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November 30, 2001

WHAT'S NEW AT CSE

What's new at the Centre for Science and Environment (CSE), New Delhi, India.

AN AUTO DREAM
The Indian automobile industry got a rude shock on October 29 when the Centre for Science and Environment released the environment rating of one of the most poorly regulated sectors in India. The industry has come of age.

 But in terms of corporate environmental management, even the giants prefer to remain greenhorns. In an effort to sensitise the environmental aspects of the automobile sector, the Green Rating Project (GRP) subjected the

sector to rigorous scrutiny. The latest Down To Earth is a special issue on the whole project - its concept, methodology and an analysis of the industry.

http://www.cseindia.org/html/dte/dte20011130/dte_cover.htm

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TRAINING WORKSHOP ON ENVIRONMENT DOCUMENTATION
Centre for Science and Environment is organising a training workshop on environmental documentation from December 17-19, at 41, Tughlakabad Institutional Area, New Delhi. Last date for confirming your participation is 30th November 2001. Details at

 http://www.cseindia.org/html/extra/lib_training_form.htm

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EQUITY WATCH
Equity Watch is a climate change newsletter from the Southern perspective the latest issue is available on our website. This issue contains: Green future and more at

http://www.cseindia.org/html/cmp/climate/ew/index.htm

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DEFYING CNG ORDERS
The Centre for Science and Environment is shocked at the callous attitude of the chief minister Sheila Dikshit towards controlling severe air pollution problem in Delhi. Her attitude towards the Supreme Court orders on clean fuels only betrays her desperation to pass on the blame.

 http://www.cseindia.org/html/cmp/air/press_20011122.htm

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HEAVY LOAD
The auto industry releases a new model of vehicle every now and then. What is not new about them is that they all pollute. Check out at

http://www.cseindia.org/html/dte/dte20011130/dte_stati.htm

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THE MISSING LINK
A bi-monthly newsletter exploring the missing link. Produced by the health and environment unit of the Centre for Science and Environment, it covers topic like poverty, Health and Environment. Available for download at

http://www.cseindia.org/html/eyou/health/publications/missing_link.htm

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A message from the Chairperson, Anil Agarwal:

WTO: A Mock Battle
THIS fortnight the Indian delegation to the ministerial meeting of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) in Doha is going to stand out as the champion of the Third World, defending the poor of the world against the "rich man's organisation" in the words of our minister of commerce, Murasoli Maran. We would feel great if only there was less rhetoric and more substance in the Indian position. As usual, we are reacting to just about everything that is on the table and have little to offer, except the time repeated bleating about Northern injustice. Maybe at the end the Indians will come home "victorious" with some concessions on textile trade. The world may even agree to amend the Trade Related Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) agreement to allow developing countries the right to manufacture "generic" drugs for national medical emergencies. But there will be another round of trade negotiations and just about everything the Indians objected to - from investment and competition to environment - will be part of the new deal.  

Why do we end up losing so much and so often? Firstly, it is because we are just not serious about our negotiating position and take contradictory stands too often for anyone to believe us. Take the entire discussion on linking environment with trade. The Indian position has been to reject the very idea completely at the WTO. Quite right, we would argue, and I am repeating. Environment is an unfair lever of power, as it can only be used by the rich to discipline the poor. On the other hand, environmental governance requires instruments which will check the environmentally errant industrialised North.

Secondly, our strategy is only to block the movement of the proposal on the table. Not to propose a new agenda. This means that we are successful in the short run but as the other side continues to push and push, the ground keeps slipping under us. At the end we are shouting a slanging match with ourselves as the other side has already gone to bed victorious.

In the case of environment in trade negotiations, WTO had initially taken the position that importing countries had the freedom to choose their own standards in order to protect their own people's health and their own country's environment but they did not have the right to impose standards aimed at improving the health or environmental practices of exporting countries. The latter would amount to a kind of 'trade tyranny' and could be easily used for economic protectionism. The open issue was whether such standards could be imposed on exporting countries if a multilateral environmental treaty had been signed to this effect. It would have served our purpose to accept this provision and to firmly draw the line. 

But we adopted our time-honoured strategy of prevaricating. As a result, pressures on WTO from the environmental lobbies of the North have grown and the organisation has more or less caved in completely. Just last week, the WTO 's appellate body decided in favour of the US in the famous case of the turtles verses the shrimps. WTO has accepted that the US was correct in taking unilateral action against another country - India, Malaysia and others - to protect the turtles, which US claimed were being killed in the process of harvesting shrimps. It accepted the extra-jurisdictional action of the US saying that as "turtles are migratory species" these animals must have been in US waters at some time. It has even accepted that trade can make a distinction between shrimps that are turtle-friendly - allowed to be imported - and those that are turtle-unfriendly - banned from imports. This destroys our position that trade cannot distinguish between products on the basis of the process used.

Thirdly, and perhaps most importantly, we are losing the battle because we do so little at home. The Indian government contends that the TRIPS agreement should be amended so that it includes geographical indicators for products like basmati or Darjeeling Tea. Perfect. But then why on earth has it taken the Indian government since 1999 to get its domestic geographical appellation bill ready?

It also says that the TRIPS agreement must be made compatible to the Convention on Biological diversity (CBD), which recognises the need to protect and reward the knowledge of the poor, unlike TRIPS, which only recognises the knowledge of the formal inventor. Again, a laudable position. But then, what does our great government do in India. It sits and sits on its national biodiversity act, which would have provided the framework to force users of the knowledge - both Indian and foreign - to recognise the contribution of the poor knowledge holder. Worse, the draft biodiversity act, is so unimaginative that it would do little to provide the bold framework needed to shake the "rich man" TRIPS agreement.

It will be easier to flex our muscles if we are consistent and serious about what we want. We cannot be a heavyweight internationally with no legs to stand on in our own country. Maran says that WTO should not try and be a "global government". We agree. But for that, Maran should also tell his prime minister and colleagues to start getting serious about the business of government.

Pressures on WTO from the environmental lobbies of the North have grown and the organisation has more or less caved in completely

- Anil Agarwal

(This article is also available online at

http://www.cseindia.org/html/dte/dte20011130/dte_edit.htm

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Visit our website at www.cseindia.org and check out what's new. Our  website carries our science and environment fortnightly Down To Earth, a daily environment news flash by subject categories, a catalog of books and publications that are available, and all of our recent press releases. We also give regular updates on all of our campaigns on topics like vehicular pollution, climate change, biodiversity, water resources, wildlife, forests etc. Our online library of books, journals, images and videos is searchable through a thesaurus of environmental keywords at

http://data.cseindia.org

 We are also looking for reciprocal linking to other websites in this  area. Let us know your website address and we would be happy to link to you. Please feel free to forward this message to other interested individuals.  Past messages of this bulletin are available at

http://www.cseindia.org/html/au/au6.htm

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