Events Archive - 被窝影视福利 of Art and Science /conference-page/ 被窝影视福利 of Art and Science Thu, 12 Mar 2026 07:54:10 +0000 en-US hourly 1 /wp-content/uploads/2021/10/cropped-favicon-1-32x32.png Events Archive - 被窝影视福利 of Art and Science /conference-page/ 32 32 WAAS Talks on Science for Human Security: Renewable Energy /conference-page/waas-talks-series/waas-talks-on-science-for-human-security-renewable-energy/ Tue, 20 Jan 2026 06:30:05 +0000 /?post_type=events&p=50276
waas_talks

Online | February 23, 2026

Introduction

In August 2023, following the initiative of WAAS Vice President Neboj拧a Ne拧kovi膰, the UN General Assembly proclaimed the International Decade of Sciences for Sustainable Development, from 2024 to 2031. The task to lead the preparation and implementation of the activities within the Decade was given to UNESCO. On April 16, 2024, The Earth-Humanity Coalition was founded 鈥 as an association of global, regional, and national scientific organizations with the task to prepare and implement, in close cooperation with UNESCO, various initiatives within the overall program of the Decade. WAAS was among the founding Members of the Coalition.

The presentWAAS Talk on Science for Human Security addresses one of the most important topics of science for sustainable development, namely the science of clean renewable energy technologies. Additionally, this WAAS Talk also focuses on the opportunities of clean energy technologies to reduce global geopolitical tensions and thus contribute to the WAAS Global Peace Offensive efforts.

Picture8

Moderator: Prof. Dr. Aleksander Zidan拧ek

Vice President, 被窝影视福利 of Art and Science (WAAS); Vice Dean, Jo啪ef Stefan International Postgraduate听School; Researcher, Jo啪ef Stefan Institute; Professor of Physics, Faculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, University of Maribor; Full Member, The Club of Rome; President, Slovenian Chapter of The Club Of Rome

Neven-Duic-300x300

Prof. Dr. Neven Dui膰

Power Engineering and Energy Management Chair, Department of Energy, Power Engineering and Environment, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering and Naval Architecture (FSB), University of Zagreb; President, The Centre for Sustainable Development of Energy, Water and Environment Systems (SDEWES Centre); Vice-President of Croatian Academy of Engineering (HATZ); Fellow, WAAS.

Speaker_Phoebe Koundouri 2

Prof. Dr. Phoebe Koundouri

Athens University of Economics and Business & University of Cambridge; Co-Chair, United Nations Global Sustainable Development Report; President, World Council of Environmental and Resource Economists Associations; Director, AE4RIA; Trustee, WAAS

UBardi_photo

Prof. Dr. Ugo Bardi

Professor听 of Chemical Physics, University of Florence, Italy; Member of The Club of Rome Executive Committee; Member of the Italian Society of System Dynamics Executive Committee; Fellow, WAAS

Speaker-Dina Dragija

Dina Dragija

Founder, President Youth Leadership Network (YLN); Co-founder, UNWASTED; Partnership Manager and Ambassador, Human Security For All (HS4A) Campaign WAAS and UN Trust Fund for Human Security; Coordinator, Stop Ecocide Initiative, Croatia; Associate Fellow, WAAS

]]>
The Science of Peace Education /conference-page/the-science-of-peace-education/ Sat, 08 Nov 2025 19:08:00 +0000 /?post_type=events&p=48893

Around the planet, we urgently need peacebuilding skills.听 Climate upheaval, armed conflict, historic waves of human displacement and other crises now threaten our existence.听 To survive, our communities must quickly master the peace practices required.听

Here are the 5 conference topics:

Peace Education for Global Transformation
Tools to shift mindsets and mobilize communities

Human Security, Health & Wellbeing
Programs and perspectives that safeguard lives

Human Rights & Justice
Strategies to uphold dignity and fairness for all

Prosperity & Sustainability
Pathways to economic development that heal our planet

Cultural Arts: Conduits to Peace
How music, media and the arts build bridges to understanding

Here is the event schedule-

Times shown are approximate, and reflect the start times in New York. (NY is on Eastern Standard Time, which is GMT -5)


THE SCIENCE OF PEACE EDUCATION
Highlights of the Paris Summit

SECTION I: TAKING PEACE TO HEART
10:00 Introduction,
* Darlene Shelton, Ph.D.
* Phillipine Dolbeau

10:10 Opening Plenary
* Antonio Guterres, United Nations Secretary General
* Amb. Anwarul Chowdhury, President, GPEN Advisory Council; former Under-Secretary General and High Representative of the United Nations
* David Weinberg, CEO, GPEN
* Mabingue Ngom, GPEN Global Ambassador; Senior Advisor, Global Health and International Development

10:30 Transformative Power of Peace Education
* Chair, Philippine Dolbeau, Entrepreneur, Journalist, TV Host,
*听Amb. Prof. Karim Errouaki, UNACCC High Representative/ EU; Special Envoy, GPEN Member, GPEN Global Advisory Council
* Helena Murseli, Ph.D., Senior Education Advisor for Education in Emergencies, UNICEF
* Kehkashan Basu, Founder, President of Green Hope Foundation, UN Human Rights Champion

SECTION II: GOING FAR TOGETHER
11:00 Partnerships for Peace Education
* Chair: Donato Kiniger-Passigli, Vice President, 被窝影视福利 of Arts and Science
* Aryan Salman, President and General Director, Global Citizenship Foundation
Bea Gasca, Founder, Womanpalooza and Philanthropist
* Helena Murseli, Ph.D., Senior Advisor for Education in Emergencies, UNICEF
* Usaama Kaweesa, Cabinet Member for Children鈥檚 Services and Councilor, Merton Council, UK
* Anna Maria Lubelska, Chair of Trustees & Founder of The Peace Building Project, Author, and Interfaith Minister

11:30 Lifetime Achievement Award
*听Constance Riviere, Director, National Museum of Immigration History, Paris. Presented by Guila Clara Kessous, GPEN Human Rights Ambassador

11:35 Go Live / Congo Tales
* Music by Jenn Johns; Photos by Pieter Henket

SECTION III: SECURING LIFE
12:00 Human Security, Health and Well Being
* Chair: Donato Kiniger-Passigli, Vice President, 被窝影视福利 of Arts and Sciences
* Felipe Domingues, Country Director for Portugal, Institute for Economics and Peace; Biographer for United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres
* Ramata Almamy Mbaye, Ph.D., Chief of Human and Social Sciences, ICESCO
* Charlotte Courtois, Founder and Director, Constellation Association
* Sabrina Gaffre Vallicelli, Educator, Facilitator of the Peace Education Program, TPRF

12:30 Peace Education, Prosperity, and Sustainability
* Chair, Felipe Domingues, Country Director for Portugal, Institute for Economics and Peace, Biographer for United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres
* Jihane El Ghiati, ICESCO Youth Peace Ambassador, Student
* Kehkashan Basu, Founder and President of Green Hope Foundation, GPEN Global Advisory Council
* Jacob Johns, Artist, Activist, Executive Director, Wisdom Keepers Delegation

SECTION IV: ARCING TOWARD JUSTICE
1:00 Human Rights and Justice
* Chair: Massimo Scaliotti, International lawyer; International Human Rights Council of the European Union
* Delia Mamon, Founder and President, Graines de Paix Foundation, Geneva
* Jacob Johns, Artist, Activist, Executive Director, Wisdom Keepers Delegation

