The 20-year-old video predated YouTube, yet it has since gone viral, with 20 million views.
Its picture is grainy but the words are crystal clear.
“We’ve come 5,000 miles to tell you adults you must change your ways.”
A 12-year-old Canadian girl stands before world leaders, expressing the
fears and despair of a young generation facing at a bleak future for
the planet they will inherit.
All listened raptly. Some wept at the starkness of her appeal.
She became known as “the girl who silenced the world for five minutes.”
It was 1992, and representatives of world governments were gathered in
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, for the first United Nations Conference on the
Environment and Development — the Earth Summit.
The girl was Severn Cullis-Suzuki, daughter of environmentalist David
Suzuki. Two decades later, Cullis-Suzuki, with a child of her own, cares
even more passionately about the issues now than she did then.
As the world prepares for another Earth Summit in Rio, we spoke with
her about her recollections of that seminal conference and what in her
opinion has — and has not — changed in the years since.
Cullis-Suzuki remembers the Earth Summit coming at a time of high
environmental concern. Two weeks were allotted for the talks. The heads
of state from 108 countries attended, including U.S. president George
Bush Sr. and Canadian prime minister Brian Mulroney. Over 10,000
journalists were on hand.
Back then, Cullis-Suzuki recalls, addressing the depletion of the ozone
layer was high on the environmental agenda, as was a growing awareness
of a new environmental issue called climate change. A big concern was
bringing on side the developing countries who were worried that being
forced to comply with environmental measures would hinder their efforts
to develop.
The end of the summit saw the signing of legally-binding agreements,
including the UN Convention on Biological Diversity and the Framework
Convention on Climate Change, which would pave the way for the Kyoto
Protocol. The nations of the world agreed to a global action plan for
sustainable development: Agenda 21.
The world emerged from Rio with a sense of hope and promise.
“I look back at those documents that came out of Rio, and they were
pretty amazing,” Cullis-Suzuki says. “Great promises were made at Rio,
then it kind of fell off people’s agenda.”
The hope and promise were short-lived. Cullis-Suzuki recalls that, in
the years following the Earth Summit, the global economy slipped into
recession and economic constraints meant the environment was no longer a
priority.
Cullis-Suzuki notes the parallels to today, as economic woes again
displace the environment as a top concern for world leaders. She cites
the fact the 2012 Earth Summit will last only three days. President
Barack Obama will not be there, and Prime Minister Stephen Harper has
not indicated if he will attend.
Climate change has risen to a pre-eminent concern.
“We’re in a new reality, living in a time of climate change. We already
have climate refugees around the globe and now have to talk about
adaptation and mitigation,” says Cullis-Suzuki, who holds a B.Sc. in
ecology and evolutionary biology, and a masters of science specializing
in ethnoecology.
In an ironic reversal, smaller developing countries like the island
nations Grenada and the Maldives, who are already feeling the effects of
climate change, are the ones begging industrial nations to address
climate change.
However, this time there will be no agreements that legally bind
countries to meet environmental targets. Instead countries will be asked
to work voluntarily towards targets they set for themselves.
Cullis-Suzuki is now coaching young Canadians to represent the
interests of the next generation as delegates at Rio 2012. We asked her
if she were to stand before the Rio Summit 20 years after she first held
the world’s leaders rapt, what would she say now?
“I’m hearing from a lot of people that the same speech I gave then
could be given again today. That is a sobering thought,” she told us.
“Sometimes it’s hard not to feel really negative. I think I would ask why we have not succeeded? Why are we not further along?”
The answer may come from her father. In a recent blog, David Suzuki
declared environmentalism a failure. Creating environment ministries and
holding environment-focused conferences, he argued, made the
environment just “another special interest” like agriculture or
education. It was something separate from the economy and so fell to the
wayside when recessions struck.
Ironically, Rio’s goal in 1992 was to integrate environmental awareness
into global development. As Suzuki put it, “The event was meant to
signal that economic activity could not proceed without considering
ecological consequences.”
Twenty years later, world leaders once again need a child to stand up
and remind them that, for the next generation, the environment is not a
special interest, it’s their future.
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