Taking Action
for Earth’s Future
Achieving sustainable development is no easy task. Significant
changes will be needed—in decision-making at the highest
levels, and in day-to-day behaviour by producers and consumers—if
we are to reach our goal of development that meets the needs
of today without sacrificing the ability of future generations
to meet their needs.
Ten years ago at the “Earth
Summit” in Rio de Janeiro, Governments committed themselves
to just such a transformation, and to Agenda 21 as the comprehensive
plan of action for getting there. But commitments alone
have proven insufficient to the task. We have not yet fully
integrated the economic, social and environmental pillars
of development, nor have we made enough of a break with
the unsustainable practices that have led to the current
predicament.
We live on one planet,
connected in a delicate, intricate web of ecological, social,
economic and cultural relationships that shape our lives.
If we are to achieve sustainable development, we will need
to display greater responsibility—for the ecosystems on
which all life depends, for each other as a single human
community, and for the generations that will follow our
own, living tomorrow with the consequences of the decisions
w e take today.
Johannesburg Summit 2002
is an opportunity to rejuvenate the quest to build a more
sustainable future. The Summit must bring the world together,
and forge more cohesive global partnerships for the implementation
of Agenda 21. It must send out a message that sustainable
development is not only a necessity, but also an exceptional
opportunity to place our economies and societies on more
durable footing.
The United Nations and
I personally very much look forward to working closely with
all concerned—Government leaders, non-governmental organizations
and civil society groups from throughout the world—at Johannesburg
and beyond, to put in place a new ethic of global conservation
and stewardship.
Kofi A. Annan
Secretary-General of the United Nations
*Johannesburg
Summit 2002 (download)
World Summit on Sustainable
Development, Johannesburg (Rio +10)
ACFOA acknowledges the importance of the World Summit on
Sustainable Development (WSSD), and the essential relationship
between environmental sustainability and sustainable development.
It is now well accepted
that any serious attempts to address global environmental
problems must be underscored by long term poverty reduction
strategies. These strategies must enhance the capacity of
low-income communities to adopt environmentally sustainable
practices while addressing over consumption and associated
negative externalities in wealthier communities.
ACFOA is convinced that
a successful World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD)
needs to address three key challenges:
- achieving poverty eradication,
particularly in developing countries and countries in transition,
- achieving sustainable consumption and production patterns
world-wide, and
- maintaining and restoring the integrity of ecosystems
worldwide.
More over these
challenges need to be addressed in an integrated and mutually
reinforcing manner, or we risk achieving one at the expense
of the other.
*Johannesburg
Summit 2002 – Rio +10 (download)
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