1:50 Chronicle of Peace, Vicky the Poet

SECTION V: CELEBRATING PEACE
2:00 Cultural Arts Forum: People Unite as One
* Chair: Jenn Johns, Multidisciplinary Artist, Founder, The F.U.N. Manifesto
* Jacob Johns, Artist, Activist, Executive Director, Wisdom Keepers Delegation
* Hussein Al Amry, TV Host, Poet, and Media Advisor
* Juan Antonio Simarro, Composer and Concert Pianist
* Pieter Henket, Fine Art Photographer
* Justin Gaspar, Creative Producer

2:45 Voices for Peace Education
* Chair, Henar Maillo Valdes, Poet, Activist, Student
* Jacob Johns, Artist, Activist, Executive Director, Wisdom Keepers Delegation
* Noe Levasseur, Poet
* Juan Antonio Simarro, Composer and Concert Pianist

3:00 Youth Leadership 鈥 Part 1
* Chair: Alexandra Torres, European Youth Parliament Representative for Spain; Chair, GPEN Youth Leadership Team; Student, Political Science and Human Rights
* Nuria Lopez Mendez, Student in Economics
* Indira Pera Gonzalez, Student in Political Science
* Hannah Neo Khambule, Student in Archeology, Anthropology and Arabic
* Mitesh Desai, M.D., Global Representative, Peace Education Program, TPRF
* Christelle Despagne, Youth Peace Ambassador, ICESCO

3:30 Youth Leadership 鈥 Part 2
* Aylina de la Mano Markau, Vice Chair, GPEN Youth Leadership Team; Student in Philosophy, Politics and Economics
* Lidia Lopez, Student in Media and Marketing
* Carolina Garcia, Student, International Management and Development
* Marina Acosta Andres, Student in Feminist Social Studies
* Gonzalo Galvan, Student in International Relations
* Henar Maillo Valdes, Poet, Activist; Student in European Studies

4:00 Adagio for Violin, Piano and String Orchestra, Juan Antonio Simarro

4:05 Closing Remarks, Amb. Anwarul Chowdhury, President, GPEN Advisory Council; Former Under-Secretary-General of High Representative of the UN

4:10 Overture for Human Rights. Juan Antonio Simarro

]]>
Thessaloniki Sustainability Summit 2025 /conference-page/thessaloniki-sustainability-summit-2025/ Fri, 12 Sep 2025 08:13:27 +0000 /?post_type=events&p=47387
Hybrid | 2-3 October, 2025, Thessaloniki, Greece

The 2025 鈥淭hessaloniki Sustainability Summit鈥 will bring together scientists, policymakers, local authorities, entrepreneurs, and other key stakeholders to engage in a global dialogue marking the 10th anniversary of the Paris Agreement.

With the theme 鈥10 Years of the Paris Agreement鈥 TSS2025 aims to contribute to the international conversation by assessing the progress made since the agreement and exploring the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead.

The first day of the Summit will feature two panel sessions, while the second, another three. The panel discussions will address regional and thematic issues:
Day 1 (online):
Panel 1: The role of the 被窝影视福利 of Art and Science in the implementation of the Paris Agreement
Panel 2: The role of the youth branch of the 被窝影视福利 of Art and Science in the implementation of the Paris Agreement
Day 2 (in-person):
Panel 1: The Balkans: Current Status and Future Pathways
Panel 2: SDG 7 – Affordable and Clean Energy: Navigating the Challenges and Opportunities of the Energy Transition
Panel 3: SDG 13 – Climate Action: Evaluating the Risks and Opportunities of Adaptation and Mitigation Strategies
Panel 4: Our future through the eyes of the 被窝影视福利 of Art and Science The panels will include contributions from scientists, government representatives, and experts from various countries, ensuring dynamic, high-level discussions expected to yield valuable insights and outcomes.

]]>
Global Turbulence /conference-page/global-turbulence/ Thu, 08 May 2025 20:55:43 +0000 /?post_type=events&p=38295

Global Turbulence: Sources and Solutions

Online | May 1, 2025

YouTube Video

The objective of the meeting was to explore the macro-level global social context in which the future of higher education should be considered and the role of education in addressing the global challenges and turbulence now confronting humanity with respect to peace, stability, human security and sustainable development. The meeting provided a forum for reflection and discussion of the global challenges, their root causes, possible remedies and solutions, and reflect on the relevance, capacities and appropriate role of higher education in addressing them.

Introduction

Enabling Conditions and Symptoms

Root Causes

Solutions, Strategies and Initiatives

Relevance to Education and G-Forces

Closing Remarks

We live in turbulent times characterized by rising levels of uncertainty, distrust, and insecurity. Rising insecurity is fueling a polarization of societies, social unrest, extremism, geopolitical instability, violence, and war. These factors are symptomatic of deeper underlying causes. The world is in the midst of a multidimensional global crisis encompassing political, economic, technological, social, cultural and environmental components. Some refer to it as a Polycrisis, some others as a Perfect Storm. Regardless of the name, its origins can be traced to significant global events since the end of the Cold War. These events have led to rapid globalization of society, accelerated pace of social and technological change, imbalances resulting from the transition from national to global, rising levels of inequality and financial instability, increasing concentration and assertion of autocratic and financial power in economy and governance 鈥 including the rapid rise of deliberate mis-and dis-information 鈥 intensification of competitive economic nationalism, decline in democracy and in the authority and effectiveness of multilateral institutions, a retreat to the Cold War mentality of competitive security, a breakdown of traditional alliances, and a scramble for global leadership to fill the vacuum.

The origins of the crisis can be traced back to the dissolution of the USSR and Warsaw Pact, founding of the EU and expansion of NATO, founding of WTO, birth of the Internet, the liberalization of听 global financial markets, the East Asian Financial Crisis, Dot-com boom and bust, Sub-Prime Mortgage Crisis, Global Financial Crisis, and a multiplicity of regional and local wars. Most recently the process has been further fueled by the COVID-19 Pandemic, wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, the renewal of the arms race, the acceleration of global warming, the threats posed by recent advances in generative AI (GenAI), the anticipation of artificial general intelligence (AGI) in the near future, and other real and potential existential threats.

The polycrisis is characterized by a weakening of democratic institutions and protection for human rights, the growing power and impact of plutocratic and oligarchic forms of government, the declining effectiveness of multilateral institutions, and loss of confidence in the media, business, technology, science and other institutions. The sense of shared vision and universal values that provided a platform for international collaboration and global leadership a decade ago is being challenged by a retreat to competitive self-interest and self-preservation that is fracturing domestic priorities and international relationships, and spurring a desperate race for new alliances.

The turbulence is expanding simultaneously in many unpredictable directions like a rapidly moving tropical storm or forest fire of global proportions multiplying in scope, speed and intensity. The storm is leaderless and seems to defy both the efforts of leaders and the collective will of humanity to control, master or direct it. Instead, each initiative to harness its power is fueling unintended and unanticipated consequences. A focus on specific individuals and events is not sufficient to explain the reasons for the turbulence. An understanding of the surface symptoms and consequences of the turbulence is not sufficient for mastering it. We also require knowledge of the root causes that spur and energize it, the social process that determines and drives its direction, and practical strategies that can alter its speed, direction, velocity and consequences, and transform it into a conscious social evolutionary movement.听

Response to Global Challenges

In 2013 the 被窝影视福利 of Art & Science launched a project in collaboration with the United Nations Office at Geneva to inquire into the emerging nexus of global challenges: political, economic, social, cultural and ecological. The study confirmed that all these challenges share certain common attributes. They are all global in reach, impact, complexity, and interdependent with one another. None can be successfully addressed by the unilateral initiatives of nation states, by unidimensional policy measures, or by specialized institutions at the national and international level. None can be effectively understood and explained by uni-disciplinary perspectives, piecemeal policy measures, prevailing theoretical frameworks, or predominant ways of thinking. Our inquiry concluded that fundamental changes would be required at all these levels to address the challenges effectively. It called for a new paradigm in social development based on integrated modes of thinking, a transdisciplinary approach to research and education, and a human-centered, value-based concept of global social development.

