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Give the Earth a Future

Helping our planet to transition to a sustainable world for our grand children and generations to come

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ENVIRONMENTAL SYMPHONY:

THE MOVEMENT


UNITED NATIONS DAY CONCERT

 

Performance for the United Nations 

New York City, United Nations General Assembly Hall


October 24, 2023, 6:30pm EST

Conductor: Julien Benichou

Orchestra: The New York Orchestra Ensemble


ENVIRONMENTAL SYMPHONY:

THE MOVEMENT


UNITED NATIONS DAY CONCERT 


Performance for the United Nations New York City, United Nations Assembly Hall


October 24, 2023, 6.30pm EST

Conductor: Julien Benichou 

Orchestra: The New York Orchestra Ensemble (members of the symphonies around New York)




A multi-media symphonic experience featuring a live orchestral performance, thought provoking narration, and mesmerizing synchronized visuals, Environmental Symphony: The Movement explores our history, our future, and our ability to make a difference.


The origin of Environmental Symphony was a passionate composition by Dr. Alan Zavod as a live performance masterpiece with five narration roles that continue in the tradition of 'Carnival of the Animals' and 'Peter and the Wolf'. An ambitious and epic work that spans billions of years, from the formation of the planet through to the devastation of our current age, and a chance of hope for the future. This is the inspiration of the music and visual creative exploration for Environmental Symphony: The Movement. 


In commemoration of “United Nations Day'' on October 24th, the Environmental Symphony: The Movement will perform at the UN General Assembly Hall with leaders from 194 countries. Hosted by Family Offices for Sustainable Development (FOSD), the purpose of the event is to not only celebrate and reaffirm the principles of the UN Charter that have guided humanity for the past 78 years, but to mobilize world leaders around the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals. 

The vision to inspire our world with The Environmental Symphony began with Michael Sander   


 “Environmental Symphony: The Movement, brings us together as people to experience the magnificent fusion of music, visuals and storytelling. It is a brilliant blueprint of how art can indeed be a catalyst for activation through inspiration. At its core, the symphony reminds us of the importance of a call to action for the people of all nations to BE AN INSTRUMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE through peace, unity and connection.”

— Michael L. Sander


Bringing the World Together for a Sustainable Planetary Future

The Family Offices for Sustainable Development (FOSD) Summit at United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) will bring together world leaders, government officials, diplomats, philanthropists, civil leaders, and select Family Offices from across the globe to highlight the power of data and public-private partnerships to achieve the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) for the world’s most vulnerable countries. Presented by the Environmental Symphony, the FOSD Summit at UNGA will formally announce the UN Day Concert.


BACKGROUND: In response to the global pandemic, the PVBLIC Foundation - in partnership with the UN Multi- Partner Trust Fund Office (“MPTF”) and the UN Office for Partnerships (“UNOP”) - launched the Family Offices for Sustainable Development (“FOSD”). 


MISSION: Mobilize family offices across the globe around the UN's Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and optimize their capacity to have an impact through philanthropy, investments, and public-private partnerships. 


PARTNER: As the official impact partner, FOSD will not only utilize its network to bring the Environmental Symphony to communities around the world, but will channel the support generated towards the most impactful institutions, campaigns, and programs that are achieving the SDGs.


GREEN CROSS INTERNATIONAL is an Official Partner of The Environmental Symphony.


Future Environmental Symphony Events

2023: 

United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP28) in Dubai, UAE [December 7th, 2023] 


2024: 

EarthX-2024 in Dallas, Texas [April 24, 2024] 

Global Island Summit (SIDS 4) in Antigua and Barbuda [May 27, 2024] 

United Nations General Assembly [September, 2024] 

United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP29) [TBD] 



Watch the Livestream on October 24, 6:30 PM EST hon the United Nation YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/@unitednations and UN Web TV: webtv.un.org




Social channels:


Website:

https://www.environmentalsymphony.com


For further information contact:

Brett McCall | brett@indeworks.com | 312.560.6557


Donation + Sponsorship:

Parixit Pathak | parixit@indeworks.com | 510.468.6811

In Honor of and thank you to Mikhail Sergeyevich Gorbachev


March 2, 1931 - August 30, 2022

Our beloved Founding President Mikhail Sergeyevich Gorbachev has left us. This is of great sadness for our Green Cross Family worldwide, as well as for the international community. President Gorbachev will be greatly missed by all. 

Never before has our world seen such a visionary leader. "The man who changed the world" was very early to set the seeds of change that can bring forth a sustainable planetary future. 

