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Pittsburgh
Region Residents Visit Sweden
One of the keys to Sweden’s place as a leader in
sustainable development has been through an ongoing commitment by
its communities and by its people towards sustainable development.
Recently 14 individuals from around the world gathered in Sweden to
participate in the 2004 Sustainable Sweden Tour to learn more about
what activities these Swedish communities and their citizens are
actively pursing in sustainable development. Through their actions
in sustainable development, these communities and their people are
creating an entire country that is moving closer to providing each
community member with the ability to meet their basic needs in a
marketplace of vibrant economic activity and within the fragile
limits of the natural world.
Participants of the 2004 Sustainable Sweden Tour visited
three different sized communities Stockholm (pop. 2 million), Umea
(pop. 100,000) and Robertsfor (pop. 7,200) and met with various
individuals including politicians, business owners, farmers and
teachers to learn about the people, the places and the process that
have made sustainability achievable in the region.
The tour participants have put together this recap and
collected information to share our insights into what’s happening
in Sweden and what we can learn from their examples.
It is the hope of the participants that this document will
serve as a source of ideas, information, inspiration and insight
into how to have a safer transition and create a more sustainable
planet.
In a world that is transforming at an unprecedented time and
scale, the world’s communities are seeking examples of places that
can help guide us through the challenge of a creating a new world.
What we’ve already realized in this transition is that our current
activities are undeniably affecting every community and every
person, some very positively and some very negatively.
Within this challenge, every community is addressing
sustainable development whether they know it or not. In its most
basic definition, sustainable development is the transformation of
our society that creates an environment in which every citizen is
able to meet his/her most basic needs without sacrificing either
economic development or environmental protection.
For those searching for such positive examples of
transformation, they need not look much further than the communities
in Sweden. A second place ranking in the 2004 United Nations Human
Development Index only confirms that Sweden has become one of the
world’s best places to live and certainly not by chance.
Historically, Sweden has had a tradition of sustainable
development activities and close relationship with their
surroundings. Set forth by the Right
to Public Access in Sweden, although not illustrate in any law,
allows every citizen and visitor access to the countryside with the
consideration that each individual not disturb or destroy the area.
By the year 2020 and within one generation,
Sweden a nation has set a goal to become a sustainable society. As
part of this goal, Sweden has established 15 objectives to guide
itself to become a sustainable society. The 15 objectives are as
follows:
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