From its inception, the United Nations has embodied a vision of international cooperation among Governments and peoples to build a more peaceful and prosperous world for all. The business community, too, must answer that call. It is for this reason the United Nations Global Compact was created at the turn of the millennium to guide and inspire companies everywhere to join in tackling humanity’s most pressing challenges.
Now, as the UN Global Compact marks 20 years of uniting business for a better world — having grown from 44 business participants to more than 10,000 companies, 3,000 non-business signatories and 68 Local Networks — the challenges we face are as great as any in the history of the United Nations. The COVID-19 pandemic, with its twin health and socio-economic crises, has swiftly and dramatically upended lives and livelihoods in nearly every corner of the globe. It has exposed global fragilities and laid bare the rampant inequalities that were already making life difficult for the most vulnerable. Upholding the core promise of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development — to leave no one behind — has never been more urgent.
The UN system is fully mobilized to save lives and ease suffering. Moreover, we know that recovery must not aim to simply go back to old ways and business-as-usual. We must work as an international community to build more sustainable and inclusive societies to withstand future shocks. The Ten Principles of the UN Global Compact in the areas of human rights, labour, environment and anti-corruption continue to show their immense value. Over its 20-year history, the Compact has guided companies of all sizes and from all regions to embed a principles-based approach to doing business. It has also brought the voice of responsible business into global agenda-setting discussions, including on the Sustainable Development Goals and Paris Agreement on Climate Change.
The Compact has pioneered standards and guidance through the Science Based Targets initiative, the Business Ambition for 1.5°C campaign, the Women’s Empowerment Principles, and the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights. It has developed a set of Principles for Responsible Investment, which has more than 2,300 signatories, as well as a body of Principles for Responsible Management Education designed to equip tomorrow’s responsible business leaders with sustainability acumen and awareness. And the Compact’s Local Networks have built up a strong presence to advance public-private dialogue and action. Where once "do no harm" was a common approach for the global business community, today we are arriving at a new landscape of elevated expectations and responsibilities.
At this pivotal moment, there is great scope for the United Nations and the business community to do even more as partners for a brighter future. By bringing together the universality of the United Nations, the formidable capacities of the private sector and our common global reach, we can help the vulnerable, rescue the planet and promote stability and shared progress. We do not yet know how we will find our way out of today’s crisis, but with determination, big ideas, unity and hope, we can recover better and build a more resilient world.
Now, as the UN Global Compact marks 20 years of uniting business for a better world — having grown from 44 business participants to more than 10,000 companies, 3,000 non-business signatories and 68 Local Networks — the challenges we face are as great as any in the history of the United Nations. The COVID-19 pandemic, with its twin health and socio-economic crises, has swiftly and dramatically upended lives and livelihoods in nearly every corner of the globe. It has exposed global fragilities and laid bare the rampant inequalities that were already making life difficult for the most vulnerable. Upholding the core promise of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development — to leave no one behind — has never been more urgent.
The UN system is fully mobilized to save lives and ease suffering. Moreover, we know that recovery must not aim to simply go back to old ways and business-as-usual. We must work as an international community to build more sustainable and inclusive societies to withstand future shocks. The Ten Principles of the UN Global Compact in the areas of human rights, labour, environment and anti-corruption continue to show their immense value. Over its 20-year history, the Compact has guided companies of all sizes and from all regions to embed a principles-based approach to doing business. It has also brought the voice of responsible business into global agenda-setting discussions, including on the Sustainable Development Goals and Paris Agreement on Climate Change.
The Compact has pioneered standards and guidance through the Science Based Targets initiative, the Business Ambition for 1.5°C campaign, the Women’s Empowerment Principles, and the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights. It has developed a set of Principles for Responsible Investment, which has more than 2,300 signatories, as well as a body of Principles for Responsible Management Education designed to equip tomorrow’s responsible business leaders with sustainability acumen and awareness. And the Compact’s Local Networks have built up a strong presence to advance public-private dialogue and action. Where once "do no harm" was a common approach for the global business community, today we are arriving at a new landscape of elevated expectations and responsibilities.
At this pivotal moment, there is great scope for the United Nations and the business community to do even more as partners for a brighter future. By bringing together the universality of the United Nations, the formidable capacities of the private sector and our common global reach, we can help the vulnerable, rescue the planet and promote stability and shared progress. We do not yet know how we will find our way out of today’s crisis, but with determination, big ideas, unity and hope, we can recover better and build a more resilient world.