The global scope, complexity, and convergence of the multiple crises that interact and amplify one anotherwas recognized by the UN and spurred its members to an unprecedented course of action in 2015, when 193 UN member nations unanimously adopted Agenda 2030, a comprehensive approach to address this complex nexus of interrelated global challenges. Agenda 2030 included a commitment to achieve 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and 169 targets by implementing a comprehensive set of policy measures within 15 years.

Agenda 2030 is a conscious initiative of the world community to conceive, plan and execute a comprehensive program to address the entire spectrum of major challenges to peace, human security and sustainable progress for all human beings on earth. Never before has an effort of this magnitude been attempted. After an impressive beginning, Agenda 2030 has met with increasing resistance and obstacles to realization. In retrospect, we perceive that even at its inception, the world community lacked some of the essential requirements for such a stupendous collective endeavor of humanity: a comprehensive, integrated theoretical framework for understanding the process of global social evolution; a knowledge of how to consciously guide, manage and lead a coordinated global social process; means to develop the leadership expertise and supporting public endorsement needed for this stupendous endeavor; the capacity to direct and manage global social forces for the security and wellbeing of all; as well as the full array of institutional capabilities, essential policy measures, skilled expertise, program initiatives, and financial support required to respond effectively to the challenges we face. By 2024, only 17% of the SDG targets were on schedule, with nearly half showing only minimal or moderate progress, and over one-third stalled or regressing.

Agenda 2030 is a recipe for global peace and human security for all. There can be no sustainable human security without peace and no lasting peace without human security. Defense spending is rising, while investment in the SDGs falls further and further behind the targets set forth in Agenda 2030. At a time of unprecedented opportunities for global progress, the collective quest for human security of all is in retreat. Those with the greatest power to lead and support global security are turning inward in a desperate pursuit of self-interest and self-assertion.

Neither the crises nor the obstacles they generate can be fully understood without recognizing their interdependence and the root causes related to them both. Effectively addressing the rising levels of insecurity and instability and restoring forward momentum on peace, human security and sustainable development as envisioned in Agenda 2030 will require knowledge, values-based leadership, and action at a still deeper level of causality related to the principles and processes governing global social evolution. It will require a level of consent and coordination never before achieved by the human community. It will require a systematic, coordinated effort of humanity to consciously transform our social values, institutions, policies, and activities in a manner conducive to support the welfare, well-being and sustainable development of all humanity and life on our planet.

The Role of Higher Education in Addressing the Global Challenges

Over the past 80 years, remarkable advances in science and technology have opened up unprecedented opportunities for our collective progress accompanied by unprecedented threats to our collective survival. During this period, global society has followed a haphazard, zigzagged course of development. Today the scope of the challenges and existential threats we face are far greater in intensity and urgency than ever before. So too are the opportunities, capacities and potential benefits for all humanity, provided we chart the right course and persist in achieving it.

The world today needs leadership in thought that leads to effective action. Education has a central role to play in the formulation of those thoughts and preparing global society to accept, embrace and act on them. The intellectual challenge before us is to fully understand the circumstances and factors that have brought us to the present situation, the root causes and deeper processes governing global social evolution, the opportunities and catalytic strategies for effective action. The leadership needed is the willingness and ability to reach out and project a unifying vision and strategy with all those of like-minded values, understanding and willingness for action, to set a common course leading ultimately to peace and human security for all.

The challenge before the intellectual leadership of humanity today is to conceive and execute a plan for conscious social transformation that addresses the root causes of the polycrisis and its manifest turbulence. The plan will need to redirect the energies, organizational capacities, technologies and policies of global society from opposition and conflict to collective action for the common good. It must also include measures to dramatically reduce social tensions, conflict and global military spending; strategies to effectively mobilize advanced technologies and redirect private sector investment into projects that enhance all dimensions of human security and sustainable development; policy-measures to reverse harmful trade wars, stimulate job creation, enhance job security, and reduce economic inequality; applications that harness the power of AI-based technologies to enhance digital connectivity, communications, finance, health, education and vocational training; and the inspired leadership and communication skills required to build a global consensus through a broad network of networks to link together and coordinate the efforts of governments, agencies, and institutions of all types to work for the realization of a common vision of peace and human security for all.

The challenges confronting humanity today are urgent, extremely serious, and multiplying almost daily with the rapid contagion of insecurity and discontent. Urgent action is needed on a global scale. Conventional institutions cannot be solely depended upon to rise to the occasion. Direct measures are also required to reach out to the global general public, project viable solutions, and catalytic initiatives that can release and mobilize the energies of global society to endorse and implement them.

Such a transformative global social movement is needed to project solutions that effectively address the fundamental needs of people everywhere for peace and human security. Irrespective of the magnitude of the challenges and the time required to address them, the endeavor must begin with measures to reduce the sense of insecurity, instability and turbulence that still continues to grow. We need first to formulate and project a vision of peace, human security and wellbeing that all can respond to positively and to rally around that vision all the progressive forces of humanity for a common endeavor.

Higher education has a central role to play in guiding humanity through these challenging times. This event is intended to explore this global context in order to highlight the opportunities and necessity of significant advances in higher education to fill the leadership void and generate positive momentum for global social evolution.


Click here to read/download the concept note

]]>
Global Peace Offensive: Nanotechnologies for Human Security /conference-page/waas-talks-series/global-peace-offensive-nanotechnologies-for-human-security/ Mon, 28 Apr 2025 21:58:05 +0000 /?post_type=events&p=38385

Online听|听29 April 2025

YouTube Video

The WAAS Talks on Global Peace Offensive aim to introduce out-of-the-box thinking听on significant contemporary opportunities and threats that听could lead to action听towards exciting alternative futures encompassing sustainability and high听quality of life building on the听human security for all agenda.听The talk scheduled for 29 April 2025 is devoted to amazing possibilities of听nanotechnologies for听human security. The event is organised in cooperation with the Slovenian听Association for the Club of Rome.

Opening

Moderated by Prof. Aleksander Zidan拧ek, WAAS Fellow and BoT Member

  • Special invited talk, given by听Prof. Sabu Thomas,听B.Tech, Ph.D., FRSC, FEurASc, DSc(UL, France), DSc(UBS, France), Mahatma Gandhi University, Kottayam, Kerala, India
  • Special invited talk, given by Prof. Eduard Alarc贸n, head of the Quantum Computing Lab, Scientific co-director of N3CAT, nanotechnology-enabled wireless communication lab, Faculty of the UPC Small Satellites lab, Intelligent Data Science and Artificial Intelligence Research Center.
]]>
Root Causes and Solutions to the Great Social Turbulence /conference-page/root-causes-and-solutions-to-the-great-social-turbulence/ Sun, 16 Mar 2025 19:14:00 +0000 /?post_type=events&p=38234

Side event at the XII Global Baku Forum | March 16, 2025

The Global Baku Forum
NGIC annually holds Global Baku Forum, which has already become the premier event in Eastern Europe, South Caucasus, Central Asia and the Middle East, providing an opportunity for distinguished leaders and thinkers to discuss the ways and means to overcome some of the world鈥檚 most pressing challenges ranging from 鈥淏uilding Trust for a Wider Europe鈥, to 鈥渁 New World Order鈥 to designing more effective programs for 鈥淪hared Societies鈥, 鈥淭owards a Multipolar World鈥, 鈥淎ddressing/Challenging Radicalization and Extremism with Interfaith Dialogue for Peace, 鈥淏ridging Gaps to Create Inclusive Societies鈥, Peace and Security in the Middle East鈥, to 鈥淕eopolitics in the Age of Sustainable Development鈥.

