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UN summit subordinates environment and development to corporate
interests
By Joseph Kay
11 September 2002
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The United Nations Summit on Sustainable Development came to
an end on September 4. After much haggling, the nearly 200 countries
represented reached a non-binding agreement that calls in vague
terms for an improvement in human and environmental health and
sustainability. The summit also sanctioned numerous partnerships
between governments, businesses and non-governmental organizations
(NGOs) for specific actions related to the conferences stated
aims.
Presidents, prime ministers and monarchs from over 100 countries
attended the final days of the conference, which was held in Johannesburg,
South Africa. In addition, participants included representatives
of NGOs, scientists and academics, and hundreds of corporate leaders.
All told, the 10-day conference attracted some 65,000 delegates,
making it the largest international meeting ever held.
What above all distinguished the Johannesburg conference was
the overriding influence of the giant multinational corporations
that flocked to South Africa. An estimated 700 companies were
represented, including manysuch as those involved in oil
and miningthat are deeply implicated in creating the problems
the conference was supposed to address. Corporate giants such
as DaimlerChrysler and Hewlett Packard, the American information
technology conglomerate, sponsored the summit. An entire day was
set aside as Business Day.
The conferences objectives
The Johannesburg summit was called to address issues as varied
as the AIDS epidemic, global warming and poverty. It was intended
to continue the work begun at the Earth Summit held in the Brazilian
city of Rio de Janeiro in 1992. That assembly produced a document
pledging environmental improvement and a betterment of living
standards around the world.
The Rio summit was widely acknowledged to have been a failure.
UN Secretary General Kofi Annan attributed the lack of progress
on the issues it raised to too few resources, a lack of
political will, a piecemeal and uncoordinated approach and continued
wasteful patterns of production and consumption.
One of the major products of the Rio summit was a pledge by
industrial countries to voluntarily reduce greenhouse gas emissionswhich
cause global warmingto 1990 levels by the year 2000. This
goal has not been met. On the contrary, global consumption of
fossil fuels increased by 10 percent from 1992 to 1999.
The Kyoto protocol on global warming, which had its roots in
the Rio conference, has been rendered ineffective by the decision
of the United States to withdraw from the treaty. Temperatures
around the world continue to rise, with record highs expected
for the year 2002. The series of environmental catastrophes of
the summercharacterized by alternating drought and flooding
in many areashighlights the potential dangers of continued
global warming, which tends to generate climactic gyrations.
The other stated goals of Rio have fared no better. The summit
pledged to improve biodiversity, but according to the UN, the
extinction rate of species is accelerating. It aimed to slow deforestation,
but deforestation is continuing, with a net annual loss in forest
area of 0.2 percent during the 1990s.
A World Bank report released recently paints a devastating
portrait of the state of the world, should it continue along the
same path for the next several decades. The report predicts a
vast increase in poverty and environmental problems.
While Rio pledged to improve social conditions, over the past
decade there has been a sharp increase in social inequality on
a global scale.
Another goal was an improvement in water distribution and sustainability.
Demand for water is expected to increase by 50 percent over the
next 30 years, which could lead to severe shortages in some regions.
According to the UN, by 2015 at least 40 percent of the worlds
population will live in regions where it is impossible or difficult
to have access to adequate water supplies. Over 13,000 people
die each day from illnesses associated with contaminated water,
and 2.4 billion people live without proper sanitation.
That the Rio summit failed to produce any real results is hardly
surprising. The document it produced was toothless, consisting
of many pious hopes and a few unenforceable targets. The summit
in Johannesburg was presented as a forum that could provide a
framework for solving all of these unsolved problems and many
more.
A forum for big business
The basic conclusion that the conference reached was that the
only way to solve these complex social and environmental problems
is to rely on businesses and the profit motive. Annan told corporate
leaders on Business Day, The corporate sector need not wait
for governments to take decisions. We realize that it is only
by mobilizing the corporate sector that we can make significant
progress. He appealed to companies to invest more in underdeveloped
countries in order to solve the problems of social inequality
that make these countries fundamentally unstable.
The American government was the most obvious and direct proponent
of eliminating governmental regulations and more directly catering
to corporate interests. It opposed even the most nominal of targets
and goals, such as a nonbinding pledge to increase to 15 percent
the proportion of energy coming from renewable resources.
