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United Nations Industrial Development Organization

The United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) (French: Organisation des Nations unies pour le développement industriel; French/Spanish acronym: ONUDI) is a specialized agency of the United Nations that assists countries in economic and industrial development.[1] It is headquartered at the UN Office in Vienna, Austria, with a permanent presence in over 60 countries.[2] As of April 2019, UNIDO comprises 170 member states, which together set the organization's policies, programs, and principles through the biannual General Conference.[3]

United Nations Industrial Development Organization
AbbreviationUNIDO
Formation17 November 1966; 56 years ago (1966-11-17)
TypeUnited Nations specialized agency
Legal statusActive
HeadquartersVienna, Austria
Head
Director-General
Gerd Müller
Parent organization
United Nations Economic and Social Council
Websitewww.unido.org
 Politics portal

UNIDO was established in 1966 by the UN General Assembly to promote and accelerate the industrialization of developing countries, which were emerging from decolonization in record numbers and with little to no industrial base.[4] In 1979 it became one of the 15 specialized agencies of the UN, with its new constitution coming into force in 1985. Since its founding, the organization has restructured and reformed several times; the 2013 Lima Declaration expanded its mission to include promoting "inclusive and sustainable industrial development" (ISID), defined as benefiting greater numbers of people while safeguarding the environment.[5][a] UNIDO is a member of the United Nations Development Group, a coalition of UN entities aimed at fulfilling the Sustainable Development Goals.[6][7]

On 25 July 2016, the United Nations General Assembly adopted Resolution A/RES/70/293,[8] proclaiming the period 2016-2025 as the Third Industrial Development Decade for Africa (IDDA III).[9] UNIDO was called upon to lead the initiative in collaboration with a range of partners. These include the African Union Commission, the New Partnership for Africa’s Development, the Economic Commission for Africa, etc.[10]

From 2018 to 2021, UNIDO's strategic priorities include creating shared prosperity; advancing economic competitiveness; safeguarding the environment; and strengthening knowledge and institutions.[11] Each of these goals is to be achieved through technical cooperation, policy advice, analysis and research, the development of uniform standards and quality control, and partnerships for knowledge transfer, networking and industrial cooperation.[11]

UNIDO employs some 670 staff and draws on the services of some 2,800 international and national experts—approximately half from developing countries—annually, who work in project assignments throughout the world.

Overview

The relevance of ISID as an integrated approach to all three pillars of sustainable development is recognized by the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the related Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which will frame United Nations and country efforts towards sustainable development in the next fifteen years. UNIDO's mandate is fully recognized in SDG-9, which calls to “Build resilient infrastructure, promote inclusive and sustainable industrialization and foster innovation”. The relevance of ISID, however, applies in greater or lesser extent to all SDGs.

Accordingly, the Organization's programmatic focus is structured, as detailed in the Organization's Medium-Term Programme Framework 2018–2021, in four strategic priorities:

  • Creating shared prosperity;
  • Advancing economic competitiveness;
  • Safeguarding the environment;
  • Strengthening knowledge and institutions.

Each of these programmatic fields of activity contains a number of individual programmes, which are implemented in a holistic manner to achieve effective outcomes and impacts through UNIDO's four enabling functions:

  • Technical cooperation;
  • Analytical and research functions and policy advisory services;
  • Normative functions and standards and quality-related activities;
  • Convening and partnerships for knowledge transfer, networking and industrial cooperation.

In carrying out the core requirements of its mission, UNIDO has considerably increased its technical services over the past ten years. At the same time, it has also substantially increased its mobilization of financial resources, testifying to the growing international recognition of the Organization as an effective provider of catalytic industrial development services.

UNIDO was established as a UN programme in 1966 with headquarters in Vienna, Austria, and became a specialized agency of the United Nations in 1985.

In 2004, UNIDO established the UNIDO Goodwill Ambassador programme.

In 2009, UNIDO created a new flagship publication, Making It: Industry for Development 9 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine.

Executive heads

UNIDO Executive Directors[12]
1967–1974 Ibrahim Helmi Abd-elRahman (  Egypt)
1975–1985 Abd-El Rahman Khane (  Algeria)
UNIDO Director-Generals[12]
1985–1992 Domingo L. Siazon Jr. (  Philippines)
1993–1997 Mauricio de Maria y Campos (  Mexico)
1998–2005 Carlos Alfredo Magariños (  Argentina)
2006 – June 2013 Kandeh Yumkella (  Sierra Leone)
July 2013 – November 2021 Li Yong (李勇) (  China)
December 2021 – Gerd Müller (  Germany)

Facts and figures

UNIDO's headquarters are located at the Vienna International Centre, the UN campus that also hosts the International Atomic Energy Agency, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime and the Preparatory Commission for the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty Organization.

Strategic priorities

Creating shared prosperity

UNIDO concentrates its efforts on the development of agro-industries, increasing the participation of women and youth in productive activities, and human security in post-crisis situations. The Organization's services for the development of agro-industries focus on adding value to agricultural production by strengthening linkages between agriculture, industry and markets.

UNIDO supports the transformation of enterprises from the informal sector to the formal sector, with a special focus on simplifying and improving access to administrative company registration services. It also strives to improve women's participation in entrepreneurial activities. Based on its experience in post-crisis and human security programmes and projects, UNIDO responds to complex emergencies through activities that contribute to socio-economic as well as environmental and energy security both at national and local level.

Advancing economic competitiveness

UNIDO supports programmes towards investment and technology promotion, SME development, trade capacity building, and entrepreneurship development.

