ENVIRONMENTALLY SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT STUDIES AND MONOGRAPHS SERIES NO. 19 Work in progress for public discussion ( | 9 4UI Advancing Sustainable Development I T'11WU B,i Ink am! dj,(ren/a ~21 A#~ ~~Illolltz/t,lZr,,,? _-E r~~~~~~~~~~~~0, -. E r~~~~ ESD Proceedings Series 1 Culture and Development in Africa: Proceedings of an International Conference (also in French) 2 Valuwng the Environment: Proceedings of the First Annual International Conference on Environmentally Sustainable Development 3 Overcoming Global Hunger: Proceedings of a Conference on Actions to Reduce Hunger Worldwide 4 Traditional Knowledge and Sustainable Development: Proceedings of a Conference 5 The Hluman Face of the Urban Environment: A Report to the Development Community 6 The Hluman Face of the Urban Environment: Proceediings of the Second Annual World Bank Conference on Environmentally Sustainable Development 7 The Business of Sustainable Cities: Public-Private Partnershipsfor Creative Technicql and Institutional Solutions 8 Enabling Sustainable Community Development 9 Sustainable Financing Mechanismsfor Coral Reef Corservation: Proceedings of a Workshop 10 Effective Financing of Environmentally Sustainable Development: Proceedings of the Third Annual World Bank Conference on Environmentally Sustainable Development 11 Servicing Innovative Financing of Environmentally Slustainable Development 12 Ethics and Spiritual Values: Promoting Environmentally Sustainable Development 13 The Self and the Other: Sustainability and Self-Empowerment 14 Meeting the Challenges of Population, Environment, and Resources: The Costs of Inaction 15 Rurai Well-being: From Vision to Action (forthcommg) ESD Studies and Monographs (formerly Occasional Paper) Series 1 The Contribution of People's Participation: Evidencefrom 121 Rural Water Supply Projects 2 Making Development Sustainable: From Concepts to Action 3 Sociology, Anthropology, and Development: An Annotated Bibliography of Wcrld Bank Publications 1975-1993 4 The World Bank's Strategyfor Reducing Poverty and Hunger: A Report to the Development Community 5 Sustainability and the Wealth of Nations: First Steps irn' an Ongoing Journey 6 Socia! Organization and Development Anthropology: 'rhe 1995 Malinowski Award Lecture 7 Confronting Crisis: A Summary of Household Responses to Poverty and Vulnerability in Fo Pr Poor Urban Communities (also in French and Spanish) 8 Conf onting Crisis: A Comparative Study of Household Responses to Poverty and Vulnerability in Foir Poor Urban Communities 9 Guidelinesfor Integrated Coastal Zone Management (Continued on the inside back cover) ENVIRONMENTALLY SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT STUDIES AND MONOGRAPHS SERIES NO. 19 Advancing Sustainable Development The World Bank and Agenda 21 The World Bank Washington, D.C. Copyright C) 1997 The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/THE WORLD BANK 1818 H Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20433, U.S.A. All rights reserved Manufactured in the United States of America First printing June 1997 This report has been prepared by the staff of the World Bank. The judgments exprEssed do not necessarily reflect the views of the Board of Executive Directors or of the governments they represent. Cover art: Watercolor by Ed Courrier, Rodale Institute. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Advancing sustainable development : the World Bank and Agenda 21 p. cm. - (Environmentally sustainable development studies and monographs series ; no. 19) ISBN 0-8213-3974-5 1. Sustainable development. 2. Economic developrment- Environmental aspects. 3. Environmental policy-International cooperation. 4. World Bank. 5. Agenda 21. I. World Bank. II. Agenda 21. III. Series. HC79.E5A354 1997 363.7-dc2l 97-13278 CIP @3 The text and the cover are printed on recycled paper, with a flood aqueous coating on the cover. Contents Foreword vii Contributors ix PART ONE THE WORLD BANK AND SUSTANABLE DEVELOPMENT 1 Chapter 1 Challenges and Imperatives 3 Mainstreaming Environmental Sustainability in All Development Programs 4 Integrating Social and Cultural Dimensions in the Development Agenda 9 Investing in Effective Partnerships 9 Building and Sharing Knowledge More Efficiently 10 Measuring Progress Differently 11 Mobilizing and Multiplying Financial Resources for Sustainable Development 12 PART Two RESPONSES TO Agenda 21 15 Chapter 2 Combating Poverty (to chapter 3) 17 Chapter 3 Linking Population with Sustainable Development (to chapter 5) 19 Chapter 4 Protecting and Promoting Human Health (to chapter 6) 21 Chapter 5 Promoting Sustainable Development of Human Settlements (to chapter 7) 23 Chapter 6 Protecting the Atmosphere (to chapter 9) 25 Chapter 7 Managing Land Sustainably (to chapter 10) 28 Chapter 8 Combating Deforestation (to chapter 11) 30 Chapter 9 Managing Fragile Ecosystems: Combating Desertification and Drought (to chapter 12) 32 iii iv Advancing Suistainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 Chapter 10 Linking Sustainable Agriculture and Rural Development (to chapters 14,32) 34 Chapter 11 Conserving Biological Diversity (to chapter 15) 37 Chapter 12 Integrating Science and Biotechnology in Sustainable Development (to chapters 16, 31, 35) 40 Chapter 13 Protecting Oceans, Seas, and Coastal Areas (to chapter 17) 43 Chapter 14 Protecting the Quality and Supply of Freshwater Resources (to chapter 18) 45 Chapter 15 Managing Toxic Chemicals and Hazardous Wastes (to chapters 19, 20) 48 Chapter 16 Promoting Environmentally Sound Management of Solid Wastes and Sewage (to chapter 21) 50 Chapter 17 Taking Global Action for Women to Attain Sustainable and Equitable Development (to chapter 24) 52 Chapter 18 Investing in Children and Youth (to chapter 25) 55 Chapter 19 Recognizing and Strengthening the Role of Indigenous Peoples (to chapter 26) 58 Chapter 20 Strengthening the Role of Nongovernmental Organizations (to chapter 27) 61 Chapter 21 Emphasizing Local Authority-Initiatives (to chapter 28) 63 Chapter 22 Strengthening the Roles of Workers and Their Trade Unions (to chapter 29) 65 Chapter 23 Strengthening the Roles of Business and Industry (to chapter 30) 67 Chapter 24 Implementing Financial Resources and Mechanisms (to chapter 33) 71 Chapter 25 Promoting Public Awareness, Education, and Capacity Building (to chapters 36, 37) 74 Chapter 26 Implementing International Legal Instruments and Mechanisms (to chapter 39) 76 Appendix Acronyms and Abbreviations 78 Boxes 1.1 Reducing poverty 4 1.2 Doubling food production 5 1.3 Addressing energy: enviromnental linkages 6 1.4 Conserving biodiversity and natural habitats 7 1.5 Addriessing social disruption and dislocation 8 1.6 Principles of the "new environmentalism" 13 5.1 The case of El Mesquital, Guatemala 24 Contents v 5.2 The case of Bosnia and Herzegovina 24 14.1 Brazil and water strategy 46 15.1 Supporting the implementation of lead phase-out: the example of Thailand 49 16.1 Catchment protection in the Sao Paulo Metropolitan Region 51 21.1 Decentralization reforms in Uganda 64 23.1 The PROPER method of pollution control 69 Figures 1.1 Active environment portfolio, fiscal 1986-97 4 1.2 Bank/GEF projects by focal area 5 1.3 World Bank lending since Rio: a green accounting, fiscal 1993-97 5 1.4 Category A projects since Rio, fiscal 1993-97 7 6.1 Fossil fuel subsidy rates in five countries in Eastern Europe 27 17.1 Percentage of Bank projects with gender-related actions, fiscal 1992-96 52 Tables 24.1 World Bank lending since Rio: a simple accounting of World Bank commitments, fiscal 1993-97 71 24.2 World Bank/GEF/MP environmental loans and grants, fiscal 1992-97 72 t Foreword Jt has now been five years since most of the 1. Mainstreaming sustainable development. countries of the world committed to the poli- Tightening environmental and social policies, cies and programs for environmentally sus- improving their implementation, and going be- tainable development laid out at the Rio Earth yond targeted programs to make traditional sec- Summit in Agenda 21. Along with other interna- toral investments more environmentally friendly. tional agencies, the World Bank has sought to be 2. Integrating social and cultural dimensions. an active partner with its client countries in imple- Recognizing the value of social capital and in- menting the priorities set at Rio. creasing the focus on participatory approaches While the past five years have brought some to sustainable development, from consulting with progress, it is not as much as we had expected- locally affected people to substantively involv- and certainly less than we had hoped. Tropical ing them in implementation. forest cover, wetlands, and other natural habitats 3. Investing in effective partnerships. Forging collectively have declined by 3.5 percent. Global strategic alliances with client governments, other carbon emissions have increased by 4 per- multilateral and bilateral donors, the private sec- cent. One-and-a-half billion people still live with tor, and civil society to build and share develop- dangerous air pollution, 1 billion people without ment knowledge and to enhance the design, clean water, and 2 billion people without implementation,andmeasurementofprogressin adequate sanitation. During this period, the attaining sustainable development. world's gross domestic product has increased by 4. Building and sharing knowledge. Tapping the $2.4 trillion, but investment in sustainable devel- living laboratory of development activities to ac- opment has not kept pace. Furthermore, what quire, organize, and disseminate knowledge has been invested has not been used as cost-ef- about what works, where, and how. fectively as it could have been. 5. Measuring progress differently. Developing This volume documents the active role of the and adopting tools and methods to better mea- Bank in assisting our clients to work toward the sure and value environmental change and its social goals laid out at Rio. It is part of the stocktaking and economic costs and benefits, with a view to im- under way at the World Bank as we seek to re- proving the empirical basis for decisionmaking. view the past and plan for improved effective- 6. Mobilizing financial resources. Maintaining ness in the future. ODA flows and ensuring that they are used cost- Part One takes a broad perspective by assess- effectively, reducing debt, and harnessing private ing some of the greatest challenges for the future capital flows for sustainable development by in- and laying out six principles to guide our fluencing international and local businesses to thinking. employ environmentally sound business practices. vii viii Advancing Sustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 Part Two addresses the majority of the chap- means to generate discussion in the international ters of Agenda 21 in turn. It provides concise community on how we all can better achieve the reviews of progress since Rio and related World global environmental objectives that we set for Bank activities, lessons learned, and challenges ourselves in Rio. and prospects for the future. This study was conceived by Andrew Steer, director of the Environment Department, and executed under his leadership. It is presented by Ismail Serageldin the World Bank not only as a part of our taking Vice President stock and planning for the future but also as a Environmentally Sustainable Development Contributors his publication was prepared by staff of tors to each chapter are listed below. the World Bank's Environment Depart- The core team was led by Louise Fallon Scura, ment in close collaboration with other with Tine R. Nielsen, Eamon Moynihan, Alicia units in the Bank Group, including the Interna- Hetzner, James Cantrell, Clare Fleming, and tional Finance Corporation, whose work directly Kerstin Canby. Tine Nielsen coordinated the con- pertains to the sustainable development issues tributions for the sections in Part Two. Andrew outlined in Agenda 21. The particular contribu- Steer provided overall direction. 1. The World Bank and Sustainable 6. Protecting the Atmosphere. Charles M. Development: Challenges and Imperatives. Feinstein, with contributions from Louise F. Scura and Andrew Steer, with Richard 0. Ackermann and Bilal H. Olav Kjorven (Environrnent Rahill (Environment Department). Department). 2. Combating Poverty. Eamon Moynihan 7. Managing Land Sustainably. Christian J. (Environmentally Sustainable Pieri and David R. Steeds (Agriculture Development) with Parita Videt and Natural Resources Department). Suebsaeng (Poverty, Gender, and Public 8. Combating Deforestation. James J. Douglas Sector Management Department). (Agriculture and Natural Resources 3. Linking Population with Sustainable Department). Development. Thomas W. Merrick 9. Managing Fragile Ecosystems: Combating (Human Development Department). Desertification and Drought. Walter J. 4. Protecting and Promoting Human Health. Lusigi (Global Environment Facility Anne G. Tinker (Human Development Secretariat) and David R. Steeds Department). (Agriculture and Natural Resources 5. Promoting Sustainable Development Department). of Human Settlements. Prasad Gopalan (Social Policy and Resettlement Division) 10. Linking Sustainable Agriculture and Rural with Lawrence M. Hannah and Sonia Development. David R. Steeds Hammam (Transport, Water, and Urban (Agriculture and Natural Resources Development Department). Department). ix x Advancing Sustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 11. Conserving Biological Diversity. Colin P. 20. Strengthening the Role of Nongovernmental Rees and David S. Cassells Organizations. Alexander G. Rondos, (Environment Department). with Winona R. Dorschel (Social Policy 12. Integrating Science and Biotechnology in and Resettlement Division) and Maria Sustainable Development. Michel J. Petit Katherine Aycrigg (Environment (Agricultural Research and Extension Department). Group) and Robert T. Watson 21. Emphasizing Local Authority Initiatives. (Environment Department). Prasad Gopalan (Social Policy and 13. Protecting Oceans, Seas, and Coastal Areas. Resettlement Division), with George L. Marea Eleni Hatziolos (Environment Gattoni (Transport, WVater, and Urban Department). Development Department). 14. Protecting the Quality and Supply of 22. Strengthening the Roles of Workers and Freshwater Resources. Stephen F. Lintner Their Trade Unions. Peter R. Fallon and Rafik Fatehali Hirji (Environment (Human Development Department). Department). 23. Strengthening the Roles of Business and 15. Managing Toxic Chemicals and Hazardous Industry. Tine R. Nielsen (Environment (Environment Department). Department), with contributions from Letitia L. Oliveira and Michael C. 16. Promoting Environmentally Sound Rubino (Environment Department), Management of Solid Wastes and Sewage. Louis Cohn Boorstin (International Prasad Gopalan (Social Policy and Finance Corporation'), and David C. Resettlement Division), with Carl Hanrahan and David R. Wheeler Richard Bartone (Transport, Water, and (Enviromnent Departinent). Urban Development Department). 24. Implementing Financial Resources and 17. Taking Global Action for Women to Attain Mechanisms. Kirk E. .Hamilton Sustainable and Equitable Development. (Environment Department). Wendy E. Wakeman and Minhchau Nguyen (Poverty, Gender, and Public 25. Promoting Public Awareness, Education, Sector Management Department). and Capacity Building. Joan Martin- 18. Investing in Children and Youth. Tania C. Brown (Environmentally Sustainable J. Barham, Jacques van der Gaag, and Development) and John Redwood m, Mary Eming Young (Human with Tonje Vetleseter (Environment Development Department). Department). 19. Recognizing and Strengthening the Role of 26. Implementing International Legal Indigenous Peoples. Shelton H. Davis, Instruments and Mechanisms. Laurence (Social Policy and Resettlement Boisson de Chazournes, with David Division). Freestone (Legal Department). PART ONE The World Bank and Sustainable Development CHAPTER 1 Challenges and Imperatives ive years after the Rio Earth Summit is a follow and are pointing the way toward lasting good time to take stock. This global mile- solutions. The World Bank is pleased to be play- stone is the theme of the Special Session of ing a constructive role in supporting many of the United Nations GeneralAssembly in June 1997 these innovations. However, we also recognize and of a series of international gatherings. The that, with so much of the agenda for the twenty- World Bank is actively participating in these meet- first century yet unfinished, we must regard these ings, with the purpose of learning from others, successes as spurs to better performance rather sharing ideas that we are developing at the Bank, than as sources of comfort that we are now and building effective partnerships for the future. "doing things right." Overall, progress in the past five years clearly In the past five years, the World Bank has re- has not been what we had hoped. Investment in shaped its overall portfolio, providing sharply sustainable development has been inadequate as increased support for human development, has been the cost-effectiveness of some of the population, environment, and poverty reduction. investments. The loss of forests, wetlands, and In these and other programs, the Bank has natural habitats has not slowed to the extent we become the major financier of programs address- had hoped; thirteen of the world's fifteen major ing the objectives laid out in Agenda 21. These fisheries are still in decline; and targets under the programs are documented in Part II of this Climate Change Convention for the year 2000 are report, and in the Bank's magazine, Environment unlikely to be met. Most important, we have Matters (Autumn 1996 and Spring 1997). We rec- made inadequate progress in improving the qual- ognize, however, that the contribution to date has ity of life of the 3 billion people who still live on been inadequate. Every agency involved in pro- less than $2 per day. Clean water and sanitation moting sustainable development needs to look programs have expanded significantly, but only hard for ways to improve effectiveness. The enough to keep up with population growth. Less World Bank is certainly no exception. than one- quarter of the world's population con- The challenges facing the human race today sumes three-quarters of its raw materials and are perhaps even greater than at the time of the produces 70 percent of all solid waste. Rio Earth Summit. Boxes 1.1 to 1.5 provide simple We have, of course, seen some remarkable updates of five of the challenges that we regard examples of dedication, innovation, and success. as central. As we assess how the World Bank can We estimate that of the 100 countries that have best assist countries in addressing these chal- prepared national environmental strategies, lenges, we see a number of imperatives that need about half are beginning to see progress on the to guide the way that we (and other agencies) ground. Some countries are introducing changes do business if we are to reach our potential that are becoming "best practices" for others to effectiveness. 3 4 Advancing Sustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 Box 1.1 Reducing poverty z * Today, 1.3 billion people still live on $1 per day. 3 billion live on less than $2 per day. * 1.3 billion are without clean water. 2 billion are without sanitation. And 800 million are malnourished * These numbers have stayed roughly constant in the five years since Rio. The proportior of the world's popu- lation in poverty has fallen slightly, but the absolute number has stayed the same. * We see a divergence of development paths, with a growing concentration of poverty in Africa. Average in- comes in Africa are 1.4 percent lower than at the time of UNCED, while incomes in East Asia are up 9 percent. * 130 million children are not enrolled in primary schools (103 million of these are girls). A child bom in Africa today is more likely to be malnourished than to attend primary school. * With the right policies and intemational support, the number in acute poverty could fall by half over the next quarter-century. And clean water could be made available to all. Specifically, we need to give priority to: example, is now financing through the Interna- tional Bank for Reconstruction and Development 1. Mainstreaming environmental sustainabiity (IBRD) and the Internationa I Development Asso- into development activities ciation (IDA) environmental programs in 70 coun- 2. Integrating social and cultural dimensions in the tries and has committed nearly $12 billion in loans development agenda for such programs, $8 billion of which has been 3. Inveting ineffective partnerships since Rio (figure 1.1). Such interventions-to re- 3. Investing in duce pollution, protect ecosystems, and build 4. Building and sharing knowledge more efficiently capacity for environmental management in de- 5. Measuring progress differently veloping countries-are vital and, for the most part, quite effective. In addition, as one of three 6. Mobilizing and multiplying finance. implementing agencies of the Global Environment Facility (GEF), the Bank has approved 70 projects 1. Mainstreaming Environmental in more than 50 countries totaling $670 million Sustainability in Development Programs in GEF-grant financing since GEF's inception in 1991. Overall, for every dollar of Bank-GEF as- A. Implementing the First Generation sistance, there is an associated dollar of IBRD or of Environment Projects IDA resources, and two additional dollars of co- In the five years since Rio, there have been nu- funding from others. These grants are designed merous programs targeted to improved environ- to fund activities that will benefit the global envi- mental management. The World Bank, for ronment in one or more ways: conserving Figure 1.l Active environment portfolio, fiscal 1986-97 (active projects currently disbursing) 14 1 2 [|rEF 1 0 4 2 co N- co 0) 0 '- C14 CV) LO co I-. cotco cO 0 0) 0) 0) 0) 0) 0) t0) 0) 0) 0t 0) 0m CD 0D 0) 0) to 0) Fiscal year Active Environment Portfolio $12 billion (174 projects in 70 countries) Active World Bank Portfolio* $137 billion Note: * Expected at end fiscal 1997. Targeted Environment Project = 9% of Total Active Portfolio Challenges and Imperatives 5 Figure 1.2 Bank/GEF projects by focal area ing of development programs, for example. In the (approved portfolio of 70 projects totalling $670 million five years since UNCED, the Bank will have made through Februvary 1997 loans from IBRD/IDAof around $109 billion (fig- International waters $104 million ure 1.3). It is obviously vital that all these pro- grams incorporate the principles of Rio fully. Ozone depletion Mainstreaming sustainability is accomplished $38 million in two ways. First, we must ensure no harm at Climate change $226 million the project level. The Bank's first-line approach includes assessing and reducing potential adverse environmental impacts of investments. The Bank has a leading position among multilateral devel- Biodversity opment institutions in applying EA in the prep a- $303 million ration and implementation of development projects and has positively influenced the prac- biodiversity, reducing emissions of greenhouse tices of governments and other agencies. The Bank established its EA policy in 1989 and, since gases, protecting international wterbodeseo 1992, has made considerable progress in EA in- phasing out chlorofluorocarbons and other ozone- siuinladoeainlapcs Ai o depleting substances (figure 1.2). GEF grants genuinely help countries meet their obligations firmly rooted in the Bank's normal business ac- under the Climate Change and Biodiversity Con- tivity, reducing the adverse environmental im- ventions; provide the economies in transition with Figure 1.3 World Bank lending since Rio: resources to complete their phase out of ozone a green accounting, fiscal 1993-97 depleting substances and meet their obligations to the Montreal Protocol; underwrite durable part- o AJI other lending Environment nerships between countries who share large wa- $56 billion, 52% projects ter bodies to manage them sustainably; and build $8 billion, 8% capacity, especially at the country level, to iden- tify and address global environment challenges. B. Integrating Environmental Sustainability in All Development Programs Win-win projects $26 billion, 24% However, as we focus on these targeted pro- grams, it is equally vital that we ensure that all Projects with potentially serious impact programs are transformed to reflect the most cur- (category A) rent understanding of environmental and social $18 billion, 16% sustainability. Consider the World Bank's financ- Note: AI figures for fiscal 1997 are estimated. Box 1.2 Doubling food production - Tfe Five Central Challenjges * Today's population is 400 million higher than at the time of Rio and will grow at 800 million per decade for the next three decades. * Food production will need to double in the next 35 years. * The last doubling (the green revolution) occurred in just 25 years. It was driven by irrigation, chemical inputs, and high-yielding seeds and was 92 percent due to intensification. * The next doubling will be less chemical- and irrigation-intensive and, without expanded'agricultural research and investment, will require greater expansion of agricultural area, threatening valuable natural habitats. * While experts disagree on projections, all agree that the next doubling of food production will be much more difficult than the last one. * Declining attention to agricultural research and rural programs has positioned the world poorly for the future. 6 Advancing Sustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 Box 1.3 Addressing energy: environmental linkages * Poverty alleviation will require access to, and efficient use of, energy. * Today's global energy policies, which promote the inefficient use of fossil fuels and energy, are environmen- tally unsustainable, causing significant local (particulates), regional (acid deposition), and global (climate change) environmental degradation. * 2 billion people are without access to electricity. Most cook using traditional biomass fuels, which lead to a high incidence of respiratory infections in children and chronic lung disease in women. * Even today, 1.4 billion people are suffering dangerous outdoor air pollution. Assuming no changes in energy policies, it is estimated that 20 million people per year will die from respiratory problems by 2020. * Energy use in developing countries is projected to more than triple in the next 30 years--even under optimis- tic assumptions of energy efficiency gains. By 2020, total energy use in developing countries will be double that of OECD. * Energy services can be provided with much less environmental degradation through significant increases in energy efficiency, coupled with cleaner production. These changes will require national policies to "get the prices fight," internalization of all environmental externalities, mobilization of scarce capital, and a signifi- cant increase in the rate of development and diffusion of new nonpolluting technologies. * Shifting from current energy patterns (80 percent of all electricity is generated from fossil fuels) to climate- friendly patterns (say, 25 percent electricity from fossil fuels by 2050) will cost 1-2.5 percent of global GDP. The challenge is to (1) reduce this cost through carbon trading and other means, (2) buildl a consensus among citizens that the cost is worth it, and (3) negotiate an international system for compliance. pacts of Bank-financed projects and influencing Nonetheless, although project-level EA can be their design and implementation. very effective, its single-project focus is inherently Second, we must move upstream from project- lirmited. Application in a broader context-at sec- specific concerns to an integration of the envi- toral and regional levels-rnoves EA from reac- ronment in sector and national strategies. For tive to proactive and overcomes this limitation. the Bank, this implies rigorous application of en- Sectoral EAs analyze environmental issues in re- vironmental assessment (EA) and scrutiny of as- lation to policies, institutions, and development sistance strategies in traditional sectors such as plans for sectorwide investment, rather than on agriculture, energy, and infrastructure. It also a project-by-project basis, and therefore can sug- implies viewing macroeconomic support through gest a broader array of options up-front to guide the lens of sustainability, with a view to balanc- sectoral development. Sectoral and regional EA ing economic, environmental, and social con- have been piloted by the Bank successfully, and cerns. Good progress has been made in these this work will be expanded. areas over the past five years, but much more Moreover, while mainstreaming sustainable areads tovber thne.ps ieyasu uhmr development in its entire portfolio is far from needs to be done. Since June 1992,107 approved projects, involv- complete, the Bank is taking other proactive ap- ing commitments of close to $19 billion and total proaches to accomplish this goal. A major review on energy-environmental issues is underway, and investments exceeding $62 billion, have been re- a major new program for revitalizing Bank work quired to undergo full EA, including public con- on rural development has been launched. We are sultation, while another 416 operations, entailing also developing and applying so-called global commitments of $36.6 billion and total invest- overlays, which involves re-examining sectoral ments of over $90 billion, have been subject to policies and programs in the light of global envi- environmental analysis, including, in both cases, ronmental concerns, such as biodiversity and incorporation of measures to avoid, minimize, clirnate change, thereby adding a global environ- mitigate, or compensate for possible adverse im- ment dimension to traditional sectoral planning. pacts. Nearly half of the projects submitted to Over the past five years, as knowledge of sus- full EA were in the power and energy sectors, tainable development has emerged, the Bank has with another third in the agriculture and trans- adapted standard approaches and pursued new port sectors, and roughly one-sixth in the water ways of doing business in the more traditional supply, sanitation, and urban development sec- sectors of its lending: agriculture, infrastructure, tors (figure 1.4). and energy. Challenges and Imperatives 7 Figure 1.4 Category A projects since Rio, fiscal 1993-97 For land, recent emphasis has included moving to cost- effective types of soil and -A $18 Billion moisture conservation, en- _ Loansand/orcredits,fortota' olects couraging market-based land cost of $62 blllion, in the foll wmng areas: reform, and shifting toward decentralized rural develop- Category A projects by sector ment. Energy and o>wer . .. 6 .i..:- -...For water, emphasis has Transportation 7-- been on a more integrated approach to include both supply and demand manage- ment, such as encouraging Water supply/saniation decentralization and local Urban development management. In the face of Environnment -=i water scarcity and water pol- Er_ronrmnt lution that increasingly jeop- Mining ardize the lives of millions of Tourism :3 people in developing coun- Finance tries, an international con- Public setomr nanagement sensus has emerged on the fundamental principles for 0 5 10 US$ billion 20 25 improving water manage- ment. In support of the wide- scale application of these Agriculture and Rural Development principles, in 1996 the United Nations Develop- A growing recognition of the environmental chal- ment Programme (UNDP) and the World Bank lenges of both extensification and intensification invited other partners to join in establishing a of-griultralproucton,and the nonarket val- Global Water Partnership (GWP). The partner- uesof agricultur p utiond, and other naturalhabi ship would consolidate the existing UNDP-World ues of forests, wetlands, and other natural habi- Bank water programs and bring together key tats has had a major impact on the Bank's portfolio partners, not just from water supply and sanita- in the rural sector. These resulted in a new focus tion but also from irrigation, the environment, on improved land, water, and forest management. and related subsectors. The partnership aims to Box 1.4 Conserving biodiversity and natural habitats - * As of today, only 1.7 million of an estimated 30 million species have been described. * The loss of natural habitats (the principal reason for species loss) appears not to have slowed in the 1990s. Forests and wetlands are probably still being lost at 0.5-1 percent per year. * Estimates of species loss over the next 50 years range from 1040 percent. Either way, there is a crisis. * Infrastructure, agriculture, extractive industries, and urbanization drive species loss. * Economic growth (world GDP is up $2.4 trillion since Rio) and population growth (up 400 million since Rio) are resulting in a massive expansion of the human footprint on the world's ecosystems. * In the next three decades, with world population rising by 800 million per decade, energy and transport infrastructure of $500 billion per year (in developing countries alone), and agriculture output doubling, the pressures on ecosystems will reach unprecedented levels. * Addressing these challenges will require: a. A revitalized rural strategy with agricultural research and intensification given the highest priority. b. Ecological issues factored into all infrastructure planning. c. Greatly strengthened conservation activities. Today 7 percent of the world's land is officially "protected," but this protection is in the form of "paper parks." Protected areas need to be expanded to 10 percent and protected seriously. 