Archive for the ‘Sustainable Development’ Category

More news about the International Year of Co-operatives

Monday, November 7th, 2011

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The United Nations has designated 2012 the International Year of Co-operatives. From Argentina to Zambia, the 1.4 million co-operatives across the globe will be celebrating and showing how they build a better world.  

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 Argentinian wine co-operative 

Co-ordinated by the International Co-operative Alliance, the global voice of co-operatives, the year aims to boost understanding of co-operatives throughout the world. 

For supporters of co-operatives, it is a unique opportunity to come together as a global movement to promote how co-operative enterprises build a better world.

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Co-operatives UK has launched the UK website for the United Nations’ International Year of Co-operatives 2012 - www.uk.coop/2012. The website provides information on what is happening across the country and features a range of useful resources about co-operatives and the International Year for businesses, individuals, journalists and all those interested in learning more.     

“Youth, the Future of Cooperatives”

Wednesday, July 20th, 2011

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Rianne ten Veen sent a link to the message from the United Nations’ Secretary-General Ban ki Moon on the International Day of Cooperatives.

The theme for this year’s International Day of Cooperatives, “Youth, the Future of Cooperatives”, highlights the enormous value of engaging the energy and drive of young people.

In the wake of the global financial and economic crisis, youth unemployment is at an all-time high. Expanding opportunity through youth entrepreneurship is one way to address this challenge. The cooperative model enables young people to create and manage sustainable enterprises. Cooperatives are underpinned by the pooling of financial and human resources, technical knowledge and business skills. Furthermore, their member-driven structure roots them in communities, encouraging socially responsible businesses that meet local needs.

Through their distinctive focus on values, cooperatives have proven themselves a resilient and viable business model that can prosper even during difficult times. This success has helped prevent many families and communities from sliding into poverty. Cooperatives have also continuously provided reliable access to credit and other financial services for many small business holders. Moreover, cooperatives have done so while promoting self-reliance and creating stability in the markets in which they operate.

Throughout this year’s observance of the International Year of Youth, decision makers around the world have stressed the importance of including young people at all levels of the development process. The active inclusion of young women and men in social and economic development helps reduce social exclusion, improve productive capacity, break cycles of poverty, promote gender equality and raise environmental responsibility.

As we move into the International Year of Cooperatives, which will be officially launched this October, I invite young people to explore the benefits of pursuing cooperative enterprise and other forms of social entrepreneurship. At the same time, I encourage the cooperative movement to engage with youth, in a spirit of dialogue and mutual understanding. Let us recognize young women and men as valuable partners in strengthening the cooperative movement and in sustaining the role of cooperatives in social and economic development.

New York, 2 July 2011

UNA meeting at Birmingham Council House

Tuesday, June 7th, 2011

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After the Deputy Lord Mayor’s welcome, an introduction to the Millennium Development Goals, was read by Bert Gedin. All speakers agreed that progress had been made, but the process has been slowing down and efforts should be renewed. Some points made at this meeting, facilitated by Ravi Kumar, chairman of B’ham UNA, follow.

Former DFID Secretary, Clare Short, listed major conferences which preceded the MDG agreement, including the Beijing event focussing on the empowerment of women, Cairo on reproductive health, Rio on the environment and several major political events, including the overthrow of apartheid and release of Nelson Mandela and the fall of the Berlin Wall.

 

Clare pointed out that the MDGs are related, for example education will be adversely affected if a child has no access to potable drinking water. To release resources, she suggested that some military spending could be transferred to education.

 She described a ‘high point’, when in 2000, 189 world leaders unanimously adopted the “United Nations Millennium Declaration” at the conclusion of their Millennium Summit on 8 September 2000, and concluded that the ‘Arab Spring’ and other changes of mood offer hope that more progress will be made towards achieving the MDGs.

Malcolm Harper, now an independent international consultant after long and distinguished service as director of the United Nations Association, looked back over improvements made since the ‘60s and focussed on the factors inhibiting the achievement of the MDGs: 

  • the rich-poor divide – some multinational companies are far wealthier than some developing countries;
  • poor rural infrastructure – for example, many needy people have to walk many miles to reach medical facilities;
  • aid which is not focussed on quality – for example, increasing the number of children attending school, regardless of equipment provided and staffing levels;
  • corruption – both corruptors and corruptees must be tackled. 

Malcolm believed that less progress has been made towards the goal of gender equality and that this should be urgently addressed. 

