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AGENDA 21 OBLIGATIONS
Chapter 35
SCIENCE FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
35.1. This chapter focuses on the role and
the use of the sciences in supporting the prudent management of the
environment and development for the daily survival and future
development of humanity. The programme areas proposed herein are
intended to be over-arching, in order to support the specific scientific
requirements identified in the other Agenda 21 chapters. One role of the
sciences should be to provide information to better enable formulation
and selection of environment and development policies in the
decision-making process. In order to fulfil this requirement, it will be
essential to enhance scientific understanding, improve long-term
scientific assessments, strengthen scientific capacities in all
countries and ensure that the sciences are responsive to emerging needs.
35.2. Scientists are improving their
understanding in areas such as climatic change, growth in rates of
resource consumption, demographic trends, and environmental degradation.
Changes in those and other areas need to be taken into account in
working out long-term strategies for development. A first step towards
improving the scientific basis for these strategies is a better
understanding of land, oceans, atmosphere and their interlocking water,
nutrient and biogeochemical cycles and energy flows which all form part
of the Earth system. This is essential if a more accurate estimate is to
be provided of the carrying capacity of the planet Earth and of its
resilience under the many stresses placed upon it by human activities.
The sciences can provide this understanding through increased research
into the underlying ecological processes and through the application of
modern, effective and efficient tools that are now available, such as
remote-sensing devices, robotic monitoring instruments and computing and
modelling capabilities. The sciences are playing an important role in
linking the fundamental significance of the Earth system as life support
to appropriate strategies for development which build on its continued
functioning. The sciences should continue to play an increasing role in
providing for an improvement in the efficiency of resource utilization
and in finding new development practices, resources, and alternatives.
There is a need for the sciences constantly to reassess and promote less
intensive trends in resource utilization, including less intensive
utilization of energy in industry, agriculture, and transportation.
Thus, the sciences are increasingly being understood as an essential
component in the search for feasible pathways towards sustainable
development.
35.3. Scientific knowledge should be
applied to articulate and support the goals of sustainable development,
through scientific assessments of current conditions and future
prospects for the Earth system. Such assessments, based on existing and
emerging innovations within the sciences, should be used in the
decision-making process and in the interactive processes between the
sciences and policy-making. There needs to be an increased output from
the sciences in order to enhance understanding and facilitate
interaction between science and society. An increase in the scientific
capacity and capability to achieve these goals will also be required,
particularly in developing countries. Of crucial importance is the need
for scientists in developing countries to participate fully in
international scientific research programmes dealing with the global
problems of environment and development so as to allow all countries to
participate on equal footing in negotiations on global environmental and
developmental issues. In the face of threats of irreversible
environmental damage, lack of full scientific understanding should not
be an excuse for postponing actions which are justified in their own
right. The precautionary approach could provide a basis for policies
relating to complex systems that are not yet fully understood and whose
consequences of disturbances cannot yet be predicted.
35.4. The programme areas, which are in
harmony with the conclusions and recommendations of the International
Conference on an Agenda of Science for Environment and Development into
the 21st Century (ASCEND 21) are:
·
Strengthening the
scientific basis for sustainable management;
·
Enhancing
scientific understanding;
·
Improving
long-term scientific assessment;
·
Building up
scientific capacity and capability.
A. Strengthening the scientific basis for
sustainable management
Objectives
35.6. The primary objective is for each
country with the support of international organizations, as requested,
to identify the state of its scientific knowledge and its research needs
and priorities in order to achieve, as soon as possible, substantial
improvements in:
·
Large-scale
widening of the scientific base and strengthening of scientific and
research capacities and capabilities - in particular, those of
developing countries - in areas relevant to environment and development;
·
Environmental and
developmental policy formulation, building upon the best scientific
knowledge and assessments, and taking into account the need to enhance
international cooperation and the relative uncertainties of the various
processes and options involved;
·
The interaction
between the sciences and decision-making, using the precautionary
approach, where appropriate, to change the existing patterns of
production and consumption and to gain time for reducing uncertainty
with respect to the selection of policy options;
·
The generation
and application of knowledge, especially indigenous and local knowledge,
to the capacities of different environments and cultures, to achieve
sustained levels of development, taking into account interrelations at
the national, regional and international levels;
·
Improving
cooperation between scientists by promoting interdisciplinary research
programmes and activities;
·
Participation of
people in setting priorities and in decision-making relating to
sustainable development.
