During a visit last week to Seoul, a city I have traveled to often over the past decade, I could not help but notice how much its appearance has changed during that time. Striking new skyscrapers and architecture immediately catches the eye, but an increasing shift towards protecting and enhancing the city’s natural and environmental amenities is showing results. Indeed, during the past few years South Korea has made sustainable development and green growth a central theme of its domestic and global policy agendas. North Korea may dominate news about the Korean Peninsula in the United States these days, but South Korea’s efforts to put sustainability at the fore of economic development deserve attention for their evolution from the growth-at-all-costs approach long pursued.
In future posts over the coming weeks, I will explore some of South Korea’s recent initiatives to encourage sustainable and green solutions to economic growth, ranging from Seoul’s Cheonggeycheon urban stream restoration project to national government policies and efforts to play a leading global role in advancing green, sustainable solutions. South Korea is particularly important in that many emerging economies around the world look to it as a successful model for achieving rapid economic growth–and perhaps can also learn from its experiences in sustainable growth.
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