WORLD
SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
PLAN
OF IMPLEMENTATION
I. Introduction
1. The United Nations Conference on Environment and Development
(UNCED), held in Rio de Janeiro in 1992, provided the fundamental principles
and the programme of action for achieving sustainable development. We strongly
reaffirm our commitment to the Rio principles, the full implementation of
Agenda 21 and the Programme for the Further Implementation of Agenda 21. We
also commit ourselves to achieving the internationally agreed development
goals, including those contained in the United Nations Millennium Declaration
and in the outcomes of the major United Nations conferences and international
agreements since 1992.
2. The present plan of implementation will further build on the
achievements made since UNCED and expedite the realization of the remaining
goals. To this end, we commit ourselves to undertaking concrete actions and
measures at all levels and to enhancing international cooperation, taking into
account the Rio Principles, including, inter alia, the principle of common but
differentiated responsibilities as set out in principle 7 of the Rio
Declaration on Environment and Development. These efforts will also promote the
integration of the three components of sustainable development — economic
development, social development and environmental protection — as
interdependent and mutually reinforcing pillars. Poverty eradication, changing
unsustainable patterns of production and consumption, and protecting and
managing the natural resource base of economic and social development are
overarching objectives of, and essential requirements for, sustainable
development.
3. We recognize that the implementation of the outcomes of the
Summit should benefit all, particularly women, youth, children and vulnerable
groups. Furthermore, the implementation should involve all relevant actors
through partnerships, especially between Governments of the North and South, on
the one hand, and between Governments and major groups, on the other, to
achieve the widely shared goals of sustainable development. As reflected in the
Monterrey Consensus, such partnerships are key to pursuing sustainable
development in a globalizing world.
4. Good governance within each country and at the international level
is essential for sustainable development. At the domestic level, sound
environmental, social and economic policies, democratic institutions responsive
to the needs of the people, the rule of law, anti-corruption measures, gender
equality and an enabling environment for investment are the basis for
sustainable development. As a result of globalization, external factors have
become critical in determining the success or failure of developing countries
in their national efforts. The gap between developed and developing countries
points to the continued need for a dynamic and enabling international economic
environment supportive of international cooperation, particularly in the areas
of finance, technology transfer, debt and trade, and full and effective participation
of developing countries in global decision-making, if the momentum for global
progress towards sustainable development is to be maintained and increased.
5. Peace, security, stability and respect for human rights and
fundamental freedoms, including the right to development, as well as respect
for cultural diversity, are essential for achieving sustainable development and
ensuring that sustainable development benefits all.
5 bis We acknowledge the importance of ethics for sustainable
development, and therefore we emphasize the need to consider ethics in the
implementation of Agenda 21.
II. Poverty eradication
6. Eradicating poverty is the greatest global challenge facing the
world today and an indispensable requirement for sustainable development,
particularly for developing countries. Although each country has the primary
responsibility for its own sustainable development and poverty eradication and
the role of national policies and development strategies cannot be
overemphasized, concerted and concrete measures are required at all levels to
enable developing countries to achieve their sustainable development goals as
related to the internationally agreed poverty-related targets and goals,
including those contained in Agenda 21, the relevant outcomes of other United
Nations conferences and the United Nations Millennium Declaration. This would
include actions at all levels to:
(a) Halve, by the
year 2015, the proportion of the world’s people whose income is less than $1 a
day and the proportion of people who suffer from hunger and, by the same date,
to halve the proportion of people without access to safe drinking water;
(b) Establish a
world solidarity fund to eradicate poverty and to promote social and human
development in the developing countries pursuant to modalities to be determined
by the General Assembly, while stressing the voluntary nature of the
contributions, the need to avoid duplication of existing United Nations funds,
and encouraging the role of the private sector and individual citizens relative
to Governments in funding the endeavours;
(c) Develop national
programmes for sustainable development and local and community development,
where appropriate within country-owned poverty reduction strategies, to promote
the empowerment of people living in poverty and their organizations. These
programmes should reflect their priorities and enable them to increase access
to productive resources, public services and institutions, in particular land,
water, employment opportunities, credit, education and health;
(d) Promote women’s
equal access to and full participation, on the basis of equality with men, in
decision-making at all levels, mainstreaming gender perspectives in all
policies and strategies, eliminating all forms of violence and discrimination
against women, and improving the status, health and economic welfare of women
and girls through full and equal access to economic opportunity, land, credit,
education and health-care services;
(e) Develop policies
and ways and means to improve access by indigenous people and their communities
to economic activities, and increase their employment through, where
appropriate, such measures as training, technical assistance and credit
facilities. Recognize that traditional and direct dependence on renewable
resources and ecosystems, including sustainable harvesting, continues to be
essential to the cultural, economic and physical well-being of indigenous
people and their communities;
(f) Deliver basic
health services for all and reduce environmental health threats, taking into
account the special needs of children and the linkages between poverty, health
and environment, with provision of financial resources, technical assistance
and knowledge transfer to developing countries and countries with economies in
transition;
(g) Ensure that
children everywhere, boys and girls alike, will be able to complete a full
course of primary schooling and will have equal access to all levels of
education;
(h) Provide access
to agricultural resources for people living in poverty, especially women and
indigenous communities, and promote, as appropriate, land tenure arrangements
that recognize and protect indigenous and common property resource management
systems;
(i) Build basic
rural infrastructure, diversify the economy and improve transportation and
access to markets, market information and credit for the rural poor to support
sustainable agriculture and rural development;
(j) Transfer basic
sustainable agricultural techniques and knowledge, including natural resource
management, to small and medium-scale farmers, fishers and the rural poor,
especially in developing countries, including through multi-stakeholder
approaches and public-private partnerships aimed at increasing agriculture
production and food security;
(k) Increase food
availability and affordability, including through harvest and food technology
and management, as well as equitable and efficient distribution systems, by
promoting, for example, community-based partnerships linking urban and rural
people and enterprises;
(l) Combat
desertification and mitigate the effects of drought and floods through such
measures as improved use of climate and weather information and forecasts,
early warning systems, land and natural resource management, agricultural
practices and ecosystem conservation in order to reverse current trends and
minimize degradation of land and water resources, including through the
provision of adequate and predictable financial resources to implement the
United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification in Those Countries
Experiencing Serious Drought and/or Desertification, particularly in Africa, as
one of the tools for poverty eradication;
(m) Increase access
to sanitation to improve human health and reduce infant and child mortality,
prioritizing water and sanitation in national sustainable development
strategies and poverty reduction strategies where they exist.
7. The provision of clean drinking water and adequate sanitation is
necessary to protect human health and the environment. In this respect, we
agree to halve, by the year 2015, the proportion of people who are unable to
reach or to afford safe drinking water (as outlined in the Millennium
Declaration) and the proportion of people who do not have access to basic
sanitation, which would include actions at all levels to:
(a) Develop and
implement efficient household sanitation systems;
(b) Improve
sanitation in public institutions, especially schools;
(c) Promote safe
hygiene practices;
(d) Promote education
and outreach focused on children, as agents of behavioural change;
(e) Promote
affordable and socially and culturally acceptable technologies and practices;
(f) Develop
innovative financing and partnership mechanisms;
(g) Integrate
sanitation into water resources management strategies.
8. Take joint actions and improve efforts to work together at all
levels to improve access to reliable and affordable energy services for
sustainable development sufficient to facilitate the achievement of the
millennium development goals, including the goal of halving the proportion of
people in poverty by 2015, and as a means to generate other important services
that mitigate poverty, bearing in mind that access to energy facilitates the
eradication of poverty. This would include actions at all levels to:
(a) Improve access
to reliable, affordable, economically viable, socially acceptable and
environmentally sound energy services and resources, taking into account
national specificities and circumstances, through various means, such as
enhanced rural electrification and decentralized energy systems, increased use
of renewables, cleaner liquid and gaseous fuels and enhanced energy efficiency,
by intensifying regional and international cooperation in support of national
efforts, including through capacity-building, financial and technological
assistance and innovative financing mechanisms, including at the micro and meso
levels, recognizing the specific factors for providing access to the poor;
(b) Improve access
to modern biomass technologies and fuelwood sources and supplies, and
commercialize biomass operations, including the use of agricultural residues,
in rural areas and where such practices are sustainable;
(c) Promote a
sustainable use of biomass and, as appropriate, other renewable energies
through improvement of current patterns of use, such as management of
resources, more efficient use of fuelwood and new or improved products and
technologies;
(d) Support the
transition to the cleaner use of liquid and gaseous fossil fuels, where
considered more environmentally sound, socially acceptable and cost-effective;
(e) Develop national
energy policies and regulatory frameworks that will help to create the
necessary economic, social and institutional conditions in the energy sector to
improve access to reliable, affordable, economically viable, socially
acceptable and environmentally sound energy services for sustainable
development and poverty eradication in rural, peri-urban and urban areas;
(f) Enhance
international and regional cooperation to improve access to reliable,
affordable, economically viable, socially acceptable and environmentally sound
energy services, as an integral part of poverty reduction programmes, by
facilitating the creation of enabling environments and addressing
capacity-building needs, with special attention to rural and isolated areas, as
appropriate;
(g) Assist and
facilitate on an accelerated basis, with the financial and technical assistance
of developed countries, including through public-private partnerships, the
access of the poor to reliable, affordable, economically viable, socially
acceptable and environmentally sound energy services, taking into account the
instrumental role of developing national policies on energy for sustainable
development, bearing in mind that in developing countries sharp increases in
energy services are required to improve the standards of living of their
populations and that energy services have positive impacts on poverty
eradication and improve standards of living.
9. Strengthen the contribution of industrial development to poverty
eradication and sustainable natural resource management. This would include
actions at all levels to:
(a) Provide
assistance and mobilize resources to enhance industrial productivity and
competitiveness as well as industrial development in developing countries,
including the transfer of environmentally sound technologies on preferential
terms, as mutually agreed;
(b)
Provide assistance to increase income-generating employment opportunities,
taking into account the International Labour Organization (ILO) Declaration on
Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work;
(c) Promote the
development of micro, small and medium-sized enterprises, including by means of
training, education and skill enhancement, with a special focus on
agro-industry as a provider of livelihoods for rural communities;
(d) Provide
financial and technological support, as appropriate, to rural communities of
developing countries to enable them to benefit from safe and sustainable
livelihood opportunities in small-scale mining ventures;
(e) Provide support
to developing countries for the development of safe low-cost technologies that
provide or conserve fuel for cooking and water heating;
(f) Provide support
for natural resource management for creating sustainable livelihoods for the
poor.
10. By 2020, achieve a significant improvement in the lives of at
least 100 million slum dwellers, as proposed in the “Cities without slums”
initiative. This would include actions at all levels to:
(a) Improve access
to land and property, to adequate shelter and to basic services for the urban
and rural poor, with special attention to female heads of household;
(b) Use low-cost and
sustainable materials and appropriate technologies for the construction of
adequate and secure housing for the poor, with financial and technological
assistance to developing countries, taking into account their culture, climate,
specific social conditions and vulnerability to natural disasters;
(c) Increase decent
employment, credit and income for the urban poor, through appropriate national
policies, promoting equal opportunities for women and men;
(d) Remove
unnecessary regulatory and other obstacles for microenterprises and the
informal sector;
(e) Support local
authorities in elaborating slum upgrading programmes within the framework of
urban development plans and facilitate access, particularly for the poor, to
information on housing legislation.
11. Take immediate and effective measures to eliminate the worst forms
of child labour as defined in ILO Convention No. 182, and elaborate and
implement strategies for the elimination of child labour that is contrary to
accepted international standards.
12. Promote international cooperation to assist developing countries,
upon request, in addressing child labour and its root causes, inter alia,
through social and economic policies aimed at poverty conditions, while
stressing that labour standards should not be used for protectionist trade
purposes.
III. Changing unsustainable patterns of consumption and production
13. Fundamental changes in the way societies produce and consume are
indispensable for achieving global sustainable development. All countries
should promote sustainable consumption and production patterns, with the
developed countries taking the lead and with all countries benefiting from the
process, taking into account the Rio principles, including, inter alia, the
principle of common but differentiated responsibilities as set out in principle
7 of the Rio Declaration on Environment and Development. Governments, relevant
international organizations, the private sector and all major groups should
play an active role in changing unsustainable consumption and production
patterns. This would include the actions at all levels set out below.
14. Encourage and promote the development of a 10-year framework of
programmes in support of regional and national initiatives to accelerate the
shift towards sustainable consumption and production to promote social and
economic development within the carrying capacity of ecosystems by addressing
and, where appropriate, delinking economic growth and environmental degradation
through improving efficiency and sustainability in the use of resources and
production processes, and reducing resource degradation, pollution and waste.
All countries should take action, with developed countries taking the lead,
taking into account the development needs and capabilities of developing countries
through mobilization, from all sources, of financial and technical assistance
and capacity-building for developing countries. This would require actions at
all levels to:
(a) Identify specific
activities, tools, policies, measures and monitoring and assessment mechanisms,
including, where appropriate, life-cycle analysis and national indicators for
measuring progress, bearing in mind that standards applied by some countries
may be inappropriate and of unwarranted economic and social cost to other countries,
in particular developing countries;
(b) Adopt and
implement policies and measures aimed at promoting sustainable patterns of
production and consumption, applying, inter alia, the polluter-pays principle
described in principle 16 of the Rio Declaration on Environment and
Development;
(c) Develop
production and consumption policies to improve the products and services
provided, while reducing environmental and health impacts, using, where
appropriate, science-based approaches, such as life-cycle analysis;
(d) Develop
awareness-raising programmes on the importance of sustainable production and
consumption patterns, particularly among youth and the relevant segments in all
countries, especially in developed countries, through, inter alia, education,
public and consumer information, advertising and other media, taking into
account local, national and regional cultural values;
(e) Develop and
adopt, where appropriate, on a voluntary basis, effective, transparent,
verifiable, non-misleading and non-discriminatory consumer information tools to
provide information relating to sustainable consumption and production,
including human health and safety aspects. These tools should not be used as
disguised trade barriers;
(f) Increase
eco-efficiency, with financial support from all sources, where mutually agreed,
for capacity-building, technology transfer and exchange of technology with
developing countries and countries with economies in transition, in cooperation
with relevant international organizations.
15. Increase investment in cleaner production and eco-efficiency in
all countries through, inter alia, incentives and support schemes and policies
directed at establishing appropriate regulatory, financial and legal
frameworks. This would include actions at all levels to:
(a) Establish and
support cleaner production programmes and centres and more efficient production
methods by providing, inter alia, incentives and capacity-building to assist
enterprises, especially small and medium-sized enterprises and particularly in
developing countries, in improving productivity and sustainable development;
(b) Provide
incentives for investment in cleaner production and eco-efficiency in all
countries, such as state-financed loans, venture capital, technical assistance
and training programmes for small and medium-sized companies while avoiding
trade-distorting measures inconsistent with WTO rules;
(c) Collect and
disseminate information on cost-effective examples in cleaner production,
eco-efficiency and environmental management, and promote the exchange of best
practices and know-how on environmentally sound technologies between public and
private institutions;
(d) Provide training
programmes to small and medium-sized enterprises on the use of information and
communication technologies.
16. Integrate the issue of production and consumption patterns into
sustainable development policies, programmes and strategies, including, where
applicable, into poverty reduction strategies.
17. Enhance corporate environmental and social responsibility and
accountability. This would include actions at all levels to:
(a) Encourage
industry to improve social and environmental performance through voluntary
initiatives, including environmental management systems, codes of conduct, certification
and public reporting on environmental and social issues, taking into account
such initiatives as the International Organization for Standardization (ISO)
standards and Global Reporting Initiative guidelines on sustainability
reporting, bearing in mind principle 11 of the Rio Declaration on Environment
and Development;
(b) Encourage
dialogue between enterprises and the communities in which they operate and
other stakeholders;
(c) Encourage
financial institutions to incorporate sustainable development considerations
into their decision-making processes;
(d) Develop
workplace-based partnerships and programmes, including training and education
programmes.
18. Encourage relevant authorities at all levels to take sustainable
development considerations into account in decision-making, including on
national and local development planning, investment in infrastructure, business
development and public procurement. This would include actions at all levels
to:
(a) Provide support
for the development of sustainable development strategies and programmes,
including in decision-making on investment in infrastructure and business
development;
(b) Continue to
promote the internalization of environmental costs and the use of economic
instruments, taking into account the approach that the polluter should, in
principle, bear the costs of pollution, with due regard to the public interest
and without distorting international trade and investment;
(c) Promote public
procurement policies that encourage development and diffusion of
environmentally sound goods and services;
(d) Provide
capacity-building and training to assist relevant authorities with regard to
the implementation of the initiatives listed in the present paragraph;
(e) Use environmental
impact assessment procedures.