Activities
35.7. Countries, with the assistance of
international organizations, where required, should:
·
Prepare an
inventory of their natural and social science data holdings relevant to
the promotion of sustainable development;
·
Identify their
research needs and priorities in the context of international research
efforts;
·
Strengthen and
design appropriate institutional mechanisms at the highest appropriate
local, national, subregional and regional levels and within the United
Nations system for developing a stronger scientific basis for the
improvement of environmental and developmental policy formulation
consistent with long-term goals of sustainable development. Current
research in this area should be broadened to include more involvement of
the public in establishing long-term societal goals for formulating the
sustainable development scenarios;
·
Develop, apply
and institute the necessary tools for sustainable development, with
regard to:
·
Quality-of-life
indicators covering, for example, health, education, social welfare,
state of the environment, and the economy;
·
Economic
approaches to environmentally sound development and new and improved
incentive structures for better resource management;
·
Long-term
environmental policy formulation, risk management and environmentally
sound technology assessment;
·
Collect, analyse
and integrate data on the linkages between the state of ecosystems and
the health of human communities in order to improve knowledge of the
cost and benefit of different development policies and strategies in
relation to health and the environment, particularly in developing
countries;
·
Conduct
scientific studies of national and regional pathways to sustainable
development, using comparable and complementary methodologies. Such
studies, coordinated by an international science effort, should to a
large extent involve local expertise and be conducted by
multidisciplinary teams from regional networks and/or research centres,
as appropriate and according to national capacities and the available
resources;
·
Improve
capabilities for determining scientific research priorities at the
national, regional and global levels to meet the needs of sustainable
development. This is a process that involves scientific judgements
regarding short-term and long-term benefits and possible long-term costs
and risks. It should be adaptive and responsive to perceived needs and
be carried out via transparent, "user-friendly", risk-evaluation
methodologies;
·
Develop methods
to link the findings of the established sciences with the indigenous
knowledge of different cultures. The methods should be tested using
pilot studies. They should be developed at the local level and should
concentrate on the links between the traditional knowledge of indigenous
groups and corresponding, current "advanced science", with particular
focus on disseminating and applying the results to environmental
protection and sustainable development.
Means of
implementation
(a) Financing and cost evaluation
35.8. The Conference secretariat has
estimated the average total annual cost (1993-2000) of implementing the
activities of this programme to be about $150 million, including about
$30 million from the international community on grant or concessional
terms. These are indicative and order-of-magnitude estimates only and
have not been reviewed by Governments. Actual costs and financial terms,
including any that are non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia,
the specific strategies and programmes Governments decide upon for
implementation.
(b) Scientific and technological means
35.9. The scientific and technological
means include the following:
·
Supporting new
scientific research programmes, including their socio-economic and human
aspects, at the community, national, subregional, regional and global
levels, to complement and encourage synergies between traditional and
conventional scientific knowledge and practices and strengthening
interdisciplinary research related to environmental degradation and
rehabilitation;
·
Setting up
demonstration models of different types (e.g., socio-economic,
environmental conditions) to study methodologies and formulate
guidelines;
·
Supporting
research by developing relative-risk evaluation methods to assist policy
makers in ranking scientific research priorities.
B. Enhancing scientific understanding
Objectives
35.11. One key objective is to improve and
increase the fundamental understanding of the linkages between human and
natural environmental systems and improve the analytical and predictive
tools required to better understand the environmental impacts of
development options by:
·
Carrying out
research programmes in order better to understand the carrying capacity
of the Earth as conditioned by its natural systems, such as the
biogeochemical cycles, the atmosphere/hydrosphere/lithosphere/cryosphere
system, the biosphere and biodiversity, the agro-ecosystem and other
terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems;
·
Developing and
applying new analytical and predictive tools in order to assess more
accurately the ways in which the Earth's natural systems are being
increasingly influenced by human actions, both deliberate and
inadvertent, and demographic trends, and the impact and consequences of
those actions and trends;
·
Integrating
physical, economic and social sciences in order better to understand the
impacts of economic and social behaviour on the environment and of
environmental degradation on local and global economies.
