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	 The Rio Declaration on Environment and Development describes each States' obligations 
		for promoting the principle of sustainable development, and involves managing resources 
		in a way that provides for the needs of those who use those resources, as well as providing 
		for their protection, and to preserve mankind's future interests in them. This takes into 
		account the fact that different States have differing abilities and methods for dealing 
		with environmental problems, a concept now known as CBDR - Common But Differentiated 
		Responsibilities. The Declaration identified 27 guiding principles on sustainable 
		development, including: 
	
		- Inter-generational equity, i.e. equity between the rights and needs of current and future 
			generations;
 
		- Precautionary approach, i.e. lack of full scientific certainty of the causes and effects 
			of environmental damage should not be a reason for delaying action to prevent such 
			damage;
 
		- "Polluter Pays" principle, i.e. polluters should bear the cost of pollution, and the costs 
			of environmental damage should be reflected in cost/benefit analyses of actions affecting 
			the environment; and
 
		- Common But Differentiated Responsibilities (CBDR), i.e. the world community has a common 
			responsibility for protecting the global environment, but the level of responsibility 
			should be concomitant with the respective amount of pollution produced.
 
	 
	 
	
	For more detailed information on the Rio Declaration on Environment and Development, 
		please visit: http://www.un.org/documents/ga/conf151/aconf15126-1annex1.htm.
	 
	
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