179Y38 - ~~~~~~~~Volunme onre * T HE 'UR BARN R AGE Em - - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~Sepilernber 1992l U R B A N E N V I R O N M E N T I S S U E Cities and UNCED: Broadening the Environmental Debate or two weeks in June representatives from 172 countries de- states that "Urban growth has IH THIS ISSUE scended on Rio de Janeiro. Brazil, to attend the United Nations outstripped society's capacity to ,, , ... . - Conferencc on Environment and Development (UNCED)- meet human needs. enslaving ostensibly the biggest and grandest intemational mcecting of al1 hundreds of millions of people , time. Scattered among as many as a dozen different vcnues- without adequate incomes. diets. , ranging from the imposing Rio Centro to the beaches at housing and services." Chapter , Flamengo Park-an assortment of presidents. prime ministers, 1 8 alludes to the necd for "spe- technocrats, and activists argued their case for a better environ- cial attention" to be given to the U ment. staging a media evcnt worthy of thie world's attention, growing effects of urbanization . f Citics. left out of much of the formal debate leading up on water demands and usage. to UNCED, emerged from the event with a mixed but optimistic And Chapter 28 is devoted scorecard. In the past two years no less than 13 mcetings had been totally to the role of local au- held among city representatives to raise the profile of urban issues on thorities in successfully imple- El'TMENTS the UNCED agenda. Support for addressing urhan environmental menting the document's action problems ranged from the "Melbourne Declaration" signed in October plans. In addition. in mobilizinga 1990 to the "Curitiba Commitment" endorsed just days prior to the support among mayors and other UNCED meeting. Each contained the same themes: that the world's locally elected officials. UNCED growing urban populations needed attention; that local authorities- raised the environmnental debate as the representatives of government closest to the people-are most to a political level-a level -E able to take concrete actions on the environment: and that cities are essential for securing long-term as integral parts of the solution to the global environmental crisis. commitments to urban environ- In getting their concems onto the official UNCED agenda- mental improvements. localities succeeded. Agenda 21, one of five official documents The lack of fuiding pledged brought before UNCED (see box, The Scorecard at UNCED) contains by national govemments for two chapters dealing specifically with urban issues, but referetices to intemational efforts to canry out urban environmental problems are mentioned throughout. Chaptcr 6 the action plans outlined in Agenda 21 makes such political commitmients seem even more important. Under the draft of Chapter 33 The iew Urban Rge: - - of Agenda 21. the World Bank was recognized as pledging a portion of l its net profits in future years as part of an "Earth Increment" within IDA - ~Wewoudidike to welcome our readers to lleiltlilrb ewhich seeks to- for environmental projects in the world's poorest countries. Additional become an excitin- and timely forurm for-information exchange and debate on funds are also likely to be forthcoming for the Global Environment urban issues-in the developiag world,. Our hope is that Tle IttrWt1l1 will evolve Facility (GEF) executed by the United Nations Dcvelopmnent Programme into-a truly responsive, irteractive vehicle for its readers. More than 7,000 (UNDP), the World Bank, and the United Nations Environment copies of the premi'ere issue have been sent to practitioners, researchers, and Programme (UNEP). But the fact remains that resources devoted academics from around the world. We look forward to receiving your exclusively to urban environmental projects and those perhaps most- comments, which are crucial to setting the form and content of the new likely to involve neighborhood and cofiiiunity groups in smail-sc:ilc. newsltter .ile is an indep- ndent jou-nal gove:ned .y an i -ternational grssroots efforts. were overlooked by UNCED. It will be up to local -g Oedtio Dge is ani independent journal governed by an intrmational govcrnments to provide most of the needed resources. in conjunctionS editorial board. Finanicia support Is provided by the conor commninuty.-.. Development funds have'been provided'by the UNDP-UNCHS (Habitat)- with a hopefully expanded pool of iterational funds. World Bank Urban-Management Programme and the World Bank. Each issue will focus on- one siibstantive topic, and regular departments will explore BROADENING THE AGENDA I community-based activities, innovative strategies amnong city managers, and controversial issues. A guest editorial, question and answer interviews, Yet perhaps more important than financial commitments was the literature-reviewt, and a calendar-of urban events wiL be regular features. In broadening of the environmental debate to include those issucs most future issues, a majority of articles will be written from the field. crucial to people living in the developing world's cities. panricularly In this issue we explore the urban environment. We need vour help in the poor. Clean water and adequate sanitation. urban smog. indoor air identifying suitable topics, events, and initiatives in the developing world for our pollution, and improper drainage affect millions of urban dwellers, next issue, which will focus on urban entrepreneurs. Please let us hear from you. resulting in 3 million deaths a year among children from diarrhea alone. continried on po,m,ge 6 * S i; \:5X18- ------- ----------------- 6ani6Wa @E A Developing World View: Post UNCED P 'M byAnilAgarwalandSunitaNarain hftqlurm Anil Agarwal is the director of the Centrefor Science a nd the Environment in New Delhi, Inlia. He hias been deeply involved with developing Southern positions on UNCED. Swuita Narain works willt himn at the center. The worldwide conciousness about the environment is now demanding action. And Rio was an This issue of TOP ME is fundWd by important staging post in this global effort to set up a framework for future action. In many ways, the the Daiish Agency for framework set up in Rio is extremely inimical to the long-term interests of the South and gocs counter to Intemational Development. the the norms of equity and justice. Federation of Canadian If Rio proved anything, it is that we now live in a global community. This has beeti so for some time. Municipalities, and the World especially with the growth of the world market system and the fact that the world's rich. including the elite Bank. Development funding for of the South, have increasingly become global consumTers. But since the market is a sclf-serving system the newsletter has been p built on values of competition and personal ambition and greed, this subject has no moral element in it by the UNDP-UNCHS(Habitat)- World Bank Urban Management which can be exploited to push the argument of a global communitv. The Southemn elite could only be Programme and The World Bank, criticized for corruption and extreme inefficiency, which indeed ist has been repeatedly. But the environmental argument has now given the North precisely the morality it has been seeking to push __ a a aits economic and political concems. This globalization process means that no country is immune from the mistakes of others. For example. if Malaysians and Brazilians mistreat their indigenous people, a forest con- Jeb Brugmann vetit to globalizc thc management of forests will be pushed through for all developing countries. ]CLEI -Toronro, Canada In addition. the North has proposed an extremely tnfair and inequitable framework for environmental action. The framework, as it stands today, consists of the following elements. First. the Nonh will not Charles Correa. discuss or negotiate the past, that is. the past is past. It means that the Nonh is not prepared to accept any Bombay, India responsibility for past damage in the sense of liability. Zsuzsa Daniel Second, all of us are now being asked to get together to solve ecological problems one by one, as they Research Institute of fhe emerge. Apart from the thorny issue this raises of unfair demands on the South for "burden sharing'-that Hungarian Ministry of Finance is, the sharing of the burden of change for problems that the South has not created-this approach also Budapest, Hungary raises questions about which problems we should try to solve first. Why o7.one layer depletion or climate Mainadou Diop change or biodiversiy conservation? Why not the international financial system or the Germs of trade or Dakar Communtry Council povcrty, all of which have deep linkages with the environmental problems of the South? The North is thus Dakar, SenegaI choosing the problems it wants the world to work on. - : - Third, if the North has to pay anything, it is only sc, because of its "capability"-a word accepted and Nigel Harris used even in the climate treaty. In other words, the North has the moncy and technology. the two elements Development Planning Unit needed to make the change. and