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Frances Beinecke

Frances Beinecke

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For the Next Earth Summit in Rio, We Want Action, Not More Grand Promises

Posted: 06/ 7/11 11:58 AM ET

One year from now, presidents, prime ministers, and other world leaders will gather in Rio de Janeiro for the "Earth Summit." Officially labeled the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development, the meeting will focus on stimulating the green economy and strengthening global governance.

NRDC supports those aims, of course, but there is something we won't support in Rio: more treaties and plans with lofty goals and distant timetables. National governments have already negotiated and agreed to hundreds of commitments and pledges to protect the environment and achieve a more sustainable future, yet many have deliver real change on the ground. The degradation of our planet continues.

At the Earth Summit in June 2012, we have an opportunity to create something different. We can encourage leaders to focus on specific actions in the present and near future instead of agreeing on hopes for a far distant time.

NRDC is launching the "Race to Rio" campaign to encourage leaders from all sectors and levels of society -- government officials, CEOs, mayors, activists -- to come to Rio to talk about what they are doing now to address the huge challenges we face. So instead of making pledges or agreeing to statements, they should join with others in implementing new or reinvigorated initiatives to tackle problems where it really matters -- at the national level and below. Promises for others to take action won't do at this Earth Summit. Everyone must look in the mirror and commit to steps that they'll take to deal with these challenges.

And they must do it quickly. With carbon pollution heating up the planet, 30 percent of animal species threatened with extinction, 75 percent of the world's fish stocks identified as over-exploited, and half of urban dwellers in development nations suffering from diseases associate with lack of clean water and sanitation, we need urgent action.

Global gatherings like the one next year in Rio have the power to shine a spotlight on the decline of our natural systems and create the will to protect them. NRDC's first Board Chairman Stephen Duggan and our Founding Director John Adams were among the few non-governmental organizations that attended the first UN Conference on the Human Environment in Stockholm in 1972. That conference drew attention to the severe pollution problems, particularly in industrialized countries.

Twenty years later, more than 100 presidents and prime ministers traveled to Rio for the first Earth Summit. Governments agreed to treaties on climate change and the loss of biodiversity. They also adopted Agenda 21, a detailed blueprint for sustainable development which each national government was to apply to its own society.

Meetings in Johannesburg, Beijing, Cairo, Nairobi, Kyoto and other capitols followed, and each one produced launched critical efforts to combat the grave challenges facing the planet. Yet now it is time to translate those advances into deeper actions.

Gus Speth, an NRDC Trustee and the former head of the UN Development Programme, writes:

For the most part, we have analyzed, debated, discussed, and negotiated these issues endlessly. My generation is a generation, I fear, of great talkers, overly fond of conferences. On action, however, we have fallen far short. As a result...the threatening global trends highlighted a quarter-century ago continue to this day.


Speth's quote reminds me of something Mayor Michael Bloomberg said to me during the UN climate treaty negotiations in Bali in 2007: "You are letting politicians off easy. They don't mind signing a commitment for 2050, because none of them will be around in 40 years."

It is time the global community started focusing more on action than talk, And the next Earth Summit in Rio must jumpstart that transformation.

The Clinton Global Initiative, which NRDC has been active in since its launch, can provide a useful model. At the CGI, government, corporate, and citizen leaders are asked to make commitments to specific joint efforts to address a range of environmental and sustainable development challenges. In five years, the CGI has generated more than 1,900 commitments which have benefited nearly 300 million people in more than 170 countries.

We need this type of individual and collective commitment in Rio, but at a much larger scale and with even more put on the table.

Over the next 12 months, NRDC's Race to Rio campaign will keep the pressure on leaders. On Monday, we released a set of specific actions that we need countries, companies, and citizens to commit to implement at the next Earth Summit. These include real solutions like ending harmful subsidies, accelerating investments in renewable energy, creating new marine reserves, and assuring the people everywhere a real say in protecting their own health and environment.

Failure is not an option when it comes to protecting the natural systems that sustain us all. We have no choice but to try to make the Earth Summit a truly historic and transformative event that starts building the green future today.

This post originally appeared on NRDC's Switchboard blog.