UNIDO provides advisory services to improve the business and policy environment for the private sector, assisting with the creation of productive capacities. Its programmes support investment and technology opportunities to help enterprises, especially SMEs, improve productivity and innovation, and achieve systemic competitive advantages. Building on a robust global network aimed at fostering investment, technology and other partnership opportunities, UNIDO seeks to enable SMEs to capitalize on their unique dynamism and flexibility by strengthening synergies among enterprises and with support institutions

In the context of trade capacity-building programmes, UNIDO strengthens international trade norms and standards by assisting developing countries and transition economies in upgrading production and processing systems to enhance the quality of local products, in particular through the adoption of improved technologies, and help them conform to the standards required by international markets. UNIDO builds capacities in both public and private institutions to formulate trade policies and strategies based on economic and statistical analysis, as well as benchmarking competitive performance at sectoral and product levels and supporting the establishment of trade-related databases such as inventories of technical barriers to trade (TBT), which are designed to expand exports from the industrial sector.

Safeguarding the environment

 
UNIDO-ISEC (International Solar Energy Center) headquarters in Lanzhou, China

UNIDO supports countries in their environmental management efforts, including the implementation of multilateral environmental agreements and the provision of sustainable energy. It helps create new green industries, establishing national road maps for greening the supply chain, determining benchmarks and indicators, disseminating and sharing best practices, running clean technology programmes, undertaking various capacity-building exercises and contributing to international forums with the necessary research and expertise.

The Organization's services include capacity building, direct technical support to enterprises and assistance to government institutions on Cleaner Production (CP) policy matters, as well as the promotion, adaptation and transfer of environmentally sound technologies and the implementation of advanced CP business models, such as chemical leasing.

Strengthening knowledge and institutions

Strengthening knowledge and institutions is a prioritized outcome that is elevated over other high-level results. It describes the organization's strategic direction towards strengthening the knowledge base for ISID at the project, programme, country and international level, as well as the institutional capacity at the technical, policy and normative level.

Historical background

Origins

 
ONUDI in French and Spanish

The origins of the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) can be traced to a series of studies on a programme of rapid industrialization of developing countries that the United Nations Secretariat carried out during the early 1950s at the request of the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC). These studies culminated in a programme of work on industrialization and productivity prepared by the United Nations Secretary-General in 1956 and endorsed the next year by ECOSOC and the General Assembly. At that time, it was first suggested that a special body to deal with the problems of industrialization be established, whose political organs could relieve ECOSOC and the General Assembly of the detailed consideration of those questions and whose secretariat could carry out more substantive work than the existing Industry Section of the Bureau of Economic Affairs within the Secretariat. The Industry Section of the Secretariat became a branch in 1959, and in 1962 it became the Industrial Development Centre, headed by a Commissioner for Industrial Development.

Special organ of the United Nations

In the aftermath, proposals for further institutionalizing industrial development-related issues within the UN were considered by various advisory groups and inter-organizational organs. Subsequently, the United Nations General Assembly created the UNIDO in November 1966 as a special organ of the United Nations.[13] In January 1967, the Organization was formally established with headquarters in Vienna, Austria. Compared to the Industrial Development Centre, UNIDO's creation was intended to broaden the work of its predecessor. Besides normative activities, such as acting as a forum for discussions, analytical functions and information dissemination, UNIDO became involved in operational activities, i.e. in technical co-operation activities.

Conversion into a specialized agency

The setting up of UNIDO as a special organ had nonetheless been a compromise solution. The developing countries (the Group of 77) had in the first instance promoted the idea of a specialized agency with its own political decision-making governing bodies and autonomy in budgetary matters. The same position was advocated by several high-level expert groups and intergovernmental committees during the following years. In the context of the General Assembly's adoption of the Declaration and Programme of Action on the Establishment of a New International Economic Order and of the Charter of Economic Rights and Duties of States, UNIDO's second General Conference, held in 1975 in Lima, Peru, adopted the Lima Declaration on Industrial Development and Cooperation.[14] For the first time, industrial development objectives were quantified internationally — the Lima Target anticipated the developing countries to attain a twenty-five per cent share of world industrial production by the year of 2000. As part of the institutional arrangements of the Lima Plan of Action, and with a view to assisting in the establishment of a New International Economic Order, it was recommended to the General Assembly that UNIDO be converted into a specialized agency.

An intergovernmental committee prepared a draft constitution, which was adopted in Vienna in 1979. However, the objections and doubts of industrialized countries as to the necessity of a specialized agency contributed to delaying the ratification process. In order to ensure that the new organization would start up with a membership including substantially all significant States, the General Assembly, by resolutions adopted in 1982 and 1984, called for a series of formal consultations among prospective Member States, which eventually led to a general agreement that the new UNIDO Constitution should enter into force. All necessary formal requirements were fulfilled in 1985, and in December of the same year, UNIDO finally became the sixteenth Specialized Agency of the United Nations with headquarters in Vienna.

Crisis and reform during the 1990s

During the subsequent years, UNIDO continuously expanded particularly its operational activities. However, several developments outside and inside the Organization led to a crisis, which reached a breaking point in 1997 when UNIDO faced the risk of closure: After the end of the Cold War and the triumph of the market economic system over the command economic system, and in view of the Washington Consensus that limited the role of industrial policy in economic development processes, some Member States felt that industrial development could be supported more effectively and efficiently by the private sector. As a result, Canada, the United States (UNIDO's then largest donor), and Australia subsequently withdrew from the Organization between 1993 and 1997[15]. Simultaneously, the continued slowdown in the economies of some major industrialized countries as well as the financial turmoil of the 1997 Asian financial crisis caused multilateral development assistance to decline. In addition, a weak management structure and lack of focus and integration of UNIDO's activities contributed to aggravating the crisis.

UNIDO's Member States responded by adopting a stringent Business Plan on the Future Role and Functions of the Organization in June 1997. Activities laid out in the Business Plan are based on the clear comparative advantages of UNIDO, while avoiding overlap and duplication with other multilateral institutions. A key point was that activities should be integrated into packages of services, rather than being provided on a stand-alone basis. The Organization radically reformed itself on the basis of this business plan and streamlined its services, human and financial resources as well as internal processes during the following years.

