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1994-05-02
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<text>
<title>
A Controversy Over Funding
</title>
<article>
<hdr>
World Press Review, March 1992
Environment: A Controversy Over Funding
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By Bharat Bhushan. From the independent "Indian Express" of New
Delhi.
</p>
<p> It seems strange that anyone should object to additional
international funds being made available for environmental
protection. Yet, the one-year-old, World Bank-sponsored Global
Environment Facility (GEF) is fast becoming a center of
controversy. Environmentalists and developing countries are in
fact suggesting that it would have been best if the GEF had not
been set up in the first place. They are saying this out of the
fear that the organization may forestall the setting up of
multi-lateral funds linked to specific environmental
conventions administered within the United Nations system, on
a one-country, one-vote basis.
</p>
<p> The GEF has been set up as a funding body within the World
Bank-International Monetary Fund system, which is not as
democratic as the UN system. It is also biased in favor of the
developed countries. The GEF takes up issues of global
environmental concern that are on the agenda for the
forthcoming UN Conference on Environment and Development. In a
sense, then, it pre-empts the agenda for the conference and may
end up setting the terms of and context of the discussion.
Developing countries can justifiably fear that the environment
facility may be presented by the developed countries as the
ideal fund for all future environmental conventions and
treaties.
</p>
<p> The GEF was set up in November, 1990, and is managed by the
World Bank, the UN Development Program, and the UN Environment
Program. It is meant to be an interest-free fund for
environmental protection wholly made up of voluntary
contributions. Initially, it was expected that the GEF core
fund would be in the range of $1 billion-$1.5 billion. However,
up to now, it has been possible to set up a core fund of only
$770 million. The World Bank is not merely the banker but also
the administrator of the environment facility. The UN agencies
have been assigned roles in strategic planning, but
environmentalists think that they do not have sufficient clout
to influence the working of the fund.
</p>
<p> Essentially, GEF funding is to be limited to four areas of
environmental concern--global warming, conservation of
biodiversity, ozone-layer damage, and the cleaning of
international waters. These specific areas are also in the
agenda before the forthcoming meeting in Brazil.
</p>
<p> It appears, under these circumstances, that the GEF may have
been designed to serve several politically important functions
for the World Bank and the developed countries. It may help
provide a "green" image for the World Bank, which funds
projects that have led to environmental degradation. Thus, the
bank can continue to fund billion-dollar forestry projects,
which partly support commercial logging concessions. Then,
through the environment facility, it can throw in a few million
dollars to protect biodiversity, because that would help blunt
the criticism of the bank's funding of environmentally
questionable projects.
</p>
<p> The GEF is also based on the premise that global
environmental problems have been caused largely by the
developed countries, and if the developing countries are to
cooperate in redressing them, additional funding from the former
would be essential and justified. Joining the GEF by making
voluntary contributions may also help salve the conscience of
some developed countries, while they avoid fully accepting the
charge that global environmental destruction has largely been
caused by their lifestyles. Thus, for example, if the use of
chlorofluorocarbons has led to a hole in the ozone layer, it is
because the developed countries have produced and consumed
these chemicals without regard for the consequences. Indeed,
they continue to do so.
</p>
<p> Additionally, if such a fund were in place before the Rio
conference takes place, so much the better for the developed
countries. The funding of treaty-linked or convention-linked
environmental projects is going to be a major issue in Brazil.
The existence of the GEF could well be used to undermine the
legitimate demand of the Third World multi-lateral funds
earmarked for environmental issues by created under the UN
system. The developed countries could forestall the creation of
such funds by arguing that the GEF already meets those needs.
</p>
<p> In June, 1990, the major chlorofluorocarbon-producing and
chlorofluorocarbon-consuming nations agreed to phase out the
chemicals under the Montreal Protocol by the year 2000 and
contributed $240 million to assist the developing nations in
meeting this goal. Now this fund has been passed on to the GEF.
This funding is in addition to the environment facility's own
core fund. The GEF is now expected to disburse funds under the
Montreal Protocol, too.
</p>
<p> This can only help present the GEF as the ideally suited
environmental fund for all new treaties and conventions. If
this is accepted, then all control over priorities for funding,
the criteria for funding, and the selection of projects will
pass out of the hands of the UN and other international
conferences. A democratic mandate will then have been handed
over to an undemocratically controlled body. Sovereign nations
will have given up their decision-making role on crucial
environmental treaties on climate change and biodiversity are
in the offing, and the GEF is already being presented as the
preferred funding option for them by the developed countries.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>