8 Advancing Sustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 _Box 1.5 Addressing social disruption and dislocation * As globalization is pulling the world together economically, social and ethnic strains are rupturing social structures and undermining development. * The link between poverty and social disruption has become more pronounced; 15 of thle 20 least developed countries have been involved in violent conflicts. More than half of all low-income countries have experi- enced major civil conflicts in the past 15 years. * Over the past 10 years, 70 million people have become international refugees or suffered extended intemal displacemient. In Africa, nearly half of the countries produced refugee flows. * 100 million mines are still scattered throughout 65 countries; 100 million more mines are stockpiled and ready for use. * In many regions in the world, crime and violence are risin-g. Especially disturbing are the increases in vio- lence against women and children. In Latin America alone, one estimate is that 6 million minors are victims of severe maltreatment, and 80,000 die each year. * Some transition economies have seen an escalating spiral of collapse of trust, violence, and economic debacle. The de facto disappearance of government from many economic and social functions has forced millions of people to rely on informal, hidden, and sometimes illegal activities to survive. * Crime and violence hurt development by eroding human and social capital and by destroying physical infra- structure. The effectiveness of development aid is undermined or nullified by violence. * The agenda to combat crime and violence includes urban poverty alleviation; programs targeted at vulner- able and at risk groups (women and children); building social capital for urban neighborhoods; improved partnerships between government, civil society, and the private sector to prevent crime; and reform of the criminal justice system. * On the positive side, there is hope that political reform will help. Countries with good civil and political liberties grow faster, and development projects there often perform better. Trust and civic cooperation, em- bodied as a rich civil society, reduce violence and enhance economic performance. achieve a dual objective: to support country-level Energy activities adopting internationally endorsed prin- The Bank supports energy production, conserva- ciples and to bring a global perspective to these tion, and consumption that are efficient, private- activities. sector-oriented, and environrnentally and socially Infrastructure sustainable. It does this through dual means: Bank activities to balance transport activities and improving demand and supply-side efficiency environmental concerns have focused on two criti- and management through energy sector and price cal issues: addressing transport-related pollution reforms; and encouraging cleam technologies. The and reduchtg urban congestion. The Bank's ap- five years since Rio have seen good progress on proaches to urban environmental management energy pricing. We estimale that subsidies on have changed significantly overtime. Anew trend energy, which promote waste Ful use of energy and focused on city-oriented, cross-sectoral, and serious pollution, have fallen by about half-al- cross-media management solutions promises to though they still remain at about $100 billion. The continue. It involves analyzing the relative mag- World Bank believes that these remaining subsi- nitudes and impacts of the numerous pollution dies should be phased out, with the resources problems arising from various sources in urban saved being used for development programs to areas and setting priorities for action among them. address poverty. Promoting cleaner technology The Bank's transport sector policy priorities are is also an objective of the Ban,ks ener rogams. addressed in the book, Sustainable Transport: Pri- gyp gr orte fo oiySco,eom The Clean Coal Initiative, the establishment of orteso PoiySco.eom the Solar Development Corporation, and the Substantive changes are also underway in the thenSolarD opmen Corporation andthe management of industrial pollution, where the l ( t focus of Bank assistance is also shifting from pol- tional Finance Corporation) of private venture lution control to pollution prevention and to pro- capital schemes in renewable energy (see Part moting cleaner industrial technologies, spelled Two, chapter 23) are some of the current initia- out in such documents as the publicly available tives to encourage environmental technologies. A draft Pollution Prevention and Abatement Handbook. ma,jor review of the Bank's work on energy- Challenges and Imperatives 9 environmental issues is underway, with a focus (CASs) for a number of key countries. The Bank on energy efficiency, pollution prevention, and cli- is also expanding support for work in post-con- mate change. The review, which will be com- flict situations, where social and institutional pleted by mid-1997, will recommend actions in structures are severely weakened or destroyed. each of these areas. And, to help build and disseminate knowledge in this area, the Bank plans to devote the 1999 2. Integrating Social and Cultural World Development Report to this theme. Finally, Dimensions in the Development Agenda we are building our own skills in this area and A central thesis of UNCED was that social sus- will be seeking to work closely with others who tainability is equally as important as-and often have more experience. This is just a beginning, linked closely with-environtmental sustainabil- and progress will be monitored carefully. ity. Nevertheless, the implications of this truth 3. Investing in Effective Partnerships are still rarely worked into public policy. While pinpointing what constitutes "socially sustain- It is now obvious that most of the development able" is still a matter of debate, consensus is challenges the world faces are not amenable to emerging on key principles that underlie it. First, solutions from any single agency or group. One development activities must do no harm socially of the strengths of Agenda 21 is its insistence on or culturally, implying that social impacts must the role of all groups in society in promoting sus- or clturlly,implingthatsocil imactsmus tamnable development. It is not merely that each be evaluated through tools such as -ocial assess- X ment and mitigated. But well beyond this, every group has its individual role to play, but that act- effort must be made to target and reach the poor- ig together the whole can be much more effective than the sum of its parts. At the Bank internaliz- est to ensure full consultation and adequate par- . .. ticipation of all stakeholders. It is also critical to mg this message and implementing a new em- phasis on effective partnerships iS requiring a support, and where necessary, restore and build dhasis . effer y ing business ad mre at social capital: culture and values, relationships, tudinal shift. and institutions. Designing development inter- To this end, the Bank is investng heavily in ventions in a participatory manner and in a way partnerships with other multilateral financial that recognizes and enhances the crucial role that institutions; United Nations agencies and bilat- social and cultural capital play in the development eral donors; operadonal nongovernmental orga- process requires knowledge and, often, an attitu- nizations (NGOs) with grassroots experience as dinal shift. well as research or technical NGOs, such as the The Bank is taking steps towards a genuine World Conservation Union (IUCN), the Earth social policy embracing issues of social capital Council, and the World Wildlife Fund (WWF); and civil society. However, recognizing that academic institutions; and private sector organi- much more could be done, President James zations, such as the World Business Council for Wolfensohn appointed a senior-level Task Force Sustainable Development. While these partner- on Social Development to prepare a plan of ac- ships must be strengthened and deepened, they tion to ensure that the social dimensions of de- already have an increasingly direct and profound velopment are fully incorporated in Bank work. effect on Bank policy and strategic planning. The task force concluded that, for the Bank to They are also positively influencing the design ensure that its work is socially sustainable, it must quality and implementation of Bank-supported deepen its understanding of the social factors that projects and programs. Partnerships with scien- affect and underpin development, adopt a tific institutions and technically oriented NGOs multidisciplinary perspective, and employ have enabled the Bank to tap into new networks complementary social and economic approaches. of experts. Partnerships with bilateral donors, At the project level, social assessment by pro- foundations, and the private sector are sparking fessionals will gradually become the norm just innovation and leveraging greater support for as environmental assessment has. At the national ambitious joint initiatives. And partnerships with level, the Bank will explicitly address issues of grassroots NGOs, sometimes "twinned" with in- social capital in its CountryAssistance Strategies ternational NGO mentors to develop local capac- 10 Advancing Sustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 ity have extended the reach and the potential Similarly, bilateral donors play a particularly impact of Bank projects. catalytic role in the Bank's work on the environ- The Banlc now commonly facilitates or brokers ment, including policy, analysis, and operations. partnerships among client country governments In addition to cofinancing many environment and other institutions and organizations better projects in client countries with the Bank, trust placed than the Bank-and often the govern- funds provided by bilateral donors directly sup- ments-to secure input from in-country stake- ported the Bank's work on the environment, in- holder networks. These strategic partnerships cluding alL aspects of the project cycle, economic have high payoffs in improving the overall qual- and sector work, policy ancL best practice devel- ity and level of Bank assistance to developing opment, technical assistance, and training. countries for sustainable development. Close to Partnerships with the private sector take on a 50 percent of new Bank projects now involve op- variety of forms. Amultistalceholder partnership erational collaboration with NGOs to contribute which includes the private sector, the Forest Mar- to environmental assessments, provide techni- ket Transformation Initiative (FMTI), involves the cal assistance for project design and implemen- Bank and IFC, conservation NGOs, representa- tation, and act as contractors or implementing tives of private sector forest-based industries, and agencies. NGOs' involvement has demonstrably forest and business research groups. It uses stake- enhanced the design, on-the-ground implemen- holder fora and other mechanisms to identify the tation, and participation of local communities in incentive structures needed to catalyze private Bank-supported projects. sector actions that will make forest production The expanding collaboration between the systems more sustainable and compatible with Bank and NGOs is not limited to operational biodiversity conservation. I'he collective hope of work but includes substantive input into policy the FMTI is that this partrLership can lead the and analysis. For example, at the Bank's request, change toward a more environmentally sustain- the IUCN is increasingly using its global network able forestry industry of members and commissions to review Bank ae forestryrindustry. policy and program initiatives. A number of Bank Wen beie threis stia huge untapped po- environmental staff are members of IUCN com- tential in working togethser in this kind of missions and program advisory groups. Similarly, kultistakeholder partnerships to bring about the the World Resources Institute (WRI), in partner- kinds of transformations in cborporate, consumer, ship with UNDP, United Nations Environment and official behavior that will be required if de- Programme (UNEP), and the Bank, publishes bi- velopment is to become susl ainable. Good stew- ennially the World Resources Report. ardship is missing in most markets because Since 1993, the Bank has been working in corporate behavior, appropriate government partnership with other multilateral financial in- policy, adequate stakeholder consultation, strong stitutions (MFIs), such as the Inter-American De- NGO and scientific involvement ensuring inde- velopment Bank (IDB), Asian Development Bank pendent certification of good practice, and ad- (ADB), African Development Bank (AFDB), Car- equate financing are not there. The World Bank ibbean Development Bank, European Bank for hopes to participate in other "market transfor- Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), and mation initiatives"-renewable energy and ma- European Investment Bank (EIB), on environmen- rinie industries are potential examples-and in tal aspects of operations. Twice per year, envi- promoting effective voluntary guidelines for cor- ronmental staff from the MFIs meet to exchange porate, consumer, and official behavior. experiences and increase consistency in treatment 4. Building and Sharing Knowledge of environmental challenges. Areas of mutual More Efficiently interest include environmental assessment, pol- lution control and abatement, public participa- We all need to recognize that we are on the steep tion and social assessment, and enviromnental slope of the learning curve when it comes to en- approaches in operations involving privatization vironmental sustainabilty. The development path and onlending to the private sector through com- laid out in Agenda 21 was different from previous mercial banks. approaches, and with each year that passes we Challenges and Imperatives 11 are all gaining experience as to what works and development and measurement of policy-relevant what does not in making development sustain- indicators of local and global environmental prob- able. Some of the best innovations around the lems. This work has built a critical link between world are still experimental, and it is vital that environmental and economic issues. A new Bank we learn from these so that good practices can be publication, Expanding the Measure of Wealth: In- replicated and failures avoided. The World Bank's dicators of Environmentally Sustainable Development project portfolio itself offers a remarkable "living (Environment Department, World Bank 1997), laboratory" from which not only the Bank but . . i others, too, can learn. But we recognize, too, that hlts sectforl indicators fo -land qai, nu- manyof te bst inovtion com frm oters dated portfolio indicators on wealth and "genu- many of the best innovations come from others, ine"svn acutn o niomna particularly, from locally-led development efforts. de" saving (accounting for environmental We are convinced that we and other agencies depletion and degradation), analysis of themes are still not managing knowledge well. Too much such as poverty and the environment, and new knowledge rests in "supply-driven" research re- policy indicators. A major innovation is the inclu- ports and not enough in user-friendly systems sion of human capital formation in the measures available on demand to practitioners around the of genuine saving. world. Recognizing this gap, the Bank will be Policies and the Environment investing heavily over the next three years in cre- ating a knowledge management system for de- The relative success on the ground of various velopment professionals. New information policy reforms in developing countries vis-a-vis technologies will facilitate this task, so that after their effects on the environment is of great inter- a period when the system will be available to our est. The most straightforward examples of poli- own staff, we will make it directly available on- cies of environmental relevance are the so-called line to all. We are seeking partners in this effort. win-win policies to eliminate subsidies that dam- To help put knowledge management into place, age both the economy and the environment. A we have recently organized our technical staff new Bank publication, Five Years after Rio: Inno- into "networks" of professional practitioners. vations in Environmental Policy (Environment De- They will be responsible for creating and main- partment 1997), surveys recent experience and taining the skill and knowledge base within their arthe 197,tuve rece experien an assesses the relative performance of a variety of area of responsibility. environmental policy interventions implemented 5. Measuring Progress Differently since Rio. The existing empirical basis in support of sustain- Participatory Poverty Assessments able development decisionmaking remains unac- The standard, objective measures of poverty- ceptably very weak. Indicators of whether income, household expenditures, dietary calo- environmental conditions are improving or ries-have given way to new measures that worsening, as well as of the efficiency and effec- recognize that a large part of poverty depends tiveness of policies and other management in- on the perceptions of the poor. To the poor, and terventions, are essential inputs to better particularly topoorwomen,povertymeansmuch decisiounmaking, yet are often lacking. The chal- more than low income. It implies lack of access lenge is to develop better indicators to guide ac- to credit and services, and social as well as eco- tion and to monitor progress. nomic isolation and vulnerability. Since Rio, the Indicators of Environmental Change Bank has supported over seventy-two country Working collaboratively over the past five years, poverty assessments. Increasingly, these have the Bank and other international agencies, includ- been participatory poverty assessments (PPAs), ing the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the which directly engage the poor to share their own UN Statistical Office (UNSTAT), UNDP, UNEP, perceptions of poverty. These assessments should and various national governments have made sig- become part of standard practice as the basis for nificant conceptual and empirical progress in the programs targeted at poverty reduction. 12 Advancing Sutstainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 6. Mobilizing and Multiplying Financial major review of its own processes for implement- Resources for Sustainable Development ing the GEF, and as a result, has adopted a num- Agenda .21 made it clear that progress towards ber of important changes to streamline processes, sustainable development would require addi- improve effectiveness, and rnainstream global en- tional investment and finance. As the largest in- vironmental concerns throughout the Bank's ternational development finance agency, the portfolio. World Bank has a special role to play in helping The good news on finance over the past five to mobilize and channel financial resources in the years is found in the private sector. Since 1992, service of sustainable development. There are net private sector flows to developing countries three imperatives: the level of finance must be have tripled, and last year reached $230 billion, raised, the pattern of finance must be redirected, five times the flow of official finance. This ex- and the need for finance must be reduced. pansion of private finance has been a surprise, but should not have been. Some developing Raising the Level of Finance countries have simply become more attractive to At the time of Rio, most discussions revolved investors. Investors respond positively to stable, around the need for new development assistance. well-managed economies with a track record of Almost all industrial countries recommitted them- low inflation and market-friendly policies. More selves to raising their foreign assistance levels developing countries have followed better eco- toward the target of 0.7 percent of GDP. Unfortu- nomic policies over the past five years, and this nately, this has not materialized. On the contrary, is paying off. Unfortunately, these gains have not in 1995, development assistance as a share of do- been achieved across the board. Three-quarters nor country GNP fell to 0.27 percent, the lowest of all private flows went to only twelve develop- level in 45 years. This downward trend urgently ing countries. Over the past three years, all of needs to be reversed. Foreign assistance remains Sub-Saharan Africa (excluding South Africa) re- vital for reducing poverty and protecting ecosys- ceived just 1 percent of total private capital flows. tems, although this case has not always been made The World Bank is working hard with African as effectively as it ought. governments-and other countries that have not The International Development Association yet succeeded in attracting private flows-to help (IDA) is the World Bank's concessional lending them create a more attractive business climate for arm that provides interest-free loans to countries private investors. too poor to afford the market rates charged by While international financial flows are essen- the Bank's regular lending arm, IBRD. Key to tial for financing development, most of the re- the Bank's future role in these countries will be quirements for investment must come from the eleventh and twelfth replenishments of IDA, within developing countries themselves. Here, which will cover the periods July 1996 to June too, there has been good news. The same poli- 1999 and July 1999 to June 2002, respectively. The cies that are attracting foreign finance are also recent replenishment of IDA-11 was very chal- generating increased domestic savings, although lenging. After extensive discussions, 30 donors the picture varies greatly across countries and committed to contribute to IDA-11, which (when regions. In East Asia, gross savings rates have factoring in reflows and World Bank contribu- risen to 38 percent of GD:P, in comparison to tions) could lend as much as $22 billion over the 20 percent in South Asia, 19 percent for Latin 3-year period. America, and only 16 percent for Sub-Saharan This year will see the replenishment of the Africa. Global Environment Facility, a $2 billion grant Removing pricing distortions can also have a fund to address the global problems of climate powerful role on resource mobilization-and can change, biodiversity loss, ozone depletion, and often improve the environment at the same time. the degradation of international waters. It is vi- A dramatic example of this is the case of energy tal that GEF be replenished at a generous level. subsidies. In the five years since Rio, we esti- To ensure continued cost-effectiveness of its GEF mate that energy subsidies in developing and programs, this year the World Bank undertook a transitioning economies have fallen from an as- Challenges and Imperatives 13 tonishing $200 billion to about half this level. Smart private investors are already recognizing Reducing subsidies frees up resources for invest- that high environmental standards are good for ment and dramatically reduces pollution by en- business as well as for ecosystems. This has been couraging greater energy efficiency the major message of leading groups such as the Changing the Pattern of Finance World Business Council for Sustainable Develop- Not only must the level of finance be raised, but ment. But in some cases, lack of knowledge, also it must be redirected to finance more envi- coupled with market imperfections, are imped- roranentally responsible investments. Private in- ing environmentally responsible investment. In vestment, in particular, has huge potential for these cases, modest support from official sources good or harm. Each year, the private sector in- can help reduce risk and help generate self-sus- vests around $4 trillion worldwide. For the de- taining private investment. As examples, the veloping world, this figure is around $1.5 trillion World Bank Group (through the IFC), in conjunc- Worldwide, private investment is six times as tion with the Global Environment Facility, is much as government investment. launching private sector venture capital funds for The primary way to ensure that private invest- investments in biodiversity and renewable en- ment supports rather than undermines envi- ergy. By so doing, it is possible to generate $20 ronmental sustainability is through sound of environmental investments for each $1 of offi- environmental policies in the host countries. cial funds. Some encouraging progress is being made here. Leading private companies are also setting The World Bank, for example, is assisting seventy themselves tough environmental standards to developing countries in reforming their environ- guide their own investments. This move is partly mental policies. In about fifty of these countries, in response to pressures from domestic share- we are beginning to see real progress, although holders and public opinion and partly due to a almost all countries still have a long way to go. recognition that long-term profitability is likely The environmental policies that are emerging are to depend on sound environmental performance. different from those traditionally followed in It is important that such voluntary standards be today's industrial countries. The "new envi- extended to become the norm among private in- ronmentalism" is more flexible, pro-business and vestors. The World Bank is working with a num- cost-effective than earlier approaches (see box 1.6). ber of private groups to encourage this process. At the international level, there are also op- portunities for "greening' private investment. Using Finance More Effectively Moving from the present to a more sustainable Box 1.6 Principles of the 'new development path will require additional re- environmentalism" sources. But, it need not require as much as is often projected. Many of the traditional invest- A recent review of the seventy countries supported ments in the environment have been unnecessary by the World Bank in their environmental reforms found the emergence of a "new environmentalism" or excessive, due to the lack of concern for cost- characterized by the following principles: effectiveness. Western nations have achieved sub- 1. Set priorities carefully. stantial improvements to their environments, but 2. Make every dollar count. at an unnecessarily high cost, as "command-and- 3. Harness win-win opportunities. control" regulations have required specific tech- 4. Use market instruments where feasible. nology-driven solutions. Today's developing 5. Economize on administrative and regulatory countries cannot afford the high costs incurred capacity.t the inotral costs incumbed 6. Work with the private sector, not against it. by the industrial countries. A growing number 7. Involve citizens thoroughly. of developing countries-as diverse as China, the 8. Invest in partnerships that work. Czech Republic, and Mexico-are basing their 9. Remember that management is more impor- policies and investment plans on careful cost-ef- tant than technology. fectveness analysis. The World Bank has been 10. Incorporate the environment from the start. fectins anysis The World Bn has been supporting many of these countries in this work. 14 Advancing Sutstainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 A key element in lowering the costs of environ- that it may cost industrial countries around $250 mental improvement is to allow the private sector- billion per year to reduce their own carbon emis- corporations, households, farmers-to make the sions to the extent required. Suppose, however, decision as to how to reduce environmental dam- that these industrial countries could purchase re- age. This is the purpose of the so-called market- ductions in carbon emissions in other countries, based instruments. There are many such where costs are much lower. The annual cost of instruments, induding effluent charges, deposit-re- achieving targets would then fall by about two- fund schemes, performance bonds, and tradable thirds to about $80 billion. The savings of around permits. The good news is that almost all of them $170 billion per year could then be shared among are being tried out somewhere. The bad news is developing and industrial countries. The signa- that they are not being tried in enough places. tories to the Climate Change Convention will be Such approaches can lead to dramatic savings deciding on whether to allow such "trading" of even at the global level. Consider the issue of carbon permits at an important meeting in Kyoto climate change, for example. Experts calculate in December 1997. PART Two Responses to Agenda 21 CHAPTER 2 (chapter 3 of Agenzda 21) Combating Poverty C urrently, more than 1.3 billion people in growth, rather than depressing productivity, ac- the developing world still struggle to sur- tually engages more people in productive work, vive on less than a dollar a day. In some and adds to total earnings. Over the last five regions, per capita incomes are actually declin- years, the Bank has allocated $14 billion for eco- and crises in agricultural production and the nomic reform, $17 billion to increase agricultural mig, ant promis m put people anate productivity, $10 billion for education, $6 billion environment promise to put people at greater risk for urban development, and $5 billion for water in the years to come. In Sub-SaharanAfrica, a child and sanitation. born today is more likely to be malnourished than to attend primary school, and the likelihood of * Increasing access to credit and land. As part of ef- dying before the age of five is the same as enter- forts to help the poor gain access to key produc- tive assets such as capital and land, the Bank has ing secondary school. In the face of these chal- supported institutions such as the Grameen Bank lenges, chapter 3 of Agenda 21 states that "the and is a partner in the Consultative Group to struggle against poverty is the shared responsi- Assist the Poorest (CGAP), which aims to in- bility of all nations" and calls for policies that pro- crease microcredit for poor entrepreneurs. Ef- mote "development, sustainable resource forts have been launched inAlbania, Niger, and management and poverty eradication simulta- Tunisia, among others. The Bank has also pro- neously." vided key technical assistance to countries pur- suing market-assisted land reform. These Progress since Rio include Brazil, Colombia, and South Africa. The central objective of the World Bank is to help * Increasing the productivity of the poor. Investments developing countries reduce poverty. In order to in basic education, agricultural extension, and caryotismsson,theBanhs em d a business are essential to improve productivity. carry out its mission, the Bantk has employed a In this regard, the Bank has devoted $17 billion three-fold agenda focused on broad-based eco- over the past five years to promote productivity nomic growth, development of human capital growth in agriculture. Increasingly, this assis- among the poor, and establishment of social safety tance is being targeted directly to poor farmers. nets for those who are most vulnerable. Making markets work. In recent years, the Bank Broad-based Growth has encouraged governments to lift unnecessary Five areas are crucial for enlsuring that the poor and burdensome regulations and taxes on start- up firms. Infrastructure investments have also are able to maximize the benefits from economic focused on smaller-scale projects, such as rural growth: roads or urban bike paths, that more closely re- * Providing the necessaryframework. In recent years, flect demand considerations. the performance of low-income economies in * Helping to overcome discrimination. In order to South Asia has shown that labor-intensive help people marginalized by discrimination 17 18 Advancing Sustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 reach their economic potential, the Bank has sup- $2 billion in safety net operati ons world-wide, from ported efforts aimed at both women and indig- urbanAfrica to Mexico to the former Soviet Union. enous populations. In the case of women, it is supporting appropriate agriculture technology, Lessons Learned the right to own land, and access to child care, education, and employment (also see chapter Assessing the impact of Bank efforts to reduce 17). In the case of indigenous populations, poverty is necessarily complicated by external greater emphasis is being placed on local par- factors, such as overall economic growth in a ticipation and extension efforts that build on lo- country, price shocks, weather, and peace and cal knowledge (also see chapter 19). security. The Bank continues, therefore, to make efforts to refine its evaluation techniques. None- Developing the Human Capital of the Poor theless, important lessons have been learned: To develop the ability of the poor to work their . Cross-country and time-series analyses of new way up from poverty themselves, the Bank has data have confirmed that economic growth is dramatically increased its investments in human critical in the fight againsi poverty in all regions capital development, such that 16 percent of Bank of the world. lending is now dedicated to this purpose. Basic . Country-specific poverty assessments map education is key in this regard, and there are three poverty using different sources of information, areas crucial to the Bank's efforts to help poor chil- including data on nutrition and education. These dren: assessments can contribute greatly to target pov- * Early childhood development. Because good nu- erty reduction efforts and coordinate donor and trition and education in the first few years of a government actions. child's life can have a lasting positive effect, the . Improvements must be made in linking poverty Bank has staked out new territory in recent years assessments, country assistance strategies, the by supporting projects that integrate health, nu- resulting lending program, and dialogue with trition and early childcare services. governments to establish more cohesive and * Primary education. Although it has long been comprehensive strategies. recognized that education is correlated with * Much more needs to be done to improve moni- income, emphasis has often been placed on toring of projects to measure the impact of pov- higher education to the detriment of primary erty efforts "on the ground." education. This is particularly true, perhaps, in , . , . . ~~* Effective povert reduction requires government the developing world. To focus more on the truly c tygq g poor, the Bank has increased its percentage of ity, and imcreased parthcpation of beneficiaries. education money going to primary education from 34 to 45 percent in the last few years. * Educating girls. Educating girls has a catalytic Challenges Ahead effect on every dimension of development from Poverty remains a tremendous challenge that no lowering fertility rates to raising productivity ccuntry has yet overcome. Future efforts must be and improving environmental management. ccordinated among donors, governments, nongov- The Bank continues to reiterate this theme and ernmental organizations (NGCs), and local commu- push for increased educational opportunities for nities. They will need to be better targeted, within girls in regions where they experience discrimi- the capacty of local institutions to implement, and nation. more participatory. To these ends, the Bank will in- crease its use of country-spedfic poverty assessments, Safety Nets ernphasizing the partidpatory type, to improve its Because most poverty reduction efforts are fo- understanding of the causes and dynamics of pov- cused on the working population, some people erty, and to refine and tailor its strategy to different will necessarily be left out unless specific efforts countrysituations. Furthermore, theBankwill moni- are designed