Category Archives: Wanabidii

Parliamentary Accountability and Good Governance: A Parliamentarian’s Handbook

From: Yona Maro

This report is a collection of essays focusing on the parliamentary accountability and the role of parliament in fostering accountability at all levels of interaction between citizens and government. The handbook is intended for parliamentarians and other practitioners, offering practical tools for strengthening parliamentary accountability.
http://www.parlcent.ca/publications/pdf/sourcebooktext.pdf


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Tanzania’s Forgotten Flood Victims

From: Yona Maro

While the Tanzanian government helps previous home-owners affected by the floods, many who lost everything face neglect.


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Msimbazi valley, Tanzania:

On December 21, Tanzania experienced its most severe flooding in 50 years.

Over 40 died in the floods, which washed away many families’ livelihoods and homes making thousands homeless. According to the Tanzanian Meteorological Agency, the floods were the worst the country has seen since independence in 1961.

The Msimbazi valley, already an area known to be at risk of flooding, was particularly badly affected.

Tanzania’s President Jakaya Kikwete suggested that the degree of destruction caused by the flood was down to the fact that people were living on unsuitable flood-prone land. Indeed, the area had been declared dangerous to build on since 1979, but to little effect.

Subsequently, victims from this area have been told they will not be allowed to move back and 580 households are to receive land in Mabwe Pande on which to build new homes.
The forgotten victims

The Tanzanian press has focused on these victims as they struggle to piece back their lives and adapt to their new homes. But one group is being ignored.

Mabwe Pande plots of land are only being given to former landlords and homeowners, but those renting rooms destroyed by the floods have received scant help from the government.

Many of these victims were housed in the Benjamin Mkapa Secondary School, but when school reopened they were asked to leave. They say that they were not offered anywhere else to stay and so they moved onto the pavement just outside the school.

It seems the government has assumed that because they were renting rooms in the flood-affected area, they can rent rooms elsewhere. But many of their livelihoods were also washed away and now they can no longer afford to rent. Since the start of January, Think Africa Press has met over 50 people who have been living on the street. Walking past, it is hard to miss the pile of mattresses and a stove that mark the home of dozens of adults and children.
What else to do?

Patrick John, who had been renting a room before the floods, explained to Think Africa Press, now “I don’t have anything.” He could no longer afford to rent a room because he lost all his belongings and money in the flood.

Musa Wazira, another victim of the flood, claimed that since school reopened, the group were not allowed to use any of its facilities. Instead, they have to pay to use a nearby public toilet.

Prior to the floods, Wazira had been renting a single room for his family in Msimbazi valley for 25,000 Tanzanian shillings (about $16) a month. Since then, he lost his job as a fruit and vegetable seller because of rotten stock. His wife earns TSh 2,000 ($1.25) a day as a food vendor, which they use to buy supplies, but they cannot save enough money to rent a room somewhere else.

Other family members did not have the space to offer them a room. Visibly depressed and with no alternative in sight, Wazira asked “What else to do?”

Mwanaharusi is living on the street with her five children. When the floods destroyed her rented room, she asked her husband, who she claimed had a drink problem and beat her, to leave. She says that without a husband it is harder, but that he used to steal her money to buy alcohol. He once appeared at the pavement camp and hit her. Mwanaharusi hopes to find work, but that would mean her sixteen-year-old daughter dropping out of school to look after her youngest child, who is just a few months old.

Ilham, a ten year old girl, said, “I don’t have comfort or pleasure here. But I don’t know what else we can do.”
Out of sight, out of mind

Patrick John claimed that Think Africa Press was the first press organisation to visit the group in two weeks. The government had provided some help, which they said they were grateful for, and some mattresses and school supplies were donated, but that now attention has faded from their plight.

But Wazira, insisted: “People know. People know we are here, we are suffering. But they can’t do anything, and the government doesn’t want to do anything.”

Aside from religious leaders donating food, those still on the streets have been met with polite indifference by many of the locals. One local, Micky, said that while he felt bad for them, he believed many were lazy and simply did not want to get jobs.

The political wrangling over Mabwe Pande plots has dominated Tanzanian news; some families are still waiting to receive their plots of land, and others are struggling to cope with long commutes and temporary houses. However, they are continuing to receive considerable help: tents, water, food, toilets, and electricity – much provided by international donors – and can dream of a better life. The Tanzanian Red Cross has already spent about TSh 200million ($125 million) helping those at Mabwe Pande.