hence it is prepared to provide aid to the South for dealing with global London, England environmental problems. The North does not want to pay as a matter of "liability"' or as automatic trans- Aprodicio Laquian fers resulting from a worldwide system of financial incentives of good environmental behavior and disin- UBC Centre for Human Settlements centives for bad environmcntal behavior. The sum total of all this is that the North cannot be fined for its Vancouver, Canada disastrous behavior, but the South must beg for its generosity in the future. Jaime Lemer Preeiturauniciral :- SOUTH ACCEPTANCE OF FRAMEWORK Prefeitura Municipal Curitiba, Brazil The South has supinely accepted this framework. An1, not surprisingly, the moment it accepted this Akin Mabogunje framework, it got ridiculed for its audacity. Its counterproposal to the Global Environmenm Facility, the Green Ibadan, Nigeria Fund. has been described as the Greed Fund. and the entina Rio exercise has repeatedly been dubbed a cheque- book writing exercise. Nobody ever said that the UNCED was a bill-paying exercise. The Westemn media and IaLme VaenzuelaD NGOs have repeatedly described the South as super-beggars with unreasonably high expcctations. The figure Quito, Ecuador of $125 billion a year being needed for sustainable development in the form of external assistance was produced by the UNCED Secretariat and not by the South. But this is what the South got continued on page 5 Po Amif Hasan Karachi, Pakistan We welcome Your romments, thoughts, and criticims onfilture issues of lltbtt lIt. HildaHerzer ; :: -t I would like to say what an the rapid changes going on in thc Seccional de Antioquia Centro Estudios Socialesy excellent idea it is to form a new woTld. Colombia BuensAies.,Argentina and expanded newsletter... I will encourage the Urban Health Pro- Enc Tudzi My compliments and best wishes Peter.Swan grammememberstocontributeto Kumasi. Ghana forsuccess with your new publica- UNCHS, Nairobi, Kenya, your new publication, and I look tion. I would suggest that you in- forward to receiving she first copy. Theideasand itnovationsyou clude special issues on the urban _ tm i lili , a plan to present in your new news- infornal sector. poor urban women Dr. Trudy Harpham letterwill present an important fact: andchild labor, and voluntary non- Editor Head o Prorxmc that by combining the use of re- governiental organizations. Mary McNeil sLodooScoouofHyien ad s with experience gained :London SchoTol ofi Hygieneand from others in different parts ofthe Dr. S.K.G. Sundaram Distribution Tropical Medicine world we can design better solu- Professor and Head Consuelo Powell I would like to congratulate the tions to problems facing Colom- Department of Economics Editorial Offices editorialboard and all those bchind batoay. Shreemati Naithibai Damodar Room S10-107, The World Bank the Urban Age. I believe it is a step Bemnardo A. Rendon. Thackersey 1818 H Street NW, Washington in the right direction considering Asociacion Colombianade (Women's University) D.C.20433 'nPeriodistas Bombay. India THE URBRH RGE September 1992 Tianjin: Towards an Irnproved Urban Environment by Josef Leitnaznn The third largest city in China, Tianjii is an industrial powerhouse Environmcntal Protection Office, the Environmental Protection that piays a leading role in the country's economy. With a metropoli- Propoganda and Education Center, and the Natuntl Preservation Zone tan population of roughly 8.7 million and a gross industrial output of Administrative Office. More than 80 pcrcent of theTEPB's budget $14.3 billion, the city accounts for 3 percent of China's national comes from locally collected discharge fees, with the remainder coming industrial output. Located near the three most economically powerful from fimes. local taxes, central govemment grants, and contracts. regions of China-the energy-rich Shanxi basin, the industries of Liaoning, and the rapidly developing Yangtze delta region-its NAKING USE OF INNOVATIONS growth has been unavoidably linked to environmental factors. Air and water pollution, environmental health problems, and a deteriorating A number a lanwasive approaches to protecting the environment housing stock have plagued the city and led to major efforts to stem have been used by the municipality over the past 15 years. For example, the tide of environmental degradation. environmental considerations have been formally integrated into the Among the city's achievements has been an improvement in the planning process; air, water, and noise targets are established and en- municipaiity's air quality and in other environmental conditions. forced based on the ecological features, geographic characteristics, and Despite rapid industrial growth and an increase in motorized vehicles economic development of the city's three municipal zones. Regulatory during the 1980s. average daily values for all major air pollutions have and economic instruments are used to enforce compliance with these declined since 1982. The municipality now disposes of most of its standards. A discharge fee and pollution control fund have been set up solid waste in sanitary landfills or has it composted. Overall, Tianjin' s into which noncompliance fees are deposited from businesses that cmit environmental quality is ranked fourth among China's cities. airpollutants, waste water, and solid wastes. Eighty percent of collected fees are placed in the fund and returned to businesses in the form of LONG-TERM EFFORTS PAY OFF concessional loans and grants to finance pollution control investments. Efforts to protect Tianjin's environment began as early as the ENVIRONMENTAL WORK TO CONTINUE 1 950s. Since then, more than 46 organizations at or above the county level have been created to focus on environmental problems. mostly The municipality is now aL work on improving institutional under the umbrella ol the Tianjin Municipal Environmental Protection capacity and increasing investments in environmental works. The Bureau (TEPB). Li Rihuan, Tianjin's former municipal mayor, during TEPB plans to create a Technical Development Center for Pollution his tenure in office was able to mobilize different sectors within the Control that will focus on techniques for environmental management, community to support environmental improvements. Focusing engineering design, environmental analysis, and staff training. principally on reconstruction and infrastructure after a devastating With regard to investments, the city has launched a Tianjin Urban earthquake racked the region in 1976, Rihuan mobilized financial Construction Plan for 1991-1995 that envisions rebuilding 0.9 kIn' of resources from businesses and govemment bureaus to support large the city proper. The plan includes provisions for developing new public works projects. At the same time, efforts to build institutional water resources through building a water works, expanding an existing and financial capacity for ongoing environmental management were reservoir and constructing a new nver project. An urban-suburban launched. drainage system will expand coverage to the municipality, as will a The TEPB, for example. has more than 800 staff responsible for new sewage system (expected to bring coverage up to 55 percent). formning local environmental policies, developing local environmental Investments are also planned to upgrade the city's transportation standards, supervising pollution prevention and control programs, system through better road and traffic management, more buses, and enforcing regulations and penalities, and monitoring environmental an additional subway line. Expansion of the city's district heating quality. Individual departments cover planning and finance, law and system is planned, as well as the construction of a new coal-to-gas policy, .science and technology, water qualicy, atmospheric pollution. plant. [ protection of nature, monitoring. supervision of effluent charges and penalties, inspection, and education. Some staff work directly for the -lsefLeitnann is on urban planner, specializing in arba,t environmen,al TEPB: others for related agencies such as the Environmental Protection issuesflor the UaVDP- UNCHS (Habitat)- Wor ridBank Urban Monagemenc Service Institution, the Environmental Monitoring Center, the Techno- Programme. He is also the Bank-based tewn leader of the progron. logical Development Center for Environmental Protection, the Marine Building Capacity for Environmental Management in Tanzania by Rasna Warah One of the greatest challenges for urban development practitioners is to tional frameworks, weak management capacities, inadequate cost ensure that cities and towns remain both economicaUy and environren- recovery, anid insufficient political will and public awareness." This tally sustainable. Typically, cities and towns produce more than one-half research was undertaken by the Environment Component of the UMP. In of a country's national output. In the developing countries, they absorb developing countries, these shortcomings are aggravated by a lack of two-thirds of the total population