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ESPM 169 Lecture, September 5, 2002

  1. Group Exercise:

"The ExCOP reviewed a Non-Paper in a Vienna Setting, while arguing about the route to AIA and whether LMO-FFPs is too broad."

2. Is a treaty just a piece of paper?

- US (current) cf. European view of international governance

3. Stockholm and Rio

To date, three "big events" dominate GEP:

1972: UN Conference on the Human Environment, Stockholm - environment

1992: UNCED - Rio de Janeiro - environment and development

2002: WSSD - sustainable development

Stockholm:

 important because it set a precedent for years to come - in particular the conference/multilateral mode of negotiation and meeting

 sponsored by the UN

 lead to creation of UNEP (under leadership of Maurice Strong)

Yielded the following unprecedented result:

114 nations (USSR and Eastern Europe voluntarily absent) agreed on a declaration of principles and plan of action on 4 issues:

human settlement

natural resources

pollution

conflict/balance between environment and development

Overall: vague, and long on shoulds, short on hows, but still:

- reflected substantial commitment by member countries

- marked, as some argue, a shift away from states towards peoples, international agencies

- introduced concept of "merged", or "collective" sovereignty - stronger than cooperation

- institutional innovations - UNEP - Nairobi

- set pattern for years to come:

- multilateral negotiations

- C-P method

- UNEP sponsorship

Then, a long road to UNCED in Rio 1992 - The Earth Summit

- gradual widening of interest

- greater realization of vulnerability

- OPEC, Chernobyl, hole in ozone layer, increasingly compelling evidence of CC

- tremendous activist role from UNEP: hosting scientific meetings, disseminating information

- growth in NGOs: 134 at Stockholm - 1400 at Rio

- growth in environmental agreements

June 1992 Earth Summit

December 1989: UN General Assembly decided to call an "Earth Summit"

- negotiations began on FCCC and CBD to have them ready for signature at the Convention

- also desertification (led to convention), set of forest principles

- Agenda 21 on Sustainability: an action plan

- Rio Declaration

At Rio: 150 states present, including 135 heads of state; 45,000 people, reps from 1500 NGOs

- parallel conference of NGOs

 US a highly reluctant participant - presidential election that year

Impact of Rio: ambiguous but overall a positive

Rio, 1992 - Johannesburg, 2002

- lot of incremental work, some setbacks, some moves forward

- tremendous amount of activity: meetings all the time

- policy agenda dominated by N-S relations, climate change - also the emergence of trade agreements and regional integration - EU, NAFTA, WTO

- growing concern over equity issues

Kyoto, 1997:

most recent big meeting on CC, with lots at stake - need to draw up a protocol under the UN FCCC

- big divisions between N and S: India, China, Brazil

-US very divided between scientific and economic communities

4. Johannesburg: Rio + 10 - context of meeting

-not too great: US lack of interest, lack of progress in implementing early goals

-merging of various parts of the international community