Post-reform role

On the basis of sound finances and in a second wave of programmatic reforms in 2004, UNIDO further focused its activities and technical services directly responding to international development priorities. In an independent assessment of 23 international organizations against a large numbers of criteria, UNIDO was assessed 6th best overall and as best in the group of specialized agencies.[16] In regard of the current[when?] UN Reform debate, it can be observed that UNIDO is actively contributing to UN system-wide coherence and cost efficiency.[citation needed]

Governance

Membership

 
  Members, List A
  Members, List B
  Members, List C
  Members, List D
  former parties

Members of the UN, or of UN specialized agencies, or of the IAEA, are eligible for membership with UNIDO.[17] The process of becoming a Member of the Organization is achieved by becoming a party to the Constitution. Observer status is open, upon request, to those enjoying such status in the General Assembly of the United Nations, unless the UNIDO General Conference decides otherwise. The Conference has the authority to invite other observers to participate in the work of the Organization in accordance with the relevant rules of procedure and the provisions of the Constitution.

As of 1 April 2019, 170 States are Members of UNIDO,[18][19] all of them being UN members. UNIDO Members are divided into four lists.[20] List A consists of all UNIDO countries in the African + Asian Groups of UN (along with Israel, while excluding Cyprus and Japan). List B consists of all UNIDO countries in WEOG group of UN (along with Cyprus and Japan, and excluding Israel). List C consists of all UNIDO countries in GRULAC group of UN. List D consists of all UNIDO countries in the Eastern European group of UN.

The lists, originally defined in General Assembly resolution 2152 5 January 2017 at the Wayback Machine and the UNIDO Constitution 2 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine serve to balance geographical distribution of member states' representation on the Industrial Development Board[21] and the Programme and Budget Committee.[22]

UNIDO is the one of the two UN specialized agencies where members are separated into groups while the other is IFAD. UNIDO List B, is similar to IFAD List A – which comprises primarily developed countries,[23] while the set of the rest of UNIDO members is similar to the set of the rest of IFAD members – which comprise primarily developing countries.[23]

The full lists are as follows:

List A (100 members): Afghanistan, Algeria, Angola, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Benin, Bhutan, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cambodia, Cameroon, Cape Verde, Central African Republic, Chad, China, Comoros, Congo, Ivory Coast, DR Congo, Djibouti, Egypt, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Eswatini, Ethiopia, Fiji, Gabon, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, India, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Kiribati, North Korea, South Korea, Kuwait, Kyrgyzstan, Laos, Lebanon, Lesotho, Liberia, Libya, Madagascar, Malawi, Malaysia, Maldives, Mali, Marshall Islands, Mauritania, Mauritius, Mongolia, Morocco, Mozambique, Myanmar, Namibia, Nepal, Niger, Nigeria, Oman, Pakistan, State of Palestine, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Qatar, Rwanda, Samoa, São Tomé and Príncipe, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Syria, Tajikistan, Thailand, Timor-Leste, Togo, Tonga, Tunisia, Tuvalu, Uganda, United Arab Emirates, Tanzania, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Vanuatu, Vietnam, Yemen, Zambia, Zimbabwe.
List B (21 members): Austria, Cyprus, Finland, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, Malta, Monaco, Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey.
List C (32 members): Argentina, Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Grenada, Guatemala, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, Jamaica, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Suriname, Trinidad and Tobago, Uruguay, Venezuela.
List D (20 members): Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Georgia, Hungary, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Poland, Republic of Moldova, Romania, Russian Federation, Serbia, Slovakia (denounced, effective 31 December 2017), Slovenia, Ukraine.

Signatory states that have not finished their ratification procedures are: Antigua and Barbuda (1982).[19]

Former UNIDO members are[24] Australia (1985–97, List B),[25] Belgium (1985–2015, List B), Canada (1985–93, List B),[25] Denmark (1985-2016, List B), France (1985–2014, List B), Greece (1985–2016, List B), Lithuania (1991–2012, List D),[20] New Zealand (1985–2013, List B), Portugal (1985–2014, List B), Slovakia (1993-2017), United Kingdom (1985–2012, List B),[20] and the United States (1985–96, List B),.[25]

Other UN member states that have never signed, ratified, or denounced the constitution are Andorra, Brunei, Estonia, Iceland, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, San Marino, Singapore, Solomon Islands, and South Sudan.

The Holy See and the Sovereign Military Order of Malta have observer status with UNIDO.[26]

Policy-making organs

The policy-making organs (or governing bodies) of UNIDO are based on their predecessors that were effective prior to UNIDO becoming a specialized agency. Thus, the General Conference, the Industrial Development Board (IDB) and the Programme and Budget Committee (PBC) are anchored in the Constitution.

Substantive decisions of the policy-making organs are generally taken by consensus. A vote takes place when no consensus can be reached or on specific request of a member of the policy-making organ[27]

General Conference

The Conference is the highest policy-making organ of the Organization and consists of all Member States of UNIDO. It meets every two years and approves the programme and budgets, establishes the scale assessments for regular budget expenditures for the forthcoming biennium and, every second time, appoints the Director-General for a period of four years.

Industrial Development Board (IDB)

The Board meets once in Conference years and twice in other years, and consists of 53 Member States[28] of the Organization that are elected for a four-year term. It acts as a preparatory body for the Conference and reviews the implementation of the approved programme of work and of the corresponding regular and operational budgets for the forthcoming biennium. Among its other main functions, the Board recommends to the Conference a scale of assessments, as well as a candidate for the post of Director-General.

Programme and Budget Committee (PBC)

The Committee consists of 27 Member States[29] of the Organization that are elected for a two-year term and meets at least once a year to consider, inter alia, the proposals of the Director-General for the programme of work and corresponding estimates for the regular and operational budgets.

