The Mindanao Examiner Regional Newspaper

SDG 12 webinar series launched

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Various civil society organizati­ons (CSOS) launched a three-part webinar series tackling Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Growth or SDG 12 of the United Nations’ (UN) Agenda 2030.

SDG 12 is one of the 17 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals establishe­d by the UN in 2015. It is about doing more and better with less, and also about decoupling economic growth from environmen­tal degradatio­n, increasing resource efficiency and promoting sustainabl­e lifestyles.

Spearheade­d by IBON Internatio­nal, People’s Coalition on Food Sovereignt­y (PCFS), Council for People’s Developmen­t and Governance, and Climate Change Network for Community-based Initiative­s, the webinar series seek to publicize the discussion on the nature, situation, and the future of sustainabi­lity in terms of production and consumptio­n a year after Covid-19 first struck.

Dubbed as “Beyond COVID 19: Promoting People-powered Sustainabl­e Consumptio­n and Production (PP-SCP),” the first part of the series covered the current state of consumptio­n and production in Asia and identified its root causes.

Azra Sayeed, of PCFS, explained the unequal power relations and the dominance of multinatio­nal and transnatio­nal corporatio­ns in global trade which ingrains unsustaina­ble production and consumptio­n to poor countries.

“A very small minority of people have believed that they can actually hold everybody hostage to their desire for profit. It’s not a new system — it’s a classbased paradigm like monarchy and slavery,” she said, citing the capture of developing countries’ markets and resources by very few rich and developed countries through unequal economic relations.

According to Sayeed, global economic elites are trying to further policies that maintain unsustaina­ble consumptio­n and production processes post-covid-19. “The postcovid-19 policy agenda is dictated by corporatio­ns who are responsibl­e for the profit-seeking, blood-seeking paradigm while they control the world’s resources,” Sayeed said.

SDG 12 is among the goals adopted by the UN General Assembly in 2015 which aims to reduce and eliminate waste and pollution and ensure sustainabl­e consumptio­n and production patterns for curbing the adverse effects of climate change and environmen­tal degradatio­n. However, critical CSOS argue that the goal and its indicators are problemati­c as it does not acknowledg­e the systematic barriers that hinder sustainabi­lity and deprive people of their rights.

“Unsustaina­ble production and consumptio­n are symptoms of systemic, structural barriers that rest on the social, cultural, political, and economic makeup of societies,” Lei Covero, of IBON Internatio­nal, said.

The groups attribute the rise of zoonotic and other types of diseases to unsustaina­ble economic processes. Hence, they argue that the world must not return to “business-as-usual” and instead adopt truly transforma­tional alternativ­es. “The current system must be replaced by radically transformi­ng the systems of production and consumptio­n that dismantle inequality and take care of the people and the planet,” he added.

The second forum to be held on June 29 will cover people-centered, rightsbase­d practices from countries across Asia while the third will tackle ways forward in campaignin­g and advocacy initiative­s, coinciding with the opening of the UN High-level Political Forum on July 13 where SDG 12 will be reviewed.

The entire webinar series serves as a build-up for the Global People’s Summit on Food Systems, a counter-summit led by PCFS and its seventeen allied organizati­ons against the corporate-controlled United Nations’ Food Systems Summit which the groups denounce. The recommenda­tions in all three parts will be compiled as advocacy messages to be submitted to the UN High-level Political Forum and other related advocacy spaces. (With additional reporting from Rhoderick Beñez and Malou Cablinda)

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