All the great work that President Gorbachev brought forth, starting some 30 years ago, shows he was far ahead of his time. He was a trailblazer calling to raise awareness, ethical change, dialog and cooperation to address the very critical issues we now face as a human race. 

President Gorbachev has passed, however his beacon of Light now shines even brighter. He lived his life in unwavering commitment to a better world, to cultivate peace, disarmament and environmental security, in solidarity and unity with the Earth. 

Mikhail Sergeyevich brought humanity new hope. He brought “glasnost” and "perestroika", an openness, a new thinking, and restructuring of society. He brought down the Berlin Wall, and ending the cold war, while opening a path for a free Europe, and was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, in 1990. 

Never before has a world leader in power proposed a full ban of all nuclear weapons, as President Gorbachev did at the Global Forum on Environment and Development for the Survival of Humanity, that same year. There he also proposed the creation of a "Green Cross for the Earth" to promote international cooperation for environmental protection. 

Founded in 1993, Green Cross International is the birth child of President Gorbachev, which became established 30 countries. He was one of the first world leaders to sound the alarm on climate change, and created the international Climate Task Force, with renowned leaders and scientists. 

In a letter to the GCI General Assembly dated August 22, 2019 President Gorbachev reflected over the legacy and achievements of Green Cross International. 

He wrote: "Green Cross as a part of a global movement, and has awakened millions of people to become concerned about the fate of our planet. 

"Our work focused including Earth ethics and environmental education, elimination of the environmental consequences of the arms race, and access to clean water." 

President Gorbachev went on to say, "Each of those areas we have great achievements. I am referring to the Earth Charter we helped to establish, which is a guidelines of governance for all sectors of society, and the school curricula that reached out to millions of children." 

He reflected on the "implementation of the Convention banning chemical weapons, the conclusion of the UN Transboundary Water Convention, and to many projects big and small to which our active supporters gave their efforts and their hearts." 

"Green Cross must continue its important role within the international community to cultivate cooperation and to bring forth solutions for a sustainable future during this time of ecological and human crisis." 

President Gorbachev's long-term understanding of the steps needed towards mankind's planetary future will now live on beyond his time on Earth. 

Let us take his advice to heart: "Let us awaken humanity to the environmental planetary crisis. Let us change from within, our consciousness. Let us work together with all levels of society, and over international borders." 

We thank you Mikhail Sergeyevich Gorbachev for all you have done for our world. 

Green Cross International
 

Mikhail Gorbachev

the founder of

Green Cross

Green Cross International’s roots can be traced back to President Mikhail Gorbachev’s time in office as Head of State of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, a period during which he spoke repeatedly about the interrelated threats humanity and our Earth face from nuclear arms, chemical weapons, unsustainable development, and the man-induced decimation of the planet’s ecology.

The Mission of

Green Cross International

The mission of Green Cross International is to respond to the combined challenges of security, poverty and environmental degradation to ensure a sustainable and secure future. We seek solutions through dialogue, mediation and co-operation.

To achieve this we:


Promote legal, ethical and behavioural norms that ensure basic changes in the values, actions and attitudes of government, the private sector and civil society, necessary to develop a sustainable global community;


Contribute to the prevention and resolution of conflicts arising from environmental degradation;


Provide assistance to people affected by the environmental consequences of wars, conflicts and man made calamities.

Our Programs

We help children, families, and communities break the cycle of poverty by

empowering people of all ages to dream, aspire and achieve.


Help us help others 

Support Green Cross International's global projects

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Green Cross International is an environmentalist 

organisation headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland

Green Cross International is an environmentalist organisation headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland, founded by former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in 1993. Today there are member organisations in 30 countries. Its primary mission is to "respond to the combined challenges of security, poverty and environmental degradation to ensure a sustainable and secure future".


Green Cross International was founded by former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in 1993, building upon the work started by the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

On 6 June 1992, the Rio Earth Summit delegates asked Gorbachev to establish Green Cross International, and around the same time Swiss National Council MP Roland Wiederkehr founded “World Green Cross”, with similar aims. The two organisations merged in 1993, becoming Green Cross International, which was formally launched in Kyoto, Japan, on 18 April 1993.


In 1994, the first Green Cross National Organisations (GCNOs) joined GCI in The Hague, including Japan, The Netherlands, the Russian Federation, Switzerland, and the United States.