Secretariat

The Secretariat of UNIDO is based in Vienna (Austria) and maintains representative offices in Brussels (Belgium), Geneva (Switzerland) and New York City (USA). As of 2013, UNIDO's organizational structure comprises[30] The Office of the Director-General (ODG), the Programme Development and Technical Cooperation Division (PTC), the Office of the Deputy to the Director General (DDG), the Programme Support and General Management Division (PSM) as well as offices of Internal Oversight and Legal Services.

The current Director-General of UNIDO is Gerd Müller (since December 2021).

Country level representation

Field representation

UNIDO's system of field representation includes four categories of offices:

  • Regional offices, which cover the country of their location as well as a number of countries in the same region, in which the Organization assumes the status of a non-resident agency
  • Country Offices, which cover their host country
  • Focal point offices maintained within national governments
  • UNIDO Desks in UNDP offices.

Technical offices at country level

In order to provide additional support to UNIDO's technical activities, different types of technical offices have been established. These include:

  • Investment and Technology Promotion Offices (ITPOs), which promote investment and technology flows to developing countries and countries with economies in transition, being financed by their host countries
  • International Technology Centres, which act as catalysts for technology upgrading and assist in managing technology change
  • In collaboration with the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), UNIDO set up a global network of National Cleaner Production Centres (NCPCs), aiming at building national capacities in clean production technologies, fostering dialogue between industry and government and enhancing investments for transfer and development of environmentally sound technologies.
  • UNIDO's Industrial Subcontracting and Partnership Exchanges (SPX) facilitate production linkages between small, medium and large manufacturing firms and link up with global markets and supply chain networks.
  • UNIDO Centres for South-South Cooperation as part of a major UNIDO South-South cooperation initiative in several of the more advanced developing countries.

See also

Sources

  • Industrial Development Report (IDR): UNIDO Flagship Publication
  • UNIDO Constitution

Notes

  1. ^ There were two Lima Declarations regarding UNIDO: the first was the 1975 Lima Declaration and Plan of Action on Industrial Development and Co-operation, and the second was the "new" Lima Declaration, Towards Inclusive and Sustainable Industrial Development of 2013

References

  1. ^ "UNIDO in brief | UNIDO". www.unido.org. Retrieved 30 March 2020.
  2. ^ "UNIDO Worldwide | UNIDO". www.unido.org. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  3. ^ "Member States". UNIDO. from the original on 1 October 2019. Retrieved 3 January 2020.
  4. ^ "A brief history | UNIDO". www.unido.org. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  5. ^ "Inclusive and Sustainable Industrial Development | UNIDO". www.unido.org. Retrieved 30 March 2020.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 11 May 2011. Retrieved 15 May 2012.
  7. ^ "UNIDO & Sustainable Development Goals | UNIDO". www.unido.org. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  8. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 January 2022.
  9. ^ "IDDA3 - Third Industrial Development Decade for Africa (2016-2025) | UNIDO". www.unido.org. Retrieved 19 February 2022.[permanent dead link]
  10. ^ "Third Industrial Development Decade for Africa (2016–2025)" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 3 December 2020.
  11. ^ a b "UNIDO in brief | UNIDO". www.unido.org. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  12. ^ a b . United Nations Industrial Development Organization. Archived from the original on 5 February 2016. Retrieved 6 February 2016.
  13. ^ United Nations General Assembly Session 21 Resolution 2152. United Nations Industrial Development Organization A/RES/2152(XXI) 17 November 1967. Retrieved 4 December 2008.
  14. ^ United Nations Industrial Development Organization, Lima Declaration and Plan of Action on Industrial Development and Co-operation, 12 October 2003 at the Wayback Machine, Lima, Peru, 12–26 March 1975, accessed 28 September 2019
  15. ^ "Building ideas from data and practice The intellectual history of UNIDO" (PDF). 2016. Retrieved 23 January 2023.
  16. ^ UK Department for International Development (DFID) "Multilateral Effectiveness Framework" (MEFF) baseline assessment of 23 organizations, 2005.
  17. ^ "UNIDO Constitution, page 8" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 10 July 2010.
  18. ^ "Member States List". UNIDO. Retrieved 3 January 2020.
  19. ^ a b . United Nations. Archived from the original on 27 December 2010. Retrieved 3 August 2010.
  20. ^ a b c "Member States according to lists". UNIDO. Retrieved 27 November 2012.
  21. ^ UNIDO Constitution, Article 9
  22. ^ UNIDO Constitution, Article 10
  23. ^ a b "Activities – The International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) – product, average, area, crops, annual, infrastructure, future, policy". www.nationsencyclopedia.com.
  24. ^ "Former Member States". UNIDO. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
  25. ^ a b c "General Assembly resolution 2152" (PDF). United Nations. (PDF) from the original on 2 March 2012. Retrieved 25 September 2010.
  26. ^ "UNIDO GC.13/2/Add.1, Report of the Industrial Development Board on the work of its thirty-fourth session" (PDF). United Nations. (PDF) from the original on 2 March 2012. Retrieved 25 September 2010.
  27. ^ . United Nations Industrial Development Organization. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 25 September 2010.
  28. ^ . United Nations Industrial Development Organization. Archived from the original on 7 March 2016. Retrieved 25 September 2010.
  29. ^ "Programme and Budget Committee". United Nations Industrial Development Organization. Retrieved 25 September 2010.[permanent dead link]
  30. ^ "UNIDO Structure". United Nations Industrial Development Organization. Retrieved 5 July 2013.

