THE FOCUS OF THIS ISSUE: THE JOHANNESBURG
SUMMIT
The World Summit on Sustainable Development
will soon meet in Johannesburg, South Africa and we have therefore decided
to focus this WRM bulletin entirely on this event. In this way we aim
at providing relevant information and analysis to both those who will
be directly participating at the Summit and those who will not, so as
to generate more public awareness leading to increased pressure on governments
to make them fulfil the commitments agreed upon ten years ago at the
Earth Summit held in Brazil.
OUR VIEWPOINT
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The fox in charge of the hen house
Ten years ago, the United Nations Conference
on Environment and Development (the Earth Summit) took place in Rio
de Janeiro, Brazil, initiating a process that will be continued in the
upcoming World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD), that will be
held in Johannesburg, South Africa, from 26 August through 7 September.
Differently from the expectations raised
ten years ago by the Rio conference, nothing enables us to foresee that
this new summit will lead to serious commitments to address the forest
crisis. The clauses referring to forests in the Draft Implementation
Plan agreed on at the last WSSD preparatory meeting, may be qualified,
in the best case, as pathetic. Among them, it is worth mentioning that:
* Not a single reference is made to the
underlying causes of deforestation
Anyone involved in the forest issue knows
that "poor management practices" are not the causes at the
root of forest destruction and degradation. When they exist, these practices
are in fact a consequence of other, underlying causes --e.g. foreign
debt, imposition of economic policies geared towards exports, transnational
investments, international trade, excessive consumption by the countries
of the North, unjust land tenure patterns, etc. In spite of the fact
that all these causes have been identified by the governments and international
agencies which have engaged themselves to address them, the draft work
plan ignores them completely. On ignoring the central problem in diagnosing
the disease, the plan already starts off by being totally inadequate
to address the problem of forest conservation.
* Insistence is placed on the promotion
of tree monocultures, defined as "planted forests."
The draft work plan insists on calling plantations,
"forests" and on assigning them the same social and environmental
benefits as forests. However, the truth is that large-scale tree plantations
generate poverty, increase inequality, affect food security, deplete
water and soil resources, and drastically reduce biological diversity,
only to mention a few of their more evident effects. For this reason,
the simple fact that the draft plan insists on calling them "forests"
is another bad sign regarding its suitability for the conservation of
forests.
* Insistence is placed on the solution
of technology transfer and assignation of financial resources from the
North as part of the answer
As if the problem could be solved by pouring
in more money and more technology! In most of the cases it is precisely
due to the availability of financial and technological resources from
the North that the forests of the South are being destroyed. It would
be much more appropriate to table the major issues --the continuous
flow of financial resources from South to North and the appropriation
of knowledge and technology from the South by the North-- as a way of
establishing suitable conditions for the conservation of forests in
the South.
* It promotes the direct involvement of
transnational companies in the process
In comparison with this, the problems mentioned
in the preceding paragraphs take on relative importance. Briefly, the
work plan promotes "partnerships" (of transnational companies
with governments and civil society organisations), which in fact means
placing the solution to the problems in the hands of those who most
destroy: transnational corporations. The draft work plan hopes that
they will provide financial resources, technology transfer, trade and
other "benefits" that would supposedly result in sustainable
forest management.
Thus, by the stroke of a pen, the transnational
corporations have gone from being part of the problem to becoming a
central part of the solution. The fact that the corporations themselves
are one of the main causes of social and environmental destruction is
overlooked. At the same time that civil society organisations are increasingly
calling for them to be controlled and made legally accountable for the
impacts of their activities, the WSSD opens the door wide to them. Although
governments are experts at both being foxes and being chickens --and
therefore knowledgeable about both species-- in fact what they want
to do is to put the fox in charge of the hen house!
In sum, the official documentation of the
WSSD is in line with the post-Rio process. Over the past ten years,
promise after promise made at the Earth Summit has been broken. The
draft work plan for the WSSD goes even further: it does not even promise
anything. As a result, to achieve something positive regarding forests
at this Summit will depend almost entirely on the capacity of civil
society organisations to achieve the introduction of substantial changes
in the plan under discussion.
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