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The Millennium Project

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Title: The Millennium Project


1
  • The Millennium Project
  • American Council for the UN University

Planning Committee Meeting
February 14-15, 2001 Smithsonian
Institution Washington, D.C.
2
AGENDA Wednesday 14 February 2001
  • Recent accomplishments
  • Briefing on recent research
  • Peer review of Challenges
  • State of the Future Index (SOFI)
  • Future Issues of Science and Technology
  • Analysis of the UN Summit Millennium Speeches
  • Environmental Crime the International Criminal
    Court
  • Global Partnership for Sustainable Development
  • Environmental Security Scanning
  • Futures Research Methods V.2
  • Node Reports

3
Agenda Thursday 15 February 2001
  • Project Information System Improvements
  • Project issues
  • Objectives for 2001-2002 Program
  • Nodes plans for next year
  • Public Relations, Marketing, and Fund Raising
    Plans
  • Review, action items, and conclusions
  • Adjourn

4
2000-2001 Financial Sponsors
Funding Support
  • Deloitte Touche
  • General Motors
  • Hughes Space and Communications
  • United Nations University
  • U.S. Army Environmental Policy Institute
  • U.S. Department of Energy

In Kind Support
  • Smithsonian Institution
  • The Futures Group International

5
Recent Accomplishments
  • State of the Future makes FSs best picks for
    2000
  • Challenges for Humanity UN, US Senate
    distribution
  • Translations of Projects reports
  • UN Strategy Unit
  • Science Attaches in planning process
  • Explorations on Transnational Crime strategy
  • Articles (AEPI, Foresight, FRQ, TFSC)
  • Streaming Video
  • Talks (China, Argentina, Japan, UNEP, Finland,
    AEPI, Forum 2000, WANGO)
  • Project sales

6
Sales in the year 2000
7
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8
Peer Review of Challenges
  • New Questionnaire used with brief overviews of
    each of the 15 challenges
  • On-going process until next publication of SOF
  • 21 Reviews received thus far
  • Nodes, MP staff, listserv selected reviewers
  • General improvements but overall descriptions,
    actions, and regional views are well received
  • Selected reviewers for more complete versions

9
Future Issues of Science and Technology Study
  • Purpose Obtain a broad range of
    international perspectives on the emerging issues
    and forces that are likely to influence the
    future of science and technology programs and
    their management

10
Three-Year Sequence
  • Year 1 What are the important future issues ?
  • Year 2 What are the implications for management?
  • Year 3 Create scenarios to make choices explicit.

11
  • Year 1 Study Flow

- Steering Committee for the Study -Science
Attachés Meeting
What are the most important ST
questions? Suggested actions/developments/answers
ST Panel Round 2
12
(No Transcript)
13
(No Transcript)
14
  • The Panel Was Highly Engaged

71 new questions were suggested (distilled to
19) 210 new actions/ developments/answers were
suggested to address the original 14 questions
Separate discussions were conducted on the
Millennium Projects Internet listserve
ltmillproj_at_hermes.circ.gwu.edugt People who were
late submitted anyway in hope their responses
would be included Requests were made to use the
material in other ways
15
Create New Opportunities
Government Decision Makers
Future Issues of Science Technology
Private Corporate Decision Makers
Avoid Problems
Non-Science Culture
Public knowledge and understanding of ST
16
Ratings of the Questions (importance globally, to
my country)
  • The first seven most highly rated questions
  • 1. What challenges can science pursue whose
    resolution would significantly improve the human
    condition? ( 4.47 4.04)
  • 13. What potential catastrophes could change the
    world within the next 25 years which science
    might help to avoid? (4.14 3.70)
  • 2. What future applications of science or
    scientific research have the greatest potential
    for danger to human survival? (4.08 3.62)
  • 5. What will help bridge the ST gap between
    developed and developing countries? (4.06
    3.59)
  • 3. What are the principal factors that will
    influence science over the next 25 years?
    (3.93 3.71)
  • 6. What emerging technologies are likely to have
    the most positive economic impact over the next
    25 years? (3.92 3.96)
  • 4. What are some seminal, key, or profound
    scientific developments that might occur during
    the next 25 years? (3.86 3.63)
  • (Complete list on the hand-out)

17
What challenges can science pursue whose
resolution would significantly improve the
human condition?
  • Most highly rated developments/actions/answers
  • 1C.Commercial availability of a cheap, efficient,
    environmentally benign, non-nuclear fission and
    non-fossil fuel means of generating base load
    electricity, competitive in price with today's
    fossil fuels.
  • 1F. Simple, inexpensive, effective medicines and
    corresponding delivery systems to treat
    widespread diseases and epidemics.
  • 1A. Improving the efficiency of water use in
    agriculture by 75.
  • 1H. Climate change - understanding and solutions.
  • 1B. Cheap, efficient, means for providing potable
    water from salt or brackish sources.
  • Examples of Newly Suggested developments/actions/a
    nswers
  • Developing strong, lightweight materials that do
    not corrode, are resistant to wear, and easy to
    recycle.
  • Developing efficient, inexpensive (e.g.
    photochemical) process to produce hydrogen from
    water.
  • Nanofiltering devices for water purification and
    recycling in households.
  • Developing methods for enlarging human
    creativity.
  • Reaching deeper understanding of the quantum
    foundations of physics.