The XII Global Baku Forum, organized by the Nizami Ganjavi International Center, took place on March 13-15, 2025, under the theme 鈥淩ethinking World Order: Turning Challenges into Opportunities.鈥

Convenor: 被窝影视福利 of Art and Science
Host: Garry Jacobs, President, WAAS

  • The Emerging World Order 鈥 Ketan Patel, Chair, Force for Good
  • Root Causes and Drivers of Why we are Here 鈥 Garry Jacobs, President, WAAS
  • Solutions, Initiatives and Strategies that Could Comprise Campaign to Taking the World Forward? 鈥 Group discussion
YouTube Video

Root Causes of the Global Turbulence听and Reflection on the Global Social Process

This paper provides a summary of a one-day conference conducted by the 被窝影视福利 of Art & Science and hosted by Nizami Ganjavi International Centre (NGIC) in Baku during the XII Global Baku Forum on March 16, 2025. The meeting explored significant events related to the rising levels of global turbulence, highlighting underlying factors, examining possible explanations, and raising challenging questions regarding the events and root causes behind the destabilizing threats presently confronting humanity. It is an introductory step in an on-going process to enhance understanding of our human dilemma, identify possible solutions, formulate practical strategies, and explore the potential role that WAAS and partner organizations can play in addressing the challenges which confront us.

I. Turbulent Times

We live in turbulent times characterized by rising levels of uncertainty, doubt, distrust, and insecurity. Rising insecurity is fueling a polarization of societies, social unrest, extremism, violence, war and geopolitical instability. Knowledge of these characteristics is symptomatic of deeper underlying causes. The world is in the midst of a multidimensional global crisis encompassing political, economic, technological, social, cultural and environmental components. Some refer to it as a Polycrisis, some others as a Perfect Storm. Regardless of the name, its origins can be traced to events following the end of the Cold War that have led to the rapid globalization of society, accelerated pace of social change, rising levels of inequality and financial instability, competitive economic nationalism, and a scramble for global leadership to fill the vacuum.

Recently the process has been further fueled by the COVID-19 Pandemic, wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, the renewal of the arms race, a retreat to the Cold War mentality of competitive security, the acceleration of global warming, the threats posed by recent advances in generative AI (GenAI), the anticipation of artificial general intelligence (AGI) in the near future, and other real and potential existential risks.

The polycrisis is characterized by a weakening of democratic institutions, the rise of extreme nationalism and authoritarianism, the declining effectiveness of multilateral institutions, and loss of confidence in the media, business, technology, science and other institutions. The sense of shared vision and universal values that provided a platform for international collaboration and global leadership a decade ago are being challenged by a retreat to self-interest and self-preservation that is fracturing domestic priorities and international relationships and spurring a desperate race for new alliances.

The turbulence is expanding simultaneously in many unpredictable directions like a rapidly moving tropical storm of global proportions multiplying in area, speed and intensity. The storm is leaderless and seems to defy both the efforts of leaders and the collective will of humanity to control, master or direct it. Instead, each initiative to harness its power is fueling unintended and unanticipated consequences.

II. The Global Context and Enabling Conditions

An understanding of the surface symptoms and consequences of the turbulence is not sufficient for mastering it. We also require knowledge of the root causes that spur and energize it, the social process that determines and drives its direction, and practical strategies that can alter its speed, direction, velocity and consequences and transform it into a conscious social evolutionary movement.

The causes of the turbulence are multidimensional, complex and interdependent. But they are all linked to extraordinary movements characteristic of the current period of global social evolution. The process of social evolution from isolated local communities to a single, interconnected global community has been taking place for millennia, but the speed, magnitude and complexity of growth, development and evolution exceed that of any period in history. Population growth, modernization, urbanization, economic development, the evolution of international relations and globalization continue to accelerate. The rate of technological innovations and dissemination that has brought us computers, renewable energies, cloud computing, algorithmic trading, AI and robotics continues to accelerate. As a result, the speed and quantity of communications have multiplied exponentially since the advent of the internet, smartphones, social media, and the viral instant sharing culture. Accelerating growth, technological innovation, communications and migration have brought along with them increases in inter-cultural contacts, influences and impacts between people around the world. The increase in contacts brought with them increasing exposure to the full spectrum of global cultural values and rapid changes in social aspiration, expectations, styles and standards of living. And at the same time, all these movements have contributed to rapidly rising levels of pressure generating environmental instability and taxing planetary limits.

Never before has humanity been subject to change of this speed, magnitude and intensity. Historically evolution has been a very slow, gradual process spanning countless centuries. It took Homo sapiens almost 200 millennia to reach a population of 10 million, another 10 millennia to reach 100 million, 18 centuries to raise it to one billion and only two centuries to raise that to eight billion. During the last 200 years, global economic growth has multiplied 100-fold. Humanity has evolved from a predominantly rural agrarian society to an urban cosmopolitan interconnected society interacting instantaneously via the internet, mobile phones, and social media.

Each stage in social evolution opens up unprecedented opportunities but also generates new pressures and stresses on established traditional and conventional customs, beliefs, values, attitudes, social institutions and lifestyles. And these things change much more slowly than the changes in technology, transport, communications and the pressures of population and migration. Increasing speed brings with it increasing uncertainty insecurity, anxiety, stress, polarization of society and social turbulence. While some look forward with anticipation to a better future, many others feel that the speed and magnitude of change threaten and undermine their achievements, power and position. Turbulence is a natural and inevitable consequence of rapid change. When the turbulence exceeds the capacity of society to adapt, it disrupts the social fabric and gives rise to discontent, the polarization of societies, conflict and violence.

The pace of change since the end of the Cold War led to unprecedented achievements: peace, demilitarization, the founding of the European Union and WTO, the birth of the Internet, the globalization of communications, economy and finance, and countless other wonders. But it also brought with it the frictions and pressures of close contact between traditional and modernized societies and cultures, increasing competition for scarce resources, international competition that shifted from military to economic dominance, financial instability, rising levels of unemployment and economic inequality. And increasing levels of environmental stress on the global habitat awakened the necessity for a rapid shift in energy from fossil fuels to renewable forms.

III. Struggle for Solutions

In 2013 the 被窝影视福利 of Art & Science launched a project in collaboration with the United Nations Office at Geneva to inquire into the emerging nexus of global challenges: political, economic, social, cultural and ecological. The study confirmed that all these challenges share certain common attributes. They are all global in reach, impact, complexity, and interdependent with one another. None can be successfully addressed by the unilateral initiatives of nation states, by unidimensional policy measures, or by specialized institutions at the national and international level. None can be effectively understood and explained by uni-disciplinary perspectives, prevailing theoretical frameworks, and predominant ways of thinking. Our research concluded that fundamental changes would be required at all these levels to address these challenges effectively. It called for the development of integrated modes of thinking, a transdisciplinary approach to education, and a new paradigm for global development.

Two years later, in 2015, 193 UN member nations took the unanimous decision to adopt a comprehensive approach to addressing this complex nexus of interrelated global challenges by adopting Agenda 2030, a program to achieve 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and 169 targets within 15 years. After an impressive beginning, Agenda 2030 has met with increasing resistance and obstacles to realization.