These facilities are far beyond those that the families camped outside Benjamin Mkapa Secondary School can hope for. The sense of frustration and depression was tangible. Those who spoke to Think Africa Press knew that they would not be offered any plots by the government and that further outside help is unlikely.

By Sarah Collier

ECOWAS SPEAKER CONDEMNS MUTINY IN MALI

From: Yona F Maro

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Mali: West African Bloc Puts Peacekeeping Troops on Alert
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The West African economic bloc suspended Mali at an emergency meeting on Tuesday, and has put a peacekeeping force on standby in the most direct threat yet to the junta that seized control in a military coup there last week. Alassane Ouattara, the president of Ivory Coast, which holds the rotating chair of the Economic Community of West African States, or Ecowas, said a delegation of five African presidents would head to Mali within the next 48 hours to try to “restore constitutional order.” There is no immediate plan to deploy the peacekeepers, who will be put on standby in the event that a military intervention is needed, said Kadré Désiré Ouédraogo, the president of the Ecowas commission. The move suggests that the bloc may consider force if the mutinous soldiers who overthrew Mali’s democratically elected leader do not stand down.

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On Mar 22, 7:43 pm, Yona Maro wrote:
From: Yona Maro
Date: Thu, Mar 22, 2012 at 12:43 PM


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OFFICE OF THE SPEAKER

ECOWAS PARLAIMENT

Press Relase

ECOWAS SPEAKER CONDEMNS MUTINY IN MALI

The Speaker of ECOWAS Parliament, Senator Ike Ekweremadu has condemned the military mutiny in Mali, saying it is highly condemnable and totally unacceptable.

Senator Ekweremadu who reiterated that the days of military and unconstitutional takeover of power in any part of West Africa were over enjoined all members of the Malian armed forces to restrict themselves to their constitutional duties.

“This political development in Mali at a time the sub-region has achieved democratic governance and substantial regional stability at great human and material costs is an assault on the collective will and sensibilities of the peoples of West Africa and therefore totally condemnable and unacceptable”, he said.

The Speaker who threw the weight of the Community Parliament behind the position of the ECOWAS Commission on the political situationthat “ECOWAS position on Zero Tolerance to any form of forceful takeover or disruption of democratic governance in the sub-region will never be compromised as such would amount to a grievous setback for regional integration and development.”

Ekweremadu who also doubles as the Deputy President of Nigerian Senateurged the Authorities of Heads of State of ECOWAS, the African Union, United Nations and members of the international community in general to rally around Mali to defend the nation’s fledging democracy.

He expressed confidence that the committed efforts by the ECOWAS and the African Union would lead to a peaceful resolution of the rebellion in the north of Mali, urging the mutineers to “return to the barracks and not aggravate the fragile peace in the country”.

Recalling the role of the Community Parliament to protecting democratic governance in Niger Republic and the Republic of Guinea, the Speaker assured that the Parliament was observing developments in the West African country and would take further appropriate steps as events demand.

Uche Anichukwu

Special Adviser (Media) to Deputy President of the Senate

22/03/12

World: Workers’ rights and corporate accountability

From: Yona Maro

Women workers across Asia and throughout the world continue to face long hours, low wages and discrimination when they try to organise into unions within garment and footwear factories. Millions of young women are making products for companies Nike and Adidas. Over the past decade, under considerable public pressure, these companies have developed standards on workers conditions for their supplier factories. Despite this, there is still a considerable gap between sportswear companies’ policies and the actual conditions inside factories. This article explores a process in Indonesia from 2009 to 2011 which brought together Indonesian factories, international sportswear brands and Indonesian unions to develop a protocol in an attempt ensure that workers’ human rights are upheld inside factories. Women union leaders were instrumental in the development of this protocol and will be integral to the implementation of these new guidelines.
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/13552074.2012.663623


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World: Global report on the financing of nuclear weapons producers

From: Yona Maro

Each year, the nine nuclear-armed nations spend a combined total of more than US$100 billion on their nuclear forces – assembling new warheads, modernizing old ones, and building ballistic missiles, bombers and submarines to launch them. Much of this work is being carried out by private companies.

By lending money to nuclear weapons companies, and purchasing their shares and bonds, banks and other financial institutions are indirectly facilitating the build-up and modernization of nuclear forces, thereby heightening the risk that one day these ultimate weapons of terror will be used again – with catastrophic humanitarian and environmental consequences. Divestment from nuclear weapons companies is an effective way for the corporate world to advance the goal of nuclear abolition.