External links

  • Official website of UNIDO
  • UNIDO 50th Anniversary 13 January 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  • Website of UNIDO's Making It magazine 9 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  • UNIDO ISID Operation Platform
  • UNIDO Open Data Platform

united, nations, industrial, development, organization, lima, declaration, redirects, here, statement, intent, form, american, trade, bloc, declaracion, lima, unido, redirects, here, 1980, 1987, philippine, opposition, party, united, nationalist, democratic, o. Lima Declaration redirects here For the statement of intent to form an American trade bloc see Declaracion de Lima UNIDO redirects here For the 1980 1987 Philippine opposition party see United Nationalist Democratic Organization The United Nations Industrial Development Organization UNIDO French Organisation des Nations unies pour le developpement industriel French Spanish acronym ONUDI is a specialized agency of the United Nations that assists countries in economic and industrial development 1 It is headquartered at the UN Office in Vienna Austria with a permanent presence in over 60 countries 2 As of April 2019 UNIDO comprises 170 member states which together set the organization s policies programs and principles through the biannual General Conference 3 United Nations Industrial Development OrganizationAbbreviationUNIDOFormation17 November 1966 56 years ago 1966 11 17 TypeUnited Nations specialized agencyLegal statusActiveHeadquartersVienna AustriaHeadDirector General Gerd MullerParent organizationUnited Nations Economic and Social CouncilWebsitewww unido org Politics portalUNIDO was established in 1966 by the UN General Assembly to promote and accelerate the industrialization of developing countries which were emerging from decolonization in record numbers and with little to no industrial base 4 In 1979 it became one of the 15 specialized agencies of the UN with its new constitution coming into force in 1985 Since its founding the organization has restructured and reformed several times the 2013 Lima Declaration expanded its mission to include promoting inclusive and sustainable industrial development ISID defined as benefiting greater numbers of people while safeguarding the environment 5 a UNIDO is a member of the United Nations Development Group a coalition of UN entities aimed at fulfilling the Sustainable Development Goals 6 7 On 25 July 2016 the United Nations General Assembly adopted Resolution A RES 70 293 8 proclaiming the period 2016 2025 as the Third Industrial Development Decade for Africa IDDA III 9 UNIDO was called upon to lead the initiative in collaboration with a range of partners These include the African Union Commission the New Partnership for Africa s Development the Economic Commission for Africa etc 10 From 2018 to 2021 UNIDO s strategic priorities include creating shared prosperity advancing economic competitiveness safeguarding the environment and strengthening knowledge and institutions 11 Each of these goals is to be achieved through technical cooperation policy advice analysis and research the development of uniform standards and quality control and partnerships for knowledge transfer networking and industrial cooperation 11 UNIDO employs some 670 staff and draws on the services of some 2 800 international and national experts approximately half from developing countries annually who work in project assignments throughout the world Contents 1 Overview 2 Executive heads 3 Facts and figures 4 Strategic priorities 4 1 Creating shared prosperity 4 2 Advancing economic competitiveness 4 3 Safeguarding the environment 4 4 Strengthening knowledge and institutions 5 Historical background 5 1 Origins 5 2 Special organ of the United Nations 5 3 Conversion into a specialized agency 5 4 Crisis and reform during the 1990s 5 5 Post reform role 6 Governance 6 1 Membership 6 2 Policy making organs 6 2 1 General Conference 6 2 2 Industrial Development Board IDB 6 2 3 Programme and Budget Committee PBC 6 3 Secretariat 7 Country level representation 7 1 Field representation 7 2 Technical offices at country level 8 See also 9 Sources 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksOverview EditThe relevance of ISID as an integrated approach to all three pillars of sustainable development is recognized by the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the related Sustainable Development Goals SDGs which will frame United Nations and country efforts towards sustainable development in the next fifteen years UNIDO s mandate is fully recognized in SDG 9 which calls to Build resilient infrastructure promote inclusive and sustainable industrialization and foster innovation The relevance of ISID however applies in greater or lesser extent to all SDGs Accordingly the Organization s programmatic focus is structured as detailed in the Organization s Medium Term Programme Framework 2018 2021 in four strategic priorities Creating shared prosperity Advancing economic competitiveness Safeguarding the environment Strengthening knowledge and institutions Each of these programmatic fields of activity contains a number of individual programmes which are implemented in a holistic manner to achieve effective outcomes and impacts through UNIDO s four enabling functions Technical cooperation Analytical and research functions and policy advisory services Normative functions and standards and quality related activities Convening and partnerships for knowledge transfer networking and industrial cooperation In carrying out the core requirements of its mission UNIDO has considerably increased its technical services over the past ten years At the same time it has also substantially increased its mobilization of financial resources testifying to the growing international recognition of the Organization as an effective provider of catalytic industrial development services UNIDO was established as a UN programme in 1966 with headquarters in Vienna Austria and became a specialized agency of the United Nations in 1985 In 2004 UNIDO established the UNIDO Goodwill Ambassador programme In 2009 UNIDO created a new flagship publication Making It Industry for Development Archived 9 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine Executive heads EditUNIDO Executive Directors 12 1967 1974 Ibrahim Helmi Abd elRahman Egypt 1975 1985 Abd El Rahman Khane Algeria UNIDO Director Generals 12 1985 1992 Domingo L Siazon Jr Philippines 1993 1997 Mauricio de Maria y Campos Mexico 1998 2005 Carlos Alfredo Magarinos Argentina 2006 June 2013 Kandeh Yumkella Sierra Leone July 2013 November 2021 Li Yong 李勇 China December 2021 Gerd Muller Germany Facts and figures EditUNIDO s headquarters are located at the Vienna International Centre the UN campus that also hosts the International Atomic Energy Agency the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime and the Preparatory Commission for the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty Organization Strategic priorities EditCreating shared prosperity Edit UNIDO concentrates its efforts on the development of agro industries increasing the participation of women and youth in productive activities and human security in post crisis situations The Organization s services for the development of agro industries focus on adding value to agricultural production by strengthening linkages between agriculture industry and markets UNIDO supports the transformation of enterprises from the