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Global Cooperation for the Environment: Policy, Technology, and Action

Date & Time

Wednesday
Apr. 22, 2020
8:55am听鈥撎12:00pm ET

Overview

To celebrate 50 years since the founding of Earth Day, 澳门六合彩 invites you to join us for a reflection on global cooperation for the environment through the lens of policy, technology, and action. The world has changed from the first Earth Day, with landmark wins balanced by new challenges鈥攐cean plastics, climate change, water insecurity鈥攁ffecting environmental policy and action.听

This is an opportunity for a global call to action, working across silos. Interdisciplinary collaboration and multi-sector partnerships can help us leverage science and technology to play a critical role in shaping the design and execution of public policy. In partnership with the Smithsonian Conservation Commons and the and leveraging initiatives such as 澳门六合彩's collaboration around , we aim to elevate solutions-based, integrated approaches to tackling today's toughest environmental challenges. The result can be a more inclusive, resilient, and ultimately healthy environment and society.

    About the Event

    • 9:00 a.m.            Opening Remarks

      • The Honorable Jane Harman, President, Director & CEO, 澳门六合彩
      • Ruth Anna Stolk, Executive Director, Smithsonian Conservation Commons

      9:30 a.m. Applying Innovation to Environmental Action

      The last fifty years have shown remarkable momentum in the environmental movement, not only in informing local action but a global scientific push that has left its mark on policy. Nevertheless, the challenges facing Earth's environment continue to mount. What are some of the existing efforts between scientists, innovators, researchers, and decision-makers being used to understand complex environmental problems and inform action? 

      • Maisa Rojas, PhD, Associate Professor, Universidad de Chile, Chair of the Scientific Committee for COP25
      • Shanna McClain, PhD, Program Lead for Risk Reduction & Resilience at NASA and Partnerships Manager for Earth Sciences Division
      • Winnie Lau, PhD, Senior Officer, Preventing Ocean Plastics, The Pew Charitable Trusts 
      • Moderator: Mike Sfraga, PhD, Director, Global Risk and Resilience Program, 澳门六合彩

        10:30 a.m.      Looking Forward to 2070: The Future of Cooperation for the Environment 

        Even as we work to address today's environmental challenges, we must anticipate the hurdles ahead. What are the problems that will mark the next 50 years of celebrating Earth Day? This is not just a matter of understanding what will shape our environment, but how we are preparing ourselves (or need to prepare ourselves) on a global scale through technology, policy, and action.

        Panel
        • David Kline, PhD, Coral Reef Ecologist, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute
        • Edan Dionne, VP, Environmental, Energy & Chemical Management Programs Corporate Environmental Affairs, IBM
        • Aaron Salzberg, PhD, Director, The Water Institute, University of North Carolina; Global Fellow, Wilson Center
        • Moderator: Anne Bowser, PhD, Director of Innovation, 澳门六合彩

        11:30 a.m. Call to Action:

        • Denis Hayes, President & CEO, Bullitt Foundation, Founder, Earth Day Network
      • Ruth Anna Stolk

         鈥淸We] got a group of scientists together to talk about the future of our field work and how we could build better synergy with communities and with one another. And a number of the scientists pushed back on us and said, 鈥榃e鈥檙e at the point where our work isn鈥檛 going to mean anything if we don鈥檛 change human attitudes towards nature.鈥欌

         鈥淚n this moment of fear and doubt, Earth Optimism is all the more important. We鈥檙e doing that as it relates to the pandemic we are facing now. We have to focus on what鈥檚 working, and we have to replicate what鈥檚 working, and we have to take the same approach to nature, to conserving our nature and cultural heritage. So, that鈥檚 what Earth Optimism is all about."

        鈥淧arachuting and getting the work done and publishing the data is only a very small piece of the story. And I think that where we鈥檙e going is a lot more community-oriented, much more integrated.鈥

        Maisa Rojas

        鈥淭he way we do science is through transparently sharing data, making our methods clear and open鈥攖hat鈥檚 very important鈥攁nd that鈥檚 how we do science in whatever field of science you come from. But it is so evident now that this is really critical to solve this pandemic.鈥

        鈥淐limate change鈥annot be addressed just by a climatologist or an economist or a sociologist, etc. And even in the climate or the earth sciences, there are many different disciplines that need to understand and fully comprehend the magnitude of the problem."

        Shanna McClain

        鈥淚 was interested to find that at NASA, we weren鈥檛 really integrating the human dimension into this concept of seeing Earth as a system. And, of course, if we鈥檙e talking about fragility, crisis, conflict, a lot of this happens because of the nexus between the human and environmental dimensions.鈥

        鈥淎 lot of the approaches that NASA use are often those of many scientists, where we鈥檝e got somebody in a lab creating something, trying to see how innovative and how far we can go, which is desperately needed. But on the other hand, I want to know what it鈥檚 going to do to help people on the ground, facing real world problems and looking for future ways of preventing or mitigating some of the crisis situations that we see.鈥

        鈥淣ASA does amazing work, and we have incredible scientists, but we鈥檙e only part of the solution鈥e need to take interdisciplinary approaches.鈥

        鈥淭he evolution for us is also about becoming more interdisciplinary and breaking out of seeing water and food security or disasters as independent program areas, but instead, part of a larger discussion of how these all come together and influence the situations that we live in and face today.鈥

        Winnie Lau

         鈥淭here鈥檚 been a constant drum beat of scientific and news articles telling us yet another new shocking fact: plastic has been found in the deepest part of the ocean, the Mariana Trench; whales and dolphins are washing up dead on shores around the world with dozens and dozens of plastic bags in their stomachs; and microplastic fibers have even been found now in our drinking water. So, the news is sobering and more and more urgent each day.鈥

        鈥淭here is no single solution that can solve this problem. It will require a global concerted approach. The good news though is that there is a scenario whereby a credible pathway exists towards stopping plastic from getting into the ocean in the first place. But I鈥檒l be honest with you, this path will not be an easy one, but it does exist.鈥

        鈥淲ith a credible pathway and a map of government efforts in hand, we have begun putting together the global roadmap. We are working with the many partners from both analyses as well as some new ones to devise this plan. We aim to share this global roadmap with the world in June and hope that it will catalyze the ambition and actions needed. And I hope that at another Earth Day celebration in the near future I can come back to tell you that we are well on our way.鈥  

        鈥淲e know that there are a lot of stakeholders, partners, organizations, who understand and recognize that this is an important environmental problem, and that it isn鈥檛 going to go away, even though right now our attention is on the pandemic鈥nce we get back to normal, this problem will still be there.鈥

         


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