Accordingly, the US was the leading supporter of the partnership
solution, which had widespread acceptance at the conference. Instead
of global targets, partnerships are meant to be local agreements
between corporations, governments and other agencies to carry
out different development projects. Several hundred such partnerships
were announced at the meeting, though many were not new initiatives.
The Business Action for Sustainable Development (BASD)a
conglomeration of national chambers of commerce dominated by European
countriesannounced 230 partnerships between businesses and
NGOs.
The UN has tasked corporations with cleaning up the mess and
solving the problems that they have themselves created. For example,
the UN has abandoned its policy of relying on governments to solve
the AIDS crisis. Instead it hopes that a rapid dying-off of the
workforce in some countries will stimulate companies to provide
aid.
Echoing these conceptions, the New York Times, in its
editorial on the summit published September 6, made the bald and
absurd assertion that AIDS will be conquered only with the
help of drug companies. In fact, the giant pharmaceutical
companies have been principally responsible for the lack of widespread
access in large parts of the world to inexpensive AIDS medication.
Other partnerships include an agreement between the French
water company Suez and the municipal authority of the South African
city of Queenstown. The company hopes to privatize the local water
supply and make a profit. Other schemes along these lines have
sharply increased water prices, exacerbating the problem of scarcity
for the majority of the population.
Proposals undermined by national divisions
In addition to the general promotion of business interests,
the summit was characterized by the sharp divisions between its
main participants. These two factors combined to create a final
document even more vague and toothless than that which emerged
from Rio.
These divisions were especially pronounced on the question
of global warming and alternative energy sources. European oil
companies, such as BP and Shell, as well as BASD, have advocated
renewable energy targets. BP is the worlds largest producer
of photovoltaic cells used in producing solar power, and Shell
is heavily invested in wind farms. The European Union (EU) promoted
a plan at the summit that called for 15 percent of the worlds
energy to be produced from renewable non-carbon sources by 2010.
American energy producers have traditionally been much more
closely tied to oil, and the Bush administration itself has numerous
ties to the oil industry. Moreover, the Bush administration has
consistently opposed any international treaties that place constraints
on American corporations, even nonbinding agreements such as those
drawn up in Johannesburg.
Together with Canada, Australia, Japan and the OPEC countries,
the US adamantly opposed any mention of specific targets for renewable
energy production. The final document merely called for the world
to develop advanced, cleaner, more efficient, affordable
and cost-effective energy technologies, including fossil-fuel
technologies as well as renewable energy technologies. It
advocated action, where appropriate to phase
out subsidies that support oil production, taking
fully into account the specific conditions and different levels
of development of the participating countries.
The EU traded its abandonment of energy targets for an agreement
with the US to halve by 2015 the number of people worldwide without
access to basic sanitation. No provision was included to enforce
this goal. A similar agreement was made to manage production of
chemicals to minimize their adverse effects on human health and
the environment by 2020.
The conference decided not to include multilateral accountability
rules for corporations operating in underdeveloped countries.
Such rules had been sharply opposed by businesses in the US and
Europe. Neither did they have the support of leaders from underdeveloped
countries, who benefit from the exploitation of resources and
labor in their own countries.
The US and European governments were united in opposition to
a provision calling for cuts in agricultural subsidies. Such reductions
would threaten domestic agribusiness profits by cheapening imports
from underdeveloped countries. Farmers in wealthy countries receive
hundreds of millions of dollars in agricultural subsidies annuallythe
bulk of which go to agribusiness concernsa policy that is
devastating for small economies that rely on the export of primary
agricultural goods. The EU also opposed eliminating subsides for
industries such as commercial fishing that threaten certain natural
resources, though the final document contained a vague commitment
to restoring depleted fisheries by 2015.
On foreign aid, the developed countries resisted calls by Third
World countries to increase the amount provided and eliminate
restrictions. The US, in particular, has insisted that any aid
be tied to economic and political reforms that open up economies
to foreign capital.
On what can a viable perspective be based?
The conditions in which the conference was held highlighted
the fact that it was tailored to the interests of a financial
and corporate oligarchy, whose profit requirements took precedence
over social and environmental problems that affect the worlds
population. The summit was held in Sandton, one of the richest
suburbs of Johannesburg. Political and corporate leaders were
provided with the most lavish accommodations. The conditions of
Sandton contrast sharply with those of the adjacent areas of the
city, such as Alexandra, characterized by tin shacks and open
sewers.
