This MCQ module is based on: Environmental Concerns, Stockholm to Paris Summits
Environmental Concerns, Stockholm to Paris Summits
This assessment will be based on: Environmental Concerns, Stockholm to Paris Summits
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Chapter 6 · Environment and Natural Resources — Part 1: Environmental Concerns in World Politics — From Stockholm to Paris
When governments meet at international conferences and quarrel about climate, forests and oceans, they are no longer dealing only with traditional questions of war and peace — they are dealing with whether human civilisation itself can survive on a damaged planet. This Part traces the rise of environmentalism from the 1960s, when Rachel Carson's Silent Spring (1962) shocked the world, through the 1972 Stockholm Conference (UNCHE) where Indira Gandhi argued that poverty was the greatest pollution, the founding of UNEP, the 1987 Brundtland Report that defined "sustainable development", the historic 1992 Rio Earth Summit with its five outcomes (Agenda 21, Rio Declaration, UNFCCC, CBD, Forest Principles), the path through Johannesburg 2002 and Rio+20 in 2012, to the Paris Agreement of 2015 with its 1.5 °C goal and Nationally Determined Contributions.
6.1 Environmental Concerns in Global Politics
Open the international page of any newspaper and you will find that "world politics" no longer means only the rise and fall of empires, wars between countries, or the work of inter-governmental organisations. It also means melting glaciers, dying coral reefs, plastic in the deepest ocean trenches, and floods that swallow whole villages. Environmental questions are political questions — because who causes the damage, who pays the price, and who takes corrective action are all questions of power.
NCERT lists a frightening set of facts. Cultivable land across the world is barely expanding, and a substantial portion of existing agricultural land is losing fertility. Grasslands have been overgrazed; fisheries over-harvested. Water bodies face severe depletion and pollution. According to the Human Development Report 2016 of the United Nations Development Programme, 663 million people in developing countries have no access to safe water and 2.4 billion have no access to sanitation, resulting in the death of more than three million children every year. Natural forests — which stabilise the climate, moderate water supplies, and harbour most of the planet's land biodiversity — are being cut down. The total ozone in the Earth's stratosphere? has steadily declined, leaving a dangerous "ozone hole". Coastal pollution is rising; intensive human settlement of coasts is degrading the marine environment.
6.1.1 Why "Environment" Is Political — Three Reasons
It is tempting to say that the environment is a matter for geographers and biologists, not for political scientists. But the chapter gives three reasons why these questions are deeply political:
6.1.2 The Rise of Environmentalism — From 1962 Onwards
Awareness of the environmental consequences of economic growth acquired a political character from the 1960s onwards. The single book most often credited with starting the modern environmental movement is Rachel Carson's Silent Spring, published in 1962. Carson, an American marine biologist, documented how synthetic pesticides — especially DDT — were killing songbirds, contaminating food chains and harming human health. The image of an American spring without birdsong shocked the public; "silent spring" entered the language as a warning of an ecological catastrophe.
Through the 1960s and 1970s, a chain of disasters and discoveries pushed the environment onto the agenda of world politics. Industrial accidents, ecological warning reports, and the realisation that some of the planet's life-support systems were failing made governments respond.
| Year | Event | Why It Mattered |
|---|---|---|
| 1962 | Rachel Carson, Silent Spring | Documented how DDT and synthetic pesticides were killing wildlife and entering food chains. Started modern environmentalism. |
| 1968 | Club of Rome founded | Global think tank assembling scientists, economists and industrialists to study planetary limits. |
| 1972 | Stockholm Conference (UNCHE) & UNEP founded | First UN conference on the environment; led to the creation of the United Nations Environment Programme. |
| 1984 | Bhopal Gas Tragedy | Methyl isocyanate leak from the Union Carbide plant in India killed thousands; raised global concern about industrial hazards. |
| 1985 | Antarctic ozone hole confirmed | Scientific proof of CFC damage to the stratosphere; led to Montreal Protocol (1987). |
| 1986 | Chernobyl nuclear disaster | Catastrophic radiation release in Soviet Ukraine; demonstrated how environmental risks cross borders. |
| 1987 | Brundtland Report — Our Common Future | Defined "sustainable development". Set the agenda for the Rio Earth Summit five years later. |
6.1.3 The Long List of Concerns — What Environmentalism Worries About
By the late twentieth century, environmental politics had to deal with a long list of inter-connected dangers. NCERT names the most important ones; modern climate science has added a few more. Most appear repeatedly in international conferences and treaties.
6.2 The Club of Rome and the Limits to Growth (1968–1972)
In 1968, a small group of European industrialists, scientists and economists founded the Club of Rome, a global think tank that would study the long-term predicament of mankind. Four years later, in 1972, the Club of Rome published its most famous report — The Limits to Growth, written by Donella Meadows, Dennis Meadows, Jorgen Randers and others. The book used computer models to argue something controversial at the time: if population growth, industrialisation, pollution, food production and resource depletion continued unchanged, the Earth would hit absolute "limits" within a hundred years. The system would collapse.
The Club of Rome dramatised the potential depletion of the Earth's resources against the backdrop of a rapidly growing world population. International agencies — including the soon-to-be-formed UNEP — began holding international conferences and promoting detailed studies for a more coordinated response to environmental problems. Since then, the environment has emerged as a significant issue of global politics.