18
What catastrophes could change the world within
the next 25 years which science might help
avoid?
  • Most highly rated developments/actions/answers
  • 13A. Global epidemics, plagues, naturally caused
    or by human action such as an adverse genetic
    mutation.
  • 13F. Economic meltdown - a major worldwide
    depression.
  • 13G. Magnitude 9 or greater earthquake.
  • 13C. Global war. (But not an old fashioned East
    vs. West war with battle lines rather a global
    terrorist war and rise in global crime as a form
    of war seems more likely)
  • 13H. Breakdown of law and order worldwide.
  • Examples of Newly Suggested developments/actions/a
    nswers
  • Criminal terrorism.
  • Major unprecedented migration of poor people to
    the affluent world.
  • Fragmentation wars among some nations.
  • Climate change induced crop failures, floods,
    droughts, sea level rise, and/or extinctions.
  • Major changes in the intensity and direction of
    ocean currents, leading to abrupt climate
    changes.

19
What future applications of science or scientific
research have the greatest potential for danger
to human survival?
  • Most highly rated developments/actions/answers
  • 2D. Accidentally - or intentionally - released
    genetically modified organisms that have
    serious adverse consequences for the biosphere.
  • 2H. Use of biotechnology to build new kinds of
    biological weapons of mass destruction.
  • 2G. Nanotechnology to build stealthy new means of
    killing large numbers of people.
  • 2C. Intelligent Nanotechnology evolves beyond
    human control.
  • 2E. Dissemination of information on potentially
    dangerous technologies via Internet.
  • Examples of Newly Suggested developments/actions/a
    nswers
  • Loss of biodiversity from exclusionary marketing
    for genetically altered, patented varieties.
  • Widespread availability of tailored psychotropes
    (e.g. programmed dream pills)
  • Human cloning
  • Technological development of the less developed
    world to the consumption levels of the US.
  • Use of Internet to promote drug use and other
    socially undesirable actions.

20
What will help bridge the ST gap between
developed and developing countries?
  • Most highly rated developments/actions/answers
  • 5F. Education and training.
  • 5B. Very low cost, multi-purpose, portable
    computer communications useful to the poor
    majority to begin to enter the education,
    economic, and health systems beyond their
    village.
  • 5E. A new economics that effectively rewards
    innovation and work but distributes wealth more
    evenly.
  • 5C. More flexible exchange programs that allow
    reciprocal residency and internships in research
    labs of other countries.
  • 5A. Use of collaboratories for tele-science so
    that people can work as if they were in one lab
    even though they are in different locations
    around the world.
  • Examples of Newly Suggested developments/actions/a
    nswers
  • Breaking down the new iron curtain between North
    and South.
  • If the pressure of overpopulation ends, many more
    countries will be able to afford (basic) science
    (like China, India, Brazil or Indonesia, etc.).
  • Develop cassette colleges for developing world.
  • Access to the chaotic jumble of fact,
    misinformation and lies on the Internet by all.
  • Development of an effective all language
    simultaneous voice translation system.

21
What are the principal factors that will
influence science over the next 25 years?
  • Most highly rated developments/actions/answers
  • 3F. Education and training of the science
    workforce.
  • 3C. Economic contraction or collapse. (Science,
    more than other enterprises, depends on human
    beings having a relatively secure base to work
    from.)
  • 3I. Scientific information exchange and
    institutional collaborations.
  • 3A. Publicly visible scientific disasters or
    achievements significantly affecting public
    perspectives and thus funding.
  • 3B. Public understanding of the relationship of
    science and technology to the emerging knowledge
    economy.
  • Examples of Newly Suggested developments/actions/a
    nswers
  • Increased corporate control of scientific
    research.
  • Applications of breakthroughs of one discipline
    in other disciplines.
  • Change in focus of interest (and funding) moving
    away from computing etc. to biological sciences.
  • International sharing of major infrastructure.