* * *
19. Call upon Governments, as well as relevant regional and
international organizations and other relevant stakeholders, to implement,
taking into account national and regional specificities and circumstances, the
recommendations and conclusions of the Commission on Sustainable Development
concerning energy for sustainable development adopted at its ninth session,
including the issues and options set out below, bearing in mind that in view of
the different contributions to global environmental degradation, States have
common but differentiated responsibilities. This would include actions at all
levels to:
(a) Take further
action to mobilize the provision of financial resources, technology transfer,
capacity-building and the diffusion of environmentally sound technologies
according to the recommendations and conclusions of the Commission on
Sustainable Development as contained in section A, paragraph 3, and section D,
paragraph 30, of its decision 9/1 on energy for sustainable development;
(b) Integrate energy
considerations, including energy efficiency, affordability and accessibility,
into socio-economic programmes, especially into policies of major
energy-consuming sectors, and into the planning, operation and maintenance of
long-lived energy consuming infrastructures, such as the public sector,
transport, industry, agriculture, urban land use, tourism and construction
sectors;
(c) Develop and
disseminate alternative energy technologies with the aim of giving a greater share
of the energy mix to renewable energies, improving energy efficiency and
greater reliance on advanced energy technologies, including cleaner fossil fuel
technologies;
(d) Combine, as
appropriate, the increased use of renewable energy resources, more efficient
use of energy, greater reliance on advanced energy technologies, including
advanced and cleaner fossil fuel technologies, and the sustainable use of
traditional energy resources, which could meet the growing need for energy
services in the longer term to achieve sustainable development;
(e) Diversify energy
supply by developing advanced, cleaner, more efficient, affordable and
cost-effective energy technologies, including fossil fuel technologies and
renewable energy technologies, hydro included, and their transfer to developing
countries on concessional terms as mutually agreed. With a sense of urgency,
substantially increase the global share of renewable energy sources with the
objective of increasing its contribution to total energy supply, recognizing
the role of national and voluntary regional targets as well as initiatives,
where they exist, and ensuring that energy policies are supportive to
developing countries’ efforts to eradicate poverty, and regularly evaluate
available data to review progress to this end;
(f) Support
efforts, including through provision of financial and technical assistance to
developing countries, with the involvement of the private sector, to reduce
flaring and venting of gas associated with crude oil production;
(g) Develop and
utilize indigenous energy sources and infrastructures for various local uses
and promote rural community participation, including local Agenda 21 groups,
with the support of the international community, in developing and utilizing
renewable energy technologies to meet their daily energy needs to find simple
and local solutions;
(h) Establish
domestic programmes for energy efficiency, including, as appropriate, by
accelerating the deployment of energy efficiency technologies, with the necessary
support of the international community;
(i) Accelerate the
development, dissemination and deployment of affordable and cleaner energy
efficiency and energy conservation technologies, as well as the transfer of
such technologies, in particular to developing countries, on favourable terms,
including on concessional and preferential terms, as mutually agreed;
(j) Recommend that
international financial institutions and other agencies’ policies support
developing countries, as well as countries with economies in transition, in
their own efforts to establish policy and regulatory frameworks which create a
level playing field between the following: renewable energy, energy efficiency,
advanced energy technologies, including advanced and cleaner fossil fuel
technologies, and centralized, distributed and decentralized energy systems;
(k) Promote
increased research and development in the field of various energy technologies,
including renewable energy, energy efficiency and advanced energy technologies,
including advanced and cleaner fossil fuel technologies, both nationally and
through international collaboration; strengthen national and regional research
and development institutions/centres on reliable, affordable, economically
viable, socially acceptable and environmentally sound energy for sustainable
development;
(l) Promote
networking between centres of excellence on energy for sustainable development,
including regional networks, by linking competent centres on energy
technologies for sustainable development that could support and promote efforts
at capacity-building and technology transfer activities, particularly of
developing countries, as well as serve as information clearing houses;
(m) Promote education
to provide information for both men and women about available energy sources
and technologies;
(n) Utilize
financial instruments and mechanisms, in particular the Global Environment
Facility (GEF), within its mandate, to provide financial resources to
developing countries, in particular least developed countries and small island
developing States, to meet their capacity needs for training, technical
know-how and strengthening national institutions in reliable, affordable,
economically viable, socially acceptable and environmentally sound energy,
including promoting energy efficiency and conservation, renewable energy and
advanced energy technologies, including advanced and cleaner fossil fuel
technologies;
(o) Support efforts
to improve the functioning, transparency and information about energy markets
with respect to both supply and demand, with the aim of achieving greater
stability and predictability and to ensure consumer access to reliable,
affordable, economically viable, socially acceptable and environmentally sound
energy services;
(p) Policies to
reduce market distortions would promote energy systems compatible with
sustainable development through the use of improved market signals and by
removing market distortions, including restructuring taxation and phasing out
harmful subsidies, where they exist, to reflect their environmental impacts,
with such policies taking fully into account the specific needs and conditions
of developing countries with the aim of minimizing the possible adverse impacts
on their development;
(q) Take action,
where appropriate, to phase out subsidies in this area that inhibit sustainable
development, taking fully into account the specific conditions and different
levels of development of individual countries and considering their adverse
effect, particularly on developing countries;
(r) Governments are
encouraged to improve the functioning of national energy markets in such a way
that they support sustainable development, overcome market barriers and improve
accessibility, taking fully into account that such policies should be decided
by each country, and that its own characteristics and capabilities and level of
development should be considered, especially as reflected in national
sustainable development strategies, where they exist;
(s) Strengthen national
and regional energy institutions or arrangements for enhancing regional and
international cooperation on energy for sustainable development, in particular
to assist developing countries in their domestic efforts to provide reliable,
affordable, economically viable, socially acceptable and environmentally sound
energy services to all sections of their populations;
(t) Countries are
urged to develop and implement actions within the framework of the ninth
session of the Commission on Sustainable Development, including through
public-private partnerships, taking into account the different circumstances of
countries, based on lessons learned by Governments, international institutions
and stakeholders and including business and industry, in the field of access to
energy, including renewable energy and energy-efficiency and advanced energy
technologies, including advanced and cleaner fossil fuel technologies;
(u) Promote
cooperation between international and regional institutions and bodies dealing
with different aspects of energy for sustainable development within their
existing mandate, bearing in mind paragraph 46 (h) of the Programme of Action
for the Further Implementation of Agenda 21, strengthening, as appropriate,
regional and national activities for the promotion of education and
capacity-building regarding energy for sustainable development;
(v) Strengthen and
facilitate, as appropriate, regional cooperation arrangements for promoting
cross-border energy trade, including the interconnection of electricity grids
and oil and natural gas pipelines;
(w) Strengthen and,
where appropriate, facilitate dialogue forums among regional, national and
international producers and consumers of energy.
* * *
20. Promote an integrated approach to policy-making at the national,
regional and local levels for transport services and systems to promote
sustainable development, including policies and planning for land use,
infrastructure, public transport systems and goods delivery networks, with a
view to providing safe, affordable and efficient transportation, increasing
energy efficiency, reducing pollution, reducing congestion, reducing adverse
health effects and limiting urban sprawl, taking into account national
priorities and circumstances. This would include actions at all levels to:
(a) Implement
transport strategies for sustainable development, reflecting specific regional,
national and local conditions, so as to improve the affordability, efficiency
and convenience of transportation, as well as improving urban air quality and
health, and reduce greenhouse gas emissions, including through the development
of better vehicle technologies that are more environmentally sound, affordable
and socially acceptable;
(b) Promote
investment and partnerships for the development of sustainable, energy
efficient multi-modal transportation systems, including public mass
transportation systems and better transportation systems in rural areas, with
technical and financial assistance for developing countries and countries with
economies in transition.
* * *
21. Prevent and minimize waste and maximize reuse, recycling and use
of environmentally friendly alternative materials, with the participation of
government authorities and all stakeholders, in order to minimize adverse
effects on the environment and improve resource efficiency, with financial,
technical and other assistance for developing countries. This would include
actions at all levels to:
(a) Develop waste
management systems, with highest priorities placed on waste prevention and
minimization, reuse and recycling, and environmentally sound disposal
facilities, including technology to recapture the energy contained in waste,
and encourage small-scale waste-recycling initiatives that support urban and
rural waste management and provide income-generating opportunities, with
international support for developing countries;
(b) Promote waste
prevention and minimization by encouraging production of reusable consumer
goods and biodegradable products and developing the infrastructure required.
* * *
22. Renew the commitment, as advanced in Agenda 21, to sound
management of chemicals throughout their life cycle and of hazardous wastes for
sustainable development and for the protection of human health and the
environment, inter alia, aiming to achieve by 2020 that chemicals are used and
produced in ways that lead to the minimization of significant adverse effects
on human health and the environment, using transparent science-based risk
assessment procedures and science-based risk management procedures, taking into
account the precautionary approach, as set out in principle 15 of the Rio
Declaration on Environment and Development, and support developing countries in
strengthening their capacity for the sound management of chemicals and
hazardous wastes by providing technical and financial assistance. This would
include actions at all levels to:
(a) Promote the
ratification and implementation of relevant international instruments on
chemicals and hazardous waste, including the Rotterdam Convention on Prior
Informed Consent Procedures for Certain Hazardous Chemicals and Pesticides in
International Trade so that it can enter into force by 2003 and the Stockholm
Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants so that it can enter into force by
2004, and encourage and improve coordination as well as supporting developing
countries in their implementation;
(b) Further develop
a strategic approach to international chemicals management based on the Bahia
Declaration and Priorities for Action beyond 2000 of the Intergovernmental
Forum on Chemical Safety (IFCS) by 2005, and urge that the United Nations
Environment Programme (UNEP), IFCS, other international organizations dealing
with chemical management, and other relevant international organizations and
actors closely cooperate in this regard, as appropriate;
(c) Encourage
countries to implement the new globally harmonized system for the
classification and labelling of chemicals as soon as possible with a view to
having the system fully operational by 2008;
(d) Encourage
partnerships to promote activities aimed at enhancing environmentally sound
management of chemicals and hazardous wastes, implementing multilateral
environmental agreements, raising awareness of issues relating to chemicals and
hazardous waste, and encouraging the collection and use of additional
scientific data;
(e) Promote efforts
to prevent international illegal trafficking of hazardous chemicals and
hazardous wastes and to prevent damage resulting from the transboundary
movement and disposal of hazardous wastes in a manner consistent with
obligations under relevant international instruments, such as the Basel
Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and
Their Disposal;
(f) Encourage
development of coherent and integrated information on chemicals, such as
through national pollutant release and transfer registers;
(g) Promote
reduction of the risks posed by heavy metals that are harmful to human health
and the environment, including through a review of relevant studies, such as
the UNEP global assessment of mercury and its compounds.
IV. Protecting and managing the natural resource base of economic and
social development
23. Human activities are having an increasing impact on the integrity
of ecosystems that provide essential resources and services for human
well-being and economic activities. Managing the natural resources base in a
sustainable and integrated manner is essential for sustainable development. In
this regard, to reverse the current trend in natural resource degradation as
soon as possible, it is necessary to implement strategies which should include
targets adopted at the national and, where appropriate, regional levels to
protect ecosystems and to achieve integrated management of land, water and
living resources, while strengthening regional, national and local capacities.
This would include actions at all levels to:
24. Launch a programme of actions, with financial and technical
assistance, to achieve the millennium development goal on safe drinking water.
In this respect, we agree to halve, by the year 2015, the proportion of people
who are unable to reach or to afford safe drinking water as outlined in the
Millennium Declaration and the proportion of people without access to basic
sanitation, which would include actions at all levels to:
(a) Mobilize
international and domestic financial resources at all levels, transfer
technology, promote best practice and support capacity-building for water and
sanitation infrastructure and services development, ensuring that such
infrastructure and services meet the needs of the poor and are
gender-sensitive;
(b) Facilitate
access to public information and participation, including by women, at all
levels, in support of policy and decision-making related to water resources
management and project implementation;
(c) Promote priority
action by Governments, with the support of all stakeholders, in water
management and capacity-building at the national level and, where appropriate,
at the regional level, and promote and provide new and additional financial
resources and innovative technologies to implement chapter 18 of Agenda 21;
(d) Intensify water
pollution prevention to reduce health hazards and protect ecosystems by introducing
technologies for affordable sanitation and industrial and domestic wastewater
treatment, by mitigating the effects of groundwater contamination, and by
establishing, at the national level, monitoring systems and effective legal
frameworks;
(e) Adopt prevention
and protection measures to promote sustainable water use and to address water
shortages.
25. Develop integrated water resources management and water efficiency
plans by 2005, with support to developing countries, through actions at all levels
to:
(a) Develop and
implement national/regional strategies, plans and programmes with regard to
integrated river basin, watershed and groundwater management, and introduce
measures to improve the efficiency of water infrastructure to reduce losses and
increase recycling of water;
(b) Employ the full
range of policy instruments, including regulation, monitoring, voluntary
measures, market and information-based tools, land-use management and cost
recovery of water services, without cost recovery objectives becoming a barrier
to access to safe water by poor people, and adopt an integrated water basin
approach;
(c) Improve the
efficient use of water resources and promote their allocation among competing
uses in a way that gives priority to the satisfaction of basic human needs and
balances the requirement of preserving or restoring ecosystems and their
functions, in particular in fragile environments, with human domestic,
industrial and agriculture needs, including safeguarding drinking water quality;
(d) Develop
programmes for mitigating the effects of extreme water-related events;
(e) Support the
diffusion of technology and capacity-building for non-conventional water
resources and conservation technologies, to developing countries and regions
facing water scarcity conditions or subject to drought and desertification, through technical and financial support and
capacity-building;
(f) Support, where
appropriate, efforts and programmes for energy-efficient, sustainable and
cost-effective desalination of seawater, water recycling and water harvesting
from coastal fogs in developing countries, through such measures as
technological, technical and financial assistance and other modalities;
(g) Facilitate the
establishment of public-private partnerships and other forms of partnership
that give priority to the needs of the poor, within stable and transparent
national regulatory frameworks provided by Governments, while respecting local
conditions, involving all concerned stakeholders, and monitoring the
performance and improving accountability of public institutions and private
companies.
26. Support developing countries and countries with economies in
transition in their efforts to monitor and assess the quantity and quality of
water resources, including through the establishment and/or further development
of national monitoring networks and water resources databases and the
development of relevant national indicators.
27. Improve water resource management and scientific understanding of
the water cycle through cooperation in joint observation and research, and for
this purpose encourage and promote knowledge-sharing and provide
capacity-building and the transfer of technology, as mutually agreed, including
remote-sensing and satellite technologies, particularly to developing countries
and countries with economies in transition.
28. Promote effective coordination among the various international and
intergovernmental bodies and processes working on water-related issues, both
within the United Nations system and between the United Nations and
international financial institutions, drawing on the contributions of other
international institutions and civil society to inform intergovernmental
decision-making; closer coordination should also be promoted to elaborate and
support proposals and undertake activities related to the International Year of
Freshwater 2003 and beyond.
* * *
29. Oceans, seas, islands and coastal areas form an integrated and
essential component of the Earth’s ecosystem and are critical for global food
security and for sustaining economic prosperity and the well-being of many
national economies, particularly in developing countries. Ensuring the
sustainable development of the oceans requires effective coordination and
cooperation, including at the global and regional levels, between relevant
bodies, and actions at all levels to:
(a) Invite States to
ratify or accede to and implement the United Nations Convention on the Law of
the Sea, which provides the overall legal framework for ocean activities;
(b) Promote the
implementation of chapter 17 of Agenda 21 which provides the programme of
action for achieving the sustainable development of oceans, coastal areas and
seas through its programme areas of integrated management and sustainable
development of coastal areas, including exclusive economic zones; marine
environmental protection; sustainable use and conservation of marine living
resources; addressing critical uncertainties for the management of the marine
environment and climate change; strengthening international, including
regional, cooperation and coordination; and sustainable development of small
islands;
(c) Establish an
effective, transparent and regular inter-agency coordination mechanism on ocean
and coastal issues within the United Nations system;
(d) Encourage the
application by 2010 of the ecosystem approach, noting the Reykjavik Declaration
on Responsible Fisheries in the Marine Ecosystem and decision 5/6 of the
Conference of Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity;
(e) Promote
integrated, multidisciplinary and multisectoral coastal and ocean management at
the national level, and encourage and assist coastal States in developing ocean
policies and mechanisms on integrated coastal management;
(f) Strengthen
regional cooperation and coordination between the relevant regional
organizations and programmes, the UNEP regional seas programmes, regional
fisheries management organizations and other regional science, health and
development organizations;
(g) Assist
developing countries in coordinating policies and programmes at the regional
and subregional levels aimed at the conservation and sustainable management of
fishery resources, and implement integrated coastal area management plans,
including through the promotion of sustainable coastal and small-scale fishing
activities and, where appropriate, the development of related infrastructure;
(h) Take note of the
work of the open-ended informal consultative process established by the United
Nations General Assembly in its resolution 54/33 in order to facilitate the
annual review by the Assembly of developments in ocean affairs and the upcoming
review of its effectiveness and utility to be held at its fifty-seventh session
under the terms of the above-mentioned resolution.
30. To achieve sustainable fisheries, the following actions are
required at all levels:
(a) Maintain or
restore stocks to levels that can produce the maximum sustainable yield with
the aim of achieving these goals for depleted stocks on an urgent basis and
where possible not later than 2015;
(b) Ratify or accede
to and effectively implement the relevant United Nations and, where
appropriate, associated regional fisheries agreements or arrangements, noting
in particular the Agreement for 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 and the 1993 Agreement to Promote Compliance with International
Conservation and Management Measures by Fishing Vessels on the High Seas;
(c) Implement the
1995 Code of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries, taking note of the special
requirements of developing countries as noted in its article 5, and the
relevant Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)
international plans of action and technical guidelines;
(d) Urgently develop
and implement national and, where appropriate, regional plans of action, to put
into effect the FAO international plans of action, in particular the
international plan of action for the management of fishing capacity by 2005 and
the international plan of action to prevent, deter and eliminate illegal,
unreported and unregulated fishing by 2004. Establish effective monitoring,
reporting and enforcement, and control of fishing vessels, including by flag
States, to further the international plan of action to prevent, deter and
eliminate illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing;
(e) Encourage
relevant regional fisheries management organizations and arrangements to give
due consideration to the rights, duties and interests of coastal States and the
special requirements of developing States when addressing the issue of the
allocation of share of fishery resources for straddling stocks and highly
migratory fish stocks, mindful of the provisions of the United Nations
Convention on the Law of the Sea and the Agreement for 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, on the high seas and within exclusive
economic zones;
(f) Eliminate
subsidies that contribute to illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing and to
over-capacity, while completing the efforts undertaken at WTO to clarify and
improve its disciplines on fisheries subsidies, taking into account the
importance of this sector to developing countries;
(g) Strengthen donor
coordination and partnerships between international financial institutions,
bilateral agencies and other relevant stakeholders to enable developing
countries, in particular the least developed countries and small island
developing States and countries with economies in transition, to develop their
national, regional and subregional capacities for infrastructure and integrated
management and the sustainable use of fisheries;
(h) Support the
sustainable development of aquaculture, including small-scale aquaculture, given
its growing importance for food security and economic development.
