APSC Answer Writing (Daily) based on Assam Tribune – 26/4/2025
For APSC CCE and other Assam Competitive examinations aspirants, practicing Daily Answer Writing is vital. This blog covers the most important Main question and its model Answer from the Assam Tribune today (26-04-2025).
📝 Mains Question
“The Rio Earth Summit of 1992 laid the foundation for global environmental governance, but its vision remains only partially realized. Critically evaluate the relevance of Rio’s principles in today’s context.”
🔹 Introduction
The Rio Earth Summit (1992), formally known as the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED), was a watershed moment in the evolution of global environmental governance. It produced landmark frameworks like the Rio Declaration, Agenda 21, UNFCCC, CBD, and UNCCD. While these initiatives outlined a blueprint for sustainable development, the world still struggles with climate crisis, biodiversity loss, and unequal ecological burdens.
🔹 Achievements of the Rio Earth Summit
Outcome | Relevance Today |
Rio Declaration (27 principles) | Introduced key concepts like precautionary principle, CBDR (Common But Differentiated Responsibilities), and intergenerational equity |
Agenda 21 | A voluntary action plan for sustainable development at global, national, and local levels—precursor to SDGs |
UNFCCC | Led to the Kyoto Protocol, Paris Agreement, and successive COP summits |
CBD & UNCCD | Institutionalized global efforts for biodiversity conservation and combating desertification |
🔹 Challenges in Realizing the Rio Vision
Challenge | Explanation |
North–South Divide | Developed nations reluctant to fund climate adaptation; developing nations burdened despite minimal historic emissions |
Weak Legal Enforcement | Rio agreements largely non-binding, limiting accountability |
Overconsumption | Global material use has increased 70% since 1992; consumerism still drives ecological degradation |
Greenwashing | Companies and governments often misrepresent eco-credentials without systemic change |
Inequitable Technology Access | Slow progress on climate finance and green tech transfer |
🔹 India’s Role in Upholding Rio Principles
- Led global push for climate equity and CBDR
- Promoted Lifestyle for Environment (LiFE) mission at COP26
- Achieved its Paris targets ahead of schedule: renewable energy, carbon intensity
- Launched National Biodiversity Mission and Desertification neutrality targets
🔹 Way Forward
- Global Green Deal
- Create enforceable agreements for emission cuts, green finance, and biodiversity protection
- Climate Justice Platforms
- Empower voices from Global South, indigenous communities, and frontline nations
- Multistakeholder Action
- Foster partnerships between governments, youth, civil society, and businesses
- Sustainable Lifestyles
- Promote low-carbon habits, mindful consumption, and localized production models
- Accountable Multilateralism
- Reform UN institutions and COP mechanisms for transparency, fairness, and compliance
🔹 Conclusion
The Rio Earth Summit gave us the vocabulary, vision, and values for sustainable development. But without equity, enforcement, and empathy, its legacy risks being symbolic. As the climate clock ticks faster, nations must move from promises to performance, from summits to solutions.
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