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FM
Former Member

Guyana is a founding member  - as Global Green Growth Institute starts its conversion to an international organisation

 

Georgetown, GINA, July 6, 2012 -- Source - GINA

 

Prime Minister of Australia, President of Korea, Prime Minister of Denmark, President of Guyana and Deputy Prime Minister of the United Kingdom look on as United Nations Secretary General, Ban ki Moon speaks at the Global Green Growth Institute event in Rio de Janeiro

 

Co-hosted by the Republic of Korea, the Kingdom of Denmark, the Commonwealth of Australia and the Global Green Growth Institute (GGGI), the Signing Ceremony for the Agreement on the Establishment of GGGI was held on June 20 on the occasion of Rio+20, United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.


Sixteen industrialized, emerging economies and developing countries joined the ceremony to sign the Establishment Agreement that will convert GGGI into an international organization:Australia, Cambodia, Costa Rica, Denmark, Ethiopia, Guyana, Kiribati, Korea, Norway, Papua New Guinea, Paraguay, the Philippines, Qatar, the UAE, the United Kingdom, and Vietnam.

 

Six heads of government including Korean President Lee Myung-bak, Danish Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt, Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard, Guyana’s President Donald Ramotar, Kiribati President Anote Tong and Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi delivered welcoming and congratulatory remarks. Also, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and British Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg were present at the signing ceremony.


The purpose of the Signing Ceremony was to prepare the legal framework for GGGI’s conversion into an international organization. The signatories will become the founding members of GGGI when it launches as a new international organization in October, this year.


Former Korean Prime Minister Han Seung-soo, who served as the Chair of the GGGI Board of Directors, said, “Today's signing of the Agreement on the Establishment of GGGI as an international organization marks a new chapter in the institutional development of GGGI, more forcefully committing itself hereinafter to the global promotion of green growth paradigm. I am sure that this will help herald a new era of global sustainability as well as human welfare.”


Speaking at the event, Guyanese President Donald Ramotar said: “GGGI’s guiding ethos – that under the right international conditions, developing countries can lead the world to a prosperous, sustainable future – is the ethos that we need the wider world to accept. The world also needs to know that progress is possible, and I am proud to say that Guyana was one of the first countries in the world to put together a Low Carbon Development Strategy which is now three years into implementation. Working with Norway, we are one of the first countries in the world to sell environmental services.

 

We have been pleased to be associated with the Global Green Growth Institute since its inception, we are honoured to be here at this significant milestone, and we hope to see the Institute grow from strength to strength in the years ahead.”


GGGI Executive Director Richard Samans thanked the signatory governments for their leadership and said, “The treaty you have signed today creates a new kind of international organization for the 21st century: interdisciplinary; multi-stakeholder and driven by the practical priorities of emerging and developing countries which are seeking to engineer a new model of growth and development that achieves strong, broad-based progress in living standards with greater resource security and environmental sustainability.”


Headquartered in Seoul, Korea and founded in June 2010, GGGI is dedicated to pioneering a new model of environmentally sustainable economic growth, known as “green growth.” Its conversion into an international organization is expected to facilitate GGGI’s mission to develop and diffuse green growth as an economic model around the world. Its Board of Directors includes leading British climate change economist, Lord Nicholas Stern, Former South African Finance Minister Trevor Manuel, Former President of Guyana BharratJagdeo, Brazilian Environment Minister Isabella Teixeira, and leading international economic advisor, Professor Jeffrey Sachs.


GGGI is a new effort initiated by the Republic of Korea in 2010 to promote a paradigm shift in economic development – an approach which targets both economic performance and environmental sustainability – to address climate change and serve as a pathway to sustainable development. Since then, other like-minded countries have joined GGGI to advance the theory and practice of green growth.


GGGI partners with developing countries and emerging economies, including least developed countries, to develop green growth strategies and plans that deliver poverty reduction, job creation and social inclusion in an environmentally sustainable way.


(Office of Climate Change)

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Originally Posted by Henry:

This is embarrassing. The things you have to do to get aid.

You  apparently are so profoundly a Larouche cultist you have a knee jerk reaction to any environmental strategy. I am against  Guyana's LCDS strategy since it is a bogus opportunistic grasping for cash. They have done nothing on the ground to merit the label "conservationists". However, there is a need to forge useful strategies to this end on a local and a global level. Talking helps.

FM

guyana should be the leading country going green,all over the goddam country is jungle and bush.when you flying over guyana all you see is bush.i take my family to guyana and we were landing in the night,when the plane was going down my kids ask where is the airport,they could not see a single light.in the day when you travelling all over is bush.i telling you guyana is more than green it all green bush

FM

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