31. In accordance with chapter 17 of Agenda 21, promote the
conservation and management of the oceans through actions at all levels, giving
due regard to the relevant international instruments to:
(a) Maintain the
productivity and biodiversity of important and vulnerable marine and coastal
areas, including in areas within and beyond national jurisdiction;
(b) Implement the
work programme arising from the Jakarta Mandate on the Conservation and
Sustainable Use of Marine and Coastal Biological Diversity of the Convention on
Biological Diversity, including through the urgent mobilization of financial
resources and technological assistance and the development of human and
institutional capacity, particularly in developing countries;
(c) Develop and
facilitate the use of diverse approaches and tools, including the ecosystem
approach, the elimination of destructive fishing practices, the establishment
of marine protected areas consistent with international law and based on
scientific information, including representative networks by 2012 and time/area
closures for the protection of nursery grounds and periods, proper coastal land
use; and watershed planning and the integration of marine and coastal areas
management into key sectors;
(d) Develop
national, regional and international programmes for halting the loss of marine
biodiversity, including in coral reefs and wetlands;
(e) Implement the
RAMSAR Convention, including its joint work programme with the Convention on
Biological Diversity, and the programme of action called for by the
International Coral Reef Initiative to strengthen joint management plans and
international networking for wetland ecosystems in coastal zones, including
coral reefs, mangroves, seaweed beds and tidal mud flats.
32. Advance implementation of the Global Programme of Action for the
Protection of the Marine Environment from Land-based Activities and the
Montreal Declaration on the Protection of the Marine Environment from
Land-based Activities, with particular emphasis in the period 2002-2006 on
municipal wastewater, the physical alteration and destruction of habitats, and
nutrients, by actions at all levels to:
(a) Facilitate
partnerships, scientific research and diffusion of technical knowledge;
mobilize domestic, regional and international resources; and promote human and
institutional capacity-building, paying particular attention to the needs of
developing countries;
(b) Strengthen the
capacity of developing countries in the development of their national and
regional programmes and mechanisms to mainstream the objectives of the Global
Programme of Action and to manage the risks and impacts of ocean pollution;
(c) Elaborate
regional programmes of action and improve the links with strategic plans for
the sustainable development of coastal and marine resources, noting in
particular areas which are subject to accelerated environmental changes and
development pressures;
(d) Make every
effort to achieve substantial progress by the next Global Programme of Action
conference in 2006 to protect the marine environment from land-based
activities.
33. Enhance maritime safety and protection of the marine environment
from pollution by actions at all levels to:
(a) Invite States to
ratify or accede to and implement the conventions and protocols and other
relevant instruments of the International Maritime Organization (IMO) relating
to the enhancement of maritime safety and protection of the marine environment
from marine pollution and environmental damage caused by ships, including the
use of toxic anti-fouling paints and urge IMO to consider stronger mechanisms
to secure the implementation of IMO instruments by flag States;
(b) Accelerate the
development of measures to address invasive alien species in ballast water.
Urge IMO to finalize the IMO International Convention on the Control and
Management of Ships’ Ballast Water and Sediments.
33.bis Governments, taking into account their national circumstances,
are encouraged, recalling paragraph 8 of resolution GC (44)/RES/17 of the
General Conference of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and taking
into account the very serious potential for environment and human health
impacts of radioactive wastes, to make efforts to examine and further improve
measures and internationally agreed regulations regarding safety, while
stressing the importance of having effective liability mechanisms in place,
relevant to international maritime transportation and other transboundary
movement of radioactive material, radioactive waste and spent fuel, including,
inter alia, arrangements for prior notification and consultations done in
accordance with relevant international instruments.
34. Improve the scientific understanding and assessment of marine and
coastal ecosystems as a fundamental basis for sound decision-making, through
actions at all levels to:
(a) Increase
scientific and technical collaboration, including integrated assessment at the
global and regional levels, including the appropriate transfer of marine
science and marine technologies and techniques for the conservation and
management of living and non-living marine resources and expanding
ocean-observing capabilities for the timely prediction and assessment of the
state of marine environment;
(b) Establish by
2004 a regular process under the United Nations for global reporting and
assessment of the state of the marine environment, including socio-economic
aspects, both current and foreseeable, building on existing regional
assessments;
(c) Build capacity
in marine science, information and management, through, inter alia, promoting
the use of environmental impact assessments and environmental evaluation and
reporting techniques, for projects or activities that are potentially harmful
to the coastal and marine environments and their living and non-living
resources;
(d) Strengthen the
ability of the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, FAO and other relevant
international and regional and subregional organizations to build national and
local capacity in marine science and the sustainable management of oceans and
their resources.
* * *
35. An integrated, multi-hazard, inclusive approach to address
vulnerability, risk assessment and disaster management, including prevention,
mitigation, preparedness, response and recovery, is an essential element of a
safer world in the twenty-first century. Actions are required at all levels to:
(a) Strengthen the
role of the International Strategy for Disaster Reduction and encourage the
international community to provide the necessary financial resources to its
Trust Fund;
(b) Support the
establishment of effective regional, subregional and national strategies and
scientific and technical institutional support for disaster management;
(c) Strengthen the
institutional capacities of countries and promote international joint
observation and research, through improved surface-based monitoring and
increased use of satellite data, dissemination of technical and scientific
knowledge, and the provision of assistance to vulnerable countries;
(d) Reduce the risks
of flooding and drought in vulnerable countries by, inter alia, promoting
wetland and watershed protection and restoration, improved land-use planning,
improving and applying more widely techniques and methodologies for assessing
the potential adverse effects of climate change on wetlands and, as
appropriate, assisting countries that are particularly vulnerable to those
effects;
(e) Improve
techniques and methodologies for assessing the effects of climate change, and
encourage the continuing assessment of those adverse effects by the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change;
(f) Encourage the
dissemination and use of traditional and indigenous knowledge to mitigate the
impact of disasters, and promote community-based disaster management planning
by local authorities, including through training activities and raising public
awareness;
(g) Support the
ongoing voluntary contribution of, as appropriate, non-governmental
organizations, the scientific community and other partners in the management of
natural disasters according to agreed, relevant guidelines;
(h) Develop and
strengthen early warning systems and information networks in disaster
management, consistent with the International Strategy for Disaster Reduction;
(i) Develop and
strengthen capacity at all levels to collect and disseminate scientific and
technical information, including the improvement of early warning systems for
predicting extreme weather events, especially El Nińo/La Nińa, through the
provision of assistance to institutions devoted to addressing such events,
including the International Centre for the Study of the El Nińo phenomenon;
(j) Promote
cooperation for the prevention and mitigation of, preparedness for, response to
and recovery from major technological and other disasters with an adverse
impact on the environment in order to enhance the capabilities of affected
countries to cope with such situations.
* * *
36. Change in the Earth’s climate and its adverse effects are a common
concern of humankind. We remain deeply concerned that all countries,
particularly developing countries including the least developed countries and
small island developing States, face increased risks of negative impacts of
climate change and recognize that, in this context, the problems of poverty,
land degradation, access to water and food and human health remain at the
centre of global attention. The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate
Change is the key instrument for addressing climate change, a global concern,
and we reaffirm our commitment to achieving its ultimate objective of
stabilization of greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level
that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate
system, within a time frame sufficient to allow ecosystems to adapt naturally
to climate change, to ensure that food production is not threatened and to
enable economic development to proceed in a sustainable manner, in accordance
with our common but differentiated responsibilities and respective
capabilities. Recalling the United Nations Millennium Declaration, in which
heads of State and Government resolved to make every effort to ensure the entry
into force of the Kyoto Protocol to the United Nations Framework Convention on
Climate Change, preferably by the tenth anniversary of the United Nations
Conference on Environment and Development in 2002, and to embark on the
required reduction of emissions of greenhouse gases, States that have ratified
the Kyoto Protocol strongly urge States that have not already done so to ratify
the Kyoto Protocol in a timely manner. Actions at all levels are required to:
(a) Meet all the commitments and obligations under the UNFCCC;
(b) Work cooperatively towards achieving the objectives of the UNFCCC;
(c) Provide technical and financial assistance and capacity building to
developing countries and countries with economies in transition in accordance
with commitments under the UNFCCC, including the Marrakech accords;
(d) Build and enhance scientific and technological capabilities, inter alia
through continuing support to the IPCC for the exchange of scientific data and
information especially in developing countries;
(e) Develop and transfer technological solutions;
(f) Develop and disseminate innovative technologies in respect of key
sectors of development, particularly energy, and of investment in this regard,
including through private sector involvement, market-oriented approaches, as
well as supportive public policies and international cooperation;
(g) Promote the systematic observation of the Earth’s atmosphere, land and
oceans by improving monitoring stations, increasing the use of satellites, and
appropriate integration of these observations to produce high-quality data that
could be disseminated for the use of all countries, in particular developing
countries;
(h) Enhance the implementation of national, regional and international strategies
to monitor the Earth’s atmosphere, land and oceans including, as appropriate,
strategies for integrated global observations, inter alia with the cooperation
of relevant international organisations, especially the United Nations
specialized agencies in cooperation with the UNFCCC;
(i)
Support initiatives to assess the consequences
of climate change, such as the Arctic Council initiative, including the
environmental, economic and social impacts on local and indigenous communities.
37. Enhance cooperation at the international, regional and national
levels to reduce air pollution, including transboundary air pollution, acid
deposition and ozone depletion bearing in mind the Rio principles, including,
inter alia, the principle that, in view of the different contributions to
global environmental degradation, States have common but differentiated
responsibilities, with actions at all levels to:
(a) Strengthen
capacities of developing countries and countries with economies in transition
to measure, reduce and assess the impacts of air pollution, including health
impacts, and provide financial and technical support for these activities;
(b) Facilitate
implementation of the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone
Layer by ensuring adequate replenishment of its fund by 2003/2005;
(c) Further support
the effective regime for the protection of the ozone layer established in the
Vienna Convention for the Protection of the Ozone Layer and the Montreal
Protocol, including its compliance mechanism;
(d) Improve access
by developing countries to affordable, accessible, cost-effective, safe and
environmentally sound alternatives to ozone-depleting substances by 2010, and
assist them in complying with the phase-out schedule under the Montreal Protocol,
bearing in mind that ozone depletion and climate change are scientifically and
technically interrelated;
(e) Take measures to
address illegal traffic in ozone-depleting substances.
* * *
38. Agriculture plays a crucial role in addressing the needs of a
growing global population, and is inextricably linked to poverty eradication,
especially in developing countries. Enhancing the role of women at all levels
and in all aspects of rural development, agriculture, nutrition and food
security is imperative. Sustainable agriculture and rural development are
essential to the implementation of an integrated approach to increasing food
production and enhancing food security and food safety in an environmentally
sustainable way. This would include actions at all levels to:
(a) Achieve the
Millennium Declaration target to halve by the year 2015 the proportion of the
world’s people who suffer from hunger and realize the right to a standard of
living adequate for the health and well-being of themselves and their families,
including food, including by promoting food security and fighting hunger in
combination with measures which address poverty, consistent with the outcome of
the World Food Summit and, for States Parties, with their obligations under
article 11 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights;
(b) Develop and
implement integrated land management and water-use plans that are based on
sustainable use of renewable resources and on integrated assessments of
socio-economic and environmental potentials, and strengthen the capacity of
Governments, local authorities and communities to monitor and manage the
quantity and quality of land and water resources;
(c) Increase
understanding of the sustainable use, protection and management of water
resources to advance long-term sustainability of freshwater, coastal and marine
environments;
(d) Promote
programmes to enhance in a sustainable manner the productivity of land and the
efficient use of water resources in agriculture, forestry, wetlands, artisanal
fisheries and aquaculture, especially through indigenous and local
community-based approaches;
(e) Support the
efforts of developing countries to protect oases from silt, land degradation
and increasing salinity by providing appropriate technical and financial
assistance;
(f) Enhance the
participation of women in all aspects and at all levels relating to sustainable
agriculture and food security;
(g) Integrate
existing information systems on land-use practices by strengthening national
research and extension services and farmer organizations to trigger
farmer-to-farmer exchange on good practices, such as those related to
environmentally sound, low-cost technologies, with the assistance of relevant
international organizations;
(h) Enact, as
appropriate, measures that protect indigenous resource management systems and
support the contribution of all appropriate stakeholders, men and women alike,
in rural planning and development;
(i) Adopt policies
and implement laws that guarantee well defined and enforceable land and water
use rights, and promote legal security of tenure, recognizing the existence of
different national laws and/or systems of land access and tenure, and provide
technical and financial assistance to developing countries as well as countries
with economies in transition that are undertaking land tenure reform in order
to enhance sustainable livelihoods;
(j) Reverse the
declining trend in public sector finance for sustainable agriculture, provide
appropriate technical and financial assistance, and promote private sector
investment and support efforts in developing countries and countries with
economies in transition to strengthen agricultural research and natural
resource management capacity and dissemination of research results to the
farming communities;
(k) Employ
market-based incentives for agricultural enterprises and farmers to monitor and
manage water use and quality, inter alia, by applying such methods as
small-scale irrigation and wastewater recycling and reuse;
(l) Enhance access
to existing markets and develop new markets for value-added agricultural
products;
(m) Increase
brown-field redevelopment in developed countries and countries with economies
in transition, with appropriate technical assistance where contamination is a
serious problem;
(n) Enhance
international cooperation to combat the illicit cultivation of narcotic plants,
taking into account their negative social, economic and environmental impacts;
(o) Promote
programmes for the environmentally sound, effective and efficient use of soil
fertility improvement practices and agricultural pest control;
(p) Strengthen and
improve coordination of existing initiatives to enhance sustainable
agricultural production and food security;
(q) Invite countries
that have not done so to ratify the International Treaty on Plant Genetic
Resources for Food and Agriculture;
(r) Promote the
conservation, and sustainable use and management of traditional and indigenous
agricultural systems and strengthen indigenous models of agricultural
production.
* * *
39. Strengthen the implementation of the United Nations Convention to
Combat Desertification in Those Countries Experiencing Serious Drought and/or
Desertification, particularly in Africa, to address causes of desertification
and land degradation in order to maintain and restore land, and to address
poverty resulting from land degradation. This would include actions at all
levels to:
(a) Mobilize
adequate and predictable financial resources, transfer of technologies and
capacity-building at all levels;
(b) Formulate
national action programmes to ensure timely and effective implementation of the
Convention and its related projects, with the support of the international
community, including through decentralized projects at the local level;
(c) Encourage the
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, the Convention on
Biological Diversity and the Convention to Combat Desertification to continue
exploring and enhancing synergies, with due regard to their respective
mandates, in the elaboration and implementation of plans and strategies under
the respective Conventions;
(d) Integrate
measures to prevent and combat desertification as well as to mitigate the
effects of drought through relevant policies and programmes, such as land,
water and forest management, agriculture, rural development, early warning
systems, environment, energy, natural resources, health and education, and
poverty eradication and sustainable development strategies;
(e) Provide
affordable local access to information to improve monitoring and early warning
related to desertification and drought;
(f) Call on the
Second Assembly of the Global Environment Facility (GEF) to take action on the
recommendations of the GEF Council concerning the designation of land
degradation (desertification and deforestation) as a focal area of GEF as a
means of GEF support for the successful implementation of the Convention to
Combat Desertification; and consequently, consider making GEF a financial
mechanism of the Convention, taking into account the prerogatives and decisions
of the Conference of the Parties to the Convention, while recognizing the
complementary roles of GEF and the Global Mechanism of the Convention in
providing and mobilizing resources for the elaboration and implementation of
action programmes;
(g) Improve the
sustainability of grassland resources through strengthening management and law
enforcement and providing financial and technical support by the international
community to developing countries.
* * *
40. Mountain ecosystems support particular livelihoods, and include
significant watershed resources, biological diversity and unique flora and
fauna. Many are particularly fragile and vulnerable to the adverse effects of
climate change and need specific protection. Actions at all levels are required
to:
(a) Develop and
promote programmes, policies and approaches that integrate environmental,
economic and social components of sustainable mountain development and strengthen
international cooperation for its positive impacts on poverty eradication
programmes, especially in developing countries;
(b) Implement
programmes to address, where appropriate, deforestation, erosion, land
degradation, loss of biodiversity, disruption of water flows and retreat of
glaciers;
(c) Develop and
implement, where appropriate, gender-sensitive policies and programmes,
including public and private investments that help eliminate inequities facing
mountain communities;
(d) Implement programmes
to promote diversification and traditional mountain economies, sustainable
livelihoods and small-scale production systems, including specific training
programmes and better access to national and international markets,
communications and transport planning, taking into account the particular
sensitivity of mountains;
(e) Promote full
participation and involvement of mountain communities in decisions that affect
them and integrate indigenous knowledge, heritage and values in all development
initiatives;
(f) Mobilize
national and international support for applied research and capacity-building,
provide financial and technical assistance for the effective implementation of
sustainable development of mountain ecosystems in developing countries and countries
with economies in transition, and address the poverty among people living in
mountains through concrete plans, projects and programmes, with sufficient
support from all stakeholders, taking into account the spirit of the
International Year of Mountains, 2002.
