What happened with Sustainocracy attempts in 2024?

Sustainocracy as a society places itself at the side of the natural human being as an unique manifestation of nature. This natural aspect conditions our existence to a set of core responsibilities that we tend to forget about when focusing on the political financial dictate. This dictate tends to absorb all human and natural resources, producing dangerous tensions around the world, unless naturally counteracted for the benefit of nature, human sustainable perspectives and even the system itself. If there would not be any counteracting parts, the system would make itself and humankind obsolete due to its parasitic nature in the hands of immaturely organized self interests.

Three publications of 2024 can be shared to develop our understandings:

First: Breaking with the financial dominance to enter the world of existential human values. My own choices serve as an example. So do the choices of the city of Eindhoven.

Secondly: The dominance of the financial world as a single dimension of our reality has negatively impacted our mental health.

Thirdly: 2024 was the 15th year of sustainocratic attempts to invite people and institutions to work together on core human values. This is what happened:

Podcast about sustainocracy and developing a new and sustainable reality together (8 minutes)

Discover Reading: World Meteorology Day 2026 ResearchPod

What if one university helped shape modern climate science? Discover how the University of Reading became synonymous with the field and why it remains at the centre of that story.This World Meteorology Day 2026, we trace the evolution of climate science, from the Antarctic ozone hole in 1985 to today’s global challenges, and explore how Reading became a hub for the ideas, research and people driving the field forward.In this episode, Professor Hannah Cloke OBE from the University of Reading's Department of Meteorology speaks with Professor Keith Shine FRS, the UK’s Regius Professor of Climate Science, and Dr Jolene Cook OBE, climate science advisor to the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero and the UK’s representative to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).Together, they examine Reading’s role in climate science and reflect on the field’s growth and future. Their journeys, shaped in part by the university, offer insight into how the discipline has developed, how universities and government are preparing the next generation of climate scientists, and the opportunities ahead for early career researchers.CHAPTERS00:00 – Discover Reading, a global centre for climate science00:52 – Meet the voices, Keith Shine and Jolene Cook02:10 – Pathways into climate science, where it all began04:32 – 1985 and beyond, the ozone hole and growth of atmospheric science07:25 – A defining role, the UK’s first Regius Professor of Climate Science09:00 – Learning at Reading, shaping a generation of scientists12:52 – From science to policy, the role of the IPCC17:00 – Preparing the next generation, universities, government and early career opportunities25:30 – Reading at 100, looking ahead to the next century of climate science
  1. Discover Reading: World Meteorology Day 2026
  2. Improving Youth Mental Health | The Enterprise Sessions with Dr Myles-Jay Linton
  3. Powering the Future of Semiconductors and Clean Energy | The Enterprise Sessions with Prof Martin Kuball and Dr Katie Hore
  4. How Global Science Supports Our Future Climate
  5. Digital Futures & Ancient History: Bridging Worlds Through Games | The Enterprise Sessions with Dr. Richard Cole 

Transforming and enhancing the world of education with human values

The financial system has provided humankind with obvious benefits. But as time went by the system also developed into a single dimension of our human reality, abusive, dictatorial, competitive and unethical. This has developed into unprecedented tension, not only at societal or ecological level but also within the scope of our natural human values, our mental, physical and emotional resilience. Having positioned my own stir research foundation and related activities fully at the side of core human values, the impact of that forced single dimension became visible. A visibility that remained obscured when emerged fully in the functioning of the system. Only the symptoms were increasingly visible, treated by the financial system as a costly problem rather than displaying empathy and self reflection of being part of the cause. The system does not provide with an alternative, but humankind does, placing the financial world at a less dominant position, as a means, not a goal.

By doing so, the entire human reality transforms, applying multiple dimensions to our daily activities. We see this happening all over the world as an evolutionary process of humankind. This equally leads to attempts to include values in our educational activities. Worldwide I try to interact with like minded scholars that do research in the field, complementing my own empirical experiences with statistics. Interesting research was published recently by Wai Chun Cherry Au from Hong Kong who teaches values to a group of students with whom I had the opportunity to interact online.