Rio Agenda 21 - Chapter 34: Transfer of environmentally sound technology, cooperation and capacity-building
Introduction
34.1. Environmentally sound technologies protect the environment, are less
polluting, use all resources in a more sustainable manner, recycle more of their
wastes and products, and handle residual wastes in a more acceptable manner
than the technologies for which they were substitutes.
34.2. Environmentally sound technologies in the context of pollution are "process
and product technologies" that generate low or no waste, for the prevention
of pollution. They also cover "end of the pipe" technologies for treatment
of pollution after it has been generated.
34.3. Environmentally sound technologies are not just individual technologies,
but total systems which include know-how, procedures, goods and services, and
equipment as well as organizational and managerial procedures. This implies
that when discussing transfer of technologies, the human resource development
and local capacity-building aspects of technology choices, including gender-relevant
aspects, should also be addressed. Environmentally sound technologies should
be compatible with nationally determined socio-economic, cultural and environmental
priorities.
34.4. There is a need for favourable access to and transfer of environmentally
sound technologies, in particular to developing countries, through supportive
measures that promote technology cooperation and that should enable transfer
of necessary technological know-how as well as building up of economic, technical,
and managerial capabilities for the efficient use and further development of
transferred technology. Technology cooperation involves joint efforts by enterprises
and Governments, both suppliers of technology and its recipients. Therefore,
such cooperation entails an iterative process involving government, the private
sector, and research and development facilities to ensure the best possible
results from transfer of technology. Successful long-term partnerships in technology
cooperation necessarily require continuing systematic training and capacity-building
at all levels over an extended period of time.
34.5. The activities proposed in this chapter aim at improving conditions and
processes on information, access to and transfer of technology (including the
state-of-the-art technology and related know-how), in particular to developing
countries, as well as on capacity-building and cooperative arrangements and
partnerships in the field of technology, in order to promote sustainable development.
New and efficient technologies will be essential to increase the capabilities,
in particular of developing countries, to achieve sustainable development, sustain
the world's economy, protect the environment, and alleviate poverty and human
suffering. Inherent in these activities is the need to address the improvement
of technology currently used and its replacement, when appropriate, with more
accessible and more environmentally sound technology.
BASIS FOR ACTION
34.6. This chapter of Agenda 21 is without prejudice to specific commitments
and arrangements on transfer of technology to be adopted in specific international
instruments.
34.7. The availability of scientific and technological information and access
to and transfer of environmentally sound technology are essential requirements
for sustainable development. Providing adequate information on the environmental
aspects of present technologies consists of two interrelated components: upgrading
information on present and state-of-the-art technologies, including their environmental
risks, and improving access to environmentally sound technologies.
34.8. The primary goal of improved access to technology information is to enable
informed choices, leading to access to and transfer of such technologies and
the strengthening of countries' own technological capabilities.
34.9. A large body of useful technological knowledge lies in the public domain.
There is a need for the access of developing countries to such technologies
as are not covered by patents or lie in the public domain. Developing countries
would also need to have access to the know-how and expertise required for the
effective utilization of the aforesaid technologies.
34.10. Consideration must be given to the role of patent protection and intellectual
property rights along with an examination of their impact on the access to and
transfer of environmentally sound technology, in particular to developing countries,
as well as to further exploring efficiently the concept of assured access for
developing countries to environmentally sound technology in its relation to
proprietary rights with a view to developing effective responses to the needs
of developing countries in this area.
34.11. Proprietary technology is available through commercial channels, and
international business is an important vehicle for technology transfer. Tapping
this pool of knowledge and recombining it with local innovations to generate
alternative technologies should be pursued. At the same time that concepts and
modalities for assured access to environmentally sound technologies, including
state-of-the-art technologies, in particular by developing countries, continued
to be explored, enhanced access to environmentally sound technologies should
be promoted, facilitated and financed as appropriate, while providing fair incentives
to innovators that promote research and development of new environmentally sound
technologies.
34.12. Recipient countries require technology and strengthened support to help
further develop their scientific, technological, professional and related capacities,
taking into account existing technologies and capacities. This support would
enable countries, in particular developing countries, to make more rational
technology choices. These countries could then better assess environmentally
sound technologies prior to their transfer and properly apply and manage them,
as well as improve upon already existing technologies and adapt them to suit
their specific development needs and priorities.
34.13. A critical mass of research and development capacity is crucial to the
effective dissemination and use of environmentally sound technologies and their
generation locally. Education and training programmes should reflect the needs
of specific goal-oriented research activities and should work to produce specialists
literate in environmentally sound technology and with an interdisciplinary outlook.
Achieving this critical mass involves building the capabilities of craftspersons,
technicians and middle-level managers, scientists, engineers and educators,
as well as developing their corresponding social or managerial support systems.
