1. The landmark report of the World Commission on
        Environment and Development, entitled "Our Common Future", warned that
        unless we change many of our lifestyle patterns, the world will face unacceptable levels
        of environmental damage and human suffering. The Commission, echoing the urgent need for
        tailoring the pace and the pattern of global economic growth to the planet's carrying
        capacity, said that: "Humanity has the ability to make development sustainable and to
        ensure that it meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future
        generations to meet their own needs." 
        2. In the final analysis, the environmental crisis affects everyone on the planet, but
        the degree to which the inhabitants of different parts of the world contribute to this
        crisis depends on the level of their economic development and their consumption patterns.
        As much as 70% of the world's consumption of fossil fuel and 85% of chemical products is
        attributable to 25% of the world's population. Water consumption is also unevenly
        distributed. The per caput water consumption in the United States is about 2 300
        m³ per annum, as compared to 1 500 m³ for the Canadians and 225 m³ for the British. The
        average per caput consumption of water in developing countries ranges between 20 to
        40 m³. The consumption patterns for forest products and many other commodities have the
        same direct inverse proportion to the size of population of the top 20% of the richest
        societies. This profligate demand puts excessive pressure on both national and global
        natural resources. The rest of the world, comprising 80% of its population with a share of
        less than 20% of global income, has a far more modest consumption level. 
        3. While international environmental concerns are often expressed in broad terms such a
        desertification or climatic change, the environmental problems of concern to
        vulnerable groups in marginal areas are generally quite localized in nature, revolving
        around immediate issues, such as the degradation of a particular rangeland or soil erosion
        on farmland or the progressive shortening of fallow. These affect the poor because they
        are directly related to household food security. Degradation of the resource base
        generally translates into decreases in production or income and thus in the availability
        of food. Declining soil fertility leads to lower crop yields while rangeland depletion
        reduces offtake, and any deterioration in water quality adversely affects the fish catch.
        Degradation of common property resources pulls labour away from directly productive
        activities towards gathering - simply collecting non-wood and minor forest products - and
        probably diminishes opportunities for deriving income from this source. Linkages with food
        security can also be less direct. Shortages of biomass may result in a transition to
        lower-nutrition foods that require less fuel for cooking. In addition, recurrent drought
        or natural calamities also directly result in progressive loss of food security prospects.
        
        4. In their quest for food security, the rural poor have sometimes little choice but to
        overuse the limited resources available to them. The resulting environmental degradation
        imposes further constraints on their livelihood in what has been called a "downward
        spiral" or "vicious circle". They are often forced to make trade-offs
        between immediate household food requirements and environmental sustainability both in
        production and consumption. Their negligible man-made capital assets, ill-defined or
        non-existent property rights, limited access to financial services and other markets,
        inadequate safety nets in time of stress or disaster, and lack of participation in
        decision-making can result in their adopting "short time horizons", which favour
        immediate imperatives over longer-term objectives. This can result in coping strategies
        that rely on the drawing down of the capital available to them -- mainly in the form of
        natural resources. It also makes them more vulnerable to environmental degradation,
        including degradation wrought by others than the poor themselves. 
        5. The poor may be both agents and victims of environmental degradation, especially in
        marginal areas, where the resource base is ill-suited to agriculture. But it cannot be
        assumed that the poor have an intrinsic propensity to degrade environmental resources. On
        the contrary, many poor traditional communities demonstrate an admirable environmental
        ethic and have developed complex resource management regimes. There is little evidence
        that the rural poor, when offered an appropriate environment - including secure tenure and
        access to markets- pursue resource-degrading strategies. Thus, while poverty may be an underlying
        cause of environmental degradation, it is more accurately seen as a proximate cause
        influenced by a complex of policy and institutional factors. The very same processes that
        lead to and perpetuate poverty constrain the poor in their decision- making with regard to
        natural resource management. Affluence and poverty affect the environment in different
        ways: poverty eradication would not erase environmental degradation but change the nature
        of environmental problems facing society. 
        Poverty in Fragile Ecosystems 
        6. Absolute poverty has been on the retreat in most high-potential areas in developing
        countries. The combination of more productive technologies, fertile land and water, and
        high levels of development and public investment have raised incomes significantly for
        people living in these areas. While this development has not always been equitable - or
        sustainable, the most important disparities are not between rich and poor people within
        high- potential areas, but rather between high-potential high-investment areas and fragile
        ecosystems. In the latter areas, politically marginal indigenous populations have been
        neglected and have been joined by new groups displaced from more fertile areas through a
        variety of processes. These processes, although varying across countries and regions,
        include expropriation, demographic pressures, land fragmentation, privatization of common
        property lands, and consolidation and expansion of the commercial sector combined with
        reduced demand for labour due to mechanization. 
