies.

Ms Mabudafhasi's opening slogan aptly summed up the South African objective—people, planet, and prosperity. The WSSD must address issues challenging nations of the South including women’s rights, unemployment, disease, poverty, and hunger.

Mr Pronk summarized the session by saying that no country has kept the promises it made in Rio. Concrete agendas have to be prepared for consensus at Johannesburg, after which they must be swiftly translated into action. Processes, relationships, money flows, etc. have to be redefined. Aspects like public–private partnerships, debt reduction, and resource allocation should be coordinated intelligently between the North and the South.