In Germany there is a broad discussion of sustainable development and climate change throughout the society. However, the discussion is often sporadic and only a few German organizations outside of the government monitor and support continuously global developments around sustainability and climate change.
One of the German networks is VENRO, an umbrella organization of development and humanitarian non-governmental organizations in Germany. The association was founded in 1995 and today consists of around 140 organizations. Their backgrounds lie in independent and church-related development co-operation, humanitarian aid as well as development education, public relations and advocacy.
“We – the VENRO member organizations – have joined together in the Association with the aim of strengthening our contribution to more justice in the One World. Our common mission is to optimally serve poverty reduction, the realisation of human rights and the conservation of natural resources.” [1]
VENRO monitors the UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development as it is implemented in and with support from Germany. They are committed to ensuring that sustainability becomes the consistent guiding principle of German politics. To this end, VENRO contributes to the political process with own proposals and positions. Their priorities recently included the revision of the German Sustainable Development Strategy (see my blog post ‘Sustainable Germany (3)” and the voluntary reporting by the federal government to the United Nations High-Level Political Forum on Sustainable Development (HLPF).
VENRO formulates on behalf of civil society organizations expectations and demands. In July 2019 Luise Steinwachs, Deputy Chair of VENRO has been part of the German governmental delegation presenting the first Voluntary National Review report at the UN’s High Political Forum on Sustainable Development. This is outstanding, as national governments usually do not share their speaking slot at the United Nations with Civil Society Organizations.[2] In addition, their comments are feed into the work of organizations like the German Council for Sustainable Development.
[1]
https://venro.org/english/who-we-are - accessed on 1 October 2021
[2] http://blog.venro.org/tag/hlpf/ and http://blog.venro.org/2019/07/ - accessed on 1 October 2021
The German Council for Sustainable Development (Nachhaltigkeitsrat) stimulates the debate and aims to make sustainability a public concern. According to the website it also ‘initiates and supports projects that aim at societal change, making sustainability a tangible issue in everyday life’. With respect to the later, there are certainly actions but it would be difficult to confirm that the Council already has a major impact on societal change with its projects.[1]
More relevant seem to be the policy papers and other publications of the Council. The position paper ‘Climate Neutrality’ was already introduced in blog post ‘Sustainable Germany (2)’.
[1]
https://www.nachhaltigkeitsrat.de/en/projects/ - accessed on 1 October 2021
The policy paper on options to reform global governance has been published on 1 March 2021 by the Council.[1] The paper's authors include Council Members like the former German minister for economic cooperation Heidemarie Wieczorek-Zeul or academics like Marianne Beisheim of the German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP) and Silke Weinlich of the German Development Institute (DIE). The paper provides an assessment of shortcomings and in the spirit of ‘form follows function’, it presents reform proposals to achieve improvements in four areas:
1. Mobilize political will, take decisions and follow up on these decisions
2. Drive and demand policy coheren
3. Identify effective instruments for the Decade of Action and disseminate them widely
4. Harnessing analysis and foresight for knowledge-based decision-making
Just by reading the titles of the areas one can get a good sense of what the experts are missing: political will, decision-making, follow-up of decisions, policy coherence, effective instruments, analysis and foresight…. That’s quite a lot and the full text is worth reading.
The text, figure and matrix of the policy paper provide the Council’s list of actions which needs to be taken to improve UN governance of sustainable development. It clearly supports the position that more international cooperation is necessary. Interestingly also, reform proposals are differentiates for different levels of reform ambition.
[1] https://www.nachhaltigkeitsrat.de/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/RNE_policy_paper_for_effective_UN-Sustainable_-Development_-Governance_1_March-2021.pdf - accessed on 1 December 2021