UNU submits report to
Johannesburg
Summit Asian preparatory committee
A UN University report containing 10 key
recommendations aimed at removing barriers to sustainable development in
the Asia and the Pacific has been submitted to the region's Preparatory
Committee for the World
Summit on Sustainable Development, to be held in Johannesburg later
this year.
A delegation from UNU and UNU Institute
for Advanced Studies presented the report to the PrepCom meeting held in Phhom
Penh November 27-29.
This report outlines
UNU's priorities relating to the implementation of Agenda 21
and its sustainable development goals, and details key sustainable
development issues and challenges in the Asia Pacific region.
The report's key findings and recommendations are:
- Enhance inter-linkages between multilateral environmental agreements
(MEAs) at the regional and national level.
- Financial mechanisms and donor institutions must promote greater
inter-linkages between MEAs.
- The principle of subsidiarity (which calls for decisions to be taken
and implement4ed at a level appropriate to the problem they address)
should be more readily applied in environmental decision making and
implementation.
- Clustering of MEAs in an effective and cost efficient approach to
MEA implementation.
- Sustainable development and the needs of developing countries should
be the guiding imperatives in resolving international debate about the
multilateral trading system.
- Greater connectivity is required between urbanization and
sustainable development and priority issues such as poverty, health
and rural development.
- Promotion of information communication technologies is critical for
environmental education and conservation.
- Zero emissions strategies are a practical and economically efficient
path to sustainability.
- Promotion of best practices on agro-biodiversity through local
knowledge is a key to biodiversity conservation.
- Creation and implementation of strategic national frameworks for
sustainable development are required.
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