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..Press
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UNESCAP News Services
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Date 26
November 2004
Press Release No: L/66/2004
THE UNITED NATIONS SECRETARY-GENERAL'S MESSAGE
TO THE ZERO EMISSIONS TENTH ANNIVERSARY SYMPOSIUM
Tokyo, 26 November 2004
Delivered by Mr. Hans van Ginkel, Rector, United
Nations University
This symposium is a measure of how far the world
has come in its understanding of environmental conservation
and economic development. Where once these ideas were widely
seen as irreconcilable, today more and more people are coming
to see them as mutually dependent and re-enforcing.
The United Nations has played an important part
in bringing about this changing mindset. From the Stockholm
conference in 1972 to the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro 20
years later and the World Summit on Sustainable Development
in Johannesburg two years ago, the Organization has helped cultivate
a strikingly new global consensus: that economic development
must be harmonized with nature for the long-term future of life
on our planet.
Today, we have a far-reaching network of international
treaties, accords and frameworks, as well as the time-bound
targets known as the Millennium Development Goals, which are
designed to promote development while protecting the global
environment. We also have at our disposal an increasing array
of advanced technologies to help reduce pollution, degradation
and waste, and even to overcome some of the damage caused in
the past. Our challenge now is to take better advantage of these
fruits of human ingenuity, while summoning a stronger human
commitment to implement what has been agreed.
It is here that the Zero Emissions initiative
plays such an important role. Not only does it seek to minimize
the emissions, wastes and other byproducts generated by industry
and human activity, it also tries to turn one sector’s
wastes into another’s inputs. Based on the simple but
powerful notion that humankind should mimic the sustainable
cycles of ecosystems, it began modestly, as an effort to restructure
industrial clusters. Over the past decade, it has grown in scope,
and taken root in a number of countries and sectors, particularly
here in Japan.
On the 10th anniversary of this initiative, I
congratulate the United Nations University for a decade of dedication
to promoting ting a more promising path of economic and social
development – a path that can ensure harmony with nature
and bring security, stability and prosperity to all, today and
in future generations. Thank you for this contribution to the
work of the United Nations, and please accept my best wishes
for a successful symposium.
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