* * *
41. Promote sustainable tourism development, including non-consumptive
and eco-tourism, taking into account the spirit of the International Year of
Eco-tourism 2002, the United Nations Year for Cultural Heritage in 2002, the
World Eco-tourism Summit 2002 and its Quebec Declaration, and the Global Code
of Ethics for Tourism as adopted by the World Tourism Organization in order to
increase the benefits from tourism resources for the population in host
communities while maintaining the cultural and environmental integrity of the
host communities and enhancing the protection of ecologically sensitive areas
and natural heritages. Promote sustainable tourism development and
capacity-building in order to contribute to the strengthening of rural and
local communities. This would include actions at all levels to:
(a) Enhance
international cooperation, foreign direct investment and partnerships with both
private and public sectors, at all levels;
(b) Develop
programmes, including education and training programmes, that encourage people
to participate in eco-tourism, enable indigenous and local communities to
develop and benefit from eco-tourism, and enhance stakeholder cooperation in
tourism development and heritage preservation, in order to improve the
protection of the environment, natural resources and cultural heritage;
(c) Provide
technical assistance to developing countries and countries with economies in
transition to support sustainable tourism business development and investment
and tourism awareness programmes, to improve domestic tourism, and to stimulate
entrepreneurial development;
(d) Assist host
communities in managing visits to their tourism attractions for their maximum
benefit, while ensuring the least negative impacts on and risks for their
traditions, culture and environment, with the support of the World Tourism
Organization and other relevant organizations;
(e) Promote the
diversification of economic activities, including through the facilitation of
access to markets and commercial information, and participation of emerging
local enterprises, especially small and medium-sized enterprises.
* * *
42. Biodiversity, which plays a critical role in overall sustainable
development and poverty eradication, is essential to our planet, human
well-being and to the livelihood and cultural integrity of people. However,
biodiversity is currently being lost at unprecedented rates due to human
activities; this trend can only be reversed if the local people benefit from
the conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity, in particular in
countries of origin of genetic resources, in accordance with article 15 of the
Convention on Biological Diversity. The Convention is the key instrument for
the conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity and the fair and
equitable sharing of benefits arising from use of genetic resources. A more
efficient and coherent implementation of the three objectives of the Convention
and the achievement by 2010 of a significant reduction in the current rate of
loss of biological diversity will require the provision of new and additional
financial and technical resources to developing countries, and includes actions
at all levels to:
(a) Integrate the
objectives of the Convention into global, regional and national sectoral and
cross-sectoral programmes and policies, in particular in the programmes and
policies of the economic sectors of countries and international financial
institutions;
(b) Promote the
ongoing work under the Convention on the sustainable use on biological
diversity, including on sustainable tourism, as a cross-cutting issue relevant
to different ecosystems, sectors and thematic areas;
(c) Encourage
effective synergies between the Convention and other multilateral environmental
agreements, inter alia, through the development of joint plans and programmes,
with due regard to their respective mandates, regarding common responsibilities
and concerns;
(d) Implement the
Convention and its provisions, including active follow-up of its work
programmes and decisions through national, regional and global action
programmes, in particular the national biodiversity strategies and action
plans, and strengthen their integration into relevant cross-sectoral
strategies, programmes and policies, including those related to sustainable
development and poverty eradication, including initiatives which promote
community-based sustainable use of biological diversity;
(e) Promote the wide
implementation and further development of the ecosystem approach, as being
elaborated in the ongoing work of the Convention;
(f) Promote
concrete international support and partnership for the conservation and
sustainable use of biodiversity, including in ecosystems, at World Heritage
sites and for the protection of endangered species, in particular through the
appropriate channelling of financial resources and technology to developing
countries and countries with economies in transition;
(g) To effectively
conserve and sustainably use biodiversity, promote and support initiatives for
hot spot areas and other areas essential for biodiversity and promote the
development of national and regional ecological networks and corridors;
(h) Provide
financial and technical support to developing countries, including capacity-building,
in order to enhance indigenous and community-based biodiversity conservation
efforts;
(i) Strengthen
national, regional and international efforts to control invasive alien species,
which are one of the main causes of biodiversity loss, and encourage the
development of effective work programme on invasive alien species at all
levels;
(j) Subject to
national legislation, recognize the rights of local and indigenous communities
who are holders of traditional knowledge, innovations and practices, and, with
the approval and involvement of the holders of such knowledge, innovations and
practices, develop and implement benefit-sharing mechanisms on mutually agreed
terms for the use of such knowledge, innovations and practices;
(k) Encourage and
enable all stakeholders to contribute to the implementation of the objectives
of the Convention, and in particular recognize the specific role of youth,
women and indigenous and local communities in conserving and using biodiversity
in a sustainable way;
(l) Promote the
effective participation of indigenous and local communities in decision and
policy-making concerning the use of their traditional knowledge;
(m) Encourage
technical and financial support to developing countries and countries with
economies in transition in their efforts to develop and implement, as
appropriate, inter alia, national sui generis systems and traditional systems
according to national priorities and legislation, with a view to conserving and
the sustainable use of biodiversity;
(n) Promote the wide
implementation of and continued work on the Bonn Guidelines on Access to
Genetic Resources and Fair and Equitable Sharing of Benefits arising out of
their Utilization of the Convention, as an input to assist Parties to the
Convention when developing and drafting legislative, administrative or policy
measures on access and benefit-sharing, and contract and other arrangements
under mutually agreed terms for access and benefit-sharing;
(o) Negotiate within
the framework of the Convention on Biological Diversity, bearing in mind the
Bonn Guidelines, an international regime to promote and safeguard the fair and
equitable sharing of benefits arising out of the utilization of genetic
resources;
(p) Encourage
successful conclusion of existing processes under the World Intellectual
Property Organization Intergovernmental Committee on Intellectual Property and
Genetic Resources, Traditional Knowledge and Folklore, and in the ad hoc
open-ended working group on article 8 (j) and related provisions of the
Convention;
(q) Promote
practicable measures for access to the results and benefits arising from
biotechnologies based upon genetic resources, in accordance with articles 15
and 19 of the Convention, including through enhanced scientific and technical
cooperation on biotechnology and biosafety, including the exchange of experts,
training human resources and developing research-oriented institutional
capacities;
(r) With a view to
enhancing synergy and mutual supportiveness, taking into account the decisions
under the relevant agreements, promote the discussions, without prejudging
their outcome, with regard to the relationships between the Convention and
agreements related to international trade and intellectual property rights, as
outlined in the Doha Ministerial Declaration;
(s) Promote the
implementation of the programme of work of the Global Taxonomy Initiative;
(t) Invite all
States which have not already done so to ratify the Convention, the Cartagena
Protocol on Biosafety and other biodiversity-related agreements, and invite
those that have done so, to promote their effective implementation at the
national, regional and international levels and to support developing countries
and countries with economies in transition technically and financially in this
regard.
* * *
43. Forests and trees cover nearly one third of the Earth’s surface.
Sustainable forest management of both natural and planted forests and for
timber and non-timber products is essential to achieving sustainable development
and is a critical means to eradicate poverty, significantly reduce
deforestation and halt the loss of forest biodiversity and land and resource
degradation, and improve food security and access to safe drinking water and
affordable energy; highlights the multiple benefits of both natural and planted
forests and trees; and contributes to the well-being of the planet and
humanity. Achievement of sustainable forest management, nationally and
globally, including through partnerships among interested Governments and
stakeholders, including the private sector, indigenous and local communities
and non-governmental organizations, is an essential goal of sustainable
development. This would include actions at all levels to:
(a) Enhance
political commitment to achieve sustainable forest management by endorsing it
as a priority on the international political agenda, taking full account of the
linkages between the forest sector and other sectors through integrated
approaches;
(b) Support the
United Nations Forum on Forests, with the assistance of the Collaborative
Partnership on Forests, as key intergovernmental mechanisms to facilitate and
coordinate the implementation of sustainable forest management at the national,
regional and global levels, thus contributing, inter alia, to the conservation
and sustainable use of forest biodiversity;
(c) Take immediate
action on domestic forest law enforcement and illegal international trade in
forest products, including in forest biological resources, with the support of
the international community, and provide human and institutional
capacity-building related to the enforcement of national legislation in those
areas;
(d) Take immediate
action at the national and international levels to promote and facilitate the
means to achieve sustainable timber harvesting, and to facilitate the provision
of financial resources and the transfer and development of environmentally
sound technologies, and thereby address unsustainable timber-harvesting
practices;
(e) Develop and implement
initiatives to address the needs of those parts of the world that currently
suffer from poverty and the highest rates of deforestation and where
international cooperation would be welcomed by affected Governments;
(f) Create and
strengthen partnerships and international cooperation to facilitate the
provision of increased financial resources, the transfer of environmentally
sound technologies, trade, capacity-building, forest law enforcement and
governance at all levels, and integrated land and resource management to
implement sustainable forest management, including the Intergovernmental Panel
on Forests (IPF)/Intergovernmental Forum on Forests (IFF) proposals for action;
(g) Accelerate
implementation of the IPF/IFF proposals for action by countries and by the
Collaborative Partnership on Forests, and intensify efforts on reporting to the
United Nations Forum on Forests to contribute to an assessment of progress in
2005;
(h) Recognize and
support indigenous and community-based forest management systems to ensure
their full and effective participation in sustainable forest management;
(i) Implement the
Convention on Biological Diversity’s expanded action-oriented work programme on
all types of forest biological diversity, in close cooperation with the Forum,
Partnership members and other forest-related processes and conventions, with
the involvement of all relevant stakeholders.
* * *
44. Mining, minerals and metals are important to the economic and
social development of many countries. Minerals are essential for modern living.
Enhancing the contribution of mining, minerals and metals to sustainable
development includes actions at all levels to:
(a) Support efforts
to address the environmental, economic, health and social impacts and benefits
of mining, minerals and metals throughout their life cycle, including workers’
health and safety, and use a range of partnerships, furthering existing
activities at the national and international levels, among interested
Governments, intergovernmental organizations, mining companies and workers, and
other stakeholders, to promote transparency and accountability for sustainable
mining and minerals development;
(b) Enhance the
participation of stakeholders, including local and indigenous communities and
women, to play an active role in minerals, metals and mining development
throughout the life cycles of mining operations, including after closure for
rehabilitation purposes, in accordance with national regulations and taking
into account significant transboundary impacts;
(c) Foster
sustainable mining practices through the provision of financial, technical and
capacity-building support to developing countries and countries with economies
in transition for the mining and processing of minerals, including small-scale
mining, and, where possible and appropriate, improve value-added processing,
upgrade scientific and technological information, and reclaim and rehabilitate
degraded sites.
V. Sustainable development in a globalizing world*
45. Globalization offers opportunities and challenges for sustainable
development. We recognize that globalization and interdependence are offering
new opportunities to trade, investment and capital flows and advances in
technology, including information technology, for the growth of the world
economy, development and the improvement of living standards around the world.
At the same time, there remain serious challenges, including serious financial
crises, insecurity, poverty, exclusion and inequality within and among societies.
The developing countries and countries with economies in transition face
special difficulties in responding to those challenges and opportunities.
Globalization should be fully inclusive and equitable, and there is a strong
need for policies and measures at the national and international levels,
formulated and implemented with the full and effective participation of
developing countries and countries with economies in transition, to help them
to respond effectively to those challenges and opportunities. This will require
urgent action at all levels to:
(a) Continue to
promote open, equitable, rules-based, predictable and non-discriminatory
multilateral trading and financial systems that benefit all countries in the
pursuit of sustainable development. Support the successful completion of the
work programme contained in the Doha Ministerial Declaration and the
implementation of the Monterrey Consensus. Welcome the decision contained in
the Doha Ministerial Declaration to place the needs and interests of developing
countries at the heart of the work programme of the Declaration, including
through enhanced market access for products of interest to developing
countries;
(b) Encourage ongoing
efforts by international financial and trade institutions to ensure that
decision-making processes and institutional structures are open and
transparent;
(c) Enhance the
capacities of developing countries, including the least developed countries,
landlocked developing countries and small island developing States, to benefit
from liberalized trade opportunities, through international cooperation and
measures aimed at improving productivity, commodity diversification and
competitiveness, community-based entrepreneurial capacity, and transportation
and communication infrastructure development;
(d) Support the
International Labour Organization and encourage its ongoing work on the social
dimension of globalization, as stated in paragraph 64 of the Monterrey
Consensus;
(e) Enhance the
delivery of coordinated, effective and targeted trade-related technical
assistance and capacity-building programmes, including to take advantage of
existing and future market access opportunities, and to examine the
relationship between trade, environment and development.
45.bis Implement the outcomes
of the Doha Ministerial Conference by WTO members, further strengthen
trade-related technical assistance and capacity-building, and ensure the
meaningful, effective and full participation of developing countries in
multilateral trade negotiations by placing their needs and interests at the
heart of the WTO work programme.
45.ter Actively promote
corporate responsibility and accountability, based on the Rio Principles,
including through the full development and effective implementation of
intergovernmental agreements and measures, international initiatives and
public-private partnerships, and appropriate national regulations, and support
continuous improvement in corporate practices in all countries.
45.quater Strengthen the
capacities of developing countries to encourage public/private initiatives that
enhance the ease of access, accuracy, timeliness and coverage of information on
countries and financial markets. Multilateral and regional financial
institutions could provide further assistance for these purposes.
45.quinquies Strengthen
regional trade and cooperation agreements, consistent with the multilateral
trading system, among developed and developing countries and countries with
economies in transition, as well as among developing countries, with the
support of international finance institutions and regional development banks,
as appropriate, with a view to achieving the objectives of sustainable
development.
45.sexties Assist developing
countries and countries with economies in transition in narrowing the digital
divide, creating digital opportunities and harnessing the potential of
information and communication technologies for development, through technology
transfer on mutually agreed terms and the provision of financial and technical
support, and in this context support the World Summit on the Information
Society.
VI. Health and sustainable development
46. The Rio Declaration on Environment and Development states that
human beings are at the centre of concerns for sustainable development, and
that they are entitled to a healthy and productive life, in harmony with
nature. The goals of sustainable development can only be achieved in the
absence of a high prevalence of debilitating diseases, while obtaining health
gains for the whole population requires poverty eradication. There is an urgent
need to address the causes of ill health, including environmental causes, and
their impact on development, with particular emphasis on women and children, as
well as vulnerable groups of society, such as people with disabilities, elderly
persons and indigenous people.
47. Strengthen the capacity of health-care systems to deliver basic
health services to all, in an efficient, accessible and affordable manner aimed
at preventing, controlling and treating diseases, and to reduce environmental
health threats, in conformity with human rights and fundamental freedoms and
consistent with national laws and cultural and religious values, taking into
account the reports of relevant United Nations conferences and summits and of
special sessions of the General Assembly. This would include actions at all
levels to:
(a) Integrate the
health concerns, including those of the most vulnerable populations, into
strategies, policies and programmes for poverty eradication and sustainable
development;
(b) Promote
equitable and improved access to affordable and efficient health-care services,
including prevention, at all levels of the health system, essential and safe
drugs at affordable prices, immunization services and safe vaccines, and
medical technology;
(c) Provide
technical and financial assistance to developing countries and countries with
economies in transition to implement the Health for All Strategy, including
health information systems and integrated databases on development hazards;
(d) Improve the
development and management of human resources in health-care services;
(e) Promote and
develop partnerships to enhance health education with the objective of
achieving improved health literacy on a global basis by 2010, with the
involvement of United Nations agencies, as appropriate;
(f) Develop
programmes and initiatives to reduce, by the year 2015, mortality rates for
infants and children under 5 by two thirds, and maternal mortality rates by
three quarters, of the prevailing rate in 2000, and reduce disparities between
and within developed and developing countries as quickly as possible, with
particular attention to eliminating the pattern of disproportionate and
preventable mortality among girl infants and children;
(g) Target research
efforts and apply research results to priority public health issues, in
particular those affecting susceptible and vulnerable populations, through the
development of new vaccines, reducing exposures to health risks, building on equal
access to health-care services, education, training and medical treatment and
technology, and addressing the secondary effects of poor health;
(h) Promote the
preservation, development and use of effective traditional medicine knowledge
and practices, where appropriate, in combination with modern medicine,
recognizing indigenous and local communities as custodians of traditional
knowledge and practices, while promoting effective protection of traditional
knowledge, as appropriate, consistent with international law;
(i) Ensure equal
access of women to health-care services, giving particular attention to
maternal and emergency obstetric care;
(j) Address
effectively, for all individuals of appropriate age, the promotion of their
healthy lives, including their reproductive and sexual health, consistent with
the commitments and outcomes of recent United Nations conferences and summits,
including the World Summit for Children, the United Nations Conference on
Environment and Development, the International Conference of Population and
Development, the World Summit for Social Development and the Fourth World
Conference on Women, and their respective reviews and reports;
(k) Launch
international capacity-building initiatives, as appropriate, that assess health
and environment linkages and use the knowledge gained to create more effective
national and regional policy responses to environmental threats to human
health;
(l) Transfer and
disseminate, on mutually agreed terms, including through public-private multisector
partnerships, technologies for safe water, sanitation and waste management for
rural and urban areas in developing countries and countries with economies in
transition, with international financial support, taking into account
country-specific conditions and gender equality including specific technology
needs of women;
(m) Strengthen and
promote ILO and World Health Organization (WHO) programmes to reduce
occupational deaths, injuries and illnesses, and link occupational health with
public health promotion as a means of promoting public health and education;
(n) Improve
availability and access for all to sufficient, safe, culturally acceptable and
nutritionally adequate food, increase consumer health protection, address
issues of micronutrient deficiency, and implement existing internationally
agreed commitments and relevant standards and guidelines;
(o) Develop or
strengthen, where applicable, preventive, promotive and curative programmes to
address non-communicable diseases and conditions, such as cardiovascular
diseases, cancer, diabetes, chronic respiratory diseases, injuries, violence
and mental health disorders and associated risk factors, including alcohol,
tobacco, unhealthy diets and lack of physical activity.