A decade after its inception, it is evident that the unprecedented levels of international cooperation, coordination and momentum required to address the existential threats to human security and sustainable development have not been achieved. The global community seems to have lost both its confidence and its commitment to its shared vision and values. It still lacks the integrated theoretical framework, institutional capabilities, essential policy measures, program initiatives, financial support, leadership expertise and public endorsement required to respond effectively to the challenges we face. By 2024, only 17% of the SDG targets were on track, with nearly half showing only minimal or moderate progress, and over one-third stalled or regressing.听1

IV. Root Causes of the Turbulence

The enabling environment of rapid and accelerating change creates a fertile field for instability. But the immediate source of the symptoms described above can be traced to more specific causes that have taken root in the unstable global social environment. Discussions in Baku identified a variety of these root causes.听Resistance to Multilateralism: Failure to maintain funding, legitimacy, trust, and authority of global institutions due to the resistance of nation states to global rule of law, implementation of Agenda 2030, and commitment to addressing the threats of global warming.

Media:听Failure to identify and protect the public or arm citizens for self-protection, against misinformation resulting from corporate control of the media.

Political:听Fragile national governance structures unable to withstand technological, geopolitical, and social disruptions. These include the inability of democratic systems to evolve in response to rapid technological and communication changes. Weakening of national sovereignty over the plutocratic power of money and corporations, financial markets, taxation, and state control. Weak governance and oversight of money and market economics, leading to systemic imbalances.

Economic:听Failure of socio-economic policies to deliver prosperity and meaningful inclusion to working classes due to neo-liberal policies supporting market fundamentalism, financial deregulation, financialization of economy, dominant power of corporations and decline of unions. Failure to address the rising problem of unemployment and job security related to globalization and technological innovation.

Technological:听Neglect in addressing the disruptive social and economic impacts of technologies such as automation, AI, robotics, and broader technological acceleration. Inadequate regulation and safeguards to prevent the weaponization of technology (AI, social media, espionage, and election manipulation). Inadequate strength of global governance to ensure equitable benefits of technological advancements.

Environmental:听Lack of integration of environmental sustainability into economic and political decision-making, rejection of scientific evidence as the basis for science diplomacy and policy-making, and shortage of funding, scientific expertise and technical skills to address ecological challenges.

V. Consequences and Outcomes

The enabling environment and root causes are responsible for the consequences and outcomes we witness today:

Increased environmental threats to human security, including the growing impact of climate as the single greatest threat to human health.

  1. Decline in quality of national and international leadership due to complexity and deviation from conventional theories of diplomacy and governance.
  2. Declining authority of national governments over tax payers, corporates, MNCs.
  3. Decline in democratic principles and human rights and a shift of democracies toward autocracy, plutocracy and oligarchy.
  4. Retreat to competitive nationalism and competitive security paradigm of the Cold War period, weakening of post WWII alliances & forging of new ones, revival of the arms race and reassertion of the nuclear threat.
  5. Growing autonomy of international financial markets and cryptocurrencies from national and global regulation.
  6. Historically high levels of economic inequality due to neoliberal economic policies favoring the wealthy and high-income earners combined with rising job insecurity due to foreign trade, AI & robotics, immigration and rising unemployment.
  7. Unbridled migration due to war, environmental degradation, cultural conflicts and declining economic opportunity and rising job insecurity. Increased migration driven by a combination of local and regional conflicts, economic opportunities, and environmental changes has accentuated pressures and tensions in the 21st century. The global refugee population increased dramatically, from 14 million in 2000 to 27 million in 2020 2.
  8. Declining trust, influence, effectiveness and power of multilateral institutions, global rule of law, national governments, business, the media and science.
  9. Fake news aggravated by social media and AI-based algorithms.
  10. Increased environmental threats to human security, including the growing impact of climate as the single greatest threat to human health.

VI. Key Initiatives to Address Global Turbulence

Humanity has come to the end of an era that can be effectively governed according to the ideas and institutions of the previous century. The problems confronting us today reveal the need for a radical shift to a new paradigm for global peace and development that transcends the values and theories of competitive nationalism, global competition, neoliberal economic policies, financialization, plutocracy and autocracy that have dominated international affairs through the 19th and 20th centuries.

The range and magnitude of the solutions must necessarily be commensurate with the range and depth of the root causes that need to be addressed. The Baku discussions identified some of the most seminal issues that need to be addressed, highlighting the need for a radical shift in approach required to guide a conscious transformation of the human community into a new era of peace and prosperity. The list below touches on a few of the issues and possible solutions identified and their implications for the future programming of the 被窝影视福利 of Art and Science.

A. Human Security for All:听Human security is the essential foundation for peace and social stability. At a time of unprecedented opportunities for global progress, the collective quest for human security for all is in retreat. Those with the greatest power to lead and support global security are turning inward in a desperate pursuit of self-interest and self-assertion. The rising levels of violence and social instability are the product of a rising sense of uncertainty, insecurity and helplessness, a loss of trust in our national and multilateral institutions, a loss of confidence, commitment and momentum in implementation of Agenda 2030. The unprecedented threats to peace and human security confronting humanity today point to the inadequacy of the current system of global governance and global rule of law. Radical change in our concept of security is needed to reverse the contagion of insecurity, violence and war spreading around the globe. A fundamental shift in strategy must place听the importance of听human security at the top of the levels of investment in military preparedness for national security which increases the temptation and propensity for war. War directly attacks all the dimensions of human security. It is the single greatest source of violence, famine, forced migration, poverty, and threats to human rights. Investment needs to be shifted to address the root causes of human insecurity.

B. Peace Offensive:听The concept of the Peace Offensive transcends traditional conflict management. It and embraces comprehensive peace and includes efforts to transform crises into opportunities for enduring peace. The objective of the Peace Offensive is to promote positive momentum on peace and human security by innovative strategic initiatives that present viable pathways for resolving protracted crises at the local, regional and global level. The strategy focuses on positive reciprocal initiatives for compromise and calls for unilateral, symbolic gestures to encourage reciprocal actions in response. The Global Peace Offensive is a new initiative launched by WAAS in 2024 in collaboration with the European Academy of Sciences and Arts, Alma Mater Europea University and the World University Consortium (WUC). Discussions are now underway with the Club of Rome and other organizations to expand the network and commence project work.

C. Reviving Momentum of Agenda 2030:听Agenda 2030 represents an unprecedented endeavor to consciously conceive, plan and execute a comprehensive program to address the entire spectrum of major challenges to peace, human security and sustainable progress for all human beings on earth. Never before has humanity come together to attempt a program of this scope, magnitude, complexity and difficulty. Effectively addressing the rising levels of insecurity and instability and restoring forward momentum on peace, human security and sustainable development as envisioned in Agenda 2030 is an essential effort to addressing the root causes of insecurity and global turbulence. The world community possesses the wealth, the technological capacities and organizational expertise needed. It must now recognize the vital importance of implementation of the 17 SDGs to ensure the future of humanity. New strategies are needed to break the logjam in implementation of Agenda 2030.

A series of reports by Force for Good, a WAAS strategic research partner, have identified a wide range of solutions to accelerate implementation of the SDGs in developing countries, including 10 major technological solutions to promote large scale investment in association with UN agencies and leading technology corporations. The objective is to harness the power of the technologies identified in the 2025 Force for Good Report to promote digital connectivity, digital health, higher education and vocational training in developing countries in collaboration with national governments, major corporations, Consumer Technology Association, UNDP and UNDESA. WAAS is also a member of the several UNESCO and Indian Science Council initiatives to promote science diplomacy for sustainable development including the Earth-Humanity Coalition.

D. Universal Higher Education:听Education is an essential driver for social stability, prosperity and rapid social evolution. Human security for all will only be attainable when accessible, affordable, world class education is available to all those who seek it. That will require a doubling the capacity of the international system of higher education to accommodate. Innovations in educational content, pedagogy and delivery systems essential for preparing millions of youth to understand, adapt, thrive personally and contribute collectively to the challenges of speed, complexity and uncertainties in the 21st century. Application of AI can significantly enhance the quality of pedagogy, curriculum and delivery systems for global higher education by overcoming the limitations imposed by the fragmentation of knowledge resulting from specialization in disciplinary silos, enhance the capacity for personalized self-paced learning and delivery systems.

