SPCS Popular Version
SPCS - An Overview
In the face of worsening environmental problems,
several of the principal environment organizations - the United
Nations Environment Programme, the World Wide Fund for Nature, and
IUCN - The World Conservation Union -proposed and then funded the
development of a global strategy for the rational development and
conservation of natural resources. Called the World Conservation
Strategy: Living Resource Conservation for Sustainable Development,
it was launched in 1980. As the logical follow-up to this strategy,
and with the help of IUCN, in due course many countries began preparation
of national conservation strategies.
In
Pakistan, the first Government organization to receive the WCS was
the National Council for the Conservation of Wildlife in what was
then the Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Cooperatives in 1983.
The Council's head, the Inspector General of Forests, asked IUCN
to help in the preparation of a National Conservation Strategy (NCS).
Actual work started in 1988, but it took till 1992 for the final
document to be approved by the Cabinet. The NCS also formed the
basis for the Pakistan National Report to UNCED, the UN Conference
on Environment and Development in Rio de Janeiro.
When the NCS document was completed,
IUCN Pakistan-at the request of the Government of Pakistan - held
nine workshops throughout the country to explore the potential and
opportunities for implementation. Right away, it was clear that
NCS implementation at the provincial level would be possible only
if the provincial Government at the highest level perceived the
need for pursuing such a strategy and accepted responsibility for
doing so. The North West Frontier Province (NWFP) decided to take
the lead and hosted the workshop on the role of provincial institutions
in implementation in Peshawar on August 13, 1991. This was followed
by a series of meetings with senior officials of the Government
of NWFP, culminating in a briefing to the Chief Minister, NWFP,
and his colleagues on November 17, 1991. Several ideas emerged during
these meetings and these formed the basis for a proposal which was
approved by the Chief Minister in December 1991. The Sarhad Provincial
Conservation Strategy (SPCS) could now go ahead.
Initially it was thought that the
SPCS would be developed by reviewing, available in- formation and
filling in gaps using studies by consultants. But it soon became
clear that the real virtue of strategic planning for sustainable
development was in initiating a public dialogue and creating public
ownership of the strategy through awareness and participation. From
this emerged the resolve to undertake province-wide public consultation
and to develop sub-strategies of the SPCS through involving people
who had a stake in the issue. These component strategies would then
be included under an overarching SPCS.
To this end a Sarhad Provincial Conservation
Strategy Inception Report was compiled and released in October 1993.
This formed the basis of the extensive consultation process carried
out with the general public in cities and villages and with government
departments, businessmen, private entrepreneurs, teachers and the
NGOs. The SPCS used a two-track approach: while consultations on
the Inception Report proceeded during the two years of the Strategy's
finalization, activities such as preparation of an environmental
profile, institution-strengthening, and awareness raising were implemented
in parallel. Out of this emerged the Sarhad Provincial Conservation
Strategy, 1995-98, a statement of commitment by the government and
people of the NWFP to move forward with an effective programme of
sustainable development.
The SPCS is the principal plan for
implementing the National Conservation Strategy in the NWFP. It
is both a comprehensive statement of provincial aspirations for
sustainable development and a commitment package containing major
policy statements, wherefore initiatives, structural improvements
and bold new programmes. With its strong emphasis on changing the
administration's operating style, the SPCS will open up government
priority-setting to the people in an unprecedented manner.
The SPCS 1995-98 is the first generation
of the strategy which, by design, is innovative, exploratory and
time-specific. It will be reviewed in 1998 to coincide with the
launch of the Ninth Five-Year plan for Pakistan. By then there will
be a far better understanding of the actual efficacy of many of
the SPCS processes, systems and policies. It is also likely that
certain priorities will have changed, and portions of it may well
have become outdated-some would have been implemented while others
may be judged unviable.
In a sense then, while the SPCS 1995-98
reflects today's priorities and is as complete as currently possible,
it remains a flexible, evolving plan to achieve sustainable development
in the NWFP. In this regard, the SPCS is subject to a legal requirement,
set out by the proposed NWFP Environment Act, that the strategy
is reviewed and re- written every five years. This will be done
by the Planning, Environment and Development Department of the Government
of NWFP, in conjunction with other departments involved in the implementation
of the Strategy.
The neglect and abuse of the environment over past decades has come
to pose a formidable challenge, and the large number of complex
problems cannot be addressed in a short period of time. This is
partly because the NWFP is a resource-deficient province, and donors
are unlikely to fund all that must be done. The SPCS has, there-
fore, adopted a prioritized agenda for implementation, in which
it concentrates initially on activities which can bring about the
greatest improvements for the smallest investments.
- What
the SPCS is all about
- Towards
Improved Governance
- Poverty
Alleviation & Population
- Community
Participation
- Communication
& Education
- Urban
Environment
- Sustainable
Industrial Development
- Natural
Resource Management
- Conserving
Biodiversity
- Cultural
Heritage
- Implementation
in Perspective
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