informal sector to the formal sector with a special focus on simplifying and improving access to administrative company registration services It also strives to improve women s participation in entrepreneurial activities Based on its experience in post crisis and human security programmes and projects UNIDO responds to complex emergencies through activities that contribute to socio economic as well as environmental and energy security both at national and local level Advancing economic competitiveness Edit UNIDO supports programmes towards investment and technology promotion SME development trade capacity building and entrepreneurship development UNIDO provides advisory services to improve the business and policy environment for the private sector assisting with the creation of productive capacities Its programmes support investment and technology opportunities to help enterprises especially SMEs improve productivity and innovation and achieve systemic competitive advantages Building on a robust global network aimed at fostering investment technology and other partnership opportunities UNIDO seeks to enable SMEs to capitalize on their unique dynamism and flexibility by strengthening synergies among enterprises and with support institutionsIn the context of trade capacity building programmes UNIDO strengthens international trade norms and standards by assisting developing countries and transition economies in upgrading production and processing systems to enhance the quality of local products in particular through the adoption of improved technologies and help them conform to the standards required by international markets UNIDO builds capacities in both public and private institutions to formulate trade policies and strategies based on economic and statistical analysis as well as benchmarking competitive performance at sectoral and product levels and supporting the establishment of trade related databases such as inventories of technical barriers to trade TBT which are designed to expand exports from the industrial sector Safeguarding the environment Edit UNIDO ISEC International Solar Energy Center headquarters in Lanzhou China UNIDO supports countries in their environmental management efforts including the implementation of multilateral environmental agreements and the provision of sustainable energy It helps create new green industries establishing national road maps for greening the supply chain determining benchmarks and indicators disseminating and sharing best practices running clean technology programmes undertaking various capacity building exercises and contributing to international forums with the necessary research and expertise The Organization s services include capacity building direct technical support to enterprises and assistance to government institutions on Cleaner Production CP policy matters as well as the promotion adaptation and transfer of environmentally sound technologies and the implementation of advanced CP business models such as chemical leasing Strengthening knowledge and institutions Edit Strengthening knowledge and institutions is a prioritized outcome that is elevated over other high level results It describes the organization s strategic direction towards strengthening the knowledge base for ISID at the project programme country and international level as well as the institutional capacity at the technical policy and normative level Historical background EditOrigins Edit ONUDI in French and Spanish The origins of the United Nations Industrial Development Organization UNIDO can be traced to a series of studies on a programme of rapid industrialization of developing countries that the United Nations Secretariat carried out during the early 1950s at the request of the United Nations Economic and Social Council ECOSOC These studies culminated in a programme of work on industrialization and productivity prepared by the United Nations Secretary General in 1956 and endorsed the next year by ECOSOC and the General Assembly At that time it was first suggested that a special body to deal with the problems of industrialization be established whose political organs could relieve ECOSOC and the General Assembly of the detailed consideration of those questions and whose secretariat could carry out more substantive work than the existing Industry Section of the Bureau of Economic Affairs within the Secretariat The Industry Section of the Secretariat became a branch in 1959 and in 1962 it became the Industrial Development Centre headed by a Commissioner for Industrial Development Special organ of the United Nations Edit In the aftermath proposals for further institutionalizing industrial development related issues within the UN were considered by various advisory groups and inter organizational organs Subsequently the United Nations General Assembly created the UNIDO in November 1966 as a special organ of the United Nations 13 In January 1967 the Organization was formally established with headquarters in Vienna Austria Compared to the Industrial Development Centre UNIDO s creation was intended to broaden the work of its predecessor Besides normative activities such as acting as a forum for discussions analytical functions and information dissemination UNIDO became involved in operational activities i e in technical co operation activities Conversion into a specialized agency Edit The setting up of UNIDO as a special organ had nonetheless been a compromise solution The developing countries the Group of 77 had in the first instance promoted the idea of a specialized agency with its own political decision making governing bodies and autonomy in budgetary matters The same position was advocated by several high level expert groups and intergovernmental committees during the following years In the context of the General Assembly s adoption of the Declaration and Programme of Action on the Establishment of a New International Economic Order and of the Charter of Economic Rights and Duties of States UNIDO s second General Conference held in 1975 in Lima Peru adopted the Lima Declaration on Industrial Development and Cooperation 14 For the first time industrial development objectives were quantified internationally the Lima Target anticipated the developing countries to attain a twenty five per cent share of world industrial production by the year of 2000 As part of the institutional arrangements of the Lima Plan of Action and with a view to assisting in the establishment of a New International Economic Order it was recommended to the General Assembly that UNIDO be converted into a specialized agency An intergovernmental committee prepared a draft constitution which was adopted in Vienna in 1979 However the objections and doubts of industrialized countries as to the necessity of a specialized agency contributed to delaying the ratification process In order to ensure that the new organization would start up with a membership including substantially all significant States the General Assembly by resolutions adopted in 1982 and 1984 called for a series of formal consultations among prospective Member States which eventually led to a general agreement that the new UNIDO Constitution should enter into force All necessary formal requirements were fulfilled in 1985 and in December of the same year UNIDO finally became the sixteenth Specialized Agency of the United Nations with headquarters in Vienna Crisis and reform during the 1990s Edit During the subsequent years