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Rio+20, The Unhappy Environmental Summit

Rio 20

BRADLEY BROOKS   06/23/12 12:54 PM ET  AP

RIO DE JANEIRO — It was hard to find a happy soul at the end of the Rio+20 environmental summit.

Not within the legion of bleary-eyed government negotiators from 188 nations who met in a failed attempt to find a breakthrough at the United Nations conference on sustainable development.

Not among the thousands of activists who decried the three-day summit that ended late Friday as dead on arrival. Not even in the top U.N. official who organized the international organization's largest-ever event.

"This is an outcome that makes nobody happy. My job was to make everyone equally unhappy," said Sha Zukang, Secretary-General of the conference, nicely summing up the mood.

In the end, this conference was a conference to decide to have more conferences.

That result was hailed as a success by the 100 heads of state who attended. Given how environmental summits have failed in recent years as global economic turmoil squashes political will to take on climate and conservation issues, the mere fact of agreeing to talk again in the future constitutes victory.

Faced with the real prospect of complete failure, negotiators who struggled for months to hammer out a more ambitious final document ended up opting for the lowest common denominator. Just hours before the meeting opened Wednesday, they agreed on a proposal that makes virtually no progress beyond what was signed at the original 1992 Earth Summit, removing the kind of contentious proposals activists contend are required to avoid an environmental meltdown.

"We've sunk so low in our expectations that reaffirming what we did 20 years ago is now considered a success," said Martin Khor, executive director of the Geneva-based South Centre and a member of the U.N. Committee on Development Policy.

Indeed, the word "reaffirm" is used 59 times in the 49-page document titled "The Future We Want." They reaffirm the need to achieve sustainable development (but not mandating how); reaffirm commitment to strengthening international cooperation (just not right now); and reaffirm the need to achieve economic stability (with no new funding for the poorest nations).

Some of the biggest issues activists wanted to see in the document that didn't make it in included a call to end subsidies for fossil fuels, language underscoring the reproductive rights of women, and some words on how nations might mutually agree to protect the high seas, areas that fall outside any national jurisdictions.

"We saw anything of value in the early text getting removed one by one. What is left is the clear sense that the future we want is not one our leaders can actually deliver," said Greenpeace executive director Kumi Naidoo. "We now need to turn the anger people around the world are feeling into creative, thoughtful and meaningful action."

On the "glass half full" side of things, while the effort to make progress on multilateral talks among the collective U.N. body were a disappointment, the big gathering produced nearly 700 promises and advances made by individual countries, companies and other organizations, in total worth about $500 billion if actually followed through

For instance, the U.S. agreed to partner with more than 400 companies, including Wal-Mart, Coca- Cola and Unilever, to support their efforts to eliminate deforestation from their supply chains by 2020.

Andrew Deutz, director of international government relations at the Nature Conservancy, pointed out that Indonesia, Australia and Colombia all made strong commitments to protecting oceans in their national waters, in part to ensure future food security.

"Monday morning, the challenge will be to go back home and hold governments and companies accountable for the commitments they made here and help them get things done," he said.

Despite the shifting global economic order, with the rise of nations like Brazil and China and a host of other "middle-income" countries, critics said negotiators still argued along the lines of old "north-south" arguments that pit richer developed nations against developing nations.

The Group of 77 nations that represents the poorest on the globe maintained their demand that richer nations in Europe and the U.S. recognize their "historic debt" eating up a much greater amount of the globe's resources since the industrial revolution began 250 years ago. They say rich nations should finance environmental improvements in the poorer nations, and also freely transfer technology that would help the developing nations use more renewable energy and build cleaner industrial sectors.

"Everything has been kicked down the lane a few years, we'll have to wait to formalize sustainable development goals and make the transition to a green economy," said Muhammed Chowdhury, a lead negotiator of Group of 77. "It's not a good scenario."