increase. Rapid urban expansion has led resources and insufficient investment in infrastructure on the one hand, to environmental problems such as degraded natural resource bases, and the inability of local govemments to effectively plan, coordinate, and which not only cause serious health and social risks but also pose major manage cities on the other. obstacles to sustained economic growth and development. Recognizing these underlying causes, a new approach to urban Although urban expansion has been blamed for a host of ills, it is by management is being taken in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania This approach. no means the primary cause of urban environmental deterioration. spearheaded by the Sustainable Cities Program (SCP), recognizes that According to research conducted by the Urban Management Programme participatory management, coupled with an integrated approach that (UMP), ajoint effort of UNCHS (Habitat), The United Nations Develop- involves technical, adrministrative, and political consensus building is ment Programme (UNDP), and the World Bank, the underlying causes essential to ensure both sustainable development and environmental of environmental degradation and the resulting costs to public health and improvements. "We feel that planning is notjust a technical exercise, but productivity can he traced to "inappropriate economic policies, inad- a process that involves negotiating rules arnong the equate investment in pollution controL deficient regulatory and institu- continued on page 8 > THE URRRH R6E Septrember 1 ,400 NGOs Attend Global Forum It began with a Viking ship. Samba dancin.g. and singe r two years. More than 50 Japanese NGOs were represented at the Jimnmy Cliff. Crowded onito the beach at F]amengo Park. Global Foruin even thoug-h in Japan the NGO movement is relatively participants danced and sang as James Bond (alias Roger young. At any givcn day at the Global Forumn no less than 50 differcnt Moore) pleaded with photographers to step back from the groups were giving presentations. Exhibitors ranged fromi the Associa- .stage- Overhead, hel icopters buzzed the beach and a giant tion of Bulgarian Ecologists to the Acupuncture Institute of Rio de balloon witha± large water drop painted on its side was Janciro. inflated as a symbol of enivironmental goodwill. The launch of the Speakers included Jacques Cousteau, who told a packed house in Global Forum '92 in Rio de Janeiro--despitc the media hype- the open speakers' tent that. "rhe [environnientall problems that arc was an event few inivolved in the environmental miovement wanted to going to be the miost difficult to solve are those that affect our daily miss, After years of gainiing political momentum, environmental habits. We need to reorganize ecology as a discipline, to spread the ggrass-roiots activists Finally took their place in the sun. Together, they ecological spirit to everyone." The crowd waitine for Cousteau to crammed onto the stage with an assortment of diplomats, elected speak had been :io thick that his talk had to be delayed while or.ganiz- officials, and intemnational civil servants to lend legitimacy to the ers chisled a path into the tent for the 80 year-old oceanographer. Global For-umi and hind it inextricably to the official UNCED meeting The events at Flamengo Park, in all their diversity and openness, hein- held 40 kiloimeters to the south. underscored the fact that the environment is essentially a democratic For thie more than 17,000 people who attended the forum during concern. Air. wiLter. and soil are, as one participant noted, common thc following two weeks, the evenit was a chance to express a different denominators in most people's lives whether they live in Tanzania or approach to the issues being discussed at Rio Centro. In agreeing to 39 Thailand. Because environmental problems are often so apparent, thiey treaties of their- owni, participants in the forumi provided a human invite a variety tf reactions, creating both a commonality of effort anid underpinning to the official UNCED discussions. As one participant a wide range of points of view. The Global Forum showed that pe-ople noted, the forum- was less concerned with money and more concerned are organizing to act on these points of view as they never have with changing policies anid institutions-, less interested in the wording before. Both international development agencies and nlational govern. of conventions and more interested in chang-ing the attitudes of ments are beginniing to recognize the need for openness. collaboration. childrenl; less worried about technological solutions and more worried and accountability before such a large and vocal constituency. about mobilizing- people to change their daily lives. "NGOs encourae a new kind of citizen participation and interac- Thec schizophrenia of the events at Rio carried another important tion," said one participant at the forum, "for there to be real change [ini themie-that the t-shirt crowd at one end of town was a mnajor reason the environment] "people have to star-t doing things differently." Many behind the gathering, of suits 33 miles away. More than most issues. NGOs believe that action at the ground level is the only way to ensure tIne environmental debate-and its rising protile on the global that legislation passed at higher levels will take effect. "It is true that agenda-has been the result of the growing power and diversity of the at Flamengo Park we will have events and at Rio Centrol. the deci- world's grass-roots environmental movements. sions," Wrote Gerson da Cunha in a column in the Earth Summit For example, the Brazilian NGO Forum, which had relatively few Times, a daily newspaper published throughout UNCED, "~But any- memibers several years ago, listed between 1.200) and 1.500 members body who sees them as separate and distinct only has a shallow at the time of UNCED and had held eight national meetings in the past understanding of' what lies ahead." THE UP8fl RR *~~~~~~~~1 ......I,, World View R Conversation With Jaime Lernef 1ion,page' 2 R pilloried tor the South has only one option in this entire North-South Curitiba mayor Jaime Lerner was intcrviewed by the editor ofTtelIatRte debate. It has never had much economic or political power. It can only during the World Urban Forum in Curitiba, May 28. have moral power. if anything. This too it can get oniy if it does two things. Onc, set its own housc in order. It must now be seen to be doing UA: What do you see as the most important follow-up to the World Urban t:e good things, like taking care of its poor and its environment. It must Forum; how will you judge these meetings to be a success? be green and good on its human rights record. Tihis is crucial. JL:Since the first meetings, from one declaration to another we are improving This will mean a call for major greening and anti-povcrty programs, our position. I think the window of opportunity the conferences have especially through fmass mnobilization. And the faster Southern resources given us to present local programs is very important. can get managed, owned. and controlled by local communities, the better it will be for the environment. This will also provide greater strength to UA: What role do you see cities playing on the global agenda? tte South to ward off the gLobalization proccss. It is legally questionable, for instance. whether the Indian state can iiegotiate a global forest JL: We now know that 80 or 90 percent of global environmental problems arc convention with respect to the forests of the northcast, which are constitu- related to local problems in cities-it is local action that must be provided tionally owned by local tribal councils. The situation will be similar to for global survival. Many people ask me how they can work toward that in industrialized countries who repeatedly argue that thcy cannot improving the environment, and I always say not to try to fight against prumise technology transfer, as technology is owned by individuals and global warmning or protecting the ozone layer, but to do things right here corporatiotis undcr their legal system. and now, small things, that can make a difference such as using your car And two. at the intemational level, the South must be prepared to less or separating your garbage. take Ihc moral high ground, whore it must make it crystal clear that it is UA. You have undenaken a lot of innovative actions regarding the not looking for any money whatsoever. It should Lask for nothina less environrnent in Curitiba, but Curitiba is a city of roughly 2 million people. than systeiii changes in the world's political and financial systems so that How do you transfer these innovations to the megacities of the developiiig fe:ir and equitable systems of environmental discipline can be enforced world? Fcr all, including the South. The argument that the rich must pay their ecological bills must ring out loud and clear. And in this process. the JL: It is not a question of scale. it isa question of mentality. You have to South should make it clear that if it gets anything, well