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Sustainable Development International Trade and International Agreements

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Title: Sustainable Development Author: JANET M. THOMAS Last modified by: PDF Maker Created Date: 1/18/2003 9:40:56 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Sustainable Development International Trade and International Agreements


1
Sustainable DevelopmentInternational Trade and
International Agreements
  • Chapter 20

2
Understanding Sustainable Development
3
Sustainable Development as a Global Objective
  • Sustainable development refers to managing
    earths resources to assure long-term quality and
    abundance for future generations
  • Aims to achieve economic prosperity and
    environmental quality
  • Also referred to as intergenerational equity
  • Involves fundamental change in how society makes
    market decisions both consumption and
    production
  • In practice, there are criticisms and concerns
  • e.g., Nobel Laureate Robert Solow argues against
    using sustainable development as a policy
    objective because it is a vague concept instead
    consider sustainability as an obligation to
    future generations

4
Growth and the Environment
  • Sustainable development relies on the premise
    that economic growth and environmental quality
    must not be competing goals. Why is this
    important?
  • Data show that the environmental impact per unit
    of income associated with growth must decline
    between 3.5 and 4 percent per year to avoid
    further pollution and natural resource depletion
  • Problem is more serious for developing countries
    that have high growth rates and rapidly rising
    populations, such as China and India

5
Growth and the EnvironmentEnvironmental Kuznets
Curve (EKC)
  • Research has examined whether a technical
    relationship exists between economic growth and
    pollution
  • A model of this relationship is the environmental
    Kuznets curve (EKC), an inverted U shape,
    implying that
  • Early stages of industrialization are linked to
    relatively high pollution levels when growth is a
    priority and environmental controls are lenient
    or nonexistent
  • More advanced economic development is linked to a
    shift in the opposite direction with greater
    concern for environmental quality and a
    strengthening of environmental regulation
  • A consensus is forming that this tradeoff is not
    as severe as once believed

6
Environmental Kuznets Curve
7
Framework for Sustainable Development
  • United Nations Conference on Environment and
    Development (UNCED) commonly known as the Rio
    Summit was a forum held in 1992 to discuss
    issues relating to sustainable development
  • Included in the summits key documents were
  • Agenda 21 a voluntary action plan outlining the
    course for worldwide progress toward sustainable
    development
  • Rio Declaration a list of 27 principles to act
    as guidelines for achieving global environmental
    quality and economic development

8
Framework for Sustainable Development (continued)
  • World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD)
    was held in Johannesburg in 2002 to renew
    interest in sustainable development and assess
    progress since the Rio Summit
  • Among the summits accomplishments
  • Adopted a plan to fully implement Agenda 21
  • Strengthened the notion of sustainable
    development
  • Established over 300 partnership initiatives to
    complement government actions aimed at
    sustainable development

9
Controlling Transboundary Pollution
10
International Agreements to Control Transboundary
Pollution
  • Montreal Protocol and Amendments
  • Aimed at phasing out ozone-depleting substances
  • Established and made permanent a Multilateral
    Fund to help developing nations in this effort
  • U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change
    (UNFCCC)
  • Garnered a commitment by each signatory nation to
    launch a strategy limiting releases of greenhouse
    gases (GHGs)
  • Kyoto Protocol to the UNFCCC
  • Calls for 38 developed nations to reduce GHG
    emissions to 5.2 below 1990 levels by 2012 with
    no targets on developing countries
  • Provides for the use of market-based instruments,
    called flexible mechanisms to achieve emissions
    targets, including a trading system of GHG
    allowances

11
International Agreements to Control Transboundary
Pollution (continued)
  • London Dumping Convention (LDC)
  • Prohibits ocean dumping of certain wastes,
    including radioactive wastes
  • US-Canada Air Quality Agreement
  • Calls for each country to set emissions caps on
    sulfur dioxide (SO2) and nitrogen oxides (NOx)

12
International Trade and Environmental Protection
13
Free Trade Versus Protectionism
  • Proponents of free trade argue that nations
    should trade with one another because there are
    tangible gains, such as
  • Higher worldwide output
  • Efficiency gains from specialization
  • More competition and lower prices in global
    markets
  • Protectionism supports using trade barriers to
    protect the domestic economy from foreign
    competition, because they believe trade can have
    negative consequences such as
  • Unfair competition
  • Job losses
  • Threats to environmental quality

14
Concerns about International Trade and
Environmental Quality
  • Production costs are lower in nations with more
    lenient environmental standards, giving their
    producers a competitive advantage, sometimes
    called the pollution haven effect
  • Quality of imports produced in nations with lax
    regulations on toxic chemical use, fuel
    efficiency, coal consumption, etc. may lead to
    international externalities

15
Counter Arguments
  • Economic gains from trade will help poorer
    nations afford the costly cleanup of
    environmental pollution
  • An improved economy can provide means to
    implement better environmental policy, as implied
    by environmental Kuznets curve
  • This argument is consistent with sustainable
    development
  • Both sets of arguments were part of negotiations
    for major international trade agreements

16
International Trade Agreements and Environmental
Goals
17
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
  • NAFTA was reached by the U.S., Mexico, and Canada
    in 1992
  • Provisions dealing with the environment include
  • Commitment to sustainable development
  • Agreement to implement NAFTA with the aim of
    environmental protection and not to lower
    standards to attract investment
  • Consensus to aim for congruence of each country's
    environmental regulations
  • Agreement that NAFTA dispute settlement panels
    will solicit environmental experts as needed

18
NAFTA (continued)
  • The three nations formed the North American
    Commission for Environmental Cooperation (CEC) to
    address environmental impact of increased trade
  • In 1992, the U.S. and Mexico initiated an
    Integrated Border Environmental Plan (IBEP)
  • Aimed at improving water quality, monitoring air
    pollution, tracking hazardous waste, and
    promoting pollution prevention for the border
    region
  • Border 2012 Program extends efforts of the IBEP
    and the Border XXI Program aims to protect
    health and environment in the border region
    following sustainable development

19
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
  • Executed in 1947, GATT was a major international
    treaty aimed at reducing trade barriers
  • Environmentalists were concerned about how GATT
    rulings might run counter to environmental goals
  • e.g., under GATT, an import cannot be restricted
    solely on the basis of an exporter using a
    pollution-generating input or production method
  • After negotiations called the Uruguay Round,
    countries had to use least trade restrictive
    measures to achieve environmental goals, and
    World Trade Organization (WTO) was formed as
    successor to GATT

20
World Trade Organization (WTO)
  • An international association aimed at
    facilitating trade and overseeing trade policy
  • It established a Committee on Trade and
    Environment (CTE), whose directive is
  • To identify the relationship between trade
    measures and environmental measures to foster
    sustainable development
  • To recommend any necessary changes to the
    multilateral trading system
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