WAAS and WUC have already promoted seven international conferences on future education, more than a dozen curriculum development programs, and recent events presented plans for development of global on-line and hybrid delivery systems that harness the power of generative AI for self-paced, interactive, multilingual education. WAAS has recently projected the need for a massive effort to upgrade global higher education at the UN Summit of the Future, 2025 Consumer Electronics Show, and Alma Mater Europea University. Plans are now underway for an International Future Education Conference in India in late 2025.

E. Cooperative Security:听The retreat to Cold War power struggles and nationalistic militarization highlight our failure to evolve from the competitive security system that dominated international relations during the pre-1990 period. The opportunity was missed during the early 1990s to evolve an inclusive cooperative security system supportive and protective of all nations. The Warsaw Pact dissolved but NATO survived and expanded eastward, enhancing the security only of its members. A negotiated ceasefire or peace in Ukraine will be at best temporary unless the deeper institutional foundations are created to ensure peace and security for all the nations of Europe from the Atlantic to the Pacific and beyond.

F. Right to Employment:听Job insecurity and unemployment are among the most widespread sources of social discontent, political instability, polarization of society, and extremist politics. In recent decades employment security has been undermined by rising power of corporations, declining power of unions, globalization of markets, uncontrolled immigration of low wage workers, and rapid technological innovations that replace workers with machines. Studies confirm that the cost of unemployment to society arising from unutilized manpower, lost skills, declining mental and physical health, rising crime, law enforcement and imprisonment are considerably greater than the cost of providing public employment for the unemployed. But there are effective instruments available to enhance employment and economic security. Recognizing the right to employment and providing a Basic Minimum Wage for all citizens may prove to be the most effective long-term strategies.

G. Vocational Training:听Skills development programs provide a means to reskill and upskill existing workers for more sophisticated work and higher productivity. Continuous lifelong training programs enable workers to keep pace with rapid advances in technology.

H. Job Guarantee Programs:听Programs such as India鈥檚 National Rural Employment Guarantee Act has ensured job opportunities for tens of millions of low income workers and raised the minimum wage in a country which does not have an effective national minimum wage program.

I. Taxing Technology:听Technological innovation is essential for social progress. But current practice distributes almost all the rewards of rising productivity to investors and shareholders, while reducing both the number of jobs and pay scales for human beings. Introduction of national or even international taxation on technological applications in the workplace can provide resources to redistribute a portion of the financial gains to the workforce and working age unemployed.

J. Economic Inequality:听Neoliberal economics and financial policies are responsible for raising levels of economic inequality to the highest level in a century. Even economically advanced nations are witnessing a hOllowing of the middle-class resulting from a dramatic rise in the percentage of national income and wealth going to a small minority of the very wealthy. The rise of money power and plutocratic forms of government must be reversed. This can only be done by addressing the economic roots of insecurity, discontent, and social unrest based on neoliberal economic theories and policies. Raising taxation of the wealthy and taxing imports from other nations that maintain very low tax rates for the upper income group are measures that can help reverse the trend and restore a more equitable income distribution.

K. Money Power and Plutocracy:听The real problem with addressing high levels of inequality is the rise in the power of wealth in global society and the gradual transition of democracies into societies controlled by money power. Simple remedies exist to prohibit or limit political donations by corporations and ensure full disclosure of the source of donations.

L. Governance of Banking and International Finance Markets:听The East Asia Financial Crisis of the late 1990s, the Global Financial Criss of 2008, rising levels of inflation and public debt today are consequences of the globalization and liberalization of the international banking and financial system in the 1990s and the progressive decline of national control over multinational corporations. Global turbulence can only be overcome by establishing effective policies and governance to address the instability introduced by financial liberalization, deregulation of banking, cross-border financial flows, corporations and wealthy individuals.

M. Global Voices:听Universal citizen participation, most especially that of youth and the voice of future generations, is an essential condition for giving voice to the aspirations and concerns of the global populace, encouraging active participation in public debates and political processes. Emergence of collective global social consciousness and identity can be facilitated by launching a transnational, global platform to give voice to the silent billions of people and empower the global public to support fundamental global systems change.

N. Redesigning Multilateralism:听The retreat to national competition, the dominance of power politics and militarization will only magnify and multiply the problems, enhance the turbulence and lead to increasing levels of social unrest, conflict and war. The problems confronting humanity today can only be effectively and permanently addressed by strengthening and empowering the international institutions of governance based on global rule of law and an inclusive system of cooperative security for all nations that renounce war as an instrument for national policy.

VII. Future Work

The solutions described above address the root causes of global turbulence. The magnitude of the challenges confronting humanity today will require addressing issues of this importance on a global scale by nations and institutions around the world. This cannot be done my incremental measures such as those proposed to address the symptoms of the global turbulence. They must be taken as elements of a comprehensive agenda for conscious social transformation of our human community. Efforts of such magnitude are rare. But the unprecedented threats confronting humanity today are of the magnitude that warrant an effort of this nature and magnitude. Nothing less will suffice.

The 被窝影视福利 was founded 65 years ago at a time when the remarkable advances in science and technology opened up unprecedented opportunities for our collective progress as well as unprecedented threats to our collective survival. Either by good common sense or miracle, we have managed to survive this long by an aspiration to build a better world combined with an ambivalent, haphazard, sporadic and stumbling exercise of good judgment and self-restraint and their very opposite. Today the scope of the challenges and existential threats we face are far greater in intensity and urgency than ever before. So too are the opportunities, capacities and potential benefits for all humanity, provided we chart the right course and persist in achieving it.

The world today needs leadership in thought that leads to effective action. The intellectual challenge before us is to fully understand the circumstances and factors that have brought us to the present situation, the root causes and deeper processes governing global social evolution, the opportunities and catalytic strategies for effective action. The leadership needed is the willingness and ability to reach out and share a unifying vision and strategy with all those of like-minded values, understanding and willingness for action to set a common course leading ultimately to peace and human security for all.

The challenge before us is to execute a plan for conscious social transformation that addresses the root causes of the crisis. To be successful, the plan will necessarily include measures to dramatically reduce social tensions and global military spending, mobilize advanced technologies, redirect private sector investment into projects that enhance human security and sustainable development by leveraging the power of AI-based technologies to enhance digital connectivity, communications, finance, health, education and vocational training.

[1]听Sustainable Development Goals,听

[2]

]]>
WAAS Talks on Science for Human Security: New Carbon Economy /conference-page/waas-talks-series/waas-talks-on-science-for-human-security-new-carbon-economy/ Thu, 20 Feb 2025 05:24:00 +0000 /?post_type=events&p=35796  

International Decade of Sciences for Sustainable Development (IDSSD)
The Earth-Humanity Coalition (EHC)
被窝影视福利 of Art and Science (WAAS)
New Carbon Economy Consortium (NCEC)

 

 

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is waas_talks.png

Online on February 20, 2025 from 6:00 pm to 7:35 pm CET

Amanda Ellis

Senior Director for Strategic Partnerships and Networks, Julie Ann Wrigley Global Futures Laboratory, Executive Director for Asia and Pacific, Global Institute of Sustainability and Innovation, Professor of Practice, Thunderbird School of Global Management 鈥 Arizona State University, Tempe and Phoenix, USA; Trustee, 被窝影视福利 of Art and Science (WAAS); Amanda.Natalie.Ellis@asu.edu

Opening and Moderation

In August 2023, the UN General Assembly proclaimed听the International Decade of Sciences for Sustainable Development (IDSSD), from 2024 to 2031. The task to lead the preparation and implementation of the activities within IDSSD was given to UNESCO. On April 16, 2024, The Earth-Humanity Coalition (EHC) was founded 鈥 as an association of global, regional, and national scientific organizations with the task to prepare and implement, in close cooperation with UNESCO, various initiatives within the overall program of IDSSD. The 被窝影视福利 of Art and Science (WAAS) was among the founding Members of EHC. It had initiated a program of sciences for sustainable development, which became an EHC specific initiative 鈥 the EHC-WAAS Program of Sciences for Sustainable Development.听

The WAAS Talks on Science for Humans Security: New Carbon Economy听is the sixth webinar within the Program. It had been initiated by Amanda Ellis, Co-Chair of the New Carbon Economy Consortium (NCEC) and Former UN Ambassador and Prime Minister’s Special Envoy for New Zealand; her additional current affiliations are given below her photo. Also, she had chosen the speakers 鈥 Klaus S. Lackner, Matthew Green, Frances Wall, and Walter M茅rida, whose affiliations are also given below their photos 鈥 and moderated the event.