22
What emerging technologies are likely to have
the most positive economic impact over the
next 25 years?
  • Most highly rated developments/actions/answers
  • 6E. New, clean and inexpensive energy
    technologies
  • 6A. Medicines derived from the knowledge founded
    in the Human Genome Project.
  • 6D. Nanotechnologies.
  • 6F. Genetically engineered products.
  • 6C. Increased bandwidth capacity for multi-media
    communications for all Internet users at
    affordable price.
  • Examples of Newly Suggested developments/actions/a
    nswers
  • Precision agriculture.
  • Much improved medical diagnostics and relatively
    inexpensive personal wearable and implant cable
    health monitors.
  • New materials such as high-temperature
    superconductors and Buckyballs, biocompatible
    implants.
  • Acceptable systems of energy generation by
    nuclear fission using advances in information
    technology for safety, operation, and monitoring
    and control of the nuclear waste stream by means
    such as transmutation, with acceptable means of
    waste storage.

23
What are some seminal, key, or profound
scientific developments that might occur during
the next 25 years?
  • Most highly rated developments/actions/answers
  • 4H. Fusion or some other forms of cheap, abundant
    power with minimal adverse environmental
    consequences.
  • 4D. Discovery of the underlying principle, "the
    final theory" that links quantum physics and
    relativity to explain the range of particles and
    forces that make up the universe.
  • 4F. Computers that achieve awareness and can
    evolve.
  • 4M. Capacity to build things cheaply and reliably
    by moving individual atoms and molecules.
  • 4G. Self-replicating nano-robots or biochemical
    structures.
  • Examples of Newly Suggested developments/actions/a
    nswers
  • Remote microprobes that can be implanted in, or
    circulated through, living organisms or deployed
    in extreme environments, such as the depth of the
    Earth's crust to collect chemical and physical
    data continuously and relatively inexpensively.
  • Human-computer symbiotics, such as implantable
    brain boosters, e.g. electro-bio-chemical
    processors with integrated random-access memories
    and telecommunication circuits.
  • Capacity to simulate and experiment with the
    brain's neurological functional modules, to
    diagnose disorders and provide therapy for
    example Parkinson's, ALS etc.
  • Reducing the cost of solar cell manufacture to
    less than 0.50 per watt.

24
Priorities 4.1 What would be the best investment
in basic science for your country's future?
  • Education
  • Biotechnology, Biology, Genetics
  • Computers, Information Systems
  • Environment, Ecology
  • Chemistry
  • Physics, including Plasma and High Energy
  • Energy
  • Advanced material science
  • Medicine, Health, life sciences
  • Space Technology, Space Station

25
Priorities 4.2 What would be the best investment
in applied science for your country's future?
  • Biotechnology, Biology, Genetics
  • Energy
  • Education
  • Environment, Ecology
  • Computers, Information Systems
  • Advanced material science
  • Medicine, Health, life sciences
  • Manufacturing, Productivity
  • Nanotechnology
  • Industry Cooperative Research

26
Priorities 4.3 What would be the best investment
in technology for your country's future?
  • Energy
  • Computers, Information Systems
  • Communications, Internet, Mobile
  • Nanotechnology
  • Biotechnology, Biology, Genetics
  • Education
  • Electronics
  • Environment, Ecology
  • Advanced material science
  • Manufacturing, Productivity

27
Priorities 4.4 What are your country's current
ST priorities?
  • Biotechnology, Biology, Genetics
  • Computers, Information Systems
  • Communications, Internet, Mobile
  • Advanced material science
  • Environment, Ecology
  • Military
  • Medicine, Health, life sciences
  • Transportation
  • Agriculture and Food

28
Priorities 4.5 What are the major ST challenges
important to your country that would (or do
already) benefit from an international
collaborative, interdisciplinary approach?
  • Biotechnology, Biology, Genetics
  • Medicine, Health, life sciences
  • Education, Knowledge Transfer, ST Marshall Plan
  • Space Technology, Space Station
  • Computers, Information Systems
  • Bi-lateral and multi-lateral programs
  • Communications, Internet, Mobile
  • Electronics
  • Environment, Ecology

29
Additional 71 questions suggested in Round 1
distilled to 19 by staff, then rated by the
Steering Committee
  • How can science become a more important part of
    the decision process?
  • What scientific developments could have the
    greatest impact on sustainability on earth even
    beyond 25 years?
  • How can inter-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary
    research be strengthened and accelerated?
  • How can the social economic impact of
    scientific research be evaluated?
  • How can funding of ST be directed toward
    research which more directly addresses the global
    basic needs of humanity?