        7. While the challenge for poverty alleviation in high-potential areas remains
        considerable, the prognosis is not grim provided agricultural intensification proceeds
        without environmental destruction. On the other hand, for the 60% of poor populations who
        are found in fragile ecosystems and mainly remote and ecologically vulnerable rural areas,
        the challenge of environmentally sustainable poverty alleviation is immense. It has been
        estimated that 80% of poor people in Latin America live in such areas, 60% in Africa and
        50% in Asia. Reliance on the currently prevailing patterns of growth will postpone the
        resolution of poverty in marginal areas, with severe implications not only for the people
        affected but also for the environment. The immediate-to-medium-term prospects for the
        rural poor to abandon these areas for other sectors of the economy, as was the case in
        Europe in the last century, are not promising. As a result, fragile ecosystems are rapidly
        becoming ghettos of poverty and environmental degradation. 
        8. The need for urgent action can be recognized in relation to the following
        characteristics of these regions: 
        (a) They constitute a significant part of the world's land resources. Forty percent of
        the earth's land surface is considered dryland, of which approximately 70% is already
        degraded or subject to heavy degradation. On the other hand, hilly and mountainous regions
        cover about 21% of the earth land mass and, although not so extensive as dry lands, they
        exert a far-reaching influence on other areas, primarily through watershed functions. 
        (b) The role of both ecosystems in terms of human habitat is also significant:
        approximately 900 million of the world's population are subsisting in dry zones. Although
        only about 10% of the world population live in mountain areas, a much larger percentage
        (about 40%) occupies the watersheds below. It is safe to assume that the future of
        mountain ecosystems affects the life of half of the world's population. From the Andes to
        the Himalayas, and from South East Asia to East and Central Africa a serious ecological
        deterioration caused by overgrazing, deforestation and excessive cultivation threatens the
        livelihood of these populations. 
        (c) Mountains are important sources of water, energy, minerals, agricultural products
        and a major reserve for the world's biodiversity. Similarly, dry zones are rich in
        biodiversity, hosting many endangered species. Moreover, crops, grasses, trees, and
        livestock species, that form the core of survival in drought prone regions, exist in these
        regions only. 
        (d) A high proportion of the absolute poor in ecologically fragile areas are indigenous
        peoples, estimated at some 300 million worldwide. They depend on renewable resources to
        maintain their well-being. This has led to the development of livelihood systems which are
        well-adapted to the harsh conditions in which they lived. Their holistic, traditional
        knowledge of their natural resources and environment constitutes a rich human heritage.
        However, their traditional ways of life are now being threatened, disturbing the delicate
        balance of natural resource use. Nevertheless, viable technology and institutional
        arrangements for resource conservation in these areas could be built upon indigenous
        knowledge; and similarly effective disaster prevention policies can benefit from coping
        strategies developed by the local population. 
        (e) Rural women play a key role in on- and off-farm activities in the developing
        countries. This is particularly true in the case of the ecologically fragile areas. With
        the growing male out-migration from marginal areas, the number of women headed households
        in these areas is increasing. Women are becoming more and more responsible for the day to
        day survival of the family. Women tend to be more vulnerable than men to the effects of
        environmental degradation because they are often involved in harvesting common property
        resources such as wood and water. Since women usually make a greater contribution to
        household food security than men, a decline in women's access to resources may have a
        significant impact on household consumption. Environmental degradation implies further
        burdens and responsibilities which are not compensated for by increased decision-making
        power. 
        (f) Degradation of land and loss of its vegetative cover also have consequences at the
        global level, primarily because of its influence on carbon exchange, but also in terms of
        loss of biodiversity. The large amount of carbon stored in the vegetation of the dry
        zones, for example, averaging about 30 tonnes per hectare, decreases when the vegetation
        is depleted or disappears. Carbon-rich soils, frequently found in dry zones, store a
        substantial amount of this element (nearly half the total quantity of carbon is stored in
        the organic matter in the soil, much more than is found in the world's vegetation). The
        destruction of these soils has a very powerful effect on the carbon cycle and boosts the
        greenhouse effect as a result of the release of carbon. 