Klaus S. Lackner

Founding Director, Center for Negative Carbon Emissions (CNCE), Professor, School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment 鈥 Arizona State University, Tempe, USA; Klaus.Lackner@asu.edu

Talks

New carbon economy

Statements

Carbon dioxide emissions from the energy sector are the primary driver of climate change. While energy efficiency and conservation can help, modern societies depend on energy for development, economic growth, and sustainability. The key challenge is not stopping energy consumption but transitioning to a carbon-neutral system while managing the excess CO2 already in the atmosphere. Current energy infrastructure, based on fossil fuels, is unsustainable. A shift to carbon-neutral energy sources such as solar, nuclear, and fossil fuels with carbon capture and storage is essential. However, even with a rapid transition, past and future emissions must be addressed through large-scale CO2 removal.

CO2 remains in the atmosphere and ocean for millennia, making mitigation alone insufficient. Achieving climate targets, such as limiting warming to 1.5掳C, requires negative emissions. At current rates, atmospheric CO2 could exceed 450 ppm within 16 years, necessitating the removal of 100 ppm or more. Scalable negative emissions technologies must be implemented, including afforestation, ocean-based CO2 removal, and direct air capture. Of these, direct air capture is the most flexible and scalable approach, capable of removing CO2 at the required scale while allowing carbon to be permanently stored or reused in synthetic fuels.

Despite its viability, direct air capture faces economic and political hurdles. Critics argue it creates a “moral hazard” by discouraging emissions reductions. However, delaying its adoption only increases future risks. Technological advances have reduced costs, and mass production could lower prices further, making large-scale air capture feasible. A decentralized approach, with millions of small capture units, can achieve global CO2 removal while integrating into existing energy systems.

To succeed, early adoption and voluntary action are crucial. Governments, industries, and consumers must support carbon-neutral fuels and CO2 sequestration incentives. If scaled effectively, air capture can remove over 35 Gt of CO2 annually, ultimately balancing the world鈥檚 carbon budget. The transition to a carbon-negative economy requires immediate investment, policy support, and market-driven solutions, ensuring a sustainable future while mitigating the long-term effects of climate change.

Matthew Green

Director, Center for Negative Carbon Emissions (CNCE), Associate Director, Center for Sustainable Macromolecular Materials and Manufacturing of the Biodesign Institute, Associate Professor, School for Engineering of Matter, Transport and Energy 鈥 Arizona State University, Tempe, USA; mdgreen@asu.edu

Direct air capture technology

Statements

A key step toward addressing these challenges lies in innovative materials research. Traditional sorbents often suffer from limited capacity or slow kinetics when targeting low-concentration CO2, highlighting the need for tailor-made polymers. By engineering polymer backbones and functional groups, researchers can design materials with optimized gas transport pathways and enhanced selectivity. High surface area polymers, for instance, provide abundant adsorption sites, improving overall CO2听uptake, while carefully tuned polymer networks can accelerate sorption kinetics. Advances in materials characterization, such as in situ spectroscopic methods, further guide the discovery and rational design of next-generation sorbents and membranes with improved stability, faster response, and lower energy demand.

However, developing advanced materials is only one part of the solution; systems-level design is equally critical for effective CO2听capture and utilization. Membrane-based capture processes would enable continuous capture of CO2, a significant advancement over current batch processes. Scaling up from bench-scale prototypes to commercial facilities requires collaborative efforts in process engineering, reactor design, and life cycle analysis to ensure that deployment is both cost-effective and environmentally sustainable. Incorporating feedback from real-world operation enables robust system architectures that can be readily adapted to diverse operational environments.

The talk highlighted several strategies that united materials research with systems design, including a membrane-based technology to continuously capture CO2, a high surface area polymeric sorbent that controls the kinetics of CO2听sorption, a capture system that can be seamlessly integrated with biological utilization, and more. By combining advanced polymers with holistic process engineering, these emerging technologies represent promising pathways to achieve negative emissions targets and mitigate the most severe impacts of climate change.

Frances Wall

Professor of Applied Mineralogy, Camborne School of Mines of the University of Exeter, UK; F.Wall@exeter.ac.uk

Critical minerals

Statements

Critical minerals are the ingredients in materials, components and products that make them work. Our modern world puts most of the elements in the Periodic Table to use in some way or other. The most famous critical minerals at the moment are lithium, cobalt, and nickel needed for the lithium-ion batteries in electric vehicles (EVs), energy storage and all our other gadgets, and rare earth elements, required for the permanent magnet motors in EVs and wind turbines. Even though these elements are essential in many applications, we might not need very much of them. The amounts of most critical minerals mined each year are hundreds of times less than copper for example. This means that just a few mines might dominate world supply, and leave the supply chain vulnerable to disruption. China dominates the mining, processing, and manufacturing of many of the critical minerals.

But China does not have a monopoly on听deposits听of critical minerals and many other counties have natural endowments of minerals that the rest of the world needs. So, while the assessment of critical minerals is a defensive strategy to protect manufacturing industry, countries who have geological deposits now have an opportunity to benefit from them. The ability to benefit is not straightforward given past experience and the so-called 鈥榬esource-curse鈥 that has accompanied development of natural resources in some countries.

The talk discussed some of the research that was taking place to understand and find new geological deposits, extract more critical minerals as by-products from mines already producing major metals, extract and process in more environmentally-friendly ways, join and create a circular economy, and put the development of resources in a framework of strong sustainable development by using the UN Resource Management System.

Walter M茅rida

Associate Dean, Research & Industry Partnerships, Faculty of Applied Sciences, Leader, M茅rida Labs, Professor, Department of Mechanical Engineering 鈥 University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada; walter.merida@ubc.ca

Hydrogen without CO2: A Living Laboratory using molten-metal methane pyrolysis

Statements

Addressing climate change challenges requires accelerated innovation processes. We have decades 鈥 not centuries 鈥 to decarbonise the global energy system. In this talk, I will briefly describe the Living Laboratory model that the University of British Columbia has pioneered to address climate change. Out of several on- and off-campus examples, I will focus on a hydrogen project deployed outside the province of British Columbia.

Hydrogen is used in a variety of industrial processes, and it represents a growing global market (US$ 243 billion in 2023). However, most of the current hydrogen production relies on fossil pathways (e.g., steam methane reforming or SMR) with a considerable carbon footprint (SMR produces 7鈥12 kg CO2/kg H2, representing more than 2% of global emissions). Methane pyrolysis provides a pathway to produce low-cost hydrogen with low- or zero-carbon emissions (2.3鈥0.7 kg CO2/kg H2 in British Columbia). The solid carbon by-product has several applications (battery electrodes, concrete additives, tyre manufacture, etc.)

