Rio Summit: Governments Need To Find Their Vision & Hearing
Press release – for immediate release
Governments Need To Find Their Vision And Hearing As The Rio Summit Is Set To Start
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 19 June 2012 - Hours before Presidents and Prime Ministers arrive in Rio for the UN Conference on Sustainable Development on June 20 -22, the Brazilian government as hosts of the Conference have consolidated an outcome document. Unfortunately, the urge to deliver a final text has led to an across-the-board loss of meaningful proposals and a style of negotiation that resulted in a last-minute cancellation of the Swiss President.
“What we are witnessing here is not the new political commitment to sustainable development we worked so hard to generate: we have to fight to even keep the outcomes here at the same level as commitments and agreements made decades ago“, worries Ashok Khosla, Member of the World Future Council, who is also President of IUCN and the Club of Rome. “The negotiators in these rooms seem to be deaf to the scientific evidence pouring in all around them on issues ranging from rising poverty and resource depletion to loss of species and climate change. What is even more baffling, politically, is their blindness to the great support of their people to create development models fit for the future.“
In the preparations for the conference, assessments of the gaps between promises made by governments on Sustainable Development and their implementation resulted in clear recommendations for reform. These included significant upgrading of the United Nations Environment Programme, a new strong sustainability unit to improve the integration of single-issue policies, and Sustainable Development Goals. A High Commissioner for Future Generations to be established as a credible advocate in this new agenda, ensuring that the decisions taken today also respect the interests of those yet unborn, is currently in the balance.
“Of all these farsighted proposals only
skeletons are left. We have publicly expressed appreciation
for Brazil’s policy commitment to create a new legacy 20
years after the first Summit here, but most of the reforms
needed to do this have been shot down for fear of
controversy or are without proper negotiation or
consultation with civil society. We really hope that
Ministers from around the world will come here in the next
few days to speak up, re-open the text and fight for the
real “Future we Want,” urges Ashok Khosla, “otherwise,
we will have a Rio minus 20 rather than the Rio plus 20 we
were led to expect.”
World Future
Council
The World Future Council brings the
interests of future generations to the centre of
policy-making. Its 50 eminent members from around the globe
have already successfully promoted change. The Council
addresses challenges to our common future and provides
decision makers with effective policy solutions. The World
Future Council is registered as a charitable foundation in
Hamburg, Germany. For further information visit www.worldfuturecouncil.org
www.worldfuturecouncil.org
ENDS