The report lists financial institutions that have been substantively involved in financing the selected nuclear weapons producers by means of share issues, shareholdings, bond issues, bondholdings and bank loans since 2008. More than half are based in the United States, and one-third in Europe. The rest are primarily from Asia (including Australia) and the Middle East. Most have significant investments in one or two of the nuclear weapons companies, while some invest in several. Among the banks and other financial institutions most heavily involved are Bank of America, BlackRock and JP Morgan Chase in the United States; BNP Paribas in France; Deutsche Bank in Germany; and Mitsubishi UFJ Financial in Japan.
http://www.dontbankonthebomb.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/DivestmentReport.pdf


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Empowering Girls and Women through Physical Education and Sport

From: Yona Mar

The topic of gender and physical education with a particular focus on girls has been widely researched and reported in the English language literature. The issues influencing girls’ participation in physical education and sport and the potential benefits they derive from their experiences are well known.

http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0021/002157/215707E.pdf


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Human Security vs Scientific Freedom: How Bird Flu has Provoked an Overdue Debate

From: Yona F Maro

Experiments conducted by two groups of scientists last year, one in
the US and the other in the Netherlands, have provoked a policy
imbroglio in most parts of the world that is destined to fester
through 2012. The experiments, funded by the National Institute of
Health in the United States, were aimed at determining how the bird
flu virus could be made transmissible between mammals. The result was
a deliberately created “bird flu” strain that may be capable of
passing from human to human.

Much coverage in the mainstream and scientific press in the developed
world has focused on the dispute over whether or not to publish the
studies as some fear they could provide recipes for criminals or
terrorists. However,  bigger issues are at stake such as questions
about how the international community should oversee particularly
risky types of infectious disease research? What, if any, research
should be impermissible? Who can make that call? And what should the
role of the World Health Organization (WHO) be in this tricky field
that mixes issues of public health and security? Despite the important
international implications of this debate, little attention has been
paid to it in Africa.

On one side are advocates of “scientific freedom” who offer no
apologies for the deliberate creation of these extremely dangerous
bugs. They say the experiments are important to prepare responses to a
future influenza pandemic. On the other side are a more heterogeneous
group of safety and security advocates who are dismayed at the lack of
oversight of the laboratories where such experiments occur. They argue
that the risks posed by such experiments outweigh the benefits and
that they should never have been performed. They argue that the
research contributes little to development of vaccines, and are
concerned about the potential for laboratory accidents that may have
far reaching negative health consequences.

Many critics of the research also want new procedures to review
security aspects of dangerous experiments before they happen. Some in
this group additionally want details of some experiments kept secret
from those considered America’s political enemies.

The US government, which both funded the experiments and is trying to
coordinate a response to the security concerns they have raised, has
ended up broadcasting mixed messages. The health ministry, which is
amenable to the interests of big science, tends toward the “scientific
freedom” position, while other officials are more likely to advocate
action to reign in risks. So the health ministry blandly promises new
biosecurity advice to laboratories, a project that has lingered undone
for nearly a decade. This guidance will likely be nonbinding and
unambitious, and have effect only in the US. Others meanwhile press
for mandatory measures that would create layers of local, national,
and international review for the small set of experiments deemed
highly risky.

Caught in this messy situation is the WHO, whose past successes have
often stemmed from its ability to bypass political rivalries – such as
its eradication of smallpox in the midst of the Cold War. If a new
international system to review especially risky infectious disease
research is to be developed, there is no question that WHO would need
to be, at some level, involved.

Yet such a system has the potential to be poisonous to the WHO and its
goals to promote public health interests over political rivalries.
What happens, for instance, if the US goes to the WHO to stop research
results from being provided to a rival such as Iran?

This is a less hypothetical problem than you may suspect. Some leading
US biological security voices appear to believe that WHO should be
bent to serve American security interests. They find it reasonable
that WHO would manage a two-tiered system of access to research
information, dividing nations between those deemed (by the US amongst
others) trustworthy and those that are not. Much as the Non-
Proliferation Treaty has divided the world into those who may, and
those who may not have nuclear weapons.

Compounding the difficulty for the WHO is that in May 2011 it adopted
a new international Framework agreement on sharing influenza viruses
and research data. This agreement is the culmination of a negotiation
that was largely divided along North-South lines.  Developing
countries, led by Indonesia, sought to reform WHO’s influenza
surveillance network, which plays a critical global role in influenza
diagnostics and vaccine selection.