The conference itself generated an enormous amount of waste.
An attempt to raise funds to counter the environmental impact
of holding the conference fell dismally short of its goal.
Conference delegates were protected by 27,000 police officers,
who were employed to control the severely restricted protests
staged by different activist groups and local political organizations
on August 31. Only those granted permission by the South African
government were allowed to participate. Shoulder-to-shoulder riot
police were in place to seal the protestors from conference participants,
with water cannon and armored vehicles on hand, if needed.
The protests provided a hint of the extensive opposition that
exists to the pro-business policies promoted at the conference.
One demonstrator was quoted as asking, What is the summit
doing for us? It is providing for the rich, not the poor.
Placards denounced Bush as a toxic Texan, while
others opposed American plans for a war in Iraq. The protestors
submitted a memo to the conference demanding land, jobs and clean
drinking water for everyone.
Police broke up an earlier rally staged by the Landless Peoples
Movement, a local political organization demanding land reform.
Over 70 people were arrested. When US Secretary of State Colin
Powell spoke at the end of the conference, he was interrupted
for several minutes by hecklers.
Several NGOs condemned the pro-business orientation of the
conference. Charles Secrett, director of the Friends of the Earth,
said, The Earth Summit should have been about protecting
the environment and fighting poverty and social destruction. Instead
it has been hijacked by free market ideology, by a backward looking
US administration and by global corporations that keep reactionary
politicians in business. The environmental organization
Greenpeace and anti-poverty group Oxfam were invited to join in
conference negotiations, but both ended up pulling out in protest.
However, none of these organizations offer a viable perspective
to oppose the pro-business positions expressed at the summit.
All base their perspective on pressuring one or another section
of corporations or national governments. During the conference,
Greenpeace joined forces with the World Business Council for Sustainable
Development, which includes polluters such as Shell, Monsanto
and the mining giant RTZ. In line with sections of European industry,
they called for an international framework to counter
global warming.
While denouncing the United States, many of these organizations
bemoaned the fact that the Europeans did not stand up for real
solutions, presumably along the lines of the Rio Earth summit.
They based themselves largely on the hope that European governments
would acquire some backbone and fight for international accountability
and binding frameworks. NGOs have pledged to renew their campaign
for such a binding agreement at the World Trade Organization (WTO)
meeting next year.
The results of the Johannesburg summit provide further proof
that this perspective is hopelessly utopian. If anything, the
WTO is more openly subservient to the interests of global corporations
than the UN. Nor is the EU more interested than the US in serious
steps to eradicate poverty or improve the environment, as is evident
from its position on agricultural tariffs and other issues. Europe
has presented itself as an advocate of renewable resources both
for economic reasons and as a lever in its escalating conflict
with the American government.
No more viable is a perspective based on alliances with different
corporations. Some companies may indeed have an interest in temporarily
securing a local supply of clean water or sustaining the lives
of workers. An attempt to seriously address the problems of AIDS
or water contamination, however, requires a massive social investment
on a global scale, which is incompatible with a system based on
the private accumulation of wealth.
It is not just a question of a few greedy corporations, but
of a socioeconomic system based on relentless competition between
different corporations and different national governments that
represent these corporations. The capitalist system prohibits
serious consideration of any aims beyond private economic gain.
Indeed, as the economic crisis around the world deepens, economic
and political tensions are becoming more and more strained. This
has only increased the demand by corporations for deeper attacks
on the social conditions and living standards of the worlds
population. This process is clearly expressed in the course of
the UN summit, characterized as it was by deep conflicts between
the major powers and the subordination of the whole process to
business interests.
The issues raised at the UN summit are of enormous importance
to the worlds population. However, they can be seriously
addressed only as part of a socialist and internationalist perspective
that opposes the capitalist system on the basis of the interests
of the working class. Only such a perspective provides an alternative
to the outmoded nation-state system and the corporate interests
that this system defends.
The precondition for the realization of this revolutionary
perspective is the construction of an independent and international
political party of the working class, which advances the interests
of the vast majority of the worlds population in opposition
to international capital and its political servantsfrom
the UN to the politicians and parties of the bourgeoisiein
the oppressed countries as well as the imperialist centers.
See Also:
What water privatisation means for Africa
[7 September 2002]
UN food summit ends in fiasco
[19 June 2002]
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