48. Implement, within the agreed time frames, all commitments agreed
in the Declaration of Commitment on HIV/AIDS adopted by the General Assembly at
its twenty-sixth special session, emphasizing in particular the reduction of
HIV prevalence among young men and women aged 15-24 by 25 per cent in the most
affected countries by 2005 and globally by 2010, as well as combat malaria,
tuberculosis and other diseases by, inter alia:
(a) Implementing
national preventive and treatment strategies, regional and international
cooperation measures, and the development of international initiatives to
provide special assistance to children orphaned by HIV/AIDS;
(b) Fulfilling
commitments for the provision of sufficient resources to support the Global
Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, while promoting access to the
Fund by countries most in need;
(c) Protecting the
health of workers and promoting occupational safety, by, inter alia, taking
into account, as appropriate the voluntary ILO code of practice on HIV/AIDS and
the world of work, to improve conditions of the workplace;
(d) Mobilizing
adequate public and encouraging private financial resources for research and
development on diseases of the poor, such as HIV/AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis,
directed at biomedical and health research, as well as new vaccine and drug
development.
49. Reduce respiratory diseases and other health impacts resulting
from air pollution, with particular attention to women and children, by:
(a) Strengthening
regional and national programmes, including through public-private
partnerships, with technical and financial assistance to developing countries;
(b) Supporting the
phasing out of lead in gasoline;
(c) Strengthening
and supporting efforts for the reduction of emissions, through the use of cleaner
fuels and modern pollution control techniques;
(d) Assisting
developing countries in providing affordable energy to rural communities,
particularly to reduce dependence on traditional fuel sources for cooking and
heating, which affect the health of women and children.
50. Phase out lead in lead-based paints and other sources of human
exposure, work to prevent, in particular, children’s exposure to lead, and
strengthen monitoring and surveillance efforts and the treatment of lead
poisoning.
[Paragraph 51 is deleted]
VII. Sustainable
development of small island developing States
52. Small island developing States are a special case both for
environment and development. Although they continue to take the lead in the
path towards sustainable development in their countries, they are increasingly
constrained by the interplay of adverse factors clearly underlined in Agenda
21, the Programme of Action for the Sustainable Development of Small Island
Developing States and the decisions adopted at the twenty-second special
session of the General Assembly. This would include actions at all levels to:
(a) Accelerate
national and regional implementation of the Programme of Action, with adequate
financial resources, including through GEF focal areas, transfer of
environmentally sound technologies and assistance for capacity-building from
the international community;
(b) Further
implement sustainable fisheries management and improve financial returns from
fisheries by supporting and strengthening relevant regional fisheries
management organizations, as appropriate, such as the recently established
Caribbean Regional Fisheries Mechanism and such agreements as the Convention on
the Conservation and Management of Highly Migratory Fish Stocks in the Western
and Central Pacific Ocean;
(c) Assist small
island developing States, including through the elaboration of specific
initiatives, in delimiting and managing in a sustainable manner their coastal
areas and exclusive economic zones and the continental shelf (including, where
appropriate, the continental shelf areas beyond 200 miles from coastal
baselines), as well as relevant regional management initiatives within the
context of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea and the UNEP
regional seas programmes;
(d) Provide support,
including for capacity-building, for the development and further implementation
of:
(i) Small island developing States-specific components within
programmes of work on marine and coastal biological diversity;
(ii) Freshwater programmes for small island developing States,
including through the GEF focal areas;
(e) Effectively
reduce, prevent and control waste and pollution and their health-related
impacts by undertaking by 2004 initiatives aimed at implementing the Global
Programme of Action for the Protection of the Marine Environment from
Land-based Activities in small island developing States;
(f) Work to ensure
that, in the ongoing negotiations and elaboration of the WTO work programme on
trade in small economies, due account is taken of small island developing
States, which have severe structural handicaps in integrating into the global
economy, within the context of the Doha development agenda;
(g) Develop
community-based initiatives on sustainable tourism by 2004, and build the
capacities necessary to diversify tourism products, while protecting culture
and traditions, and effectively conserving and managing natural resources;
(h) Extend
assistance to small island developing States in support of local communities
and appropriate national and regional organizations of small island developing
States for comprehensive hazard and risk management, disaster prevention,
mitigation and preparedness, and help relieve the consequences of disasters,
extreme weather events and other emergencies;
(i) Support the
finalization and subsequent early operationalization, on agreed terms, of
economic, social and environmental vulnerability indices and related indicators
as tools for the achievement of the sustainable development of the small island
developing States;
(j) Assist small
island developing States in mobilizing adequate resources and partnerships for
their adaptation needs relating to the adverse effects of climate change, sea
level rise and climate variability, consistent with commitments under the
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Changes, where applicable;
(k) Support efforts
by small island developing States to build capacities and institutional
arrangements to implement intellectual property regimes;
53. Support the availability of adequate, affordable and
environmentally sound energy services for the sustainable development of small
island developing States by, inter alia:
(a) Strengthening
ongoing and supporting new efforts on energy supply and services, by 2004,
including through the United Nations system and partnership initiatives;
(b) Developing and
promoting efficient use of sources of energy, including indigenous sources and
renewable energy, and building the capacities of small island developing States
for training, technical know-how and strengthening national institutions in the
area of energy management;
54. Provide support to SIDS to develop capacity and strengthen:
(a) Health-care
services for promoting equitable access to health care;
(b) Health systems
for making available necessary drugs and technology in a sustainable and
affordable manner to fight and control communicable and non-communicable
diseases, in particular HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, diabetes, malaria and dengue
fever;
(c) Efforts to
reduce and manage waste and pollution and building capacity for maintaining and
managing systems to deliver water and sanitation services, in both rural and
urban areas;
(d) Efforts to
implement initiatives aimed at poverty eradication, which have been outlined in
section II of the present document.
55. Undertake a full and comprehensive review of the implementation of
the Barbados Programme of Action for the Sustainable Development of Small
Island Developing States in 2004, in accordance with the provisions set forth
in General Assembly resolution S-22/2, and in this context requests the General
Assembly at its fifty-seventh session to consider convening an international
meeting for the sustainable development of small island developing States.
VIII. Sustainable development for Africa
56. Since the United Nations Conference on Environment and
Development, sustainable development has remained elusive for many African
countries. Poverty remains a major challenge and most countries on the continent
have not benefited fully from the opportunities of globalization, further
exacerbating the continent’s marginalization. Africa’s efforts to achieve
sustainable development have been hindered by conflicts, insufficient
investment, limited market access opportunities and supply side constraints,
unsustainable debt burdens, historically declining ODA levels and the impact of
HIV/AIDS. The World Summit on Sustainable Development should reinvigorate the
commitment of the international community to address these special challenges
and give effect to a new vision based on concrete actions for the
implementation of Agenda 21 in Africa. The New Partnership for Africa’s
Development (NEPAD) is a commitment by African leaders to the people of Africa.
It recognizes that partnerships among African countries themselves and between
them and with the international community are key elements of a shared and
common vision to eradicate poverty, and furthermore it aims to place their
countries, both individually and collectively, on a path of sustained economic
growth and sustainable development, while participating actively in the world
economy and body politic. It provides a framework for sustainable development
on the continent to be shared by all Africa’s people. The international
community welcomes NEPAD and pledges its support to the implementation of this
vision, including through utilization of the benefits of South-South
cooperation supported, inter alia, by the Tokyo International Conference on
African Development. It also pledges support for other existing development
frameworks that are owned and driven nationally by African countries and that
embody poverty reduction strategies, including poverty reduction strategy
papers. Achieving sustainable development includes actions at all levels to:
(a) Create an
enabling environment at the regional, subregional, national and local levels in
order to achieve sustained economic growth and sustainable development and
support African efforts for peace, stability and security, the resolution and
prevention of conflicts, democracy, good governance, respect for human rights
and fundamental freedoms, including the right to development and gender
equality;
(b) Support the
implementation of the vision of NEPAD and other established regional and
subregional efforts, including through financing, technical cooperation and
institutional cooperation, and human and institutional capacity-building at the
regional, subregional and national levels, consistent with national policies, programmes
and nationally owned and led strategies for poverty reduction and sustainable
development, such as, where applicable, poverty reduction strategy papers;
(c) Promote
technology development, transfer and diffusion to Africa and further develop
technology and knowledge available in African centres of excellence;
(d) Support African
countries to develop effective science and technology institutions and research
activities capable of developing and adapting to world class technologies;
(e) Support the
development of national programmes and strategies to promote education within
the context of nationally owned and led strategies for poverty reduction, and
strengthen research institutions in education in order to increase the capacity
to fully support the achievement of internationally agreed development goals
related to education, including those contained in the Millennium Declaration
on ensuring that, by 2015, children everywhere, boys and girls alike, will be
able to complete a full course of primary schooling, and that girls and boys
will have equal access to all levels of education relevant to national needs;
(f) Enhance the
industrial productivity, diversity and competitiveness of African countries
through a combination of financial and technological support for the
development of key infrastructure, access to technology, networking of research
centres, adding value to export products, skills development and enhancing
market access in support of sustainable development;
(g) Enhance the
contribution of the industrial sector, in particular mining, minerals and
metals, to the sustainable development of Africa by supporting the development
of effective and transparent regulatory and management frameworks and value
addition, broad-based participation, social and environmental responsibility
and increased market access in order to create an attractive and conducive
environment for investment;
(h) Provide
financial and technical support to strengthen the capacity of African countries
to undertake environmental legislative policy and institutional reform for
sustainable development and to undertake environmental impact assessments and,
as appropriate, to negotiate and implement multilateral environment agreements;
(i) Develop
projects, programmes and partnerships with relevant stakeholders and mobilize
resources for the effective implementation of the outcome of the African
Process for the Protection and Development of the Marine and Coastal
Environment;
(j) Deal
effectively with energy problems in Africa, including through initiatives to:
(i) Establish and promote programmes, partnerships and initiatives
to support Africa’s efforts to implement NEPAD objectives on energy, which seek
to secure access for at least 35 per cent of the African population within 20
years, especially in rural areas;
(ii) Provide support to implement other initiatives on energy,
including the promotion of cleaner and more efficient use of natural gas and
increased use of renewable energy, and to improve energy efficiency and access
to advanced energy technologies, including cleaner fossil fuel technologies,
particularly in rural and peri-urban areas;
(k) Assist African
countries in mobilizing adequate resources for their adaptation needs relating
to the adverse effects of climate change, extreme weather events, sea level
rise and climate variability, and assist in developing national climate change
strategies and mitigation programmes, and continue to take actions to mitigate
the adverse effects on climate change in Africa, consistent with the United
Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change;
(l) Support African
efforts to develop affordable transport systems and infrastructure that promote
sustainable development and connectivity in Africa;
(m) Further to
paragraph 40 above, address the poverty affecting mountain communities in
Africa;
(n) Provide
financial and technical support for afforestation and reforestation in Africa
and to build capacity for sustainable forest management, including combating
deforestation and measures to improve the policy and legal framework of the
forest sector.
57. Provide financial and technical support for Africa’s efforts to
implement the Convention to Combat Desertification at the national level and
integrate indigenous knowledge systems into land and natural resources
management practices, as appropriate, and improve extension services to rural
communities and promote better land and watershed management practices,
including through improved agricultural practices that address land
degradation, in order to develop capacity for the implementation of national
programmes.
58. Mobilize financial and other support to develop and strengthen
health systems that aim at:
(a) Promoting
equitable access to health-care services;
(b) Making available
necessary drugs and technology in a sustainable and affordable manner to fight
and control communicable diseases, including HIV/AIDS, malaria and
tuberculosis, and trypanosomiasis, as well as non-communicable diseases,
including those caused by poverty;
(c) Building
capacity of medical and paramedical personnel;
(d) Promoting
indigenous medical knowledge, as appropriate, including traditional medicine;
(e) Researching and
controlling the Ebola disease.
59. Deal effectively with natural disasters and conflicts, including
their humanitarian and environmental impacts, recognizing that conflicts in
Africa have hindered and in many cases obliterated both the gains and efforts
aimed at sustainable development, with the most vulnerable members of society,
particularly women and children, being the most impacted victims, through
efforts and initiatives, at all levels, to:
(a) Provide
financial and technical assistance to strengthen the capacities of African
countries, including institutional and human capacity, including at the local
level, for effective disaster management, including observation and early
warning systems, assessments, prevention, preparedness, response and recovery;
(b) Provide support
to African countries to enable them to better deal with the displacement of
people as a result of natural disasters and conflicts, and put in place rapid
response mechanisms;
(c) Support Africa’s
efforts for the prevention and resolution, management and mitigation of
conflicts and its early response to emerging conflict situations to avert
tragic humanitarian consequences;
(d) Provide support
to refugee host countries in rehabilitating infrastructure and environment,
including ecosystems and habitats, that were damaged in the process of receiving
and settling refugees.
60. Promote integrated water resources development and optimize the
upstream and downstream benefits therefrom, the development and effective
management of water resources across all uses and the protection of water
quality and aquatic ecosystems, including through initiatives at all levels,
to:
(a) Provide access
to potable domestic water, hygiene education and improved sanitation and waste
management at the household level through initiatives to encourage public and
private investment in water supply and sanitation that give priority to the
needs of the poor, within stable and transparent national regulatory frameworks
provided by Governments, while respecting local conditions involving all
concerned stakeholders and monitoring the performance and improving the
accountability of public institutions and private companies; and develop
critical water supply, reticulation and treatment infrastructure, and build
capacity to maintain and manage systems to deliver water and sanitation
services, in both rural and urban areas;
(b) Develop and
implement integrated river basin and watershed management strategies and plans
for all major water bodies, consistent with paragraph 25 above;
(c) Strengthen
regional, subregional and national capacities for data collection and
processing, and for planning, research, monitoring, assessment and enforcement,
as well as arrangements for water resource management;
(d) Protect water
resources, including groundwater and wetland ecosystems, against pollution, as
well as, in cases of most acute water scarcity, support efforts for developing
non-conventional water resources, including the energy-efficient,
cost-effective and sustainable desalination of seawater, rainwater harvesting
and recycling of water.
61. Achieve significantly improved sustainable agricultural
productivity and food security in furtherance of the agreed millennium
development goals, including those contained in the Millennium Declaration, in
particular to halve by 2015 the proportion of people who suffer from hunger,
including through initiatives at all levels to:
(a) Support the
development and implementation of national policies and programmes, including
research programmes and development plans of African countries to regenerate
their agricultural sector and sustainably develop their fisheries, and increase
investment in infrastructure, technology and extension services, according to
country needs. African countries should be in the process of developing and
implementing food security strategies, within the context of national poverty
eradication programmes, by 2005;
(b) Promote and
support efforts and initiatives to secure equitable access to land tenure and
clarify resource rights and responsibilities, through land and tenure reform
processes which respect the rule of law and are enshrined in national law, and
to provide access to credit to all, especially to women, and that enable
economic and social empowerment and poverty eradication as well as efficient
and ecologically sound utilization of land, and enable women producers to
become decision makers and owners in the sector, including the right to inherit
land;
(c) Improve market
access for goods, including goods originating from African countries, in
particular least developed countries, within the framework of the Doha
Ministerial Declaration, without prejudging the outcome of the WTO negotiations
and also within the framework of preferential agreements;
(d) Provide support
for African countries to improve regional trade and economic integration
between African countries. Attract and increase investment in regional market
infrastructure;
(e) Support
livestock development programmes aimed at progressive and effective control of
animal diseases.
62. Achieve sound management of chemicals, with particular focus on
hazardous chemicals and wastes, inter alia, through initiatives to assist
African countries in elaborating national chemical profiles, and regional and
national frameworks and strategies for chemical management and establishing
chemical focal points.
63. Bridge the digital divide and create digital opportunity in terms
of access infrastructure and technology transfer and application, through
integrated initiatives for Africa. Create an enabling environment to attract
investments, accelerate existing and new programmes and projects to connect
essential institutions, and stimulate the adoption of information communication
technologies in government and commerce programmes and other aspects of
national economic and social life.
64. Support Africa’s efforts to attain sustainable tourism that
contributes to social, economic and infrastructure development through the
following measures:
(a) Implementing
projects at the local, national and subregional levels, with specific emphasis
on marketing African tourism products, such as adventure tourism, eco-tourism
and cultural tourism;
(b) Establishing and
supporting national and cross-border conservation areas to promote ecosystem
conservation according to the ecosystem approach, and to promote sustainable
tourism;
(c) Respecting local
traditions and cultures and promoting the use of indigenous knowledge in
natural resource management and eco-tourism;
(d) Assisting host
communities in managing their tourism projects for maximum benefit, while
limiting negative impact on their traditions, culture and environment;
(e) Support the
conservation of Africa’s biological diversity, the sustainable use of its
components and the fair and equitable sharing of the benefits arising out of
the utilization of genetic resources, in accordance with commitments that
countries have under biodiversity-related agreements to which they are parties,
including such agreements as the Convention on Biological Diversity and the
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and
Flora, as well as regional biodiversity agreements.
65. Support African countries in their efforts to implement the
Habitat Agenda and the Istanbul Declaration through initiatives to strengthen
national and local institutional capacities in the areas of sustainable
urbanization and human settlements, provide support for adequate shelter and
basic services and the development of efficient and effective governance
systems in cities and other human settlements, and strengthen, inter alia, the
United Nations Human Settlements Programme/UNEP managing water for African
cities programme.