UNIDO continuously expanded particularly its operational activities However several developments outside and inside the Organization led to a crisis which reached a breaking point in 1997 when UNIDO faced the risk of closure After the end of the Cold War and the triumph of the market economic system over the command economic system and in view of the Washington Consensus that limited the role of industrial policy in economic development processes some Member States felt that industrial development could be supported more effectively and efficiently by the private sector As a result Canada the United States UNIDO s then largest donor and Australia subsequently withdrew from the Organization between 1993 and 1997 15 Simultaneously the continued slowdown in the economies of some major industrialized countries as well as the financial turmoil of the 1997 Asian financial crisis caused multilateral development assistance to decline In addition a weak management structure and lack of focus and integration of UNIDO s activities contributed to aggravating the crisis UNIDO s Member States responded by adopting a stringent Business Plan on the Future Role and Functions of the Organization in June 1997 Activities laid out in the Business Plan are based on the clear comparative advantages of UNIDO while avoiding overlap and duplication with other multilateral institutions A key point was that activities should be integrated into packages of services rather than being provided on a stand alone basis The Organization radically reformed itself on the basis of this business plan and streamlined its services human and financial resources as well as internal processes during the following years Post reform role Edit On the basis of sound finances and in a second wave of programmatic reforms in 2004 UNIDO further focused its activities and technical services directly responding to international development priorities In an independent assessment of 23 international organizations against a large numbers of criteria UNIDO was assessed 6th best overall and as best in the group of specialized agencies 16 In regard of the current when UN Reform debate it can be observed that UNIDO is actively contributing to UN system wide coherence and cost efficiency citation needed Governance EditMembership Edit Members List A Members List B Members List C Members List D former parties Members of the UN or of UN specialized agencies or of the IAEA are eligible for membership with UNIDO 17 The process of becoming a Member of the Organization is achieved by becoming a party to the Constitution Observer status is open upon request to those enjoying such status in the General Assembly of the United Nations unless the UNIDO General Conference decides otherwise The Conference has the authority to invite other observers to participate in the work of the Organization in accordance with the relevant rules of procedure and the provisions of the Constitution As of 1 April 2019 170 States are Members of UNIDO 18 19 all of them being UN members UNIDO Members are divided into four lists 20 List A consists of all UNIDO countries in the African Asian Groups of UN along with Israel while excluding Cyprus and Japan List B consists of all UNIDO countries in WEOG group of UN along with Cyprus and Japan and excluding Israel List C consists of all UNIDO countries in GRULAC group of UN List D consists of all UNIDO countries in the Eastern European group of UN The lists originally defined in General Assembly resolution 2152 Archived 5 January 2017 at the Wayback Machine and the UNIDO Constitution Archived 2 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine serve to balance geographical distribution of member states representation on the Industrial Development Board 21 and the Programme and Budget Committee 22 UNIDO is the one of the two UN specialized agencies where members are separated into groups while the other is IFAD UNIDO List B is similar to IFAD List A which comprises primarily developed countries 23 while the set of the rest of UNIDO members is similar to the set of the rest of IFAD members which comprise primarily developing countries 23 The full lists are as follows List A 100 members Afghanistan Algeria Angola Bahrain Bangladesh Benin Bhutan Botswana Burkina Faso Burundi Cambodia Cameroon Cape Verde Central African Republic Chad China Comoros Congo Ivory Coast DR Congo Djibouti Egypt Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Eswatini Ethiopia Fiji Gabon Gambia Ghana Guinea Guinea Bissau India Indonesia Iran Iraq Israel Jordan Kazakhstan Kenya Kiribati North Korea South Korea Kuwait Kyrgyzstan Laos Lebanon Lesotho Liberia Libya Madagascar Malawi Malaysia Maldives Mali Marshall Islands Mauritania Mauritius Mongolia Morocco Mozambique Myanmar Namibia Nepal Niger Nigeria Oman Pakistan State of Palestine Papua New Guinea Philippines Qatar Rwanda Samoa Sao Tome and Principe Saudi Arabia Senegal Seychelles Sierra Leone Somalia South Africa Sri Lanka Sudan Syria Tajikistan Thailand Timor Leste Togo Tonga Tunisia Tuvalu Uganda United Arab Emirates Tanzania Turkmenistan Uzbekistan Vanuatu Vietnam Yemen Zambia Zimbabwe List B 21 members Austria Cyprus Finland Germany Ireland Italy Japan Luxembourg Malta Monaco Netherlands Norway Spain Sweden Switzerland Turkey List C 32 members Argentina Bahamas Barbados Belize Bolivia Brazil Chile Colombia Costa Rica Cuba Dominica Dominican Republic Ecuador El Salvador Grenada Guatemala Guyana Haiti Honduras Jamaica Mexico Nicaragua Panama Paraguay Peru Saint Kitts and Nevis Saint Lucia Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Suriname Trinidad and Tobago Uruguay Venezuela List D 20 members Albania Armenia Azerbaijan Belarus Bosnia and Herzegovina Bulgaria Croatia Czech Republic Georgia Hungary Montenegro North Macedonia Poland Republic of Moldova Romania Russian Federation Serbia Slovakia denounced effective 31 December 2017 Slovenia Ukraine Signatory states that have not finished their ratification procedures are Antigua and Barbuda 1982 19 Former UNIDO members are 24 Australia 1985 97 List B 25 Belgium 1985 2015 List B Canada 1985 93 List B 25 Denmark 1985 2016 List B France 1985 2014 List B Greece 1985 2016 List B Lithuania 1991 2012 List D 20 New Zealand 1985 2013 List B Portugal 1985 2014 List B Slovakia 1993 2017 United Kingdom 1985 2012 List B 20 and the United States 1985 96 List B 25 Other UN member states that have never signed ratified or denounced the constitution are Andorra Brunei Estonia Iceland Latvia Liechtenstein Micronesia Nauru Palau San Marino Singapore Solomon Islands and South Sudan The Holy See and the Sovereign Military Order of Malta have observer status with UNIDO 26 Policy making organs Edit The policy making organs or governing bodies of UNIDO are based on their predecessors that were effective prior to UNIDO becoming a specialized agency Thus the General Conference the Industrial Development Board IDB and the Programme and Budget Committee PBC are anchored in the Constitution Substantive decisions of the policy making organs are generally taken by consensus A vote takes place when no consensus can be reached or on specific request of a member of the policy making organ 27 General Conference Edit The Conference is the highest policy making organ of the Organization and consists of all Member States of UNIDO It meets every two years and approves the programme and budgets establishes the scale assessments for regular budget expenditures