Business Quarterly Annual Awards 2007, Sandton Convention Centre,
Johannesburg
30 November 2007
Master of ceremonies
Ladies and gentlemen
To talk of development is to talk of the reason for the reproduction and
progression of our existence as human beings, to talk of sustainable
development is to speak of the superiority of the human race above all other
species. It is in the fulfilment of this assertion, the superiority of the
human species, that most of us here spend our days. For us, above all else,
have the sensibility that should speak to the need of ensuring that we can
secure our continuity.
Historically, societies have propelled themselves forward consciously or
unconsciously on a set of milestones. Their very existence depends on progress
toward these. Failure to do this has led to stagnation and attrition. Every
civilisation has been marked and identified by the milestones it has made. The
Iron Age, for instance, distinguished itself from previous periods by the use
of implements in its subjugation of the environment. It did not survive,
because it was not sustainable. Here lies the nub of the issue at hand: Every
major civilisation has had within it the seed of its own destruction, or
conversely, of its mutation to higher levels.
Here we are: The 21st Century, which is marked by immeasurable progress as
we conquer the world and subordinate it to our needs. This is our place in
history and we will be judged by the decisions we took and whether they led to
the regeneration of humanity, or allowed and encouraged unsustainable
consumption of the world's finite resources by a few.
As the human race is ever more drawn and preoccupied with producing the
conditions for wealth accumulation, a more powerful and enduring collective
concern has emerged that tempers this narrow drive for wealth that enquires for
whom, how and to what end.
As we accumulate wealth: do we do that in the interest of securing a better
future for all of us, or do we do that in narrow self interests and thereby
inadvertently creating the conditions where our continuation is invariably
undermined. From time to time we talk about it and fortuitously we have
occasions like these where we can ask the awkward question, no matter how
fleetingly.
At the core of our actions as communities and individuals is the belief that
we must live fruitful lives, which should at all times be followed by the
belief that the generations following us also have a right to live as
prosperously as we can make possible. As we embark on efforts to defeat hunger,
deprivation and want, we must take extra precaution to gear the economy of our
country towards growth that can be justified and maintained.
From a common, lengthy and protracted process of gatherings of the global
community over the last fifty years culminating in this country, at these
precincts in 2002, a declaration was produced which was to bind all of humanity
to a sustainable and just future. In its barest essentials, 'The Declaration'
at the conclusion of the United Nations, World Summit on Sustainable
Development stated that the current trajectory of our development as the human
race was not sustainable. The summit concluded, declaring that the 'deep fault
line' between rich and poor posed a major threat to global prosperity and
stability. It set out the parameters for an alternative.
The phrase sustainable development became entrenched in our discourse and
has gained greater currency and has resonance with all, whatever their area of
activity. It is as pertinent for me as I take part in planning the growth of
this country. It is as relevant for each one here. Will your business be able
to grow and add value? These are issues I am certain occupy your minds.
Sustainability is an all encompassing concept that is about today and
tomorrow.
Convened here today, at the very place that hosted the summit, we cannot but
feel privileged to be part of this generation. For just as the international
community was coming to the realisation that growth that was not geared towards
sustainable development was breeding discontent we too were turning our country
around. Thus, we now have become part of a global movement that asserts that
growth must take cognisance of social justice.
It was in accordance with this framework for global action that agreements
were reached towards the achievement of specific measurable results. The Plan
of Implementation read, therefore, as I reiterate for emphasis, that: "We will
spare no effort to free our fellow men, women and children from the abject and
dehumanising conditions of extreme poverty, to which more than a billion of
them are currently subjected. We are committed to making the right to
development a reality for everyone and to freeing the entire human race from
want."
A profound statement by any account! To free the human race from want. For
most of us charged with the management of your affairs, this ranked as one of
the most important collective achievements of our time. We were setting the
world on a new development path with lessons at the back of our minds of the
price we paid in the past decades within which we paid no heed to this
important precept of sustainable development.
We, in particular, have learnt from Apartheid that the price to pay in the
pursuit of growth that was illogically not sensitive to the needs of the
majority led to the destruction of that very system and was a wanton plunder of
resources by a few. Apartheid had within it the seeds of its own destruction,
it was not sustainable.