Beyond technologies and innovation, university research can amplify academic impact by enabling regional economic development. Demonstrating low- or zero-emission solutions outside the laboratory, can provide an effective platform for dialogue with governments, utilities, indigenous communities, civil society, and organised labour.

YouTube Video
WAAS Talks on Science for Human Security : New Carbon Economy
]]>
被窝影视福利 of Art and Science and European Academy of Sciences and Arts Meet to Support the Global Peace Offensive /conference-page/gpo_florence_jan2025/ Sun, 26 Jan 2025 04:49:00 +0000 /?post_type=events&p=35908 Florence | Jan 26, 2025

In early January, Professor Ludvik Toplak, rector of听 Alma Mater University (AMEU – Maribor) visited Florence and a group of Fellows of the 被窝影视福利 of Art and Science (WAAS) based in Tuscany, in the context of the “,” a WAAS initiative听for global听tension reduction and peacebuilding.

The three-day visit was held at the History听Department of Florence University (Palazzo Fenzi) and hosted by Prof. Zeffiro Ciuffoletti, former director of the Department and founder of the Florence for Europe Institute (ISFE). Attendees included: Prof. Zeffiro Ciuffoletti (host, University of Florence), Prof. Tanja Angleitner (EASA Alma Mater), Prof. Alberto Zucconi, Prof. Ugo Bardi and Dr. Donato Kiniger Passigli (WAAS fellows), Dr. Gian Luca Corradi and Dr. Edoardo Tabasso (University of Florence).

Education is pivotal in fostering social cohesion, promoting cultural understanding and addressing听global challenges. It’s on this premise, that inter-academic collaboration and ad hoc study programs are being evaluated听and developed among major university听networks, in the framework of human security principles. Participants of the meeting agreed that in view of its historical听traditions rooted into European听culture, and being the birthplace of Renaissance, Florence would听be ideally suited to become a centre for inter-disciplinary humanistic studies and听social sciences, bridging听cultures for peace. In Florence, there are already听30 campuses of international听universities whose听students would benefit from a deeper understanding of European culture and historical traditions.

In a world grappling with escalating conflicts and entrenched hostilities, the 被窝影视福利 of Art and Science (WAAS) and the European Academy of Sciences and Arts (EASA) unveiled a bold vision for a Global Peace Offensive, that was launched in Maribor, Slovenia last autumn.This initiative, spearheaded by WAAS, seeks to identify practical measures to de-escalate tensions and foster cooperation through a multi-faceted peace effort.


The proposes a three-tiered approach:

  1. Initial Confidence-Building Measures: Pioneering, symbolic gestures and gradual tension reduction measures to initiate dialogue and build trust.
  2. Cooperation for Human Security: Increased adherence to Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) while addressing broader, interconnected global challenges.
  3. Long-Term Conflict Resolution: Fostering lasting peace through cultural, scientific, and educational diplomacy, supported by traditional diplomatic channels, parliamentary diplomacy, and peace education.

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is WhatsApp-Image-2025-01-09-at-04.38.34-1-1110x833.jpeg

Central to this strategy is the concept of Graduated Reciprocation in Tension Reduction (GRIT), involving unilateral concessions to encourage reciprocal de-escalation. Historical examples, such as Gorbachev’s nuclear concessions and Sadat’s address to the Knesset, illustrate the potential effectiveness of this approach.

The Peace Offensive seeks to fundamentally shift the way we approach conflict, transforming crises from intractable problems into opportunities for building lasting peace. This begins by prioritizing conflict prevention and ensuring that any peacemaking efforts are deeply rooted in the needs and perspectives of local communities. It means tackling the root causes of conflict head-on, whether those are disputes over natural resources or deep-seated ethnic and religious divisions.

To build trust and encourage cooperation, the initiative proposes implementing a series of phased and highly publicized initiatives. These confidence-building measures create a foundation for broader engagement by mobilizing young people and diverse stakeholders, creating a broad and inclusive coalition for peace. Ultimately, the success of the Peace Offensive hinges on ensuring the sustainability of these initiatives and fostering a sense of local ownership, empowering communities to become the architects of their own peaceful future.

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is Florence_2-1110x888.jpeg

The initiative will leverage the expertise of like-minded organizations and individuals to catalyze ongoing peace efforts with WAAS playing a crucial role in incorporating the concept of human security into this project. WAAS completed the Human Security for All (HS4A) campaign last year in partnership with the United Nations Trust Fund For Human Security (UNTFHS).

The Global Peace Offensive calls for a coordinated effort to transform crises into opportunities through strategic unilateral actions, paving the way for a future of lasting peace and human security for all.

]]>
4th Security, Science and Peace Conference /conference-page/4th-security-science-and-peace-conference/ Wed, 22 Jan 2025 05:23:52 +0000 /?post_type=events&p=35713  

22 January 2025 | 10:00 CET | Hybrid

Venue: Independent Union of Research, Florijana Andra拧eca 18a, Zagreb

The Security, Science and Peace Conference is an annual conference organized by Pugwash Croatia, a chapter of Pugwash Conferences and World Affairs, the 被窝影视福利 of Art and Science and the portal Ideje.hr.听The conference deals with peace policies, connecting science with decision makers, responsible global governance, security policies and academic dialogue on sustainable world peace. This year the conference was held on the 22 January 2025 in the hall Andromeda of the Independent Union of Science in Zagreb, Croatia, in a hybrid format. The topics were Global Security, Global Peace, Global Humanism, Science and Security, The Role of Religion in Building World Peace and Media as Tools for Promoting Peace. Click here to read a comprehensive report about the conference.

 

YouTube Video

4th SECURITY, SCIENCE AND PEACE CONFERENCE | Garry Jacobs | 22 Jan 2025
YouTube Video

4th SECURITY, SCIENCE AND PEACE CONFERENCE | Ivo 艩laus | 22 Jan 2025
YouTube Video

4th SECURITY, SCIENCE AND PEACE CONFERENCE | Jonathan Granoff | 22 Jan 2025
YouTube Video

4th SECURITY, SCIENCE AND PEACE CONFERENCE | Aleksander Zidan拧ek | 22 Jan 2025
YouTube Video

4th Security, Science and Peace Conference | Pugwash WAAS 2025

Conference Directors:

  • 沤eljko Ivankovi膰, Ideje.hr
  • Ana Jerkovi膰, Pugwash Croatia Vice-President; Associate Fellow, 被窝影视福利 of Art and Science
  • Zvonimir 艩iki膰, Pugwash Croatia President
  • Ivo 艩laus, Honorary President of the 被窝影视福利 of Art and Science, Member of Pugwash International Committee
]]>
CES 2025 /conference-page/ces-2025/ Wed, 25 Dec 2024 10:53:54 +0000 /?post_type=events&p=35665

Las Vegas, USA | January 7-10, 2025

explored how technology can play a critical role in solving the most pressing issues our industry is tackling. Technology enables positive change that can reach all humanity. First introduced by the U.N. in 1994, the concept of human security recognizes the importance of personal wellbeing and identifies security pillars tied to an individual’s experience in life. To promote these human security tenets, the show will highlight鈥攁s a CES first鈥攖he latest tech innovations and thought leaders dedicated to solving the most serious threats facing humankind. 

Technology鈥檚 Critical Role in Human Security

Human security recognizes the experiences of personal wellbeing and inclusiveness across eight security pillars tied to an individual鈥檚 experience in life. Tech is becoming ever more essential as a tool in facilitating positive change and innovation across these eight pillars

YouTube Video

How AI Can Close The $3 Trillion Education Gap | January 8, 2025 |

YouTube Video

Digital Health: The Next Frontier in Tech-Driven Wellness | January 7, 2025 |  

]]>