Read the stories

Green Cross International News

By gcs 23 Oct, 2023
ENVIRONMENTAL SYMPHONY: THE MOVEMENT  UNITED NATIONS DAY CONCERT Performance for the United Nations New York City, United Nations Assembly Hall
By Ryuji Kuwahara 15 Jun, 2021
Green Cross Japan published the 2021 version of the Green Lane Diary in May, and began (free of charge) distribution to primary schools nationwide in Japan.
By Andreas Vos 15 Apr, 2021
One of Europe's biggest freshwater lakes. VÄTTERN BELOW THE SURFACE (Documentary 2020) Lake Vättern Below the Surface This documentary brings forth new perspective of Swedish water management. This film is an example of how water management can be risking human health and water quality, not only in Sweden but in countries worldwide. The problem is most of the countries in the western world does not have a functioning water management, nor do they have field personnel or fully employed environmental diving inspectors checking the ecosystem below the surface. Eurofins, a major company in Europe testing for different toxins and substances, can today only provide data on approximately 300 substances. From a average sewer plant there can be an outlet of some 10 000 to a 100 000 chemicals. We cannot see chemicals, but we can see the effects when we dive. What we see are dead ecosystems at the bottom of lakes with algal blooms containing toxic cyanobacteria as a result of chemical discharge. These cyanotoxins are today linked with human diseases such as ALS, Alzheimer's and Parkinson, to name a few. The problem is we don't really know how many toxins there are in our drinking water, or in the food we eat. The film Lake Vättern Below the Surface documents this issue. The international community must begin to reevaluate how we are going to solve this problem. After you view this film some things to consider and discuss are the following topics below. These challenges we now see can easily be solved in a first stage. What is needed is to assess the level of toxic discharge there is in national water systems. We need to begin by digitizing all outlets and create an overview map of the difference in toxins found in the water systems. Then an overall plan can be tailormade made for the infrastructure in country and for the local communities. A common sense example is that placing heavy industrial complexes upstream freshwater lakes which are utilized for drinking water is not a good idea. Sweden has already solved the first stage and created a database showing the direction all water flow in the country, meaning the surface water and most of the groundwater. If a lorry with toxic cargo tips over we can follow the contamination downstream in the database and see how it affects the water system. What the country of Swedish has not realized is that we have laid the foundation for a much bigger database. Within this system we have the possibility to register the toxic discharge that is currently approved by the government. We can for example register into the database the estimated 6,000 covered dumping sites currently leaking toxic wastewater, as well as our thousands of sewer plants, industrial outlets, and the dumping locations of munition materials by Armed Forces. This can be done to provide an overview to assess the impact of the chemical outlets to our water systems. The governments have the necessary data to make this happen. This can be an effective tool to control and stop to sensitive ecosystems and keep our citizens and future generations safe. The next two steps involve diving and field personnel to survey the water systems and assess the state of ecosystems below the surface, in each country. Most important is to begin researching the methods for sampling the thousands of chemicals in our water. If we do not stop the dissemination of toxic chemicals today it could take years into the future before we solve what will become an even greater challenge to provide clean water, which is safe to drink. We need to know what our water contains to keep people, animals and the ecosystem out of harm's way. Water security will also be a major challenge for governments worldwide with the challenge of climate change. Green Cross Sweden, together with Green Cross international, are in talks with the water researchers behind this film to create a pilot studies in several countries that can address this issue or water management internationally on an global scale. Together we can change the world towards a sustainable future. - Andreas Vos Board Member, Green Cross Sweden
By Ryuji Kuwahara 30 Mar, 2021
 Green Cross Japan implemented an environmental education project for school children in 2020. Despite the difficulties posed by the global pandemic, the project has been a success and will continue into 2021.
By Ryuji Kuwahara 10 Mar, 2021
The signing of a contract for a grant from the Japanese Government signified the start of the fourth joint water project between Green Cross Sri Lanka and Green Cross Japan.
By Sunil Chacko 01 Jul, 2019
Switzerland, (July 1, 2019) — Following several months of discussion by the Green Cross International (GCI) Board of Directors, Diane Meyer Simon will assume the chair of Green Cross International from Martin Bäumle as per July 1 2019. Bäumle will remain on the GCI Board of Directors. Diane Meyer Simon is the Founder & Co-Chair of Global Green, the American Affiliate of Green Cross International. Simon founded Global Green in 1993 following a Moscow Board Meeting of Green Cross International and in alignment with her dear friend, President Mikhail Gorbachev. For the past quarter-century, Simon has spearheaded Global Green USA’s agenda and mission, to foster a global value shift toward a sustainable and secure future for people, places, and the planet in need. Global Green serves as a model for urban sustainability with projects in responsible resource recovery, green urban design, affordable housing, water management, environmental