Wednesday, June 13, 2012

RIO+20: INTERVIEW WITH HEAD OF THE UN SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT CONFERENCE

RIO+20: INTERVIEW WITH HEAD OF THE UN SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT CONFERENCE
New York, Jun 13 2012 6:10PM
Ahead of the UN Sustainable Development Conference (Rio+20), taking place in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil next week, from 20-22 June, the UN News Centre spoke with the Conference's Secretary-General, the Under-Secretary-General for Economic and Social Affairs, Sha Zukang, about the the main issues up for discussion, as well as his thoughts on what will make the Cconference a success.

<strong>UN News Centre: Why is Rio+20 important?</strong></p>

<strong>Sha Zukang:</strong> Rio+20 is where decisions on the future of our planet, our economies and our livelihoods – for the next 10 or 20 years – are going to be made. The world we live in today is not sustainable – socially, economically and environmentally. At Rio, world leaders need to renew their political commitments for sustainable development and adopt an ambitious and yet practical outcome that equals the magnitude of today's challenges. It cannot be another talk shop. </p>

In addition to the two main themes of the Conference – a green economy in the context of sustainable development and poverty eradication, and institutional framework for sustainable development – other priority areas are of critical importance such as green jobs, food security, sustainable energy, water access, oceans, sustainable cities and disaster risk reduction. </p>

The world is watching. Rio can deliver agreement on specific initiatives and commitments that can accelerate progress and advance well being. This can only happen by delivering actions, not just words.</p>

<strong>UN News Centre: With so much else happening around the world, how hard is it to get the world's attention to focus on Rio+20?</strong></p>

<strong>Sha Zukang:</strong> Rio+20 matters a great deal, especially with what is happening in the world today. Indeed, because of the world's problems, it cannot afford to miss this opportunity.</p>

<div id="EmbedPhotoLeft" style="width:190px;"><"/News/dh/photos/large/2012/June/maternal-health1.jpg" class="lightbox" title="Achieving good maternal health requires quality reproductive health services and a series of well-timed interventions to ensure a women's safe passage to motherhood. UN Photo" rel="gallery-default"><img class="Embed" src="/News/dh/photos/2012/June/maternal-health1.jpg" style="width:180px; height:120px;">
<p class="phtocaption2">Achieving good maternal health requires quality reproductive health services and a series of well-timed interventions to ensure a women's safe passage to motherhood. UN Photo</p>
</div>With its three pillars of social, economic and environmental, sustainable development is the only way to address a host of interlinked global challenges, and come up with balanced solutions. We are in an intensive period of negotiations and the pressure is on to deliver an action-oriented outcome in line with the magnitude of today's challenges. The current deteriorating environmental conditions, the deepening social inequities and the economic crisis bear testimony to a world profoundly in crisis.</p>

We also should not lose sight of the simple fact that over one-fifth of humanity is severely deprived, lacking basic goods and services. Yet, on the other hand, some 20 per cent of the world population is consuming 80 per cent of the natural resources. This is unsustainable. We need to change. We need action. My message is: come to Rio ready to commit.</p>

<strong>UN News Centre: What are some of the biggest challenges that will come up in the Rio+20 discussions?</strong></p>

<strong>Sha Zukang:</strong> First, Member States need to renew political commitment for sustainable development. This means reaffirming the principles agreed in 1992, and committing to honour them going forward.</p>

<div id="EmbedPhotoRight" style="width:190px;"><"/News/dh/photos/large/2011/October/451894-poverty.jpg" class="lightbox" title="Children in Kallayanpur slum, one of the urban slums in Dhaka. Around 28 per cent of all children in developing countries are estimated to be underweight or stunted. UN Photo/K. Park" rel="gallery-default"><img class="Embed" src="/News/dh/photos/2011/October/451894-poverty.jpg" style="width:180px; height:120px;">
<p class="phtocaption2">Children in Kallayanpur slum, one of the urban slums in Dhaka. Around 28 per cent of all children in developing countries are estimated to be underweight or stunted. UN Photo/K. Park</p>
</div>

A critical issue in the discussions is certainly a green economy in the context of sustainable development and poverty eradication. A green economy can be an important pathway to sustainable development, but it is vital that each country has the policy space to pursue its own green economy path. It is also important that countries agree that a green economy will not become a new barrier to trade or source of aid conditionalities – there is no one-size-fits-all approach.</p>

Another essential issue is the institutional framework for sustainable development. We must step up efforts to build stronger mechanisms for implementing sustainable development initiatives at all levels – local, national, regional and international.</p>

Overall, the negotiations underway need to focus on the fundamentals and deliver a blueprint that leaders will be proud to adopt at Rio.</p>

<strong>UN News Centre: What would be considered a successful outcome for the conference?</strong></p>

<div id="EmbedPhotoLeft" style="width:190px;"><"/News/dh/photos/large/2012/June/education1.jpg" class="lightbox" title="Enrolment in primary education has continued to rise, reaching 89 per cent in the developing world. But the pace of progress is insufficient to ensure that, by 2015, all girls and boys complete a full course of primary schooling. UN Photo" rel="gallery-default"><img class="Embed" src="/News/dh/photos/2012/June/education1.jpg" style="width:180px; height:150px;">
<p class="phtocaption2">Enrolment in primary education has continued to rise, reaching 89 per cent in the developing world. But the pace of progress is insufficient to ensure that, by 2015, all girls and boys complete a full course of primary schooling. UN Photo</p>
</div><strong>Sha Zukang:</strong> I would stress both participation, as well as political outcome. Over 135 Heads of State and Government are already inscribed to attend. This far exceeds the number of Heads of State who spoke at Rio in 1992 [108].</p>

But merely being present is not enough. We hope the Conference will adopt a focused political document, building on the Rio Principles, Agenda 21 and the Johannesburg Plan of Implementation. Rio must have an action document with clear steps forward, one that defines the implementation agenda for the next 10 or 20 years.</p>

So far, we have noted a broad and enthusiastic support for sustainable development goals (SDGs). These would complement the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), and they would be universal and measurable. In this regard, I am pleased to see that Member States are committed to a high level of ambition for Rio, anchored on action. Just to name a few issues, these could include universal access to modern energy, clean water, and eradication of hunger.</p>

<div id="FastFactsRight"><strong>Fast facts:</strong><ul>
<li>The name Rio+20 makes reference to the Rio Earth Summit held in 1992, also in Rio de Janeiro, which set out the principles of sustainable development</li>
<li>Agenda 21 is a comprehensive plan of action adopted at the Rio Earth Summit, to be taken globally, nationally and locally by organizations of the UN System, governments, and groups in every area in which humans directly affect the environment</li>
<li>The Johannesb
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