Raoni Metuktire, center, a chief of Brazil's Kayapó
tribe in Rio for the conference, said deforestation continued to be a
threat.
Burdened by low expectations, snarled by endless traffic congestion and shunned by President Obama, the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development ended here as it began, under a shroud of withering criticism.
The antipoverty organization CARE called the meeting “nothing more than a political charade,” and Greenpeace said the gathering was “a failure of epic proportions.” The Pew Environment Group
was slightly more charitable. “It would be a mistake to call Rio a
failure,” the group said, “but for a once-in-a-decade meeting with so
much at stake, it was a far cry from a success.”
But while the summit meeting’s 283-paragraph agreement, called “The Future We Want,” lacks enforceable commitments on climate change
and other global challenges, the outcome reflects big power shifts
around the world. These include a new assertiveness by developing
nations in international forums and the growing capacity of grass-roots
organizations and corporations to mold effective environmental action
without the blessing of governments.
The Obama administration offered no grand public gestures here, opting
to focus on smaller-scale development projects like clean cookstoves and
local energy projects.
Europe, traditionally the driving force behind environmental action yet
distracted now by efforts to contain a financial crisis, was
considerably more active than the United States, taking part in nearly
every corner of the sprawling conference, called Rio+20 to commemorate
the anniversary of the first Earth Summit held here in 1992.
“Probably those who are most frustrated, and who say they are
frustrated, are the Europeans,” André Corrêa do Lago, Brazil’s chief
negotiator at Rio+20, said in an interview. “They think they can still
indicate paths which others should follow.”
The sheer size of the gathering — nearly 50,000 participants including
more than 100 heads of state or government — may have raised
expectations, in spite of the mixed record of previous such gatherings.
The first Rio summit meeting produced two landmark treaties, on climate
change and biodiversity, that have so far failed to live up to their
promises.
Yet despite this record, the activity outside the main negotiating
sessions here produced hundreds of side agreements that do not require
ratification or direct financing by governments and that offer the
promise of incremental but real progress.
“Even a complicated, diverse world can address problems not through
treaties, but by identifying the goals that then inspire decentralized
actions,” said Jeffrey D. Sachs, director of the Earth Institute at
Columbia University.
For instance, Microsoft said it would roll out an internal carbon fee on
its operations in more than 100 countries, part of a plan to go
carbon-neutral by 2030. The Italian oil
giant Eni said it would reduce its flaring of natural gas. Femsa, a
Latin American soft-drink bottler, said it would obtain 85 percent of
its energy needs in Mexico from renewable sources.
The Indian Ocean island nation of the Maldives, already experiencing
dangerous sea-level rise, announced what it said would become the
world’s largest marine reserve, encompassing all 1,192 of its islands by
2017. A group of development banks announced a $175 billion initiative
to promote public transportation and bicycle lanes over road and highway
construction in the world’s largest cities.
But the ubiquity of corporate and financial sponsorship made some uneasy.
“If George Orwell were alive today, he would be irritated, and then
shocked, by the cynical way in which every lobby with an ax to grind and
money to burn has hitched its wagon to the alluring phrase ‘sustainable
development,’ ” said Jagdish N. Bhagwati, a professor of economics at
Columbia, in an essay called “Rio’s Unsustainable Nonsense.”
Still, some with decades of experience with such summit meetings take a
more nuanced view. Thomas Lovejoy, an American conservation biologist
who was a driving force behind the first Earth Summit in 1992, said he
remained discouraged by the lack of action in reducing carbon emissions.
But Mr. Lovejoy, who began working in the Amazon in 1965, also said he
could recognize how some important progress had been made, especially in
Brazil, since then.
“There was one national forest and one demarcated indigenous reserve,”
said Mr. Lovejoy, 70. “Now, 50 percent is under some form of
protection.”
Brazil, with command over its vast forests as well as an estimated 12
percent of the world’s fresh water, remains crucial to any international
preservation efforts. The rate of deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon
recently fell to its lowest level since record-keeping began in 1988.
Still, others who came here for the conference, like the indigenous
leader Raoni Metuktire, 82, a chief of Brazil’s Kayapó tribe, said such
advances meant little. He said he found himself emphasizing the same
things he spoke about at the original Earth Summit in 1992.
“Deforestation continues,” said Mr. Metuktire, who is normally referred
to as Raoni, through an interpreter. “The river is having dams built
into it; the people don’t listen,” he said. “They don’t respect me.”
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