Rio+20 lacks audacity
Rio+20 lacks audacity
Let's start with the host country, which is a huge contradiction in terms of sustainability: As one of the worlds' fastest growing economies, Brazil's growth is generated almost exclusively through an unprecedented exploitation of natural resources. Contrary to the political messages of its socialist government, the wealth generated by this resources exploitation is concentrating in the hands of a wealthy elite. While in the 70s and 80s Brazil reinvested in its own economy, nowadays the country generates little added value and seems to have returned to depending on primary commodities as the basis for its export and its growth.
Brazil organizing a sustainability conference is only one of the many contradictions we see in the world. Take for example fossil fuels; while there is no doubt that we have to reduce the use of oil, gas and coal, investments in fossil by all energy companies listed on stock exchanges soared in recent years. This increase is many times larger than the increase in investments in renewable energies. Meanwhile, if we were to burn all the existing reserves owned by these companies today, global temperature would already rise by 6 degrees. In a sustainable world, no more new reserves would be explored and the current worth of these companies would diminish drastically. But the contrary seems to happen; stock exchanges react enthusiastically to new reserves of oil and gas and many countries face conflicts over these 'precious' resources.
So will Rio's green economy help? No, it won't. Rio's green economy is about taking very small steps in the wrong direction. It is an economy that allows rich elites to take further control over natural resources through the creation of markets and international institutions to govern the euphemistically renamed "global public goods'. In that economy, the vast majority of people has no say whatsoever over its resources.
All those engaged in the Rio process must face the fact that they have a very perverse perception of risk. The real risks lie in continued investments in fossil fuels and unchecked exploitation of resources without any consideration of wealth distribution and investments in society. We are seriously risking democratic processes by creating new markets for CO2 and ecosystem services that disempower local stakeholders while diverting our attention away from the need to break with existing markets. Instead of investing in fossils, we desperately need investments in new initiatives for a sustainable economy, including agriculture and energy. They will generate returns without putting the global ecosystem in crisis and have the added advantage that they are about real people.
Those involved in Rio+20 all realize that that we face a serious crisis. Their challenge is to advocate for real change, for example in the way in which financial markets estimate risks and value their assets. I hope they will have the guts to break with current market thinking and to start investing in what really works.
See further:
Real numbers on investments in fossil fuels
Read more about this subject
-
Blog / 18 februari 2022This is what a fair and sustainable Africa strategy looks like
Minister Liesje Schreinemacher for Foreign Trade and Development Cooperation recently made her first working visit, to Kenya and Uganda. With this visit, the minister made a flying start in honouring the pledge in the new government's coalition agreement to formulate a 'targeted Dutch Africa strategy'. Such a strategy is desperately needed as, too often, our foreign trade is conducted at the expense of people and the environment, including in countries in Africa. The new strategy presents a perfect opportunity to ensure that the 'trade and aid' agendas are closely aligned.
-
Blog / 16 juni 2020The political and industrial elites in Indonesia grasp their opportunity
In September 2019, the streets of Jakarta were filled with angry demonstrators protesting against the Omnibus Employment Law. The law will ease the rules for mining, make it much more difficult to hold companies liable for criminal acts and severely restrict the power of the national anti-corruption committee. At the moment, such protests are completely impossible in Indonesia because of the COVID-19 crisis and the associated lockdown measures. And Indonesian people already had few other means of exerting influence on decision-making and legislative processes.
-
Blog / 28 mei 2020South American organisations are pushing back their boundaries
By Eva SchmitzThe Rio de la Plata Basin in South America extends across Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. The livelihoods of the millions of people who live there – city-dwellers, small farmers and fishers, and indigenous peoples – are under pressure from soya cultivation, mining and logging, and by the construction of dams and ports. The COVID-19 crisis is making the situation even worse.
-
Blog / 13 mei 2020You can’t eat gold, copper and gas
You can't eat gold, copper and gas
"The virus is spreading quicker than the information" – that was the first we heard in the Netherlands about COVID-19 in many African countries and the measures they were taking to tackle it. While states of emergency were announced, borders were closed and we saw image after image of violent police and army responses, many people outside the big cities did not know that what was going on. When the situation became clearer, serious concerns arose about the consequences of the measures that had been taken: the informal economy coming to a standstill, food shortages and internal migration flows.
-
Blog / 5 mei 2020Freedom
Today the Netherlands is celebrating freedom. Our freedom goes further than living in peace. We have the freedom to discuss policy to our hearts’ content on, for example, ending the lockdown on television, in the press and on social media. We can do that freely because we know that our rights to freedom of expression are well protected. But how different that is in countries where authoritarian leaders are grasping the crisis as an excuse to throw these rights out with the trash and rule with an iron hand.
-
Blog / 30 april 2020Discovery of gas in Mozambique: blessing or curse?
COVID-19is placing our economy under a magnifying glass. Now that a large part of global trade has come to a standstill, the tension between international economic activity and local well-being is becoming more visible. That is very clear in northern Mozambique, where one of the world’s largest gas fields was discovered in 2011. Dutch companies are investing in the processing and transport of the gas.