to meet their needs. These people tor more dosely the way its country assistance strat- include the sick, elderly, disabled, those in mar- egies incorporate poverty, and will continue to ginal areas, and those suffering temporary set- mainstream participation and sodal assessment in backs. The Bank now spends approximately project design and implemenrtation. CHAPTER 3 (chapter 5 of Agenda 21) Linking Population with Sustainable Development he relationship between population nutrition, and population projects. As a key com- and sustainable development remains a piler of information on social and economic indi- I complex and highly debated issue. Nev- cators in developing countries, the Bank continues ertheless, there is broad agreement that rapid to play a central role in mobilizing and dissemi- increase in human population puts pressure on nating basic information about demographic natural resources and the environment both trends. It has also worked to incorporate that in- directly, through increased need for employment formation into sector work and policy dialogue and livelihood, and indirectly, through increased on linkages between population and sustainable demand for goods and services. In many rural development at the global, regional, and country areas, growing populations demanding more levels. As a follow-up to Rio, the Bank's report, food, employment, and livelihood have acceler- Population and Development: Implications for the ated conversion of forests and other natural habi- World Bank, for the International Conference on tats to agriculture and other uses. Landless poor Population and Development held in Cairo in have streamed from rural areas into cities in search 1994 emphasized the importance of linking popu- of employment, and the resulting rapid pace of lation policy to core Bank agendas in poverty re- urbanization imposes huge environmental chal- duction and sustainable economic development. lenges. While rural to urban migration eases the Population issues have also gained promi- subsistence pressure for further encroachment on nence in the Bank's regional, country, and sec- natural habitats, it increases the market pressure toral strategies. A recent regional example is the for food, timber, and energy. In addition, urban- strategy for Sub-Saharan Africa, articulated in the ization brings with it a whole set of pollution- Bank paper, Toward Environmentally Sustainable related concerns stemming from sanitation, Development in Sub-Saharan Africa: World Bank industry, energy, and transport. Recognizing the Agenda (1996). As part of the effort to help its cli- linkages between demographics and sustainability, ent countries formulate integrated national poli- chapter 5 of Agenda 21 calls for increased analysis cies to take account of demographic trends, the of demographic trends as well asbroader dissemi- Bank is seeking to improve the use of demograph- nation of information on what these trends may ics in its country assistance strategies, which are portend. the compacts that guide the Bank's work with its borrowers. Similarly, the Bank is exploring the Progress since Rio impact of population in its country-level eco- Since Rio, the Bank has substantially increased nomic and sector work, such as the recent Popu- assistance for population programs, and now lation Growth, Shifting Cultivation, and commits over $2.3 billion per year for new health, Unsustainable Agricultural Development: A Case 19 20 Advancing Sustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 Study in Madagascar (1994). At the project level, increasing household incomes, decreasing child the Bank routinely takes account of projected mortality, expanding educational and employ- changes in the growth and distribution of popu- ment opportunities for women, and increasing lation, especially in such critical areas as water, access to family planning to help individual sanitation, and land use. women avoid unwanted births-are desirable in their own right. Supporting them to avoid ad- Lessons Leamed verse longer-term environmental impacts repre- One of the most important demographic lessons sents a win-win scenario. to emerge since Rio, and one which has major Challenges Ahead implications for the sustainability of economic development, is that population momentum is an As the world continues to confront the conse- increasingly important factor driving population quences of rapid population growth, the Bank will growth in developing countries, particularly in continue to promote sustainable development by large countries such as China, India, and Indone- meeting three important challenges: sia, where substantial fertility declines have al- . Prevailing on policymakers fo think and planfor the ready occurred. Even with these declines, these longer run. First recognize the importance of countries will still experience very large absolute timely actions to complete transitions to lower increases in population. The reason is that while population growth rates and then develop strat- the current generation of mothers is having many egies for coping with the very large increases in fewer children than their mothers did, the num- population that are upon us. The next two de- bers of new mothers have increased faster than cades offer a onetime winclow of opportunity for fertility ratewmots have decli urthea orater these effective action. Actions that fail to consider fertility rates have declined. Furthermore, these longer-term consequence., will likely have dev- large absolute increases will occur over the next astating impacts. two to three decades. The Bank has been work- ing with its client countries to increase awareness *Continuing the progress thzt was made in Rio and of the momentum factor and to help them plan subsequently in Cairo, Beijing, and elsewhere to put ho th morands to help themfp a humanface on population jssues. While recogniz- how to manage these very large increases effec- ing the importance of links between population tively. and sustainable development, many NGOs, par- Another important lesson is that the links be- ticularly those representing women's perspec- tween demographics and sustainability are com- tives, called for responses that put individual plex. It is intuitively clear that substantially larger reproductive rights and health needs first. They numbers of people consuming much more than grounded their position on basic principles of today and doing so in regions of the world which human dignity and evidence that this approach toare alreadomgy o experiening great thenviron al has been more effective and less costly than top- are already experiencing great environmental down efforts driven only by macrodemographic stress will have serious consequences. However, targets. understanding the dynamics and measuring the adverse impact of these linkages is a major * Mobilizing thefinancial and human resources needed for this effort. The Bank will continue to play a challenge. Decisions have to be made despite un- major role at the policy level to address these certainty and incomplete information. Fortu- issues, and will maintain its increased support nately, many of the actions that will help to for investments to implement programs of effec- encourage and maintain fertility declines- tive action in population and the environment. CHAPTER 4 (chapter 6 of Agentda 21) Protecting and Promoting Human Health T he state of human health is closely linked * Policy analysis and research. The Bank's seminal to development. Impaired health lowers publication on health, World Development Report I human productivity. At the same time, dis- 1993: Investing in Health, has helped both the ease is often associated with poverty, manifested Bank and many countries reorder health policy as illnesses caused by inadequate sanitation, mal- priorities. Other World Bank papers on key top- nutitin,otes lack of medial treatment The ics to improve the quality of Bank work include * . Better Health in Africa: Experience and Lessons poor take the brunt of the health imipacts of air Learned (1994); A New Agendafor Women's Health and water pollution, because they are the least and Nutrition (1994); and Evaluating Health able to reduce their exposure. They are also more Projects: Lessons from the Literature (1996). The vulnerable, because they are less healthy and less Bank also cosponsored the Ad Hoc Committee nourished. In order to improve human health, on Research and Development report, Investing chapter 6 of Agenda 21 calls for, among other goals, in Health Research and Development (1996), which improvements in primary health care, particularly will contribute to a global agenda for research in rural areas; better control of communicable dis- addressing issues related to communicable dis- ease; protection of the most vulnerable; and re- eases, maternal conditions, microbial threats, duction of the health risks from pollution. noncommunicable diseases, and health policy. * Country-specific sector work and dialogue. Over the Progress since Rio last five years, the Bank has undertaken coun- The Bank's assistance in health has increased dra- try-based analytical studies in key areas such as matically over the past five years. The average financing, health care delivery systems, and annual number of projects has nearly doubled health training in Chile, China, India, Jordan, Kyrgyz Republic, Malawi, Mexico, Poland, and since the early 1990s. Lending commitments for Tunisia. These studies have served the dual health, nutrition, and population have risen from purposes of educating Bank staff about health $0.9 billion in fiscal year 1992 to $2.3 billion in issues and client country needs as well as stimu- fiscal year 1996. The World Bank is now the single lating analysis, debate, and consensus-building largest external financier of health activities in among national decisionmakers. low- to middle-income countries. Health assis- . Training. The Bank is increasingly using train- tance comprises 11 percent of total Bank lending, ing as a vehicle for dialogue on health policy, twice what it was five years ago. health sector development, and sustainable fi- Along with its lending activities, the Bank has nancing. A recent example was the regional contributed significantly to national and interna- policy seminar attended by ten southern Afri- tional debates on health policy through the fol- can countries held in South Africa in 1996. A lowing nonlending channels: global course will be held in 1997 on health sec- 21 22 Advancing Sustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 tor reform and sustainable financing. This holders in building strong local ownership and course will feature an intensive six-week train- commitment has become increasingly evident. A ing program as well as locally adapted courses growing number of Bank projects include financ- in six regional partner institutes. ing for NGOs and communilty support. For ex- * Partnerships. The Bank continued as a sponsor ample, in India the Bank has supported the of the Task Force for Child Survival and Safe participation of NGOs in the preparation and Motherhood Initiative and participated in ma- implementation of the new Reproductive and jor health conferences and scientific meetings. Child Health project, which has ensured incor- In collaboration with the World Health Organi- poration of women's perspectives. zation (WHO) and other international organiza- tions, the Bank hosted the 1997 International Challenges Ahead Conference on Innovations in Health Financing, the first major conference to focus on the full To meet the key upcoming challenges to the health range of international health financing mecha- sector, the Bank is taking a tripartite approach: nisms. In its lending program, the Bank is work- Focusing on poverty alleviation. The Bank will ing in consortia with other donors to improve coordination and resource mobilization, as in work with client countries to ensure access to recent health projects in Bangladesh and Zim- high quality preventive and basic curative health babwe. The Bank also has strengthened its staff services that address the needs of women, chil- and created closer partnerships through dren,andthepoor. secondments of technical staff from the Centers . Enhancing resource mobilization and cost contain- for Disease Control (CDC) and WHO. ment. The Bank will work with client countries and the private sector on appropriate public and Lessons Learned private roles in health. In raiddle-income coun- While there have been dramatic improvements in tries, the focus will be prinnarily on preventing health status globally, many countries have not pro- uncontrolled, escalating expenditures and un- gressed as well as expected. More attention needs sustainable systems. In low-income countries, to be given to ensuring access to cost-effective services, the focus will be on ensuring an adequate level as well as focusing on efficient spending, quality in of public funding and on using scarce resources service delivery, and increased civil participation. most effectively. Bank analysis of the global disease burden and * Assisting in policyformulation and broad sector re- the costs of alternative interventions, undertaken form. The challenge includes addressing prob- over the last four years with WHO, has identified lems such as inefficient, c entralized delivery key interventions which are particularly cost-effec- systems, poor management, human resources tive. These interventions include management imbalances, information failures, poor quality of of sick children, immunization, prenatal and de- care, inequitable systems, and weak involvement livery care, family planning, AIDS prevention, of communities and the private sector. To im- treatment of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), prove planning, implementation, and health out- chemotherapy for tuberculosis, school health, and comes of projects, the Bank< will be developing, tobacco and alcohol abuse prevention. in collaboration with other donors and client The importance of participatory approaches countries, better indicators to measure perfor- that engage clients, beneficiaries, and other stake- mance of health programs. CHAPTER 5 (chapter 7 of Agendtla 21) Promoting Sustainable Development of Human Settlements Trban consumption patterns in industri- commercial bank entry into financing housing alized countries severely stress the glo- and land markets by developing projects that _ bal ecosystem, while human settlement appropriately allocate financial, operating, and conditions in the developing world remain very market risks between governments and private poor, in part because of low levels of investment, entities. To pool knowledge, share responsibili- People without income often lack shelter, even in ties, and leverage finances for settlement projects the wealthiest societies. To improve the state of around the world, the Bank has forged coopera- human settlements, chapter 7 of Agenda 21 calls tive arrangements with other donor agencies such for a series of reforms and reallocation of re- sources. These include providing adequate shel- ments (UNCHS) (Habitat), the United NationS ter for all, improving management of human mentss(UNCHS (Habitat), the settlements, providing integrated environmental united Nations Children's Fund (UNICE), the infrastructure, supporting sustainable energy and United Natos Clen's Fnde(Ua CEona te transport systems, and planning more effectively United States Agency for International Develop- in disaster-prone areas. ment (USAID), and the European Union (EU) in the design and implementation of settlement Progress since Rio projects. Increasingly, the Bank has sought ac- Housing and land issues formed the mainstay of tive stakeholder participation and support-from tHeWorlgad Bank's iearly forban pr ams,tand te both governmental and nongovernmental the World Bank's early urban programs, and the entities (box 5.1). demand for projects in this area is still strong. The Bank's project appraisal and development Since Rio, however, the Bank has engaged in a processes have been adapted to lend in time and strategic reconfiguration of its loan portfolio, de- more efficiently to reconstruction activities in re- signing and evaluating settlement projects based gions of the world torn by wars or natural disas- on their impact on the housing and urban land ters. The Bank is leading efforts in post-conflict market as a whole, rather than focusing narrowly reconstruction in Bosnia (box 5.2) and in the West on single project outcomes. Bank and Gaza. It has also responded rapidly to The Bank has also sought to develop new ways the decimation of settlements by natural disas- to access cost-effective, long-term financing for ters, with emphasis on settlements of the poor, settlements and services, including the develop- who are particularly vulnerable. Emergency re- ment of mortgage and/or municipal credit mar- construction activities, such as those sponsored kets in those countries with relatively advanced after earthquakes in India and Turkey and after financial markets. To this end, it is facilitating floods in Brazil, have focused on the short-term 23 24 Advancing Sustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 Box 5.1 The case of El Mesquital, * Recognize that infrastructLre service delivery is Boxtema.1 an essential component of sustainable settlement Guatemala projects A community cooperative established in response * Use appropriate mechanisms to encourage m- to a health crisis that took the lives of 160 children novative design and construction of settlements in 1985 is taking the lead in identifying priorities as well as to allow competitive private sector and helping develop this inadequately serviced sub- .a.i.p.i. urban area of Guatemala City. Through the identifi- partcipation cation of priority investments by the cooperative, the * Consider innovative ways of valuing projects World Bank is lending to finance these targeted and evaluating impacts related to land improve- needs. Land development by extending essential in- frastructure services to all of El Mezquital is envi- ment, or eample, b s target rates of re- sioned to meet the demands of the community, which turn based on land prices as feasibility indicators is paying for services and the purchase of developed for infrastructure projects. land through the cooperative. By developing a tar- geted lending project that relied on stakeholder in- Challenges Ahead put to determine priority needs, the World Bank built grassroots support for the project, improving its Despite the Bank's strategic refocusing of shelter chances to succeed. and land projects, certain obstacles still need to be overcome. They include: need to repair shelter in the afflicted areas and * Mastering the division of roles and the alloca- restore their essential infrastructure services. tion of responsibilities between the public and In addition, a new Historic Cities initiative is the private sector underway in which the Bank, the United Nations * Designing targeted subsidy programs that fac- Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organisation tor in affordability and transparency while mini- (UNESCO), academic institutions, foundations, mizing the impact on financing arrangements and other governmental and nongovernmental entities are collaborating on the preservation and * Focusing on government's role in ensuring mac- restoration of historic cities as culturally and eco- roeconomic stability that specifically affects long- nomically viable entities. term finance issues in this sector. Lessons Learned_ _ BLox 5.2 The case of Bosnia and Herzegovina Over the past five years, the Bank has learned impotantlessons about how to improve settle- A>s a result of civil conflivct in Bosnia and important lIHerzegovina, in addition to the million displaced ment projects and create a more favorable en- people, about 50 percent of the housing stock was abling environment. Experience has shown it is damaged and an additional 6 percent totally de- important to: s troyed, with no maintenance over four years. The housing reconstruction program aims to create con- * Encourage governments to establish more effi- ditions to enable the return of r efugees and the dis- cient land and housing sector markets through placed and to rapidly expand the usable housing appropriate policy reforms. Also, allow govern- stock for the entire population cost effectively. In ments to focus their efforts on improving settle- addition, the program provides institution-building, ments and services for the poor, while not management, and implementation support for de- participating directly in the production and fi- s[gning appropriate housing policies. Although nancing of shelter projects or delivery of shelter much has been achieved through the support for services locally driven reconstruction by the World Bank, nongovernmental organizations, and other multi- * Rethink the orthodoxy of land tenuring and and bilateral agencies, the situation in Bosnia and cadastering to create a broader array of prod- Herzegovina needs sustained support. ucts for designing and evaluating land and shel- Among the lessons gleaned following a year of ter development projects implementation has been the need to coordinate ac- * Improve institutional capacities and arrange- tions among donors, streamlire contracting proce- ments to remove land and housing market im- dures for labor and materials, integrate infrastructure mrectsitonremoveslan and inusevice mketlivy rehabilitation in the process, and maintain realistic perfectons and increase service delivery expectations of outcomes. efficiency CHAPTER 6 (chapter 9 of Agendila 21) Protecting the Atmosphere AL tmospheric pollution is an enormous and environmental projects address the most important ,At growing concern throughout much of the problems and do so in a cost effective way. world, causing widespread health prob- A prime area of focus is the effort to reduce lems, particularly for the young and the elderly. atmospheric pollution ozone depletion caused by Atmospheric pollution has caused ozone deple- chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs). When countries tion and threatens to bring about climate change around the world signed the Vienna Convention with widespread repercussions. To reduce pol- for the Protection of the Ozone Layer and its as- lution and protect the atmosphere, chapter 9 of sociated Montreal Protocol. They made a com- Agenda 21 calls for greater investment in scien- mitment to phase out all CFCs by 2010 (1996 for tific research, the promotion of sustainable devel- Organisation for Economic Co-operation and opment, the prevention of ozone depletion, and Development nations). The World Bank has par- agreements to handle transboundary pollution ticipated in a number of initiatives designed to issues, among other measures. support its client countries as they attempt to meet these obligations: Progress since Rio e Montreal Protocol. Since 1991, as an implement- As evidence increasingly suggests that the old "pol- ing agency for the Multilateral Fund for the lution control" paradigm is no longer adequate, Montreal Protocol (MFMP), the Bank has ap- the Bank has shifted its emphasis in recent years proved over 460 investrnent projects (about 40 to environmental management. Currently, the Bank percent of all MFMP investment projects) at about has committed approximately $526 million to 55 $210 million (nearly 50 percent of MFMP invest- atmospheric pollution projects in 32 countries ment project resources). These projects have re- through the Global Environment Facility (GEF) and sulted in an annual phaseout of over 7,800 tons Montreal Protocol (MP). Of these projects, 7 are of ozone-depleting substances (ODS) weighted for through IFC for $29 million, and 1 is through the their ozone-depleting potential and will ultimately Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) for $3 result in an annual phaseout of over 42,000 tons. million. All the projects strengthen institutional . Global Environment Facility. Many countries with capacity to monitor and enforce environmental transition economies are not eligible to receive management and, where appropriate, establish a financing from the MP but are eligible under the sound regulatory and planning framework. Solu- GEF. Through the Bank as an implementing tions being applied with the Bank's assistance in- agency, the GEF is financing ODS phaseout in volve privatization and public sector reform, six economies in transition, including Russia. movement toward financial sustainability through The value of the approved projects is now over user charges and management autonomy, and the $85 million. They will ultimately result in an establishment of clear priorities to ensure that annual phaseout of over 18,000 tons of ODS. 25 26 Advancing Sustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 * ODS production phaseout. The Bank is support- among these win-win opportunities is the elimi- ing a special initiative to help the Russian Fed- nation of subsidies which damage both the eration phase out ODS production. Although economy and the environment. Preliminary re- ODS consumption in Russia has fallen over re- sults from tracking the changes in fossil fuel sub- cent years, this trend could be undermined by sidies in Eastem Europe show that total subsidy the continuing availability of locally produced levels on coal, natural gas, and petroleum prod- ODS. Illicit trade in Russian CFCs in Europe, ucts dropped from $14.4 billion in 1991 to $6 bil- North America, and developing countries also lion in 1995,4.3 percent of the region's combined undermines the world community's efforts to gross national product (G(NP). Improvements phase out all CFCs. The production phaseout is in energy efficiency also reduce GHG emissions probably the most cost-effective large-scale ODS while aiding economic growth. Increasing evi- phaseout in the world. In another special initia- dence shows that, more than any other factor, tive, the Bank has been working with the Gov- changes in economic struicture affect the future emnment of China on a pilot to phase out over path of energy intensity eand GHG emissions. A 35,000 tons of ODS annually in the halon sector, joint study by the Chinese Environmental Pro- used primarily in fire protection systems. tectionAgency, the State I'lanning Commission, * Market-based instruments (MBIs). In 1996, the the UNDP, and the World Bank isolated the fac- ' ~~tors that are responsible for reducing the energyv Bank undertook a study on market-based instru- * v v, ments to support ODS phaseout. The study iden- intensity of the Chinese economy below the level tifies potential applications for conventional that would be reached Nvith static production MBIs, such as taxes and tradable production technologies. Some 79 percent of the total ex- permits, and recommends a national bidding pected decline in energy consumption per unit system for MFMP grant distribution. A national of output is a consequence of changes in the auction would reduce costs to the MFMP since structure of Chinese industrial production. Mac- firms would have to compete for the Fund's re- roeconomic and other policies can therefore have fiurmes would w dhave t ncmentive f th und' mie a larger impact on GHG emissions than any ex- sheirourcversin would. haveincentivestominimizplicit mitigation option a the project level. their conversion costs.v * Hydrocarbon refrigeration. The Bank and the Gov- ' Global Environment Facility. As a GEF implement- e,ments of Germany and Switzerland have ~ ing agency, the Bank emplhasizes in its program- ernments ofrGe emrmiany an Swntz er land have irt- t are tiated a study on the global hydrocarbon domestic mig emissions abatement opportunities that are refrigeration market. The study's purpose is to cost effective from a long-term global environ- evaluate the barriers faced by hydrocarbon tech- mental perspective. Renewable energy and en- nologies, determine whether they enjoy a level ergy efficiency have been the major foci of playing field relative to other alternatives, and investment activity. To date, the GEF Council assess their comparative envirornmental benefits. has authorized $220 million in GEF cofinancing of Bank renewable energy projects and $92 mil- A second area of focus in the effort to reduce lioninenergyefficiencyinvestments (see figure 6.1). atmospheric pollution concerns the threat of glo- On average, each dollar of GEF financing has bal climate change. To meet the objectives of the leveraged approximately four dollars in comple- 1992 United Nations Framework Convention on mentary private sector, WVorld Bank, and other Climate Change (FCCC), nations will be com- official capital flows. pelled to improve energy efficiency and reduce Activities implemented jointly. Activities Imple- reliance on fossil fuels. The Bank has taken the * A emented J l J)under "theFCCC Imple lea in hepn conre reuc emsin and mented Jointly (AIJ) under the FCCC AIJ Pilot lead in helping countries reduce emissions and Phase implies that countbries contract with par- enhance sinks of greenhouse gases through a Phsimletatcuresonatwthp- number of measures. ties in another country to reduce that country's GHG emissions. AlJ can be an important mecha- * Mainstreaming climate change. Evidence is grow- nism for stimulating additional resource flows ing that macroeconomic policy changes will for the global environmental good. With strongly affect future greenhouse gas (GHG) Norway's cofinancing, the Bank has expanded emissions and that, in many cases, it is in a its collaborativeAIJ Work Program to clarify how country's best interest to pursue actions that also AIJ and other market mechanisms can promote capture climate change benefits. Foremost the Bank's client countries' interests. Protecting the Atmosphere 27 Figure 6.1 Fossil fuel subsidy rates in five countries in Eastern Europe (percent) 111990/91 Petroleumr Natural Coal 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Note: Liberalization in five Eastern European countries (Bulgaria, Former Republic of Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland, and Romania) has led to dramatic decreases in implicit and explicit subsidies on fossil fuel. Total fossil fuel subsidies fell from $14.4 billion in 1990/91 to $6 billion in 1995, a drop of 4.3 percent of GNP SoLutm Internasonal Energy Agenq, World Bank, and calculations by John Dixon and Kirk Hanilton, Environment Departmt World Bank Lessons Learned Challenges Ahead Concerning national atmospheric pollution and The challenges in reducing atmospheric pollution ozone layer protection, perhaps the principal les- lie in two principal domains. The severity of na- son learned is the need to shift priorities in devel- tional and global pollution problems strengthens oping countries. From an earlier preoccupation the case for identifying and implementing win- with setting standards and finding resources, en- vironmental managers are increasingly recogriz- A p ing the importance of cost effectiveness in it is not clear how much such efforts will accom- formulating and applying solutions. Efficient re- plish by themselves. source allocation and "bang for the buck" have Going beyond win-win will require a concen- become post-Rio watchwords. trated commitment to mainstream pollution ex- Regarding the protection of the global climate ternalities into development planning and system, a different cost-effectiveness ethic pre- decisionmaking. Environmentally friendly al- vails. Here the preoccupation must be on the ef- ternatives should be evaluated early in the policy ficiency of expenditures over the long term. Viewed in these terms, and given the enormity andainvestment cycle, and new resources must of the climate change problem, leveraging changeze t takes on heightened importance. Influencing of- natives. This will also help identify the underly- ficial development assistance and private sector ing synergies in addressing global, regional, and resource flows must be a priority. local pollution problems. CHAPTER 7 (chapter 10 of Agendla 21) Managing Land Sustaina[bly P roper planning and effective management which include discussion of land policy issues, for of land resources is necessary to protect the Albania, Belarus, Bulgaria, C6te d'Ivoire, Ethio- environment and ensure our future ability pia, Hungary, Iran, Kenya, Mali, Mauritania, Ro- to gain sustenance from our surroundings. With mania, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zimbabwe. As a this in mind, chapter 10 of Agenda 21 calls for new result, most of the current projects in the Bank's approaches to conserving and protecting limited agricultural and natural resources lending port- resources such as soil, fresh water, and vegeta- folios have environmental objectives with land use tion. Signatories agreed to link social and eco- components. Examples are: nomic development with environmental protection and,hermen possible, environmental en- * India Watershed Plains project. Through the intro- protection and, where possible, envirornmental en- dcino ehal olcnevto rc hancement. To achieve this goal, the chapter lists duct ao plicabvesiervan ractce a number of management-related activities that suhaplnigvterrssndef- a number of,,ngemntrelte isho estation, the project seeks to contribute to the re- nations and the development community show versal of ecological degradation in a variety of implement, recommendations in support of ef- agroecological zones COvring 265,000 hectares forts to improve data and information systems, in the rainfed and drylandi areas in the states of and a call for international and regional coordi- Gujarat, Orissa, and Rajasthan. nation and cooperation. Mali Natural Resource Management project. The Progress since Rio project will introduce a land use system designed to reverse natural resource degradation in 150 Since Rio, the Bank has been a key partner in as- farm communities. The nature of resource en- sisting client countries with the development of hancing investments are being defined by local policies and methodology related to land use plan- committees and include such practices as stone ning and land management. One important role contours, water harvesting, and improved for- the Bank has played has been providing advice est and wildlife habitat management. and helping arrange technical assistance for Na- China Loess Plateau project, The project is aimed tional EnvironmentalAction Plans (NEAPs). The at increasing agricultural production and income development and implementation of land use in nine tributary watersheds of the Yellow River, policies, land tenure systems, and land use plan- while reducing soil losses with various conser- ning processes are all recognized as key activities vation practices. These practices include terrac- under the intensive environmental