In collaboration with leaders and experts from industry, government and civil society our teams are working on ‘Five Big Bets’ that have enormous potential to contribute to a clean and prosperous economy, as we collectively develop effective and scalable solutions to climate change, biodiversity loss and pollution.

We live in a time of great uncertainty, complexity, and unprecedented systemic challenges. Addressing complex sustainability challenges requires unprecedented collaboration and new ways of working across sectors and across scales.

The Canada Plastics Pact (CPP) is creating a circular economy in Canada in which plastic waste is kept in the economy and out of the environment. Canada Plastics Pact Partners are united, working together on achieving clear, actionable targets by the year 2025. 

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The Natural Step Canada and EnviroCentre launch season two of the Greening Ottawa NGOs (GONGOs) program

On March 4th, EnviroCentre and The Natural Step (TNS) Canada hosted the first workshop for the 2010 cohort of the Greening Ottawa Non-Governmental Organizations (GONGOs) program.  Participants will work together throughout the year long program, which is designed to support collaboration and sustainability initiatives amongst Ottawa area NGOs.  

The Natural Step Heads East: Storytelling in Halifax

Submitted by Shane Yates 02.03.2010

On February 24th and 25th, The Natural Step came to Halifax for their Level 1 course: Sustainability for Leaders.  Arriving at the Dalhousie Student Union Building, I did not know what to expect from this one of a kind experience.  Having been assigned the position of youth storyteller for Halifax, I brought along a camcorder, digital camera, and notebook thinking this would be enough to capture what the workshop truly represented.  It turned out the workshop itself was only the tip of the iceberg of a much larger movement. 

TEDxWhistler: Looking beyond the Olympic Games

While most of Canada focuses on how many medals Canada is winning or losing, the Whistler Centre for Sustainability has been sharing another important story.  As co-host of the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games, Whistler is concerned not only with delivering a successful games but also what happens after the games. As The Whistler Centre says, “what happens after the Games after the adrenaline levels drop, hangovers dissipate, and Whistler starts coming to grips with a more carbon-restrained world?”  Can Whistler continue “to be the premier resort community as we move toward sustainability” as their mission states?
 

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