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Partnership Building
1. The Seed Initiative
Scaling up its activities since its launch
in 2004, the SEED Initiative is making its awards component
an annual event as of 2008. This inspiring initiative of
UNEP, UNDP and the IUCN has now opened its call for submissions
for SEED Awards 2008. The Award carries a special prize:
instead of prize money, five Award Winners will receive
a 12 month package of targeted support services, such as
business development counseling, technical assistance, and
using the SEED network to find new partners and access expertise.
All finalists will receive support through capacity development
activities or networking opportunities. The finalists will
be announced at the 16th session of the UN Commission for
Sustainable Development (CSD) in New York, May 2008. The
deadline for submissions is 16 March. For more information
go to www.seedinit.org.
Published in 2006, the first Seed Partnership
Report, provides analysis of over seventy local level partnerships
who participated in the first call and the five Seed Award
winners who received support services during 2005 - 2006.
The report describes the challenges local entrepreneurs
face in experimenting with new financing and business planning
models in their efforts to implement projects advancing
world environment and development goals. The background
to this is a pool of over 260 emerging partnerships who
sent submissions for each of the first two calls of the
Awards.
Download the Seed
Initiative Partnership Report 2006 (PDF - 6.12 MB).
A new Partnership Report will be published in 2008.
What is the Seed Initiative?
The Seed Initiative consists of three
legs: (i) an award scheme that recognizes innovative and
promising partnerships, (ii) a partnership support channel
to provide targeted support and sevices to help awardeed
set up their new partnerships and (iii) a research and learning
channel to draw out policy lessons and relevant conclusions
from the partnerships experiences.
Who is the Seed Initiative?
The Seed Initiative brings together a
diverse group of partners that represents leaders in environment
and development. The group draws on close involvement with
the work of the United Nations on the Millennium Declaration
Goals and the Johannesburg Plan of Implementation. The founding
partners are:
- IUCN - The World Conservation Union
- United Nations Environment Programme
- United Nations Development Programme
Other collaborating groups include International
Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD) and the Collective
Leadership Institute (CLI). The Seed Initiative enjoys strong
support from governments and the United Nations Global Compact.
It was formally launched at simultaneous events the World
Social Forum (Mumbai) in January 2004, and the World Economic
Forum (Davos) also in January 2004.
Who can participate in the Seed Awards?
The Seed Awards will be given annually
to new innovative partnerships that:
- At least involve three different stakeholder
groups - such as community or church groups, local or
international non-governmental organisations, small or
global businesses, governments, labour unions, and others.
- Relate to the tree pillars of sustainability:
economic, environmental and social or have the potential
to contribute to the Millenium Development Goals and/
or the outcomes of the Johannesburg Plan of Implementation.
- Centres on a local initiative and display
entrepreneurship in its broadest sense
- And has the following elements
already in place:
- a definition of partnership goals;
- a governance structure; and
- a work plan.
For more information see the
Seed Initiative official website.
2. Business Award of the ICC in collaboration
with UNEP
The 2002 Award
The
2002 Business Award for Sustainable
Development Partnerships was presented at WSSD in
Johannesburg on 31st August to the top-ten of the final
thirty-two recipients, recognised for their "excellent
contribution
to sustainable development".
Over 120 partnership nominations were
received from nearly 37 countries for the 2002 Award. These
involve businesses, industry sector associations, labour,
non-governmental organisations, governments and international
agencies and institutions. The focus of the award was on
partnerships (multi-stakeholder) and sustainable development
(all three pillars - being environment, social and economic).
For more information download the Award
Brochure (PDF - 130 Kb).
The 2000 Award
The Millennium
Business Award for Environmental Achievement was
presented for the first time in May 2000 by the ICC in collaboration
with UNEP. The aim of this award was to recognise the so-called
"hidden gems" of corporate environmental management.
Entries world-wide were received by ICC national committees,
who selected two finalists for each country following agreed
selection criteria. No type or size of companies were excluded
from entering, but the international Selection Committee
wished to recognise companies that are less well known on
the international stage.
The award winners from the first round
included a major Japanese electric power utility and a Peruvian
brewer, an aluminium producer in Bahrain and a printer in
southern England (press
release - 5 Kb)
UNEP Executive Director Klaus Töpfer
explained that "the [2000] award winners may not have
achieved all the goals of environmental performance that
UNEP desires, but that their managers and employees are
showing the road to sustainable industrial development by
implementing cleaner production and eco-efficiency in their
operations".
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