planning re- ing on slopes between 5 and 25 degrees, quired by NEAPs. Moreover, to inform its coun- expanding forest cover from 14 percent to 28 try assistance strategies, the Bank has prepared percent of the land area, and constructing sedi- Country Environment Strategy Papers (CESPs), ment control dams. 28 Managing Land Sustainably 29 The Bank has also been very active in support- Challenges Ahead ing the development of Forestry Action Plans, The main challenges facing the Bank, its clients, such as those for Ethiopia and Tanzania, which and partners in the upcoming years are: employ an integrated approach to the manage- ment of land resources. In addition, the Bank has * To put in place all the ingredients of sustainable land supported several subregional initiatives, such as management. These include: improved technolo- the Desertification Control Initiative in the Middle gies, land reform laws and regulations, and sup- East and the Collaborative Research Initiative for portive institutional mechanisms at local and Sustaining Rice-Wheat Cropping Systems in the national levels. It will also be necessary to show Indo-Gangetic Plain, which address the issues of through pilot projects that, by taking a longer conflicting land uses and suboptimal land man- view, farmers can increase production and in- agement. crease their net returns by adopting environmen- In countries with highly skewed land owner- tally friendly practices. Recently, the Bank ship, redistributive land reform can have high helped launch an international consortium, the equity and efficiency benefits. This is not a new Soil Fertility Initiative, to disseminate appropri- insight, but land reform was discredited during ate technologies for organic and inorganic fer- the 1980s under the weight of unduly high-cost, tilizer, erosion control, and water management, government-administered land acquisition and as well as economic valuations of soil fertility redistribution programs. At that time, no practi- benefits. cable alternative was in sight. However, since . To develop decentralized information systems on Rio, the Bank has developed the concept of ne- land-related issues. These include use of reliable gotiated, or market-assisted, land reform and has indicators to assess and monitor changes in the provided technical assistance to countries inter- conditions of the land and availability of this ested in piloting this approach, including Brazil, information to all stakeholders, including those Colombia, Guatemala, and South Africa. To- at the grassroots. This will require innovative gether with the Food and Agriculture Organiza- thinking and increased intemational and na- tion of the United Nations (FAO) and the tional coordination to develop (1) appropriate International Fund forAgricultural Development information dissemination systems, and (2) edu- (IFAD), the Bank is establishing a learning net- cation and training on how to use the informa- work of interested partners. tion as well as on how to negotiate on a more Lessons Learned equal basis with other classes of stakeholders, such as commercial interests. Together the Bank, Much has been learned since Rio about what kinds UNEP, UNDP, FAO, and the Consultative Group of land use planning and resource management on InternationalAgricultural Research (CGIAR) work best. These lessons include: have launched a new program on land quality indicators. * Land resource use will be most efficient when * To merge urban and rural interests by recycling us- all stakeholders are involved in the negotiation able organic wastesfrom urban communitiesfor ag- and decisionmaking processes. ricultural purposes. This process includes use of * Resource management must be pursued at the compost and municipal solid waste to improve community level, using demand-based ap- soil health and productivity, wastewater reuse proaches. In rural areas, individual farmers, both for irrigation, and sewage-fed aquaculture. men and women, as well as farmers' organiza- There are some successful waste recycling pro- tions, are crucial resources and must actively grams around the world, but for the following participate in planniing and decisiomnaking. reasons the time is now right to make these prac- tices universal: social behavior is changing from * Land registration facilities can have high pay- "throw away" to "recycle," and conventional offs in terms of increased on-farm investments methods of disposing of waste are becoming and incomes, in circumstances where land dis- scarce, expensive, and/or socially and environ- putes are common and land transitions are high- mentally unacceptable. Moving in this holistic cost or high-risk. direction will have win-win benefits. CHAPTER 8 (chapter 11 of Agendta 21) Combating Deforestation orests are immensely important to the NGOs and other interest groups in their world's ecology, affecting the climate both implementation. Since 1992, the Bank has locally and globally, sequestering carbon, invested in approximately siKty projects with a preserving rainwater, supporting biodiversity, major impact on forests-a total of $3.1 billion in and providing important renewable resources. lending and associated cofinancing loans or Poor policies throughout the world, however, grants. In addition, since 1992, the Bank has have caused widespread damage to forests or led processed disbursements of approximately $1.7 to deforestation. In recognition of the need to re- billion under the Global Environment Facility. verse these trends, chapter 11 of Agenda 21 calls Much of this has been directed toward projects on nations to strengthen the institutions in charge involving forest biodiversity in some significant of conservation and management of forests and way. Although the assessment is subjective, most improve the level of knowledge and skills neces- operatives in forestry within the Bank, in major sary to carry out these tasks. NGO)s, and in client governrnents believe that, since Rio, the Bank has worked both more Progress since Rio extensively and more successfully with other interest groups in its forest-related programs. Forest policy represents a relatively new concern The Bank has participated in major interna- for the World Bank. The Forest Sector: A World tionalforest-based initiatives, such as the Bank Policy Paper was first printed in September Intergovernmental Panel on Forests and the 1991. That paper reflected the concern over rapid World Commission on Forestry, both of which are deforestation in the developing world, notably in due to present findings to the United Nations tropical forest countries. It proposed a strategy Council on Sustainable Development later in based on international cooperation (particularly, 199,7. transfers from richer countries to encourage biodi- In 1994, the Bank reviewed implementation versity conservation and carbon sequestration in of its 1991 sector policy in its forestry portfolio. forested areas), policy reform and institutional That review found that although significant strengthening in the forestry sector, resource ex- progress had been made since 1991 in project pansion, and protection of valuable intact forest design, the rate of deforesta tion has remained areas. stubbornly high, at around 15 million hectares per Since the Rio conference, the Bank has year. In many countries, forests remain seriously continued to invest in forest protection and undervalued, and controversy over objectives sustainability, giving stronger emphasis to major and practices continues to be a serious problem. cross-cutting issues such as poverty alleviation The 1994 report recommendecL targeting poverty, and participation in its interventions, and integrating conservation and production objec- pursuing much more extensive partnerships with tives more successfully, stimulating appropriate 30 Combating Deforestation 31 private sector investment, and monitoring non- ing in sustainable options in forested countries, forestry activities more closely for their impacts and on the demand side, by exercising strong on forests. preference for forest products from sustainably managed forests. Lessons Learned In the years since Rio, the Bank has learned some Challenges Ahead important lessons about what is causing forests To contribute to achieving these changes, the Bank to become degraded or destroyed, but less about will need to alter its approach to combating de- what can be done to stop this process. forestation in various ways. These include: Deforestation and the more hidden, but po- tentially far more extensive, problem of forest * Interventions in the forests will be prioritized, degradation occur because forests are underval- according to the scale of the environmental, so- ued in terms of their outputs (wood and non- cial, and economic impact in each case. wood) and their intrinsic value. * In high priority countries or regions, an attempt Because of poor incentives, different interest will be made to develop a consensus on needed groups are not properly discouraged from using reforms and investments by working with cli- forests in an unsustainable manner. ent governments, other donors, and other inter- est groups including the NGO community and * Commercial interests take a short-term, exploit- the private sector. ative approach often utilizing powerful politi- . After a strategy for change is agreed, the instru- cal and economic influence to achieve their ends. ments available to the Bank-especially those • Poor communities living in or near forests are related to major adjustment and country strat- excluded from any meaningful share or role in egy implementation-will be reviewed for each the sustainable use of the resource, and thus turn priority country and included in a program of to deforestation and conversion to other forms intervention in the sector. of land use as the only alternatives. * This strategy will be designed in close consulta- tion with partners in government and other in- Government agencies and others responsible for terest groups, so that a coordinated and effective forest land decisionmaking frequently sanction effort is mounted. or promote deforestation and conversion op- tions, where proper evaluation and analysis * When designing its own interventions, the Bank would preclude them. will take greater account of other donor and in- terest groups' ongoing or projected programs. It is clear that efforts to preserve forests by de- The Bank will also develop new or expanded nying people access to them will not work in the ways of working with partners in the forestry regions where deforestation is occurring most sector. These include joint donor-private sector- rapidly. Therefore, sustainable forest use, with NGO financing and implementation of major adequate and well-planned zoning, is the best forests projects in selected countries, consulta- hope of stemming forest and biodiversity loss in tive mechanisms aimed at production of joint most of the remaining natural forest which is ac- strategies and program design, and support for cessible for human use. But such a pattern of use certification and other market-oriented mecha- will only emerge if: nisms for improving incentives for sustainability. These contemplated changes will not be easy, * Governments, donors, and other interest groups and the success of the new approach will rely agree on reasonably detailed policy and institu- heavily on finding common cause with clients tional reforms. and other partners. Even where agreement is pos- * Governments then act to implement such sible, it may involve a prolonged consultative changes, and donors act jointly to support these process, during which the Bank (and others) may changes. have to postpone previously planned investments until sufficient direction has been attained. The * The international private sector mobilizes more effort to combat deforestation has been joined, effectively, both on the supply side, by invest- but, clearly, much remains to be done. CHAPTER 9 (chapter 12 of Agendta 21) Managing Fragile Ecosystems: Combating Desertification and Drought A rid and semiarid lands are among the anticipates being an active partner in its imple- world's most inherently fragile ecosys- mentation by bringing an array of instruments 1AItems. Often, the same qualities that make to bear. By engaging in policy dialogue, provid- these areas fragile also make them ecologically ing technical assistance and Froject financing, and important, as their unique properties contribute assisting in project implerrmentation, the Bank to biodiversity in the regions themselves and to looks forward to working with member states in global biodiversity collectively. As a result, hu- addressing the challenge of desertification in its man encroachment on these fragile ecosystems, environmental, economic, and social dimensions. man encroachment on these fragile ecosystems, From 1990 to 1995, the Bank financed 108 especially unsustainable use, can cause dispropor- . 1 tionate harm to the environment and, ultimately, projects to improve natural resources manage- ment in drylands areas. The Bank's contribution to people as well. To protect drylands ecosystems, totald .8blln and lev an addition chapter 12 of Agna2.alfripoeet totaled $6.8 billilon and leveraged an additional chapter 12 of Agenda 21 callS for improvements $13.4 billion. Within this portfolio, 34 projects in the knowledge base, efforts to conserve soil and dealt primarily with land degradation. Bank fi- promote forestation, and programs to fight pov- nancing for this portion totaled over $1.3 billion erty and help drought-prone areas. and leveraged an addition $0.9 billion. At present, 57 Bank-financed projects directed towards de- Progress since Rio sertification problems are under preparation. Chapter 12 of Agenda 21 contains six program ar- Over the next three years, these project propos- eas, each of which outlines measures at interna- als are expected to result in an additional Bank tional, regional, national, and local levels to funding commitment of $2.3 billion and to lever- prevent and reverse the degradation of drylands age an additional $2.7 billion. resources. At the international level, the most important Lessons Learned action since Rio has been the conclusion of the Common characteristics of successful drylands negotiations on the Convention to Combat projects are that they: Desertification and subsequent ratification by * Focus on the positive synergies among poverty state parties sufficient for it to enter into force on reduction, economic efficiency, and environmen- December 6, 1996. The convention places heavy tal protection emphasis on the involvement of nongovernmen- tal organizations and the need for community- * Are developed with, not for, the beneficiaries based, "bottom-up" approaches involving all . Are based on an integrated approach to natural stakeholders in drylands planning and manage- resources and environmental planning and man- ment. The World Bank supported the conven- agement, utilizing country-driven national en- tion during its drafting and negotiation and vironmental action plans (NEAPs). 32 Managing Fragile Ecosystems: Combating Desertification and Droulght 33 An important lesson from earlier projects is quire creative valuation of the multifaceted ben- that benefits cannot be adequately measured in efits of thriving drylands economies. Without this terms of average outcomes. The focus has to be correct analysis being made widely available, on probable outcomes and has to address the key goverunents and donors will invest elsewhere. question faced by drylands peoples: What can * The interrelation between extensive "rainy sea- be done in an abnormally dry year? Well-inten- son" pastoralism and concentrated "dry season" tioned drylands management projects will fail if forage resources has to be much better under- they do not address, or reinforce, coping mecha- stood so that government policies and regula- nisms in dry years. tions can be based on full valuation of An additional important lesson is that tradi- alternatives. In northern Nigeria and elsewhere, tional knowledge, even more in drylands than else- by greatly improving crop yields in low-lying where, is especially valuable. As rainfall declines, depressions,fadama (gently sloping bottomland coefficients of variation increase. Fordrylands where water gathers) development has been coefficients of variation increase. For drylands widely hailed as successful. These low-lying ar- peoples, a dry year can be a matter of life or death, eas have played an important, perhaps critical, first for livestock, and second for human beings. role in providing dry-season forage for livestock Understanding traditional coping mechanisms that could be extensively grazed in "arid" areas and bringing them to the fore in project prepara- during the rainy season. If the critical limit to tion are vital for successful project design. extensive pastoralism is access to dry-season for- age, fadama development has high opportunity Challenges Ahead costs that should be taken into account in assess- The 1996 ratification of the Convention to Com- ing options. bat Desertification was a major accomplishment. * The question of who gains or loses must be ad- Major future challenges are: dressed. Fadama development may be benefi- cial in aggregate, but what if the beneficiaries a The analytical justification for investment in dry- are relatively well-off sedentary crop farmers lands management, rather than in health and edu- and the losers are relatively poor transhumant cation, is to enable drylands peoples to become pastoralists? Compensation mechanisms will more productive migrants. This justification has have to be devised if social, and perhaps politi- to be more clearly established. Doing so will re- cal, problems are to be avoided. CHAPTER 10 (chapters 14 and 32 of Agendiia 21) Linking Sustainable Agriculture and Rural Development. A s population continues to increase, most hard to answer. Techniquaes such as conserva- notably in developing countries, one of tion tillage, integrated plant nutrition, and inte- he great political and technological chal- grated pest management are being promoted in lenges facing the world is the need to increase food many Bank-financed projects and are being production sustainably. Chapter 14 of Agenda 21 adopted more widely but not nearly fast enough. proposes a number of program areas aimed at Progress has been made in several program- meeting this challenge. It argues that the priority matic areas in many countiies. Working with a is to increase productivity of land and water al- variety of partners, the World Bank has made ma- ready in use in order to avoid further encroach- jor changes in its approach to rural development: ment on marginal land and natural, often forested, habitat. Chapter 32 of Agenda 21 emphasizes the * In rural sector strategy and policy formulation, needtt . (dire engAgenfarmersmandstrengthen the scope of analytical work has been broadened theirto (diroctly) engage farmers.fnd str o mgthen from the agricultural seclor to the wider rural their roles. economy, with sector adjustment operations in- corporating win-win measures, such as removal Progress since Rio of subsidies on agrochemicals and land tenure Globally, the best measure of the adequacy of food reform. supply to meet demand is the trend in world grain As countries move beyond adjustment, time- prices. Despite a sharp rise during 1994-1996, grain prices in 1997 are at almost the same levels slice funding of the public expenditure program, as in 1992. This suggests that a large part of the or sector investment lending, becomes possible. challenge has been met, in the short run at least. Earlier innovations in Morocco and Tunisia have But: recently been carried further in Zambia, where 150 projects supported by 20 donors have been * Has productivity increased? Although no single integrated into an overall sectoral expenditure index is appropriate, a good indicator is the trend program. Similar exercises are coming to frui- in world grain yields. These yields grew at an tion in Kenya and Pakistan. annual rate of 2.1 percent during the 1980s but . In rural development, a "matching grant" ap- fell to less than 1 percent during the 1990s. proach to local and community-driven develop- * Has encroachment declined? Again, no single ment was undertaken in rnortheast Brazil. This indicator is appropriate, but it is very disturb- approach has turned around a large, poorly per- ing that the rate of deforestation in the tropics, forming portfolio of area development projects of which agricultural encroachment is the prin- and made it a flexible, participatory, and cost- cipal cause, has not declined. effective poverty reduction program. * Has sustainability improved? In view of the * In irrigation and drainage, the perennial opera- acute measurement problems, this question is tions and maintenance problem can be reduced 34 Linking Sustainable Agrzctlture and Rural Development 35 by transferring responsibilities for operations * Recognition is widespread in the Bank and, in- and maintenance from centralized or regional creasingly, in client governments, other donors, irrigation agencies to local users' associations. and civil society that public expenditure has to This was first shown on a large scale in Mexico, be focused on public goods and that government has been rapidly adopted in Turkey, and is be- need not deliver such goods itself (or through ing widely disseminated through a worldwide parastatal organizations). During the 1980s, Participatory Irrigation Network. much effort was put into parastatal reform in the misguided belief that parastatals could be * In natural rsources managment, a commuity reformed. During the 1990s, the focus is on the based approach to resource allocation, enforce- ment, and maintenance has proven successful more profound questions: What functions war- in such diverse circumstances as Burkina Faso rant public funding? What is the best delivery and southern Brazil. These experiences were mechanism among the many (nonpublic) op- started prior to Rio, but the evidence of success hons? has come later. * Public support of farmer organizations is justi- * In rural finance, the emphasis has shifted from fied for three reasons: (1) it provides a public providing agricultural credit to supporting the good that would not otherwise be provided; development of rural financial services. This (2) it ensures better quality and more cost-effec- change was pioneered by nongoverrunental or- tive public (and private) rural services by a more ganizations and predates Rio, although support demanding, contributing, and sophisticated cli- izats . . entele; and (3) it contributes to sustainable de- for it has lately gained momentum, culminating in the 1997 Microcredit Summit. The Bank has velopment because of the resulting increased supported successful institutional innovation in capacity to manage and fund farmer organiza- providing microfinance to the poor in circum- tions. stances as diverse as Albania (village funds) and * There is now widespread recognition in the Bank Benin (savings and loans associations). and elsewhere that participation matters. The - In land policy and land reform, the Bank has led concept is not new but was often treated as a the development of new market-assisted ap- promising idea that needed to be tested. Now, proaches to redistributive land reform in South the evidence is in. Participation is at the core of Africa and in Latin American countries includ- the progress recorded above in rural develop- ing Brazil, Colombia, and Guatemala. Farm re- ment, irrigation, and drainage, and natural re- structuring has also received much attention in sources management. Central Asia and Eastern Europe. In institutional development, the Bank sup- Challenges Ahead ported three different but related approaches: Three principal challenges lie ahead: (1) decentralization of government (for example, in Brazil and Colombia), (2) empowering farm- * Complacency. The success to date of agriculture ers (as in Burkina Faso and Mali), and (3) involv- in feeding the world has induced widespread ing the private sector (for example, Chile, Estonia, complacency in governments, donors, and much and Nicaragua). The Bank has focused more on public discourse. On the donor side, official de- sustainable agriculture through support to farm- velopment assistance (ODA) for agriculture has ers' organizations that aim to manage common declined by 50 percent over the last decade. In- resources more sustainably, market produce and terest was reawakened during the 1994-1996 ensure input supply, and ensure security of ten- grain price spike but soon dissipated. Attack- ure. Also, over the past five years more women ing complacency is a major challenge to meet- farmers were positively affected by Bank-sup- ing the objectives set out in chapter 14 of Agenda ported projects than before. 21. In most countries, significant poverty reduc- tion still requires effective rural development. Lessons Learned Therefore, the Bank has designated rural devel- opment as one of its six thematic priorities and Four lessons stand out because they cut across will shortly issue its action plan, Rural Develop- the diverse domains in which progress has been ment: From Vision to Action, which the Bank will recorded. seek to implement with its many partners. 36 Advancing Sustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 * Research and information. Obtaining increased tainable farming will require more labor, and productivity of land and water already in use more skilled labor and management, than cur- will require a substantial, sustained investment rent farming systems. When incomes rise rap- in agricultural research. In many countries, par- idly, as in much of East Asia, the opportunity ticularly in Africa, investment in research is de- cost of the extra skilled labor input required to clining. Private investment in agricultural farm more sustainably wLII increase and could research, which far exceeds public spending, has offset gains made from reduced input use or probably increased over the last five years. This higher yields. Farmers could find less sustain- is to be welcomed, but the limits of private re- able farming more profitable. In this event, fis- search have to be recognized. Many aspects of cal measures and/or regulations would have to sustainable farming systems will not generate be devised and enforced to promote sustainable benefits that can be appropriated and thereby farming. OECD countries have put in place a remunerate private research. Worldwide, invest- wide variety of such measures. Assessing when ment in the Consultative Group on International such measures will be required in developing Agricultural Research by its fifty-three public countries and finding workable solutions for put- and private sector members declined in the early ting them in place will be a formidable challenge. 1990s. Although this decline has been reversed, strong efforts will be required to retain the re- * Pluralism. It is easy to see how different types of cent gains. farmers need different types of services, supplied by and paid for through different mechanisms. - Information technology. A related challenge is to One major question will be the role of government increase investment in information technology facilitator, implementor, financier, controller, or a to inform and empower rural people. It has enor- combination thereof? Making the case for further mous and often recognized potential, but there strengthening the role of farmers will require bet- is still very limited investment in making it work ter justification on economrc, technical, environ- for the rural poor. mental, and political grounds. Therefore, better * Incentives. Sustainable farming systems are more indicators and more participatory mechanisms to information-intensive than input-intensive. Sus- use them need to be developed and employed. CHAPTER 11 (chapter 15 of Agendla 21) Conserving Biological Diversity T MIhe conservation and sustainable use of Bank Assistance Strategyfor Implementing the Con- biodiversity, and the fair and equitable vention on Biological Diversity, 1995) and presented sharing of the benefits arising from its use, it to the Second Conference of the Parties to the are fundamental to socioeconomic development CBD in Jakarta. Underlying the strategy is the and poverty alleviation. While biodiversity is recognition that, while protected areas are impor- being lost at an alarming rate, the welfare of the tant and necessary, they are not sufficient for world's rural poor continues to be closely linked biodiversity conservation. The reason is that sig- to biological resources, which often provide sub- nificant biodiversity is located in land- and sistence in the form of food, supplies, medicines, water-scapes outside protected areas, and the and shelter as well as employment and income opportunity cost to developing nations of not us- from marketed biological products. In addition, ing these resources is prohibitive. This strategy biodiversity loss may rob future generations of now guides the evolution of Bank support from genetic varieties that could be very important in the traditional focus on targeted government-led medicine or new technology. Chapter 15 of conservation efforts toward "mainstreaming" Agenda 21 calls for the entry into force of the In- biodiversity concerns. ternational Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), along with other measures to preserve Targeted Conservation Efforts genetic resources and promote sustainable devel- Bank biodiversity lending has grown rapidly in opment. recent years and totals $956 million for 101 projects or project components in 56 countries. Of Progress since Rio the total commitment, $619 million represents Many of the Bank's client countries have ratified borrowing by client countries through IBRD loans the Convention on Biological Diversity. By do- or IDA credits, and another $337 million exists as ing so, they have formally acknowledged the pri- grants to client governments from the Bank-ad- ority they accord to conserving and sustainably ministered Global Environment Facility or the using the world's biodiversity and protecting the Brazil Rain Forest Trust Fund. This investment ecological processes that shape and sustain it. The has leveraged an additional $536 million from Bank is committed to helping its developing coun- other donors and borrowing governments, bring- try partners meet their CBD obligations. Follow- ing the total commitment since 1988 to $1.34 bil- ing considerable consultation with external lion. stakeholders and partners, in fiscal 1996 the Bank In addition to projects and project components finalized its Biodiversity Assistance Strategy (see with specific biodiversity objectives (the biodi- Mainstreaming Biodiversity in Development: A World versity portfolio), the Bank has supported many 37 38 Advancing Sustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 other environmental projects (the environment NCOs, and international institutions. To this end, portfolio) that may also have positive, although the Bank has worked actively with Conservation indirect, impacts upon biodiversity. Of these en- International, the World Conservation Union vironmental projects, those aimed at improving (IUCN), the World Wildlife Fund, the World Re- natural resources management ("green" projects) sources Institute, and many other national and and those designed to strengthen environmental international NGOs to explore the possibilities for institutions ("institutional" projects) may help support mechanisms to ampl ify the effectiveness conserve biodiversity through improved natural of existing government-led conserVation activi- resources management and development of ap- ties through NGO and community-based actions. propriate incentives and policies. 'With its partners, the Bankc has also provided support for biodiversity conservation by prepar- Mainstreaming Biodiversity in Productive Sectors ing regional biodiversity strategies and priority- As part of its commitment to incorporate biodi- setting exercises. For example, in collaboration versity into all its lending, the Bank finalized its with World Wildlife Fund, the Bank undertook a Operational Policy on Natural Habitats (OP 4.40). key priority-setting exercise for terrestrial This policy recognizes loss of natural habitat as ecoregions of Latin America and the Caribbean, the main threat to biodiversity and commits that A Conservation Assessment of the Terrestrial the Bank will not support projects involving the Ecoregions of Latin America and the Caribbean significant conversion or degradation of critical (World Bank in association with World Wildlife natural habitats. Wherever feasible, other natu- Furnd, 1995). This book provides a regional over- ral habitats are also avoided entirely by locating view of the conservation status and biological dis- projects on lands already cleared or converted. tinctiveness of 191 ecoregions that comprise the Where avoidance is not feasible and environmen- land-based natural habitats oi Latin America and tal assessment indicates that a project would sig- the Caribbean and demonstrates that high-prior- nificantly convert or degrade natural habitats, the ity areas for biodiversity conservation are located Bank requires that the project include acceptable throughout the region. mitigation measures, such as the establishment Lessons Learned and maintenance of an ecologically similar pro- tected area. In 1995, the Bank undertook an in-depth review A key element of the Bank's Biodiversity As- of its support for biodiversity conservation. The sistance Strategy is development of biodiversity- main lessons which have emerged from this ex- friendly sector policies and programs. For this perience are to: purpose, in 1995 the Bank launched its Global * Engage and empower local communities, indig- Overlays Program, which seeks to develop the enous peoples, NGOs, and other stakeholders conceptual framework and toolkit for als partners in designing and implementing mainstreaming global environmental objectives projects in national environmental planning and Bank operations. The initial focus of the Global Over- * Mgonitor and evaluate arranrgements in projects lays Program has been on mainstreaming biodi- a gainst specific outcomes or processes and adopt iaysProgramhasbeenonagricultureal ilope mn action-learning approach with the flexibility versity conservation to take account of lessons learned during imple- Toward this end, Mainstreaming Biodiversity in rnentation Agricultural Development: Towards Good Practice was presented to the Third Conference of the * Identifyinstitutionalweaknessesorinstabilities Parties to the CBD in Buenos Aires in November that are frequently the source of problems. 