A Guidebook to the Green Economy – Issue 2: Exploring Green Economy Principles


Division for Sustainable

Retrieved from: UNDESA

Issue 2 of A Guidebook to the aims to further ‘unpack’ or ‘demystify’ the green economy concept by moving beyond the simple definitions of green economy and providing a brief overview of several sets of green economy principles that were published in the lead up to Rio+20.

The green economy is established as a multifaceted tool for achieving and eradicating , a concept that gained significant international prominence during the Rio+20 conference. The following sections detail the foundational frameworks and principles defining this economic model:

Nine Principles of a Green Economy

The transition to a green economy is guided by a framework that prioritizes the delivery of sustainable development, equity through justice, and genuine prosperity for all. This structure emphasizes the improvement of the natural world through earth integrity and adherence to planetary boundaries while ensuring that decision-making remains inclusive, participatory, and accountable. Central to this approach is the building of economic, social, and environmental resilience, the promotion of sustainable consumption and production, and the commitment to intergenerational investment for the future.

15 Principles for the Green Economy

A more expansive framework consolidates international agreements into fifteen core ideas, focusing on the equitable distribution of wealth and economic fairness guided by common but differentiated responsibilities. This model identifies the precautionary approach and the right to development as essential components, alongside the internalization of externalities and the necessity of international and liability. Furthermore, it advocates for a just transition for workers, the redefinition of well-being, gender equality, and the safeguarding of biodiversity to prevent environmental pollution.

10 Conditions for a Transition Toward a Green Economy

The transition is categorized into four areas of innovation: social, environmental, economic, and cross-cutting elements. Social innovation focuses on awareness, , , and the creation of meaningful employment. Environmental innovation centers on resource efficiency, decoupling, and a life cycle approach, while economic innovation requires open markets, metrics beyond GDP, and diverse finance and investment. These elements are integrated through unified policy-making, , and partnerships.

Principles for a Green Economy That Meets the Needs of Workers and Their Trade Unions

This framework ensures that the green economy delivers social equity and decent work by focusing on inclusiveness for vulnerable groups like youth, women, and the poor. It defines the transformation of traditional roles into new green jobs and the protection of workers’ rights as central priorities. The model emphasizes fulfilling human needs—such as access to food, water, and housing—while prioritizing materials’ productivity over cutting labor costs and advocating for a just transition for affected communities.

Principles for a Fair and Green Economy

This ecological framework is rooted in the Earth Integrity Principle, asserting the inalienable right of natural communities to flourish and evolve. It recognizes planetary boundaries as limits to and establishes the Dignity Principle, which prioritizes poverty eradication and wealth redistribution. The framework further defines justice as the fair sharing of benefits and burdens, promotes resilience through economic diversification, and advocates for a “Beyond-GDP” approach to measuring human and environmental well-being.

Five Working Principles of an Equitable Green Economy

This southern hemisphere perspective serves as a filter for policy decisions, linking the green economy to enabling conditions that address systemic distortions and disfunctionalities. It establishes clear objectives for mobilizing technology, finance, and capacity while creating an aligned framework of institutions with defined roles. The model requires transparency and from powerful actors and insists on clear timelines and new measurement to track the well-being of people and the planet.

Working towards a Balanced and Inclusive Green Economy

The green economy is characterized by its ability to maintain growth and reduce emissions for the total economy while generating public revenues for social protection and quality services. It focuses on retaining biodiversity and ecosystem services to support the livelihoods of the poor who depend on them. Additionally, it enhances energy and resource efficiency through equitable access and ensures resilience to environmental risks by developing adaptive capacities.

Global Sustainability Panel Characteristics

This framework extracts ten characteristics that define the green economy as an engine for sustainable development tailored to national and regional needs. It emphasizes a long-term, resilient growth model that can withstand external shocks and uses accurate price signals by including social and environmental costs in pricing. Key distinctions include the promotion of renewable energy, the addressing of resource scarcity, and the facilitation of stakeholder participation and cooperation.

A Guide to Common Green Economy Principles

Analysis of various frameworks reveals 26 common principles, with the most frequent being the interpretation of the green economy as a means for achieving sustainable development. There is a pronounced emphasis on social dimensions, particularly the creation of decent work and the improvement of governance through inclusivity and transparency. Other primary categories include poverty reduction, equity, resource efficiency, and the protection of biodiversity.

Green Economy Principles and the Rio+20 Outcome Document

The negotiated intergovernmental position at Rio+20 frames the green economy as a flexible tool that should not be a rigid set of rules but must contribute to poverty eradication and social inclusion. It mandates that policies must be consistent with international law, respect national sovereignty over resources, and strengthen international cooperation through technology transfer and finance. While comprehensive, this framework notably omits explicit references to planetary boundaries, low-carbon development, and resilience to external shocks found in other stakeholder proposals.


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