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The United Nations International Day of Zero Waste, led jointly by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) and UN Human Settlements Programme (UN-Habitat), “highlights the importance of bolstering waste management globally and the need to promote sustainable consumption and production patterns to address the waste pollution crisis.”

The 2025 theme focuses on waste reduction in the fashion and textile industries. Inspired by zero-waste initiatives outlined in the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, this international observance promotes a “reduce, reuse, recycle” approach at consumer, governmental, and industrial levels to advance more sustainable practices in the sector.

This topic was addressed in a 2022 Global Ties San Francisco webinar, “Climate Change in Africa: Local and Global Implications,” featuring speakers from the United States Institute of Peace (USIP) and the City and County of San Francisco Department of the Environment. The discussion explored how climate-related challenges manifest differently across regions and what local and global communities can learn from climate mitigation strategies attempted in Africa.

During the webinar, Aly Verjee, Senior Advisor to the Africa Center at USIP, reflected on the unintended consequences of clothing donations, emphasizing the importance of considering where these items ultimately go:

“When we put clothes in the donation bin, we think we’re doing a good thing, but perhaps inadvertently we are often just exporting our disposal problem elsewhere.”

Some donations are repurposed, but a large portion is exported to other countries, where local infrastructure may struggle to manage the influx of textile waste effectively. This can contribute to environmental challenges, including waste accumulation and emissions from incineration.

Reflecting on potential solutions, Verjee spoke not only to the need for systemic change in textile waste management but also individual responsibility in donating clothing thoughtfully and considering how the lifecycle of used clothing often extends beyond one’s local community. His remarks highlighted the broader implications of textile waste management and the interconnected nature of global consumption patterns.

Watch the webinar for more information: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ez10VD1czcE

Authors: Lily Langley & Alannah Crandall

International Visitors enjoying Muir Woods National Monument

The United Nations International Day of Forests is recognized on the 21st of March to raise awareness of the importance of all types of forests. The 2025 theme, Forests and Foods, highlights the vital role of forests in food security, nutrition, and livelihoods. Beyond providing sustenance and income, forests support ecosystems, protect water and soil, and offer habitats for biodiversity, among other benefits.

Here in the San Francisco Bay Area, Muir Woods National Monument — proclaimed a National Monument in 1908 to protect and preserve the land — is one of the last remaining forested areas of coast Redwood trees. These giant evergreens can stand up to 79 meters tall and average between 600 and 800 years old, with the oldest being at least 1,200 years old. The park is home to 380 different plants and animals, ranging from bats that find refuge in tree cavities to Coho salmon and steelhead trout that swim in the clear waters of Redwood Creek.

Known for its towering stand of old-growth coast Redwood trees, Muir Woods attracts visitors from all over the world to experience this unique breathtaking ecosystem. Beyond its natural beauty, Muir Woods is also a site of profound historical significance, where nature, diplomacy, and the pursuit of peace intersect.

Did you know San Francisco is the birthplace of the United Nations, and Muir Woods played a symbolic role in its founding?

During a pivotal time in history, as World War II neared its end, world leaders convened in San Francisco for the United Nations Conference on International Organization (UNCIO) from April 25 to June 26, 1945, to draft and sign the UN Charter. Relatively equidistant between Asia, Europe, and Latin America, picturesque San Francisco was well positioned for a global gathering.

As preparations for the San Francisco Conference were underway, it was proposed that the delegates visit the serenity of Muir Woods to reflect in “a ‘temple of peace’ [where] the delegates would gain a perspective and sense of time that could be obtained nowhere in America better than in a forest.” U.S. Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes described Muir Woods as a natural cathedral, where trees older than the Magna Carta stood as enduring witnesses to history.

When U.S. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt — who had championed the creation of a new international system to maintain peace — passed away two weeks before the conference began, the retreat to Muir Woods took on additional significance.

In tribute to his legacy, over 500 delegates from 46 nations gathered in Muir Woods Cathedral Grove on May 19, 1945, to honor the late president and reaffirm their commitment to building a more peaceful world. This commemoration cemented Muir Woods’ place in global history, making it not only a site of natural wonder but also a symbol of international cooperation, diplomacy, and the enduring pursuit of peace.

Today, as we celebrate the UN International Day of Forests, we are reminded that forests are even more than ecological treasures — they are also places of inspiration and unity, where people from different nations come together, as they did in 1945, to contemplate a shared future.

Through our work with the U.S. Department of State’s International Visitor Leadership Program (IVLP) and other custom exchanges, Global Ties San Francisco continues this tradition by bringing international visitors to experience the majesty of Muir Woods. In doing so, we reinforce San Francisco’s role as a center for global engagement, fostering the same spirit of global exchange and mutual understanding that underlined the founding of the United Nations nearly 80 years ago.

#ForestDay

Author: Song Held
Editor: Alannah Crandall