Our collective challenge

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Our planet is a beautiful place. Our problem (‘our’ being humanity) is a lot bigger than the one our planet has. We can easily forget how much our planet Earth has to offer, because we are constantly being reminded of the challenges we face daily, from inequalities to poverty to climate change. The complexity of these converging crises we are facing will not go away simply because we are overwhelmed by it.

We are faced with the challenge of collectively re-designing the human presence on Earth. And everybody has a role to play. Business is not being asked to deliver the SDGs alone, but the goals will not be achieved without a significant contribution from the private sector. The SDGs provide us with a powerful framework to translate global needs and ambitions into business solutions. Radical transformation is required to deliver the Global Goals, allowing business to demonstrate leadership and apply its creativity to innovate for a more sustainable and inclusive future. NOW is the time for transforming humanity’s planetary impact from predominantly degenerative to regenerative! It is our generations, those alive today, who face the task of regenerating the healthy, life-supporting functions of marine and terrestrial ecosystems everywhere. In doing so we will create the basis for thriving local communities and vibrant circular bio-economies. We can create a fairer distribution of resources through widespread global-local collaboration while learning to live within planetary boundaries. This is the promise ahead, if we come together across sectorial, national and ideological divides to collaborate in implementing the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development at the local, regional and global scale. It is time to get to work – one community at a time!

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This matters to each of us because we are all responsible for being a part of the change. Our actions today affect our children tomorrow. Everyone deserves a fair an equal chance in life. Through the goals, we can reach far and wide because the goals are universal. It’s also important to understand that these goals are interconnected. We cannot separate poverty from hunger, or education from women’s empowerment and so on. If we can grasp that, we are closer to understanding the needs that must be met, and in turn we are closer to achieving the 17 goals. It’s time to give back to the planet what the planet has given to us. It’s simple and there is no cost.

“To make the world work for 100% of humanity in the shortest possible time through spontaneous co-operation without ecological offense or the disadvantage of anyone.”

— R. Buckminster Fuller

’Otto Scharmer elucidates shares his interesting view in his book ‘Leading from the emerging future’: ‘This process of co-creating disruptive change is not a singular, isolated case. The change makers embarking on these journeys venture away from well-known paths and put themselves at the edges of the unknown. The movement also includes a new breed of business entrepreneurs who create ‘hybrid’ business enterprises that aim for a triple bottom line, combining profitability with a social mission and environmental objectives. This new global movement has no name, no leader, no ideology, no single program, no single center. Instead people are sharing a new interior field, an emerging field of connection and consciousness, a collective concern about the well-being of all living beings, including our planet.'

 We are in a conceptual emergency! To respond wisely to these extraordinary times and make it through the proverbial eye of the needle requires us to change. We need to change the way we think about who we are, what we are here to do, and where are we going. Science is now revealing from diverse perspectives a structure of reality that is not dissimilar from those described in humanity’s ancient wisdom traditions. We are (re)discovering the fundamentally interconnected nature of life as fluid networks of relationships that form temporarily coherent identities which can interact with each other and are in themselves expressions of life as a planetary and fundamentally interconnected process.

 

Multiply! Action – acceleration – adaptation

Year of action!

Through intelligent intervention we can adapt and bolster our resilience to all these challenges. Delivering this demands global cooperation and partnership. To drive the urgent action required, the Global Commission on Adaptation has launched its “Year of Action”, a series of initiatives intended to see the delivery of practical measures to #AdaptOurWorld to the looming threat of climate change.

Supported by the Dutch Government, the “Year of Action” offers a platform for change culminating with the global Climate Adaptation Summit on 22 October 2020. The summit coincides with a Climate Adaptation Week held in cooperation with local partners from 19 to 23 October 2020. The week will  see key events held in Groningen and Rotterdam as well as numerous local, regional, national and international side events to advance the climate adaptation agenda.