        Towards Action 
        9. Over the past two decades, environmental degradation, including land degradation has
        continued to worsen exacerbating further poverty and food insecurity. Conversely,
        awareness of the importance of the environment and its conservation has increased. There
        has been a transformation in people's perception of the poverty problem in developing
        countries. If one accepts that hard core rural poverty is increasingly a phenomenon
        associated with marginal lands, then new strategies are required that integrate poverty
        alleviation and environmental management. Until recently, the international community and
        national governments have tended not to appreciate the need for integrated rural poverty
        alleviation and environmental management programmes in marginal areas. There were a number
        of promising initiatives in this field, usually undertaken by NGOs and community- based
        organizations, but they were usually small and very localized. At the same time, in many
        regions, rural people's perception of their environment and the priority they give to a
        better relationship with it have changed. Increasingly, rural people are realizing that:
        (a) the fragile environment on which they depend for their survival is being neglected or
        over- exploited, and it is now necessary to rehabilitate it and manage it sustainably; and
        (b) the environment belongs primarily to them, and they must take the responsibility for
        the land and organize themselves in groups, cooperatives, village development associations
        and other local association to defend it. 
        10. UNCED's Agenda 21, the global action programme for sustainable development, is
        perhaps the first expression of international commitment to addressing the poverty-
        environment nexus. Chapter 3 on "combating poverty" called for specific
        long-term strategies that integrate poverty eradication and sustainable management of the
        environment. Agenda 21 devoted two chapters to the special needs of fragile ecosystems,
        namely Chapter 12 on "Combating Desertification and Drought" and Chapter 13 on
        "Sustainable Mountain Development". In the follow-up to UNCED, promising
        initiatives have emerged for these thematic areas. For drylands, the United Nations
        Convention to Combat Desertification in Those Countries Experiencing Serious Drought
        and/or Desertification, Particularly in Africa (CCD) provides a framework for concrete
        action at the local level. For mountainous areas, efforts are currently under way to
        develop the basis for an action plan for sustainable mountain development, known as the
        "Mountain Agenda". 
        11. The Agenda involves the establishment of a network on sustainable mountain
        development consisting of United Nations agencies, NGOs and intergovernmental
        institutions. A set of action proposals has been developed by those involved in promoting
        sustainable mountain development. In recognition of the need to give prominence to the
        "Mountain Agenda" on the international and national lists of priorities, a
        global Inter-Governmental Organizations (IGO)/NGO Conference, as well as regional
        inter-governmental consultations are being convened. The main proposals for action that
        are emerging, identified through a broad participatory process involving the major NGOs,
        encompass five specific areas of focus: poverty eradication; the strengthening of a global
        information network and database; strengthening country capacity and the generation of
        "National Mountain Action Programmes"; raising awareness through the preparation
        and organization of a World Conference on Sustainable Mountain Development in early 1997;
        and the formulation, negotiation and implementation of regional or sub-regional mountain
        conventions and possibly the development of a "Global Mountain Charter". 
        12. The Desertification Convention offers new and exciting opportunities for collective
        action, as well as a fertile field for testing and nurturing innovative partnerships in
        development cooperation for local level action. It is the first International Treaty to
        squarely address poverty and environmental degradation in rural areas. Unlike the other
        Conventions associated with Rio, the direct beneficiaries of CCD are the hundreds of
        millions of predominantly poor and food-insecure people who populate the drylands of the
        world. It is the first Convention that casts resource users and their communities as
        central to the solution rather than part of the problem. At the very heart of the CCD is
        the concept of "Partnership". Partnership embodies the new thrust in development
        assistance, in which it is finally recognized that interdependence rather than dependence
        is the way forward. But partnerships won't work unless all partners stand to benefit. CCD
        tries to translate this attractive concept into more or less concrete terms. 
        13. While the underlying incentives to enter into partnership must exist, what is also
        needed is a favourable context to promote its emergence and functioning. In the context of
        CCD, the National Action Programmes - or NAPs - are the instrument for partnership. NAPs,
        which are not intended as static plans but as a dynamic programming capacity, should offer
        a macroeconomic and institutional framework that will support local-level action. Here,
        more is meant than economic and fiscal policies, although these are of course extremely
        important. It also means a policy orientation that actively focuses on empowerment of
        local actors to take advantage of new opportunities and overcome old constraints. The
        Convention therefore encourages devolution of decision-making from the centre to local
        populations and resource users. The most important reasons for this are compellingly
        obvious: 
        Local Ownership in Decision-making - Local structures are more likely to make
        decisions that are relevant and suitable to local circumstances. 
