A sustainable business strategy is an integration of social, economic, and environmental goals that reflects Red Sea Co.’s vision to sustain a better environment for everyone, including goals, activities, and planning with the aim of creating long-term value for Red Sea Co., its stakeholders, and the wider community.
To achieve a sustainable environment, develop environmental, social, and economic performance, achieve the leadership of the Egyptian oil and gas sector in economic and sustainable development, and work to improve the quality of living conditions of local communities and the Egyptian society as a whole in line with Egypt’s vision 2030.
The development concept adopted by the Egyptian petroleum sector strategy for social responsibility is based on the three dimensions of development; economic, social, and environmental development, in order to achieve the principles and goals of sustainable development.
Red Sea National Petrochemicals Co. adopted 10 of the Sustainable Development Goals to help make our world a better place, help establish a healthier environment for the next generations, provide clean water, upturn the economy, erase hunger, provide quality education, and a lot more.
Yes, it’s an ambitious goal but we believe it can be done.
In 2000, the world committed to halving the number of people living in extreme poverty by the year 2015 and we met this goal.
However, more than 800 million people around the world still live on less than $1.25 a day that’s about the equivalent of the entire population of Europe living in extreme poverty.
Now it’s time to build on what we learned and end poverty altogether.
In the past 20 years, hunger has dropped by almost half.
Many countries that used to suffer from famine and hunger can now meet the nutritional needs of their most vulnerable people, it’s an incredible accomplishment.
Together, we can make that a reality by 2030.
We all know how important it is to be in good health.
Our health affects everything from how much we enjoy life to what work we can perform.
That’s why there’s a Goal to make sure everyone has health coverage and access to safe and effective medicines and vaccines.
We have the means to turn that around and make good health more than just a wish.
First, the bad news on education. Poverty, armed conflict, and other emergencies keep many kids around the world out of school.
Now for some good news. Since 2000, there has been enormous progress on the goal to provide primary education to all children worldwide.
Now, let’s get an even better grade for all kids, and achieve the goal of universal primary and secondary education, affordable vocational training, access to higher education, and more.
We can celebrate the great progress the world has made in becoming more prosperous and fair.
But there’s a shadow to the celebration, in just about every way, women and girls lag behind.
There are still gross inequalities in work and wages, lots of unpaid “women’s work”
The Sustainable Development Goals aim to build on these achievements to ensure that there is an end to discrimination against
women and girls everywhere.
Everyone on earth should have access to safe and affordable drinking water.
That’s the goal for 2030, while many people take clean drinking water and sanitation for granted, many others don’t.
But we can take a new path—more international cooperation, protecting wetlands and rivers, sharing water-treatment technologies—that leads to accomplishing this goal.
Between 1990 and 2010, the number of people with access to electricity increased by 1.7 billion.
That’s progress to be proud of, and yet as the world’s population continues to rise, still more people will need cheap energy to light their homes and streets, use phones and computers, that way we’ll meet electricity needs and protect the
environment.
How’s that for a balancing act?
An important part of economic growth is that people have jobs that pay enough to support themselves and their families.
The good news is that the middle class is growing worldwide, almost tripling in size in developing countries.
We can promote policies that encourage entrepreneurship and job creation, eradicate forced labour, slavery, and human trafficking, the goal of decent work for all women and men will be achieved by 2030.
Humans and other animals rely on other forms of life on land for food, clean air, clean water, and as a means of combatting climate change.
the Sustainable Development Goals aim to conserve and restore the use of terrestrial ecosystems such as forests, wetlands, drylands, and mountains by 2030.
Sustainable Development Goals are no small matter either.
193 countries agreed on these goals, pretty incredible, isn’t it? 193 countries agreeing on anything!
The final goal lays out a way for nations to work together to
achieve all the other goals.