We have since focused attention on issues such as, among others, the role
that business could play in ensuring that there was sustainable development. We
came to the conclusion, after much deliberation that for economic growth to be
sustainable, it had to have the essential rationale to move beyond itself and
create the environment for its own reproduction. For it would be, stunted if it
existed for its own sake. Growth, in other words, needed to help the movement
towards sustainable development. It needed to sustain the progress towards
ensuring that those who come after us have the resources that they need to
enjoy quality lives.
Sustainable development has become a very useful term that should underscore
all we do. And of course the emphasis will be determined by a number of
factors. In the developed world, sustainable development has of necessity to be
about the environment, which is a global issue of major importance. For Africa,
sustainable development has to be first and foremost about poverty because that
is the stark reality of our time. In South Africa it has to be about
inequalities. The deep fault line between the rich and the poor, this is a
schism that will bedevil all our effort at sustainability.
The seed of our destruction resides in this growing inequality and
marginalisation. The same dichotomy that the world faces between the rich and
the poor, we face in this country.
The crossing of barriers to tackle poverty and inequality requires the same
level of commitment demonstrated in the challenge of apartheid. It requires a
social contract, an agreement to produce equity, and a shared understanding of
the balance that is necessary for our planet to reproduce itself to ensure our
collective survival and confidence. We must rise above our complacency to see
poverty, HIV and AIDS and violence not as a problem to be left unchallenged. If
we do not respond to the slow and arduous institutional task of building social
solidarity, we will be doomed to injustice, insecurity and environmental
destruction in our time and beyond.
I am very glad that as black business you have been with us throughout the
process and continue to accompany us on this long but necessary journey.
We rely on you, you who must be the pre-eminent advocates of the changes we
need to ensure that growth serves sustainable development, you who must invest
the necessary energy and time to help achieve those goals. In times of greatly
needed changes, nations count on those with the developed consciousness,
foresight, resources and vision to carve a path out of what often is a thick
glass of uncertainty, confusion and at times a deliberate obfuscation of the
real issues of the day.
Sustainable development is above all about development that is based on
partnerships. It is about the efficient stewardship of scare resources and
their merger with the realisation of a quality life. Hence, it encompasses the
economic, social and environmental contexts of development. It entails a number
of complex processes with many interacting factors, which affect the lives of
everyone and make it everybody's business.
It is on account of this that I am confident that together we will be able
to address the pressing need for sustainable development within our country
through properly directing growth towards these purposes and making the
necessary changes within the economy. Changes have begun with the restructuring
of the economy to achieve greater representation where it matters.
As government we would work very hard to make sure that our partnership
works. For we know what we gain in realising it. Conversely, we know what we
lose when we fail to do so. Beginning tomorrow, our efforts will be directed to
the threat of HIV and AIDS which shortens the lives of productive men and
women. Such is the challenge that it would even be impossible to speak about
sustainable development without having in placing concrete measures on curbing
the spread of the disease. In eating away the lives of children at the early
stages of their development it again takes away from us a potential human
resource whose productiveness would have counted in our progress towards our
development.
I am very hopeful for the future of this country because you are now
beginning to take your place in the space grudgingly left by the previously
advantaged. When you are firmly entrenched in that place, we stand a better
chance of turning the fortunes of our people. You are our hope, our bridge to
stem this chasm that threatens our continuity and progression. You know who we
are, we the ordinary, who trail behind. We who are proud of what you have
become, we who are your own are cheering you on. The sustainability of our
common development lies in the removal of that which threatens it: the crime,
the disease, the poverty, the homelessness, the joblessness and the pain.
We urge you to thrive so that you can create jobs that will sustain the
poor. Thrive and grow and sustain this democracy. By doing well for yourselves,
you are doing well for society. We want you to do well so that you can sustain
the economy. Your success will guarantee the sustainability of our dreams. That
should tell you how important you are to all of us. Thrive, for in you is the
seed of our regeneration and destiny. Thrive.
I thank you.
Issued by: Department of Housing
30 November 2007
Source: Department of Housing (http://www.housing.gov.za)