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johannesburg: wednesday 4th september
us wrecks earth
summit
friends of the earth’s art installation
“hear our voice” (inside sandton security
zone, corner of maude and 5th), with 6,000
mute witnesses and a 6 metre high corporate
giant, has been specially adapted for the end
of the earth summit.
It’s the picture you need for your end
of Summit report!
The Bush Administration has been the
single biggest obstacle toward achieving
progress at this Summit. Despite Secretary of
State Colin Powell’s shameless speech today,
US intransigence has been obvious to the
world. US refusal to agree to substantive
agreements with timetables and targets is
particularly egregious given the
disproportionate share of global resources it
consumes and environmental damage it does.On
August 2, 2002, 31 right wing groups and
individuals sent a letter to President Bush
asking his Administration to return from
Johannesburg with no new targets and
timetables. The US has done its best to
pander to these interests. Only two new
concrete targets were agreed (1).
Undermining Corporate
Accountability
The US has been obstructionist throughout
the WSSD on critical issues such as global
rules for business that would ensure high
standards of corporate behaviour everywhere.
Despite the corporate malfeasance scandals
that have rocked especially the US, the
Americans are still trying to undermine
corporate accountability negotiations taking
place in Johannesburg. Countries agreed in
the negotiations to develop and implement
intergovernmental agreements on corporate
responsibility and accountability. But the US
sought to impose its own interpretation of
the text on the rest of the world by
demanding a "Letter of Interpretation" from
the chair of the globalization and trade
negotiations. This interpretation would say
that all countries agree that the agreement
on corporate accountability has to do only
with "existing" agreements. This is a clear
attempt to scuttle any effort to develop new,
binding international rules for big business.
It is impossible for an interpretive note to
bind all countries – which is why Ethiopia
and Norway objected formally. The issue could
be raised again today by the US in plenary as
the White House allegedly gave orders that
the US could not accept the current text
without its own interpretation prevailing.
Ignoring Climate Change and Imperiling the
World, The Bush Administration remains
opposed to real action to combat climate
change, despite producing one quarter of the
world’s climate emissions. US public finance
institutions are subsidizing further dirty
fossil fuel projects around the world. US
Government inaction has led Friends of the
Earth United States to file a lawsuit with
Greenpeace and the City of Boulder, CO in the
US District Court in San Francisco to compel
the Overseas Private (OPIC) Investment
Corporation and the Export-Import Bank
(EX-Im) to comply with the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). This
groundbreaking legal action alleges that OPIC
and Ex-Im illegally provided over $32 billion
in financing and insurance for oil fields,
pipelines and coal-fired plants over the past
10 years without assessing their contribution
to global warming and their impact on the
U.S. environment required under key
provisions of NEPA.
Forcing GMOs Against the Will of
Developing Countries
Friends of the Earth condemned Powell for
his announcement that he deplored the action
of countries that rejected US food aid that
contained GMOs. The stance of the US
government advances the interests of
multibillion dollar biotech companies looking
for overseas markets. Friends of the Earth
calls on governments to respect the right of
countries to decide the type of food they
want to eat and urges international
institutions to provide non-GMO sources when
countries in need request it. Bush:
Partnerships as the Solution Rather than
binding action, the Bush Administration
announced "signature partnerships" in the
areas of water, energy, agriculture and
forests. Only $20 million of the $970 million
pledged to address these areas represents new
money. Furthermore, the Administration is
shirking Africa in other areas. For example,
overall aid to Africa in FY 2003 declined by
$39 million. The Congo Basin Initiative is a
key example of the Bush Administration's
flawed partnerships approach. While
supposedly benefiting forest protection and
management in the highly biodiverse Congo
Basin, the initiative will actually put more
money into flawed programs that have not
reduced illegal logging, empowered local
communities or enabled sustainable forest
management. The US has also dismissed
concerns of local environmental groups about
corruption in these countries and the close
collusion between government officials and
timber barons.
Leslie Fields of Friends of the Earth
United States commented
“The Bush Administration's actions at the
WSSD reflect a sordid pandering to
corporations and far right wing interest
groups. People around the world have not have
had their voices heard, but corporations
continue to dominate US policy at
Johannesburg.”
Ricardo Navarro, Chair of Friends of the
Earth International added: “Throughout this
Summit, the US Administration has betrayed
our environment, and the needs of the poor
and the vulnerable around the world. That’s
why we were protesting during Colin Powell’s
shameless and inadequate speech. The
responsibility of the US for the relative
failure of this Summit is paramount. The
whole world knows it. Nothing the Secretary
of State had to say will make the slightest
difference to this damning verdict.”
CONTACTS
:
Ricardo Navarro (FoEI Chair, El Salvador)
+27 72 401 5392
Tony Juniper (FoEI Vice-Chair, UK) +27 72
401 5393
Daniel Mittler (FoEI Summit Co-ordinator,
Germany) +27 72 401 5394
Carol Welch (US) +27 82 858 6073
Yuri Onodera (Japan) +27 72 401 5391
Niccolo Sarno (Media) +27 72 401 5387
Ian Willmore (Media) +27 72 401 5386
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