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Money can indeed grow on trees
Five years after the Paris Agreement was reached, the need for global action on climate change is clearer than ever. Calls for mitigation and a green economic recovery continue to catch headlines, even if in the margins of the COVID-19 newsreel.
Restoring the global commons is good business
Butterflies, nature and the business case for a resilient recovery from COVID-19
Edward Lorenz, best known as the father of chaos theory, famously hypothesized that the flap of a butterfly’s wings in the Amazon could set off a tornado in Texas.
Post-COVID capitalism should care for people and the planet
Communities will act as a brake on the excesses of businesses that prioritize value for shareholders
The COVID-19 crisis has shaken up how we view the world. It has shown that many of our political and social structures are built on privilege and inequality, breaking through the clutter and smug self-satisfaction of our times, and turning the spotlight on what is truly important.
How can we avoid another pandemic?
There are three steps governments must take to demonstrate their commitment to safeguarding global commons and reducing the risk of cascading catastrophes.
It cannot be hammered home too often: the root cause of the COVID-19 pandemic is the unsustainable world that we have built. It is a world in which surprises – usually unpleasant ones – are going to be the new normal.
How a COVID-19 recovery could lead to a more resilient Africa
There is no getting around it: the COVID-19 crisis will hit Africa’s people particularly hard. Even if the infection rate remains low, the socioeconomic devastation is already being felt. Access to clean water supply and basic health services remain a challenge throughout the continent, making the containment measures taken by most countries all the more challenging.
How can we create a more prosperous economy and protect the planet?
After the COVID-19 pandemic we can do better than simply return to business as usual
It’s a cruel and twisted enemy that claims not only people’s lives and livelihoods but makes us each a danger to our loved ones. Attacking societies at their core, coronavirus is the greatest test we have faced since the Second World War. Yet we find ourselves experiencing something else remarkable: an outpouring of hope, resourcefulness, and new-found solidarity.
How we can all come back better - and greener - after COVID-19
Pairing action on the pandemic and on climate change will ensure that economies end up stronger than before
Fifty years ago today, protecting the environment became a mass movement when 20 million Americans took to the streets in hundreds of cities around the country to mark the first Earth Day. Over the past half-century Earth Day has become a global event, observed in some 190 countries and involving nearly 100,000 organizations in the largest civic observance in the world.
This Earth Day, reflecting on the global commons we share
Earth Day 2020 comes at a pivotal moment for our planet. This is the first time since the global celebration was launched 50 years ago where Earth Day events are only digital. COVID-19 has affected the whole world, driving home how connected we are while also keeping us apart in a time of required social distancing.
Nature: one of the best solutions to climate change
Investing in trees and forests combats global warming and provides good financial returns.
The best way to tackle climate change may come naturally. For years, solutions have focused on clean energy technology, including electrifying transport and driving down the cost of wind and solar power.
But the conservation and sustainable management of nature are now recognised as the other critical pathway to a climate-positive future, which on balance, benefits rather than damages the climate and can also help us protect biodiversity and water.
Luxury is setting the pace for sustainability
The fashion industry must be ahead of the curve in tackling the climate and biodiversity crises
This is being described as the “super-year”, with 2020 seen as pivotal – when binding decisions will be made on climate and nature by the world’s governments at international policy meetings.