and good, but have the political will and to believe that your problems are not so big orherwvise it docs not want a penny more. thfat you should do nothing; the problem is you really can change. We have to rediscover the city as an instrument of change. lam convinced GLOBAL ECONOMIC SYSTEM that every city could do the same, no matter what its size, whether it is a third world city or a fuist world city. The South must also expose how the international economic system UA: How do you motivate the people in your cities to follow your today devalucs its resources and environment. Most developing coun- innovations? What is the key to mobilizing political support? tries are now bcing forced to restructure their economies under the d.ctates of the International Monetary Fund (IMF). But devaluation of a JL: With the garbage program we began with the children. We have currency is not the devaluation of pieces of paper. It is the devaluation of environmental education in all the municipal schools and for six months the entire natural resource base of a country. Extemal dollaus can buy before cbildren even begin to attend the schools. We have tried to have more resources of a devalued country. Surely. when almost the entire a schedule for every family as to when the garbage is to be collected. c vironmerit of the South is being forced into devaluation. the North Once a week, a green truck with a beUl comes by your home, and everyone cannot ask the South within a forum like UNCED to start valuing its in the city knows what day this is. Every child in the city knows from this natural resources. This contradiction is patently unjust and unfair and attitude they can save a few trees. I think when people understand the must be exposed. In addition, the South must demand a world market and results of this attitude, they become more responsible and when they feel trading system that properly values its resources, including the ecological respected, I think that is what makes the difference. cOsts of its production. And negotiations must be forced to take place UA: What do you think cities in the developed world, cities such as Los within thEse tenms ol reference. The South must also deinanid a fair share of the global commons. It Angeles or New York, have in common with a developing country city is the South's environmental space that the North is using. especially in the case of the atmosphere. Every pound assd guilder collected from nL: I tLiink every first world city has a third world city inside. They carbon taxes in Europe belongs by right to thc South and not to the have similar problems, what's the difference? In our cities we have more treasuries of the European governments. This tax is simply the payment migration, more impoverishment. .BWt we have similar problems of )or using a resource that does not belong just to the Europeans or the transport, of garbage, of sewage. of education. I think we cannot think Americans. about the city as whether it's a first or third world city; it's a city. If you All this may look impossible. But the South has no other choice after can improve the quality of life, don't try to postpone it, but make Rio but to engage itself in the intemational dialogue. Isolation and dis- it happen right now. You don't have to have all the answers, sometimes engagement in a -lobalized political process can only be self-defeating. . its possible to improve something without always waiting for the great The challenge to the elite leadership of the South has become clear solution. The great solution is step by step. To start.is what's important. after the Rio summit. If it does not get its house in order, its own intemal UA: How do you see cites in the twenty-first century? divisions will be used to clamp greater intemational restrictions on it. ALnd unless it is able to get greater honesty, efficiency, and self-reliance JL: I think we have to be optimists about cities in the future. Some important into its own economic systems. it will be consistently portrayed as a changes are needed in the management of cities. We.have to have a beggar and its morality snatched away. It will then be left in a very weak strategic view aboutthe city, to understand what's important when you negotiating position. integrate.people. The city.becomes more intelligent, it's more human. Never before has the South needed leadership which can strongly The more you mix- the urban functions, the- more human the city becomes,. denounce the immorality of the West and at the same time work hard to the more you mix income the more human the city becomes and the less ensure that every aspect of morality gets incorporated into domestic violence there is. We have to understand that the city must become a policies. The rise of global cnvironmentalism has left the South with sceniano of solidarity. very few choices. However bad and hypcitical the Northem leadership nay be, it is the hypocrisy of the Southern elites that will get exposed. We can trust the North to do that. m THE URRRN R6E ------------------------------------- UNCED that cities-and how Cities and UNCED they cope with problems of - conrinuedfrom page I infrastructure, poverty, institu- Mayors and others attending a series of"urban" meetings leading tional inadequacy, and urban up to UNCED expressed their concem over a seeming lack of interest management-be recognized among the press and UNCED organizers for this "brown agenda" of as being as important to environmental issues. According to Haroldo Mattos de Lemos, of the solving global problems as are Institute Brazil PNUMA (Programa das Nacoes Unidas para o Meio new technologies and innova- Ambiente), who spoke at the Eco-Urbs conference in Rio May 24-29, tions. "There is no more explosive problem that governments are going to The number and diversity have to face than the urban crisis, and the most serious environmental of cities represernted in problem we will face is the capacity of the atmosphere to absorb the Curitiba underscored the human and industrial wastes generated by the world's cities." importance of mobilizing the His words were echoed by Dr. Manuel Costa, assistant secretary of support of local authorities in CEPPD (Center for Population and Development Policies) at the same implementing et vironmental conference, "I have not seen anything [in the UNCED discussions] agendas. Mayors from Dakar, that talks about preserving the quality of human life. We have not Senegal; Lilongwe, Malawi; framed the questions correctly; we are always concerned about Saio Paulo, Brazil; and _ .g ecology but not about populations." Montreal, Canada; among At the World Urban Forum held in Curitiba, Brazil, May 28-29, others joined panel discussions more than 350 representatives from city and local govemments, on institutional capacity nongovemmental organizations, and other groups caled for not only a building and international change in attitude, but improved mechanisms for funneling much- coordination. Intemational city needed resources directly to local governments. Documents prepared associations such as the for UNCED indicate that only about 6 percent of all development Intemational Union of Local assistance is devoted to areas that could loosely be called "urban." A Authorities (IULA), Cites crucial outcome to the debate at Curitiba was a coordinated plea to Unies, MetropoDis, and the Summit of Major Cities of the World (see box, this page) joined in the debate along with representatives from multilateral and bilateral lending agencies. Gorel Thurdin, Sweden's Minister of Physical Planning, in expressing Sweden's support for changing the environ- i 5_ - -S E mental debate to focus on urban areas said, "If we can accept to pm protect biological diversity, the same case should be made for human ~~~ ~diversity." - '1 - | THer comments are founded in alarming statistics concerning the developing world's growing urban population and the struggle faced by many municipal and city governments to provide basic services to _ '~ their residents. Estimates from the World Health Organization suggest that 25 percent of all urban dwelers in the developing world do not have access to sae water supplies and 50 percent do not have an dequate sanitation system. According to the UNDP-World Bank Water and Sanitation Programr, by the year 2000 more than 600 n~ illion urban peDple will lack adequate sanitation, and 450 million -safe drinking water. CHANGE IN !POLICY DIALOGUE The recogni don of the urban diemma had begun to creep into the '~global policy dialogue even before UNCED. A UNDP report on the urban environment (The Urban Environ ent in Developing Countries) published in late May stated that -Rapid and massive urbanization in deeoigcountries is depleting natural resources, discharging * munprocessed wastes into the environment, and resulting in severe health problems especially among the poor." InThe World Bank's 1992 World Development Report, also pub- lsed in May, cites unsafe drinking water, inadequate sanitation, soil depletion, indoor- smoke from cooking fire and outdoor smoke from coal burning as the leading enviromnmental priorities in most develop- ing countries, as well as the most life-threatening. The report also emphasizes the importance of involving local people in setting envi- Setting a new policy framework in the donor community is one potential avenue for enabling local developing country city govern- ments greater access to much-needed funds for environmental im- -provements. It also opens the door to a more "participatory approach"' * . ~~~to the design and, implementation of projects,-one: that draws upon the strengths of local governments to mobilize political support for on- * ~~~going action. In Orangi, a squatter setiement in Karachi, Pakistan, for example, a TIE URBR0 ROE Sep,tember # :s l---------------------------------- project wasdeveloped in 1980to ronment' conference held in Toronto in August 1991. and has since enable residents to install and been endorsed during a number of international meetings. The pilot r .