One Year to Earth Summit 2012: A New Generation Goes to Rio
Posted June 6, 2011 in Curbing Pollution, Moving Beyond Oil, Reviving the World's Oceans, Solving Global Warming
One year from this week, government leaders, civil society members and representatives of the business community will meet in Rio de Janeiro to discuss the future of the planet. The Earth Summit (also called Rio+20 after the first such global event in 1992) can help lead to a more prosperous world that utilizes natural resources more efficiently and responds to the needs of the most impacted communities of environmental degradation. But only if youth help write the story, and here’s why.
Rio 1992 was a watershed moment for the global environmental conscience. Treaties were signed, commissions created, and action plans drafted. Yet one of the most memorable speeches from the two-week conference was by a 12-year old girl (here’s what she’s doing now).
Now, a generation later, my generation is faced with two seemingly insurmountable challenges: the world is changing at a rate never before seen, and the current governance structures are insufficient to meet even the environmental problems of the 1970s.
NRDC Trustee and former UNDP head Gus Speth writes of his “generation of great talkers” in Global Environmental Challenges: “For the most part, we have analyzed, debated, discussed, and negotiated these issues endlessly…On action, however, we have fallen far short…The threatening global trends highlighted a quarter-century ago continue to this day.”
That’s why we’re looking for something different this time around. NRDC is inaugurating our Race to Rio campaign with an initial set of Earth Summit deliverables we would like to see heads of state, business executives and civil society leaders agree to (see more details and climate/energy asks). The criteria are simple, they must be specific and short-term; involve commitments to work together; and have robust monitoring and reporting provisions.
Actions and accountability
Fortunately, as I reported back from the last preparatory meeting, civil society is already focusing on the dual challenges of actions and accountability. This was reflected in submissions (pdf) to UN Sec-Gen Ban Ki-Moon’s High-Level Panel on Global Sustainability as well as recent calls for greater ambition.
We as civil society must channel this energy, however, neither wasting precious time pointing fingers at every unfulfilled promise of the last forty years nor demanding that our leaders commit to lofty ideals long after they will be out of office. NRDC President Frances Beinecke thinks we can learn from the Clinton Global Initiative, which has a unique track record for generating real actions on the ground.
As we contemplate what needs to be done in the next five to ten years, though, be sure: from now until Rio 2012 is the most important year. I uncovered a public service announcement from the run up to Rio 1992 calling on every American to send a telegram to the White House asking the U.S. to lead. We need the same passion and pragmatism guiding us toward Rio in 2012.
An open challenge to youth
Our new abilities to tear down planetary boundaries are only surpassed by our tools to tear down cultural and geographic boundaries.
It’s interesting to look at what’s happened in my generation – the generation of billions: we’ve added 1.3 billion new people to the planet (a billion in our cities), two billion internet users, five billion mobile phone subscriptions, and brought billions out of the worst kind of poverty.
We know that a successful Earth Summit must engage all strata of society, and thankfully we are beyond telegrams and faxes. But, how do we bring the myriad new media tools to bear on the problem of accountability and actions? This is an open challenge for youth to help shape the debate using a new, more effective language. This week, we raise awareness through posts on #earthsummit and #rioplus20, but we need to think beyond.
Some examples already exist. Earth Day Network’s Billion Acts of Green campaign encourages all of us to share our local actions toward sustainability. The European Environmental Agency’s iEnviroWatch app gives local environmental conditions and wants to invite users to submit content. Various youth rapid response networks at UN climate negotiations provide instant accountability to constituents back home.
And youth from Canada to the UK are coming up with creative ways to engage.
These and many more need to be scaled up by Rio next year, because it is obvious to UN leaders that the current way of doing things will not survive another twenty years. Our world cannot wait for a Rio+40 to curb climate change, repopulate the oceans and restore lost forests.
We need to blaze a path forward at the same time we ask our leaders to lead.
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Comments
Yiting — Jun 10 2011 10:38 AM
Here is what Gus Speth delivered last year, talking about the death of the old environmentalism and need for a broad-based social movement, in response to you call on all social strata to act. But this can happen, however, provided that all strata of society understand the common thread that is not only crippling the living environmental for all but also generating the waves after waves of economic and political crisis. That is, the current political economic structure that fuels "an unquestioning society-wide commitment to economic growth at almost any cost."
Here is Gus Speth speech titled "A New American Environmentalism and A New Economy:" It's a challenge call, but it is the only way I can see transformative change happening.
"The new environmental politics must be broadly inclusive, reaching out to
embrace union members and working families, minorities and people of color, religious organizations, the women’s movement, towns and cities seeking to revitalize and stabilize themselves, and other groups of complementary interest and shared fate. The “silo effect” still separates the environmental community from those working on domestic political reforms, a progressive social agenda, human rights, international peace, consumer issues, world health and population concerns, and world poverty and underdevelopment, but we are all in the same boat.
And the new environmental politics must build a powerful social movement... We now need a new broad-based social movement – demanding action and accountability from
governments and corporations, protesting, and taking steps as citizens, consumers and
communities to realize sustainability and social justice in everyday life.
The speech can be found here:
http://environmentalgovernance.org/cms/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/A_New_American_Environmentalism_and_the_New_Economy_final1.pdf