Influenza vaccines are made from influenza viruses, and developing
countries rightly criticized the WHO for collecting viruses in the
name of public health and then gifting those viruses to the
pharmaceutical industry that used them to develop proprietary
commercial vaccines. Moreover, the industry is uninterested in
producing and selling influenza vaccines to developing countries, at
the prices that they could afford. At the centre of H5N1 outbreaks,
Indonesia found itself unable to buy vaccines made from the viruses
that it gave to the WHO, and which the WHO gave to industry.

The Framework promises to change this with a commitment from vaccine
makers to provide benefits to developing countries in return for
access to the viruses. These viruses include those that were used in
the experiments that kicked off the present controversy, which were
collected by the WHO system from Indonesia and Vietnam.

Ironically, in the negotiation of the Framework, the staunchest
advocate for the unrestricted sharing of influenza viruses between
nations was none other than the United States, which feared that
Indonesia or other countries would become so frustrated that they
would abandon the WHO system by making bilateral deals with vaccine
companies – cutting others out of the loop.

Now, however, the United States is making an abrupt change of course.
Concerned that the H5N1 experiments could offer its geopolitical
opponents a map to create a particularly nasty biological weapon, the
US doesn’t want these engineered viruses and key details of the
research freely shared.

Thus, having just fixed virus-sharing problems with the Framework, the
WHO now must deal with one of its weightier members wanting to revert
to a system that collects all the viruses but does not equitably share
the benefits. This time, the forces auguring for disparity are related
to security, rather than economic interests.

With advances in biotechnology enhancing the dangerous potential of
engineering viruses that transmit from human to human, it makes a
great deal of sense for specific types of research to be pre-screened
and more tightly overseen.  Some experiments, especially those
intended to increase the danger a disease poses, may be too risky to
allow at all. Also, because some such diseases can quickly spread
around the world, it stands to reason that an international review
should be required in cases where the most extreme danger is posed.

But this is no simple task. In fact, the potential political obstacles
to an international review system may be insurmountable – at least if
governments want to protect the independence of the international
public health agency. Governments that look to the WHO to implement
their national security policy would best look elsewhere. If a
depoliticised international research review system could be
established with countries on equal footing, however, it may help
ensure that we are less often confronted with dangerous surprises such
as the recent flu experiments. Given that any worldwide pandemic is
likely to hit the African continent harder than others, we should
prepare a response that upholds public health interests by ensuring
that influenza research goes forward that is well considered and
properly overseen, to improve public health outcomes.

Dr. Edward Hammond is Director of Prickly Research
(www.pricklyresearch.com) and an advisor to the Third World Network.
Dr. Chandre Gould is a senior researcher in the Crime and Justice
Programme of the ISS


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Land for Life: Securing our Common Future

From: Yona Maro

The GEF and UNCCD Secretariats collaborated on this new book to convey how sustainable land management (SLM) practices are helping shape a sustainable future for people and the planet. The book is illustrated with high quality photos donated by the GoodPlanet Foundation and from other sources, to demonstrate how human ingenuity is largely driving innovations in soil, land, water, and vegetation management. It describes how harnessing natural, social, and cultural capital is addressing fundamental needs for livelihood and well-being—food, water, energy, and wealth—while delivering global environmental benefits.

http://www.thegef.org/gef/sites/thegef.org/files/publication/SLM-english-1.pdf


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Population Aging and the Generational Economy

From: Yona Maro

The goal of this study is to improve our understanding of how changes in population age structure are influencing national economies. Until recently changes in age structure were favorable for most countries as populations became increasingly concentrated in the working ages. Effectively addressing the economic challenges of population aging is especially difficult, for two reasons. The first is that countries cannot rely exclusively on their own experience because in any given country changes in population age structure are occurring for the first time. The second problem is that many issues are addressed in piecemeal fashion, relying on partial and incomplete data. This study addresses this problem by relying on a newly developed system of accounts, National Transfer Accounts.

http://idl-bnc.idrc.ca/dspace/bitstream/10625/47092/1/133467.pdf

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E-Government in Transition Economies

From: Yona Maro ??

