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..Press
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UNESCAP News Services
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Date 23
November 2004
Press Release No: L/64/2004
SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY EXIST TO BEGIN TRANSITION
FROM ERA OF EXPLOITATION TO ‘ETHIC OF STEWARDSHIP’,
SAYS SECRETARY-GENERAL IN MESSAGE TO BANGKOK CONGRESS
Following is Secretary-General Kofi Annan’s
message to the third World Conservation Union’s World
Conservation Congress in Bangkok, 17 to 25 November:
It gives me great pleasure to send my greetings
to all the participants in the Third International Union for
Conservation of Nature (IUCN) World Conservation Congress who
have gathered here over the past three days.
You have met at a crucial time in our work for
peace and sustainable development. More than ever, we need to
heal divisions in the international community and engage in
a constructive debate about the future: how to forge a true
global partnership for the fight against poverty, hunger and
disease; how to build a collective security system that meets
all threats and enjoys the confidence of all countries; and
how to protect our one and only planet, so that today’s
and future generations can meet their needs.
Unsustainable practices remain deeply woven into
the fabric of modern life. Every country, and every individual,
has a responsibility to change -- to move from an era of exploitation
to an ethic of stewardship. That transition need not wait for
tomorrow’s breakthroughs. We have the science and the
green technologies to begin the job today. We know what policies
are needed to fight global warming, to use energy more efficiently,
to protect ecosystems and resources, and to promote balanced
growth. Conservation and change may seem expensive, but the
cost of inaction, or even of continuing on our present path,
is far greater.
Events of the past few years have distracted the
world from dealing adequately with these issues. In the year
ahead, we must do better. Next September, world leaders will
gather for a summit to review progress in the five years since
the Millennium Declaration. I want them to use that summit not
merely to make observations, but as an opportunity to agree
on bold decisions which can move the world closer to the shared
vision set out in that Declaration. To help them in their deliberations,
they will have in their hands the report of my High-Level Panel
on Threats, Challenges and Change, to be issued next month,
as well as the report of the Millennium Project, to be issued
in January, on what it will take to achieve the Millennium Development
Goals -- the seventh of which is to ensure environmental sustainability
-- by the target year of 2015. My own report will be issued
in March, indicating clearly to Member States the points on
which decisions are needed.
I wish to commend the participants and organizers
of the Congress for the lively debate you have had. And I very
much look forward to the contributions you will make to our
common effort to adapt our United Nations and secure our common
future. Thank you again for the commitment, creativity and collective
spirit that you have brought to the cause of a safer, fairer
more sustainable world.
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