Sustainable
Consumption and Production:
The Story So Far
B urgeoning
consumption and the corresponding exploitation of our planet’s finite
natural resources have largely contributed to the sustainability
problems the 21st
century faces. The creation of such an ‘accumulation economy’1
has not only put ecological services at risk but also poverty
alleviation and development gains, undermining present and future human
and planetary welfare.
A part of the global development agenda for over two
decades 2,
Sustainable Consumption and Production (SCP) is a powerful response to
these unprecedented challenges. The most commonly accepted definition of
SCP is ‘the use of services and related products which respond to
basic needs and bring better quality of life while minimising the use of
natural resources and toxic materials as well as the emissions of waste
and pollutants over the life cycle of the service or product so as not
to jeopardise the needs of future generations’.3
It must be pointed out here that SCP does not simply
imply consuming or producing lesser goods and services. It is about
adopting different consumption and production patterns that are more
efficient and less resource intensive. Looking at both the demand
(consumption) and supply (production) side, SCP envisions well-being for
both – people and the planet.
Despite being designated as one of the overarching
objectives of sustainable d evelopment,
the progress on the SCP front has been rather ponderously slow. The
‘add-on’ 4
like treatment of SCP is a result of poor political will,
short-sightedness of policy discourses and a considerable lack of its
integration with other areas.
In this sense, 2015 is in the making of a historic
year, with adoption of a new global agenda in the form of 17 Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs). The Open Working Group (OWG) has tried to
create a universally relevant and transformative global development
agenda in the form of 17 goals for a sustainable future. OWG has not
only created a stand-alone goal (goal 12) on SCP but also tried to
inter-weave it with the other SDGs.
The attempted linking of Goal 12 with the other SDGs
and 10-Year Framework of Programmes on SCP will ensure treatment of
social-ecological-economic systems as integrated parts of a whole system
rather than as silos. However, putting aside this mainstreaming of SCP,
laudable as it maybe, the real question is ‘how to implement?’
given the complex web of systemic issues.
To begin with, the shift to SCP will demand a deeper
understanding of not only how (including the why) we produce, distribute
and consume our products but also how we organise our societies,
international and national policies and our everyday lives. It is about
creating a leapfrog in our actions, currently limited to technology
tweaks, recycling or promotion of green products. Akenji & Bengtsson 5
rightly point out the need for the SCP framework to address ‘social
and cultural aspects that facilitate and constrain production and
consumption patterns’. This allows the SCP targets to be aligned to
a country’s belief systems and development agenda, circumventing any
conflict that may undermine social cohesion. Such resonance along with
an enabling policy framework will help in ‘mobilising a broader
coalition of actors’
6
(such as citizens, businesses and civil society) towards building
partnerships and collaborative action.
The movement towards SCP systems needs to be fully
exploited by designing a robust monitoring framework with a
comprehensive set of indicators, giving the SCP targets teeth. UNEP 7
has proposed a set of indicators that can be classified into six domains
(1) scale of resource use, (2) decoupling, (3) environment impact, (4)
technology and lifestyles, (5) financing and investing for SCP and (6)
policy support for SCP.
The integration of SCP in SDGs framework is a step in
the right direction. Realising SCP systems will fulfil not only the
aspirations of today’s generations, but also the hopes and dreams of
future ones. It is time to make this paradigm shift. q
Mandira Thakur
mandirathakur@gmail.com
Endnotes
1 Common Action for United Nations, n.d., Addressing Sustainable
Consumption and Production in the SDGs
2 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development, World Summit
on Sustainable Development, Rio+20, and the High Level Panel (HLP) of
Experts on the post-2015 development agenda, etc.
3 Oslo symposium, 1994
4 Le Blanc D., 2014, Towards Integration at Last? The Sustainable
Development Goals as a Network of Targets
5 Akenji & Bengtsson, 2014, Making Sustainable Consumption and
production the core of the Sustainable Development Goals
6 Hajer, M. etal, 2015, Beyond Cockpit-ism: Four Insights To Enhance The
Transformative Potential of the Sustainable Development Goals
7 UNEP, 2015, Sustainable Consumption and Production Indicators for the
Future SDGs
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