- .- =2. r ,' . ,; E .' 'pay for a low-cost sanitation phase of the fund will make approximately $ 15 million in small gamnts, system. Project staff, with a available to localities. community groups. and NGOs to implcment small amount of extemal environmental innovations. Projects are to focus on one or more of funding. organized household the following: water supply and sanitation; solid waste management: meetngs in which they showed air pollution: environmental health: access to means of livelihood: and the benefits of the scheme and the incorporation of environmental considerations into the metropoli- offered technical assistance. tan planning process. Community leaders were As administered by UNDP. grants can be made to community- responsible for collecting funds based organizations in a selected country of up to $50,000 cach. Joint from households. having the activities among cities and towns within a country can receive up to sewers installed, and organizing S100.000. NGO networks, city associations, and concerned interna- regular maintenance by resi- tional agencies can apply for grants as well. with funding levels dents. The success of the pilot determined on a case-by-case basis. UNDP plans to implement the project has led to the provision program initially in 20 countries. of sewerage to more than A third vehicle is the Small Grants Program administered by 6 00.000 peopie in Karachi. UNDP through the GEF. Under this progzram. individual grants Of Such initiatives have been S50,000 are provided to support grassroots and NGO activities in - repeated inCairo. Egypt. where developing countries. The pilot program has been active initially in ;a ,/jb , the Zabbaleen community, with 35 countries. Grants for regional or subregional projects can be in Fw?,.p C, nt¶milde0it" support from the Ford Founda- amounts up to $250,000. One of the objectives of the facility is to ~t Corifiha. Brazif. JYhn ti don and the World Bank and show. through concrete results from funded projects. which kinds of ma oJ f.P.IW077t7W7 -. mobilization at the local level. community-based and NGO activities have the potential for making a ?,drj have been able to develop a difference, and for demonstrating strategies for involving communities successful waste recycling in expanded activities financed by the fund. enterprise that has splintered off Another mechanism has been established continmed onp2 pge .S into a number of entrepreneurial efforts (see story. pg. 9). In Recife, Brazil.;s'"condominial" system of sewerage has been developed, which calls upon the people it will service to decide the level of scrvice they The Scorecard at-UNCED - want and to maintain part of the infrastructure required to run it. Thc system is now providing sewerage to hundreds of thousands of urban Adoption of the Rio Declaration on Environrnent and Development dwellers living in northeast Brazil. In low-income areas of Accrac volLntary organizations and local entrepreneurs operate community The Rio Declaration consisted of 27 basic principles to guide natiiial and latrines, which are emptied by the municipal authoritv. international policies. Its adoption reflected a commitment at the highest These examples, although not exhaustive. are enough to provide a political levels to the objectives of UNCED.- firm ''real-world" backdrop to the belief that community involvement at the urassroots level is essential to sustaining and expanding upon Endorsement of International Conventions on Climate urban environmental projects. Change and Biodiversity NEW MviECHANISMS The Climate Change Convention works to stabilize concentrations of greenhouse gases that contribute to global warmiing. The Convention on Biodiversiry proposes to protect and-sustain the earth's living resources and To be able to gain access to new funding sources, however. remains ecosystems, and to ensure a sharing of benefts from the use of genetic critical :o local authorities struggling with insufficient operating budgets resources. Both conventions, adopted just before Rio, were opened for and overwhelmed service agencies. Several mechanisms for support signature at UNCED. Only the United States and Malaysia refused to sign the werc cndorsed as a result of the UNCED process. Approvcd in Chapter Biodiversity Convention. 28 of ARenda 21 is a "Local Agenda 21" initiative throtigh which localities would develop their own environmental action plans. Local Adoption of a Framework ofPrinciplesfora Global Consensus on. Agenda 21 stresses that environmental agendas should be developed Forests through 'consultation and consensus building"' among citizens and local civic. community, and business organizations. Likewise, partnerships The framework reconciles the potential conflicting objectives of sound among international organizations are to be fostered to mobilize in- management, conservation, and deveopment of forests with their multiple functions and uses. creased international support for local programs. The International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives Agreement to Negotiate a "Deserfication" Convention (ICLEI:1, crcated in 1991 to develop tools and new approaches for urban environmental protection, has proposed.AX3-year project to The agreement ensures that a request be made to the UN General Assembly in support the development of Local Agenda 21 s in 21 municipalities. September 1992 to establish an intergovermnental conmittee to negotiate an The project, as described by ICLEI secretary general Jeb Brugmann, international convention to combat desertification, particularly in.Africa. will increase awareness of the Agenda 21 document among localities. - aid local governments in developing education programs and consulta- Adoption of Agenda 21 tions. assist in preparing environmental audits of localities. and establish a common set of environmental indicators among cities. The only document to deal specifically-with. urban issues, Agenda 21 covers ICLE] is now preparing a Local Agenda 21 Action Manual, which will over 100 program areas integrating environment and development irnproved contain a general introduction to Local Agenda 21 and an outline of access to environmentally sound technology, and strengthened institutional rocedures for organizing Local Agenda 21 campaig-ris. capacity. Countries are called upon to develop their own sustainable procedures for organizing Local Agenda 2 campaigns. development plans; support for which will come tbrough additional financial Another new initiative, launched by the UNDP in the Spring of resources channeled througb existing rather than new funding mechanisms. 1992. is a Local Initiative Facility for Urban Environment, or LIFE Fund. First proposed by Curitiba Mayor Jaime Lerner and others in August 1991. the LIFE Fund was approved and endorscd during a meeting of' more than 100 mayors at the "World Cities and the Envi- THE RGE SeptembIer 1992 L r Cities and UNCED - Similarly, multilateral lending agencies coming out of UNCED * continuedf from pcage 7 are recognizing that they too need to review the way they do business. According to Francisco Covarrubias Gaitan, Mexico's former through the Urban Environment Component of the UMP. The UMP, Undersecretary of Urban Development and a member of Metropolis along with the Habitat-supported Sustainable Cities Programtne (SCP) who spoke at the mayors' meeting prior to UNCED, "Agencics must is helping to organize a series of consultations to be held initially in learn how to connect better with local communities in light of the ten developing country cities to identify environmental priorities. world's growing democractization." he said, and to be better able to These consultations, to be hosted and led by government officials, respond to the groundswell of local initiatives and participation now members of NGOs and community groups. scientists, engineers, and going on in many developing cities. This was reflected in the overall others, are the first step toward developing local environmental UNCED process by the insistence of developing country governments management strategies and action plans that will provide