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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Please support Masters level education in Strategic Sustainable Development

In the small town of Karlskrona, Sweden, young leaders from around the world gather every September to begin a Masters program in Strategic Leadership towards Sustainability (MSLS) at the Blekinge Institute of Technology. The course is based around The Natural Step Framework for Strategic Sustainable Development, and it turns passionate students into empowered change agents for a better world.

Infodimanche.com: Imaginer Rivière-du-Loup dans 40 ans

La Ville de Rivière-du-Loup, partenaire de Natural Step Canada, a été mise en avant dans un article Infodimanche.com pour son initiative de développement durable. Il s’agit d’un bon exemple de municipalité canadienne appliquant la démarche de planification stratégique de Natural Step ayant fait ses preuves.

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Rivière-du-Loup - Le mercredi 7 septembre, la Ville de Rivière-du-Loup dévoilait les lignes directrice d’une nouvelle démarche de planification stratégique innovatrice qui sera mise en application d’ici à la fin de l’année et qui s’inscrit dans l’optique d’un développement durable.

The Answers are Blowing in the Wind

The following poem appeared in the Rocky Mountain Outlook of November 27, 2008. This composition is by Bert Dyck, the former Town of Canmore CAO, and addresses a recent community controversy about clotheslines being prohibited in certain Canmore developments

The Answers are Blowing in the Wind

Bert Dyck

I went to Canmore for a walk
On rivers, trails or creeks
Or climb Ha Ling, that rugged Rock
Or other worthy peaks

When what should cross my line of sight
And bugger up my view?
A clothesline on a yard stretched tight
Replete with laundry, too

The lot on which the line I found
Was large and well located
With clothesline on that piece of ground
Its value I deflated

I would have given it a price
Quite high, or even higher
Secure in mind that owners here
Could well afford a dryer

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