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John Cooper, Christian Aid’s Regional Co-ordinator for the West Midlands, spoke next. Christian Aid thinks that the Declaration’s emphasis on empowering people living in poverty was translated into telling poor counties what their priorities should be. Its emphasis on powerful countries and companies meeting their responsibilities to others was translated into a system which fails to hold them accountable for their part in fuelling global poverty. 

Progress has been made with providing clean water but the other MDGs are significantly behind target level in areas, including maternal and child mortality, hunger and access to sanitation.

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Christian Aid’s new report on progress towards the MDGs says that the fundamental reason for the failure of the MDGs to achieve more is that they are based on a flawed understanding of poverty – which ignores the root causes of the problem. They are blind to inequality, unsustainability and the importance of input by ordinary people to decision-making. The report argues that a successor to the MDGs after 2015, which truly reflects the ambition of the Declaration, is vital. 

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Rianne ten Veen, of Green Creation, examined assertions made about the MDGs: 

Too ambitious?

In 1996, the Rome Declaration on World Food Security aimed to halve the number of hungry people by 2015, but MDG 1 merely aims to halve the proportion of people in developing countries who suffer from hunger and has a baseline of 1990 instead of what would be a more ambitious 1996.

Too expensive?

The estimated cost of achieving the MDGs is $189bn but:

  • Annual fossil fuel subsidies: $312bn
  • Iraq War: $648bn
  • Wall Street bailout: $8.5trn 

Lagging because of lack of effort from poor countries? 

No; because of the lack of a level playing field in terms of debt, trade and investment.The amount of debt relief is often deducted from the aid budget. Only 1% of foreign direct investment benefits the poorest and 82% FDI goes into the extractive industries.

The role of the WTO was questioned by Malcolm Harper – is it really acting in the interest of poor countries? Rianne points out that the Millennium Declaration had fair trade as its ambition, but MDG8 offers more obvious advantages for foreign multinationals, and trade liberalisation. 

A brief case study of Argentina was given to illustrate the uneven playing field.The ICSID Convention is a multilateral treaty formulated by the Executive Directors of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (the World Bank). ICSID’s website reveals that, in all but one of the first fifty pending cases, wealthy corporations are bringing charges against small developing countries – 24 against Argentina.  The MNCs usually ‘win’. 

MDG7 on environmental sustainability appears to relate only to poor countries, though the rich countries are responsible for the high greenhouse gas emissions and the poor suffer most of the consequences. Rianne concluded that Millennium Consumption Goals (MCG) could help make our development path more sustainable, by focusing on the 1.4 billion people in the richest 20 percentile of the world’s population. They consume over 80% of global output, or 60 times more than the poorest 20 percentile. Instead of viewing the rich as a problem, they should be persuaded to contribute to the solution.  

A vote of thanks was given by Gill Briggs.#

NOTE: The Millennium Consumption Goals proposal was made by Prof. Munasinghe in January 2011 at the United Nations in New York. The background paper for the original proposal “MCG: How the Rich Can Make the Planet More Sustainable” is available at: http://www.mohanmunasinghe.com/pdf/Island-MCG-1Feb20112.pdf. 

Protected Planet

Saturday, May 28th, 2011

 a UN-Civil Society Initiative to harness the World Database on Protected Areas 

The new interactive website, http://protectedplanet.net, invites the participation of “citizen scientists” around the world.   

The initiative was launched in Nagoya, Japan, on 19 October 2010.  The chief partners are the UN Environment Programme/UNEP (a UN agency) and the International Union for the Conservation of Nature/IUCN (an NGO).  The project is monitored from Cambridge by UNEP in collaboration with a UK charity, the World Conservation Monitoring Centre/WCMC. The IUCN brings together governments, NGOs, UN agencies, companies and local communities to develop and implement policy and best practices.  Their Programme on Protected Areas administers the World Commission on Protected Areas/ WCPA, the world’s premier network of expertise in the field. 

 Protectedplanet.net works with Wikipedia, Google and the social networking sites to enable individuals and local groups to upload photographs and information about protected areas near them.  At present Protected Areas number 150,000.  They include the most famous ones, like Yellowstone National Park in the USA and the Serengeti in Tanzania, as well as many thousand “hidden gems” which attract very few visitors. 

The names and acronyms are given for reference; the thing to remember is that a huge global effort to protect and maintain earth’s biodiversity is well-established and looking for support.