1996 (published World Bank 1997). Nqonetheless, also recognize that "problem projects" can stil achieve gains-often compli- Partnerships cating measures to gauge success or failure in The Bank's Biodiversity Assistance Strategy rec- biodiversity conservation ognizes that successful conservation depends on * Be as precise as possible in estimating in advance active partnerships among stakeholders-govern- the amount of time that planning for protected ment, local communities, the private sector, area management will require. Conserving Biological Diversity 39 Challenges Ahead contexts. In the case of the rural poor, biological • For the Bank to play an effective role in pursu- resources often provide the single most impor- ing biodiversity conservation and sustainable tant source of economic and social well-being use, it must go beyond traditional targeted lend- in the form of food supplies, medicine, shelter, ing. The large scale of Bank investment in tradi- income, employment, and cultural integrity. tional natural resource sectors, such as Successful biodiversity conservation also de- agriculture, forestry, and fisheries, as well as in pends on sound policies and effective institu- industry, energy and infrastructure-about $20 tional and social arrangements. Because policy billion per year-underscores the importance of work and organizational structure usually fall integrating biodiversity conservation with eco- outside the domain of traditional conservation, nomic development. The Bank's initial focus has these are two areas on which the Bank must par- been on mainstreaming biodiversity concerns in ticularly focus attention. agriculture, with work being undertaken in all the Bank's regions. New efforts will focus on * Recognizing that no one party has the franchise forests and land degradation, among others. The on wisdom in the complex and challenging area challenge remains to develop a toolkit for imple- of biodiversity, the Bank must forge partnerships mentation of this new framework and to test the with local groups in areas where biodiversity is approach in a few countries. threatened. Even more than in other areas of sus- * Sustainable use and biodiversity conservation tainable development, successful efforts to pre- also require addressing the social and economic serve biodiversity require strong consensus. CHAPTER 12 (chapters 16,31, and :35 of Agenda 21) Integrating Science and Biotechnology in Sustainable Development ^ cience and technology must play a central Progress since Rio role in the movement toward sustainable Through IBRD, IDA, and the GEF, the Bank has development. Scientific research will be assisted its client countries by facilitating interac- crucial in increasing understanding about how tions among scientsts, engineers, economists, and human activity affects the environment, especially policymakers. It has also established partnerships in such complex issues as climate change. New among these groups and civil society, environ- technologies hold the promise of resolving many mental NGOs, and the private sector. Since Rio, current problems if they are properly applied and the Bank has supported a variety of activities fo- disseminated. Biotechnology, the science of chang- cused on the use and development of science and ing the genetic code in plants, animals, and mi- technology in general, and biotechnology in par- crobial systems to create useful products and ticular. These include: technologies, is quickly emerging, with great po- . Knowledge assessment. In conjunction with the tential but also with pitfalls. With proper man- U.S. National Research Council, the Bank has re- agement, however, biotechnology can make cently developed a knowledge assessment significant contributions to sustainable develop- process to help countries analyze their ment in a variety of areas, including health, agri- capabilities to participale in the knowledge culture, and pollution reduction, and the clean-up revolution. of toxic chemicals. * Capacity building through technology centers and Chapters 31 and 35 of Agenda 21 recognize the universities. The Bank has supported the devel- critical role of scientists, science and technology opment of capacity to enable policymakers and researchers to engage in science and technology. in the development process. These chapters em- Specifically, the Bank has assisted a number of phasize that countries need to access, generate, client countries to improve their scientific and and utilize knowledge to achieve sustainable technical infrastructure through technology cen- development, and that dialogue among the sci- ters and universities. Exarmples include a project entific and technical communities and policymak- in China to support reforrns in technology policy ers is essential. In recognition of the importance and institutions to promol:e the development of of biotechnology, chapter 16 of Agenda 21 sets out clean, productive technolDgies; a project in In- program areas designed to establish enabling dia to support technology institutions and forty progransms for its development and use, espe- public sector research establishments; and a mechanisms for its development and use, espe- project in Africa to support university-level in- cially within developing countries, and to foster stitutional capacity. The Bank has also supported internationally agreed principles on the proper and published studies, such as Enabling the Safe management of technology. Use of Biotechnology: Princijles and Practice (1996), 40 Integrating Science and Biotechnology in Sustainable Development 41 which increase public awareness and under- * Policyreform. TheBankhassupportedpolicyre- standing of biotechnology policy issues. form relating to the use of biotechnology, includ- *Institutional andhumancapacitybuildingthrough ing biosafety regulations, which cover experimentation, testing, and release of modi- the Consultative Group on InternationalAgricultural edporganism, andtintlcal roperty rig Research. The Bank has supported infrastruc- ture development to help create an envi- * Germplasm conservation. Through the CGIAR, the ronment conducive to promoting science, Bank has also been instrumental in supporting technology, and biotechnology, particularly the collection and preservation of agricultural through support to agricultural research. The accessions (germplasm), which are the founda- Bank has worked closely with its partners in the tion of biotechnology projects in agriculture. CGIAR, a South-North coalition supporting six- Similarly, the Bank is beginning to support teen agricultural research centers dedicated to germplasm conservation with funding from the promoting sustainable agriculture for food se- GEF. curity in developing countries. Research will focus on increasing productivity, protecting the Lessons Learned environment, preserving biodiversity, improv- ing poiis an.teghnn ntoaeerh The field of biotechnology is relatively new, but ing pohis,adstengteninnatonalreserch.several important lessons have emerged concern- Institutional and human capacity building through ing biotechnology. Economic Development Institute (EDI) training courses: EDI conducts multi-year, interactive ' Most biotechnology research is focused on what learning programs for officials from developing industrialized countries perceive as needs and countries to help them plan and manage their opportunities. Very little attention is paid to national investments more productively. About developing countries. Because private compa- 4,500 policymakers participate in some 150 EDI nies are the major investors in biotechnology program activities each year. research, developing countries must find ways to attract and engage private enterprise in re- P Partnerships. The Bank is promoting innovative search activities relevant to their national needs. partnerships between national programs and advanced research institutes, both public and * Intellectual property rights have a big impact on private. It is also promoting the development high technology activities by private enterprise. of a Global Agricultural Research System, which Very little high technology work occurs in coun- will help bring biotechnology products from the tries with weak patent laws, where companies advanced research institutes to the fields of poor are willing to transfer "old technologies" only. farmers in different parts of the world (see The Developing countries need to strengthen their Emergence of a Global Agricultural Research Sys- intellectual property laws. tem, World Bank 1996). In addition, the Bank . Biotechnology requires substantial investments has developed the Banana Improvement Project, m basic research, an extensive knowledge base cosponsored by the Common Fund for Com- and sophisticated human capacity, and is along- modities and the FAO, which supports biotech- term endeavor. Partnerships between the indus- nology research on important production trialized countries and developing countries are constraints for developing countries. essential for the initial phase of biotechnology * Global environment. The World Bank has been development in developing countries. working closely with client countries utilizing the concessionary funds of the Global Environ- Challenges Ahead ment Facility to learn more about climate change, biodiversity, stratospheric ozone depletion, and Major challenges lie ahead: international waters. GEF funding has enabled * Knowledge management is only starting to make the use of new technologies in many regions, its way through governments and donor agen- such as solar water heating in Tunisia. It also cies. There is an urgent need to enhance knowl- supports capacity building for scientists and edge access, creation, dissemination, and use so technical experts and a limited number of tar- that national policymakers can base their deci- geted research projects. sions on accurate data. The initial steps will re- 42 Advancing Sustainable Development: 7he World Bank and Agenda 21 quire performing knowledge assessments in biotechnology products from the industri- most countries to assess their strengths and alized world will be important. Finding weaknesses and will almost certainly require a innovative ways to involve the private sec- significant strengthening of the scientific and tor in technology development relevant to technical infrastructure in most developing the developing worlcl (such as Costa Rica countries. One particular challenge will be to create incentives to stem the brain-drain andMerck)willbeveryimportant. whereby many developing countries are losing b. Enacting national policies to address some of their best and brightest to the industri- biosafety and intellectual property rights alized world. issues. In biotechnology, the enormous gap between c. Addressing the crucial ethical and moral is- industrialized nations and the developing world sues involved in biotechnology. On the hu- is growing wider every day. The developing na- tions realize this and are very interested in work- mhealth side teraenisu rela to ing with the Bank and other donors on capacity the extent to which intervention should be building, government policy, and private sector allowed (for example, genetic manipulation involvement in biotechnology. Clearly, if the to correct/improve ]humans, diagnosis). promise of biotechnology is to benefit the devel- Biotechnologists have the ability to go way oping world, intervention by the international beyond "nature" and utilize genetic mate- community is necessary, including partnerships rial from both kingdomns, plant, and animal! with the major research laboratories. The Bank has begun to support such efforts and is poised d Eancing public awaren an under- to do more. The promises of biotechnology are standing of how the application of biotech- great, but the path to products which will be used nology can play a viial role in improving by the Bank's clients will prove challenging. Is- the quality of life for people all over the sues which must be addressed before the ben- world. efits are realized include: e. Ensuring that scientists have access to infor- a. Building human and institutional capacity mation on new technologies and techniques. to effectively engage the developing world Access to journals, web-sites, and other in biotechnology. Initially, gaining access to modern telecommunications is essential. CHAPTER 13 (chapter 17 of Agendab 21) Protecting Oceans, Seas, and Coastal Areas T he world's oceans and seas are linked to Awareness Creation and Capacity Building many bodies of fresh water through coastal Strategic and analytical work by the Bank has in- areas, and the two form an interdependent cluded the regional strategy, Africa: A Framework ecosystem that spawns much of the world's ma- for Integrated Coastal Zone Management (ENVLW/ rine life. Chapter 17 of Agenda 21 sets forth a se- AFTES 1994, 1996); best practice in the form of ries of program areas aimed at protecting the recently published Guidelinesfor Integrated Coastal marine environment, promoting sustainable use Zone Management (1996); and periodic technical of marine living resources, and strengthening in- updates to the Environmental Assessment Sour- ternational cooperation. cebook (World Bank 1991) dealing with the coastal zone. This work has promoted a greater appre- Progress since Rio ciation-both within the Bank and among bor- rower nations-of the complex issues confronting In the past, Bank activities related to marine and development planners in coastal areas. Since coastal management focused on discrete areas, 1994, the Bank has also helped train over 300 pro- such as fisheries and aquaculture; water supply, fessionals inside and outside the Bank in ICZM sewerage, and waste disposal; ports development; principles and implementation. Much of this and coastal erosion protection. Since the Rio Earth training has focused on Africa in an effort to Summit, however, the Bank and other develop- strengthen capacity in a region where ICZM was ment practitioners are emphasizing an Integrated virtually unknown as an environmental manage- Coastal Zone Management (ICZM) approach. In- ment tool prior to the Rio Conference. voked in a number of international conventions, Investment Portfolio most recently the 1995 Jakarta Mandate under the T Convention on Biological Diversity, ICZM pro- This combination of awareness creation and ca- Convntio on iolgica Divrsiy, IZM po- acity building has led to growing investment by vides a unifying framework for protecting and pAciybidn ha le to grwn ivesmn by client countries in coastal and marine resources manaing the world's oceans and coastal areas v v ~~~~~~~~management programs, with support from the consistent with environmentally sustainable de- maaemn prgas wit supr frmAh ceonsisent. withe environmentall sustainablede- Bank and GEF. Although the number of dedicated velopment. Since 1993, the Bank has promoted projects that the Bank is financing is still small, the establishment of integrated coastal zone plan- the current portfolio includes some $320 million ning and management in client countries through for projects and activities that directly contribute (a) awareness creation and capacity building, (b) to the establishment of ICZM. These projects in- investment, and (c) partnerships. These efforts clude strengthening institutions and developing have paralleled support for marine environmen- technical skills; establishing environmental sys- tal protection, including pollution control and tems to identify problems and target interven- conservation of marine biodiversity. tions; reforming marine policy and improving 43 44 Advancing Sustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 regulatory frameworks; and introducing innova- Recommendations of the study are being imple- tive, sustainable production technologies. In addi- mented with GEF assistance and the collabora- tion, strategies are being explored for sustainable tion of UNDP and UNEP. mariculture, ecotourism, marine bioprospecting, and microenterprise. The Indonesia Coral Reef Lessons Learned Rehabilitation and Management Project and the Bank experience from investment activities is still Madagascar Second Environment Programme limited, but experience elsewhere suggests that Support Project are pilot efforts also receiving many ICZM initiatives have stalled at the plan- support. ning stage. To be sustainable, initiatives in coastal Through capital investments in water supply and marine resources management require a sup- and sanitation, improved port reception facilities prting context with a number of essential com- for ship-based waste and marine pollution abate- ponents. They are: ment, and cleaner production technologies for coastal industries, the Bank is also contributing * Integration in broader development planning- to improving the quality of waters in the coastal at either the national or regional level zone and protecting international waters farther * Institutional, legal, and financial support of gov- out. Such investments include the Wider Carib- ernment bean Initiative for Ship-Generated Waste, the Sey- chelles Biodiversity Conservation and Marine * Local financing schemes for cost recovery, which Pollution Abatement Project, and the Lebanon may include the introduction of user fees, pub- Sollutidn bastemand E ronment,ald MagemLebant lic/private investment, income-generating enter- SQolid Waste and Environmental Management pie,o rs ud Project. Other projects include the Wider Carib- prises, or trust funds bean Initiative, Preparation for Adaptation to * Support of local communities Climate Change, and a series of ecorestoration * Clear public understanding of the benefits of col- and biodiversity conservation projects in the is- lective action as well as the costs of inaction land states of the Western Indian Ocean. P l'artnerships with other institutions. Partnerships The Bank has forged partnerships with a number Challenges Ahead of bilateral, nongovernmental, and private orga- nizations, particularly in the areas of marine en- * A key challenge for the future will be to mean- vironmental protection and strengthening ingfullyintegrate ICZM inlbroader development cooperati potecank and tswednthena- planning in nations with s..gnificant coastal and tional Development Authority (SIDA)n in marine resources, rapidly expanding urban tional~~~~~~ Deeomn'uhoiy(IA,i populations, or coastal indlustry and maritirne particular, have worked closely to strengthen re- pouain,o osa nutyadmrtm particular, have worked closely to strengthen re- interests. In client countries, greater emphasis gional capacity and cooperation in managing needs to be placed on establishing the regula- coastal and marine resources of the Western In- tory and institutional framework required to dian Ocean. Joint efforts have facilitated the mainstream coastal and marine resources man- adoption of the Arusha Resolution, a regional agement in national development plans, public resolution on coastal zone management adopted sector budgets, and enforcement operations. The in 1993 by the nations of Eastern Africa and the IDA-related challenge is for integrated river Island States. basin planning to be tied to downstream coastal The Bank has been a partner in the Interna- planning in countries which contribute signifi- tional Coral Reef Initiative since its inception in cant pollution to transnational drainage basins. 1995. It is also involved in a partnership with the . There is also a clear need for robust indicators Great Barrier Reef Marine ParkAuthority and the to accurately assess the progress of ICZM and IUCN to establish and improve the management other programs. The first systematic evaluation of marine protected areas in priority high biodi- of ICZM experience in the Mediterranean is be- versity and ecology sites. The results of this pri- ing completed with the support and supervision ority-setting exercise were published by the Bank of the Bank. The results should guide the next in a four-volume report, A Global Representative round of investments and contribute to a stan- System of Marine Protected Areas (ENVLW 1995). dard evaluation methodology. CHAPTER 14 (chapter 18 of Agendtia 21) Protecting the Quality and Supply of Freshwater Resources ood quality freshwater is essential for life. The Bank has also sought to change the way Yet, in many regions, this resource is be- that it approaches water projects. Its operations coming more and more scarce, and in are focusing on the cross-sectoral management many cases, its quality has deteriorated. To stave of water resources, such that competing economic off worsening freshwater shortages and pollution, interests are better accounted for in water use chapter 18 of Agenda 21 proposes a number of pro- decisions. The Bank has also sought to promote gram areas aimed at preserving drinking water, the translation of internationally endorsed man- protecting aquatic ecosystems, ensuring that wa- agement principles into practice. In these activi- ter is available for agricultural purposes, and in- ties, four complementary shifts in aquatic creasing understanding of the effect of climate resource management activities at the basin, na- change on water resources. tional, and regional levels are being pursued. Progress since RionMovingfrom a Segmented to a Comprehensive Framework The Bank is working to protect the quality and An integrated framework is replacing use-based supply of freshwater in a number of ways. To management of water resources. Within the Bank, establish an international consensus, the Bank was regional water resources management strategies instrumental in developing agreement on prin- have been completed for Sub-Saharan Africa, ciples for sound water resources management at Asia, and Mddle East and NorthAfrica (MENA). the 1992 Dublin International Conference and the In Sub-Saharan Africa, for example, the Bank is 1992 Earth Summit. These principles have been engaged in major subregional initiatives, includ- articulated in the Bank's Water Resources Manage- ing the Southern Africa, Nile Basin, and Volta ment Policy Paper (1993), and the Guide to the For- Basin Water Resources Management Initiatives. mulation of Water Resources Strategies (1994). In cooperation with the GEF, European Union, The Bank has also worked on promoting stra- and other partners, the Bank has given priority tegic partnerships. For example, it was a key to developing and implementing regional- and player in conceptualizing, developing, and toidevelog a t promote regrated launching the Global Water Partnership (GWP) basin-level programs that promote integrated in August 1995. The GWP will assist countries strategies for water management. The Bank con- and regions to address water needs holistically tinues to participate in Environment Programs for and to improve the effectiveness of assistance the Aral, Baltic and Black Seas, Danube River Ba- available from the international community. The sin, Mediterranean Sea, and Red Sea and Gulf of Bank also assisted in launching the World Water Aden; and in cooperation with UNEP and UNDP, Council, which will complement the GWP's ac- to work on Lake Victoria and the Caspian Sea. tivities. The Bank's freshwater work includes integrated 45 46 Advancing Sustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 river basin and lake management such as theAsia erage in its client countries (see box 14.1). For Water Initiative and activities in eastern, south- example, in Argentina, the Bank was involved in ern and western Africa and the Caribbean. the preparation and implementation of the Movingfrom an Incremental to a Strategic Buenos Aires water and sewerage concession Approach which laid the groundwork for privatization. IFC The Bank's regional environmental programs and subsequently invested in Aguas Argentinas S.A., regional and national water resources strategies the largest water concession in the world and the for river basins and lakes all contribute to a shift first major concession in the developing world. from a piecemeal to a strategic investment Similarly, in Guinea, the Bank was instrumental approach. All identify a diversity of complemen- in the development and implementation of a lease tary actions-policy, regulatory, management, arrangement for water supply in the capital, investment and institutional-which permit en- Conakry, and other major cities. Under a lease, a vironmentally sound management of available private sector company is responsible for opera- resources. In 1996 the Bank's Middle East and tions and maintenance, while the government re- North Africa Region conducted regional and tains responsibility for investments. Bank national evaluations of water resources manage- involvement in transitional economies, including ment to identify priorities for policy changes, AlbDania, Bulgaria, Hungary, and Poland, has been institutional strengthening, and investments. l til f These investments have been complemented in pnmarity on utlity re orm. many cases by measures supported by the Medi- In addition, the Bank is pursuing the use of terranean Environment Technical Assistance Pro- guarantees to promote privaate sector involve- gram (METAP) and GEF activities in the Black, ment in water and sanitation. Examples include Mediterranean, and Red Seas. Argentina, where the Bank is looking to develop a guarantee framework to support the privatiza- Promoting Private Sector Participation tion of water supply at the provincial level, and in Water Supply Chile, where a Bank guarantee is being developed The Bank has been actively involved in promot- to back a wastewater Build-C)perate and Transfer ing private sector involvement in water and sew- project. Box 14.1 Brazil and water strategy The Government of Brazil (GOB) and the Bank are prcvision of potable, reliable, and healthy water sup- working together on a strategy to address the scarcity, plies to the rural population; to increase the supply of cyclical unreliability, and poor quality of water supplies quality water to the urban poor; and to provide collec- used for human consumption, irrigation of food crops, tion and treatment of sanitary wastes in metropolitan and industrial production. Over the last four years, the areas. Specific efforts involve (1) the development of foundation of the joint strategy has been to formulate integrated watershed management planning for the market-based, rational, legal, and institutional frame- basin of the Rio Sao Francisco, (2) resolution of quality works for the sustainable management of water re- management problems of the Paraiba do Sul River, (3) sources at both the federal and state levels. Targeted development of a program for private/public coopera- regions include the drought-stricken Northeast (at the tioll in irrigation to enhance job opportunities for the basin level) and both the South and Northwest (at the rural poor, and (4) an effort to eliminate the suscepti- microbasin level). Progress is evident in the adoption bility of the poor to annual and cyclical drought and of sound water laws by the federal government and by the impact of water-borne disease vectors. the States of Sao Paulo, Ceara, Bahia, and Rio Grande In 1996, IFC invested in the first privatization of do Norte. Other key indicators of progress include (1) wastewater and sewer services in Brazil. Aguas de recognition that the use of water has an economic value, Limeira (AdL), a 50-50 consortium between a major Bra- (2) identification of environmental requirements for sus- zilian construction company, CBPO, and Lyonnaise des tainable riparian ecology, paramount for use of the re- Eaux of France. AdL will provide approximately $124 source, (3) realization that the costs of providing water million of new investment during the 25-year conces- must be recovered in a sustainable manner, and (4) plan- sion. AdL's investment will reduce the waste load into ning for water development on a watershed basis with the region's principal urban stream by more than 90 active participation of the users and the public. percent over the next five years. It will also increase As a follow up, the GOB and the Bank are imple- access to safe drinking water and will link more homes menting the next step in the strategy to maximize the to the municipal sewer system. Protecting the Qutality and Sutpply of Freshwater Resources 47 Increasing Beneficiary Participation in Irrigation opportunities to integrate local staff in the strat- In irrigation the Bank has progressively applied egy preparation process and build local capacity. the 1993 Water Resource Policy, including devel- opment of a comprehensive analytical framework Challenges Ahead for management, economic incentives for im- Current trends show that several regions, most proved efficiency, decentralization of service pro- notably the Middle East and North Africa, and vision, increased user participation, and adoption an increasingly large number of countries in all of new irrigation technologies for water conser- parts of the world are approaching a "water cri- vation. Creating water users' associations and sis." Already, an estimated 1 billion people have turning over management of irrigation systems no access to safe drinking water and 1.7 billion to them, as in India, Mexico, and Turkey, has be- are without access to adequate sanitation. In the come increasingly common. future, availability of water rather than land will be the main constraint to agricultural production Lessons Learned in many areas. In many countries, water prob- The Bank's pursuit of newer approaches to water lems stem not from a shortage of water per se, management has generated a number of lessons. but from the inefficient use of water (often exac- erbated by subsidies), degradation of available * A major difficulty has been coordinating the water from pollution, degradation of watersheds cross-sectoral inputs both within and outside the from poor land use, and unsustainable use of Bank, in part because of traditional sectoral groundwater resources. In the face of these chal- boundaries. Within the Bank, a thematic team lenges, skilled water management will be crucial on water is helping break down sectoral barri- to the overall effort to achieve sustainable devel- ers. At national levels, Inter-Ministerial Steer- opment. ing Committees (IMSC) help coordinate water The Bank and other organizations have sup- resources management efforts. ported pilot activities to demonstrate and test * Water resources agencies are ill equipped to innovative solutions to freshwater, coastal, and manage water resources comprehensively. How- marine resources management. The challenge for ever, regional and national water resources man- the future will be to move from piloting to ap- agement strategy development has provided plying these approaches more broadly. CHAPTER 15 (chapters 19 and 2.0 of Agenida 21) Managing Toxic Chemicals and Hazardous Wastes A ilthough use of chemicals and the produc- the Bank is strengthening the capabilities of regu- tion of potentially dangerous waste prod- latory authorities in many countries to control the cts are an inherent part of modem industry, improper handling or transfer of such substances. with proper management and control they need The single largest contribution by the Bank to not pose a threat to humankind and the environ- toxic chemicals reduction has been its efforts to ment. Nonetheless, the failure to exercise proper remove lead from gasoline, which studies have care is common worldwide, and the need for im- shown to be a highly effective way to avoid a se- proved regimes in management of both toxic ricus public health problem, especially for chil- chemicals and hazardous waste is evident. Chap- dren. The Bank has called for the global phaseout ters 19 and 20 of Agenda 21 establish a number of of lead from gasoline and is working with gov- program areas aimed at improving toxic and haz- erriments, industries, NGOs, and other organi- ardous waste disposal and preventing their zations to raise awareness, build political illegal transport, particularly, although not exclu- commitment and consensus, design appropriate sively, from industrialized to developing countries. policies, and facilitate the implementation of lead phase-out programs. Progress since Rio Regional programs to phase out lead from gasoline have been supported by Bank technical A major impact of the new thinking associated assistance and policy advice in Asia, Central and with sustainable development has been a shift Eastern Europe, and Latin America and the Car- toward reducing, substituting, or eliminating the ibbean. As a result, several countries have phased use of toxic chemicals in manufacturing, thus out lead recently, and others have made firm po- removing them totally from the environment. In litical commitments to do so by designing na- this vein, the Bank is supporting Cleaner Produc- tional phase-out plans. In Thailand, a successful tion and similar approaches. The goal is to re- effort to end the use of lead in gasoline was helped duce the volumes of hazardous wastes generated by a Bank lending program to support refinery from industrial and other activities and to try to upgrades (see box 15.1). ensure that acceptable management and disposal The Bank has also been supporting projects options are put in place for those wastes that are to address broad issues of hazardous waste in generated. Working with UNEP and UNIDO, the Algleria, Egypt, India, MexicD, Russia, and other Bank has supported this process by including countries. Project components typically include cleaner production activities in more projects and compiling basic information on location and type by promoting environmental management sys- of hazardous wastes, strengthening regulatory tems such as IS014000 and Pollution Release and and enforcement capacity, educating industry Transfer Registers (PRTRs), which focus on the and the public on the problems and how to ad- wastage and release of toxins. At the same time, dress them, and helping provide treatment and 48 Managing Toxic Chemicals and Hazardouis Wastes 49 Box 15.1 Supporting the implementation of lead phase-out: the example of Thailand In response to evidence showing the serious health im- grams per liter; and by the end of 1995, the use of lead pacts of lead and other vehicular emissions in the late in gasoline was banned altogether 1980s, the Government of Thailand became strongly Government regulations to eliminate lead and to committed to address the problem. reduce the aromatic and benzene content and vapor The Bank provided support to improve air quality pressure of gasoline were part of a comprehensive pro- as part of its lending for the road sector (Third and Fourth gram that required changes in the three refineries of Highway Projects in 1990 and 1992, respectively) by as- the country. After a successful restructuring of the sisting the Government of Thailand to strengthen regu- Bangdiak