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About Rio+20

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RIO+20 - A Gender Issue

Across the world, women are affected by environmental issues, which often lead to long lasting detrimental effects on their chances for independence and equality, as well as on their standard of living. As the result of floods, droughts, and other natural disasters, many women who rely on agriculture for income have been left in dire situations.
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RIO+20 Statements from the Roots

AWARE Uganda - Statement on Women and Climate Change in Karamoja

The Impact of Climate Change on Women and Children in Karamoja - Statement by AWARE Uganda, Safeworld Field Partner.

BAFNET - Statement on Women and Climate Change in Central Uganda

The Impact of Climate Change on Women and Children in Central Uganda - Statement by BAFNET - Safeworld Field Partner.

BBF - Statement on Women and Climate Change in Nigeria

Climate Change: Challenges Facing Nigerian Women - Statement by Brown Button Foundation - Safeworld Field Partner.

EACO - Statement on Women and Climate Change in Mukono, Uganda

The Impact of Climate Change on Women and Children in Mukono, Uganda - Statement by EACO - Safeworld Field Partner.

Hope Centre - Statement on Women, Children and Climate Change in Wakiso, Uganda

The Impact of Climate Change on Women and Children in Wakiso, Uganda - Statement by Hope Children's Centre - Safeworld Field Partner.

New Life - Statement on Women and Climate Change in Southern India

The Impact of Climate Change on Women and Children in Southern India - Statement by New Life - Safeworld Field Partner.

SDTS - Statement on Women and Climate Change in Sindh Province, Pakistan

The Impact of Climate Change on Women and Children in Sindh Province, Pakistan - Statement by SDTS - Safeworld Field Partner.

USA: Women Well-Poised to Act on Climate Change

USA - Women can act on climate change

Only 40 % of Americans are concerned or alarmed by global warming. However research shows that women may be more eco-conscious than men.
Results of a recent survey said that that women feel guiltier than men about not practicing an eco-friendly lifestyle.
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Leaders of the Rio+20 United Nations sustainable development summit pose for a group photo

Rio+20 summit kicks off

Source: Stuff.co.nz

Leaders from around the globe have opened three days of talks at the United Nations conference on sustainable development, where a sober, unambitious mood prevailed as negotiators produced what critics called a watered-down document that makes few advances on protecting the environment.

Negotiators worked for months to hammer out a document that many hoped would lay out clear goals on how nations could promote sustainable development - making economic advances without eating up the globe's resources.

But with time running out, contentious issues like technology transfers from rich to poor nations and new financing for developing countries were set aside.

Diplomats agreed on what all call a mere beginning, a step toward a roadmap on how to embrace sustainable development at the conference dubbed "Rio+20" - coming two decades after the landmark 1992 Earth Summit put sustainable development on the globe's agenda.

Epic Failure

"The future we want has gotten a little further away today. Rio+20 has turned into an epic failure. It has failed on equity, failed on ecology and failed on economy," said Kumi Naidoo, executive director of Greenpeace.

"This is not a foundation on which to grow economies or pull people out of poverty, it's the last will and testament of a destructive twentieth century development model."

UN Secretary General Bank Ki-moon acknowledged the world has made little progress on environmental issues since the first Rio meeting in 1992, but said leaders are working to reverse that at the Rio+20 summit.

"Twenty years ago, the Earth Summit put sustainable development on the global agenda. Yet let me be frank: our efforts have not lived up to the measure of the challenge," he told delegates.

"For too long, we have behaved as though we could . indefinitely . burn and consume our way to prosperity. Today, we recognize that we can no longer do so."

"We recognize that the old model for economic development and social advancement is broken. Rio+20 has given us a unique chance to set it right."

Critics blasted the draft document before leaders as requiring little and using language that turns what were once demands into goals for individual nations to aspire for - on increasing use of renewable energy, on protecting forests, on eradicating poverty and hunger.

Showing hope and confidence

French President Francois Hollande told reporters that he wasn't too excited about the summit's likely results.

"Disappointment, yes, there's always a bit of disappointment. But I've come here to show my hope, my confidence."

He highlighted what he said were two shortcomings: the failure of the document to create an international agency for development and also the inability of negotiators to agree on additional ways of financing sustainable development, including through a tax on financial transactions.

The same roadblocks that have hindered all environmental summits in recent years have been seen in Rio.

Delegates from developing nations said the US and other developed nations wouldn't agree to any language in the Rio+20 document that would mandate direct transfers of environmentally sound technologies.

The US and other rich nations have said that simply violates intellectual property laws, while poorer nations insist there is no way they can afford to pay for the advanced equipment that would, for instance, allow factories to operate in a way that pollutes less.

The economic crisis cast a clear shadow over Rio+20 - and was the reason many heads of state did not show up, like Italy's Mario Monti.

With Europe in crisis and the US still in economic doldrums, delegates said there was no way those nations would agree on new financing for poorer nations to promote sustainable development. The document reflects that.

While Hollande, Russian leader Vladimir Putin and China's Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao are among more than 100 leaders expected in Rio, there are high-level absentees: US President Barack Obama, Britain's David Cameron and German leader Angela Merkel are all no-shows, adding to a subdued atmosphere that the action taken in Rio isn't getting the global spotlight.

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