for the forthcoming biennium and every second time appoints the Director General for a period of four years Industrial Development Board IDB Edit The Board meets once in Conference years and twice in other years and consists of 53 Member States 28 of the Organization that are elected for a four year term It acts as a preparatory body for the Conference and reviews the implementation of the approved programme of work and of the corresponding regular and operational budgets for the forthcoming biennium Among its other main functions the Board recommends to the Conference a scale of assessments as well as a candidate for the post of Director General Programme and Budget Committee PBC Edit The Committee consists of 27 Member States 29 of the Organization that are elected for a two year term and meets at least once a year to consider inter alia the proposals of the Director General for the programme of work and corresponding estimates for the regular and operational budgets Secretariat Edit The Secretariat of UNIDO is based in Vienna Austria and maintains representative offices in Brussels Belgium Geneva Switzerland and New York City USA As of 2013 UNIDO s organizational structure comprises 30 The Office of the Director General ODG the Programme Development and Technical Cooperation Division PTC the Office of the Deputy to the Director General DDG the Programme Support and General Management Division PSM as well as offices of Internal Oversight and Legal Services The current Director General of UNIDO is Gerd Muller since December 2021 Country level representation EditField representation Edit UNIDO s system of field representation includes four categories of offices Regional offices which cover the country of their location as well as a number of countries in the same region in which the Organization assumes the status of a non resident agency Country Offices which cover their host country Focal point offices maintained within national governments UNIDO Desks in UNDP offices Technical offices at country level Edit In order to provide additional support to UNIDO s technical activities different types of technical offices have been established These include Investment and Technology Promotion Offices ITPOs which promote investment and technology flows to developing countries and countries with economies in transition being financed by their host countries International Technology Centres which act as catalysts for technology upgrading and assist in managing technology change In collaboration with the United Nations Environment Programme UNEP UNIDO set up a global network of National Cleaner Production Centres NCPCs aiming at building national capacities in clean production technologies fostering dialogue between industry and government and enhancing investments for transfer and development of environmentally sound technologies UNIDO s Industrial Subcontracting and Partnership Exchanges SPX facilitate production linkages between small medium and large manufacturing firms and link up with global markets and supply chain networks UNIDO Centres for South South Cooperation as part of a major UNIDO South South cooperation initiative in several of the more advanced developing countries See also Edit Politics portalUnited Nations Development Programme United Nations Environment Programme United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization World Trade Organization Chemical LeasingSources EditIndustrial Development Report IDR UNIDO Flagship Publication UNIDO Annual Reports UNIDO ConstitutionNotes Edit There were two Lima Declarations regarding UNIDO the first was the 1975 Lima Declaration and Plan of Action on Industrial Development and Co operation and the second was the new Lima Declaration Towards Inclusive and Sustainable Industrial Development of 2013References Edit UNIDO in brief UNIDO www unido org Retrieved 30 March 2020 UNIDO Worldwide UNIDO www unido org Retrieved 4 May 2020 Member States UNIDO Archived from the original on 1 October 2019 Retrieved 3 January 2020 A brief history UNIDO www unido org Retrieved 4 May 2020 Inclusive and Sustainable Industrial Development UNIDO www unido org Retrieved 30 March 2020 UNDG Members Archived from the original on 11 May 2011 Retrieved 15 May 2012 UNIDO amp Sustainable Development Goals UNIDO www unido org Retrieved 4 May 2020 Third Industrial Development Decade for Africa 2016 2025 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 19 January 2022 IDDA3 Third Industrial Development Decade for Africa 2016 2025 UNIDO www unido org Retrieved 19 February 2022 permanent dead link Third Industrial Development Decade for Africa 2016 2025 PDF Archived PDF from the original on 3 December 2020 a b UNIDO in brief UNIDO www unido org Retrieved 4 May 2020 a b History of UNIDO United Nations Industrial Development Organization Archived from the original on 5 February 2016 Retrieved 6 February 2016 United Nations General Assembly Session 21 Resolution 2152 United Nations Industrial Development Organization A RES 2152 XXI 17 November 1967 Retrieved 4 December 2008 United Nations Industrial Development Organization Lima Declaration and Plan of Action on Industrial Development and Co operation Archived 12 October 2003 at the Wayback Machine Lima Peru 12 26 March 1975 accessed 28 September 2019 Building ideas from data and practice The intellectual history of UNIDO PDF 2016 Retrieved 23 January 2023 UK Department for International Development DFID Multilateral Effectiveness Framework MEFF baseline assessment of 23 organizations 2005 UNIDO Constitution page 8 PDF Archived PDF from the original on 10 July 2010 Member States List UNIDO Retrieved 3 January 2020 a b UNIDO Constitution status United Nations Archived from the original on 27 December 2010 Retrieved 3 August 2010 a b c Member States according to lists UNIDO Retrieved 27 November 2012 UNIDO Constitution Article 9 UNIDO Constitution Article 10 a b Activities The International Fund for Agricultural Development IFAD product average area crops annual infrastructure future policy www nationsencyclopedia com Former Member States UNIDO Retrieved 2 October 2020 a b c General Assembly resolution 2152 PDF United Nations Archived PDF from the original on 2 March 2012 Retrieved 25 September 2010 UNIDO GC 13 2 Add 1 Report of the Industrial Development Board on the work of its thirty fourth session PDF United Nations Archived PDF from the original on 2 March 2012 Retrieved 25 September 2010 Policymaking Organs United Nations Industrial Development Organization Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 25 September 2010 Industrial Development Board United Nations Industrial Development Organization Archived from the original on 7 March 2016 Retrieved 25 September 2010 Programme and Budget Committee United Nations Industrial Development Organization Retrieved 25 September 2010 permanent dead link UNIDO Structure United Nations Industrial Development Organization Retrieved 5 July 2013 External links EditOfficial website of UNIDO UNIDO 50th Anniversary Archived 13 January 2019 at the Wayback Machine Website of UNIDO s Making It magazine Archived 9 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine UNIDO ISID Operation Platform UNIDO Open Data Platform Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title United Nations Industrial Development Organization amp oldid 1135298837, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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