Opinion
Protecting the environment not enough
Posted Thursday, June 28 2012 at 21:00
Rio+20 was a landmark for the future. As more than 190 countries gathered in Rio de Janeiro, we witnessed a historic moment.
The recent global crisis has shown that old-fashioned views about development are misleading.
It is now time to rethink the very foundations of what we consider development, well-being and wealth.
Over the past four decades, the world has increasingly realised that our natural resources are under serious pressure.
A growing awareness of the need to ensure sustainability has led a whole new generation to consider the requirements of sustainable development in its decisions to produce or consume.
This is no small achievement. Rio 92 was a major step forward. Important legal texts on key issues were adopted. These conventions ensured important progress that we must maintain and build on.
We now face a complex challenge. Protecting the environment is not enough. We need to encourage public and private decision-makers to incorporate environmental and social concerns into economic planning and growth strategies.
This will require new thinking from policymakers, experts, business people, project managers and many other public and private actors in order to implement sustainable development initiatives.
From now on, a three-dimensional approach to development is crucial, one that combines social, economic and environmental concerns.
Rio+20 endeavoured to become the launch-pad for this new development model. This is why one of the main topics of Rio+20 was building consensus around the need for “sustainable development goals”.
These goals offered a blueprint for international co-operation on sustainable development for years to come.
Future strategies, be it for governments, entrepreneurs or civil society, must offer a balanced and integrated approach encompassing the three pillars of sustainable development.
To achieve this result, Brazil decided to adopt new methods. Innovative tools for multilateral meetings were introduced, bringing national governments and global civil society together.
The Dialogues for Sustainable Development, a Brazilian initiative enthusiastically embraced by the UN, opened a means of communication between interested groups and civil society on key decision-making aspects.
Through an online platform, more than a million votes were cast, expressing views on 10 issues related to the conference.
Topics ranged from energy and water to sustainable cities and food security.
For four days in Rio, sharing the venue of the summit, experts, businessmen, activists and journalists engaged in live debates and streamlined the proposals that will be handed to Heads of State and Government.
The “Rio dialogues” were so successful that the UN is now considering turning this initiative into a standard practice for future summits.



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