VIII.bis Other regional initiatives
66. Important initiatives have been developed within other United
Nations regions and regional, subregional and transregional forums to promote
sustainable development. The international community welcomes these efforts and
the results already achieved, and calls for actions at all levels for their
further development, while encouraging interregional, intraregional and
international cooperation in this respect, and expresses its support for their
further development and implementation by the countries of the regions.
Sustainable development in Latin America and the Caribbean
67. The Initiative of Latin America and the Caribbean on Sustainable
Development is an undertaking by the leaders of that region that, building on
the Platform for Action on the Road to Johannesburg 2002, which was approved in
Rio de Janeiro in October 2001, recognizes the importance of regional actions
towards sustainable development and takes into account the region’s
singularities, shared visions and cultural diversity. It is targeted towards
the adoption of concrete actions in different areas of sustainable development,
such as biodiversity, water resources, vulnerabilities and sustainable cities,
social aspects (including health and poverty), economic aspects (including
energy) and institutional arrangements (including capacity-building, indicators
and participation of civil society), taking into account ethics for sustainable
development.
68. The Initiative envisages the development of actions among
countries in the region that may foster South-South cooperation and may count
with the support of groups of countries, as well as multilateral and regional
organizations, including financial institutions. Being a framework for
cooperation, the Initiative is open to partnerships with governments and all
major groups.
Sustainable development in Asia and the Pacific
69. Bearing in mind the target of halving the number of people who
live in poverty by the year 2015, as provided in the Millennium Declaration,
the Phnom Penh Regional Platform on Sustainable Development for Asia and the
Pacific recognized that the region contains over half of the world’s population
and the largest number of the world’s people living in poverty. Hence,
sustainable development in the region is critical to achieving sustainable
development at the global level.
70. The Regional Platform identified seven initiatives for follow-up
action: capacity-building for sustainable development; poverty reduction for
sustainable development; cleaner production and sustainable energy; land
management and biodiversity conservation; protection and management of and
access to freshwater resources; oceans, coastal and marine resources and
sustainable development of small island developing States; and action on
atmosphere and climate change. Follow-up actions of these initiatives will be
taken through national strategies and relevant regional and subregional
initiatives, such as the Regional Action Programme for Environmentally Sound
and Sustainable Development and the Kitakyushu Initiative for a Clean
Environment, adopted at the Fourth Ministerial Conference on Environment and
Development in Asia and the Pacific organized by the Economic and Social
Commission for Asia and the Pacific.
Sustainable development in the West Asia region
71. The West Asia region is known for its scarce water and limited fertile
land resources. The region has made progress to a more knowledge-based
production of higher value-added commodities.
72. The regional preparatory meeting endorsed the following
priorities: poverty alleviation, relief of debt burden; and sustainable management
of natural resources, including, inter alia, integrated water resources
management, implementation of programmes to combat desertification, integrated
coastal zone management, and land and water pollution control.
Sustainable development in the Economic Commission for Europe
region
73. The Economic Commission for Europe (ECE) regional ministerial
meeting for the World Summit on Sustainable Development recognized that the
region has a major role to play and responsibilities in global efforts to
achieve sustainable development by concrete actions. The region recognized that
different levels of economic development in countries of the region may require
the application of different approaches and mechanisms to implement Agenda 21.
In order to address the three pillars of sustainable development in a mutually
reinforcing way, the region identified its priority actions for the ECE region
for sustainable development in paragraphs 32-46 of a ministerial statement.
74. In furtherance of the region’s commitment to sustainable
development, there are ongoing efforts at the regional, subregional and
transregional levels, including, inter alia, the Environment for Europe
process; the fifth ECE ministerial conference, to be held in Kiev in May 2003;
the development of an environmental strategy for the 12 countries of Eastern
Europe; the Caucasus and Central Asia; the
Central Asian Agenda 21; OECD work on sustainable development, the EU
sustainable development strategy; and regional and subregional conventions and
processes relevant to sustainable development, including, inter alia, the
Aarhus Convention, the Alpine Convention, the North American Commission on
Environmental Cooperation, the Boundary Waters Treaty, the Iqaluit Declaration
of the Arctic Council, the Baltic Agenda 21 and the Mediterranean Agenda 21.
IX. Means of implementation*
75. The implementation of Agenda 21 and the achievement of the
internationally agreed development goals, including those contained in the
Millennium Declaration as well as in the present plan of action, require a
substantially increased effort, both by countries themselves and by the rest of
the international community, based on the recognition that each country has
primary responsibility for its own development and that the role of national
policies and development strategies cannot be overemphasized, taking fully into
account the Rio principles, including, in particular, the principle of common
but differentiated responsibilities, which states:
“States shall cooperate in a
spirit of global partnership to conserve, protect and restore the health and
integrity of the Earth’s ecosystem. In view of the different contributions to
global environmental degradation, States have common but differentiated
responsibilities. The developed countries acknowledge the responsibility that
they bear in the international pursuit of sustainable development in view of
the pressures their societies place on the global environment and of the
technologies and financial resources they command.”
The internationally agreed
development goals, including those contained in the Millennium Declaration and
Agenda 21, as well as in the present plan of action, will require significant
increases in the flow of financial resources as elaborated in the Monterrey
Consensus, including through new and additional financial resources, in
particular to developing countries, to support the implementation of national
policies and programmes developed by them, improved trade opportunities, access
to and transfer of environmentally sound technologies on a concessional or
preferential basis, as mutually agreed, education and awareness-raising,
capacity-building, and information for decision-making and scientific
capabilities within the agreed time frame required to meet these goals and
initiatives. Progress to this end will require that the international community
implement the outcomes of major United Nations conferences, such as the
programmes of action adopted at the Third United Nations Conference on the
Least Developed Countries, and the Global Conference on the Sustainable
Development of Small Island Developing States, and relevant international
agreements since 1992, particularly those of the International Conference on
Financing for Development and the Fourth WTO Ministerial Conference, including
building on them as part of a process of achieving sustainable development.
76. Mobilizing and increasing the effective use of financial resources
and achieving the national and international economic conditions needed to fulfil
internationally agreed development goals, including those contained in the
Millennium Declaration, to eliminate poverty, improve social conditions and
raise living standards and protect our environment, will be our first step to
ensuring that the twenty-first century becomes the century of sustainable
development for all.
77. In our common pursuit of growth, poverty eradication and
sustainable development, a critical challenge is to ensure the necessary
internal conditions for mobilizing domestic savings, both public and private,
sustaining adequate levels of productive investment and increasing human
capacity. A crucial task is to enhance the efficacy, coherence and consistency
of macroeconomic policies. An enabling domestic environment is vital for mobilizing
domestic resources, increasing productivity, reducing capital flight,
encouraging the private sector, and attracting and making effective use of
international investment and assistance. Efforts to create such an environment
should be supported by the international community.
78. Facilitate greater flows of foreign direct investment so as to
support the sustainable development activities, including the development of
infrastructure, of developing countries, and enhance the benefits that
developing countries can draw from foreign direct investment, with particular
actions to:
(a) Create the
necessary domestic and international conditions to facilitate significant
increases in the flow of FDI to developing countries, in particular the least
developed countries, which is critical to sustainable development, particularly
FDI flows for infrastructure development and other priority areas in developing
countries to supplement the domestic resources mobilized by them;
(b) Encourage
foreign direct investment in developing countries and countries with economies
in transition through export credits that could be instrumental to sustainable
development;
79. Recognize that a substantial increase in ODA and other resources
will be required if developing countries are to achieve the internationally
agreed development goals and objectives, including those contained in the
Millennium Declaration. To build support for ODA, we will cooperate to further
improve policies and development strategies, both nationally and
internationally, to enhance aid effectiveness, with actions to:
(a) Make available
the increased ODA commitments announced by several developed countries at the
International Conference on Financing for Development. Urge the developed
countries that have not done so to make concrete efforts towards the target of
0.7 per cent of GNP as ODA to developing countries, and effectively implement
their commitment on ODA to the least developed countries as contained in
paragraph 83 of the Programme of Action for the Least Developed Countries for
the Decade 2001-2010. We also encourage developing countries to build on
progress achieved in ensuring that ODA is used effectively to help achieve
development goals and targets in accordance with the outcome of the International
Conference on Financing for Development. We acknowledge the efforts of all
donors, commend those donors whose ODA contributions exceed, reach or are
increasing towards the targets, and underline the importance of undertaking to
examine the means and time frames for achieving the targets and goals;
(b) Encourage
recipient and donor countries, as well as international institutions, to make
ODA more efficient and effective for poverty eradication, sustained economic
growth and sustainable development. In this regard, intensify efforts by the
multilateral and bilateral financial and development institutions, in
accordance with paragraph 43 of the Monterrey Consensus, in particular to
harmonize their operational procedures at the highest standards, so as to
reduce transaction costs and make ODA disbursement and delivery more flexible
and more responsive to the needs of developing countries, taking into account
national development needs and objectives under the ownership of recipient
countries, and to use development frameworks that are owned and driven by
developing countries and that embody poverty reduction strategies, including
poverty reduction strategy papers, as vehicles for aid delivery, upon request.
80. Make full and effective use of existing financial mechanisms and
institutions, including through actions at all levels to:
(a) Strengthen
ongoing efforts to reform the existing international financial architecture, to
foster a transparent, equitable and inclusive system that is able to provide
for the effective participation of developing countries in the international
economic decision-making processes and institutions, as well as for their
effective and equitable participation in the formulation of financial standards
and codes;
(b) Promote, inter
alia, measures in source and destination countries to improve transparency and
information about financial flows to contribute to stability in the
international financial environment. Measures that mitigate the impact of
excessive volatility of short-term capital flows are important and must be
considered;
(c) Work to ensure
that the funds are made available on a timely, more assured and predictable
basis to international organizations and agencies, where appropriate, for their
sustainable development activities, programmes and projects;
(d) Encourage the
private sector, including transnational corporations, private foundations and
civil society institutions, to provide financial and technical assistance to
developing countries;
(e) Support new and
existing public/private sector financing mechanisms for developing countries
and countries with economies in transition, to benefit in particular small
entrepreneurs and small, medium-sized and community-based enterprises and to
improve their infrastructure, while ensuring the transparency and
accountability of such mechanisms.
81. Welcome the successful and substantial third replenishment of the
GEF, which will enable it to address the funding requirements of new focal
areas and existing ones and continue to be responsive to the needs and concerns
of its recipient countries, in particular developing countries, and further
encourage GEF to leverage additional funds from key public and private
organizations, improve the management of funds through more speedy and
streamlined procedures and simplify its project cycle.
82. Explore ways of generating new public and private innovative
sources of finance for development purposes, provided that those sources do not
unduly burden developing countries, noting the proposal to use special drawing
rights allocations for development purposes, as set forth in paragraph 44 of
the Monterrey Consensus.
83. Reduce unsustainable debt burden through such actions as debt
relief and, as appropriate, debt cancellation and other innovative mechanisms
geared to comprehensively address the debt problems of developing countries, in
particular the poorest and most heavily indebted ones. Therefore, debt relief
measures should, where appropriate, be pursued vigorously and expeditiously,
including within the Paris and London Clubs and other relevant forums, in order
to contribute to debt sustainability and facilitate sustainable development,
while recognizing that debtors and creditors must share responsibility for
preventing and resolving unsustainable debt situations, and that external debt
relief can play a key role in liberating resources that can then be directed
towards activities consistent with attaining sustainable growth and
development. Therefore, we support paragraphs 47 through 51 of the Monterrey
Consensus dealing with external debt. Debt relief arrangements should seek to
avoid imposing any unfair burdens on other developing countries. There should
be an increase in the use of grants for the poorest, debt-vulnerable countries.
Countries are encouraged to develop national comprehensive strategies to
monitor and manage external liabilities as a key element in reducing national
vulnerabilities. In this regard, actions are required to:
(a) Implement
speedily, effectively and fully the enhanced heavily indebted poor countries
(HIPC) initiative, which should be fully financed through additional resources,
taking into consideration, as appropriate, measures to address any fundamental
changes in the economic circumstances of those developing countries with
unsustainable debt burden caused by natural catastrophes, severe terms-of-trade
shocks or affected by conflict, taking into account initiatives which have been
undertaken to reduce outstanding indebtedness;
(b) Encourage participation
in the HIPC initiative of all creditors that have not yet done so;
(c) Bring
international debtors and creditors together in relevant international forums
to restructure unsustainable debt in a timely and efficient manner, taking into
account the need to involve the private sector in the resolution of crises due
to indebtedness, where appropriate;
(d) Acknowledge the
problems of the debt sustainability of some non-HIPC low-income countries, in
particular those facing exceptional circumstances;
(e) Encourage
exploring innovative mechanisms to comprehensively address the debt problems of
developing countries, including middle-income countries and countries with
economies in transition. Such mechanisms may include
debt-for-sustainable-development swaps;
(f) Encourage donor
countries to take steps to ensure that resources provided for debt relief do
not detract from ODA resources intended to be available for developing
countries.
84. Recognizing the major role that trade can play in achieving sustainable
development and in eradicating poverty, we encourage WTO members to pursue the
work programme agreed at the Fourth WTO Ministerial Conference. In order for
developing countries, especially the least developed among them, to secure
their share in the growth of world trade commensurate with the needs of their
economic development, we urge WTO members to take the following actions:
(a) Facilitate the
accession of all developing countries, particularly the least developed
countries, as well as countries with economies in transition, that apply for
membership of WTO, in accordance with the Monterrey Consensus;
(b) Support the Doha
work programme as an important commitment on the part of developed and
developing countries to mainstream appropriate trade policies in their
respective development policies and programmes;
(c) Implement
substantial trade-related technical assistance and capacity-building measures
and support the Doha Development Agenda Global Trust Fund established after the
Fourth WTO Ministerial Conference as an important step forward in ensuring a
sound and predictable basis for WTO-related technical assistance and
capacity-building;
(d) Implement the
New Strategy for WTO Technical Cooperation for Capacity-Building, Growth and
Integration;
(e) Fully support
the implementation of the Integrated Framework for Trade-Related Technical
Assistance to Least Developed Countries, and urge development partners to
significantly increase contributions to the Trust Fund of the Framework, in accordance
with the Doha Ministerial Declaration.
85. In accordance with the Doha Declaration as well as with relevant
decisions taken at Doha, we are determined to take concrete action to address
issues and concerns raised by developing countries regarding the implementation
of some WTO agreements and decisions, including the difficulties and resource
constraints faced by them in fulfilling those agreements.
86. Call upon WTO members to fulfil the commitments made in the Doha
Ministerial Declaration, notably in terms of market access, in particular for
products of export interest to developing countries, especially least developed
countries, by implementing the following actions, taking into account paragraph
45 of the Doha Ministerial Declaration:
(a) Review all
special and differential treatment provisions with a view to strengthening them
and making them more precise, effective and operational, in accordance with
paragraph 44 of the Doha Ministerial Declaration;
(b) Aim to reduce
or, as appropriate, eliminate tariffs on non-agricultural products, including
the reduction or elimination of tariff peaks, high tariffs and tariff
escalation, as well as non-tariff barriers, in particular on products of export
interest to developing countries. Product coverage should be comprehensive and
without a priori exclusions. The negotiations shall take fully into account the
special needs and interests of developing and least developed countries,
including through less than full reciprocity in reduction commitments, in accordance
with the Doha Ministerial Declaration;
(c) Fulfil, without
prejudging the outcome of the negotiations, the commitment for comprehensive
negotiations initiated under article 20 of the Agreement on Agriculture as
referred to in paragraphs 13 and 14 of the Doha Ministerial Declaration, aiming
at substantial improvements in market access, reductions of with a view to
phasing out all forms of export subsidies, and substantial reductions in
trade-distorting domestic support, while agreeing that the provisions for
special and differential treatment for developing countries shall be an
integral part of all elements of the negotiations and shall be embodied in the
schedules of concession and commitments and, as appropriate, in the rules and
disciplines to be negotiated, so as to be operationally effective and to enable
developing countries to effectively take account of their development needs,
including food security and rural development. Take note of the non-trade
concerns reflected in the negotiating proposals submitted by WTO members and
confirm that non-trade concerns will be taken into account in the negotiations
as provided for in the Agreement on Agriculture, in accordance with the Doha
Ministerial Declaration.
87. Call on developed countries that have not already done so to work
towards the objective of duty-free and quota-free access for all least
developed countries’ exports, as envisaged in the Programme of Action for the
Least Developed Countries for the Decade 2001-2010, which was adopted in
Brussels on 20 May 2001.
88. Commit to actively pursue the WTO work programme to address the
trade-related issues and concerns affecting the fuller integration of small,
vulnerable economies into the multilateral trading system in a manner
commensurate with their special circumstances and in support of their efforts
towards sustainable development, in accordance with paragraph 35 of the Doha
Declaration.
89. Build the capacity of commodity-dependent countries to diversify
exports through, inter alia, financial and technical assistance, international
assistance for economic diversification and sustainable resource management,
and address the instability of commodity prices and declining terms of trade,
as well as strengthen the activities covered by the Second Account of the
Common Fund for Commodities to support sustainable development.
90. Enhance the benefits for developing countries, as well as
countries with economies in transition, from trade liberalization, including
through public-private partnerships, through, inter alia, action at all levels,
including through financial support for technical assistance, the development
of technology and capacity-building to developing countries to:
(a) Enhance trade
infrastructure and strengthen institutions;
(b) Increase
developing country capacity to diversify and increase exports to cope with the
instability of commodity prices and declining terms of trade;
(c) Increase the
value added of developing country exports.