However, a U.S. delegate member said that countries can no longer debate issues with an eye on the past, that once poor nations are becoming rich, and that anybody looking for the Rio+20 summit to somehow reach a magical agreement and solve complicated environmental and development challenges would be sorely disappointed.

"I think the expectation that there is one document or one approach that can solve one of the major questions of our time – how do you maintain economic growth and protect the environment? – there's not one paper that can do that," said U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Oceans and International Environmental and Scientific Affairs Dr. Kerri-Ann Jones.

"This is a process. We have to embrace it as a process, look at the positive things we have done, and keep working, as there is much more to do."

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Follow Bradley Brooks on Twitter: http://twitter.com/bradleybrooks

___

Associated Press writer Jenny Barchfield contributed to this report.

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RIO DE JANEIRO — It was hard to find a happy soul at the end of the Rio+20 environmental summit. Not within the legion of bleary-eyed government negotiators from 188 nations who met in a failed...
RIO DE JANEIRO — It was hard to find a happy soul at the end of the Rio+20 environmental summit. Not within the legion of bleary-eyed government negotiators from 188 nations who met in a failed...
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rodjard
I Update my brain frequently
11:47 PM on 06/25/2012
They all know the truth of the lies they are telling one another and the press.
They are all embarassed by the pretense of their antics when they all know
everyone else knows the truth too. What an exercize in futility!!!
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02:27 PM on 06/25/2012
Does anyone need any additional proof that so-called "global warming" is a political cause and the "scientist" that study so-called "global warming" are just tools of the UN?
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French Toast
MAPLE SYRUP
02:41 PM on 06/25/2012
We both know you've never read the science and don't have a grade schooler's understanding of science. You spread doubt because you don't know anything about science. You're the guy who in decades previous would have said the same thing of cancer and cigarettes. You are less than nothing.
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02:49 PM on 06/25/2012
People select what science they choose to believe based on their politics.  How many believers say they accept science, yet go against proven science when GM foods or Nuclear power is studies and shown safe by major science groups?  So-Called "global warming" is a political cause.
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02:53 PM on 06/25/2012
Prove me wrong, Skippy.  Tell me what the climate will be in 5 years, and show how you came to your conclusion.  If you're right, I'll believe as well.
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09:03 AM on 06/25/2012
Has anyone ever seen a Happy Environmentalist? Do these things even exist?
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maxwelldog
even if i don't go anywhere, I'll still be late.
11:51 PM on 06/24/2012
well, since we got the correct answer back in the 1920s from Henry Ford and Rudolf Diesel, the answer that biomass fuel was way better than gasoline and petroleum, and we turned our backs on it then, and even now our government turns its back on the answer...
I think we should take our little flag down and go sit at the children's table until the adults figure out how wrong we have been for near a century.
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Roadrun
In Financial Theocracy we Trust
07:13 PM on 06/24/2012
Future News:

An emergency meeting of the League of Countries Who Would Like to Continue Being Countries met today to discuss the passing of the tipping point.

A list of the primary questions and answers follows:
-- Can we pass a measure saying in the most strong terms that we must have more time?
-- No

-- What emergency measures can we take now to avert what you say will now happen?
-- None

-- If we act like it isn't happening will it go away?
-- No

-- But clearly we can reverse it right?
-- No

-- Our country doesn't believe in Global Warming.
-- So?

-- What can we do at this point?
-- Nothing, that's what a tipping point is. This is a true landslide, an avalanche, going beyond the point of no return.

-- Can we pray or hope or wish?
-- Go for it. Nobody really cares what you do. Oh yeah, like everybody else has ever discovered at the time that it counts the most - there really isn't a god.
09:06 PM on 06/24/2012
Go save a beaver and improve the wetlands. What a monologue of whining.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Roadrun
In Financial Theocracy we Trust
10:29 PM on 06/24/2012
ignorance is bliss and you are giddy
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
maxwelldog
even if i don't go anywhere, I'll still be late.
11:55 PM on 06/24/2012
saving the beavers is really hard with the gun toters wandering around the forest lands with fully automatic weapons.