        Removing Bottlenecks in Information Flow and Decision-making - Decision-making
        for natural resource management requires prompt and relevant information. 
        Improved Ability to Involve Marginalized Groups - Decentralization might allow
        better targeting of services and better identification of needy groups. 
        Better Tailoring of Approaches to Local Conditions - Local appreciation of
        constraints and opportunities can only improve the quality of solutions. 
        14. An emphasis on empowerment of local populations and civil society should not be
        construed as a wish to actively withdraw from the sustainable development arena. Instead,
        it is based on a recognition that the public sector and multilateral finance can
        facilitate but cannot substitute for action that must come from economic agents at the
        local level that act individually or collectively. What is needed now is to build an
        operational coalition between NGOs, CBOs as well as other institutions of civil society
        together with government institutions and international agencies, to form action-oriented
        partnerships around specific and concrete areas of intervention. 
        The Challenge of Financing Action 
        15. Promoted by the world's distress over the loss of life in the Sahelian famine of
        early 1970, the UN Conference on Desertification (UNCOD, Nairobi 1977) adopted a plan of
        action to end desertification by the close of the century. The response to the plan of
        action was dismal and it was virtually left on the shelf. Now with only four years left to
        the day when UNCOD's promises should have materialized, desertification has almost
        doubled, and the poor are paying the cost, with their health and lives. The CCD diligently
        negotiated and enthusiastically adopted holds new promises, as the degree of awareness,
        globally and locally, has increased. But unlike its sister Conventions on climate change
        and biological diversity, the CCD does not promote establishment of a new financial
        mechanism. Instead it foresees the creation of a "Global Mechanism" to be housed
        in an existing organization to coordinate and facilitate the flow of additional funds
        including grants and concessional loans through both bilateral and multilateral channels. 
        16. Neither national budgets nor statistics on international financial flows to
        developing countries give clear figures on resources presently allocated to combat
        desertification. But there is little argument about the dearth of international funding
        for desertification control. Even resources formally provided under Global Environmental
        Facility (GEF) - which, by and large, precludes eligibility for desertification programmes
        - are judged to be inadequate. Nevertheless, financing constitutes a major pillar for the
        success of CCD without which it may very well face the same fate as UNCOD. Within this
        context, a proactive role for the Global Mechanism should be promoted. 
        17. The multi-source and multi-channel orientation of the CCD is more of a strength
        than a weakness. Instead of relying on one mechanism - say, the GEF - the Convention is
        not predicated on the availability of external grant finance earmarked for the purpose. In
        contrast, the Global Mechanism configuration is about improving the effectiveness and
        efficiency of existing flows, in addition to catalyzing and leveraging new flows
        and sources of finance. It encourages a greater role for domestic resource mobilization,
        private sector initiative, and a blending of various concessional and non-concessional
        external finance. 
        18. This diversity of flows and the multifaceted diverse coalition which one hopes it
        would represent, will in the end make the Convention and the actions it triggers more
        robust and sustainable. One should work towards that coalition, by assisting to set in
        place policy and institutional frameworks that are favourable to private initiative, by
        helping governments to provide public goods, by pump-priming promising initiatives, and by
        assisting local populations and community organizations to interface more productively
        with the private sector. 
        Financing Peoples' Participation 
        19. Local-level activities and creativity championed by CCD have a number of
        implications for the nature of resource mobilization as well as the manner through which
        resources are utilized. First, there is a need to step up efforts aimed at
        awareness- building at local level. This is a task for which NGOs and CBOs are best
        suited. The NGO community, and in particular the international NGOs, should give a high
        priority to this objective when mobilizing resources for CCD as stipulated in the
        Convention. Second, CCD calls upon Parties to promote a National Desertification
        Fund (NDF) and similar mechanisms for directing funds to the local level. Such mechanisms
        should be run on the basis of a participatory governance involving local communities and
        their partners in the NGO community. 