This paper deals with e-government issues at several levels. Initially we look at the concept of e-government itself in order to give it a sound framework. Than this paper look at the e-government issues at three levels, first it analyse it at the global level, second it analyse it at the level of transition economies, and finally it take a closer look on developments in Croatia. The analysis includes actual progress being made in selected transition economies given the Euro area averages, along with e-government potential in future demanding period.
http://www.waset.org/journals/waset/v53/v53-84.pdf 


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Towards a post-2015 framework for disaster risk reduction

From: Yona Maro

This brief is a response to the call for comments on the consultation paper Towards a Post-2015 Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction drafted by the United Nations International Strategy for Disaster Reduction (UNISDR). Recommendation and comments were given. One of the inputs include a note that the Post-2015 Framework for disaster risk reduction should continue the periodical reviews by the member states. It is highly recommended that the progress reports from the member states shall be continued as a long term global practice in measuring countries resilience to risks.

http://sustainability-k-governance.net/carr/CARRIndonesia4thMarch2012.pdf

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World: How US diplomats promote genetically engineered crops worldwide

From: Yona Maro

Dozens of United States diplomatic cables released in the latest WikiLeaks dump in 2011 reveal new details of the US effort to push foreign governments to approve genetically engineered (GE) crops and promote the worldwide interests of agribusiness giants like Monsanto and DuPont. The cables further confirm previous reports from the Web site Truthout on the diplomatic pressure the US has put on Spain and France, two countries with powerful anti-GE crop movements, to speed up their biotech approval process and quell anti-GE sentiment within the European Union (EU).

Tough regulations and bans on GE crops can deal hefty blows to US exports. About 94 percent of soybeans, 72 percent of corn and 73 percent of the cotton grown in the US now use GE-tolerate herbicides like Monsanto’s Roundup, according to the U.S. Agriculture Department.

http://civileats.com/2011/08/30/new-wikileaks-cables-show-us-diplomats-promote-genetically-engineered-crops-worldwide/


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World Development Report 2012

From: Yona Maro

The World Bank’s 2012 World Development Report: Gender Equality and Development, is 458 pages long. By contrast, the German Development Institute’s critique of the World Development Report is a 4 page brief, but these pages have punch.

The gist of the paper is how the World Development Report shows that the Bank now acknowledges that “….social and cultural factors make it difficult for women to participate with equal rights in the social and political life of their societies.” This statement isn’t groundbreaking in itself, but it shows a sea change in how the World Bank thinks about women’s equality. In the past, they viewed gender equality as a natural side effect of bringing greater prosperity to a region, but a more complex narrative has emerged where increased prosperity for a nation as a whole won’t necessarily make it any easier for a woman to get an education, start a business, or have access to birth control. The brief also critiques the World Bank’s past efforts at gender assessment, and gives them suggestions for areas that need improvement.

http://www.bicusa.org/en/Document.102866.aspx


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The Humanitarian Response Index 2011

From: Yona Maro

This report gathers evidence on how the humanitarian sector is functioning, and from this, raise concerns about important issues that affect the quality and effectiveness of humanitarian action, ranging from the importance of need-based approaches and the dangers of aid politicisation, to the need for better prevention, preparedness, and risk reduction, and support for protection and access.

The 2011 report examines responses to crises to assess how the world’s main donor governments – 23 members of the OECD’s Development Assistance Committee (DAC) – face the challenge of ensuring that their aid money is used effectively and efficiently in order to maximize the benefits for those affected. It gathers and analyses data regarding the way in which donor governments address gender in their policies and funding, and provide field actors’ perspectives of donor commitment to gender.

http://daraint.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/HRI_2011_Complete_Report.pdf


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A Global Redesign? Shaping the Circular Economy

From: Yona Maro

– A fundamentally new model of industrial organization is needed to de-link rising prosperity from resource consumption growth – one that goes beyond incremental efficiency gains to deliver transformative change.

– A ‘circular economy’ (CE) is an approach that would transform the function of resources in the economy. Waste from factories would become a valuable input to another process – and products could be repaired, reused or upgraded instead of thrown away.

– In a world of high and volatile resource prices, a CE offers huge business opportunities. Pioneering companies are leading the way on a CE, but to drive broader change it is critical to collect and share data, spread best practice, invest in innovation and encourage business-to-business collaboration.

http://www.chathamhouse.org/sites/default/files/public/Research/Energy,%20Environment%20and%20Development/bp0312_preston.pdf


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World: Young, Underemployed and Optimistic

From: Yona Maro

A plurality of the American public believe that young adults are having the toughest time of any age group in today’s economy — and a lopsided majority says it’s more difficult for today’s young adults than it was for their parents’ generation to pay for college, find a job, buy a home or save for the future.

Young adults (ages 18 to 34) say that the sluggish economy has had an impact on a wide array of coming-of-age decisions about career, marriage, parenthood and schooling.