the basis for that safeguards be put in place regarding the distribution of funds long-term investment in urban environmental improvements. The available from the GEF. which is executed by the UNDP, UNEP and environment component of the UMP has also developed a ftanmework The World Bank. Mayors and other local authorities, recognizing that for collecting and analyzing much-needed environmental data on much of the additimil tfmding pledged at Rio will go into the IDA individual cities. replenishment and to the GEF. need to continue to influence agencies administering these funds of the need for urban environmental im- WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE provements. Underpinning both of these movements is the recognition that The momentum gained by cities leading up to and including local involvernent and demand for improvements are key to ensuring UNCED can have an effect that goes beyond strictly environmental long-term success. Community groups and nongovemmental organi- concems. The donor community, for example, is beginning to recog- zations (1,400 of which participated in UNCED) will now have to nize the importance of urban issues and to reorient its resources form stronger coalitions and at the same time leam how to better toward implementing many of the action plans that relate to develop- articulate citizens demands for change. ing country cities' concems. National governments, as well, are Cities, enierging from UNCED with a broadened agenda for learning that the "think globally, act locally" strategy is not an idle action, now have to work toward maintaining the momentum gained slogan. With new funding mechanisms opening up to local and city during UNCED. As Rio de Janeiro Mayor Marcello Alencar stated in authorities, national governments are beginning to decentralize their a meeting of rnayors held in Rio two days before UNCED, localities authority and to rely on local governments to initiate and implement must work together to bring about a process that enables cities to take new projects. Mayors are now less reluctant to approach multilateral their rightful place within the "world structure that the United Nations lending agencies for assistance, and issues of infrastructure mainte- and numerous govemments intend to establish." nance, urban poverty, inadequate housing, and the informal sector are beginning to gain more attention. -Mary McNeil These principles were all clarified and confirmed in the initial phase Environment Management in Tanzania of the program in Dar es Salaam. Preparation of an environmental profile 1' conrinuedfrom page 3 of the city is the first stage in the SCP process. After it is completed key actors involved in the city's management and development-technicians, various actors," explains Jochen Eigen, coordinator of the SCP. "It's easy politicians, ancl developers-will be invited to attend a series of work- to get technical answers to technical problems. The challenge is to shops to revievw the key environmental issues that can be addressed with reconcile competing interests and to arrive at a consensus which is the resources and the mechanisms available. participatory. This is the only way to sustainability." Local authority involvement and active participation by urban A sustainable city. according to Jochen Eigen, is one where "achieve- managers, government agencies, and concemed parties in the private and ments in social, economic and physical development are made to last." community sectors, are necessary for the success of the program. "By Such a city has "lasting environmental resources on which its develop- bringing people from the various sectors together, we get them to respect ment depends and a lasting security from environmental hazards which each other's point of view," says Chris Radford, the SCP's Chief Techni- may threaten development achievements." As a global exercise, the SCP cal Adviser in ]Dar es Salaam. " The process also provides a basis for is designed to promote the sharing of expertise and experience between mutual support andrives them a sense of direction." Cross-sectorial co- cities in different regions of the world. As an inter-organizational effort, it ordination amcrng agencies also ensures that problems are addressed will mobilize know-how, technology and financial resources. concurrently and that scarce resources are used to maximum efficiency. Dar es Salaam is Tanzania's largest city, and overcrowding one of its According to Radford, this participatory and community-oriented greatest problems. Seventy percent of the city's population lives in approach has particular potential in Tanzania where there is a strong unplanned settlements with little access to water, sanitation, drainage, community spirit among citizens. The 10-cell unit system, in which roads, electricity, and other basic social services, causing a higher than every 10 or so households has a leader who represents them at the ward average incidence of waterbome diseases and health problems. Since 75 or village level, has developed community organization to a fairly percent of the city's households rely on pit latrines, there is extensive advanced level, In such a system, it is more likely that members will groundwater contamination. Ninety percent of the city's solid waste follow-up on any recommendations that benefit the community as a remains uncollected, reflecting inadequate management and cost recov- whole. The SCP has begun to look at the respective roles of the city and ery mechanisms. the community in terms of how both can contribute to the maintenance of In looking for a solution to these problems, Tanzanian authorities urban services. Fostering rather than restricting community and indi- approached the SCP and found its strategy appealing for three main vidual initiative is the essence of the approach, but it will require local reasons, according to Paul Baruti, Chief Planning Officer of the Dar es authority officials and technicians to change their current attitudes. Salaam City Council. First, the approach shifted focus from the central - government to the municipal level, thereby encouraging greater local Rasnah Warah is a Ke=tyan national and afreelancejounalon based in g ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Nairobt. She ccordinated the Habitat International Coalition's women involvemenL Second, the cyclical, non-linear process it would involve and shelter netwvork for two years and is currently a regular contriburor better ensured continuity. And finally, given the project's urban to the Kenva national press, specializing in human settlements and sustainability component it has improved prospects for donor assistance. women's issues. THE URRBDN 6E --------------------------------------- Zabbaleen Community Develops New Jobs to Iaprove the Environment airo Tgypt with a population of more than 9 e millnon people'is o'nc of the most rapidly growing cities in the world. UN, UD LocUal GoveInmeI t Honors PIUog,Im *Approximatelv 6.000 tons of solid wIaste i's generated daily by Appoximatl . Y Local government initiatives on the environment were honored during the rcsidents of thc city: collection and disposal of this waste is a opening day of UNCED through an officially sanctioned program managed by gargantuan task. the Intemational Council for Local Environmental Inititiatives (ICLEI). More Dealing with this waste is a job shared by the municipal than 200 entries had been received by ICLEI. which presented the top 25 govermnent and a traditional private sector waste collection entries to an international board of expens for final selection. Winners were system that hac evolved over the past 50 years. This private announced by UNCED Secretarv General Maurice Strong followitng the sector operation, run by an association called the "Wahi Rabta." special session on urban issues at the UN conference. assigns collection of g-arbage to individual collectors known as the "Zabbaleen." a community originally from northern Egypt that has "It is in cities, towns. and villages that the problems of the world are lons provided wastc collection services to the citY. The Zabbaleen had concentrated." said Maurice Strong., the Secretary General of the Earth traditionally traveled from household to househoid by donkey-drawn Summit during the awards program. 