It is the figures that first attract
attention to the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD). The
Johannesburg World Summit Company (Jowsco) has 15 000 official
delegates already signed up, 5 000 of them government officials, and 5
000 media. It expects another 45 000 or so "civil society" delegates,
mostly non-governmental organisations (NGOs). With less than three
months to go until the Summit, Johannesburg schools have had their
school holidays shifted, extensive roadworks are under way, and the
body organising the NGO events, the Civil Society Secretariat, wants
R100 million by the end of May to cover its costs. The WSSD itself is
expected to cost R550 million besides.
Which is why many are already predicting failure. The Summit has not
received strong media coverage, and the business communities seem
strangely unenthusiastic. The official NGO representatives, prominent
amongst them SANGOCO, have bungled and botched their way into the news,
seemingly unable to get their act together for the Global Forum they
are supposed to be hosting alongside the WSSD meetings to be held in
Sandton from 26 August to 4 September 2002.
Jowsco is managing the Summit on behalf of the South African
government, but the ultimate organiser is the UN Commission on
Sustainable Development. The WSSD itself is part of a much broader
process that brings together environmentalists, governments, civil
society and business and labour, to focus on sustainable development in
a global context.
With one man's sustainability being another man's socialism achieved
through stealth, sustainable development is in itself a loaded term.
The definition the UN Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED)
prefers is "development that meets the needs of the present without
compromising the ability of the future generations to meet their own
needs". It's about combining economic development issues with
environmental conservation.
UNCED, held at Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in 1992, (the so-called "Earth
Summit") launched the first in the series of steps that will culminate
in Johannesburg this year. Since pollution knows no boundaries, and
poverty puts pressure on natural resource utilisation, these things are
now included in the WSSD remit. Many of these recommendations on a
"sustainable economy" are included in UNCED's Agenda 21, as well as the
Rio Declaration, the Convention on Biological Diversity, and the
Framework Convention on Climate Control.
Well and good. The need to include environmental concerns on an
economic issues agenda is so widely accepted it has become mainstream.
The problem is that, in the nature of all large talkshops, it is hard
to get people to do something other than talk, especially if it costs
money. It is even harder to get them to agree on the interventions
desired.
The WSSD has been preceded by a range of preparatory meetings on the
various continents of Europe, Africa and Asia. Some idea of the
controversies involved in these apparently "motherhood and apple pie"
concepts of sustainable development can be read between the lines of
these meetings. Thus, while on the one hand the European Community
regional inter-government preparatory meeting in late 2001 (for more
information, go to www.johannesburgsummit.co.za) argued that Agenda 21
should be put into effect, that globalisation and its impact merited
special attention and that the UN's Millennium Summit goals of halving
world poverty by 2015 all deserved discussion, on the other hand the EC
was also concerned that when it came to poverty and globalisation
issues, the link between human rights and democracy and growth should
be clearly understood - including issues relating to good governance,
such as the rule of law. The African preparatory conference, held in
Nairobi at more or less the same time, places no emphasis on the rule
of law, and a lot on issues such as cancellation of debt and global
assistance. In this view, poverty causes unsustainable development, and
so the solution to the latter is to rapidly eliminate the former.
Somewhere in the middle is the master of compromise, UN
Secretary-General Kofi Annan. Addressing the London School of Economics
in February 2002, Annan set out his vision for the WSSD. He urged that
the promise of a development round of talks, agreed on at the WTO
meeting in Durban last year, be given effect in order to open the
markets of developed economies to labour-intensive exports from
developing ones. He called for a more globally integrated approach to
development. In this benevolent vision, "sustainable development is an
exceptional opportunity - economically and socially - to bring people
in from the margins, and politically, to reduce tensions over resources
that could lead to violence…". UNCED put it slightly differently: "The
planet's environmental problems were intimately linked to economic
conditions and problems of social justice". That's not quite the same
thing as Annan's WEHAB priorities (Water, Energy, Health, Agriculture,
Biodiversity).
The Southern African Regional Poverty Network, which provides a
critically important resource on regional poverty issues
(www.sarpn.org.za), interviewed Saliem Fakir, Director of the South
African Office of the World Conservation Union, on the WSSD. He pointed
out some other sticking points, such as concerns that environmental
issues become a stalking horse for imposing new kinds of tariff
barriers.
So the aim of the WSSD is to reconcile a wide range of divergent
interests around a central goal of environmental and development
issues. Or, as Saliem put it, "a battle of interests around trade,
energy, finance and climate change", as well as globalisation and
poverty relief. At an African Conference of Civil Society
Organisations, held in Nairobi earlier this year, another take on the
issue emerged. It proposed "African" solutions for African problems and
an "end to the numerous foreign concepts which are incompatible with
the potential of Africa". The Conference also rejected the paper tiger
of the " 'Washington Consensus' that breeds neo-liberal and
imperialistic economic capitalism".
Indeed, many of the more interesting features of the WSSD will take
place on the civil society fringe. South African NGOs are already at a
disadvantage in that their interests are represented by a Civil Society
Secretariat riven with factional disputes. One of the main organisers
of the Secretariat, the deputy secretary of COSATU, somewhat ominously
declared that all groups will be welcomed at the civil society Forum
"except for groups that have a 'blatant disregard' for the principles
of sustainable development". Who will judge this is left unsaid.
Leftwing NGOs have been critical of the Secretariat as being too close
to government. The Secretariat rejects this as "rabble rousing", in the
words of Neva Makgetla, the COSATU representative. But Makgetla
disingenuously continues, "this is a democratically elected government.
We must not oppose it just as a matter of principle…" (Mail &
Guardian, 3-9/5/02).
In fact, large segments of "civil society" in South Africa are
dependent on government for their income, or on government-endorsed
foreign donor initiatives. Their ability to take an independent stance
is suspect. And since the civil society component of the events linked
to the WSSD is by far the largest, failure on this front will cast a
long shadow over the broader proceedings. The portents are not good.
That may account for the lack of popular enthusiasm for the WSSD. A
portent that the WSSD may serve as an idealogical battleground is a
declaration signed by 200 NGOs. It calls for a halt to privatisation,
and - wait for it - the abolition of the UN Security Council, the World
Bank and the IMF. It appears to be a move to prevent the WSSD becoming
a rich "northern government summit for unsustainable development"
(Business Day 28/5/02).
Should we be hosting the WSSD at all? It is a huge leap of faith,
which, if South Africa pulls it off, will expose South Africa and,
amongst other things, its tourism opportunities to over 5 000
journalists. If it fails (which is unlikely for the core WSSD, as
opposed to the Global Forum) the eyes of the world will still be on us.
But there is no turning back now. It's a gamble, the outcome of which
is difficult to predict.