A Comprehensive Report on Environmental Sustainability: A Global Perspective

P. R. Kumaresan

Department of Civil Engineering, College of Engineering and Technology, SRM Institute of Science and Technology, Ramapuram Campus, Chennai – 600089, Tamil Nadu, India.

Narmada Hidangmayum *

Department of Human Development and Family Studies, College of Community Science, Central Agriculture University, Imphal, Tura, Meghalaya, India.

Akhilesh Singh

RVSKVV, Gwalior-474002, India.

Deny Yadav

Department of Buddhist Studies, University of Delhi-110007, India.

Shabnam

Dr. YS Parmar University of Horticulture and Forestry, Solan, Himachal Pradesh, India.

Brajendra

ICAR-Indian Institute of Rice Research, Rajendranagar, Hyderabad-500030, Telangana, India.

Arambam Bebina Devi

UGC-SRF, Department of Adult Continuing Education and Extension, Manipur University, Manipur-795003, India.

Asmatullah

Department of Civil Engineering, Chaitanya Bharathi Institute of Technology (CBIT), Hyderabad, India.

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

In the last three decades, protecting the earth's environment has become a major challenge in international relations. Hundreds of regional and bilateral agreements, as well as at least ten global environmental agreements, were negotiated. Environmentalism can be seen as a social movement that seeks to influence jobs and education to conserve natural resources and ecosystems. Concerns for environmental protection have emerged in various forms in various parts of the world throughout history. The environmental movement is a diverse scientific, social and political movement. The movement is committed to ecology, health and human rights while accepting people as workers in the ecosystem. Today, it is generally accepted that environmental protection is a part of national policies and plans. The accepted standard to achieve this reduction target is "sustainable development". In fact, all existing laws and policies on environmental protection and human development, at the national or international level, aim at achieving "sustainable development". Despite the great environmental protection that humans have used in the past three decades, global warming has not reduced the occurrence of anomalous atmospheric phenomena due to scientific knowledge and available technology. Although many environmental policies and action plans have been negotiated over the past three decades, significant gaps remain in international environmental policy law. The framework has not yet become a method or method. Rather, each is a collection of commitments related to a democratic international or regional environmental issue. Nature has become negative by affecting the climate on the one hand and the health and safety of all living and non-living beings on the other. The ecosystem resonates with abnormal noise, vibration, dust and smoke from human activities. These events remind people that the environment must be protected with all enthusiasm and energy no matter what. Given the progress we have made in destroying the earth's environment, future global environmental efforts will focus more on environmental restoration than conservation. Human rights will also provide important opportunities for better protection of the environment.

Keywords: Environment, human rights, sustainable development


How to Cite

Kumaresan, P. R., Narmada Hidangmayum, Akhilesh Singh, Deny Yadav, Shabnam, Brajendra, Arambam Bebina Devi, and Asmatullah. 2023. “A Comprehensive Report on Environmental Sustainability: A Global Perspective”. International Journal of Environment and Climate Change 13 (11):1310-16. https://doi.org/10.9734/ijecc/2023/v13i113283.