'The twelve communities ihat have hen selected for the honors tprogrami have faced environmient and developmntini carts. collecting the wastc- and carryiiig it to the outskirts of the city slce o h oosIrga]hv ae nioietaddv)pc -orts. collecting the wastc and carrying it to the outskirs ofthecity problems of the highest consequence. It is in actions likc these that we Find v here it was sorted and recvcled. instructions for a sustainable future." In the latc 1980s. the municipal governatc realized the Zabbaleen coklc no longer handle the increasing burden of waste collection in Developing country winners included the Ankara Greuter City Municipalhiv the c ity. It had to make a decision. Should it replace the Zabbaleen for its Fuel Switching and Energy Programme: the City of Bulawayo operation with a system operated by the municipal government: or Zimbabwe for thc Matabeleland 7ambezi Water Project Trust and Water shouLId it enable the Zabbaleen to upgrade their operation in its own Management Program: the City of Cairo for the Zabbalegn Environmental lrieht'' Program; Curitiba, Brazil. for its Environmental Regeneration in Low-Incorsre The Zabbaleen." said Mounir Neamatallah of Cairo-based Communities Program: the Ciudad de Mexico for its Programa de Rcdoe'eic3r Etivironmental Quality International (EQI). an organization that has de Contaminacion Atmosferia: and the City of Surahaya for its Kampunan prov ided support to the Zabbaleen for over tcn years. "had come to Upgrading Programme. the city because they found that it could provide animal food for their .i k They b hFor more inforation on these projects and other w.inners contact IC. Ce livestock. They began so haul waste free Or charge: the \Vahis' Hall. East Tower. 8th Floor, Toronto. Ontario. Canada M5H 2N2. administcred the system and collected money from houscholds. They were supplying cheap sources of raw material to a whole nctwork of small industries that could not afford other sources of raw material." worked through EQI to incorporate and upgrade the work of the Although the Zabbaleen had been able to create employment and Zabbaleen to meet the needs of the municipal government. These income 'or tens of thousands of low-income residents through their efforts led to the creation of the Z7ibbaleen Environmental and Devel- waste collection activities, they werc a nomadic pcople. continually opment Programme in the late I 980s. which grew out of a partnership rioving from settlement to settlement on the otitskirts of the city. of the Governerate of Cairo, the Zabbaleen Gamcva connmmunity, the They lacked security of land tenure. and a mechanism by which to Wahi Rabta trade association, and EQI. Its purpose: to bring recogni- iMprove their standard of living. tion to the social, economic. and environmental merits of the Recognizing the need to help the Zabbalecn. Neamatallah. with Zabbalcen system. financial backing from the Ford Foundation and the World Bank. The success of the program has been remarkable. Since it was first launched, seven new small enterprise activities have been added to ih,: initial waste collection activity. These include a community upgrading 77a? 71fli1wbbP5wYp7yJi/z/fws Th1em and infrastructure extension project that has provided basic infrastroc- Ye access to secutre oe services.- ture. health. and educational services to the Moqattarn Zabbaleen -'^.',,. , ~~ ~' - "' 7' settlement: a project to) internally cican-up the main Zabbaleen settIc- <'~ - - -- . @t ment: and a project to construct and operate a Zabbaleen composting -. : t plant. Other projects have included a women-headed household project to create income-generating opportunities for womcn: a small industries project to open tip business opportunities to the Zabbalccn related to their waste recycling trade: a route extciision project to '~ cxtend Zabbalcen waste collection and sanitation services to new low- ',~ >income neighborhoods in Cairo: and a Zabbaleen mechanization project to enable the community to instittitionalize its waste collection system and respond to government requirements for upgrading. The work of the Zabbaleen community. which once existed in at >; times hazardous and unhealthy conditions, has become the cote of w what Neamatallah calls "the work of my life. The Zabbaleen cotionu- - - || nity':' says Neumatallah. "is now a vibrant area ol' comm1ler-cc. trade. V and industry. which is slowly becoming part of the middle class. Suddenly people have hope and security of tenurc. They havc been organi7ed into private companies. where informal activities have -; become formal franchise arrangements. l'hc Zabbaleens now handle a _ major environmenLal industry." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1v2 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~S"1 .... UReRI8 _ : s,<,l,l,˘,-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1( ";LtJjllSxl Iiq -- --------------------------------- These initiatives were nade knownl to De rine Ole during the recent to plant seedlings provided by the municipality. Parallel educational UNCED meeting in Rio de Janeiro, and thus have a Brazilianfocus. activities to both the reforestation and sanitation and urbanization parts of We actively seek our developing country readers' input to this section. the program are cnnducted by volunteers in the commullity. Our intention is to broadent our network among developing count rt city managers and other urban representatives. C02 PROJECT ALERT II PUBLIC AIR MONITORING PROGRAM Contact: Phillip :essup Director CO, Preject. ICLEI Contact: Liz Faulkner, Mega-Cities Coordinator New Ciirt Hall, East Tower. 8th Floor Toroirto, 30 Irving Place. 9th Floor Ontario, Canada M5H 2AT2 New York, NY 10003, USA The International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives has The Alert II Public Air Monitoring Program is a technology established the Urban CO, Project to assist municipal governments to transfer initiative from the city of Sao Paulo to the city of New York, develop strategies to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases. Key with management provided by the Mega-Cities project. The program elements of the project are: raises public awareness of air pollution and encourages people not to drive on days when air pollution levels are dangerously high. * the development of policy framneworks for municipal CO. The focal point of Alert II is the installation of air monitors that reduction programs: publicly display air quality levels along the major travel corridors leading to the central city. Monitors show a range of air quality levels, * the assessment of economic costs, equipment, emplovment. and from "good" to "fair" to "poor" to "Alert I" to "Alert 11. On days of other institutional factors reducing CO, emissions; and excessive pollution, people are encouraged to voluntarily park their cars on the periphery of the city and take public transportation. * support for a growing network of local governments Monitors have been operating in Sao Paulo since 1988 and are focusing on CO. problems. scheduled for installation in New York City in the fall of 1992. METROPOLIT'AN ENVIRONMENTAL IMPROVEMENT '~PROJECT Contact: G.N. Warade Environmenr Department, Government of Malharaslhtra Newt Administrative Buildinig. 15th Floor Opp Mantralava Mantralava, Bomba 400 032. India The Metropolitan Environmental Improvement Project (MEIP.t is a UNDP-funded, World Bank-executed regional program to suppccn and learn from the environmental efforts of Asia's large and rapidly growing metropolitum areas. Its primary objective is to assist in the development of effective institutional arrangemcnts for environn. ntal protection in five Asian Cities: Colombo. Sri Lanka: Jakarta Indonic&-a: Metro Manila, the Philippines: Beijing. China; and Bombay. India. In Bombay. the program is working with an NGO. Clean Bomtmn. -X'. < . on a demonstration project for neighborhood waste collection. The project sets up a system in which hagged garbagc from individual PAID MUTUAL SELF-HELP PROJECT, RIO DE households is consolidated into large plastic bags by sweepcrs JANEIRO in apartment buildings. The garbage is then transferred to mobile compactors for crushing and taken by municipal trucks to dumpsiles Contact: Deborah Levinson where it is recycled by the Municipal Corporation of Greater Bomhay. Instituto Brasileiro de Administracao Municipal (IBAM) Edificio Diogo Lordello de Mello, Largo IBAM no. 1 SAO PAULO M,STER PLAN IlzUm1aita 22282. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Contact: Ladislau Dowbor The Paid Mutual Self-Help Project is carried out in the Prefeilura do Municiplo de Sao Paulo, Assussoria de Relacoe.s municipalitity of Rio de Janeiro by the Municipal Secretariat of Social Internacionais, Gabtenite de Prefeit pav. Pe Manoel do Nobrego-stila Development (SMDS). The Self-Help Project implements an inte- 207 Parque ibirapuera - 04098 grated program of sanitation and urbanization, reforestation, and Saio Paulo, Brasil environmental and health education within low-income areas of the city. Sao Paulo has developed a "Master Plan for Everyone" as p.un of a The dcsign of the program calls for the municipality to provide recent urban revitali2ation program by the Municipal Planning Depart- technical assistance as well as constniction materials to low-income ment of the Municipal Planning Secretariat of the Sao Paulo Citv Admill- communities who have responsibility for carrying out improvement istration. The master plan sets up the development and expansion policy works through volunteer labor organized by the community. Work of the City of Sao Paulo. under the sanitation and urbanization sub-component has been ongo- The plan was developed with inputs from the public and follows a in. since 1984 and has succeeded in constructing sewerage and decade of economic crisis in Sao