Did you know?

In Argentina, thanks to lax laws created during the nineties and today's existing, large multinationals are looking for gold, silver, copper and uranium. This industry uses nine tons of explosives a day to extraction, to separate the gold from the rock are used daily 10 tons of cyanide, in this same process, called leaching by cyanide 300.000 cubic meters of water per day are used.

Just so you know, a single gold ring is equivalent to 18 tons of toxic waste.

Be sure to watch this video (in spanish)

Discover the Sustainable Earth alliance

Can we develop a different future for our country as the exodus, poverty and overexploitation?

Can we dream of a healthy and lasting diet in the cities, in agreement with the harmonious development of territories and producers?

Are we capable of inventing new ways of managing our natural resources and land and adapt them to the challenges of the 21st century?

Can we still act for countries with peasants, mountains with mountain people and a coastline with artisanal fishermen?

To meet these challenges, a growing number of social organizations, NGOs, figures, researchers, farmers and fishermen weave since 1993 the international alliance Sustainable Earth.

This alliance aims not only to act from local, but also bring a significant number of initiatives and proposals at the international level.

Sustainable Earth is an informal alliance, made up of individuals and organizations with a with a willingness to work as big as the challenges they face. These men and women together built synergies, a relationship of trust and concrete initiatives.

The origin of this alliance comes from the "APM Program - Peasant agricultures and globalisation" initiated by the Charles Leopold Mayer Foundation for Human Progress - FPH - in 1993. In 2003, the association between APM network members and new organizations like the World Mountain People Association, the World Forum of Fishermen, Alimenterra, ADEPA, etc. .. was born Terre Citoyenne (Sustainable Earth Alliance). Pierre Vuarin (FPH) is one of the co-founders and leaders.

Charles Leopold Mayer Foundation participates in the financing of the Sustainable Earth Alliance. Through its numerous activities that address global challenges, as well as its approach to international work, the Charles Leopold Mayer Foundation offers to allies of the Sustainable Earth Alliance the opportunity of extensive collaboration. It also provides new research issues, new important collective management tools (Coredem, conceptual mapping, etc.).. In the same way, Sustainable Earth Alliance allies contribute to the creation and improvement of tools, knowledge creation and generating collective action.

 

The Sustainable Earth alliance has three fundamental characteristics:

  • It operates on several levels developing networks to strengthen local capacity for action at the international level.
  • It is a open work space, international, which reconstructs according to the opportunities and synergies among the allies, and promotes the reflexive work and the collaborative capacity.
  • It is a multi-stakeholder process which aims to integrate diverse views (producers, consumers, intermediaries) on specific or general issues (food, fishing, agriculture, territories, natural resources, governance, etc.)



Its action is trying to integrate at any moment:  

  • To take into account basic human behaviour of individuals and groups to overcome the logic of competition and avoid wars.
  • The search for a responsible commitment of the various actors.
  • The integration of the cultural and intercultural dimension in how to conduct actions, activities.

To discover the actions and initiatives of the Sustainable Earth Alliance:

The ongoing initiatives

To discover the allies:

The Sustainable Earth allies

Agenda

"Pour un tourism agricole et accueil des paysans durable"

Colloque international. 10-12 Juillet 2012. Bac kan, Vietnam.

Journées internationales souveraineté alimentaire, formation de leaders sociaux et gouvernements locaux

28 mai 3 juin 2012 Ambato, Tungurahua, Equateur (agenda, 06.05.2012)

Le changement climatique dans la méditerranée: un projet de crise alimentaire?

Table ronde du 15 de mayo 2012, a las 17 hrs à la Chaire Terre Citoyenne de l'UPV de Valencia (Espagne).