Australia
1
PRIME MINISTER
CHECK AGAINST DELIVERY EMBARGOED UNTIL DELIVERY
UNITED NATIONS CONFERENCE ON SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT (RIO+20)
RIO CENTRO, RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL
21 JUNE 2012
Your Excellency, President Rousseff, President of the
conference,
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon,
Madam/Mr Vice President, Friends.
In the twenty years since the first Earth Summit, the
world’s great environmental challenges have grown.
2
Biodiversity is being lost.
Many oceans and forests are threatened.
Carbon emissions and other pollutants have grown
dramatically.
But in the same twenty years, the strength of the world’s
peoples to meet those challenges has grown too.
The global economy is twice as large as it was in 1992.
Economic growth has lifted hundreds of millions of people out
of poverty – building new lives of hope and building the
capacity for communities to protect their natural heritage.
New technologies have emerged – and continue to emerge –
driving green growth and clean energy use.
And even through difficult days, international determination for
shared action towards shared goals has endured.
World leaders and their peoples have united in the past to
achieve great environmental goals.
We can do it again.
3
That is why Australia believes that this Conference must
agree to develop and then work towards a set of
Sustainable Development Goals.
Everyone here knows that collective action is hard – and global
collective action even harder.
Because through global collective action we seek complex
change, with imperfect knowledge, through difficult actions.
Everyone here also knows that setting goals is important.
Because when we set goals, we put before ourselves a task
which is practical and empirical.
To allocate resources with rigour – to define progress through a
measure of our outcomes, not of our efforts or intentions.
And even when we set ambitious goals, which stretch our
resources and test our resolve, we bring a precision and clarity
to our work together – and in doing so we set the firmest
possible basis for long-term success.
The Millennium Development Goals have transformed
global thought and action against extreme poverty.
4
While much remains to do, it also true that much has been
done.
Including being on track to halve the number of people living in
poverty by 2015.
Yesterday I was delighted to accept an invitation from the UN
Secretary General to co-chair the Millennium Development
Goals Advocates.
And through this role Australia will do its part in the vital
ongoing task of pursuing the MDGs.
Our own aid program is set to increase sixty per cent in the
next five years.
This is an act of a generous people – but undoubtedly it is one
prompted by a determined global project.
And we believe global thought and action against
environmental challenges can be similarly transformed.
Friends
Sustainable Development Goals are not the only important
objective we will discuss here.
5
The world needs new models of clean growth.
This must be grounded in an acceptance of this vital fact: that
a growing global economy also consumes more energy.
Innovative new mechanisms like the Global Green Growth
Institute, launched yesterday as an international organisation,
can help.
Australia is playing our part, adopting market-based
mechanisms like carbon pricing and investment for renewable
energy technologies.
And as an island continent we understand the world needs
a new focus on the health of our oceans and on the ‘blue
economy’ they underpin.
Australia welcomes the resolve expressed here at Rio +20 to
step up our efforts for our oceans.
Australia is pleased to see recognition in this conference of the
need for greater action to conserve the high seas and their
resources.
6
We hope that all states will act urgently on this global issue by
developing a strengthened oceans governance regime under
the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, including for the
establishment of marine protected areas.
We welcome agreement to take action to eliminate fisheries
subsidies that contribute to over-fishing.
And to address the affects of climate change on our oceans,
including acidification.
Again, Australia is playing our part.
Supporting collective action to restore depleted fish stocks,
conserve marine ecosystems and improve the science of ocean
management.
With additional funding of $8 million to the Coral Triangle
Initiative and up to $25 million to the Pacific Oceanscape
Framework.
And establishing a national network of marine reserves, placing
some three million square kilometres under conservation
management.
7
Women must be able to fully participate in and benefit from
sustainable development.
I welcome warmly the Summit´s affirmation of the vital role of
women in all areas of sustainable development.
I was proud to be one of the Leaders supporting the Call to
Action on Women earlier today.
Friends, with unity we can achieve change and that unity must
embrace the world’s women and all of our people.
And the world must listen to the knowledge of indigenous
people and work with them as custodians of their lands
and waters.
Yesterday Australia launched the Indigenous Peoples and
Local Communities Land and Sea Managers Network, a forum
that will help us listen and learn.
Friends
Rio+20 has brought us together for the third time in 20 years.
We are – each of us – greatly privileged to be present here
today.
8
Let us greet this privilege with passion and perspective.
We are not here this week just to talk to each other.
We’re here to decide, to agree – and then to act.
