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A world for our children's grandchildren

Guest Column by Heikki Holmås, Norwegian Minister of International Development

Parents all over the world want to live in a way that ensures the best possible future for their children and grandchildren. This must also be the goal for the world's leaders when we meet in Rio.

I am working for a more just world. At the same time, parents all over the world want their children to have a better life than they have had. This is why we must promote economic growth and create jobs and security for millions of people. We must encourage the use of more climate-friendly technology and more sustainable development. And those who create most pollution must also do most to cut emissions.

Sri Lanka is by no means among the nations responsible for global warming and green-house gas emissions and its impact on humanity and the environment, rather to the contrary. Sri Lanka has emerged as a middle-income country with impressive economic growth without jeopardizing the global environment. Aligning with the global community, in 1993 Sri Lanka ratified the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change -- as one of the first 50 countries to have done so.

This year it is 20 years since sustainable development first hit the agendas of world leaders, when Gro Harlem Brundtland, Norwegian Prime Minister at the time, launched this new approach to development and environment at the World Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. In June, world leaders will once again gather in Rio. This UN summit - Rio+20 - will be a new opportunity to agree on how to achieve growth and welfare and at the same time protect the environment.

We need to find ways of making growth sustainable. We also need to distribute revenues more equitably as countries become richer. At the moment, every fifth person worldwide lacks access to electricity. Twice as many - three billion people - have to gather fuel to cook their food and heat their homes. The smoke from inefficient stoves is harmful and claims the lives of nearly two million people every year. This is unfair, it is a waste of resources, and is unsustainable. Instead, children should have time to go to school, and adults to take paid work.

In the rich part of the world, we waste electricity and use more than our fair share of the planet's energy resources. The widespread use of energy from oil, gas and coal is causing dangerous climate change. In Norway, buildings account for 40 % of all energy use. We can halve our electricity consumption use by 2040 by improving the energy efficiency of buildings - and at the same time live more comfortably and reduce our electricity bills. We are already beginning to feel the impacts of interference with the climate system. But the consequences for those who come after us will be far more serious.

In this dire situation, I am pleased to learn that important steps are taken by Sri Lanka to rectify matters. Albeit being a low green-house gas emitting country, Sri Lanka is considering emission reduction and aims to work towards low carbon growth. Norway hopes to assist Sri Lanka in reaching its goals. We are in dialogue with the government on a possible cooperation on a Climate Change Adaptation Programme. This endeavour will involve capacity building in the Ministry of Environment and its agencies and other key stakeholders. The programme will develop sustainable solutions for long-term development while at the same time mainstreaming climate concerns into the national planning, development and social systems through establishing a conducive policy and legal framework.

Food is another key area. According to UN figures, about a third of all food is thrown away or destroyed. Every one of us in the rich part of the world throws away an average of 100 kg of food a year. In Norway alone, 500,000 tonnes of food goes into the bin. At the same time, more than a billion people are going hungry. Even in poor countries, a good deal of food is wasted, partly because of poor roads and inadequate storage facilities. If we are to feed all the children in the world properly, we must make some major changes.

These are some of the issues we will be discussing in Rio. Governments, NGOs, researchers and representatives of the business sector from all over the world will work together to identify opportunities. We all agree that the way we are living today is not sustainable. But it is much more difficult to find solutions that everyone can agree to because the key is more equitable distribution. Aid from rich countries to poor countries is one way of improving the situation. But aid is most effective when it stimulates private investment and enables a country to develop its own solutions. Poor countries now have better opportunities to choose environmentally friendly solutions than we had during our industrialisation.

But this is far from enough. The financial crisis, and the elections in a number of key countries, is deflecting the attention of politicians and the general public towards domestic problems and short-term prospects. Rio+20 reminds us that the most serious challenges require the ability to think along new lines. World leaders need to cooperate more closely. We must create the political will needed to ensure that Rio+20 is a milestone towards sustainable development. We must find solutions that make sustainable development profitable.

We cannot produce enough food for everyone simply by producing more food. We also need to look at the whole value chain from farm to fork. When food is lost during harvesting and storage, small farmers lose income and poor consumers must pay higher prices. We must therefore invest in better methods of food production, in infrastructure and in technology that will reduce food waste and bring more food to more people.

Norway is seeking to ensure that Rio+20 culminates in new goals for sustainable energy. We support UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's focus on energy for all. His aim is to double the use of renewable energy and the efficiency of existing energy use by 2030. To do this, we must all work together. The business sector is playing a decisive role in the implementation of the new technology that is needed to achieve these goals.

Heikki Holmås. Pic courtesy Berit Roald, Scanpix

In the worst case, Rio+20 will be too much talk and not enough action. The pessimists are already pointing out that the UN has been unable to resolve major global problems on several occasions.

But the UN is the only arena where all the countries of the world come together to address these issues. We must all make use of Rio+20 as an opportunity to improve the UN's ability to take action and stake out a pathway of equitable green growth.

We are working towards an agreement on new goals for sustainable development. This will require both rich and poor countries to take appropriate steps at home.

We must ensure that the world we leave to our children's grandchildren is a place where everyone can afford to take part. That will require bold decisions at Rio+20 and in the coming years.

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