Petroleum Refinery (Bangchak Oil Refinery Re- latory institutions; build up ambient air monitoring structuring Project, World Bank, 1985) that enhanced network; set ambient standards, vehicle emission and fuel standards; and introduce vehicle emission testing. tpizatio of the ficnedr faciiaed the prtiald fpria- The Bank was involved in an extensive dialogue with ing fo the refne hel Band has pIded n the Thai Government about formulating and imple- ing for the Clean Fuels and Environmental Improvement menting cost-effective policies for air quality improve- Project (World Bank, 1995) to meet the government' ment, and providing analytical support and financing fuel quality requirements. The deregulation of oil for the government's Action Plan to reduce air pollu- prices and removal of restrictions for private sector tion. In addition, the Bank worked closely with the investments in the refinery sector in 1992 facilitated the key agencies involved in developing the government's rapid adjustment of refineries to changing conditions. clean fuel standards. The fuel reformulation program of the Thai Gov- The Thai Government adopted a rapid phase-out ernment has been very effective and resulted in sig- strategy: in 1990, the maximum lead content in gaso- nificant reductions in lead emissions. About a year after line was set at 0.4 grams per liter; in May 1991, unleaded its introduction, unleaded gasoline increased its mar- gasoline was introduced; in September 1992, the maxi- ket share to about 18 percent, and within four years, mum lead content in all gasoline was lowered to 0.15 vehicular lead emissions were eliminated. disposal facilities. The Bank Group, especially the Challenges Ahead International Finance Corporation, has been work- ing to involve the private sector in hazardous Educating the public about the dangers of toxic waste management, a natural extension of private substances and hazardous wastes is essential for sector involvement in solid waste management. changing consumption patterns. Industries can contribute by developing and promoting alterna- Lessons Learned tives which avoid the use of toxic substances. Solutions to serious environmental problems can, However, government policies have to provide in some cases, be relatively inexpensive in com- the basic incentive framework in which industries parison with the large economic and social ben- are motivated to produce and consumers are en- efits of such measures. For the industries couraged to buy environmentally friendly prod- immediately affected, however, the financial costs ucts. In case of unleaded gasoline, for example, can sometimes be quite significant. Given the dif- refineries should be able to recover the costs of ferent incentives involved, several conditions are their investments, and consumers should be able necessary to mobilize action for change: strong to buy unleaded gasoline more cheaply than the political commitment, support of regulations and more damaging leaded fuel. Designing such policies, consensus of affected stakeholders, and policy frameworks is one of the most challenging support of consumers and the public. tasks for the Bank and its clients. Promoting good behavior in toxic and hazard- There is clear potential for closer partnerships ous waste management is only one aspect of a with the private sector to address control of tox- broader set of Bank efforts to improve productiv- ity, safeguard workers, and protect the environ- ins and hazardous wastes. These partnerships ment. However, apart from the IFC's direct must be widened to include local government, involvement with enterprises in its portfolio, the workers, and the concerned public. Steps are be- Bank's power in this area is limited. Efforts are being ing made in this direction through innovative pi- made to strengthen partnerships with more environ- lot projects, especially in LatinAmerica, which can mentally conscious private sector firms to leverage lead to a better understanding of processes to pro- their influence over their partners and suppliers. duce practical results on the ground. CHAPTER 16 (chapter 21 of Agenda 21) Promoting Environmentally Sound Management of Solid WaLstes and Sewage S olid wastes and sewage represent major pol- ing spatial, technical, institutional, and financial lution problems in both the industrialized perspectives. )and developing worlds. Both forms of * Promoting a policy and regulatory framework pollution seriously threaten water supplies, en- for economically sound waste reduction, recov- dangering human health and in many cases ery, recycling and reuse, and environmentally destroying aquatic life. Even when not life-threat- sound waste disposal. ening, these forms of pollution seriously dimin- ish the quality of life. Because waste production * Mobilizing public and private resources for ser- and sewage are concentrated in urban areas, con- vice delivery seeking greater efficiency and cost trolling and managing their impact on the envi- effectiveness. ronment will pose one of the major challenges for Examples of the applicati on of the above prin- the twenty-first century as cities grow and ex- ciples and priorities in Ban k-supported projects pand. Chapter 21 of Agenda 21 calls for waste include the watershed protection plan for Sao minimization, increased reuse and recycling, and PaUlo in Brazil (see box 16.1w, urban environment environmentally sound waste disposal and treat- management plans in Colombia, a national mu- ment. nicipal waste management strategy in Turkey, Progress since Rio jointly supported by METAP and the GEF, and metropolitan solid waste management projects in As of July 1996, the World Bank's lending for ac- Madras, India and Colombo, Sri Lanka. The Bank tive pollution management projects stood at $6.9 has entered into a collaborative effort with the billion, constituting approximately 60 percent of Swiss Development Cooperation (SDC) to distill the Bank's total lending for "environmental the lessons learned from these and other urban projects." Since Rio, the Bank has redirected its solid waste projects and to prepare, field test, and efforts at combating waste management prob- disseminate a guide for strategic solid waste man- lems, shifting away from projects dealing with agement for large cities. end-of-the-pipe technological fixes toward front- The Bank has also financed a number of end, more comprehensive, and integrated efforts projects in Africa, Asia, and Latin America de- at pollution management. signed to provide basic services for the poor, such Preparing and implementing the new genera- as the Strategic Sanitation Plan in Ghana, which tion of Bank projects are based on the following covers five major cities. This UNDP/World Bank principles: Water and Sanitation project aims at improve- ments in drainage, sanitation, and waste manage- * Adopting a strategic, integrated planning ap- ment. The upgrading components will benefit proach for waste management services combin- some 600,000 lower-income people. The project 50 Promoting Environmentally Sound Management of Solid Wastes and Sewage 51 Box 16.1 Catchment protection in the Sao Paulo Metropolitan Region The formulation of a watershed protection plan for the One of the main medium-term institutional reforms Sao Paulo MetropolitanArea (SPMA) in Brazil is a good willbe the creation of a water basin management agency. example of an issue-specific urban environmental man- The action plan calls for studies and orgamzing the pub- agement strategy. It started with a rapid assessment to lic and governmental consultation processes needed to gauge explicit needs and inventory problems. Consen- develop and establish the basin agency An indirect ben- sus among the stakeholders was achieved through con- efit of the project will be to develop a modem scheme of sultations, culminatingdr wa anissue-speific sthrategyriver basin management, which, in the medium term, sultahtons, culminatag in an issue-specific stratend The would be expanded on a larger scale to the other major plan set the stage for coordinated short- and medium- basins in the region that serve the SPMA. term sectoral action plans and investments. Once pri- The program will directly benefit over 500,000 ur- orities were set and consensus was achieved, a series ban dwellers in the watershed, 48 percent of whom are of sectoral action plans and investments were designed poor, as well as protect the water supply of 3 million to form an integrated program. domestic consumers in Sao Paulo City itself. also aims to establish better institutional and fi- Challenges Ahead nancial mechanisms and more effective policy Four main challenges to managing wastes effec- frameworks so that improvements are sustained tively lie ahead: over time. As part of its commitment to waste manage- * Ensuring that projects can be replicated and are sus- ment and disposal programs, the Bank has em- tainable. To meet the challenges posed by increas- phasized partnerships with both donor and ing urbanization in the developing world, the recipient organizations. The long-standing col- Bank must be vigilant in evaluating best prac- laborative UNDP/World Bank Water and Sani- tices to ensure that projects can be replicated. It must also support continued monitoring of tation Program is a testament to the commitment projetso st come tontonure mthaite ar betwen donr agnciesto takle he grwing projects past completion to ensure that they are between donor agencies to tackle the growing sustainable. waste management problem. Other partnerships with UNCHS, UNDP, EIB, GEF, Commission Of * Building alliances through stakeholder consultation, withe EUropea CmNities, and variosgovern participation, and transparency. The Bank needs mental and nongovernmental agencies have been to be proactive in soliciting active participation estal nd. n from stakeholders and ensuring that projects are established. designed and implemented transparently. Lessons Learned * Differentiating solutions based on demand and affordability. Waste management systems are far By far, the most important lesson learned since too often built and operated without factoring Rio is the need for strategic and integrated ap- affordability and demand criteria into their de- proaches to waste management. In addition, sign. Project evaluatiori must avoid these po- concurrent with the massive investments in physi- tential problems to ensure sustainability. cal infrastructure that these projects require, there Creatin the capaci to handle devolved responsi- must be investments in "softer" forms of assis- g . bilities. As decisionmaking devolves to more lo- tance, such as, effective training programs. Fi- calized levels, it is important to ensure the nally, to implement a strategic and integrated existence of adequate management and imple- approach to waste management, donor institu- mentation capacity. This desirable trend empha- tions must emphasize the importance of establish- sizes the need for the Bank to focus more on ing priorities and ensuring commitment from all "softer" modes of assistance to train and prepare stakeholders. decisionmakers to handle new responsibilities. CHAPTER 17 (chapter' 24 of Agetnda 21) Taking Global Action for Women to Attain Sustainable and Equitable Development G ender relations and issues affecting to be represented. Many of the gender-related women such as education, access to activities respond to specific challenges in each koJ health care, and attitudes toward self-de- sector. Milestones include: termination have significant consequences for sus- a. Bank-supported projects are providing credit tainable development. Women play a crucial role to women in their own names, granting small in determining overall levels of wealth in both in- loans (microcredit) without collateral, and dustrialized and developing countries. In many offering assistance on technology and mar- countries, women work as farmers and thus are keting. critical in the effort to increase agricultural pro- b. Women's access to agricultural services is ductivity and reduce environmental damage. being improved by setting up group rather Furthermore, family planning issues, which have than individual contacts between farmers primary importance to women, ultimately deter- and extension agents. mine population dynamics, and these are key c. To reduce the barriers to girls' education, forces affecting sustainable development. Chap- Bank-assisted projects decrease the direct ter 24 of Agenda 21 calls for fuller participation by women at all levels of society and in all forms of Figure 17.1 Percentage of Bank projects with gender- decisionmaking, particularly in areas affect- related actions, fiscal 1992-96 ing environment and development. 100 Progress since Rio 9Ci In the years since Rio, the Bank has attached in- creasing importance to women and gender issues 7C in achieving sustainable development. Progress 60 has been made in the following areas: sc 40 Bank Lending 3 Increasingly, the Bank has integrated gender con- 20 cerns in its lending portfolio. From fiscal 1992 to 10l fiscal 1996, 30 percent of Bank-assisted projects had specific gender-related actions (see figure VV q. 17.1). In some projects, women have been brought O > 0 in through consultative and participatory mea- $'b 9 , sures. In others, women were specifically required 52 Taking Global Action for Women to Attain Ststainable and Equitable Development 53 costs to parents through special incentives with developing country partners to implement such as fee waivers, scholarships, and free training programs to help low-income women. textbooks. Bank-assisted projects also support The West Africa Social and GenderAnalysis train- infrastructure needs that increase girls' atten- ing program (SAGA) provides training for agri- dance (such as latrines and water points). cultural extension workers to improve outreach d. Community-based health services are cost- to women and other marginalized groups to ag- effective in improving women's health. ricultural extension services. Most of the Bank's e. Women are being trained in nontraditional resident missions are staffed with one or more occupations to improve their employability. gender specialists. f. Employment and training programs are Lessons learmed making better information available to women about job markets. Over the past five years, important gender-related lessons have emerged: Research and Analysis An enablingframework isfundamental. To effec- The Bank's research and analytical work has sig- tively address gender inequalities, it is necessary nificantly advanced understanding about the to go beyond the project level and examine sys- forces at work in the persistent inequality between temic causes of gender differentials. Modifying women and men. Furthermore, evidence of the national legal and regulatory frameworks is es- gains from investing in women has grown con- sential, because they form the functional frame- siderably. Education increases women's options work of the economy and civil society. Four in the labor market and boosts their earnings. bodies of law are particularly important: land Education is also associated with lower birth rates, and property rights, employment, family, and which reduce the risks of maternal and child mor- financial. tality. Moreover, lower birth rates appear to con- * Gender issues are interconnected and cross-sectoral. fer benefits on those children who are born, To achieve specific gains in one sector may re- passing down better health and education to fu- quire action in another. For example, improv- ture generations. Providing women with access ing rural households' access to water supply may to financial services leads to greater savings mo- be key to increasing girls' enrollment in school. bilization, and increasing the income they control Improving infrastructure such as roads may also results in improved child health. Violence against be important. Women in Morocco identified the women creates significant physical and mental inaccessibility of schools as one reason their health damage and reduces their contributions. daughters were not attending. Discrimination against women in property rights * Data are important. The Bank's analytical work hinders their economic activities. In contrast, on gender and education and health has pro- women's access to land is associated with higher ag- vided the substantive basis which made possible ricultural productivity and, in some cases, with major changes in sectoral lending trends. Work greater investments by women in land conservation. on property rights and the labor market has pro- vided evidence of the need for changes in legal Partnership Initiatives and regulatory frameworks and has indicated The Bank has entered into numerous partnership ways these changes can be made. initiatives. The Consultative Group on Interna- tional Agricultural Research (CGIAR) began a Challenges Ahead gender program in 1991. In 1993 the Bank co- Efforts to increase women's participation in sponsored the Consultation on Promoting Women in EosytemManaemet. fte the199 Unted social and economic decisionmaking raise com- in Ecosystem Management. After the 1995 United plxise.Ad,athevenenice,tee Nations Fourth World Conference on Women in plex issues. And, as the evidence indicates, these Beijing, it created an External Gender Consulta- efforts take time. Many challenges lie ahead tive Group (EGCG) to assist in the formulation * Stronger govemment commitment is needed and implementation of its gender policies. The and must be reflected in policymaking and bud- Bank's Economic Development Institute works get expenditures. 54 Advancing Stustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 * Gender-related actions need to be cost effective. energy. More needs to be learned about how to There may be times when general policy inter- mainstream gender issues beyond the project ventions are not enough, and programs that spe- level. As a part of this piocess, the Bank has cifically target women may be required. As with begun to focus on how to iniegrate gender analy- all development programs, these targeting ef- sis into the Country Assistamce Strategy (CAS), forts should be cost effective, to make the most which the Bank prepares vvith a client govern- efficient use of scarce development resources. d p g ment to define its overall development goals and * Significant gains have been made concerning investment strategies. gender issues in the health and education sec- tors. More needs to be learned about gender in * In all of these areas, the Bank will work closely sectors such as large-scale infrastructure and with its country-level and international partners. CHAPTER 18 (chapter 25 of Agendtla 21) Investing in Children and Youth nvesting in the well-being and education of mation on all aspects of designing an ECD pro- children and youth is central to efforts to gram, such as types of interventions, financing, achieve sustainable development. Countries and best practice examples; (3) the ECD cost-ef- that have failed to focus attention on educating fectiveness assessment tool; and (4) a list of ECD all children have not prospered. In recognition of consultants. the pivotal importance of investing in young Many of the Bank's regional units are now people, chapter 25 of Agenda 21 calls for improved addressing region-specific issues on children. In education and greater protection of children, es- collaboration with other agencies such as theAga pecially girls. Khan Foundation, the Bernard van Leer Founda- Progress since Rio tion, and UNICEF, the Bank's Africa Region Progress since Rio (AFR) supports an African-managed Regional Recognizing the importance of investing in indi- Network for Early Childhood Development. The viduals as distinct from nations in recent years, Asia Region has produced country profiles on the Bank has sharply increased lending for edu- children which include data on Bank lending, cation, health, nutrition, population, and other information about economic and social policies components of human development. This lend- as they affect children, the status of children's ing represents more than $3.5 billion yearly, or 18 health and education, and suggestions for future percent of total World Bank lending in fiscal 1996. work. Of this amount, approximately one-third has di- The Latin American and Caribbean Region rectly benefited children under 15 years. (LAC) has launched a series of studies and initia- In 1992, the Bank launched a Children's Ini- tives on children. Household surveys are being tiative, a central focus of which has been Early used to evaluate the status of poor children, and Child Development (ECD). Based on a series of the region has also started work on street chil- dren and child violence. Two studies have been seminars With experts in ECD, the Bank produced published: A Participatory Study of Urban Poverty Early Child Development: Invest in the Future and Violence in Jamaica (1996), and Targeting At- (1996), which has served as a blueprint for Bank Risk Youth: Rationales, Approaches to Services De- activities. Highlighting best practice, this publi- livery and Monitoring and Evaluation Issues. A cation is being used by the Bank to develop more research proposal and several papers are under effective ECD interventions in its projects. In col- preparation to assess the issue of child labor. laboration with the Inter-American Development The Europe and Central Asia (ECA) Region is Bank, a web site is now available explaining also focused on children's issues. In collabora- (1) the theory and economics of ECD; (2) infor- tion with UNICEF, ECA developed the Social 55 56 Advancing Sustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 Challenges of Transition (SCT) database, which attention on Country Assistance Strategies and includes indicators on the well-being of children on related country-level discussions on the sta- by country. ECA also has undertaken a study on tus of girls' education. Profiles on countries likely Enterprise Divestiture of Kindergartens and Childcare to lag on gender parity have been prepared so Arrangements in Central Asia and is studying nu- that their progress can be c arefully monitored. tritional status and household welfare among pre- The Africa Region is developing a Strategy for in Uzbekistan. the Development of Basic Education in African school chBldren . onc Countries with Very Low Primary School Enroll- The Bank's researchnkchildren issuests ment. Project components are being designed to changing the nature of Bank-supported projects alleviate the barriers to girls' education, increase as well. In the past, World Bank project work on girls' attendance in primary and secondary children was limited to primary and secondary school, and decrease their drop-out rates. Ex- education, nutrition, immunization, and mater- amples of such projects are MAali's Education Sec- nal child healthprojects. Now, however, the Bank tor Investment Project (fiscal 1997) and has begun to support a more holistic approach, Mozambique's Social Investment Program (fis- and ECD projects such as those in LatinAmerica cal 1999). and Africa are intervening earlier in a child's life. The Bank is working to monitor growth, improve Lessons Learned nutrition, educate parents, and teach financial E . . management skills to mothers. Projects in Guinea Emphasizig children and youth i the sustai- and the Dominican Republic promote school- able development process is a relatively new fo- based health care. Attention is also being given cus for the Bank. Therefore, lessons of experience to specific youth problems such as violence, and to date are fairly preliminary. pilot programs are underway in Colombia and * Monitoring and evaluation are crucial since Jamaica. many of the projects involving children are new. To improve AIDS/HIV prevention, ECD, and Systems need to be set up or improved to better girls' education, the Bank is joining in partner- monitor inputs, output, and outcomes. This ships with the international community includ- needs to be done carefully, keeping in mind that ing other UN agencies, the OECD, regional most outcomes and impacts will not occur until development banks, and four major international after the project is finishecd. In this regard, Bank children's NGOs (Save the Children, World Vi- projects must include support for longitudinal sion, Christian Children's Fund, and Plan Inter- analysis and studies of follow-up groups. national). Through a special grant to the * The Bank is striving to help its client countries Consultative Group on Early Child Care and De- reach universal primary enrollment by 2010 and velopment, the Bank is a member of a global ECD to ensure that those children who reach primary network consisting of NGOs, bilaterals, school have had the proper cognitive develop- multilaterals, and academics. To expand its ment, health care, and nutrition to perform at knowledge base on best practice and interven- their best in primary school. The Children's Ini- tions for sustainable youth development, the tiative has shown that focusing on primary and Bank is also developing a partnership with the secondary education projects is not adequate. In- Interational Youth Foundation. tervention needs to start before primary school Anothern stroaonguthnk Focundation. improvinggito enhance school readiness. Children whose Another strong Bank focus is improving girls' earliest years are blighted by hunger or disease education (see also section 17). Despite progress or whose minds are not stimulated by appropri- on many fronts in recent years, tens of millions ate interaction with adults and their environment of children are not provided with basic nutrition pay for these early deficits throughout their lives. and education. In developing countries, more Such children are far more likely to do poorly in than 110 million 6 to 11 year-olds and 273 million school, drop out early, and be functionally illit- 12 to 17 year-olds are not in school. The situa- erate. tion is even worse for girls and minority groups: . In promoting early childhood intervention in 77 of the 110 million 6 to 11 year-olds and 148 of both health and education, partnerships are nec- the 273 million 12 to 17 year-olds, out-of-school essary. Governments must build partnerships children are girls. The Bank is placing increased with parents and communities, NGOs, the pri- Investing in Children and Youth 57 vate sector, religious ministries, the media, and * Reaching children in rural areas. Work being done professional organizations. International sup- on education and technology should bring about port is also necessary. innovative projects. Partnerships have proven to be a successful approach. Increasingly, the Challenges Ahead Bank will need to reach out to other international organizations, NGOs, bilaterals, multilaterals, Many challenges lie ahead as developing countries and governments that are working on the same strive to reach a 100 percent primary completion or similar issues to avoid repetition, combine rate and a 60 percent entry rate into secondary edu- resources, and share lessons. cation by equal numbers of boys and girls by 2010. Partneringfor solutions. Globally, children face in- * Disseminating lessons. Much is already known creasingly complex problems. Together with its about improving the situation of children and partners, the Bank needs to find solutions and youth, but there is a need to increase dissemina- address the often-interrelated issues of violence tion of this information so that the knowledge is against and by children, street children, children incorporated into future projects and programs. in post-conflict situations, and child labor. CHAPTER 19 (chapter 26 of Agenzdta 21) Recognizing and Strengt:hening the Role of Indigenous Peoples A major outcome of the Rio Summit was a of indigenous peoples, if they so choose, to par- growing recognition of the important ticipate in and benefit from development projects. X role which the world's 300 million indig- The directive outlines specific procedures for in- enous or tribal people play in the stewardship and corporating the concerns of indigenous peoples sustainable management of large sections of the into Bank-financed investment projects through earth. Although indigenous peoples comprise less the design of Indigenous Peoples Development than four percent of the world's population, they Plans. represent ninety-five percent of the world's cul- In crafting this policy, Bank legal and anthro- tural diversity and over fifty percent of the popu- pclogical specialists consulted extensively with lation living in areas of high biodiversity, such as indigenous organizations and worked closely tropical rainforests. Despite these realities, rec- with other international agencies and develop- ognition of the significant role of indigenous ment banks, such as the Asian and Inter-Ameri- peoples has been very limited. Only very belat- can Development Banks. Operational Directive edly has modern science recognized the ecologi- 4.20 has also been used as the basis for recogniz- cal and cultural sophistication of these peoples ing the role of indigenous peoples in other Bank and argued for the need to conserve their knowl- policies, such as those dealin,g with environmen- edge of natural habitats, fragile ecosystems, and tal assessments, forests, and natural habitats. medicinal plants. In recognition of their impor- The greatest progress in implementing the tance, chapter 26 of Agenda 21 calls for a number Bank's policy on indigenous peoples has occurred of measures to empower indigenous people, while in Latin America and the Caribbean, where there promoting effective resource management and are over 40 million indigenous people, many of sustainable development. whom have rights recognized in national consti- tutions and special legislation. In other regions, Progress since Rio progress has been more difficult due to differing World Bank policy concerning indigenous peoples regional and national contexts and complexities since Rio has continued to be guided by an op- in identifying the groups covered. Among the erational directive issued in 1991 (OD 4.20). Un- projects in which indigenous peoples components der this policy, indigenous peoples are defined as have been included are: groups who maintain social and cultural identi- . The Rondonia and Mato Grosso Natural Re- ties distinct from those of the national societies in source Management Projects in Brazil, the Para- which they live, have close attachments to their guay Natural Resource Mlanagement Project, ancestral lands, and are susceptible to being dis- and the Colombia Natural Resource Manage- advantaged in the development process. The ment Project, which contain indigenous compo- policy focuses particular attention on the rights nents in project design and implementation. As 58 Recognizing and Strengthening the Role of Indigenous Peoples 59 part of the Pilot Program to Protect the Brazil- * In the Russian Federation, a Petroleum Joint Ven- ian Rain Forest, the Bank is administering a $20.8 ture Development Project under preparation million Indigenous Lands Project. Financing for contains an environmental assessment which the project comes from the Rain Forest Trust and takes into account the needs of indigenous and the German bank, KfW. Several new natural other local populations affected by new oil and resource management projects being prepared natural gas developments in Western Siberia. In- in Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua are digenous peoples' concerns have been included expected to have strong indigenous land titling in a recent Russian Forestry Policy Review and in and natural resource management components. the preparation of the GEF-funded Russia Biodi- In cooperation with the Hemispheric Indigenous versity Conservation Project. Peoples Fund (Fondo Indigena) in La Paz, Bolivia, * In 1993, to support the United Nations Interna- and the Swedish International Development tional Year of the World's Indigenous Peoples, Authority (SIDA), the Bank has been financing the Bank sponsored a Conference on Traditional a very successful series of training workshops Knowledge and Sustainable Development (see pro- for Latin American indigenous organizations. ceedings of the same name (World Bank 1995)). The training program is supported by country- level grants from the Bank's Institutional Devel- Lessons Leared opment Fund (IDF) and is meant to strengthen the capacity of indigenous organizations to de- Five of the many lessons that have resulted from sign and manage their own development pro- the Bank's experience in projects that affect in- grams. To date, 19 training programs are digenous peoples are particularly important: planned, underway, or have been completed in 15 Latin American countries at a total grant al- ' To identify indigenous peoples' issues early in location of over $2.6 million. project preparation, using systematic social and environmental assessment techniques. * In India, several Bank-financed projects in the health, education, forestry, biodiversity conser- * To base development projects among indigenous vation, and water resources sectors include spe- peoples on culturally appropriate consultation cially designed action programs for scheduled and participation. These techniques should take tribes and castes. Similarly, in Indonesia, recent into account indigenous peoples' languages, tra- Bank-financed projects in road construction, for- ditional values, forms of social organization, estry, and protected area management and ru- decisionmaking styles, and religious and spiri- ral health are being designed to take into account tual beliefs. the needs of remote-dwelling, indigenous popu- a To cooperate with and strengthen indigenous lations. organizations, especially through training pro- * The Matruh Natural Resource Management grams and other capacity strengthening exer- Project in Egypt, whose beneficiaries are recently cises. settled Bedouin tribes, draws heavily upon the * To increase Bank staff and borrower country land-use knowledge of the Bedouin people (in- awareness of the special rights and needs of in- cluding women). It promises to provide impor- digenous peoples, especially as reflected in re- tant lessons for natural resource management cent international documents such as the and rural development planning in other arid Intemational Labour Organisation (ILO) Con- regions of the Middle East and North Africa. vention 169, the draft UN Declaration on Indig- enous Peoples, and the International Convention * In East Africa, GEF-financed biodiversity con- on Biological Diversity. servation projects in Kenya and Uganda contain special programs for remote pastoral and hunter- * The need to respect the preferences of indigenous gatherer groups. In Southern Africa, the Bank peoples and communities, especially their has collaborated