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Main Milestones
2017
The Ocean Conference
2015
Addis Ababa Action Agenda
Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction
Transforming our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development
Paris Agreement
2014
SIDS Accelerated Modalities of Action (SAMOA) Pathway
2013
High-level Political Forum on Sustainable Development
2012
United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development, RIO +20: the Future We Want
2010
Five-year review of the Mauritius Strategy of Implementation: MSI+5
2005
BPOA+10: Mauritius Strategy of Implementation
2002
World Summit on Sustainable (WSSD) Rio+10: Johannesburg Plan of Implementation
1999
Bardados Programme of Action (BPOA)+5
1997
UNGASS -19: Earth Summit +5
1994
Bardados Programme of Action (BPOA)
1993
Start of CSD
1992
United Nations Conference on Environment and Development: Agenda 21
1987
Our Common Future
1972
United Nations Conference on the Human Environment (Stockholm Conference)
Creation of UNEP
Working Towards a Balanced and Inclusive Green Economy
Environmental Management Group, United Nations, 2011
by: Environmental Management Group

This publication documents the United Nations system‐wide persspectives on the green economy and offers each agency the opportunity to define their contribution to all three pillars of sustainable development. The report provides a common reference for United Nations agencies on the meanings and implications of a green economy, and documents the understanding of the UN on what is required to meet current economic and resource challenges. The overall goal of the report was to assess how the UN system could coherently support countries in transitioning to a green economy
second aim of the report was to contribute to the preparatory process for the Rio+20 United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development 2012.

As the report is a synthesis of UN agency positions, the green economy is defined in the same way as in the UNEP’s ‘Towards a Green Economy’ report. The report also includes sections on:

• investment in physical infrastructure and target sectors;

• investment in human capital and societal infrastructure (restating that a green economy must contribute to the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs);

• enabling the transition towards a green economy, with the following sub‐sections on:
- mainstreaming environmental and social integration;
- public and private financing;
- full‐cost pricing;
- sustainable trade;
- innovation and technology transfer; and,
- assessment and indicators.

• the way forward for the United Nations system.

Particular emphasis is placed on the Rio+20 conference and its potential to send a powerful signal to governments, business and civil society around the world of the determination of the United Nations to “Deliver as One” on a green economy transformation for sustainable development and poverty eradication.

United Nations