Actaully, I liked the change of pace, because so far this year, I've read too many comments like yours...long on gripe and whine, short of substance everytime.

In fact, I think you should turn in your feathers for the ladies to have a nice hat.
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frank1946
Tell the Truth
05:10 PM on 06/24/2012
Population control, etc.

Nobody wll say so.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
toxico
Dedicated Permie
08:56 PM on 06/24/2012
Bingo. I will.
11:27 AM on 06/24/2012
What a collosal waste of money and resources! This is a great example of why the UN should not be entrusted with any endevours.

Their measure of success for a conference is to agree to have more conferences and waste more money. Of course the UN officials make a living this way and drain much needed resources from their sponsor countries.

By the way, has anyone looked at the salaries of these UN officials - I bet they are all 1% er's in their own country. Yet, their waste of funds provided by the 99% in their country goes unchallenged.
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LuisD
It's a wonder what you'll find with an open mind
04:54 PM on 06/24/2012
I blame the member states who cling to neoliberalist policies more than the U.N.

The funny thing in all this is, by adopting sustainable policies, economies can stand to gain tremendous economic returns. Unfortunately few elected leaders understand economic externalities...
09:07 PM on 06/24/2012
The UN is very sustainble in maintaining the status quo.
09:08 AM on 06/24/2012
Over population is the root cause of the environmental problem and until we address the unsustainable growth in the human population, all efforts to protect and restore the environment are doomed to failure.
09:46 AM on 06/24/2012
so we should stop all food aid or even foreign in total.......hunger will slow the population

problem solved
11:23 AM on 06/24/2012
Zero child policy will become the new environmentalist mantra
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FaunaAndFlora
Daughter of Pan
12:26 AM on 06/25/2012
The overpopulation of human beings will never be addressed as long as most of us refuse to acknowledge that it is driven by a declining death rate and not a rising birth rate. The birth rate has been declining since 1970. The death rate began declining at the start of the 20th century, with this trend accelerating exponentially since World War II. Considering the immorality (or amorality?) of deliberately causing a rise in death rates, there are no easy answers.
HansB
The only good certainty is a dead certainty
05:57 AM on 06/24/2012
People don't care a bit about the environment. They just don't. They sit inside all day hitting buttons and couldn't care less about the birds and trees outside, let alone the survival of coral reefs and rainforests. They can always have pretty fish and frogs on their screen savers.

Climate change, deforestation, ocean acidification and pollution are just symptoms of the underlying disease: indifference.

This world is getting less beautiful by the minute and there is no end in sight.
09:50 AM on 06/24/2012
of true the planet will correct the problem........flooding causes death and disease........drought causes food shortages.........just leave it alone and balance with be achieved soon enough
10:08 AM on 06/24/2012
Or, we can just limit our use of fossil fuels and save ourselves and other species a lot of unnecessary agony.
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FaunaAndFlora
Daughter of Pan
12:49 AM on 06/25/2012
In my opinion, people don't care about the environment if they have never taken the time to learn how to identify native flora and fauna. I'm always puzzled by people who can't be bothered to learn how to tell a beech from a birch, for example, or to identify native birds.
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01:37 AM on 06/25/2012
gettin technical i see :)
HansB
The only good certainty is a dead certainty
03:11 AM on 06/25/2012
Funny you should say that because it's my obsession right now. I've given up on adults but still have hope for children, and since I'm rather disappointed in how stories for children speak about nature, I started a series of little books which teach kids how to recognize common species. E.g. there's a story about a herring gull who paints his head black to please a blackheaded gull; one about a European oak mocked by other trees because of his irregular leaves; one about a praying mantis who becomes an artist, cutting sculptures in the wings of foolish little butterflies. I've been sending them to publishers these past two weeks and am crossing my fingers. The intention is to cover 150-200 common species in 50-70 booklets.
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jm2100
advocate for success
02:45 AM on 06/24/2012
How about concentrating on getting the economies going, then lets worry about the snail darters.
HansB
The only good certainty is a dead certainty
06:37 AM on 06/24/2012
That's always the excuse, even when the economies are doing fine. It's never enough.
09:50 AM on 06/24/2012
agreed......it isn't
09:44 AM on 06/24/2012
If we don't reduce our fossil fuel emissions now, global warming will affect everything—our ability to produce food; our water supplies; our homes and property; national security and a livable future for our children.