with the regional office of the wishes as expressed at numerous international International Union for the Conservation of Na- conferences, to design, implement, and control ture and Natural Resources (IUCN ROSA) in their own development and environment pro- designing a set of NGO workshops on the role grams. of indigenous knowledge systems and institu- The Bank is attempting to respond to these tions in natural resource management. lessons learned by improving its staff and bor- 60 Advancing Sustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 rower capacity to deal with indigenous peoples demand enormous cross-cultural sensitivity and issues. In particular, the Bank is introducing new patience but promise to be oiF great importance in social assessment techniques for identifying in- the Bank's future work. digenous peoples, eliciting their preferences in The second challenge emerges from economic relation to service delivery (health, education) and globalization and the opening of formerly closed other development interventions, and incorporat- economies to large-scale hydrocarbon and min- ing their knowledge in the environmental man- ing developments. These pose special challenges agement process. It is also taking greater tu cognizance of legal issues involved in the protec- an tures of idenos peopl Lesons lion of indigenous lands and resources, and pre- and abou indigenous peoples. Lessons paring regionally based training courses to learned about idigenous peoples land claims increase the awareness of its own staff and that of negotiations, monetary com,pensation, labor re- its counterpart borrower country agencies of in- lations, and environmental protection, and sacred digenous peoples' needs, knowledge, and issues. sites in industrial countries such as Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Scandinavia, and the Challenges Ahead United States could help private corporations, multilateral finance institutions, and host coun- The first challenge is to address the increasing in- goenntdsinocaladevrnm- terest of some borrower countries, especially in tay acceptales pojt Ealh and the Latin American and Caribbean region, in pre- tal[ly acceptable projects Establishing paring development projects with the full partici- adequate and agreed policy framework for the pation and often in equal partnership with private sector based on recognized international indigenous peoples and their organizations. Two human rights standards and environmental prin- projects of this type are under preparation or ciples will be fundamental to the effectiveness and about to be negotiated-a stand-alone Indigenous success of such initiatives. The Bank intends to Peoples Development Project in Ecuador and a reaich out to the private sector on these issues Community Forestry Project in Mexico. These through greater collaboration on social and envi- sorts of projects in which co-partnership arrange- ronmental matters among all members of the Bank ments need to be worked out among indigenous Group, including the IFC and Multilateral Invest- organizations, government agencies, and the Bank ment Guarantee Agency (MIGA). CHAPTER 20 (chapter 27 of Ageniula 21) Strengthening the Role of Nongovernmental Organizations ongovemmental organizations (NGOs) incorporated, nonprofit consortium of NGOs, as bringwide-rangingexperienceandvalu- the principal implementing agency for the able lessons to sustainable development project. NIPA is receiving $17 million of the total efforts. In recognition of the importance of NGOs, $20 million grant to finance overall project coor- chapter 27 of Agenda 21 discusses way to estab- dination and supervision. This marks the first lish partnerships and closer dialogue among time in the Bank's history that funds have been NGOs, governments, and international agencies given directly to an NGO for implementation. involved in development. As NGO relationships with the Bank have grown, additional staff have been appointed in Progress since Rio Bank headquarters and NGO liaison officers have In the five years since Rio, important advances been appointed in most of the Bank's resident have been made in forging partnerships between missions, vastly expanding the capacity to reach the World Bank and nongovernmental organiza- out to a network of local, national, and interna- tions. These partnerships have broadened capa- tional organizations that are potential partners bilities and vastly extended the reach and in project or policy work. potential impact of both Bank- and GEF-financed By building strategic partnerships with envi- projects. In addition, the partnerships have ronmental NGOs, the Bank is better able to carry brought greater accountability to the Bank and out its work program on the environment. The increased the Bank's credibility among the many most prominent example of a strategic partner- actors within civil society. ship is the Letter of Understanding the Bank has Since 1992, NGO participation in Bank- and with the World Conservation Union (IUCN)-the GEF-financed activities has dramatically in- largest confederation of conservation organiza- creased. By 1996, NGOs were involved in almost tions in the world. The Bank is relying on IUCN 50 percent of Bank projects. Local, as opposed to for broader participation and state-of-the art ex- international, NGOs became more prominently pertise in environmentally sustainable develop- involved. NGO participation ranges from pro- ment. To that end, IUCN and the Bank have viding project ideas to implementing specific collaborated on an Ecosystems and Natural Habi- project components to providing technical advice tats Handbook, which will synthesize on-the- and assistance to being the primary interlocutor ground experience through case studies, and a with local populations. In the Philippines Con- guide on the global system of marine protected servation of Priority Protected Areas Project, the areas, A Global Representative System of Marine Bank as GEF-implementing agency has entered Protected Areas. IUCN has also participated in de- into a formal agreement with NIPA, Inc., a legally veloping a regional dialogue on a variety of en- 61 62 Advancing Suistainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 vironmental issues in Southern Africa and con- tive long-term partnerships for sustainable devel- tributed advice and guidance on the development opment. To this end, there is increasing empha- of a Critical Ecosystems Partnership Fund. sis on analyzing lessons learned and identifying Recognizing that consultation with affected good practices in promoting Bank-NGO partner- groups and NGOs is key to identifying environ- ships. mental impacts and designing mitigation mea- Some countries have made exciting strides sures, the Bank's operational directive on overthepastfiveyearsingovernment-NGOpart- environmental assessment (OD 4.01) requires that nerships, but many others have not progressed the borrower consult with affected groups and as much as had been hoped. There are two rea- NGOs on at least two specific stages in the EA sons for this which the Bank has begun to help to process. A recent evaluation illustrates a signifi- address: (1) The policy environment in some cant increase in NGO consultations. The opera- countries inhibits NGO development. In some tional policy on disclosure of documents (OP cases, the Bank can help governments reform 17.50) increases transparency by ensuring that NGO laws and other policies which could pave affected groups and NGOs have greater access the way for healthier govern,ent-NGO relations. (2) The Bank's new disclosure policy has given to project information, the public far greater access to information about Through the Global Environment Facility, the Bank's activities. This policy will help level grant resources have been channeled through the the playing field for NGO participants who feel Bank to help developing countries achieve glo- tha t in the past they have been deprived of infor- bal environmental objectives in biodiversity mation essential for their constructive contribu- conservation, climate change mitigation, interna- tion to policy dialogue or project development. tional waters protection, and ozone layer protec- tion. The nature of GEF projects has required Challenges Ahead high-quality implementation partners, which in The development of cohereni regional strategies many cases have been NGOs. One-quarter of the that take into account the principal lessons stakeholders identified in the biodiversity learned is a central challenge for the future. The project portfolio are NGOs. A new me- Bank has moved from placating NGOs to engag- dium-sized projects window in the GEF will fa- ing them and must develop the necessary man- cilitate NGO access to GEF resources. agement tools to do so cost effectively. Central to this exercise is the development of sustained Lessons Learned links with NGOs in borrowing countries and with networks of NGOs. To this end, the Bank is in- The ~ .. drmtcices.nNOivleeti vesting in training programs, grants fund- Bank-financed activities over the last five years ing instruments, and other opportunities to help has provided the Bank with a far sounder base builld the capacity of local NG Os. upon which to build a deeper and more effective 'Part of the challenge for the Bank lies in bal- collaboration. The NGO community, however, is ancing the interests of borrowing governments and growing in number and has diverse interests, the local NGO communities. The Bank can foster dia- dynamics of which the Bank is learning. The Bank logue between governments and NGOs. In each must be more discerning if it is to promote effec- country, political realities will dictate practice. CHAPTER 21 (chapter 28 of Agendla 21) Emphasizing Local Authority Initiatives G lobally, emphasis is increasing on devolv- * Improving the ability of subnational entities to ing service delivery to the local level to collect revenues and effectively use the revenues Jimprove efficiency and respond more to manage and maintain quality of service de- quickly to local demand. For sustainable devel- livery opment, proper integration of local authority in * Building responsive, professional financial inter- decisionmaking and service delivery is particu- mediaries which focus on providing long-term larly important to build consensus and strengthen financing for investments by local authorities the knowledge base on how to promote well- * Monitoring the success of project outcomes being without exhausting crucial resources. How- through financial control ever, this trend towards devolution appears to be proeedngin a fashion that is dictated more by 3 Reforming intergovernmental fiscal relation- proceeding inpediencyon less dictational by ships to remove distorting incentives and ineffi- political expediency and less by rational analysis ciencies. Developing more effective instruments of local needs and strengths. Chapter 28 of Agenda to facilitate fiscal transfers. 21 lays down the principles governing the role in which local authorities should be participating to The Bank often uses tools such as policy work- achieve sustainable development, shops in which govermnent officials and leaders explore issues and experiences with counterparts Progress since Rio from other countries and international experts. To promote decentralization in developing coun- These workshops elicit participation and dia- tries, the World Bank has been making more loans logue among relevant stakeholders in the process. that are reaching projects sponsored by local au- In turn, it is hoped, greater consensus on reform thorities, as these authorities seek to cope with measures can be reached, while these reforms are new service delivery mandates. In addition, as better tailored to local conditions. the need for strategic investment planning grows, To build local government capacity, the Bank the Bank has stepped up efforts to work with has worked collaboratively with partner donor countries to implement decentralization. agencies including USAID and UNDP. The Bank The Bank's assistance in advancing decentrali- also extends assistance dedicated to building in- zation and strengthening local capabilities em- stitutional effectiveness in local governments and phasizes the following elements: governmental institutions in Sub-Saharan Africa * Building and bolstering the financial and insti- through its Municipal Development Programme tutional capacities of subnational entities to as- (MDP). Through national and regional work- similate and undertake the massive investments shops, the MDP provides a forum for governmen- now under their purview tal and nongovernmental agencies to analyze, 63 64 Advancing Sustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 Box 21.1 Decentralization reforms in Uganda In 1992, after a detailed three-year study, the Govern- local and central governmental institutions and their ment of Uganda instituted a sweeping decentralization pol icies as well as improving intergovernmental financ- program. Implementation of the decentralization pro- ing arrangements. In addition, the Bank is assisting gram, which will occur in phases, is expected to last Six local governments in preparing specific investment years. These specific reallocations of roles and respon- projects to be implemented under the new regime. The sibilities between the central and local governments i were formalized by the national government and have mvestment program iS expected to fortify the decen- been inscribed in Uganda's Constitution. tralization process by clarifying and appropriately re- The Bank is supporting the Ugandan process with fining the division of obligations and powers between a capacity building program aimed at strengthening the central and local governments. debate, and promote policy development for ef- forward in a methodical and clearly established fective, responsive, and democratic local gover- process. nance. Challenges Ahead Lessons Learned The Bank faces multiple challenges as it seeks to Because decentralization is a recent phenomenon assist local authorities in developing the capacity in many client countries, it is difficult to ascertain to ineet the new obligations that decentralization its full consequences over time. Nonetheless, the has conferred on them. Among these are the fol- Bank's initial experience in providing assistance lowing: to local authorities gives preliminary assessments Improving efficient organization through clear that may provide perspective: demarcation of central and local obligations and • On its own, decentralization of political powers powers. For long-term sustainability, before ob- is not adequate to improve public sector perfor- ligations are allocated between local and central mance. To improve service delivery, decentrali- authorities, the political relationship between the zation should be accompanied by fundamental center and the local agencies needs clear and reforms in the administrative, sectoral, legal, and rational definition. The Bank's efforts also need regulatory arenas. to focus more closely on synchronizing the re- form process to ensure that local authorities are * Local service delivery problems are not simply as responsive to their consi ituencies in practice the result of a poor tax system, substandard ac- as they are supposed to be in theory. counting standards, or inadequate capital bud- Encouraging financial innovation by helping cre- geting. Rather, the real problems usually reflect ate conditions for the development of munici- a lack of proper design and disregard of equity pal credit markets. Ever-increasing financial issues. Therefore, the traditional, narrow focus pressures to sustain effective local service deliv- on municipal development related solely to taxa- ery require additional resources beyond inter- tion, internal administration, and related con- governmental fiscal transfers. Besides helping cems in many cases has not yielded significant streamline and improve the collection of local benefits. A comprehensive, integrated approach government revenues, the B3ank should concen- to service delivery at the appropriate spatial and trate more on creating an environment that is political level is necessary for decentralized gov- conducive to extrabudgetaty resource mobiliza- ernance to attain its objective, which is improved tion, such as the ability to access credit markets. service delivery to constituents. * Improving the regulatory ard legal environment. * To improve service delivery, early involvement Local and central political accountability is com- with clients and relevant stakeholders and the monly derived through enactment of laws and identification of responsibilities are key (box 21.1). regulations. The Bank should focus on how best With decentralization still in its infancy and with to design legal and regulatory regimes to improve the need for many other reforms, the effort to political and civil service accountability within the address the needs of local authorities must move context of decentralized governance. CHAPTER 22 (chapter 29 of Agendtia 21) Strengthening the Roles of Workers and Their Trade Unions S ustainable development is not possible with- microenterprise development, employment ser- out a productive labor force that is free to vices, improved conditions for female workers, E5 bargain for safe working conditions, fair and compensation for workers laid off in adjust- wages, and benefits. Moreover, smoothly func- ment programs. tioning labor markets which balance flexibility Lending for these relatively new activities in- with protection from external shocks and down- creased considerably in the last four years. In turns are necessary as nations adjust to constantly fiscal 1996, 73 new projects were approved with changing levels of development and new one or more labor components, compared with technology. Recognizing the role that labor has 15 in 1992. By mid-1996, 229 ongoing projects played in addressing change and protecting work- included labor components, of which 28 projects ers, chapter 29 of Agenda 21 calls for the active were exclusively concerned with labor markets. participation of labor, supported by increased In total, in the 1990s, the Bank committed about training and capacity building, in promoting sus- $2.4 billion in lending for labor market activities. tainable development. The Bank further supports its clients through research and analysis of labor market policy. The Progress since Rio work can be country specific (such as trade unions in Jamaica, minimum wages in Mexico, The Bank attaches considerable importance to e omn euiyrglto nIda,i improvements in labor market performance and, p since 1992, has expanded its role in supporting which case it is invariably undertaken jointly with workers and trade unions. World Development government or forms part of a broader research Report (WDR) 1995: Workers in an Integrating World program (such as the linkage between labor mar- .,iethe analytical underpinning of the ket institutions and economic performance, the proids labor force strategy, which the Bank has relation between training and productivity, and Bank's labor force strategy, which the Bank has assessments of labor market discrimination). sought to implement through its lending activi- The Bank has increased its efforts to improve ties, economic and sectoral work, and research, partnerships with other organizations that share and through strengthening its partnerships with its concerns with labor issues. Such partnerships major trade unions and related organizations. bring clear benefits through sharing of knowl- To promote labor mobility, employment, and edge and experience. The 1995 WDR, for ex- worker welfare, the Bank lends for a wide set of ample, was prepared in close consultation with labor activities including labor code revision, the International Labour Organisation (ILO) and employment creation in public works schemes, international trade union confederations such as and retraining unemployed or potentially redun- the International Confederation of Free Trade dant workers. Other labor lending promotes la- Unions (ICFTU) and the World Confederation of bor market information and monitoring, Labor (WCL). 65 66 Advancing Sustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 Bank partnerships with trade unions are now ing income insecurity, and equipping workers for clearly established. With ICFTU and other inter- change. The 1995 WDR also argues that trade national organizations, the Bank sponsored three unions and collective bargaining may create net conferences since Rio with union officials from benefits through higher productivity and lower Europe, WestAfrica and SouthernAfrica, the last costs, although it favors decentralized over cen- of which was held in Harare in 1996. The aim of tralized bargaining systems. these meetings was to inform unions about work on labor and development issues, and seek their Challenges Ahead feedback. The Bank also assisted the WCL with The past century has been marked by widening a recent conference in Budapest. External train- interational inequality between workers. The ing is another area that has recently started to past fifteen to twenty years have seen a rapid involve trade unions. In 1996, union leaders from advancement for large numobers of Asian work- five countries participated in an EDI course on ers but stagnation or decline for many in Sub- labor and development with employers and gov- Salharan Africa, Latin Amer ica, and the Middle ernment officials. East, and, most recently, the former centrally The Bank enjoys close cooperation with the plainned economies of Central Asia and Europe. ILO in which both institutions benefit. In addi- tion to regular informal discussions among offi- * The primary chalLenge is, and will continue to cials, the two institutions are close to completing be, a reversal of that long-run widening inequal- a joint study on obstacles to reform of vocational ity. The Bank wilL continue to assist governments education and training systems. A study on the in creating the right environment, in which work- labor market impact of export-processing zones ers will be able to make the job choices, negoti- is also in progress. In addition, the two institu- ate the conditions of work, and make the tions recently held a joint workshop on labor code schooLing decisions for their children that will reform in West Africa. improve the welfare of alL groups of workers. The aims are robust job crEation, rising produc- Lessons Learned tivity, and improvements in job quaLity. The Bank's lending experience andanalytical * International assistance will also remain vital in Thek Bank' lending markexarie s maned anaytil supporting the inclusion of all groups of work- svork n labr marets ar summrlzedm the ers in the global economy. The Bank will there- 1995 WDR, which stresses the potential benefits fre cntie its sportmto goernm in ther to wokersof geaterintenatinal itegrtion fore continue itS support to governments in their to workers of greater international integration efforts to establish frameworks for labor policy through freer trade and greater international capi- that complement informal and rural labor mar- tal mobility. Such benefits may accrue through kets, support an effective system of industrial employment and real wage gains but are more relations in the formnal sector, provide safeguards likely to be realized if workers and other economic for the vulnerable, and avDid biases that favor agents are responsive to the changes imposed by relatively well-off insiders. Union officials are globalization. The WDR recognizes that improved likely to participate increasingly in the Bank's labor standards may be desirable in poor coun- training and dissemination activities. tries and strongly opposes child labor and unequal Finaly, the role of key labor standards is likely treatment of minorities and disadvantaged to become more important internationally As groups. It notes, however, that most of the labor part of this process, the Bank plans to take a more force of developing countries lies outside the for- proactive role in the fight against intolerable mal sector so often does not benefit from labor forms of child labor. While details remain to be regulations, while excessive standards, if en- worked out, it is likely that the Bank will lend forced, may raise labor costs and reduce employ- directly to reduce harmful child labor incidence ment. Therefore, the WDR stresses the need to with the advice and assistance of other key in- help workers outside the formal sector through stitutions and support these loans with analyti- job creation schemes and other mechanisms. In cal work. With regard tc labor standards in transition economies, it notes the wrenching general, Bank procurement practices are under changes faced by many workers and recommends review to ensure that its lending meets such action in three areas: enhancing mobility, reduc- standards. CHAPTER 23 (chapter 30 of Agemit 21) Strengthening the Roles of Business and Industry T he private sector is a major driving force ated an Environmental Projects Unit in its Tech- behind economic growth and poverty al- nical and Environment Department to develop leviation in much of the developing world, and structure environmental projects. Despite its Moreover, there is strong reason to believe that rapid growth in recent years, however, in terms private companies, if given the proper incentives, of overall private investment, IFC is still small. will be friendlier to the environment than state- Its chief contribution and impact lie in acting as a owned monopolies, which they often replace. To catalyst to develop and implement a variety of enhance the role of the private sector in sustain- new financing mechanisms and to promote envi- able development, chapter 30 of Agenda 21 sup- ronmentally sustainable projects that other inves- ports initiatives to promote cleaner production, tors can replicate. more efficient resource use, waste minimization, The Bank is also examining ways to bring pub- and a healthier environment. It also encourages lic and private sector stakeholders and local com- a more dynamic private sector, emphasizing en- munities together to tackle specific environmental trepreneurship and small and medium-sized problems. To this end, the institution has been firms. Finally, it encourages the creation of ven- working closely with the World Business Coun- ture capital funds for sustainable development cil for Sustainable Development (WBCSD). It also projects and increased training in the environmen- works with other industry groups committed to tal aspects of enterprise management. the environment, both on an international basis such as the Prince of Wales Business Leaders Fo- Progress since Rio rum (PWBLF), or in a specific industrial sector, Since Rio, the World Bank Group has continued such as the International Council for Mining and to strengthen links with the business community the Environment (ICME). At the same time, the and with NGOs to support the expanding role of Bank is raising the level of dialogue with indi- the private sector in sustainable development. The vidual multinational companies to understand International Finance Corporation, the Bank their attitudes and approaches and to explore Group's primary nexus for private sector devel- areas of possible cooperation, such as training in opment and investment, has increasingly worked environmental management. Aided by informa- to integrate environmental issues with business tion sharing from the Bank and UNDP, the development. All projects in which IFC invests PWBLF is bringing together examples of corpo- must meet the World Bank Group's high environ- rate good practice in environmental and social mental standards and all local requirements. To aspects of development, which will provide a further increase its ability to invest in environmen- basis for informed discussion on how to imple- tally sustainable development, IFC recently cre- ment sustainable development concepts. In ad- 67 68 Advancing Sustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 dition, as part of an independent assessment of plified environmental management systems pat- its environmental procedures, IFC is reviewing terned after the systems of "mentor" companies the development aspects of its operations. These that have agreed to work with their suppliers. results will also contribute to this discussion. Another area of Bank activity in improving the To foster capacity for proactive environmen- performance of industry is the involvement of tal activity in small and medium-sized enter- environmental specialists in the process of priva- prises, a seminar on Ecoefficiency in the Textile tization of large and inefficient state-owned Sector was developed and pilot-tested by IFC, enterprises (SOEs). Badly run SOEs are often ma- with support from the IFC/European Commis- jor polluters. The introduction of new incentives sion Asia Trust Fund. There are plans to expand and new management provides an opportunity this training program to several countries and to reduce waste, improve productivity, and revi- industry sectors through a joint effort with the talize pollution control systems. Even without Bank. IFC has also developed an innovative specific attention to the environment, improve- workshop on Environmental Risk Management ments have been demonstrated to follow privati- for Financial Institutions. Over 265 financial in- zation. However, the inclusion of environmental stitutions have participated since 1993. A new concerns can both reduce investors' concerns week-long, intensive course emphasizing the about subsequent environmental liability, as with practical aspects of integrating environmental Bank involvement in the mining sector in Bolivia, management into a financial institution's opera- and identify rapid and cost-effective improve- tions has been successfully developed, also sup- ments that can be made, such as examples in ported by the IFC/EC Asia Trust Fund, and will heavy industry in Central Europe. soon be expanded. Another measure designed to improve private The Bank is playing a growing role in support- sector environmental performance concerns the ing agencies such as the Industry and Environ- Bank's work with national pollution control agen- ment Office of UNEP, a major proponent of cies to issue public ratings of companies accord- cleaner production, in promoting the implemen- ing to how well they protect the environment (see tation of cleaner production methods. The best box 23.1). The ratings are designed to reward example to date is in China, where a Bank tech- good performance and call public attention to nical assistance project has supported UNEP in polluters who are not in compliance. Armed helping environmental authorities set up a na- with this information, local communities can tional cleaner production system. The Bank is negotiate better arrangements with companies, documenting and promoting cleaner production firms with good performance can advertise their and ecoefficiency through its new Pollution Pre- st.atus and earn market rewards, investors can vention and Abatement Handbook (forthcoming better assess potential liability costs, and regula- 1997), which will require analysis of such oppor- tors can better focus limited resources. tunities for Bank industrial projects and has al- Environmental and developmental concerns ready attracted considerable interest from the provide win-win business opportunities. The private sector, particularly in the area of thermal Bank Group has proactively sought opportuni- power, ties to invest and mobilize capital for environ- The extension of the cleaner production ap- mental infrastructure projects, such as water proaches is the promotion of environmental s w management systems, such as International supply, wastewater management, solid and haz- Standardization Organization's IS014000, as a ardous waste management, and ecotourism mechanism to institutionalize good operational Caipital has been mobilized for major priva- practices. In addition to supporting govern- tizations and new treatment projects in Argen- ments' strerngthening the institutional infrastruc- tirna, Brazil, and Mexico. IFC and the Bank are ture for such systems, the Bank Group has been also providing advisory services in Argentina, exploring ways to use commercial relationships Brazil, Gabon, and the Philippines on privatiza- between large and small companies to introduce tion of water services (see chapter 14 on Fresh- good practices and environmental management water). systems. A pilot project has begun in Mexico to Awareness is growing that global environmen- involve small local companies in developing sim- tal problems such as climate change and biodi- Strengthening the Roles of Business and Induistry 69 Box 23.1 The PROPER method of pollution control A new approach to regulation in Indonesia and the can advertise their status and earn market rewards, in- Philippines is showing that local communities and vestors can more accurately assess environmental labili- market forces can be powerful allies in the struggle ties, and regulators can focus their limited enforcement against excessive industrial pollution. The two pro- resources on the worst performers. grams, called PROPER in Indonesia and EcoWatch in During its first two years of operation. PROPER has I the Philippines, have involved collaboration between proven quite effective in moving poor performers to- national pollution control agencies and World Bank ward compliance and motivating some firms to pursue staff to rate and publicly disclose factories' environ- excellent ratings. The first EcoWatch disclosure will mental performance. The ratings are designed to re- occur in Spring 1997, after a year of careful planning I ward good performance and call public attention to and consultation with NGOs, community leaders, and polluters who are not in compliance with regulations. industry associations. Inspired by these and other ex- Armed with this information, local communities can amples of public information in action, the Governments negotiate better environmental arrangements with of Colombia and Mexico are now moving rapidly to- 0 neighboring factories, finrm with good performance ward their own public disclosure programs versity loss will not be solved unless the private SMEs to leverage larger flows of private finance. sector adds its vast technical, managerial, and fi- The projects are conducted primarily through nancial resources to the effort. For this purpose, financial intermediaries, such as venture capital IFC has developed a portfolio of environmental funds or NGOs, which identify and appraise eli- investments that employ grant funds from the gible subprojects. Global Environment Facility, the Montreal Pro- tocol, and other donors to leverage much