 
One year from now, presidents, prime ministers, and other world leaders will gather in Rio de Janeiro for the "Earth Summit." Officially labeled the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Developme...
One year from now, presidents, prime ministers, and other world leaders will gather in Rio de Janeiro for the "Earth Summit." Officially labeled the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Developme...
 
 
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12:34 PM on 06/08/2011
"the meeting will focus on stimulating the green economy and strengthening global governance.
NRDC supports those aims, of course,"

Because the real enemy is the American middle class and the Bill of Rights and Constitution, of course.
07:38 PM on 06/07/2011
Bring on the pressure. The stakes are higher than ever.
06:35 PM on 06/07/2011
That there is only 1 only comment in response to this important & daunting issue, crucial to all life on earth?.. is why I am a member of NRDC & support their objectives . They fight & advocate on behalf of our global environment for all people.. even as some of those same people may fight & advocate against, procrastinate or are seemingly just apathetic about our environmental crises & supporting their efforts to solve or, at least, ameliorate contributing factors.

And, in the case, they either did not even bother to read Frances Beinecke's post here from an NRDC blog or, IF they did, could not be bothered to engage in the conversation. Kudos to NRDC, shame on apathetic HuffPo readers! Get involved & be active in securing a healthy environment for your future & that of future generations. We are all part of the problem & it is incumbent on all of us to be part of the solution:
http://www.nrdc.org/
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BluePhantom2
The Blacksmith & the Artist reflected in their art
06:31 PM on 06/07/2011
Nobody is going to sign on to anything like this until the US gets duped into it first. It's amazing that it hasn't happened yet but there is that whole congressional approval of these treaties so don't see any One World tax's getting through. Any climate UN slush fund (Spelled tax) is just a UN wet dream that isn't going to happen.
08:07 PM on 06/08/2011
its time for the UN TO GO.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NJP1
06:23 PM on 06/07/2011
The only forward planning with any certainty of action at climate change summit conferences will be the date of the next meeting. Expecting something to be ‘done’ would be a triumph of hope over experience. Study its delegates, for most it is nothing more than a luxury, all expenses break from sordid surroundings, with the added political bonus of being seen to be ‘doing something’. Why wouldn’t they plan the next one? Nothing gets done because few address the root cause of the problem, and all are concerned primarily with their specific territorial difficulties. None are prepared to accept that ‘growth’ is over, that fossil fuels cost too much to use (in every sense) and above all that there are just too many of us.. ‘Growth’ was an illusion made real by 200 years of fossil fuel use; it is now shimmering back into nothing as oil energy leaves us. Its only reality is a legacy of about 6 billion extra mouths, and diminishing food for them. Nations everywhere have to dole out free food to prevent its citizens from starving. 1 in 8 Americans is now on direct food aid, similar figures apply in Egypt and many other African countries. When the ‘free food’ money runs out, people will starve no matter where they are. No climate change summit is going to solve that part of our unpleasant future, or the extra 3 billion scheduled to arrive in the next 40 years .
http://www.yourmedievalfuture.com/
08:10 PM on 06/08/2011
YOU MUST BE A SO CALLED CLIMATE SCIENTIST. A PERSON WITH A 2 YEAR SCIENCE DEGREE WHO WATCHED THE WEATHER CHANNEL.
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NJP1
05:06 AM on 06/09/2011
Hmmm, Caps says it all really, I really don't need to add anything to that. Not to worry though, next time Harold Camping has a rapture day, you might be one of the lucky ones.
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Malcolm Hensley
Last of the Reagan Republicans
03:21 PM on 06/07/2011
The Clinton Global Initiative should promote taxes or tariffs on products sold first in the industrial world and later in the developing world based on the environmental impact of transporting, manufacturing, and sustainability of the products sold.

This encourages local manufacturing, local use of raw materials, it encourages minimum CO2, CO, O3, NOx, SOx, mercury, lead, PM, CFx emissions. all in the name of making a more price competitive product. It would discourage the destruction of rain forest, old growth forest, estuaries, marshes. All in the name of making a more competitive price product.

Currently all the pressure from the mega stores is for lower price, it comes at the expensive of the environment. We need a paradigm shift to make products cost more that harm the environment.
08:13 PM on 06/08/2011
I WOULDNT TRUST ANYBODY NAMED CLINTON!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! HE WANTS TO BE PRESIDENT OF THE WORLD.