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SPEECHES / STATEMENTS
PM's address at the High level
segment of the 18th meeting of Parties to the Montreal
Protocol
November 2, 2006, New Delhi
I am delighted to be
here at your meeting. On behalf of the people and Government
of India, and on my own behalf, I extend a warm welcome
to you all to this High Level Segment of the 18th Meeting
of the Parties to the Montreal Protocol. I hope we are
able to provide you a conducive environment for a purposeful
and fruitful conference.
Indias
approach to the challenge of the protection of our environment
was shaped by the very wise and perceptive observations
of our former Prime Minister, Mrs. Indira Gandhi, who
told the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment
in 1972 that "poverty was the worst polluter".
In saying so,
Prime Minister Indira Gandhi launched a global debate
on the relationship between poverty alleviation, economic
growth, and environmental conservation. In the years
since then, an organized structure of multilateral agreements
and institutions for realizing the goal of sustainable
development has been developed.
It is this perspective
of Indira Gandhi that also defines our own National
Environment Policy, which we adopted earlier this year.
Our policy says, "while conservation of environmental
resources is necessary to secure livelihoods and well-being
of all, the most secure basis for conservation is to
ensure that people dependant on particular resources
obtain better livelihoods from the fact of conservation,
than from degradation of the resource".
To liberate people
from poverty, to ensure the well being of all citizens,
to provide employment for all, and yet pursue a sustainable
development path that preserves and protects our common
natural heritage that is the challenge before
humanity as a whole.
India has participated
in major international events on the environment, since
1972. We have contributed to, and ratified several key
multilateral agreements on environmental issues recognizing
the trans-boundary and global nature of environmental
problems and concerns, and their implications for long-term
development. We have also participated in numerous regional
and bilateral programmes for environmental cooperation.
Environment is something which unites the entire humankind
because the entire humankind faces a single common environment.
We also provide assistance to other developing countries,
particularly for scientific and technological capacity
building. We seek to help other countries meet their
commitments under various international and regional
environmental treaties.
At the national
level too, we have set up an effective regime of policies,
regulations, programmes, and scientific capacity for
addressing sustainable development issues. Our national
regime for sustainable development seems to have had
a positive impact on our development process. Consider
the fact that while in industrialized countries, key
environmental parameters reversed their decline at per-capita
incomes of $ 6,000-8,000 in Purchasing Power Parity
terms, in India, this decline has been reversed at a
per-capita income of $ 2,000 in Purchasing Power Parity
terms. This is by no means a mean achievement.
The depletion
of the Ozone Layer has emerged as a significant global
environmental concern in the last few decades. In 1985,
the Vienna Convention established mechanisms for international
cooperation in research into the Ozone Layer and the
effects of Ozone Depleting Substances (ODSs). Thereafter,
the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the
Ozone Layer was agreed upon on 16th September 1987.
It was a binding multilateral treaty to protect the
ozone layer by reducing to predetermined levels, global
emissions of Ozone Depleting Substances. However, ratification
by developing countries did not proceed rapidly, until
the Protocol was amended in London in 1990.
We believe that
the Protocol is successful in implementing a global
phase-out plan for Ozone Depleting Substances. By and
large, the national action plans and phase-out schedules
have been adhered to. India has fulfilled, without exception,
all our obligations under the Protocol. Indeed, we have
done so in the case of all other multilateral environmental
agreements we are party to. This has been done within
the timetable laid down and, in some aspects, before
the promised schedule.
What are the
reasons for our success in this arena? What lessons
does our experience hold for the design of other multilateral
agreements on the global environment?
First, the treaty
was preceded by strong scientific consensus about the
causes of the problem; clarity about responsibility
for the problem; the availability of mitigation technologies
at reasonable cost; and, fairly accurate knowledge about
the extent of resources needed to address the problem.
Second, and this
is the key shift that occurred in the London amendment,
the eventual entitlements to Ozone Depleting Substances
on a per capita basis between developed and developing
countries are identical.
Third, there
are explicit financial arrangements set out, for meeting
the incremental costs of changes in technology in, and
transfer of technology to, the developing countries.
These contributions are generally in line with the Principle
of "common but differentiated responsibility and
respective capabilities", and contributions from
developed countries are voluntary.
However, in terms
of the realization of broader goals of sustainable development
in developing countries, which must be a principal objective
of multilateral environmental agreements, the Protocol
could have done better.
I say this because
technology transfer has not occurred to any significant
extent. I am not referring to the simple sale of capital
equipment embodying the technology, and related training
in operations. Rather, I am talking about the development
of capacity in developing countries to manufacture and
further develop capital equipment they require.
A provision in
the Protocol that enables the use of trade restrictions
to ensure compliance is also a source of concern. While
fulfillment of commitments in multilateral environmental
agreements by all Parties must certainly be ensured,
the use of trade restrictions is in my view, not advisable.
Such restrictions may adversely impact economic growth
prospects and poverty alleviation efforts. We need to
be more creative and less adversarial in our approach
to compliance.
Let us not seek
trade advantages through the instrument of environmental
treaties. This would nullify gains for developing countries
accomplished after strenuous negotiations in the World
Trade Organisation regime. Let us not trim the flow
of multilateral and bilateral resources for poverty
alleviation to accomplish unrelated environmental objectives.
Let us, instead, ensure that the financial and technological
resources needed to accomplish agreed environmental
objectives, consistent with growth and poverty alleviation
strategies, are indeed additional. And that they are
administered efficiently through dedicated and well
tried out mechanisms. I urge you to approach the global
environmental agenda keeping in mind these lessons.
India is a multi-cultural,
multi-religious, multi-lingual and multi-ethnic nation,
a country of over a billion people seeking their salvation
within the framework of an open society and an open
economy committed to respect for all fundamental human
rights and also committed to the rule of law. The success
of our experiment in nation building within the framework
of a democratic polity, I believe, is vital to the future
of mankind. If we are able to eliminate poverty, provide
gainful employment to all and do this while protecting
the environment, we would have shown a new path to sustainable
development. It is therefore, imperative that we make
the process of economic development more inclusive,
make processes of globalisation more inclusive and make
our societies and polities more inclusive. In doing
so we can, I daresay, ensure that the harmony between
man and nature is sustained for all times.
I do hope that
the key Principles of sustainable development that inform
the negotiations of the Meeting of Parties recognize
the vital importance to humankind of finding a consensual
means to address our common problems. I started by saying
that the environmental concerns unite the entire humankind.
I wish you all success in your deliberations, which
have a vital bearing on the future evolution of humankind
in this 21st century that we are going through.
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