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SDNP China: Helps to Implement Agenda 21
"People are now aware that the sustainable development strategy is essential to China's future development." - Wang Qiming, SDNP Coordinator , China
To a greater extent than most other SDNP projects, the project in China is
an integral part of its host country's Agenda 21 (comprehensive programme
for action agreed to by most countries at the 1992 Earth Summit) initiative.
This alliance is what gives the programme its special character.
"Technically, there are many organisations that provide IT training in
China," says SDNP National Co-ordinator Wang Qiming, "but only our
organisation does IT training combined with sustainable development."
Launched in 1997 with UNDP grants totalling US $340,000, SDNP China has
trained 150 government workers in four training courses, with two more
courses planned for this year. Participants from the Government include
civil servants at the national level and those from 16 pilot cities with local
Agendas 21, as well as representatives from 40 counties and townships
known as "sustainable communities." All of these government trainees are
working on implementing Agenda 21 at their respective levels. Among
other things, they are preparing web sites to provide the public with
information on local resources and sustainable development issues.
"National Agenda 21 co-ordinates the implementation of China's
sustainable development strategy," Mr. Wang explains. "So we have lots of
communication with each government department, particularly those
dealing with natural resources, environment and legislation." These
agencies, he points out, already have access to the Internet. Where they
need help is in learning how to use the Internet effectively to find
information relevant to their work, and this is the focus on SDNP's training.
In addition, SDNP has trained people in a number of government agencies
in content preparation and the production of web sites. "We now have ten
ministries whose data can be searched on the web," says Mr. Wang.
Newly active NGOs
But it would be inaccurate to say that SDNP China trains only government
employees. Mr. Wang notes that in recent years a groundswell of concern
has focused public attention on environmental issues. "In China in the last
couple of years, people are concerned about the environment," he says.
"For instance, Beijing is the worst city for air pollution in the world. The
people know that, and they want to know how to improve it." So about 30
percent of the people SDNP China has trained are academics, researchers,
and representatives of nine NGOs based in Beijing, including the Chinese
Society for Sustainable Development, the Environmentally Sound
Technology Centre, and the Economic Monitoring Centre which provides
"neutral" monitoring of China's economy.
The rise of NGOs in China has coincided with the proliferation of
Information Technology (IT), and represents a sharp departure from
conditions of the last 50 years. "The NGOs in China working on
environment and development are new," says Mr. Wang. "They provide
their own independent monitoring indicators on their own web sites. The
Government has to accept this. In fact it's quite normal now.
Multi-information is available on the Internet. Nobody can stop that."
In another dramatic break with tradition, Mr. Wang says that Chinese NGOs
are now finding they can arrange for funding via the Internet, both from the
Chinese Government and from abroad, in order to create their own
activities. "They are searching for co-operation and partnerships," he says,
"and they also provide information about their activities in China." For
instance, one NGO is working on eliminating the environmental pollution
caused by the ubiquitous plastic bags used to wrap "quick lunches."
Another is monitoring automobile emissions in Beijing. "They can provide
their recommendations to the government through the Internet," says Ms.
Wang. "Actually, the government encourages NGOs who are concerned
about the environment and development, because that is the way we seek
the participation of the whole society."
Before SDNP came along, Chinese NGOs and research organisations were
already compiling databases on various sustainable development topics,
but none were available on the Internet. That has only been accessible in
China since 1997. Now they are. "We encouraged the NGOs to get on the
Internet and connect to each other to share their information," says Mr.
Wang. "That's the primary goal of SDNP."
This year, the two training courses run by SDNP will be advanced courses
in areas such as how to create a Common Gateway Interface [CGI) between
a database and one or more web sites. Participants will be drawn from the
most qualified trainees from the Government and NGO sectors.
Promoting information-sharing
To further promote information-sharing within China, SDNP has organised
formal workshops on information-sharing and brought together
government agencies and Chinese research institutions to discuss what
kinds of mechanisms would be best for sharing information within China.
"It's not Internet, it's Inconnect," says Mr. Wang.
SDNP China also promotes access to the Internet on the part of the general
public by providing a fully-equipped centre in the SDNP office at the
Beijing Environmental Training Centre for anyone who cares to drop in.
"We have a national node here, our own server" says Mr. Wang. "We have
the software and the hardware and ten computers. So we provide remote
access for users who would like to get onto the Internet."
In fact, SDNP has a number of servers, including an FTP server, a web
server, and a database server. It has set up the first Geological Information
Survey [GIS) Internet server in China. On this server, information on natural
resources (agriculture, forests, mineral deposits), the environment and
natural disasters, including "a huge amount of diagrams" is available to the
Chinese public for the first time.
Innovations in IT and Metadata on Sustainable Development
Mr. Wang is obviously proud of the project's accomplishments. "We
provide the training course, the training materials, and we publish a book
on IT use through China's scientific press," he says, noting that SDNP
China also invited researchers to use their facilities to set up the first GIS
standards for China and to create metadata standards for the first time in
China. "We initiated this idea in China from the international community.
We provided the data standards, we organised a meeting with the
government, the State Development Planning Commission and the Ministry
of Science and Technology to which we are attached, to release these
standards and use them on all projects in China containing GIS information.
So now it's accepted."
SDNP China is also working with the Massachusetts Institution of Technology (MIT) to set up a mirror site of the Global Systems for Sustainable Development (GSSD). "We are working on translating their interface into Chinese so they can have the Chinese mirror site here," says Mr. Wang. "People can access it by keying in Chinese words, and this
software can do the auto-translation into Chinese and English. On the
parallel search for information when it comes back, they will ask if you want
to have it translated into Chinese or if you want the original English
information. Then the software will do the auto-translation back into
Chinese." However, he points out that the software for these automatic
translations still needs improvement, and SDNP China is working on this
during the current year.
