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July 5, 2007 |
New Approach to Sustainable Development Urged |
| International Institute for Environment and Development Two British ministers will today be urged to steer the UK government towards a new era of global policymaking that has the environment and social equity at its heart. |
| The Secretaries of State for Environment and International Development will hear the challenge at a meeting of government officials and civil society organisations.
George Varughese, representing the Ring alliance of 13 organisations in five continents, will deliver a speech after the ministers and urge them to pursue a radically new agenda to towards genuine sustainable development. The Ring, whose members include the UK-based International Institute for Environment and Development, has issued a joint statement with a 'to do' list of actions that include: * Creating incentives for people to invest, innovate and plan for the long-term. "20 years have passed since the World Commission on Environment and Development concluded that development must meet present needs without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs," says Varughese, who is also president of the Development Alternatives Group, an Indian NGO. "Yet we see scant evidence that the scale of action is remotely commensurate with that of the problems facing the planet. We need to challenge economic and social norms that promote inequity and environmental degradation." The meeting has been called to discuss and make recommendations about three issues that are central to the sustainable development agenda - climate change; sustainable consumption; environmental economics. Delegates will recommend key changes that the UK government and NGOs need to make to put development onto pathways to sustainability. "Major challenges such as climate change, biodiversity loss and poverty are all tightly linked," says Tom Bigg, head of global governance at IIED. "To tackle these problems we need new approaches that build sustainability from the grass roots up. We also a need to bring the voices of those most likely to be affected adversely by any future changes into global policy fora." The 18 June meeting will take place at the Royal Institute of Engineering in London. It has been organised by the Development and Environment Group of BOND (British Overseas NGOs for Development), whose members include the International Institute for Environment and Development; WWF; Oxfam and Christian Aid. The Ring is an alliance of 13 renowned policy research organisations promoting sustainable development through collaborative research, dissemination and policy advocacy. It was founded in 1991, in the build-up to the Rio Summit on Environment and Development. NOTES |
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