http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/12/05-1

Published on Monday, December 5, 2011 by Think Forward

The Water, Energy and Food Nexus

by Shiney Varghese

As I flew back from Bonn last week, on my way back from the Bonn 2011 
Nexus Conference (16-18 November), one thing was clear to me. 
Corporate environmentalism is entrenching itself firmly in the 
corridors of global governance, and challenging its advance will 
require new strategies. The "in-your-face" approach of yesterday is 
being replaced with a softer, albeit more dangerous "corporate 
responsibility" garb. This softer path also seeks to ensure that 
civil society stakeholders are seen as party to the decisions.

The Bonn Nexus conference is symptomatic of the way that corporate 
environmentalism is developing. "The water, energy and food security 
nexus, Solutions for the Green Economy," as it is called, is an 
initiative of the federal government of Germany to develop specific 
contributions to the Rio+20 Conference. It is an important event 
because this is the first of several nexus conferences being planned 
to gain political support for advancing the green economy at Rio+20. 
The next follow-up conference is being organized by World Economic 
Forum and will be held in January 2012.

In its recognition of a "nexus," these conferences could be seen as a 
step forward. Two years ago, when we published a report on the need 
for integrated solutions for the water, climate and food crises 
<http://www.iatp.org/files/451_2_105477.pdf>, the idea of connections 
between these three sectors was simply not on any official agenda.

But the conference understood the "nexus" through a distinctive 
lens-that of the "green economy." This term has been coming to a new 
prominence over the last year or two. And what it actually means was 
brought out well in the Bonn proceedings. The majority of experts at 
the conference were from international institutions (including 
globally operating NGOs), and for-profit companies, with a limited 
number of experts and representatives from a broader group of smaller 
NGOs and the global South. Moreover most sessions seemed to be 
focused on the technocratic approach of increasing resource use 
efficiency. In fact, some of these concerns were brought up by us in 
a letter to the organizers of the Bonn 2011 Nexus Conference.

Resource use efficiency improvement is always a desirable objective, 
but a lot depends on how it is concretized. At Bonn, while increasing 
crop per drop was defined as part of green growth in agriculture, the 
"hows" were left undefined, thus leaving the field open for 
introduction of GMO crops, nanotechnology and synthetic biology. 
[This became clear, when in response to my intervention, in the 
strategy panel on creating more with less, the presenter answered in 
the affirmative].

The focus on resource use efficiency also usually goes along with 
silence on other issues. At Bonn, there was hardly any discussion 
about the polluting and resource intensive role of global capital in 
the traditional economy, about holding it accountable for cleaning up 
its act or about its contribution to the disenfranchisement of the 
poor. The private sector was seen as the source for funding, in the 
absence of public finance, but the question of how the private sector 
was to be regulated was not addressed in official proceedings.

In this, Bonn is not unusual. As several bloggers attending the 
ongoing climate conference in Durban point out at Occupy COP17 
<http://occupycop17.org/>, industrialized countries continue to urge 
those who question market mechanisms to "trust the markets." For 
example, a letter released yesterday in Durban, endorsed by over 163 
organizations including IATP, drew attention to an attempt by the 
U.S., the UK and Japan to turn the Green Climate Fund-created to 
support people in developing countries, people who are the most 
affected by the climate crisis but are the least responsible for 
it-into a "Greedy Corporate Fund." According to the Friends of the 
Earth International, "developed countries are trying to allow 
multinational corporations and financiers" to directly access Green 
Climate Fund financing, meant to help adaptation in the developing 
countries.

Also, while the conference stressed over and again the need for 
increasing the production of food and energy, and for ensuring water 
and energy security for the poor, there was little acknowledgement of 
the fact that today if too many women, men and children go to bed 
hungry, it is not due to problems with food production, but rather 
with food distribution.

What would be an alternative way of proceeding with the nexus 
approach or, if we want to retain the phrase, "green economy?" 
Perhaps we should begin, first, with this humble recognition: the 
nexus approach is best understood (and practiced) possibly by the 
over 1 billion people who do not have access to food and clean water, 
or the 2.5 billion who do not have access to sanitation or energy to 
meet their basic needs. The poorest billion actually uses resources 
most efficiently. But this is a different kind of efficiency from 
that involved in the green economy. Here, efficiency springs from a 
recognition of the human and ecosystem interdependence and indeed 
inseparability of what we for functional purposes separate out as 
three domains.

Second, building on this, we should adhere to the full implications 
of what the Bonn conference called for, without giving that call any 
substance or teeth: "putting people and their basic human rights at 
the center of the nexus-especially women, who make important choices 
and decisions regarding water, energy, and food for household 
consumption," is necessary to make the nexus approach work. To put 
people and their basic rights at the center of the nexus would mean 
listening to them, starting out from their perspective, rather than 
assuming that "we" have the solutions which we need to give to them.

Third, those of us in societies and states that consume far beyond 
our share of the earth's resources surely need to improve our 
resource use efficiency, but that must begin with the questioning of 
our consumption patterns themselves, rather than seeking more 
efficient ways to continue with the same consumption patterns.

© 2011 IATP

Shiney Varghese is Senior Policy Analyst with IATP. She leads IATP's 
work on global water policy, focusing on the water crisis, its impact 
on water and food security, and possible local solutions that 
emphasize equity, environmental justice and sustainability.
Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy
http://www.iatp.org/

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