6.3 The 1972 Stockholm Conference (UNCHE) & the Birth of UNEP
In June 1972, the United Nations convened the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment — universally known as UNCHE? or the Stockholm Conference — in the Swedish capital. It was the first global conference ever held on environmental issues. 113 countries took part; thousands of NGOs, scientists and journalists attended. The conference produced the Stockholm Declaration — 26 principles linking environment, development and human rights — and recommended the creation of a permanent UN body for the environment.
Out of Stockholm came the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), founded in 1972 with its headquarters in Nairobi, Kenya. UNEP became the main UN body to monitor environmental conditions and coordinate international environmental agreements. Stockholm thus marks the moment when "the environment" first acquired an institutional home inside the United Nations system.
6.3.1 Indira Gandhi at Stockholm — Poverty as the Greatest Pollution
One of the most quoted speeches at Stockholm 1972 came from India's Prime Minister, Indira Gandhi. She was the only head of government besides the Swedish Prime Minister to attend. Her argument cut through the dominant Northern framing of environmental concern. She pointed out that for the Third World, poverty itself was a form of pollution — that hungry, ill-housed and ill-educated people could not afford the luxury of conservation. The argument that economic development and environmental protection had to go together, not against each other, would later become the foundation of the concept of sustainable development?.
6.4 The 1987 Brundtland Report — "Our Common Future"
In 1983, the UN Secretary-General appointed the World Commission on Environment and Development, headed by the former Norwegian Prime Minister Gro Harlem Brundtland. After four years of consultations, the Commission published its report in 1987: Our Common Future, popularly known as the Brundtland Report. It warned that traditional patterns of economic growth were not sustainable in the long term, especially given the demand of the South for further industrial development. It coined and popularised the phrase that has dominated environmental policy since: "sustainable development".
6.5 The 1992 Earth Summit — UNCED at Rio de Janeiro
The growing focus on environment was firmly consolidated at the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development? (UNCED), held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in June 1992. This was also called the Earth Summit. It was attended by 170 states, thousands of NGOs and many multinational corporations. Five years earlier, the Brundtland Report had warned of unsustainable patterns of economic growth; now the world's governments tried to act.
The Rio Summit dramatised a sharp divide between the rich industrialised countries — the "global North" — and the poor and developing countries — the "global South". The Northern states were anxious about ozone depletion and global warming; the Southern states wanted to talk about the connection between economic development and environmental management. Out of this tension came five major outcomes — known popularly as the "Five Pillars" of Rio.
| Outcome | Type | What It Did |
|---|---|---|
| Agenda 21 | Action Plan | Detailed list of "development practices" for the 21st century — sustainable agriculture, sustainable cities, atmosphere protection. Critics said it leaned more towards economic growth than ecological conservation. |
| Rio Declaration | Principles | 27 principles, including the famous Principle 7 — "common but differentiated responsibilities". |
| UNFCCC | Convention | The framework treaty on climate change. Parent treaty of the Kyoto Protocol (1997) and the Paris Agreement (2015). |
| CBD (Convention on Biological Diversity) | Convention | Treaty to conserve biodiversity, sustainably use its components and share benefits fairly. |
| Forest Principles | Statement | Non-binding statement on conservation and sustainable use of all types of forests. India and other forest-rich Southern countries blocked a binding forest treaty. |
| UNCCD (1994) | Convention | Negotiated after Rio: the Convention to Combat Desertification, adopted in 1994 to address land degradation in dryland regions. |
6.6 After Rio — Johannesburg 2002, Rio+20 in 2012, Paris 2015
The Earth Summit was the high point of environmental optimism — but the political road afterwards was rocky.
6.6.1 The Paris Agreement — How It Works
The Paris Agreement is the most important global climate treaty in operation today. Three of its features deserve attention:
Paris was a turning point for two reasons. First, it included all countries — including India and China, which had been exempt from the binding emission cuts of the Kyoto Protocol of 1997. Second, it switched from top-down targets (what the Kyoto Protocol attempted) to bottom-up NDCs, where each country sets its own goal. This made it more politically acceptable, but also more dependent on each country's voluntary ambition.
The NCERT itself asks: "Collect news clippings on reports linking environment and politics in your own locality." Spend one week scanning your local newspaper. Find at least five news items where an environmental issue (pollution, water scarcity, encroachment, deforestation, mining) becomes a political question — protests, court cases, government decisions, opposition criticism.
- For each clipping, note: the environmental issue, the political actors involved (parties, NGOs, government), and the action demanded.
- Map the clippings to the Five Pillars of Rio 1992 — does the issue connect to climate, biodiversity, forests, desertification, or principles of equity?
- Bring the file to class for a 5-minute presentation linking local environmental politics to global environmental politics.
6.6.2 Sustainable Development Goals — The 2015 Agenda
In September 2015, the UN General Assembly adopted the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development with its 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The SDGs replaced the older Millennium Development Goals and explicitly link environmental protection (Goals 13, 14, 15 — climate action, life below water, life on land) with poverty reduction, gender equality, decent work and education. The SDGs framework was a direct outcome of Rio+20.
Competency-Based Questions — Part 1
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
(C) A is true, but R is false.
(D) A is false, but R is true.