Activities
35.12. The following activities should be
undertaken:
·
Support
development of an expanded monitoring network to describe cycles (for
example, global, biogeochemical and hydrological cycles) and test
hypotheses regarding their behaviour, and improve research into the
interactions among the various global cycles and their consequences at
national, subregional, regional and global levels as guides to tolerance
and vulnerability;
·
Support national,
subregional, regional and international observation and research
programmes in global atmospheric chemistry and the sources and sinks of
greenhouse gases, and ensure that the results are presented in a
publicly accessible and understandable form;
·
Support national,
subregional, regional and international research programmes on marine
and terrestrial systems, strengthen global terrestrial databases of
their components, expand corresponding systems for monitoring their
changing states and enhance predictive modelling of the Earth system and
its subsystems, including modelling of the functioning of these systems
assuming different intensities of human impact. The research programmes
should include the programmes mentioned in other Agenda 21 chapters
which support mechanisms for cooperation and coherence of research
programmes on global change;
·
Encourage
coordination of satellite missions, the networks, systems and procedures
for processing and disseminating their data; and develop the interface
with the research users of Earth observation data and with the United
Nations EARTHWATCH system;
·
Develop the
capacity for predicting the responses of terrestrial, freshwater,
coastal and marine ecosystems and biodiversity to short- and long-term
perturbations of the environment, and develop further restoration
ecology;
·
Study the role of
biodiversity and the loss of species in the functioning of ecosystems
and the global life-support system;
·
Initiate a global
observing system of parameters needed for the rational management of
coastal and mountain zones and significantly expand freshwater
quantity/quality monitoring systems, particularly in developing
countries;
·
In order to
understand the Earth as a system, develop Earth observation systems from
space which will provide integrated, continuous and long-term
measurements of the interactions of the atmosphere, hydrosphere and
lithosphere, and develop a distribution system for data which will
facilitate the utilization of data obtained through observation;
·
Develop and apply
systems and technology that automatically collect, record and transmit
data and information to data and analysis centres, in order to monitor
marine, terrestrial and atmospheric processes and provide advance
warning of natural disasters;
·
Enhance the
contribution of the engineering sciences to multidisciplinary research
programmes on the Earth system, in particular with regard to increasing
emergency preparedness and reducing the negative effects of major
natural disasters;
·
Intensify
research to integrate the physical, economic and social sciences to
better understand the impacts of economic and social behaviour on the
environment and of environmental degradation on local and global
economies and, in particular:
·
Develop research
on human attitudes and behaviour as driving forces central to an
understanding of the causes and consequences of environmental change and
resource use;
·
Promote research
on human, economic and social responses to global change;
·
Support
development of new user-friendly technologies and systems that
facilitate the integration of multidisciplinary, physical, chemical,
biological and social/human processes which, in turn, provide
information and knowledge for decision makers and the general public.
Means of
implementation
(a) Financing and cost evaluation
35.13. The Conference secretariat has
estimated the average total annual cost (1993-2000) of implementing the
activities of this programme to be about $2 billion, including about
$1.5 billion from the international community on grant or concessional
terms. These are indicative and order-of-magnitude estimates only and
have not been reviewed by Governments. Actual costs and financial terms,
including any that are non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia,
the specific strategies and programmes Governments decide upon for
implementation.
(b) Scientific and technological means
35.14. The scientific and technological
means include the following:
·
Supporting and
using the relevant national research activities of academia, research
institutes and governmental and non-governmental organizations, and
promoting their active participation in regional and global programmes,
particularly in developing countries;
·
Increasing the
use of appropriate enabling systems and technologies, such as
supercomputers, space-based observational technology, Earth- and
ocean-based observational technologies, data management and database
technologies and, in particular, developing and expanding the Global
Climate Observing System.
-
Improving long-term scientific assessment
Objectives
35.16. The primary objective is to provide
assessments of the current status and trends in major developmental and
environmental issues at the national, subregional, regional and global
levels on the basis of the best available scientific knowledge in order
to develop alternative strategies, including indigenous approaches, for
the different scales of time and space required for long-term policy
formulation.
Activities
35.17. The following activities should be
undertaken:
·
Coordinate
existing data- and statistics-gathering systems relevant to
developmental and environmental issues so as to support preparation of
long-term scientific assessments - for example, data on resource
depletion, import/export flows, energy use, health impacts and
demographic trends; apply the data obtained through the activities
identified in programme area B to environment/development assessments at
the global, regional and local levels; and promote the wide distribution
of the assessments in a form that is responsive to public needs and can
be widely understood;
·
Develop a
methodology to carry out national and regional audits and a five-year
global audit on an integrated basis. The standardized audits should help
to refine the pattern and character of development, examining in
particular the capacities of global and regional life-supporting systems
to meet the needs of human and non-human life forms and identifying
areas and resources vulnerable to further degradation. This task would
involve the integration of all relevant sciences at the national,
regional, and global levels, and would be organized by governmental
agencies, non-governmental organizations, universities and research
institutions, assisted by international governmental and
non-governmental organizations and United Nations bodies, when necessary
and as appropriate. These audits should then be made available to the
general public.
Means of
implementation
Financing and cost evaluation
35.18. The Conference secretariat has
estimated the average total annual cost (1993-2000) of implementing the
activities of this programme to be about $35 million, including about
$18 million from the international community on grant or concessional
terms. These are indicative and order-of-magnitude estimates only and
have not been reviewed by Governments. Actual costs and financial terms,
including any that are non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia,
the specific strategies and programmes Governments decide upon for
implementation.