91. Continue to enhance the mutual supportiveness of trade, environment
and development with a view to achieving sustainable development through
actions at all levels to:
(a) Encourage the
WTO Committee on Trade and Environment and the WTO Committee on Trade and
Development, within their respective mandates, to each act as a forum to
identify and debate developmental and environmental aspects of the
negotiations, in order to help achieve an outcome which benefits sustainable
development in accordance with the commitments made under the Doha Ministerial
Declaration;
(b) Support the
completion of the work programme of the Doha Ministerial Declaration on
subsidies so as to promote sustainable development and enhance the environment,
and encourage reform of subsidies that have considerable negative effects on
the environment and are incompatible with sustainable development;
(c) Encourage
efforts to promote cooperation on trade, environment and development, including
in the field of providing technical assistance to developing countries, between
the secretariats of WTO, UNCTAD, UNDP, UNEP and other relevant international
environmental and development and regional organizations;
(d) Encourage the
voluntary use of environmental impact assessments as an important
national-level tool to better identify trade, environment and development
interlinkages. Further encourage countries and international organizations with
experience in this field to provide technical assistance to developing
countries for these purposes.
92. Promote mutual supportiveness between the multilateral trading
system and the multilateral environmental agreements, consistent with
sustainable development goals, in support of the work programme agreed through
WTO, while recognizing the importance of maintaining the integrity of both sets
of instruments.
93. Complement and support the Doha Ministerial Declaration and the
Monterrey Consensus by undertaking further action at the national, regional and
international levels, including through public/private partnerships, to enhance
the benefits, in particular for developing countries as well as for countries
with economies in transition, of trade liberalization, through, inter alia,
actions at all levels to:
(a) Establish and
strengthen existing trade and cooperation agreements, consistent with the
multilateral trading system, with a view to achieving sustainable development;
(b) Support
voluntary WTO compatible market-based initiatives for the creation and
expansion of domestic and international markets for environmentally friendly
goods and services, including organic products, which maximize environmental
and developmental benefits through, inter alia, capacity-building and technical
assistance to developing countries;
(c) Support measures
to simplify and make more transparent domestic regulations and procedures that
affect trade so as to assist exporters, particularly those from developing
countries.
94. Address the public health problems affecting many developing and
least developed countries, especially those resulting from HIV/AIDS,
tuberculosis, malaria and other epidemics, while noting the importance of the
Doha Declaration on the TRIPS Agreement and Public Health, in which it has been
agreed that the TRIPS Agreement does not and should not prevent WTO members
from taking measures to protect public health. Accordingly, while reiterating
our commitment to the TRIPS Agreement, we reaffirm that the Agreement can and
should be interpreted and implemented in a manner supportive of WTO members’
right to protect public health and in particular to promote access to medicines
for all.
95. States should cooperate to promote a supportive and open
international economic system that would lead to economic growth and
sustainable development in all countries to better address the problems of environmental
degradation. Trade policy measures for environmental purposes should not
constitute a means of arbitrary or unjustifiable discrimination or a disguised
restriction on international trade. Unilateral actions to deal with
environmental challenges outside the jurisdiction of the importing country
should be avoided. Environmental measures addressing transboundary or global
environmental problems should, as far as possible, be based on an international
consensus.
96. Take steps with a view to the avoidance of and refrain from any
unilateral measure not in accordance with international law and the Charter of
the United Nations that impedes the full achievement of economic and social
development by the population of the affected countries, in particular women
and children, that hinders their well-being and that creates obstacles to the
full enjoyment of their human rights, including the right of everyone to a
standard of living adequate for their health and well-being and their right to
food, medical care and the necessary social services. Ensure that food and
medicine are not used as tools for political pressure.
97. Take further effective measures to remove obstacles to the
realization of the right of peoples to self-determination, in particular peoples
living under colonial and foreign occupation, which continue to adversely
affect their economic and social development and are incompatible with the
dignity and worth of the human person and must be combated and eliminated.
People under foreign occupation must be protected in accordance with the
provisions of international humanitarian law.
98. In accordance with the Declaration on Principles of International
Law concerning Friendly Relations and Cooperation among States in accordance
with the Charter of the United Nations, this shall not be construed as
authorizing or encouraging any action which would dismember or impair, totally
or in part, the territorial integrity or political unity of sovereign and
independent States conducting themselves in compliance with the principle of
equal rights and self-determination of peoples and thus possessed of a
Government representing the whole people belonging to the territory without
distinction of any kind.
* * *
99. Promote, facilitate and finance, as appropriate, access to and the
development, transfer and diffusion of environmentally sound technologies and
corresponding know-how, in particular to developing countries and countries
with economies in transition on favourable terms, including on concessional and
preferential terms, as mutually agreed, as set out in chapter 34 of Agenda 21,
including through urgent actions at all levels to:
(a) Provide
information more effectively;
(b) Enhance existing
national institutional capacity in developing countries to improve access to
and the development, transfer and diffusion of environmentally sound
technologies and corresponding know-how;
(c) Facilitate
country-driven technology needs assessments;
(d) Establish legal
and regulatory frameworks in both supplier and recipient countries that
expedite the transfer of environmentally sound technologies in a cost-effective
manner by both public and private sectors and support their implementation;
(e) Promote the
access and transfer of technology related to early warning systems and to
mitigation programmes to developing countries affected by natural disasters.
100. Improve the transfer of technologies to developing countries, in
particular at the bilateral and regional levels, including through urgent
actions at all levels to:
(a) Improve
interaction and collaboration, stakeholder relationships and networks between
and among universities, research institutions, government agencies and the
private sector;
(b) Develop and
strengthen networking of related institutional support structures, such as
technology and productivity centres, research, training and development
institutions, and national and regional cleaner production centres;
(c) Create
partnerships conducive to investment and technology transfer, development and
diffusion, to assist developing countries, as well as countries with economies
in transition, in sharing best practices and promoting programmes of
assistance, and encourage collaboration between corporations and research
institutes to enhance industrial efficiency, agricultural productivity,
environmental management and competitiveness;
(d) Provide
assistance to developing countries, as well as countries with economies in
transition, in accessing environmentally sound technologies that are publicly
owned or in the public domain, as well as available knowledge in the public
domain on science and technology, and in accessing the know-how and expertise
required in order for them to make independent use of this knowledge in
pursuing their development goals;
(e) Support existing
mechanisms and, where appropriate, establish new mechanisms for the
development, transfer and diffusion of environmentally sound technologies to
developing countries and economies in transition.
* * *
101. Assist developing countries in building capacity to access a
larger share of multilateral and global research and development programmes. In
this regard, strengthen and, where appropriate, create centres for sustainable
development in developing countries.
102. Build greater capacity in science and technology for sustainable
development, with action to improve collaboration and partnerships on research
and development and their widespread application among research institutions,
universities, the private sector, governments, NGOs and networks, as well as
between and among scientists and academics of developing and developed
countries, and in this regard encourage networking with and between centres of
scientific excellence in developing countries.
103. Improve policy and decision-making at all levels through, inter
alia, improved collaboration between natural and social scientists, and between
scientists and policy makers, including through urgent actions at all levels
to:
(a) Increase the
use of scientific knowledge and technology, and increase the beneficial use of
local and indigenous knowledge in a manner respectful of the holders of that
knowledge and consistent with national law;
(b) Make greater
use of integrated scientific assessments, risk assessments and interdisciplinary
and intersectoral approaches;
(c) Continue to
support and collaborate with international scientific assessments supporting
decision-making, including the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, with
the broad participation of developing country experts;
(d) Assist
developing countries in developing and implementing science and technology
policies;
(e) Establish
partnerships between scientific, public and private institutions, and by
integrating scientists’ advice into decision-making bodies in order to ensure a
greater role for science, technology development and engineering sectors;
(f) Promote and
improve science-based decision-making and reaffirm the precautionary approach
as set out in principle 15 of the Rio Declaration on Environment and
Development, which states:
“In order to protect the
environment, the precautionary approach shall be widely applied by States
according to their capabilities. Where there are threats of serious or
irreversible damage, lack of full scientific certainty shall not be used as a
reason for postponing cost-effective measures to prevent environmental
degradation.”
104. Assist developing countries, through international cooperation,
in enhancing their capacity in their efforts to address issues pertaining to
environmental protection including in their formulation and implementation of
policies for environmental management and protection, including through urgent
actions at all levels to:
(a) Improve their
use of science and technology for environmental monitoring, assessment models,
accurate databases and integrated information systems;
(b) Promote and,
where appropriate, improve their use of satellite technologies for quality data
collection, verification and updating, and further improvement of aerial and
ground-based observations, in support of their efforts to collect quality,
accurate, long-term, consistent and reliable data;
(c) Set up and,
where appropriate, further develop national statistical services capable of
providing sound data on science education and research and development
activities that are necessary for effective science and technology
policy-making.
105. Establish regular channels between policy makers and the
scientific community for requesting and receiving science and technology advice
for the implementation of Agenda 21, and create and strengthen networks for
science and education for sustainable development, at all levels, with the aim
of sharing knowledge, experience and best practices and building scientific
capacities, particularly in developing countries.
106. Use information and communication technologies, where
appropriate, as tools to increase the frequency of communication and the
sharing of experience and knowledge, and to improve the quality of and access
to information and communications technology in all countries, building on the
work facilitated by the United Nations Information and Communications
Technology Task Force and the efforts of other relevant international and
regional forums.
107. Support publicly funded research and development entities to
engage in strategic alliances for the purpose of enhancing research and
development to achieve cleaner production and product technologies, through,
inter alia, the mobilization from all sources of adequate financial and
technical resources, including new and additional resources, and encourage the
transfer and diffusion of those technologies, in particular to developing
countries.
108. Examine issues of global public interest through open, transparent
and inclusive workshops to promote a better public understanding of such
questions.
108.bis. Further resolve to take concerted action against
international terrorism, which causes serious obstacles to sustainable
development.
* * *
109. Education is critical for promoting sustainable development. It
is therefore essential to mobilize necessary resources, including financial
resources at all levels, by bilateral and multilateral donors, including the
World Bank and the regional development banks, by civil society and by
foundations, to complement the efforts by national governments to pursue the
following goals and actions:
(a) Meet the
development goal contained in the Millennium Declaration of achieving universal
primary education, ensuring that, by 2015, children everywhere, boys and girls
alike, will be able to complete a full course of primary schooling;
(b) Provide all
children, particularly those living in rural areas and those living in poverty,
especially girls, with the access and opportunity to complete a full course of
primary education;
110. Provide financial assistance and support to education, research,
public awareness programmes and developmental institutions in developing
countries and countries with economies in transition in order to:
(a) Sustain their
educational infrastructures and programmes, including those related to
environment and public health education;
(b) Consider means
of avoiding the frequent, serious financial constraints faced by many
institutions of higher learning, including universities around the world,
particularly in developing countries and countries in transition.
111. Address the impact of HIV/AIDS on the educational system in those
countries seriously affected by the pandemic.
112. Allocate national and international resources for basic education
as proposed by the Dakar Framework for Action on Education for All and for
improved integration of sustainable development into education and in bilateral
and multilateral development programmes, and improve integration between
publicly funded research and development and development programmes.
113. Eliminate gender disparity in primary and secondary education by
2005, as provided in the Dakar Framework for Action on Education for All, and
at all levels of education no later than 2015, to meet the development goals
contained in the Millennium Declaration, with action to ensure, inter alia,
equal access to all levels and forms of education, training and
capacity-building by gender mainstreaming, and by creating a gender-sensitive
educational system.
114. Integrate sustainable development into education systems at all
levels of education in order to promote education as a key agent for change.
115. Develop, implement, monitor and review education action plans and
programmes at the national, subnational and local levels, as appropriate, that
reflect the Dakar Framework for Action on Education for All and that are
relevant to local conditions and needs leading to the achievement of community
development, and make education for sustainable development a part of those
plans.
116. Provide all community members with a wide range of formal and
non-formal continuing educational opportunities, including volunteer community
service programmes, in order to end illiteracy and emphasize the importance of
lifelong learning and promote sustainable development.
117. Support the use of education to promote sustainable development,
including through urgent actions at all levels to:
(a) Integrate
information and communications technology in school curriculum development to
ensure its access by both rural and urban communities, and provide assistance
particularly to developing countries, inter alia, for the establishment of an
appropriate enabling environment required for such technology;
(b) Promote, as
appropriate, affordable and increased access to programmes for students,
researchers and engineers from developing countries in the universities and
research institutions of developed countries in order to promote the exchange
of experience and capacity that will benefit all partners;
(c) Continue to
implement the work programme of the Commission on Sustainable Development on
education for sustainable development;
(d) Recommend to
the United Nations General Assembly that it consider adopting a decade of
education for sustainable development, starting in 2005.
* * *
118. Enhance and accelerate human, institutional and infrastructure
capacity-building initiatives, and promote partnerships in that regard that
respond to the specific needs of developing countries in the context of
sustainable development.
119. Support local, national, subregional and regional initiatives,
with action to develop, use and adapt knowledge and techniques and to enhance
local, national, subregional and regional centres of excellence for education,
research and training in order to strengthen the knowledge capacity of
developing countries and countries with economies in transition through, inter
alia, the mobilization from all sources of adequate financial and other
resources, including new and additional resources;
119.bis Provide technical and financial assistance
to developing countries, including through the strengthening of
capacity-building efforts, such as the United Nations Development Programme
capacity 21 programme, to:
(a) Assess their
own capacity development needs and opportunities at the individual,
institutional and societal levels;
(b) Design
programmes for capacity-building and support for local, national and
community-level programmes that focus on meeting the challenges of
globalization more effectively and attaining the internationally agreed
development goals, including those contained in the Millennium Declaration;
(c) Develop the
capacity of civil society, including youth, to participate, as appropriate, in
designing, implementing and reviewing sustainable development policies and
strategies at all levels;
(d) Build and,
where appropriate, strengthen national capacities for carrying out effective
implementation of Agenda 21.
* * *
119.ter Ensure access, at the national level, to
environmental information and judicial and administrative proceedings in
environmental matters, as well as public participation in decision-making, so
as to further principle 10 of the Rio Declaration on Environment and
Development, taking into full account principles 5, 7 and 11 of the
Declaration.
119.quater Strengthen national and regional information
and statistical and analytical services relevant to sustainable development
policies and programmes, including data disaggregated by sex, age and other
factors, and encourage donors to provide financial and technical support to
developing countries to enhance their capacity to formulate policies and
implement programmes for sustainable development.
119.quinquies Encourage further work on indicators for
sustainable development by countries at the national level, including
integration of gender aspects, on a voluntary basis, in line with national
conditions and priorities.
119.sexties Promote further work on indicators, in
conformity with paragraph 3 of decision 9/4 of the Commission on Sustainable
Development.
119.septies Promote the development and wider use of
earth observation technologies, including satellite remote sensing, global
mapping and geographic information systems, to collect quality data on
environmental impacts, land use and land-use changes, including through urgent
actions at all levels to:
(a) Strengthen
cooperation and coordination among global observing systems and research
programmes for integrated global observations, taking into account the need for
building capacity and sharing of data from ground-based observations, satellite
remote sensing and other sources among all countries;
(b) Develop
information systems that make the sharing of valuable data possible, including
the active exchange of Earth observation data;
(c) Encourage
initiatives and partnerships for global mapping.
119.octies Support countries, particularly developing
countries, in their national efforts to:
(a) Collect data
that are accurate, long-term, consistent and reliable;
(b) Use satellite
and remote-sensing technologies for data collection and further improvement of
ground-based observations;
(c) Access, explore
and use geographic information by utilizing the technologies of satellite
remote sensing, satellite global positioning, mapping and geographic
information systems.
119.noviens Support efforts to prevent and mitigate the
impacts of natural disasters, including through urgent actions at all levels
to:
(a) Provide
affordable access to disaster-related information for early warning purposes;
(b) Translate
available data, particularly from global meteorological observation systems,
into timely and useful products.
119.diciens Develop and promote the wider application of
environmental impact assessments, inter alia, as a national instrument, as
appropriate, to provide essential decision-support information on projects that
could cause significant adverse effects to the environment.
119.undeciens Promote and further develop methodologies
at policy, strategy and project levels for sustainable development
decision-making at the local and national levels, and where relevant at the
regional level. In this regard, emphasize that the choice of the appropriate
methodology to be used in countries should be adequate to their
country-specific conditions and circumstances, should be on a voluntary basis
and should conform to their development priority needs.
X. Institutional framework for sustainable development
120. An effective institutional framework for sustainable development
at all levels is key to the full implementation of Agenda 21, the follow-up to
the outcomes of the World Summit on Sustainable Development and meeting
emerging sustainable development challenges. Measures aimed at strengthening
such a framework should build on the provisions of Agenda 21 as well as the
1997 Programme for its further implementation and the principles of the Rio
Declaration on Environment and Development and should promote the achievement
of the internationally agreed development goals, including those contained in
the Millennium Declaration, taking into account the Monterrey Consensus and
relevant outcomes of other major United Nations conferences and international
agreements since 1992. It should be responsive to the needs of all countries,
taking into account the specific needs of developing countries including the
means of implementation. It should lead to the strengthening of international
bodies and organizations dealing with sustainable development, while respecting
their existing mandates, as well as to the strengthening of relevant regional,
national and local institutions.
120.bis. Good governance is essential for
sustainable development. Sound economic policies, solid democratic institutions
responsive to the needs of the people and improved infrastructure are the basis
for sustained economic growth, poverty eradication, and employment
creation. Freedom, peace and security,
domestic stability, respect for human rights, including the right to
development, and the rule of law, gender equality, market-oriented policies,
and an overall commitment to just and democratic societies are also essential
and mutually reinforcing.