Transferring environmentally sound technologies also involves innovatively adapting
and incorporating them into the local or national culture.
OBJECTIVES
34.14. The following objectives are proposed:
(a) To help to ensure the access, in particular of developing countries, to
scientific and technological information, including information on state-of-the-art
technologies;
(b) To promote, facilitate, and finance, as appropriate, the access to and
the transfer of environmentally sound technologies and corresponding know-how,
in particular to developing countries, on favourable terms, including on concessional
and preferential terms, as mutually agreed, taking into account the need to
protect intellectual property rights as well as the special needs of developing
countries for the implementation of Agenda 21;
(c) To facilitate the maintenance and promotion of environmentally sound indigenous
technologies that may have been neglected or displaced, in particular in developing
countries, paying particular attention to their priority needs and taking into
account the complementary roles of men and women;
(d) To support endogenous capacity-building, in particular in developing countries,
so they can assess, adopt, manage and apply environmentally sound technologies.
This could be achieved through inter alia:
(i) Human resource development;
(ii) Strengthening of institutional capacities for research and development
and programme implementation;
(iii) Integrated sector assessments of technology needs, in accordance with
countries' plans, objectives and priorities as foreseen in the implementation
of Agenda 21 at the national level;
(e) To promote long-term technological partnerships between holders of environmentally
sound technologies and potential users.
ACTIVITIES
(a) Development of international information networks which link national,
subregional, regional and international systems
34.15. Existing national, subregional, regional and international information
systems should be developed and linked through regional clearing-houses covering
broad-based sectors of the economy such as agriculture, industry and energy.
Such a network might, inter alia, include national, subregional and regional
patent offices that are equipped to produce reports on state-of-the-art technology.
The clearing-house networks would disseminate information on available technologies,
their sources, their environmental risks, and the broad terms under which they
may be acquired. They would operate on an information-demand basis and focus
on the information needs of the end-users. They would take into account the
positive roles and contributions of international, regional and subregional
organizations, business communities, trade associations, non-governmental organizations,
national Governments, and newly established or strengthened national networks.
34.16. The international and regional clearing-houses would take the initiative,
where necessary, in helping users to identify their needs and in disseminating
information that meets those needs, including the use of existing news, public
information, and communication systems. The disseminated information would highlight
and detail concrete cases where environmentally sound technologies were successfully
developed and implemented. In order to be effective, the clearing-houses need
to provide not only information, but also referrals to other services, including
sources of advice, training, technologies and technology assessment. The clearing-houses
would thus facilitate the establishment of joint ventures and partnerships of
various kinds.
34.17. An inventory of existing and international or regional clearing-houses
or information exchange systems should be undertaken by the relevant United
Nations bodies. The existing structure should be strengthened and improved when
necessary. Additional information systems should be developed, if necessary,
in order to fill identified gaps in this international network.
(b) Support of and promotion of access to transfer of technology
34.18. Governments and international organizations should promote, and encourage
the private sector to promote, effective modalities for the access and transfer,
in particular to developing countries, of environmentally sound technologies
by means of activities, including the following:
(a) Formulation of policies and programmes for the effective transfer of environmentally
sound technologies that are publicly owned or in the public domain;
(b) Creation of favourable conditions to encourage the private and public
sectors to innovate, market and use environmentally sound technologies;
(c) Examination by Governments and, where appropriate, by relevant organizations
of existing policies, including subsidies and tax policies, and regulations
to determine whether they encourage or impede the access to, transfer of and
introduction of environmentally sound technologies;
(d) Addressing, in a framework which fully integrates environment and development,
barriers to the transfer of privately owned environmentally sound technologies
and adoption of appropriate general measures to reduce such barriers while creating
specific incentives, fiscal or otherwise, for the transfer of such technologies;
(e) In the case of privately owned technologies, the adoption of the following
measures, in particular for developing countries:
(i) Creation and enhancement by developed countries, as well as other countries
which might be in a position to do so, of appropriate incentives, fiscal or
otherwise, to stimulate the transfer of environmentally sound technology by
companies, in particular to developing countries, as integral to sustainable
development;
(ii) Enhancement of the access to and transfer of patent protected environmentally
sound technologies, in particular to developing countries;
(iii) Purchase of patents and licences on commercial terms for their transfer
to developing countries on non-commercial terms as part of development cooperation
for sustainable development, taking into account the need to protect intellectual
property rights;
(iv) In compliance with and under the specific circumstances recognized by
the relevant international conventions adhered to by States, the undertaking
of measures to prevent the abuse of intellectual property rights, including
rules with respect to their acquisition through compulsory licensing, with the
provision of equitable and adequate compensation;
(v) Provision of financial resources to acquire environmentally sound technologies
in order to enable in particular developing countries to implement measures
to promote sustainable development that would entail a special or abnormal burden
to them;
(f) Development of mechanisms for the access to and transfer of environmentally
sound technologies, in particular to developing countries, while taking into
account development in the process of negotiating an international code of conduct
on transfer of technology, as decided by UNCTAD at its eighth session, held
at Cartagena de Indias, Colombia, in February 1992.