larger * Biodiversity Enterprise Fundfor Latin America (pr amounts of private sector investment. GEF pro- posed). IFC and private investors would bring vides grants, loans, and guarantees aimed at glo- together investment management expertise, sec- bal environmental issues, such as reduction of tor know-how, and capital to make these re- greenhouse gases and biodiversity conservation. sources available to medium-sized enterprises The Montreal Protocol provides grants to assist in sustainable forestry, ecotourism, and agricul- country-specific projects to phase out use of ture in South America. ozone-depleting substances. * Global Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Specific projects and investment funds man- Fund (proposed). This fund would provide and aged by IFC include: equity finance from private sector investors, IFC, * The Poland Efficient Lighting Program. Funded by and GEF to medium-sized and small projects. $5 million from GEF, six local manufacturers participated in this program designed to stimu- Lessons Learned late the Polish market for compact fluorescent lamps and luminaires through manufacturers' Progress in environmental sector investments has rebate and consumer education. After six been slower than anticipated for a number of rea- months of operation, nearly 350,000 compact sons. Primary is the difficulty in integrating pri- fluorescent lamps had been sold nationwide; the vate sector approaches with public sector goals. three-year goal is 1,000,000. Often, government policies must change before * Montreal Protocol projects. IFC approved the private sector will step in. Since 1996, there- Montreal Protocol grants totaling over $4.8 mil- fore, IFC and the Bank have emphasized public- lion to assist private sector firms in complying private partnerships to design investment projects with requirements for phasing out CFC use. Spe- and market transformation initiatives, as well as cifically, leading Turkish manufacturers of ma- the use of cofunding through GEF and Montreal terials for the cold storage industry and Protocol projects. From these collaborations, the Slovakian refrigerator and freezer manufactur- Bank Groupchs From two apoahes to ers will eliminate CFC use. Together, these pro- Bank Group has developed two approaches to grams will eliminate over 600 tons of CFC use overcome market barriers: per year. * Where necessary, to "buy down" the costs and * SmallandMedium-ScaleEnterprise(SME)Program. risks associated with sustainable business ven- This program funds GEF-eligible projects by tures with various measures, including conces- 70 Advancing Sustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 sional loans, credit guarantees, equity invest- "ecoefficient" project designs, and support leg- ments, or grants for technical assistance islative and policy frameworks that erode mar- * To use market transformation initiatives to stimu- ket barriers to sustainable development. late or "jump-start" market demand through re- * The IFC strategy in this sEctor will be to maxi- bates and consumer education programs, mize leverage of concessional funding from challenge grants, loans, and loan guarantees, as sources such as GEF and the Montreal Protocol with the Poland Efficient Lighting Project. GEF with private investment capital and IFC's own funds were also recently approved for a Photo- resources. This strategy increases the likelihood voltaic (PV) Market Transformation Initiative de- that projects can be replicated without further veloped by the Bank and IFC to accelerate the concessional support. In this effort, IFC is evalu- mtroduction of PV technologies in India, Kenya, ating various nongrant finaLncing methods to de- and Morocco. termine which instruments are most effective in catalyzing private capital Jlows. Challenges Ahead * Another future challenge is to encourage a con- The Bank Group is committed to encouraging the sultative process with key stakeholders, includ- privat,invest in environmentally d ing government, industry, NGOs, and other prvter psec o interested parties, to develop voluntary environ- mental and social guidelines for private sector investment. Such consultation could contribute * Key future challenges are to continue to demon- to a more stable and predictable investment cli- strate the financial viability of such investments, mate in developing countries and would demonstrate innovative financing approaches, complement governmeni efforts. The Bank build capacity in financial institutions to under- Group could act as a catalyst and a mediator in take environmental risk management, promote this process. CHAPTER 24 (chapter 33 of Agendtla 21) Implementing Financial Resources and Mechanisms Tr he effort to promote sustainable develop- Table 24.1 World Bank lending since Rio: a simple ment, most importantly in developing accounting of World Bank commitments, fiscal 1993-97 countries but in industrialized ones as well, Bilions cannot move forward without adequate re- Type of/ending of dollars Percent Total lending 108.4 100 sources. Investments in research, technology, Environment projects 8.4 8 infrastructure and social services are all necessary Win-win projects 26.0 24 to change how people pursue economic well- Category A projects 18.0 16 being in environmentally sustainable ways. At All other lending 56.0 52 the same time, issues such as the vast inequality Source: Environment Department, World Bank. between the wealthiest countries and the poor- est, as well as the transboundary nature of threats are benign to the environment while promoting to the environment, require effective international economic development. These win-win projects mechanisms to mediate among countries. In include population, education, health, and tar- recognition of these factors, chapter 33 of Agenda 21 geted poverty reduction projects. Third are the calls for the multinational agencies, including the so-called EA category A projects such as road or World Bank (IBRD), the International Development energy projects in which real tradeoffs may exist Association (IDA), and the Global Environment between protecting the environment and promot- Facility, to provide adequate resources to help real- ing economic development. Finally are all other ize the goals articulated in the rest of the document. programs-in agriculture, urban development, Chapter 33 also calls for all partners in the devel- economic adjustment, and the like, which contrib- opment process to pursue financing alternatives, ute positively to sustainable development if cor- such as debt swaps and tradable permits. rectly designed, but without proper care can damage long-term sustainability. Progress since Rio Table 24.2 provides a summary of both direct The years since Rio have been by far the most ac- lending and grant commitments, as well as the tive period for Bank lending, concessional finance amount of cofinance (from domestic governments through IDA, and implementation of the GEF and and the private sector, other multilateral institu- Montreal Protocol. A simple-and rough--envi- tions and bilateral aid agencies) making up the ronmental accounting of the Bank's total lending Bank's environment portfolio. since Rio is presented in table 24.1. Four types of Since Rio, combined lending, concessional fi- projects are identified. First are those specifically nance, and grants through the World Bank have targeted towards improving the environment (dis- totaled over $10 billion. This funding has lever- cussed below). Second are those that inarguably aged another $15 billion in cofinancing for a broad 71 72 Advancing Sustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 Table 24.2 World BanklGEF/MP environmental loans and grants, fiscal 1992-97 (millions of dollars) Concessional World Bank (IDA) Lending Cofinance Total Energy 0.0 329.0 74.9 403.9 Env. management 801.0 1,174.3 2,227.4 4,202.7 Institution buildmg 225.6 535.3 591.1 1,351.98 Nat resource mgmt. 540.2 303.0 449.3 1,292.5 Polluton abatement 280.7 2,660.4 5,225.0 8,166.1 Renewable energy 115.0 80.9 262.1 458.0 Urban environment 233.0 1,718.0 2,893.3 4,844.3 Subtotal 2,195.5 6,800.9 11,723.1 20,719.5 GEF Grant Cofinance Total Biodiversity 314.0 404.1 718.1 Climate change 355.5 2,793.9 3,149.4 International waters 104.0 127.1 231.1 Multiple focal areas 19.8 51.2 71.0 Ozone depletion 109.3 99.5 208.8 Subtotal 902.5 3,475.8 4,378.3 Montreal Protocol Grant Cofinance Total Ozone depletion 226.8 (n.a.) 226.8 Total 3,324.9 6,800.9 15,198.9 25,324.6 Source: Kirk Hamilton, Environment Department, World Bank. range of projects to support environmentally sus- ment, while reducing the dannaging environmen- tainable development. In addition, in 1996 the tal effects of excessive energy use. World Bank and the IMF agreed upon a debt re- Private sector participation (PSP) in water, lief initiative for highly indebted poor countries sewage, and electric generation has also been (HIPC). In coordination with actions by all credi- growing since Rio. While PSI? is not a panacea, it tors, an HIPC trust fund administered by IDA will does provide access to new technologies, better provide debt relief to eligible countries on debt management, and the implementation of a charg- owed to participating multilateral institutions. ing schema that permits increased access, Eligibility will be based upon commitments to improved maintenance of plant, and new invest- sustained improvements in economic manage- for expansion. The key to success lies in balancing the risks between public and private ment, as well as structural and social policy re- sectors and in enforcing environmental perfor- form on the part of recipient countries. mance standards. Another important area in which progress has been made since Rio and in which the Bank has Lessons Learned played a pivotal role is the effort to reduce fossil The financing provided by the World Bank fuel subsidies. Overall levels of fossil fuel subsi- T h in lendided the W ldrB through its own lending and the grant programs dies in developing countries, Eastern Europe, and it administers is just a portion of the total devel- Russia have declined from $115 billion in 1990/ opment assistance aimed at achieving sustainable 91 to $58 billion in 1995/96, with substantial (but development. The harsh fact is that overall levels difficult to measure) declines also likely in the of ODA as a share of GNP have been falling in other countries of the Former Soviet Union (see the developed world since Rio. The first lesson Expanding the Measure of Wealth, World Bank to be learned in the years sirnce Rio is that much 1997). This progress on subsidy reform has made of the finance for achieving the goals of Agenda an additional $57 billion available for develop- 21 will have to be found from local sources. Implementing Financial Resources and Mechanisms 73 Other lessons include the critical importance while increasing overall economic efficiency and of engaging the public in environmental projects reducing impacts on the environment Contin- and policies. In environmental projects, as in most ued progress must be made in this area. others, public participation and support are im- . Environmental taxation. An important part of the portant determinants of success. New experience agenda for reform is to move beyond reducing also shows that informing the public about envi- subsidies to taxing harmful products. While en- ronmental conditions and attendant dangers can vironmental taxes are generally most effective be a powerful impetus for polluters to change when applied directly to emissions, in many their ways, stimulating private finance for sus- cases this is not practical (for transport emissions, tainable development. for example), so taxing the input is second best. Expanding the scope of environmental taxes, Challenges Ahead including taxes on pollution emissions, provides * Partnerships. The simple act of making money not only cost-effective pollution reductions but available for new development projects will also a source of finance. never be enough to bring about sustainable de- * International greenhouse offsets. Expanded use of velopment. The quality of investment matters international offsets will play a growing role in at least as much as the quantity. So while the dealing with greenhouse warming. In this World Bank will continue to expand its environ- regard, the Costa Rican program of Certifiable mental portfolio, there will also be a growing Transferable Greenhouse Gas Emissions Offsets, emphasis on ensuring successful outcomes. The implemented through afforestation of degraded level of cofinancing for environmental projects agricultural lands, is an important innovation seen in table 2 speaks to the importance of part- that significantly reduces transaction costs. Off- nerships in the sustainable development busi- sets will provide the necessary finance for affor- ness. estation while giving emitting countries an affordable way to reduce net emissions. * Reduced subsidies. The scope for reforming sub- sidies that drain governments' treasuries and are For basic macroeconomic reasons, govern- harmful to the environment is considerable. ments everywhere are being forced to constrain Recent estimates place the level of subsidies to expenditure. In these times of fiscal restraint the fossil fuels, electricity, road transport, water, and issue of finance may be one of the most impor- agricultural inputs at over $200 billion per year tant motivations for embracing environmental in developing countries. Even reducing these taxes and other innovative, market-friendly subsidies by half would release considerable fi- approaches to protecting and enhancing the nancial resources for sustainable development, environment. CHAPTER 25 (chapters 36 and '37 of Agenida 21) Promoting Public Awareness, Education, and Capacity Building T o focus sufficient public attention on sus- ecosystem management, with a focus on the roles tainable development, broad-based efforts of science, economics, and Ilw. to educate and inform people are needed These annual ESD (now ESSD) conferences in both developing and industrialized countries. have been complemented by concurrent associ- Chapter 36 of Agenda 21 emphasizes the impor- atetd events and other conferences, many cospon- tance of these efforts for those involved in devel-sored with external partners. Over twenty such events have been held since Rio. Because of the opment. high level of expertise participating from outside Effective development requires strong cap- and inside the Bank, many of these events have ity on the part of beneficiary countries to man- le(d to published proceedings and papers that age new projects and integrate them in their have advanced of shared literacy on various as- economies. This is especially true for sustainable pects of ESD. These pub]ications have been development, where a failure to maintain and widely distributed outside the Bank to United upgrade technology or a breakdown in the in- Nations agencies, national commissions on sus- centive system necessary to capture externalities tainable development, NGC's, academia, the pri- can have dire consequences. Chapter 37 of vate sector, and the civil society. They are also Agenda 21 emphasizes the need to build domes- used by Bank staff, particularly the Economic De- tic capacity from the national to the municipal velopment Institute (EDI) and in the Learning and level and in tandem with nongovernment sectors. Leadership Center (LLC), as reference materials for training and education. Progress since Rio Capacity building is one of the main objectives To promote awareness of sustainable develop- of many Bank lending operations, including all To p e ee Bank-financed environmental projects. It is a cen- ment issues, in Fall 1993, the Bank convened its trail focus of lending desi gned primarily to first annual conference to address issues related strengthen environmental institutions. Since mid- to advancing environmentally sustainable devel- 1992, such Bank-assisted projects have been un- opment (ESD). The first conference, "Valuing the dertaken in countries as diverse as Benin, Chile, Environment," was followed in 1994, 1995, and Chtina, Colombia, The Gambia, Ghana, Hondu- 1996 respectively by conferences on "The Human ras, India, Indonesia, Korea, Morocco, Russia, and Face of the Urban Environment," "Effective Fi- Trimnidad and Tobago, together with previously nancing of ESD," and "Rural Well-Being: From approved operations in Brazil, Indonesia, Mada- Vision toAction." In 1997, the FifthAnnual World gascar, Mauritius, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, and Bank Conference on Environmentally and Socially Poland. In addition, as parl of or following on Sustainable Development will address the national regional, national, or subnational strategic plan- imperatives of global overlays, that is, global ning for the environment, the Bank, often in 74 Promoting Public Awareness, Education, and Capacity Building 75 partnership with other donors, has supported ing and in some cases equipment to schools to strengthening environmental management ca- participate in GLOBE. These schools will then pacity at the regional, provincial, and municipal/ become part of GLOBE's international network of urban levels in many client countries. Examples more than 2,000 schools in over forty countries. include the Pilot Program for Conservation of the Brazilian Rainforest, which the Bank administers Lessons Leamed on behalf of the G-7 countries; the Metropolitan . There is a continuing need to enhance quality and Environmental Improvement Program (MEIP) for effectiveness of sustainable development initia- Asia; and a new initiative known as MELISSA, tives building on the emerging lessons. There is or Managing the Environment Locally in Sub- also the need for flexibility. Careful evaluating Saharan Africa. and disseminating of what works and what does The Bank's policy requiring environmental not in projects under implementation and sys- assessment (EA) for Bank-financed projects with tematically feeding this information back into the potential adverse environmental impacts has design of new operations are important elements spurred domestic capacity building for EA in its in this process. Particular attention needs to be client countries. In countries in which EA capac- given to efforts to build institutional capacity for ity is weak, the Bank has helped to build capac- improved environmental management and sus- ity at both the national and sectoral levels and in tainable development more generally. both the public and private sectors. * Since 1992, approximately 100 countries have Capacity building is also the principal purpose completed environmental strategies or action of the Economic Development Institute. EDI as- plans, in many cases with Bank assistance. In sists the Bank and its borrowers to achieve the many ways, the process of these exercises has goals of poverty reduction and equitable, sustain- been more important than the product. Through able development by helping them to design and a participatory process, these planning exercises implement better policies and programs. EDI has have raised public awareness and have helped organized national and regional seminars and to develop domestic capacity to identify and workshops on many relevant areas for senior assess environmental problems and define pri- policymakers and development practitioners in ority actions. Bank member countries over the past five years. The Bank's ESD conferences have convincingly These areas include water policy reform, agricul- demonstrated the need to convene processes ture and forestry, urban and industrial manage- which link experts so that lessons learned and ment, social issues (for example, resettlement and knowledge can be shared, not only among the rehabilitation and social investment funds), and participants but also with others through spe- mainstreaming the environment. cific dissemination strategies. Such events af- As another part of the Bank's commitment to fect policy, inform a broader public to create a environmental awareness building, EDI recently shared literacy, and help enable the Bank, in part- launched the World Links for Development ("the nership with others, to respond to Agenda 21. WorLD") program to create on-line educational communities for secondary school students and teachers around the world. Students in develop- Challenges Ahead ing countries will be linked by the Internet and the Principal future challenges in the context of Bank World Wide Web with their peers in industrialized lending operations include using EA more effec- countries for collaborative distance learning. tively as a strategic planning tool at the policy, WorLD is working closely with GLOBE, a dis- sectoral, and regional levels; improving the envi- tance environmental education program founded ronmental and social assessment of investment under the leadership of U.S. Vice President Al alternatives; strengthening public involvement in Gore and funded through the U.S. National Oce- the EA process; and ensuring adequate implemen- anic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), tation and supervision of project-specific environ- National Aeronautics and Space Administration mental management plans. Even more important, (NASA), and the National Science Foundation however, is the need to continue to build and con- (NSF). In each country in which the WorLD pro- solidate EA capacity within the Bank's client gram connects schools, WorLD will provide train- countries. CHAPTER 26 (chapter 39 of Agenda7 21) Implementing International Legal Instruments and Mechanisms B y their nature, environmental problems Strengthening Legal and Institutional National often cross rational borders. Effective so- Capacities .D> lutions thus require an international re- Legal capacity is a key conmponent in ensuring sponse. In recognition of this, chapter 39 of souand and sustainable deveLopment. The Bank's Agenda 21 calls for increasing technical assistance project design and technical assistance activities to developing countries in the field of environ- address this concern by seeking to enhance the mental law as well as negotiating new instruments scope, content, and capacity of existing national and mechanisms based on "both universal prin- frameworks. The Bank also helps strengthen the ciples and the particular and differentiated needs institutional capabilities of borrowing countries and concerns of all countries." through free-standing environmental projects and/or as components of other loan and credit Progress since Rio projects. In this context, the Legal Department has helped a large number of countries produce Since 1992, greater seriousness has been attached framework and sectoral legislation to support to environmental issues and sustainable develop- natural resources base and pollution control. ment. The Rio conference prompted the negotia- The Bank also assists in reviewing the involve- tion and adoption of a large number of new global ment of countries in international environmen- and regional environmental conventions. It also tal agreements to help reinforce their capacity to placed at the forefront of the international envi- implement the agreements. For example, the ronmental agenda the need to ensure the effec- Bank assisted in a comprehensive review by the tiveness of the wide range of international RuLssian Federation and other states of the Former instruments already in place. Soviet Union (FSU) of their participation in in- In its role, the Bank focuses on identifying and ternational environmental agreements. addressing difficulties that prevent states, devel- The development of a legal and institutional oping countries in particular, from participating framework for the involvement of local commu- in or properly implementing international instru- nities in environmental management and the fi- ments. This task is accomplished in partnership nancing of microenvironraental projects are with other universal and regional international additional examples of Bank activities aimed at organizations such as Food and Agriculture Or- strengthening the ability of stakeholders to imple- ganization of the United Nations, United Nations ment environmental agreemrents. Development Programme, United Nations En- vironment Programme, and United Nations Implementing International Conventions Institute for Training and Research (UNITAR) as As an implementing agency for the GEF and well with the private sector, foundations, NGOs, Ozone Trust Fund projects, the Bank contributes and other communities. to the implementation of some of the most im- 76 Implementing International Legal Instruments and Mechanisms 77 portant Multilateral Environmental Agreements biological resources and to develop networks to (MEA), such as the Montreal Protocol and the exchange and use environmental information. Framework Convention on Climate Change. In The purpose is to support sustainable develop- this context, the Bank has assisted a number of ment and help the countries of the Congo Basin countries in phasing out ozone-depleting sub- ecosystem implement the biodiversity conven- stances (ODS) and adopting new cost-effective, tion. A memorandum of understanding will regu- CFC-free technologies. To facilitate grant dis- late cooperation among the six Congo Basin Rain bursements in this area, the Bank has established Forest Countries (CBRFC) to implement the the Umbrella Agreement mechanism, which re- project. duces the contractual arrangements for disburs- ing funds to the recipient countries. Lessons Learned The Bank is also an implementing agency for To implement international legal instruments, a GEF-financed project, the West Africa Pilot there is a crucial need to strengthen domestic in- Community-based Natural Resources and Wild- stitutional and regulatory capacities. Building life Management Project, which involves Burkina regional cooperation will also help to address Faso and C6te d'Ivoire. The Bank has been help- regirenationmwllalsobheltovdrs rtransboundary environmental objectives. ing these two countries develop bilateral coop- International instruments have become more eration to better address wildlife management and more complex, with far-reaching objectives. along their shared border and prepare domestic They require that sophisticated innovative poli- legislation to improve national capacity to man- cies and mechanisms be put in place. The meth- age natural resources. ods to be used (command and control/economic The Bank has also helped implement legal in- instruments) must reflect the local economic and struments to protect international waters. The social milieu within which they operate. GEF-financed and Bank-administered Ship- Public participation and dissemination of in- Generated Waste Management Project provides formation are key components to ensure moni- support for the ratification and effective toring and compliance with legal instruments at implementation of the International Convention the local, national, and international levels. for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships (MARPOL 73/78) Convention, which regulates Challenges Ahead ship-generated waste. As a direct result of the project, each of the countries has adopted cost Implementation of international instruments re- recovery legislation including a fee on cruise ship quires still more thought, and much remains to passengers. The GEF-financed and Bank-admin- be achieved. There is still a quest for grassroots istered Wider Caribbean Initiative for Ship-Gen- effectiveness and sustainable implementation of erated Waste has assisted countries in the these instruments. Attention needs to be given to development of model MARPOL legislation. A voluntary compliance through legislation and joint project among Algeria, Morocco, and Tuni- regulation as well as to building capacity to moni- sia is another example of a GEF-financed and tor and enforce legal instruments. Bank-administered project requiring the de- Bringing Agenda 21 to the domestic level re- velopment of legislation to implement MARPOL. quires the "localization" of international obliga- tions. Technical assistance should be many-fold Building Expertise and Access to Information (including investment projects, training, and edu- Legal components in a number of Bank projects cation) to give treaties and conventions practical aim at capacity building initiatives to build ex- meaning in everyday life in borrowing countries. pertise and increase access to information. The Capacity building remains a challenge. Insti- Regional Environmental Information Manage- tutions and legislation are pillars to ensure sus- ment Project (REIMP) in the Congo Basin is work- tainable development. They should reflect local ing to identify and compile existing data on conditionsbasedonallstakeholders'participation. APPENDIX Acronyms and Abbreviations ADB Asian Development Bank AdL Aguas de Limeira AFDB African Development Bank AFR Africa Region AFTES Africa Technical Environmentally Sustainable Development Division AIDS acquired immune deficiency syndrome AIJ activities implemented jointly CAS Country Assistance Strategy CBD Convention on Biological Diversity CBRFC Congo Basin Rain Forest Countries CDC Centers for Disease Control CESP Country Environment Strategy Papers CFCs chlorofluorocarbons CGAP Consultative Group to Assist the Poorest CGIAR Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research $ current U.S. dollars EA Environmental Assessment EBRD European Bank for Reconstruction and Development EC European Commission ECA Europe and Central Asia Region ECD Early Child Development EDI Economic Development Institute EGCG External Gender Consultative Group EIB European Investment Bank ENVLW Land, Water, and Natural Habitats Division ENVPE Pollution and Environmental Economics Division ESD Environmentally Sustainable Development (in 1997 became Environmentally and Socially Sustainable Development (ESSD)) ESDAR Agricultural Research and Extension Group EU European Union 78 Acronyms and Abbreviations 79 FAO Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations FCCC United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change FMTI Forest Market Transformation Initiative FSU Former Soviet Union GDP gross domestic product GEF Global Environment Facility GHG greenhouse gas GNP gross national product GOB Government of Brazil GWP Global Water Partnership ha hectare HIPC Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Program HIV human immunodeficiency virus IBRD International Bank for Reconstruction and Development ICFTU International Confederation of Free Trade Unions ICME International Council for Mining and the Environment ICZM Integrated Coastal Zone Management IDA International Development Association IDB Inter-American Development Bank IDF Institutional Development Fund IFAD International Fund for Agricultural Development IFC International Finance Corporation ILO International Labour Organisation IMF International Monetary Fund IMSC Inter-Ministerial Steering Committees ISO International Standardization Organization IUCN World Conservation Union (formerly International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources) LLC Learning and Leadership Center MARPOL 73/78 International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships MBI market-based instrument MDP Municipal Development Programme MEA Multilateral Environrnental Agreements MEIP Metropolitan Environmental Improvement Program MELISSA Managing the Environment Locally in Sub-Saharan Africa MENA Middle East and North Africa Region METAP Mediterranean Environment Technical Assistance Program MFI multilateral financial institution MFMP Multilateral Fund for the Montreal Protocol MIGA Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency MP Montreal Protocol MTI Market Transformation Initiative NASA National Aeronautics and Space Administration NEAP National Environmental Assessment Plan NGO nongovernmental organization 80 Advancing Sutstainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 NIPA, Inc. Filipino NGO consortium NOAA National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration NSF National Science Foundation OD Operational Directive ODA official development assistance ODS ozone-depleting substances OECD Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development OP Operational Policy PPA participatory poverty assessment PROPER Program for Pollution Control, Evaluation, and Rating PRTR Pollution Release and Transfer Register PSP private sector participation PV photovoltaic PWBLF Prince of Wales Business Leaders Forum REIMP Regional Environmental Information Management Project SAGA West Africa Social and Gender Analysis training prograrr SCD Swiss Development Cooperation SCT Social Challenges of Transition database SIDA Swedish International Development Authority SME Small and Medium-Scale Enterprise Program SPMA Sao Paulo Metropolitan Area STD sexually transmitted disease UNCED United Nations Conference on Environment and Development UNCHS United Nations Centre for Human Settlements (Habitat) UNDP United Nations Development Programme UNEP United Nations Environment Programme UNESCO United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organisation UNHCR United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees UNICEF United Nations Children's Fund UNIDO United Nations Industrial Development Organisation UNITAR United Nations Institute for Training, and Research UNSTAT United Nations Statistical Office WBCSD World Business Council for Sustainalble Development WCL World Confederation of Labor WDR World Development Report WHO World Health Organization WorLD World Links for Development IProgram WRI World Resources Institute WWC World Water Council WWF World Wildlife Fund 10 Enabling the Safe Use of Biotechnology: Principles and Practice 11 Biodiversity and Agricultural Intensification: Partnersfor Development and Conservation 12 Rural Development: From Vision to Action (forthcoming) 13 Integrated Pest Management: Strategies and Policiesfor Effective Implementation 14 Rural Finance: Issues, Design, and Best Practices (forthcoming) 15 The Economics of Involuntary Resettlement (forthcoming) 16 Social Assessmentsfor Better Development: Case Studies in Russia and Central Asia 17 Expanding the Measure of Wealth: Indicators of Environmentally Sustainable Development 18 Five Years After Rio: Innovations in Environmental Policy 19 Advancing Sustainable Development: The World Bank and Agenda 21 Related ESD Publications Monitoring Environmental Progress: A Report on Work in Progress Nurturing Development: Aid and Cooperation in Today's Changing World Toward Sustainable Management of Water Resources Water Supply, Sanitation, and Environmental Sustainability: The Financing Challenge The World Bank Participation Sourcebook | n * - * - 3 9 7 4 9 780821 339749