Paulo during which the financial drainage systems. paving streets, building staircases. and canalizing underpinning of public services has steadily worsened. The master plan ditches in the low-income hillside settlements of the city. aims to eliminate the inequalities created by the current zoning laws and A reforestation sub-componentL created in 1986. reforests selected to improve upon the critical situations of housing. cnvironment, and mass hillsides that run the risk of landslides through using local volunteer labor transportation. Copies of the plan arc available upon request. THE URRRN R6E .S'eptemnber 1992 1-- ------------_-_____________ _-- 1is report. Ecocycles is a In this book, Resources: - - --- published by joint effort U.S. Senator the United . between the Albert Gore iSyposiw n the Nintires- Nations Swedish looks at the i Opports.rop.eorOpp...n... 1991. . I _ 'i- Development Ministry of global cnvi- Rio de Ianetro: Banco Boavista. Programme in Physical ronmental .. Reebok..BRASCAN. and CtD -. May 1992. Planning's - _ crisis nnd calls - World Resource: a Guide to the Global identifies six Environmental for "bold and :- &nironznentl 992-95.Wasiington' priority areas of concern regard- Advisory Council and the Swed- unequivocal action." In stating - D.C. WorfdResoarrces Institute. ing the urban environment: water ish Association of Local Authori- such a strong call to action, he supply, waste disposal, air ties as a contribution to the 1992 paints the environmental situa- State of the World. 1992. Washington,. pollution, land degradation, urban Earth Summit. This readable and tion in a philosophical light, - . :C.. Worldwatch Insitute. - poverty. and spillovers across visually attractive document, urging not for incremental steps --- - - --.------ -- borders and the globe. In stress- based on the concept that cities forward but for a complete En'ironenaManagementand Urban ing the need to draw attention to are integral parts of ecological change in mindset and attitude. . VA6bit t992 . Wordd Bank 'Diseussion Paper No.. 168.Wahs gton, 'hurnan- needs, it argues that systems, provides concrete Change must come, he argues, D P N W 68. improving the environment examples of environmental through each person rethinking _-.DC.- Tbe orl Ban _ _ cannot wait until economic manayement from Swedish cities his or her concept of the environ- -Enerjy,,Enironmzal U:nkagjs in thke Urban-. development creates the re- and suggests general principles ment. n &wrronmenl Linkages 2n temUrioe _:_`Sector, ,UMPN9.Z2 199I.Aternaotive,', sources to tackle problems. for urban development. In addressing the concerns of hepprachesto Pon Control - - Rather, a healthy environment More than 30 examples are the developing world, Gore ` andWasteManage,innt: Regulatory. tunst be seen as a prerequisite to cited in the text that illustrate the writes, "there has rarely been -:Tno,a,o rsUMP #3. economic growth. "The urban application of ecological ap- much balance between the 1991 AeenvofEnviromental environment thus has to be a key proaches to urban development, projects financed by the indust- Healrh lmpacrsor Developing part of macroeconomic policy Examples in Sweden include rial world and the true needs of - -Cotnries,?#6,.199i'Wastington- and management.' argues the projects dealing with green the Third World." The result, he . UtbanM tPtogtamme. report. "Waste is not merely in infrastructure, water and sewage, says. is that too many projects -,- t1. ---- nonrenewable resources .... It is in solid waste, renewable energy. have ended up doing more harm Morehi ct -onrbt eurs.9 peoples lives, time, and cner- and traffic management. A than good, disrupting both < -teneIa IWodd HeaIdOanizadon gi es-and the urban poor arc the second section documents cases ecological balance and societal_ - - living embodiment of this fact." where integrated environmental stability. o p Re'---eelp- n improvements have been initiated. - Wor aet Renron .Development -9 .WashmgtorI D.C. iThe Wortd Bank.- llllllllqllllll----------------------------------------- Below is a list of urban events and training courses culledfronz le 111n Iges currentfiles. We regret that more eventsfrom developing countries are nom listed. Ifyou would like your evenrt to be iutcluded, please send announcements to the Editor, The Urbn Ige Rne S10-107, The World Bank, 1818 H Streed NW, Washington D.C 20433 Date EventiLocation DescriptionlInstitution For Information Contact October I to International Association for the The conference theme is Urban Renaissance in INTA Intemational Secretariat, November I Development and Management of Europc; participants will see how the Olympic Nassau Dillenburgstraat 44, Existing and New Towns (INTA) sites have been used to restructure the city and NL-2596 AE The Hague, Annual Conference region of Catalonia. and how the World's Fair The Netherlands. Madrid, Barcelona. and Seville sites will be reused in Seville. Tel.: 31-70-3244526 Spain. Fax: 31-70-3280727. October 8-1 I The University of Cincinnati, This conference is for urban planners, design Wolfgang Preiser or Brenda "International Symposium on reviewers. architects, attorneys and deveklan Iighmnere C of Design, Design Review: Debating Prac- interested in urban design issues. Architecture, Art, and Planning, tices and Issues"Cinncinati, Ohio. University of Cincinnati, Cincin- nati, Ohio. U.S.A., Tel.: (513) 556-4943, Fax: (513) 556-3288. October 17-21 ECO-ED World Congress The ECO-ED conference will feature speakers CONGRESS CANADA, 191 Toronto. Canada on current environmental and development Niagara St. Toronto, Canada, issues who will lead discussions relevant to M5VIC9, Tel.: 1- 416-860-1772, education and communication professionals. Fax: 1- 416-860-0380. October 19-21 The Tropical Health Program, Urbanization and Education for Health are this Wendy Gardiner, Tropical Health University of Queensland Medical year's themes. Urbanization plenaries will Program, University of School, "Australian Tropical address population growth and urban planning, Queensland Medical School, .Health and Nutrition Conference" poverty, nutrition, and infectious diseases. A Herston Road, Herston, Brisbane, Australia. tropical health and nutrition expo will be held Queensland 4006. Australia. concurrently. THE [RER H6E c ..... E: Date Event/Location Description/Institution For information Contact October 26-30 The Pan American Development This is an opportunity for NGOs and resource CONTACT '92, Pan American Foundation "Fifth International organizations to meet and discuss priority Development Foundation, 1889 Resource Exchange Forum" dcvelopment activities, technical assistance F. St. N.W., Washington, D.C., Miami, Florida. sources, and funding possibilities for Latin 20006-4499. Tel.: 202- 458-6160, America and the Caribbean, Fax; 202-458- 6316. October 26 to Biennial International Housing This workshop is geared tovvard planners. Dr.-Ing. Reinhard Goethert, November 6 Workshop on "Rethinking Devel- architects, and other policy makers in the fields SIGUS-School of Architecture opment: Paradigms and Prac- of development. housing. anrd design. and Planning, MIT, Building 5- tices" Cambridge, Massachusetts. 146; 77 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02139, U.S.A., Tel.: (617) 253- 2402, Fax: (617) 253-8993 March 25-27, 1993 March 25-27. International Federafion for The preliminary program and call for papers is Douglas Gordon, Gencral 1993 Housing and Planning "IFHP now available. Secretary. Suomi IFHP c/o Helsinki Congress" Hrlinski, Asuntohallitus, Finland. Asenapadllik6nkatu 14. PL Box 100, 00521 Heiniski. Finland. August I I - 13. 4th Rinker International Confer- A description of conference Lhemes and a call for For more details contact: Dr. R. 1993 ence on Building Construction, papers is available C. Stroh, Conference Coordina- Affordable Housing: Present & tor, Rinker Intemational Confcr- Future, Shimberg Center for ence. FAC- I - I, University of Affordable Housing and Rinker, Florida. Gainesville. Florida. Sr. School of Building Construc- 32611, USA, Tel.: 904-392-5965, tion University of Florida, Fax: 904-392-4364. Gainesville. Florida. rraining October 19-22 Communication Tecaniques and Center for African Settlement CASSAD, No. 3 Ayo Adekunle November 2326 Skill Improvement Strtegies for Studies and Development Close, New Bodija, P.O. Box December 7- 10 Primary Health Care Workers (CASSAD) 20775, U.l. Post Office. Ibadani. and Community Development Nigeria, Tel.: 022-414536. Telex: Officers (Oct 19-22). Construction 31199 Sec Ibadan. Management. Sourcing and Utilization of Affordable Local Building Materials (Nov.23-26). Preparation of Physical Develop- ment Plans for Urban and Rural Communities (Dec 7-10). August 6- 60th and 61st International Institute for Housing and IMS:P.O. Box 1935, 3000 BX December I Courses on Housing, Planning, Urban Development Studies Rotterdam. The Nctherlands. and Building Rotterdamn, The (IlS) Netherlands. > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~llt OnO s printed on myclCed TIE uRERI ydE Te--lr-, ____