-
Blog / 20 april 2020Call to Minister Kaag: do not waste time and help poor countries through local organisations
The world is turned upside down in this pandemic. Ordinary life is disrupted on our end. Many people suffer from the ‘polder lockdown’, although fortunately we have enough resilience and safety nets to meet our most urgent needs. Unfortunately, outside the Netherlands this all too often lacking. Especially in countries where public health structures are weak and where people are in a total lockdown. Because local communities that are shackled today may be hungry tomorrow. And aid and money does not naturally flow to the most vulnerable citizens there. So extra financial support is urgent.
-
Blog / 16 april 2020New faces are needed for a different future
In this time of crisis-driven reflection we can read telling analyses of past and present on all sides which are being translated into agendas for action. Many of the analyses address issues like inequality, climate, the financial sector, health care, education and women’s rights. They talk about ‘what’ and much less about ‘who’ or ‘how’.But a different future can only be built together with everyone, young and old, men and women. This future will not simply happen to us; we ourselves have a hand in it. It is time for new faces around the table, with new voices. It is time for a new future.
-
Blog / 15 april 2020Now is the time! Investing in a socially just and sustainable society
After Dutch Minister of Finance Wopke Hoekstra had brought the fury of the Southern European countries down on his head on 26 March by blocking the European emergency fund, the Dutch were suddenly 'small-minded and selfish‘ (Parool) and we should ‘go on holiday somewhere else‘ (RTL News). The tone was set. The difficulties encountered in making agreements on support at European level contrast sharply with the speed with which the welcome support measures for employers, entrepreneurs and companies had been announced in the Netherlands two weeks earlier. We have learned nothing from our own past, while everyone benefits from greater priority for solidarity.
-
Blog / 14 april 2020Stop WTO talks until everyone can take full part in them again
The World Trade Organization (WTO) is often seen as an institution in crisis, powerless and no longer relevant, and especially after US president Donald Trump decided in 2019 to pull the plug on one of the WTO’s most important bodies (the one dealing with trade disputes). Now, more than 150 civil society organisations, networks and interest groups from around the world have signed an urgent letter to WTO Director General Roberto Azevedo, because they are seriously concerned about the state of affairs within the organization.
-
Blog / 13 april 2020Invest International – a golden opportunity to green our trade relations
Since his previous government, prime minister Mark Rutte has wanted to create a green legacy with Invest-NL and Invest International, two new financial organisations. With the advent of the COVID-19 crisis, these organisations are more important than ever. Aiming to stimulate investment in sustainable and social projects, they will operate at a distance from the government so that they can act quickly and efficiently. With an initial budget of 2.5 billion euros, they will give financial support to companies active in sectors that the market avoids and which are at the heart of the transition. At Both ENDS, we see that as an essential step in closing the door for good on our old polluting lifestyle and putting sustainability at the centre of developments in the energy sector, in the organisation of our transport and mobility system, in how we produce our food and in the design of our cities.
-
Blog / 19 september 2019A forgotten opportunity worth 1.5 billion euros
Reward high-risk international business projects investing in a green future and stop support for the international fossil industry
The climate is 'hot'. Everyone is talking about it. 'Everyone needs to do something' calls the government in its recently started public campaign. Good plan. Let's really do something. For a start, we can stop supporting international trade in fossil energy by our own multinationals. That would free up 1.5 billion euros which we could use to combat climate change on an international scale and at the same time give our own innovative businesses a boost. Today's Vergeten Klimaattafel (Forgotten Climate Roundtable) will discuss the opportunities for the Netherlands to have a real impact. And those opportunities are enormous. Because our big money and our influence lie beyond our borders.
-
Blog / 29 januari 2019Make the climate debate a part of our foreign policy
The climate debate in the Netherlands is bogged down in what we can change at home and does not touch on our actions abroad. And that is a missed opportunity. Precisely because our international trade model is both so influential and, at the same time, such a widespread cause of pollution, changes in that policy can have an immediate effect.
-
News / 7 oktober 2018Our Director ranking 52nd on Dutch ‘Sustainable 100’-list
We are very proud that our director Daniëlle Hirsch has been included again in the ‘Sustainable 100’ (an annual ranking list published by Dutch newspaper Trouw), and has gone up more than 40 spots compared to last year! Danielle was included in the list because of the many things she does with her organisation as a whole, but she got the higher ranking for the way she combines her criticism of the destructive role of the Netherlands as a trading nation and large cause of CO2 emissions in the world (often supported by the Dutch government), with a constructive attitude when it comes to finding alternatives and solutions.
-
Blog / 23 maart 2017Déjà vu: from Famatina via Orissa and Dakota to Groningen
Whenever I see pictures of the people in the Dutch province of Groningen whose houses are collapsing because of gas extraction and who, even if they wanted to move somewhere else, would never be able to sell them, I can't help but think of all the people worldwide who have been experiencing the same problems, sometimes for decades. Every time I see the anger and powerlessness of the people of Groningen, the comparison to the many people we have been working with for many years in many parts of the world comes to my mind.
-
Blog / 25 november 2016Celebrate countervailing power!
This is the text of the speech given by Danielle Hirsch on the 'Nacht van de Tegenmacht' (Night of Countervailing Power)
-
Blog / 11 juli 2016She is just around the corner…
She is just around the corner… -
Blog / 17 oktober 2014‘Africa Works’ with decent finance
‘Africa Works’ with decent finance -
Blog / 18 april 2014We want value for climate money
We want value for climate money -
Blog / 9 december 2013'The winner takes all'
'The winner takes all'