30
Second Science Attachés Meeting
  • Attachés appreciated involvement in the study
  • Review categories in the National Priorities
    section
  • Current Priorities may have been misinterpreted
    ask what priorities are increasing in importance
  • Gov ST budget data available OECD, UNESCO
  • Add nuclear conflict to answers under question
    13.
  • Intro Rd 2 with short status report of the study
  • Go for more depth shortening lists of 14 and 19
  • Make the full text of Round 1 responses available

2. Use
31
UN Millennium Summit Speeches
The largest gathering of world leaders in history
assembled at the United Nations September 6-9,
2000 to assess the challenges of the 21st century.
  • 144 heads of State or Government
  • 6 Deputy Ministers,
  • 21 other Ministers
  • 5 Vice-Presidents
  • 1 Crown Price
  • 10 chairpersons of delegations
  • 10 observers
  • 2 from civil society (Conferences of Presiding
    Officers of the National Parliaments and the
    Millennium Forum)

32
UN Millennium Summit Speeches
  • 63 Key Concepts Grouped into 6 Themes
  • Globalization inevitable, Internet all, be
    careful
  • Rich-poor gap open markets, create partnerships
  • Peace and conflict Rapid response and prevention
  • Human rights Implement Intl agreements
  • UN reform expand SC, empower ECOSOC
  • Environment Kyoto, nuclear waste, basis of SD
  • Little ideological rancor
  • Finland We know the facts. We know what we want.
    We know how to get it. All we need is the will to
    do it.

33
UN Millennium Summit Speeches
34
UN Millennium Summit Speeches
35
Topic Stressed by Various Countries
36
Comparison Between Richer and Poorer Countries
37
Topics Most Often Mentioned by Poorer Countries
38
Topics most often mentioned by Richer Countries
39
Environmental Crimes in Military Actions and the
International Criminal Court
  • ICC 139 signatories and 28 ratifications
  • Documents, UN Interviews, Scenario Comments
  • ICC action on mil/env-crimes extremely unlikely
    since environment is law on the ICC priorities
    and must meet all of these conditions
  • most serious to the international community
  • specifically intended, not collateral damage
  • cause long-term and severe damage to the natural
    environment and clearly excessive to
    anticipated military gains
  • no legal basis in criminals country to act
    (Complementary)

40
Potential Env-Crimes in Military Actions and the
ICC
  • Country X would not send troops unless they were
    exempt from any ICC prosecution
  • A secret nuclear waste storage area is damaged
  • Prosecute the officer in charge of the biological
    weapons storage area
  • The major source of greenhouse gases refused to
    reduce its emissions
  • Country X which has not ratified the ICC statute
    says it will not cooperate with a case against
    one of its military officers

41
Environmental Security ScanningSome patterns and
questions
  • Sovereignty - UN early warning response teams,
    ICC and war crimes, genetically modified foods
    and organisms, environmental conditions that
    affect public health, Bioagent Chips deployed
    to detect biological warfare attacks. Where
    should the nation-state end and the UN begin to
    address environmental problems?
  • Worsening environment - forests, resources (fish,
    wet lands , water), greenhouse gases, and
    interaction of these. With water tables falling
    in all continents, and ethnic tensions on the
    rise, water pollution caused by one group
    affecting another could escalate more seriously
    than in the past. Putin abolishes Russias
    environmental protection agency.
  • Environmental Accounting - value of
    environmental conditions
  • Environmental Ministers ... we can ensure
    environmental security through early warning...
    raising environmental-security on global agenda.

42
Futures Research Methods V.2
  • Introduction Overview Environmental Scanning
  • Participatory Methods Structural Analysis
  • Delphi Systems and Modeling
  • Decision Modeling Scenario Construction
  • Trend Impact Analysis Cross-Impact Analysis
  • Statistical Modeling Simulation-Gaming
  • Futures Wheel Normative Forecasting
  • Technological Sequence Analysis
  • Relevance Trees and Morphological Analysis
  • Genius Forecasting, Vision, and Intuition
  • Method Frontiers and Integration

43
Additional Chapters for FRM Version 2.0
  • Science and Technology Roadmapping
  • Field Anomaly Relaxation
  • Godets tool box (Scenario, MIMAC, etc)
  • Text Mining
  • Summary of Non-linear Techniques Chaos Modeling
  • Software additions for methods
  • SOFI
  • Others

44
Discussion of Objectives for the 2001-2002
Program
  • Publish State of the Future at the Millennium V
    2.0
  • Publish Futures Research Methods CD-RO V 2.0
  • Rd 2 and report on Future Issues of ST
  • Yr 2 Future Issues of ST Management
    implications
  • Complete Env-Crime the ICC
  • Complete UN Millennium Summit Analysis
  • Partnership for Sustainable Development report
  • Complete SOFI paper, journal submission, and
    Delphi SOFI indicators for relative weights
  • Continue work on data mining for futures,
    Starlight, others
  • Nodes plans for next year
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