policy, and climate resilience. Most notable are Global Green’s efforts in New Orleans following Hurricane Katrina, as well as long-time influence on the Hollywood community – with key Global Green celebrities acting as the essential mouthpiece to environmental advocacy and a more sustainable future. Diane Meyer Simon assumes the helm at Green Cross International during a time of great transition and influence. Green Cross is grateful for Bäumle’s great efforts to benefit GCI in recent years by implementing a leaner structure and several cost saving measures. With her new position, Diane is poised to fortify Green Cross and its mission as originally intended by her dear friend, Gorbachev. In 1990, Green Cross was introduced as a source of global aid to a world in ecological trouble–resembling the emergency response model of the Red Cross. In 1993, Green Cross International was founded in hopes of expediting solutions to environmental problems that transcend national borders. Today, Simon is motivated to defend GCI’s programmatic pillars: Value Shift; Social & Medical (SOC MED); Environmental Security & Sustainability (ESS); Water for Life & Peace; and Smart Energy. Together Green Cross and Global Green’s mission and programs live in harmony, a collaborative response to challenges of environmental security, poverty, and degradation in order to ensure a sustainable and secure future. Diane Meyer Simon’s family serve as her every inspiration and primary motivation to actualize an enlightened human race. A human race with an understanding of the inter-relationship of humans with our living Earth. Simon believes we must learn to lighten the human load on Earth’s resources. Her work with Global Green and Green Cross International is her deepest hope for both her children’s future, as well as all of Earth’s future generations. ABOUT: Global Green USA is dedicated to helping the people, places, and the planet in need through catalytic projects, transformative policy, and cutting-edge research. Global Green USA’s signature programs include greening affordable housing, neighborhoods, and cities as well as rebuilding communities — such as New Orleans and areas of New York and New Jersey — that have suffered from the impacts of climate change, sea level rise, and environmental degradation. Global Green USA is the U.S. affiliate of Green Cross International, which was founded by President Mikhail Gorbachev in 1993 to foster a global value shift toward a sustainable and secure future. For more information, visit globalgreen.org and follow us @globalgreen . Green Cross International works to promote legal, ethical and behavioral norms to ensure basic changes in values, actions and attitudes of government, the private sector and civil society, necessary to develop a sustainable global community. GCI’s programmatic pillars focus on the critical nexus in the quest for a just, secure and sustainable future for humanity. President Mikhail Gorbachev founded Green Cross International in 1993; its key programs include Water for Life & Peace, Environmental Security & Sustainability, Social & Medical, Smart Energy, and Value Shift.
By Sunil Chacko 26 Sep, 2018
Above: Sculpture depicting St. George slaying the dragon. The dragon is created from fragments of Soviet SS-20 and United States Pershing nuclear missiles. UN Photo/Milton Grant GCI ESS programme director Dr Paul F. Walker commemorates this day with the following: “September 26th is an important annual reminder that the world has pledged for over half a century to abolish nuclear weapons. This was a major part of the 1970 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty under Article VI, and has remained a global priority for all to build a more peaceful and sustainable world. Unfortunately some 14,500 nuclear weapons remain in nine nuclear powers today, with Russia and the US accounting for the great majority, and Britain, China, France, India, Israel, North Korea, and Pakistan the remainder. It’s long past time that Russia and the United States further reduce their thousands of nuclear weapons, that all countries ratify the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT), and also join the 2017 Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. Our world will be a more secure and sustainable planet, and billions of funds will be freed for much needed socio-economic priorities.” You can find the UN statement here.Above: Sculpture depicting St. George slaying the dragon. The dragon is created from fragments of Soviet SS-20 and United States Pershing nuclear missiles. UN Photo/Milton Grant GCI ESS programme director Dr Paul F. Walker commemorates this day with the following: “September 26th is an important annual reminder that the world has pledged for over half a century to abolish nuclear weapons. This was a major part of the 1970 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty under Article VI, and has remained a global priority for all to build a more peaceful and sustainable world. Unfortunately some 14,500 nuclear weapons remain in nine nuclear powers today, with Russia and the US accounting for the great majority, and Britain, China, France, India, Israel, North Korea, and Pakistan the remainder. It’s long past time that Russia and the United States further reduce their thousands of nuclear weapons, that all countries ratify the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT), and also join the 2017 Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. Our world will be a more secure and sustainable planet, and billions of funds will be freed for much needed socio-economic priorities.” You can find the UN statement here .
By Sunil Chacko 03 Sep, 2018
The Shoe Project is a collaboration between Green Cross Japan , Green Cross Sweden and the Green Belt Movement (GBM) in Kenya, which distributed some 1,000 shoes to children and youth in the Rift Valley, last February.