35.19. With regard to the existing data
requirements under programme area A, support should be provided for
national data collection and warning systems. This would involve setting
up database, information and reporting systems, including data
assessment and information dissemination in each region.
D. Building up scientific capacity and
capability
Objectives
35.21. The primary objective is to improve
the scientific capacities of all countries - in particular, those of
developing countries - with specific regard to:
·
Education,
training and facilities for local research and development and human
resource development in basic scientific disciplines and in
environment-related sciences, utilizing where appropriate traditional
and local knowledge of sustainability;
·
A substantial
increase by the year 2000 in the number of scientists - particularly
women scientists - in those developing countries where their number is
at present insufficient;
·
Reducing
significantly the exodus of scientists from developing countries and
encouraging those who have left to return;
·
Improving access
to relevant information for scientists and decision makers, with the aim
of improving public awareness and participation in decision-making;
·
Involvement of
scientists in national, regional and global environmental and
developmental research programmes, including multidisciplinary research;
·
Periodic academic
update of scientists from developing countries in their respective
fields of knowledge.
Activities
35.22. The following activities should be
undertaken:
·
Promote the
education and training of scientists, not only in their disciplines but
also in their ability to identify, manage and incorporate environmental
considerations into research and development projects; ensure that a
sound base in natural systems, ecology and resource management is
provided; and develop specialists capable of working in
interdisciplinary programmes related to environment and development,
including the field of applied social sciences;
·
Strengthen the
scientific infrastructure in schools, universities and research
institutions - particularly those in developing countries - by the
provision of adequate scientific equipment and access to current
scientific literature, for the purpose of achieving and sustaining a
critical mass of highly qualified scientists in these countries;
·
Develop and
expand national scientific and technological databases, processing data
in unified formats and systems, and allowing full and open access to the
depository libraries of regional scientific and technological
information networks. Promote submission of scientific and technological
information and databases to global or regional data centres and network
systems;
·
Develop and
expand regional and global scientific and technological information
networks which are based on and linked to national scientific and
technological databases; collect, process and disseminate information
from regional and global scientific programmes; expand activities to
reduce information barriers due to language differences. Increase the
applications - particularly in developing countries - of computer-based
retrieval systems in order to cope with the growth of scientific
literature;
·
Develop,
strengthen and forge new partnerships among national, regional and
global capacities to promote the full and open exchange of scientific
and technological data and information and to facilitate technical
assistance related to environmentally sound and sustainable development.
This should be done through the development of mechanisms for the
sharing of basic research, data and information, and the improvement and
development of international networks and centres, including regional
linking with national scientific databases, for research, training and
monitoring. Such mechanisms should be designed so as to enhance
professional cooperation among scientists in all countries and to
establish strong national and regional alliances between industry and
research institutions;
·
Improve and
develop new links between existing networks of natural and social
scientists and universities at the international level in order to
strengthen national capacities in the formulation of policy options in
the field of environment and development;
·
Compile, analyse
and publish information on indigenous environmental and developmental
knowledge, and assist the communities that possess such knowledge to
benefit from them.
Means of
implementation
(a) Financing and cost evaluation
35.23. The Conference secretariat has
estimated the average total annual cost (1993-2000) of implementing the
activities of this programme to be about $750 million, including about
$470 million from the international community on grant or concessional
terms. These are indicative and order-of-magnitude estimates only and
have not been reviewed by Governments. Actual costs and financial terms,
including any that are non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia,
the specific strategies and programmes Governments decide upon for
implementation.
(b) Scientific and technological means
35.24. Such means include increasing and
strengthening regional multidisciplinary research and training networks
and centres making optimal use of existing facilities and associated
sustainable development and technology support systems in developing
regions. Promote and use the potential of independent initiatives and
indigenous innovations and entrepreneurship. The function of such
networks and centres could include, for example:
·
Support and
coordination of scientific cooperation among all nations in the region;
·
Linking with
monitoring centres and carrying out assessment of environmental and
developmental conditions;
·
Support and
coordination of national studies of pathways towards sustainable
development;
·
Organization of
science education and training;
·
Establishment and
maintenance of information, monitoring and assessment systems and
databases.
(c) Capacity-building
35.25. Capacity-building includes the
following:
·
Creating
conditions (e.g., salaries, equipment, libraries) to ensure that the
scientists will work effectively in their home countries;
Enhancing national, regional and global capacities for carrying out
scientific research and applying scientific and technological
information to environmentally sound and sustainable development. This
includes a need to increase financial resources for global and regional
scientific and technological information networks, as may be
appropriate, so that they will be able to function effectively and
efficiently in satisfying the scientific needs of developing countries.
Ensure the capacity-building of women by recruiting more women in
research and research training. |