A Sustainable Development web-browser
Like other SDNP projects in countries such as Lebanon, SDNP China found
that commercial Internet browsers are not always as user-friendly as they
might be. "The difficulty is that Yahoo provides too much information,"
says Mr. Wang. "You may search for sustainable development in China,
and they provide you with thousands of articles. You really don't know
which one you want."
So to help people find their way through the tangled web of the Internet,
SDNP China has created its own Sustainable Development web site
navigator. "We collected 400 web sites from around the world related to
sustainable development," says Mr. Wang. "We put them into classified
groups, like capacity-building, environmental technologies, human
settlements, cleaner production, global issues on SD. This helps people so
they can easily access the information they want."
SDNP is also compiling a database of information on China from 100
databases around the world, such as FAO's data on China's food
production, UNDP's data on China's development, or the US Geological
Survey's geological data on China. This newly compiled database will be
accessible on the Internet soon.
A mouthpiece for sustainable development
Mr. Wang feels that SDNP China's greatest accomplishment so far has been
in promoting sustainable development in the context of Agenda 21. "SDNP
is an integral part of the implementation of Agenda 21," he says. "We are
not independent. I think our greatest accomplishment is that people are
now aware that the sustainable development strategy is essential to China's
future development. And they know about this strategy through
government documents such as the national Agenda 21 document," --
documents which are available to them through SDNP on the Internet both
in both English and Chinese." This information provides tools that people
at the local Agendas 21can use for their own purposes."
Another important element is the credibility associated with SDNP's web
sites because of their affiliation with UNDP and the Chinese government,
which according to Mr. Wang is highly trusted within China. "People
believe our web sites," he says. "The news or the information has
authority. If we were an NGO, or if we are funded by foreign countries, the
government officials would not trust us."
Working toward self-sufficiency
UNDP funding for SDNP China is due to expire in mid-2000, and Mr. Wang
is seeking ways for SDNP to become self-supporting. Because of its close
ties with the Chinese government, particularly the Ministry of Science and
Technology with which it is affiliated, support appears to be forthcoming.
"Last year the Ministry of Science and Technology approved a US $2.5
million project for us to continue SDNP's work," he says. "We are
responsible for managing this project, co-ordinating with ten different
Ministries and encouraging them to put their data onto the Internet. That is
the follow-up to SDNP and it's very important. Without SDNP the Chinese
government wouldn't be launching a big follow-up project like this on
information-sharing."
Additional funds are being sought from the European Union, which is
supporting a 15 million ECU (European Currency Unit) project on China's
environmental management for sustainable development. "In terms of
dollars, quite a large part of this project involves exchanging information
between the European Union and the States on environmental issues,"
says Ms. Wang.
But he is also convinced that SDNP China can become a money-making
venture through what he calls "the transfer of environmentally sound
technologies," in other words, charging people to access information about
the growing number of activities in China designed to produce new
technologies that will support environmental sustainability. "This will
provide the Chinese people with information on where to find technologies
that are environmentally friendly," he says. "There is a market there." He
cites examples such as research on detergents that do not contain
phosphorous or technologies that use all parts of a given crop, including
the stems which can be made into cardboard and building materials. "There
are a lot of new technologies, such as energy efficiency and clean
investments, new materials, construction and also medicine, which are very
interesting to the Chinese people and which we can put on different
servers," he says. SDNP already charges users of its ISP 50 cent an hour,
but Mr. Wang points out that this discounted price ("to stimulate them")
will have to be increased.
Another plan for income-generation would be to provide technical
assistance and help with web site design to the 16 cities and 40
"sustainable communities" whose representatives have already been
trained by SDNP. These communities did not have access to the Internet
until SDNP trained their employees and the local Agenda 21 projects
provided the hardware they needed to access the Internet, through a US
$70,000 grant from SDNP.
With all these possibilities, it would seem that SDNP China's work is far
from over, despite the important contribution it has already made. Maybe
it's partly a coincidence, but when Mr. Wang looks back on the two-year
SDNP project, he is struck by the huge increase in the level of Internet use
in China. "I have to say that since 1997, the Internet has spread out to the
whole country," he says.
Agenda 21
Agenda 21 is the comprehensive programme for action agreed to by
delegates from most countries of the world at the United Nations
Conference on Environment and Development ("the Earth Summit")
which took place in Rio de Janeiro in 1992. It provides a blueprint for
action in all areas relating to sustainable development of the planet, from
now into the 21st century. There is a growing consensus all over the
world that development must meet the needs of the present generations
without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their
needs. Agenda 21 calls for changes in the economic development
activities of all human beings - changes that are based on a new
understanding of the impact of human behaviour on the environment. The
call for sustainable development is not simply a call for environmental
protection, but is in fact a call for a new concept of economic growth - one
that provides fairness and opportunity for all the world's people, without
further destroying the world's scarce natural resources and carrying
capacity.
Sustainable development is a process in which economics, finance, trade,
energy, agriculture, industry and all other policies are so designed as to
bring about development that is economically, socially and
environmentally sustainable.
For more info: info@sdnp.undp.org
Technical Terms:
Metadata:
Metadata are descriptive information about data and information resources. Typically, they describe, point to, or otherwise complement the information content of the data to which they are related. Metadata provide concise aid in locating desired information on a variety of topics, and help make such information easily accessible. Metadata may describe a range of information resources such as digital data images, databases, and printed materials such as books, memos, or maps.
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