These accommodations to a tough economy appear to have contributed to a broader change in social norms about when adulthood begins. The survey finds that today two-thirds of parents of children age 16 or younger say children should have to become financially independent from their parents by the age of 22 — down from 80% who felt this way in 1993.
http://www.pewsocialtrends.org/files/2012/02/young-underemployed-and-optimistic.pdf


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Japan: 1-year progress report

From: Yona Maro

One year after the worst natural disaster in Japan’s history — the massive earthquake and tsunami of March 11, 2011 — Mercy Corps continues to work with our partner agencies, Peace Winds Japan and PlaNet Finance Japan, to help the Japanese people rebuild. Mercy Corps and Peace Winds provided relief supplies — tents, tarps, blankets, mattresses, space heaters, kerosene, medical masks, clothing, bottled water, diapers, toilet paper, school supplies and food — to 42,000 people living in shelters.

Comfort for Kids builds up the ability of local communities to help children recover from the emotional effects of a large-scale disaster. We customized this program for Japan and incorporated activities for adults. Mercy Corps provided a generator, forklifts, fish tanks, ice storage and scales to help reopen the Ofunato fish market, which supports the fishing industry of the entire town. The market employs 20 people who serve dozens of fishermen and 100 vendors who buy, sell and process salmon and other kinds of fish.
http://www.mercycorps.org/sites/default/files/japan_1-year_progress_report_final_0212.pdf


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Buying green! A handbook on green public procurement

From: Yona Maro

Green Public Procurement (GPP) is defined in the European Commission’s Communication Public procurement for a better environment as “a process whereby public authorities seek to procure goods, services and works with a reduced environmental impact throughout their life cycle when compared to goods, services and works with the same primary function that would otherwise be procured.

This handbook has been produced for public authorities, but many of the ideas and approaches are equally relevant for corporate purchasers. It should also help suppliers and service providers – particularly smaller companies (SMEs) – to better understand the environmental requirements increasingly encountered in public tenders.

GPP may also provide financial savings for public authorities – especially if you consider the full life-cycle costs of a contract and not just the purchase price. Purchasing low-energy or water saving products for example, can help to significantly reduce utility bills. Reducing hazardous substances in products can cut disposal costs. Authorities who implement GPP will be better equipped to meet evolving environmental challenges, as well as political and binding targets for reduction of greenhouse gas emissions, energy efficiency and in other environmental policies.

http://bookshop.europa.eu/en/buying-green–pbKH3011071/downloads/KH-30-11-071-EN-C/KH3011071ENC_002.pdf;pgid=y8dIS7GUWMdSR0EAlMEUUsWb0000SbuoV7XR;sid=_qr2jp7Sx1H2jtGKodVoKfz3-XnwXZkB-Hk=?FileName=KH3011071ENC_002.pdf&SKU=KH3011071ENC_PDF&CatalogueNumber=K


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Presentations on incentives to deploy renewable energy and energy efficiency

From: Yona Maro

The World Bank Group has made available the presentations from the recent workshop on incentives for renewable energy and energy efficiency technology adoption. The workshop was attended by public and private sector participants and convened from 30 January-2 February 2012.

The main topics addressed were feed-in tariffs (FiTs) for renewable energy, trends and lessons learned in energy efficiency, renewable energy auctions and competitive procurement of energy efficiency. Tim Richards, Managing Director of Energy Policy for General Electric (GE), told workshop participants “We are in a phase of developing higher-cost renewable energy, and this is a highly policy-dependent environment,” adding that the key concept to focus on is the cost of electricity. In this respect, participants discussed FiTs—the most widespread policy incentive for renewable energy—which offer cost-based compensation to renewable energy producers. Workshop participants agreed that even though costs of wind and solar energy are diminishing, they cannot yet compete with fossil fuels without policy incentives.

http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/TOPICS/EXTENERGY2/0,,contentMDK:23106382~menuPK:6191602~pagePK:210058~piPK:210062~theSitePK:4114200,00.html


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Disasters in Africa: the case for legal preparedness

From: Yona Maro

This report provides examples from African countries where National Societies have supported their governments to strengthen their capacity to prevent, mitigate and respond to disasters by improving their laws. It states that good legislation can empower both communities and civil society organisations, and integrate them in disaster management in different ways, as the disaster management law of South Africa shows. It also contains a case study on Mozambique, highlighting how the International Relief and Initial Recovery Assistance (IDRL Guidelines) have assisted one government in reviewing the preparedness of its existing frameworks.

http://www.ifrc.org/PageFiles/92463/IDRL-Africa-Report-2011.pdf


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