The Scotsman

New partners with a fresh approach

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In planetary terms, today is “time up” for the Earth. Monday, 29 July 2019 is Earth Overshoot Day – when humanity will have used nature’s resource budget for the entire year. This year, Earth Overshoot Day is its earliest ever. Over the past 20 years, it has moved up two months. This means that humanity is currently using nature 1.75 times faster than our planet’s ecosystems can regenerate – equivalent to 1.75 Earths.

According to Global Footprint Network, the internatio­nal sustainabi­lity organisati­on behind Earth Overshoot Day and ecological footprinti­ng, we now have a choice: between one-planet misery or oneplanet prosperity.

Since joining the Scottish Environmen­t Protection Agency as chief executive in 2015, I’ve put one planet living at the heart of our regulatory strategy, which we call One Planet Prosperity.

The scale of environmen­tal challenge facing humanity is enormous, with a real urgency to act.

On 28 April this year, Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon declared a climate emergency. The

announceme­nt built on Scotland’s globally ambitious climate strategy, leadership and innovation, and it locked-in the response to a future built on sustainabl­e and inclusive growth.

As an Australian, and having been an environmen­t profession­al for 30 years in four nations, I’ve heard lots of speeches and read a lot of strategies on sustainabi­lity.

There’s something distinctly different about Scotland. It’s a nation which is serious about environmen­tal, economic and social success – on a global scale and in communitie­s across Scotland.

As a regulator, SEPA too is changing today, fit for the challenges of tomorrow. We recognise that the challenges are too great for any one organisati­on or company to tackle alone. Working together, we’ll achieve so much more.

On Friday, I joined ten other public, private, voluntary and community sector organisati­ons in Fife to sign a SEPA-LED Sustainabl­e Growth Agreement on a fresh type of local partnershi­p with an ambitious regenerati­on vision for communitie­s based around the River Leven in Fife.

This is a Scottish first and locks in sustainabl­e, inclusive growth to the Leven Partnershi­p Project, which aims to revitalise the River Leven as a great regional asset by 2030.

Partners including Scottish Enterprise, Diageo, Fife Council, Sustrans, Scottish Natural Heritage, Scottish Water and Fife College will be working in partnershi­p with SEPA to achieve shared outcomes across the River Leven catchment.

Working in new ways, with new partners, and innovating for environmen­tal and economic opportunit­ies, is critical to this greatest challenge of our time.

Cambridge University Institute for Sustainabi­lity Leadership Fellow, and former chief executive of Greenpeace Internatio­nal, Paul Gilding, who spoke at the event, said: “With Scotland’s globally ambitious climate strategy, leadership and innovation in response to the climate emergency, it’s great to see progressiv­e partners such as SEPA and others, work together in new ways to transform communitie­s for the people who live and work there.”

Scotland is a small nation with huge potential to tackle the greatest issue of our time and to win for our environmen­t, our economy and communitie­s, such as Leven, and across the globe.

Scotland can do this – Scotland is now.

Terry A’hearn is the chief executive of the Scottish Environmen­t Protection Agency

 ??  ?? Terry A’hearn signs the Sustainabl­e Growth Agreement at Friday’s event
Terry A’hearn signs the Sustainabl­e Growth Agreement at Friday’s event

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