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Information Habitat: Where information Lives
- Date submitted: 1 Nov 2011
- Stakeholder type: Major Group
- Submission Document: Download
- Additional Document:
Information & Communications Technologies:
Critical Foundation for a Sustainable Common Future
In the twenty-one years since the initial PrepCom for the UN Conference on
Environment and Development, no industry has come close to the exponential growth,
rapid technological innovation, widespread adoption and affordability than the
information & communications technology (ICT) sector; nor has any industry in human
history so rapidly transformed the path of development and the global financial,
economic and social landscapes.
However, the significance of ICT in relation to sustainable development has gained scant
attention, yet its growth and evolution continues to have profound impacts on a wide
range of processes critical to the transition to a sustainable common future - including
opportunities for access to information and citizen participation in decision-making,
technology transfer, access to education and health care, real-time monitoring of
industrial processes and of the environment, early warning systems for natural disasters
and disaster relief.
The second key concept in the rarely-cited second sentence of the Brundtland Report?s
definition of sustainable development - i.e. ?the idea of limitations imposed by the
state of technology and social organization on the environment's ability to meet
present and future needs? - provides a valuable framework for understanding ICT?s
significance for sustainable development. That ICT has enabled unprecedented new,
networked forms of social organization is undeniable, and the very idea of limitations
has been transcended in a digital environment in which the constraints of the material
world - imposed by the laws of conservation of mass and conservation of energy - no
longer apply, for information has zero mass, zero physical size and takes virtually zero
time to travel. Free access to knowledge is key to sustainable use of the environment.
The combination of the characteristics of information and rapidly increasing computing
power, storage capacity, bandwidth, affordability and portability has provided
unprecedented access to knowledge - the key to a sustainable common future.
The recognition in the Brundtland Report of the interlocking nature of the crises relating
to sustainable development represented a major breakthrough in understanding; in
this regard, advances in ICT have made possible analyses, models and presentations
based on massive sets of data from the nature and specifics of relationships between the
different sectors in ways that were ot previously possible.
Green Economy
*A Networked Information Economy: The key features of an the information
economy - virtually zero marginal cost of production, unprecedented opportunities
for collaborative peer production free from constraints of time and distance, the
emergence of new forms of intellectual property including Open Source software
and Creative Commons licenses - have given rise to a new culture of cooperation, a
transformation of markets in a platform that is essentially carbon-free, and a
rapidly growing and freely accessible global digital commons.
*Access to Markets: There are countless ways in which ICT has transformed
access to markets, from the use of cell-phones and text messaging for agricultural
producers in rural areas to current market prices and conditions to online payment
systems and the availability of free templates and hosting services that enable
individual or community-based enterprises to establish an online ?storefront? to
sell products and services - including, but not limited to, digital products - in the
global marketplace of the World Wide Web.
*Education and ICT: Access to all levels of education is a central prerequisite for a
sustainable common future and ICT is transforming access to education - whether
elementary education, education in methods of sustainable agriculture, or graduate
level courses from major universities.
*Technology Transfer: ICT has played a vital role as a medium for the transfer of
technology, especially in the free access to the transfer of the information
technology itself - in conjunction with Free/Libre Open Source Software (FLOSS) -
thus enabling free use of an extensive set of tools for building in a digital economy.
*Open Source Construction Templates: Among recent development has been
the dissemination of freely available templates with detailed designs for the
construction of goods and products, especially with locally available resources.
*Wireless Communications: The exploding use of wireless / wi-fi
communications unparalleled and timely access to information, markets, tele-
medicine, and much more in areas and conditions where communications were
previously minimal or non-existent, this breakthrough in modality of
communications offers numerous savings in energy and CO emissions.
*Information Infrastructure: The development of affordable, broadband
information infrastructure - especially wireless infrastructure - deserves much
greater recognition as a foundation for sustainable development. Wireless
infrastructure - for example, combining satellite access and mesh networking in
conjunction with improvised ?last-mile? information delivery. In many respects,
the establishment of universally accessible information infrastructure can allow
developing countries to leapfrog the wired technology of developed countries.
*Full Cost Accounting: The failure of markets to external costs ICT - applied,
inter alia, to monitoring of energy use and waste generation in production and to
accounting for external cost throughout a business?s value chain is a sine qua non
of full cost accounting. The adoption and implementation of full cost accounting
policies and procedures needs to be actively supported, through voluntary and/or
mandatory guidelines.
*External Costs of ICT: While there are many positive ways in which the ICT
sector can and does support a sustainable development path, the manufacture of
computers and mobile phones is not without a substantial ecological and social
footprint, including toxic wastes and toxic working conditions to which much
greater attention must be provided. There is also a vital need for greatly
strengthened provisions and requirements for recycling used electronic equipment
to reduce the impact on landfills and to recover valuable minerals for re-use.
Institutional Framework for Sustainable Development
*Access to Information and Participation: During the UNCED preparations,
the use of email and ?electronic conferences? became established as the default
modality for access to information and the participation of NGOs in UN
proceedings; since then, ICT has become
*Common Framework for Multilateral Agreements: The adoption of a
common framework for the administration of multilateral agreements can provide
greatly increased coherence between the different agreements. The characteristics
of a common framework - ideally based on an Open Source software platform -
needs to include a common data warehouse, and a common online template for
managing and organizing the work and meetings of multilateral agreements.
*Environmental Monitoring: From high-resolution satellite images through
real-time monitoring of air and water quality and weather conditions, systematic
monitoring of environmental conditions is essential to intelligent responses to
environmental conditions.
*Open Government & Open Data: Openness and transparency in government
play a key role in enabling broad-based an informed participation in decision-
making in sustainable development. The growth of ICT has been a principle driving
force in a growing movement for open government, including the recently launched
Open Government Partnership. A key element of open government is the
provision of open access to governmental data, in conjunction with encouragement
for provisions that enable the independent development of ?Apps? that can provide
access to government information in more useful and usable forms than are
available on government web sites.
*Online Meeting Spaces: One area of ICT that has gained greater appreciation
concerning sustainable development is the use of videoconferencing and the use of
collaborative documents for meetings - by governments, businesses and social
organizations - providing substantial savings in travel, time and energy & resource
use. The use of online meetings needs to be actively promoted, in conjunction with
the development and strengthening of broadband information infrastructure.
*Natural Disaster Early Warning Systems and Disaster Response: In the
context of predictions of increasing frequency and intensity of natural disasters,
ICT-based early warning systems can play a vital role, and mobile phones and GPS-
enabled smart phones have a crucial role in disaster recovery.
Conclusion
This paper barely begins to do justice to the scope of actual and potential relevance of
ICT with respect to sustainable development, a green economy and an institutional
framework for sustainable development. It is essential that greater attention be given to
this issue, for example through the establishment of an Ad Hoc Working Group on ICT
and Sustainable Development
* * * *
Submitted by Information Habitat: Where information Lives, NGO in Special
Consultative Status with ECOSOC, pioneered and supported the use of information &
communication technology by the UN NGO community, beginning with preparations for
the 1992 Earth Summit.
For comments and feedback, contact Robert Pollard, Founder & Information Ecologist
at ecologist@information-habitat.net