Objectives
121. Measures to strengthen sustainable development institutional
arrangements at all levels should be taken within the framework of Agenda 21[1]
and should build on developments since UNCED, and should lead to the
achievement of, inter alia, the following objectives:
(a) Strengthening
commitments to sustainable development;
(b) Integration of
the economic, social and environmental dimensions of sustainable development in
a balanced manner;
(c) Strengthening
of the implementation of Agenda 21, including through the mobilization of financial
and technological resources, as well as capacity-building programmes,
particularly for developing countries;
(d) Strengthening
coherence, coordination and monitoring;
(e) Promoting the
rule of law and strengthening of governmental institutions;
(f) Increasing
effectiveness and efficiency through limiting overlap and duplication of
activities of international organizations, within and outside the United
Nations system, based on their mandates and comparative advantages;
(g) Enhancing participation
and effective involvement of civil society and other relevant stakeholders in
the implementation of Agenda 21, as well as promoting transparency and broad
public participation;
(h) Strengthening
capacities for sustainable development at all levels, including the local
level, in particular those of developing countries;
(i) Strengthening
international cooperation aimed at reinforcing the implementation of Agenda 21
and the outcomes of the Summit.
Strengthening the institutional
framework for sustainable development at the international level
122. The international community should:
(a) Enhance the
integration of sustainable development goals as reflected in Agenda 21 and
support for implementation of Agenda 21 and the outcomes of the Summit into the
policies, work programmes and operational guidelines of relevant United Nations
agencies, programmes and funds, GEF and international financial and trade
institutions within their mandates, while stressing that their activities
should take full account of national programmes and priorities, particularly
those of developing countries, as well as, where appropriate, countries with
economies in transition, to achieve sustainable development;
(b) Strengthen
collaboration within and between the United Nations system, international
financial institutions, the Global Environment Facility and WTO, utilizing the
United Nations Chief Executives Board for Coordination (CEB), the United
Nations Development Group, the Environment Management Group and other inter-agency
coordinating bodies. Strengthened inter-agency collaboration should be pursued
in all relevant contexts, with special emphasis on the operational level and
involving partnership arrangements on specific issues to support, in
particular, developing countries’ efforts in implementing Agenda 21;
(c) Strengthen and
better integrate the three dimensions of sustainable development policies and
programmes, and promote the full integration of sustainable development
objectives into programmes and policies of bodies that have a primary focus on
social issues. In particular, the social dimension of sustainable development
should be strengthened, inter alia, by emphasizing follow-up to the outcomes of
the World Summit for Social Development and its five-year review, and taking
into account their reports, and by support to social protection systems;
(d) Fully implement
the outcomes of decision I on international environmental governance adopted by
the UNEP Governing Council at its seventh special session, and invite the
General Assembly at its fifty-seventh session to consider the important but
complex issue of establishing universal membership for the Governing
Council/Global Ministerial Environment Forum;
(e) Engage actively
and constructively in ensuring the timely completion of the negotiations on a
comprehensive United Nations convention against corruption, including the
question of repatriation of funds illicitly acquired to countries of origin;
(f) Promote
corporate responsibility and accountability and the exchange of best practices
in the context of sustainable development, including, as appropriate, through
multi-stakeholder dialogue, such as through the Commission on Sustainable
Development, and other initiatives;
(g) Take concrete
action to implement the Monterrey Consensus at all levels.
123. Good governance at the international level is fundamental for
achieving sustainable development. In order to ensure a dynamic and enabling
international economic environment, it is important to promote global economic
governance through addressing the international finance, trade, technology and
investment patterns that have an impact on the development prospects of
developing countries. To this effect, the international community should take
all necessary and appropriate measures, including ensuring support for
structural and macroeconomic reform, a comprehensive solution to the external
debt problem and increasing market access for developing countries. Efforts to
reform the international financial architecture need to be sustained with
greater transparency and the effective participation of developing countries in
decision-making processes. A universal, rule-based, open, non-discriminatory
and equitable multilateral trading system, as well as meaningful trade
liberalization, can substantially stimulate development worldwide, benefiting
countries at all stages of development.
124. A vibrant and effective United Nations system is fundamental to
the promotion of international cooperation for sustainable development and to a
global economic system that works for all. To this effect, a firm commitment to
the ideals of the United Nations and to the principles of international law and
those enshrined in the Charter of the United Nations, and to strengthening the
United Nations system and other multilateral institutions and promoting the
improvement of their operations, is essential. States should also fulfil their
commitment to negotiate and finalize as soon as possible a United Nations
convention against corruption in all its aspects, including the question of
repatriation of funds illicitly acquired to countries of origin and also to
promoting stronger cooperation to eliminate money-laundering.
Role of the General Assembly
125. The General Assembly of the United Nations should adopt
sustainable development as a key element of the overarching framework for
United Nations activities, particularly for achieving the internationally
agreed development goals, including those contained in the Millennium Declaration,
and should give overall political direction to the implementation of Agenda 21
and its review.
Role of the Economic and Social Council
126. Pursuant to the relevant provisions of the Charter of the United
Nations and Agenda 21 provisions regarding the Economic and Social Council and
General Assembly resolutions 48/162 and 50/227, which reaffirmed the Council as
the central mechanism for the coordination of the United Nations system and its
specialized agencies and supervision of subsidiary bodies, in particular its
functional commissions, and to promote the implementation of Agenda 21 by
strengthening system-wide coordination, the Council should:
(a) Increase its
role in overseeing system-wide coordination and the balanced integration of
economic, social and environmental aspects of United Nations policies and
programmes aimed at promoting sustainable development;
(b) Organize
periodic consideration of sustainable development themes in regard to the
implementation of Agenda 21, including the means of implementation.
Recommendations in regard to such themes could be made by the Commission on
Sustainable Development;
(c) Make full use
of its high-level, coordination, operational activities and the general
segments to effectively take into account all relevant aspects of the work of
the United Nations on sustainable development. In this context, the Council
should encourage the active participation of major groups in its high-level
segment and the work of its relevant functional commissions, in accordance with
the respective rules of procedure;
(d) Promote greater
coordination, complementarity, effectiveness and efficiency of activities of
its functional commissions and other subsidiary bodies that are relevant to the
implementation of Agenda 21;
(e) Terminate the
work of the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources for Development and
transfer its work to the Commission on Sustainable Development;
(f) Ensure that
there is a close link between the role of the Council in the follow-up to the
Summit and its role in the follow-up to the Monterrey Consensus, in a sustained
and coordinated manner. To that end, the Council should explore ways to develop
arrangements relating to its meetings with the Bretton Woods institutions and
WTO, as set out in the Monterrey Consensus;
(g) Intensify its
efforts to ensure that gender mainstreaming is an integral part of its
activities concerning the coordinated implementation of Agenda 21.
Role and function of the Commission on Sustainable
Development
127. The Commission on Sustainable Development should continue to be
the high-level commission on sustainable development within the United Nations
system and serve as a forum for consideration of issues related to integration
of the three dimensions of sustainable development. Although the role,
functions and mandate of the Commission as set out in relevant parts of Agenda
21 and adopted in General Assembly resolution 47/191 continue to be relevant,
the Commission needs to be strengthened, taking into account the role of
relevant institutions and organizations. An enhanced role of the Commission
should include reviewing and monitoring progress in the implementation of
Agenda 21 and fostering coherence of implementation, initiatives and
partnerships.
128. Within that context, the Commission should give more emphasis on
actions that enable implementation at all levels, including promoting and
facilitating partnerships involving Governments, international organizations
and relevant stakeholders for the implementation of Agenda 21.
129. The Commission should:
(a) Review and
evaluate progress and promote further implementation of Agenda 21;
(b) Focus on the
cross-sectoral aspects of specific sectoral issues and provide a forum for
better integration of policies, including through interaction among Ministers
dealing with the various dimensions and sectors of sustainable development
through the high-level segments;
(c) Address new
challenges and opportunities related to the implementation of Agenda 21;
(d) Focus on
actions related to implementation of Agenda 21, limiting negotiations in the
sessions of the Commission to every two years;
(e) Limit the
number of themes addressed in each session.
130. In relation to its role in facilitating implementation, the Commission
should emphasize the following:
(a) Review progress
and promote the further implementation of Agenda 21. In this context, the
Commission should identify constraints on implementation and make
recommendations to overcome those constraints;
(b) Serve as a
focal point for the discussion of partnerships that promote sustainable
development, including sharing lessons learned, progress made and best
practices;
(c) Review issues
related to financial assistance and transfer of technology for sustainable
development, as well as capacity-building, while making full use of existing
information. In this regard, the Commission on Sustainable Development could
give consideration to more effective use of national reports and regional
experience and to this end make appropriate recommendations;
(d) Provide a forum
for analysis and exchange of experience on measures that assist sustainable
development planning, decision-making and the implementation of sustainable
development strategies. In this regard, the Commission could give consideration
to more effective use of national and regional reports;
(e) Take into
account significant legal developments in the field of sustainable development,
with due regard to the role of relevant intergovernmental bodies in promoting
the implementation of Agenda 21 relating to international legal instruments and
mechanisms.
131. With regard to the practical modalities and programme of work of
the Commission, specific decisions on those issues should be taken by the
Commission at its next session, when the Commission’s thematic work programme
will be elaborated. In particular, the following issues should be considered:
(a) Giving a
balanced consideration to implementation of all of the mandates of the
Commission contained in General Assembly resolution 47/191;
(b) Continuing to
provide for more direct and substantive involvement of international
organizations and major groups in the work of the Commission;
(c) Give greater
consideration to the scientific contributions to sustainable development
through, for example, drawing on the scientific community and encouraging
national, regional and international scientific networks to be involved in the
Commission;
(d) Furthering the
contribution of educators to sustainable development, including, where
appropriate, in the activities of the Commission;
(e) The scheduling
and duration of intersessional meetings.
132. Undertake further measures to promote best practices and lessons
learned in sustainable development, and in addition promote the use of
contemporary methods of data collection and dissemination, including broader
use of information technologies.
Role of international institutions
133. Stress the need for international institutions both within and
outside the United Nations system, including international financial
institutions, WTO and GEF, to enhance, within their mandates, their cooperative
efforts to:
(a) Promote
effective and collective support to the implementation of Agenda 21 at all
levels;
(b) Enhance the
effectiveness and coordination of international institutions to implement
Agenda 21, the outcomes of the World Summit on Sustainable Development,
relevant sustainable development aspects of the Millennium Declaration, the
Monterrey Consensus and the outcomes of the fourth WTO ministerial meeting,
held in Doha in November 2001.
134. Request the Secretary-General of the United Nations, utilizing
the United Nations System Chief Executives Board for Coordination, including
through informal collaborative efforts, to further promote system-wide
inter-agency cooperation and coordination on sustainable development, to take
appropriate measures to facilitate exchange of information, and to continue to
keep the Economic and Social Council and the Commission informed of actions
being taken to implement Agenda 21.
135. Significantly strengthen support for UNDP capacity-building
programmes for sustainable development, building on the experience gained from
Capacity 21, as important mechanisms for supporting local and national
development capacity-building efforts, in particular in developing countries.
136. Strengthen cooperation among UNEP and other United Nations bodies
and specialized agencies, the Bretton Woods institutions and WTO, within their
mandates.
137. UNEP, UN-Habitat, UNDP and UNCTAD, within their mandates, should
strengthen their contribution to sustainable development programmes and the
implementation of Agenda 21 at all levels, particularly in the area of
promoting capacity-building.
138. To promote effective implementation of Agenda 21 at the
international level, the following should also be undertaken:
(a) Streamline the
international sustainable development meeting calendar and, as appropriate,
reduce the number of meetings, the length of meetings and the amount of time
spent on negotiated outcomes in favour of more time spent on practical matters
related to implementation;
(b) Encourage
partnership initiatives for implementation by all relevant actors to support
the outcome of the World Summit on Sustainable Development. In this context,
further development of partnerships and partnership follow-up should take note
of the preparatory work for the Summit;
(c) Make full use
of developments in the field of information and communication technologies.
[Paragraph 139 is deleted]
140. Strengthening of the international institutional framework for
sustainable development is an evolutionary process. It is necessary to keep
under review relevant arrangements; identify gaps; eliminate duplication of
functions; and continue to strive for greater integration, efficiency and
coordination of the economic, social and environmental dimensions of
sustainable development aiming at the implementation of Agenda 21.
Strengthening institutional
arrangements for sustainable development at the regional level
141. Implementation of Agenda 21 and the outcomes of the Summit should
be effectively pursued at the regional and subregional levels, through the
regional commissions and other regional and subregional institutions and
bodies.
142. Intraregional coordination and cooperation on sustainable
development should be improved among the regional commissions, United Nations
Funds, programmes and agencies, regional development banks, and other regional
and subregional institutions and bodies. This should include, as appropriate,
support for development, enhancement and implementation of agreed regional
sustainable development strategies and action plans, reflecting national and
regional priorities.
143. In particular and taking into account relevant provisions of
Agenda 21, the regional commissions, in collaboration with other regional
and subregional bodies, should:
(a) Promote the
integration of the three dimensions of sustainable development into their work
in a balanced way, including through implementation of Agenda 21. To this end,
the regional commissions should enhance their capacity through internal action
and be provided, as appropriate, with external support;
(b) Facilitate and
promote a balanced integration of the economic, social and environmental
dimensions of sustainable development into the work of regional, subregional
and other bodies, for example by facilitating and strengthening the exchange of
experiences, including national experience, best practices, case studies and
partnership experience related to the implementation of Agenda 21;
(c) Assist in the
mobilization of technical and financial assistance, and facilitate the
provision of adequate financing for the implementation of regionally and subregionally
agreed sustainable development programmes and projects, including addressing
the objective of poverty eradication;
(d) Continue to
promote multi-stakeholder participation and encourage partnerships to support
the implementation of Agenda 21 at the regional and subregional levels.
144. Regionally and subregionally agreed sustainable development
initiatives and programmes, such as the New Partnership for Africa’s
Development (NEPAD) and the interregional aspects of the globally agreed
Programme of Action for the Sustainable Development of Small Island Developing
States, should be supported.
Strengthening institutional
frameworks for sustainable development at the national level
145. States should:
(a) Continue to
promote coherent and coordinated approaches to institutional frameworks for
sustainable development at all national levels, including through, as
appropriate, the establishment or strengthening of existing authorities and
mechanisms necessary for policy-making, coordination and implementation and
enforcement of laws;
(b) Take immediate
steps to make progress in the formulation and elaboration of national
strategies for sustainable development and begin their implementation by 2005.
To this end, as appropriate, strategies should be supported through
international cooperation, taking into account the special needs of developing
countries, in particular the least developed countries. Such strategies, which,
where applicable, could be formulated as poverty reduction strategies that
integrate economic, social and environmental aspects of sustainable
development, should be pursued in accordance with each country’s national
priorities.
146. Each country has the primary responsibility for its own
sustainable development, and the role of national policies and development
strategies cannot be overemphasized. All countries should promote sustainable
development at the national level by, inter alia, enacting and enforcing clear
and effective laws that support sustainable development. All countries should
strengthen governmental institutions, including by providing necessary
infrastructure and by promoting transparency, accountability and fair
administrative and judicial institutions.
146.bis All countries should also promote public
participation, including through measures that provide access to information
regarding legislation, regulations, activities, policies and programmes. They
should also foster full public participation in sustainable development policy
formulation and implementation. Women should be able to participate fully and
equally in policy formulation and decision-making.
147. Further promote the establishment or enhancement of sustainable
development councils and/or coordination structures at the national level,
including at the local level, in order to provide a high-level focus on
sustainable development policies. In that context, multi-stakeholder
participation should be promoted.
148. Support efforts by all countries, particularly developing
countries, as well as countries with economies in transition, to enhance
national institutional arrangements for sustainable development, including at
the local level. That could include promoting cross-sectoral approaches in the
formulation of strategies and plans for sustainable development, such as, where
applicable, poverty reduction strategies, aid coordination, encouraging
participatory approaches and enhancing policy analysis, management capacity and
implementation capacity, including mainstreaming a gender perspective in all
those activities.
149. Enhance the role and capacity of local authorities as well as
stakeholders in implementing Agenda 21 and the outcomes of the Summit and in
strengthening the continuing support for local Agenda 21 programmes and
associated initiatives and partnerships, and encourage, in particular,
partnerships among and between local authorities and other levels of government
and stakeholders to advance sustainable development as called for in, inter
alia, the Habitat Agenda.
Participation of major groups
150. Enhance partnerships between governmental and non-governmental
actors, including all major groups, as well as volunteer groups, on programmes
and activities for the achievement of sustainable development at all levels.
[Paragraph 151 is deleted]
152. Acknowledge the consideration being given to the possible
relationship between environment and human rights, including the right to
development, with full and transparent participation of Member States of the
United Nations and observer States.
153. Promote and support youth participation in programmes and
activities relating to sustainable development through, for example, supporting
local youth councils or their equivalent, and by encouraging their
establishment where they do not exist.
* Because the structure of chapter V was
changed in the course of negotiations so that its paragraph numbering no longer
corresponds to the earlier version contained in document A/CONF.199/L.1, Latin
ordinal numbers (bis, ter etc.) are used after paragraph 45 until the end of
the chapter in order not to disrupt the paragraph numbering of subsequent
chapters which were not so changed.
* Because the structure of chapter IX was changed in
the course of negotiations, so that its paragraph numbering no longer corresponds to the earlier version contained
in document A/CONF.199/L.1, Latin ordinal numbers (bis, ter etc.) are used
after paragraph 119 until the end of the chapter in order not to disrupt the
paragraph numbering of the following chapter, which was not so changed.
[1] References
in the present chapter to Agenda 21 are deemed to include Agenda 21, the
Programme for the Further Implementation of Agenda 21 and the outcomes of the
Summit.