PRIME MINISTER
CHECK AGAINST DELIVERY EMBARGOED UNTIL DELIVERY
UNITED NATIONS CONFERENCE ON SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT (RIO+20)
RIO CENTRO, RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL
21 JUNE 2012
Your Excellency, President Rousseff, President of the
conference,
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon,
Madam/Mr Vice President, Friends.
In the twenty years since the first Earth Summit, the
world’s great environmental challenges have grown.
2
Biodiversity is being lost.
Many oceans and forests are threatened.
Carbon emissions and other pollutants have grown
dramatically.
But in the same twenty years, the strength of the world’s
peoples to meet those challenges has grown too.
The global economy is twice as large as it was in 1992.
Economic growth has lifted hundreds of millions of people out
of poverty – building new lives of hope and building the
capacity for communities to protect their natural heritage.
New technologies have emerged – and continue to emerge –
driving green growth and clean energy use.
And even through difficult days, international determination for
shared action towards shared goals has endured.
World leaders and their peoples have united in the past to
achieve great environmental goals.
We can do it again.
3
That is why Australia believes that this Conference must
agree to develop and then work towards a set of
Sustainable Development Goals.
Everyone here knows that collective action is hard – and global
collective action even harder.
Because through global collective action we seek complex
change, with imperfect knowledge, through difficult actions.
Everyone here also knows that setting goals is important.
Because when we set goals, we put before ourselves a task
which is practical and empirical.
To allocate resources with rigour – to define progress through a
measure of our outcomes, not of our efforts or intentions.
And even when we set ambitious goals, which stretch our
resources and test our resolve, we bring a precision and clarity
to our work together – and in doing so we set the firmest
possible basis for long-term success.
The Millennium Development Goals have transformed
global thought and action against extreme poverty.
4
While much remains to do, it also true that much has been
done.
Including being on track to halve the number of people living in
poverty by 2015.
Yesterday I was delighted to accept an invitation from the UN
Secretary General to co-chair the Millennium Development
Goals Advocates.
And through this role Australia will do its part in the vital
ongoing task of pursuing the MDGs.
Our own aid program is set to increase sixty per cent in the
next five years.
This is an act of a generous people – but undoubtedly it is one
prompted by a determined global project.
And we believe global thought and action against
environmental challenges can be similarly transformed.
Friends
Sustainable Development Goals are not the only important
objective we will discuss here.
5
The world needs new models of clean growth.
This must be grounded in an acceptance of this vital fact: that
a growing global economy also consumes more energy.
Innovative new mechanisms like the Global Green Growth
Institute, launched yesterday as an international organisation,
can help.
Australia is playing our part, adopting market-based
mechanisms like carbon pricing and investment for renewable
energy technologies.
And as an island continent we understand the world needs
a new focus on the health of our oceans and on the ‘blue
economy’ they underpin.
Australia welcomes the resolve expressed here at Rio +20 to
step up our efforts for our oceans.
Australia is pleased to see recognition in this conference of the
need for greater action to conserve the high seas and their
resources.
6
We hope that all states will act urgently on this global issue by
developing a strengthened oceans governance regime under
the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, including for the
establishment of marine protected areas.
We welcome agreement to take action to eliminate fisheries
subsidies that contribute to over-fishing.
And to address the affects of climate change on our oceans,
including acidification.
Again, Australia is playing our part.
Supporting collective action to restore depleted fish stocks,
conserve marine ecosystems and improve the science of ocean
management.
With additional funding of $8 million to the Coral Triangle
Initiative and up to $25 million to the Pacific Oceanscape
Framework.
And establishing a national network of marine reserves, placing
some three million square kilometres under conservation
management.
7
Women must be able to fully participate in and benefit from
sustainable development.
I welcome warmly the Summit´s affirmation of the vital role of
women in all areas of sustainable development.
I was proud to be one of the Leaders supporting the Call to
Action on Women earlier today.
Friends, with unity we can achieve change and that unity must
embrace the world’s women and all of our people.
And the world must listen to the knowledge of indigenous
people and work with them as custodians of their lands
and waters.
Yesterday Australia launched the Indigenous Peoples and
Local Communities Land and Sea Managers Network, a forum
that will help us listen and learn.
Friends
Rio+20 has brought us together for the third time in 20 years.
We are – each of us – greatly privileged to be present here
today.
8
Let us greet this privilege with passion and perspective.
We are not here this week just to talk to each other.
We’re here to decide, to agree – and then to act.
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