RIO+20: IT'S A SELL OUT OF PEOPLE, THE PLANET, SAYS FoEI
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FRIENDS of the Earth International, FoEI, a global federation of environmental rights advocacy organizations, on Saturday, strongly condemned world leaders for allegedly selling out humanity and the planet in their Rio+20 declaration. VigRX
FoEI is claiming that the Rio+20 declaration falls way short of the action needed to tackle the planetary crisis we face, and does not include any of the real solutions demanded by the people at the alternative Peoples Summit. VigRX Oil
According to the global federation, the lack of political will from governments is rooted in the undue influence of corporations over governments and UN institutions. But pressure from civil society groups and movements and developing countries prevented world leaders from agreeing an even worse Rio+20 declaration that would have taken the world further backwards than we were twenty years ago.
Nigeria's Chair of the FoEI, Nnimmo Bassey, said in a statement to AkanimoReports, ''once again corporate polluters have held UN decision-making hostage to furthering their economic interests, at the expense of peoples wellbeing and the planet. But real solutions to the crises exist and were presented by the alternative Peoples Summit. They include economic justice, climate justice, and food sovereignty''.
The federationl has been a key player in the People’s Summit – an alternative space independent from the UN Summit supported by over 200 civil society groupings who have worked together over the past nine days to generate ideas for the change needed to tackle the crisis we face.
“Friends of the Earth International and our allied social movements will keep fighting the corporate capture of the UN which is stopping our governments from listening to the voices of the 99 percent of the people. These voices include not only the Peoples Summit voices here in Rio but also the voices of the Occupy and Indignados movements around the world,” said Lucia Ortiz, Economic Justice International Program Coordinator at FoEI.
“Peoples power is the solution to the crises we are facing. The alternative Peoples Summit in Rio was an example of peoples voices uniting to demand real solutions. We need to build on our strengths and organise ourselves to resist corporate power, false solutions, and reclaim our democracies and UN decision-making” said Isaac Rojas, FoEI Coordinator of the Forest and Biodiversity Program,
Friends of the Earth International’s analysis of key issues on the table
in Rio: Provestra
GREEN ECONOMY
The European Union block tried to impose in Rio the corporate-driven green economy agenda --which is a front for our broken and unfair economic system and for selling out nature—as the main tool for achieving sustainable development. Civil society and developing countries managed to prevent this agenda from being adopted and partially stopped its imposition in the Rio declaration, allowing, for now, individual countries
to continue define their own vision of what a truly fair and sustainable economy might look like.
Unfortunately the declaration still recognizes the green economy as an important tool and does not include any recognition that developed countries, whose unsustainable consumption patterns caused the bulk of our environmental problems, should take the lead on sustainable consumption and production. The Rio+20 declaration also fails to recognise that multinational corporations are a main cause of the multiple crises the
world is facing. Vigorelle
THE RIO PRINCIPLES
The Rio+20 declaration reaffirms the so-called 'Rio Principles' first agreed at the 1992 Earth Summit but does not go any further.
The Rio+20 declaration ignores the need of the industrialised world to repay its ecological debt through provision of new and additional public finance and through technology transfer.
The Rio+20 declaration does not tackle the need to phase out fossil fuels through a just transition to clean and affordable community-controlled energy. VitaliKoR
CORPORATE CAPTURE OF THE UN
The Rio+20 declaration includes a voluntary approach to sustainability reporting – something that was on the table 10 years ago and is wholly insufficient to address corporate abuses and crimes.
The Rio+20 declaration unfortunately states that governments should support initiatives including “promoting the contribution of the private sector” and the only reference to mobilizing public finance was made in connection to public-private partnerships.
The Rio+20 declaration does not include any of the steps raised in a statement issued on June 4 by Friends of the Earth International and other organizations and signed by more than 400 organisations. ProEnhance
The steps that should be taken include:
Limiting the privileged status that business currently has in official UN negotiations and policy-making; limits on the role of the “business and industry” major group; disclosure of existing relations and links between the UN with the private sector; a code of conduct for UN officials; a review of existing partnerships with corporates and trade associations, and a halt to entering into any new such partnerships; increased transparency around lobbying; and the establishment of a legally binding framework to hold companies accountable to environmental, human rights and labour rights law. SizeGenetics