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UN
SECRETARY GENERAL'S MESSAGE
SG/SM/8247
ENV/DEV/639
OBV/275
21 May 2002
IN
ENVIRONMENT DAY MESSAGE, SECRETARY-GENERAL EXPRESSES HOPE
FOR 'REAL
AND TANGIBLE' BREAKTHROUGH AT JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT
Says 'Planet Still in Need of
Intensive Care'
Following is the message by
Secretary-General Kofi Annan for World Environment Day, 5 June:
The theme of this year's World
Environment Day, "Give Earth a Chance", is meant to convey a message of
urgency –- about the state of the earth and the broader quest for
sustainable development.
Sustainable development rests
on three pillars: economic growth, social progress and protection of our
environment and natural resources. When the idea first burst onto the
scene in 1987 with the publication of "Our Common Future", it was meant
to go beyond the ecosystem approaches of the past, which put
environmental issues on the political map but did not take fully into
account these other key concerns.
In 1992, at Rio de Janeiro,
the international community achieved a conceptual breakthrough. No
longer, it was hoped, would environmental issues be regarded as a luxury
or afterthought. Rather, they would become a central part of the
policy-making process, integrated with economic and social development.
Developing countries would be helped to pursue a more environmentally
sound path to modernization than that followed by the developed
countries. The big picture
-- a positive vision of long-term growth, equity, justice and
environmental protection -- seemed firmly in view.
Despite this advance, and
despite considerable efforts and significant achievements since the
“Earth Summit”, the latest readings reveal a planet still in need of
intensive care. Poverty, pollution and population growth; rural poverty
and rapid urbanization; wasteful consumption habits and growing demands
for water, land and energy continue to place intense pressures on the
planet’s life support systems, threatening our ability to achieve
sustainable development.
There is little chance of
protecting the environment without a greater sense of mutual
responsibility, especially in an age of interdependence, and especially
since the environmental “footprint” left by some societies is so much
larger than that left by others. I hope that all States and all
stakeholders will come together at the World Summit on Sustainable
Development in South Africa later this year, and that the breakthrough
this time, ten years along the path from Rio, will be real and tangible.
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