GLOBAL
ENERGY NETWORK INSTITUTE
a
solution to global problems
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September
10, 2002
World
Summit on Sustainable Development:
Success
or Failure?
Dear GENI
friend,
Having
just returned from the Johannesburg United Nations
Earth Summit, I was intrigued by the conversations
with people back home. Almost everyone said that the
media described the Summit as a failure— that
several nations stonewalled certain issues and the
environmental groups called it Rio minus 10. This
is exactly opposite from my personal observations
in being there.
Having
attended several UN summits in the past decade, I
find them to be overwhelming, confusing and inspiring.
Getting 200 nations and numerous international agencies
to agree on a direction is a bit like herding cats.
And this summit had a huge agenda put forward by Secretary
General Kofi Annan called WEHAB: water and sanitation,
energy, health care, agriculture and biodiversity.
7000 official delegates (these are mostly career government
officials) worked late every evening and concurred
on most of these issues with commitment and financial
pledges like never before.
Much attention
was given on targets and timetables for the development
of renewable energy. This was not possible due
to
reluctance by the U.S., Japan and OPEC nations — but the
European Community and nation after nation spoke
powerfully about the necessity for renewable
energy development— both for those developing societies
who have no energy services and for the world to
reduce
greenhouse gas emissions. This was a sea-change from
10 years ago where energy wasn't even on the agenda.
I also
attended 2 special energy meetings hosted by ESKOM,
the national utility of South Africa. One of their
Directors, Steve Lennon, made a comment that will
always stick with me. He had seen our exhibit in Rio
ten years ago, and said that we seemed "a bit
looney." He
then continued to say that today, ESKOM was doing
exactly what we we've been talking about ever since!
That's movement.
I've enclosed
some of the reports about the Johannesburg
Summit and the UN
Millennium Goals. As you'll see, there is progress
-- and still a long way to go. You helped us make
the change in ESKOM and put renewable energy onto
the global agenda. (Every UN agency and national
delegation received the GENI newsletter and CD ROM
"There is no energy crisis.") Now we
need to accelerate it's realization.
In partnership
for the planet,
Peter Meisen
A
U.S. Tax Exempt 501(c)(3) Corporation committed to
improving the quality of life for everyone without
damage to the planet.
GENI
Affiliates in Australia, Canada, Hong Kong, New Zealand,
Singapore and United States.
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