(c) Improvement of the capacity to develop and manage environmentally sound
technologies
34.19. Frameworks at subregional, regional and international levels should
be established and/or strengthened for the development, transfer and application
of environmentally sound technologies and corresponding technical know-how with
a special focus on developing countries' needs, by adding such functions to
already existing bodies. Such frameworks would facilitate initiatives from both
developing and developed countries to stimulate the research, development and
transfer of environmentally sound technologies, often through partnerships within
and among countries and between the scientific and technological community,
industry and Governments.
34.20. National capacities to assess, develop, manage and apply new technologies
should be developed. This will require strengthening existing institutions,
training of personnel at all levels, and education of the end-user of the technology.
(d) Establishment of a collaborative network of research centres
34.21. A collaborative network of national, subregional, regional and international
research centres on environmentally sound technology should be established to
enhance the access to and development, management and transfer of environmentally
sound technologies, including transfer and cooperation among developing countries
and between developed and developing countries, primarily based on existing
subregional or regional research, development and demonstration centres which
are linked with the national institutions, in close cooperation with the private
sector.
(e) Support for programmes of cooperation and assistance
34.22. Support should be provided for programmes of cooperation and assistance,
including those provided by United Nations agencies, international organizations,
and other appropriate public and private organizations, in particular to developing
countries, in the areas of research and development, technological and human
resources capacity-building in the fields of training, maintenance, national
technology needs assessments, environmental impact assessments, and sustainable
development planning.
34.23. Support should also be provided for national, subregional, regional,
multilateral and bilateral programmes of scientific research, dissemination
of information and technology development among developing countries, including
through the involvement of both public and private enterprises and research
facilities, as well as funding for technical cooperation among developing countries'
programmes in this area. This should include developing links among these facilities
to maximize their efficiency in understanding, disseminating and implementing
technologies for sustainable development.
34.24. The development of global, regional and subregional programmes should
include identification and evaluation of regional, subregional and national
need-based priorities. Plans and studies supporting these programmes should
provide the basis for potential financing by multilateral development banks,
bilateral organizations, private sector interests and non-governmental organizations.
34.25. Visits should be sponsored and, on a voluntary basis, the return of
qualified experts from developing countries in the field of environmentally
sound technologies who are currently working in developed country institutions
should be facilitated.
(f) Technology assessment in support of the management of environmentally
sound technology
34.26. The international community, in particular United Nations agencies,
international organizations, and other appropriate and private organizations
should help exchange experiences and develop capacity for technology needs assessment,
in particular in developing countries, to enable them to make choices based
on environmentally sound technologies. They should:
(a) Build up technology assessment capacity for the management of environmentally
sound technology, including environmental impact and risk assessment, with due
regard to appropriate safeguards on the transfer of technologies subject to
prohibition on environmental or health grounds;
(b) Strengthen the international network of regional, subregional or national
environmentally sound technology assessment centres, coupled with clearing-houses,
to tap the technology assessment sources mentioned above for the benefit of
all nations. These centres could, in principle, provide advice and training
for specific national situations and promote the building up of national capacity
in environmentally sound technology assessment. The possibility of assigning
this activity to already existing regional organizations should be fully explored
before creating entirely new institutions, and funding of this activity through
public-private partnerships should also be explored, as appropriate.
(g) Collaborative arrangements and partnerships
34.27. Long-term collaborative arrangements should be promoted between enterprises
of developed and developing countries for the development of environmentally
sound technologies. Multinational companies, as repositories of scarce technical
skills needed for the protection and enhancement of the environment, have a
special role and interest in promoting cooperation in and related to technology
transfer, as they are important channels for such transfer, and for building
a trained human resource pool and infrastructure.
34.28. Joint ventures should be promoted between suppliers and recipients of
technologies, taking into account developing countries' policy priorities and
objectives. Together with direct foreign investment, these ventures could constitute
important channels of transferring environmentally sound technologies. Through
such joint ventures and direct investment, sound environmental management practices
could be transferred and maintained.
MEANS OF IMPLEMENTATION
Financing and cost evaluation
34.29. The Conference secretariat has estimated the average total annual cost
(1993-2000) of implementing the activities of this chapter to be between $450
million and $600 million from the international community on grant or concessional
terms. These are indicative and order-of-magnitude estimates only and have not
been reviewed by Governments. Actual costs and financial terms, including any
that are non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia, the specific strategies
and programmes Governments decide upon for implementation.
next
|