        20. NDF should also be flexible and simple in design. To preserve the confidence of
        both donors and local populations, it is imperative to ensure full transparency and
        effective accountability in its management. Moreover, the local populations could be true
        shareholders and effectively claim their share in the partnership if, in addition to the
        contribution from the external donors and national resources, they shoulder part of the
        financial burden. This could be done by mobilization and pooling of individual savings as
        well as through decentralization of collection and management of taxes, levies and other
        revenues derived from local resources. Third, it is absolutely important that the
        NDF resources are to be utilized for community level investment and that they lead to the
        creation of durable economic assets, shared collectively. Using the proceeds of NDF for
        relief activities or financing individually- owned enterprises would be a costly mistake.
        The former would deplete the resources of the fund without any lasting benefit, and the
        latter would distort the local financial market, preventing the creation of sound
        credit/saving structures. Such structures are equally important to facilitate investment
        for crop intensification or to promote economic diversification to lessen man and
        livestock pressure on land. 
        Conclusion 
        21. Populations in marginal areas are not doomed to despair. On the contrary, it is in
        these very regions that the people, forced by circumstance, manage to cope most creatively
        with their harsh and unpredictable environment, and to diversify their resource use
        strategies over space, season and sector. They capitalize as much as they can on
        biological diversity - most pronounced in these regions and constituting a core of their
        survival. They are responsible for most appropriate technological and institutional
        innovations which depend minimally on costly and external inputs. This is particularly
        true in the conservation of rainwater, notwithstanding the saline soils common in those
        regions. It is also true for the institutions which developed for the collective
        management of very scarce common resources, such as water points, grazing land and
        forests. 
        22. Effective actions against poverty, household food insecurity, and environmental
        degradation in marginal areas require first and foremost the empowering and equipping of
        local communities to take up the reins of resource management. The importance of local
        area development and improved local governance - also covered in the other issues papers -
        must be emphasized. An important factor in this context, of course, is the issue of
        incentive frameworks and enabling environments, with specific regard to the question of
        how to combine longer-term concerns for environmental rehabilitation and conservation with
        the pressing short-term needs of household food security. Also important are the
        technology and related measures to be promoted that build on traditional knowledge, such
        as those which will in the short term generate tangible benefits for the farmer, as
        outlined in the discussion paper on this topic. 
        23. Many conservation policies and strategies in the past have failed because of their
        top-down approach and their reliance on technologies which were irrelevant to the local
        circumstances. In contrast to the result of these efforts, the micro-projects implemented
        in many places over the past decade have made it possible to build up a store of knowledge
        allowing for the implementation of new approaches. Within this context, a consensus has
        emerged on the importance of indigenous people's traditional knowledge and practices in
        the management of arid land, forest, pasture and farmland to conserve soil and moisture,
        and in diversifying crop and livestock production to minimize risks. 
        24. Some traditional rural communities have developed complex resource management
        systems that have stood the test of time, and have much to offer in addressing present-day
        concerns over long-term resource sustainability. Their admirable environmental ethic
        deserves its due place. Asserting the importance of local knowledge calls for the
        empowerment of local people through their own organizations. Moreover, the considerable
        cultural and environmental heterogeneity of mountain areas and the scattered nature of
        dryland populations underline the need for decentralized local-level action toward
        integrated management of local areas. 
        25. This is not to suggest that local communities can be left to their own devices.
        There is a need for supportive and facilitating measures on the part of governments. The
        international community should also be aware of the global dimension of the process and
        the responsibility that this implies. There is therefore a need for a coalition of actors
        ranging from the international to the national and the local level. This is precisely what
        the CCD is promoting and what an eventual Mountain Agenda might promote. In the short
        term, what is needed is what one might risk calling "affirmative action"
        in the form of finance and assistance to local communities. 
        26. The immediate challenge is to consider how ratification of the CCD can be
        expedited, how it can be implemented and how to secure adequate financing for local area
        development. The CCD also stipulates a major role for civil society organizations,
        foremost among them the community-based organizations - namely that they should galvanize
        energies and mobilize resources. The private sector, as well as civil society at large,
        should also be encouraged to think beyond individual or corporate interests towards a
        recognition of a shared responsibility for the environment. Vigorous resource mobilization
        to combat desertification would stand a better change of succeeding if launched on the
        basis of empirically verifiable improvements. 
        
       Discussion Paper 1: Empowerment of the poor
        Discussion Paper 2: Enhancing technology generation and diffusion
        Discussion Paper 3: Combating environmental degradation
        Discussion Paper 4: Preventing disaster and reducing its impact on
        the poor 
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