By Sunil Chacko 28 Aug, 2018
Press Release – 28 August 2018 The Swedish authorities are called upon to take action as World Water Week opens in Stockholm. Tuesday 28 August 2018, Geneva, Switzerland –– Green Cross Sweden , with the support of Green Cross International , and along with Urbergsgruppen Grenna-Norra Kärr, denounces the current and proposed mining activities of Tasman Metals AB as endangering public health and the ecosystems around Lake Vättern, one of Europe’s most important sources of drinking water. The Norra Kärr mining project is too great a threat to allow its continuation, and all related activities in the area must cease, including the collection of ore samples for prospecting purposes through test drilling. According to existing Swedish and EU environmental codes it should be impossible for such a mining lease to be granted. Should this mining project nevertheless be authorised, we demand that civil society plays an active role in the review and approval of the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) being prepared by Tasman Metals AB, prior to its submission to the Swedish mining authorities. This EIA study must also include the damages already caused by prospecting activities, and fully disclose their plans for eliminating health risks and reducing the environmental cost of their operations. Should the process go ahead, we strongly recommend that a site-specific environmental risk assessment is done, where the local concerns of the mine and the releases of chemicals are addressed. Since 2009, Tasman Metals AB (a Swedish subsidiary of Leading Edge Materials Ltd, a Canadian mining group) has sought to acquire an exploitation concession from the Mining Inspectorate of Sweden to extract rare earth elements (REE) as close as 1.5 kilometres from Lake Vättern. Despite losing their exploitation concession in 2016, and following a successful appeal by local stakeholders, Tasman Metals AB has restarted the application process, which includes current prospecting activities. While prospecting can cause damage to the environment, the company has already been test drilling throughout the region as a part of these operations. Future mining will impact the integrity of Lake Vättern, as toxic and radioactive substances can seep into the groundwater, polluting the water resources. Lake Vättern provides drinking water for approx. 250,000 people, in 11 municipalities, and with an additional 8 municipalities on the way, making an estimated total of 500,000 people in the near future. The presence of some 5,500 tonnes of ammunition at the bottom of the lake, due to military activity, constitutes another potential risk for public health and the lake’s ecosystem. This issue was highlighted at Green Cross Sweden’s Protect Lake Vättern event in March 2018 by Hans Sanderson, Senior Scientist and advisor for Dept. of Environmental Science, Aarhus University and advisor for the Danish Center for Energy and the Environment (DCE), in collaboration with Green Cross International, the local environmental group Urbergsgruppen Grenna-Norra Kärr, and parliamentary leaders. According to Gunilla Högberg Björck, the environmental lawyer with GBH Environmental Law, representing the NGOs and local citizens in the aforementioned successful appeal to the Swedish Supreme Administrative Court in 2016 against Tasman Metals AB: “If they are fully enforced, the Swedish and EU environmental codes should not allow the granting of the necessary permits to start any mining project, regardless of how thorough the EIA is. If it is nevertheless granted, an exploitation concession would allow Tasman to drill, blast, and deplete the natural resources of the region for at least the next 25 years.” The company currently has until September 28, 2018 to submit a new, more thorough and extensive EIA, which now has to cover a whole 10 square kilometres around the mine, rather than just the proposed open pit mining area. In a time when our planet and all its ecosystems are facing the consequences of climate change – such as the droughts and wildfires that have been occurring across Sweden – it is imperative that we preserve our precious watersheds for future generations. Lake Vättern is a notably deep cold water lake, filled with crystal clear water – something that will prove to be of even greater importance in the future, as shallower lakes become warmer and allow microorganisms, bacteria and algae to grow and flourish to worsening levels and threatening the fish population. Deep water intakes allow the provision of high quality drinking water. For these reasons, the importance of protecting and preserving Lake Vättern cannot be overstated. Marie-Laure Vercambre, Green Cross International’s Water for Life and Peace Programme Director, paints a broader picture: “The adoption by the international community of a Sustainable Development Goal for Water, and of several UN resolutions recognising the human right to safe drinking water and sanitation, reflects the urgency of the matter. What measures will States take to meet these goals and honour their populations’ human rights? How compatible is this industrial development with those environmental and public health goals?” This sentiment is mirrored by Carina Gustafsson, Chair of Urbergsgruppen Grenna-Norra Kärr: “We must strengthen the protection of our drinking water, as groundwater levels are at an all time low and Sweden and the world are burning. A secure supply of drinking water is an issue of survival and has to rank in highest priority. This is why we urge the Swedish authorities to prohibit the implementation of environmentally hazardous industrial projects, such as Tasman Metal’s Norra Kärr mining project, which is so close bordering Lake Vättern, in order to protect and secure all vital drinking water sources.” The original press release can be accessed here in English and French .
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