Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byGwen Nichols Modified over 9 years ago
1
THE CHALLENGE OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT Jeffrey D. Sachs Director of the Earth Institute Interdisciplinary Ph.D. Workshop in Sustainable Development April 12, 2013
2
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT MEANS... THREE INTERCONNECTED DIMENSIONS OF A HEALTHY SOCIETY ECONOMIC PROSPERITY AND THE END OF EXTREME POVERTY SOCIAL INCLUSION ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY UNDERPINNED BY PEACE AND GOOD GOVERNANCE (PUBLIC & PRIVATE)
3
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IS THE GREAT CHALLENGE OF OUR ERA, BUT... THE WORLD IS DANGEROUSLY OFF COURSE: Extreme poverty afflicting more than 1 billion; Fragility and conflicts in many regions High and rising inequality in most societies, with pervasive gender and ethnic discrimination and lack of good jobs for youth Severe degradation of the environment in all parts of the world Global population still rapidly increasing, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa
4
MANHATTAN, HURRICANE SANDY, OCTOBER 29, 2012
5
BEIJING, JULY 21, 2012
6
BANGKOK OCTOBER 2011
7
INDIANA MAIZE AUGUST 2012
8
Homes are destroyed in Colorado Springs, June 2012
9
Fires Are Increasing World-Wide Source: Westerling et al. 2006 Western US area burned Wildfires in Western US have increased 4-fold in 30 years.
10
June 2011: Record 7.6% of U.S. in ‘Exceptional’ drought category, simultaneous with record flooding on Mississippi River.
12
CHAD 2012
17
Figure 2: Planetary Boundaries (Source: Rockström et al 2009a)
19
THE INDISPENSABLE ROLES OF ASIA AND AFRICA AS OF 2050, A REMARKABLE 80% OF THE WORKING AGE POPULATION, 25-59, WILL BE IN ASIA AND AFRICA, UP FROM 74% TODAY
20
GLOBAL RESPONSES TO THE CHALLENGES OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT RIO EARTH SUMMIT (1992) INTERNATIONAL LAW: UNFCCC, CBD, UNCCD MILLENNIUM SUMMIT AND MDGS (2001) GLOBAL GOALS TO REDUCE EXTREME POVERTY RIO+20 (2012) SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS
21
A CHANGED WORLD SINCE 2000: PLANETARY BOUNDARIES MORE URGENT END OF POVERTY WITHIN SIGHT EMERGING ECONOMIES TAKE CENTER STAGE INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY REVOLUTION DEMOGRAPHIC AND RESOURCE PRESSURES CENTRAL ROLE OF MULTINATIONAL BUSINESS THE CHALLENGE OF JOBS AND INEQUALITY
22
TRANSITION FROM MDGS to SDGs SDGs should: FORM A CONSISTENT AND COMPREHENSIVE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT FRAMEWORK EMBRACE A SHARED UNDERLYING GLOBAL ETHIC CREATE UNIVERSAL AND SHARED RESPONSIBILITIES MOBILIZE THE PUBLIC, ESPECIALLY THE YOUTH
23
AN ILLUSTRATIVE SET OF 10 SDGS Goal 1: End Extreme Poverty Goal 2: Achieve Development within Planetary Boundaries Goal 3: Achieve Gender Equality, Human Rights and the Rule of Law Goal 4: Achieve Food Security and Rural Prosperity Goal 5: Empower Inclusive, Productive and Resilient Cities Goal 6: Achieve Health and Wellbeing at all Ages Goal 7: Ensure Effective Learning for Every Child for Life and Livelihood Goal 8: Curb Human-Induced Climate Change Goal 9: Secure Ecosystem Services and Biodiversity Goal 10: Transform Governance for Sustainable Development
24
SOME KEY SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES LOW-CARBON ENERGY RENEWABLE ENERGY CARBON CAPTURE AND SEQUESTRATION ENERGY EFFICIENCY, SMART VEHICLES, SMART CITIES SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE IMPROVED TRAITS, AGRO-ECOLOGY SMART TILLAGE & IRRIGATION, MICRO-DOSING, DIETARY CHOICES, OCEAN MANAGEMENT SUSTAINABLE CITIES RAPID VOLUNTARY REDUCTION OF HIGH TFR DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES IN HEALTH, EDUCATION, ENERGY, ETC.
25
THE INCREASINGLY URGENT CASE FOR INVESTING SUSTAINABLE TECHNOLOGIES
26
THE NEW POTENTIAL OF RENEWABLE ENERGY
27
THE NEW GLOBAL PROBLEM SOLVING: THE U.N. SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SOLUTIONS NETWORK (UN SDSN): TO FOSTER A GLOBAL NETWORK OF PROBLEM SOLVING, EMPOWER UNIVERSITIES, PROMOTE PUBLIC-PRIVATE SOLUTION INITIATIVES, AND ENCOURAGE BOLD FIRST MOVERS
28
The Pluses Advanced Technologies Information revolution Corporate SD Leadership Sustainable Development Goals The Minuses Population Pressures Climate Change Land Grabs Lack of Planning Global lawlessness A Sustainable Planet?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.