| Distinguished
Guests,
I would like to begin by thanking everyone
who contributed to the purpose and arrangements
for this evening’s event. Particular credit
goes to the Directors, Executives and staff of
Alcan and the International Business Leadership
Forum for the conception and administration of
the Alcan Prize for Sustainability. It is truly
an innovative and timely award.
I would also like to thank the leadership
and staff of the Aga Khan Planning and Building
Services, Pakistan – past
and present – for their devotion to AKPBS’ mission
and the people it serves. Tonight AKPBS is represented
by Mr. Hafiz Sherali, who chairs its voluntary
board, and Mr. Asif Merchant, its Chief Executive
Officer.
At this point it is appropriate that we
turn our minds for a few minutes to the South Asian
Earthquake, and the millions of people whose lives
it changed forever in India and
particularly in Pakistan .
It is unfortunate that it takes such tragedies
to raise awareness about the needs of the multitude
of people living in isolated and remote settings
which have poor infrastructure and are particularly
vulnerable to the vagaries of nature.
Where those areas are also in zones of
high seismic instability, the fragility is even
greater, and certainly deserve attention. In many
cases, simply moving these populations is not an
acceptable option for demographic, social and/or
cultural reasons. We saw some of this at work in
Pakistan where villagers refused to leave their devastated
villages in the upper valleys for temporary camps
at lower altitudes. However, steps must be taken
to help them overcome the devastation and rebuild
in a manner that will reduce such severe losses in
the future.
The Alcan Prize itself deserves some of
our attention this evening. In contrast to many
high profile awards, the Alcan Prize is explicitly
not for the “Best Project of the Year”,
or even for “Lifetime Achievement”.
It is about clarity of conception, effectiveness
of implementation, and the quality of results:
in the present, over a period of time, and – with
its focus on sustainability – into the future.
It is about developing and using world
class knowledge, and working with local communities
to choose and implement what reflects their needs
and ability to sustain. The key dimensions are
that interventions must be grounded in communities,
must integrate social, economic and environmental
elements and be undertaken with a long term perspective.
All of them are explicitly part of this Prize.
These same considerations are at the core
of the work of the agencies of the Aga Khan Development
Network, and are particularly evident in the work
of the winner of the Alcan Prize for Sustainability
for 2005, the Aga Khan Planning and Building Services,
Pakistan. I say particularly evident, because so
much of what AKPBS does in the field is tangible,
and has such direct and immediate consequence for
the communities in which and with which it works.
The public health impact is measurable:
in the decline of respiratory and water-borne diseases;
in the contribution of the more efficient use of
fuel in the regeneration of forest cover; and the
contribution to physical safety and security in
the construction of homes and public buildings
designed to mitigate the worst effects of earthquakes
and other calamities.
Though tangible, the activities often go
without notice because they take place away from
the bright lights of the big modernising cities
and do not lend themselves to high profile inaugurations
and ribbon cuttings. It is methodical work in which
the development of products and the careful laying
of plans are essential, but for which implementation
and maintenance – and the training that both
require – form the central pillars. We are
grateful to the Alcan Prize for creating an opportunity
to draw attention to it. It is a clear example,
to take a phrase from the Alcan brochure, of working “diligently
to make the world a better place.”
AKDN’s experience in more than fifteen
countries over a period of more than twenty years
shows that civil society plays a pivotal role in
bringing such improvements to the rural habitat
in the developing world. Governments and international
development agencies can help, but civil society
in the widest definition of the term is crucial
to addressing the backlog of needs dispersed over
wide areas. Indeed, a crucial aspect of AKPBS’ success
has been inviting individual community members
to contribute their own labour and money to improving
their built environment, frequently providing them
with access to micro-credit products to do so.
This kind of public engagement gives communities
ownership of the changes, thereby underwriting
their sustainability.
Let me say a few words about how we intend
to use the prize money. I am happy to announce
that the Aga Khan Development Network is proposing
to leverage the prize money in two ways. First,
the Aga Khan Foundation Canada will
match the prize money with a one million dollar
contribution in recognition of Canada ’s
long standing support for the work of AKPBS and
of Alcan’s Canadian roots. Secondly, His
Highness the Aga Khan will also make available
a further one million dollars to match other contributions
to this work. In total, these funds will be placed
in an endowment, to be called the Fund for the
Sustainability of the Built Environment, to extend
the work of AKPBS in Pakistan, and into neighbouring
countries where circumstances are similar with
respect to high risk seismic zones and the need
for improvement in rural housing, water and sanitation.
The AKDN will seek to further amplify the
impact of the prize by encouraging other donations
for the endowment or for outright expenditure.
It will do so by guaranteeing that the full amount
of each gift will go directly to physical interventions
at the village level, without any overheads or
other administrative costs. The Network’s
goal is to create a sustainable source, and thereby
reflect the ethos of the Prize “through ongoing
activities and investment to address and progress
sustainability and the impact of their activities.”
Thank you again for honouring AKPBS with
the Alcan Prize for Sustainability for 2005.
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