Members
Students
UArctic
Skip navigation
Membership
Organization
Support UArctic
Thematic Networks
UArctic Institutes
Knowledge and Dialogue
Partnerships
News
Rectors' Forum
Media
FAQ
Contact
Beginning of navigation
Event Calendar
UArctic Global Access Workshop
Mon, May 20, 2013 02:00 PM
2013 Council of UArctic Meeting
Mon, Jun 03, 2013 12:00 PM
7th UArctic Rectors' Forum, Archangelsk Russia 2013
Wed, Jun 26, 2013 10:00 AM
Protecting the Sacred
Wed, Sep 11, 2013 09:00 AM
More events
Calendar Feed
RSS feed
Skip navigation
Home
/
Contact
/
Search
/
Sitemap
/
FAQ
/
Russian
/
Catalogue
/
Atlas
/
Internal
Beginning of navigation
Home
/
About UArctic
/
News
Sustainable development requires holistic thinking
Fri, Apr 27, 2012
The combination of social trust and individual entrepreneurship is at the core of sustainable development. That was the message of Secretary General Halldór Ásgrímsson at the
Stockholm+40
conference on April 24.
The Rio+20 meeting is coming up in two months, bringing world leaders and over 50.000 activists and negotiators together to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the Earth Summit in 1992 that changed the way the world looks at growth and development.
Described as one of the last opportunities for world leaders to meet before the Rio meeting, the Stockholm+40 conference on April 23-25 brought together ministers, NGOs, UN delegates, business leaders and local government officials from all over the world, including Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao, EU Environment Commissioner Janez Potocnic and UNEP Director Achim Steiner, under the heading "Partnership Forum for Sustainable Development".
Alongside the conference was the first ministerial of the new Climate and Clean Air Coalition initiated by Sweden along with the United States and others, to combat the short lived climate polluters addressed recently also by the Nordic Environment Ministers in the Svalbard Declaration.
As part of a high-level dialogue between ministers and stakeholders, Secretary General of the
Nordic Council of Ministers
Halldór Ásgrímsson described the Nordic Way towards a sustainable society:
- The Nordic countries have not always been rich, which is otherwise often seen as a prerequisite for sustainable development. But we have grown rich through a combination of a strong state and individual autonomy in a society based on trust and inclusiveness, factors I also see as crucial for our future development, said Ásgrímsson as he rounded off the panel debate.
The Nordic Council of Ministers will take that message to the Rio+20 summit where the Nordic focus will be on issues like welfare and equality, and the role of the state in creating a green economy through e.g. green public procurement as well as the potential of New Nordic Food to generate a more sustainable lifestyle.
The Rio Summit of 1992 highlighted the urgent need to rethink growth, but the attention to sustainable development actually got its first boost in Stockholm in 1972 at the UN Conference on the Human Environment celebrated at Stockholm+40, which also lead to the formation of the United Nations Environment Programme.
Later on, the Brundtland Commission elaborated the concept of sustainable development to include social and economic parameters, cementing the role of the Nordic countries in the global effort to secure the future of our planet.
Swedish environment minister Lena Ek rounded off the conference by stating her firm commitment to substantial results at Rio+20.
Photo: Terje Heiestad
More news...
Recent News
Arctic Roundtable at University of Washington, May 30, 2013
Fri, May 17, 2013
Finnish International Educators' Days in Levi May 20-22
Fri, May 17, 2013
New book: Arctic calls – Finland, the European Union and the Arctic Region
Thu, May 16, 2013
Arctic Council Ministerial concludes in Kiruna, Sweden
Thu, May 16, 2013
Extended Call for Papers, 2013 Arctic Energy Summit
Wed, May 15, 2013
Kiruna Ministerial Meeting 2013
Wed, May 15, 2013
Call for Papers:extended deadline- International Conference 'In the Spirit of the Rovaniemi Process'
Wed, May 15, 2013
NYT: Hands Across the Melting Ice
Tue, May 14, 2013
More news...
News feed (RSS)
Follow UArctic on Twitter