When do you want to start worrying about them?
12:57 AM on 06/24/2012
the one thing americans have to look out for, especially with our left wing state department, and the united nations, is an under the table, redistribution of wealth, from us to them. we have enough wealth going to them, with foreign aid, and other programs, and americans do not want to see added tax money going to these nations on top of that. it is often a one way street, in which we give up 90 percent of what we want, so that these other mations get 90 percent of what they want...hillary has already agreed to some mandates on global gun control (fast and furious), however the american people have been left out of the information...these days you have to watch everybody.
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maxwelldog
even if i don't go anywhere, I'll still be late.
12:09 AM on 06/25/2012
especially stay on the look out for made up statistics, opinions made to sound like they are a good message, and subtle suggestions about who to vote for.

Like THIS comment, for example.
No books, no links...just opinion dressed in a fine Sunday suit, finished church, drove fifteen miles to the ice cream shop with the fam...and then the the important business of picking out the only party TRYING to do SOMETHING (right or wrong) and cinching it all off with an anti-immigrant rant.

Facts being facts, you are wrong about people not wanting taxes.
Most of us, and the middle class WANT to save our country, and taxes is a small way to show it. On the other hand, there's the rich who have the greed gene of the Miser.
(http://daryth.com/draconica/The_Miser)
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FaunaAndFlora
Daughter of Pan
12:57 AM on 06/24/2012
There is no such thing as sustainable development if it is based on a model of economical and technological expansion, or so it seems to me. In my opinion, the only way to address our current ecological issues while providing basic needs to most of the human population is if a majority of those who live in "developed" nations accept that there are limitations to what humans can achieve, learn how to live with less and get into the habit of using available lands to grow food for their kitchens.
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12:40 PM on 06/24/2012
The first line says it all.
12:49 AM on 06/24/2012
I wouldn't consider it a victory until\unless the various govts. actually follow through on those promises, or simply *begin* to take steps in that direction, but I also wouldn't hold my breath.
12:25 AM on 06/24/2012
I really dont want any UN resolution or treaty which delagates any authority over the citizens of america from the UN.
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French Toast
MAPLE SYRUP
01:13 AM on 06/24/2012
I doubt you have a good handle on what the UN is involved with beyond what you heard on right wing sites. You worry about the authority from places that don't try to exercise it while at the same time ignoring the very real co-opting of authority from those who truly do (multinational corporations and banks).

Take the flag and eagle off of your avatar. You don't deserve to use those symbols.
01:16 AM on 06/24/2012
French anything is worthless.
08:54 AM on 06/24/2012
I respect your opinion. My "handle" your words, comes from 12 years of international assignments working with the UNDP, OIC, UNHRC, UNCRF, UNHCH, UNV, UNWFP, UNICRI. I have opposed the unsustainable global economy and the financial drag of unintended consequences. As for my flag and eagle, I am veteran proud of it. I have no idea what you deserve other than your typical social network monologue which leads me to point to the fact that better to be thought of as a fool than open your mouth and remove all doubt. I dont worry about these matters, just express my opinion.
nolib1937
Obama won the country lost
12:14 AM on 06/24/2012
I turn green when I eat organic food ..........
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flyingaspidistra
War is not the answer
02:25 PM on 06/24/2012
better green than red. :)