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Environment Online E N O 2000 – 2010 Mika Vanhanen Why did it start? • A need for an environmental education programme that has local and global points • A need to utilize ICT in learning • A need for interaction between schools • Environment Online – ENO was created at Eno Primary school by teachers Mika Vanhanen and Urpo Ahlholm in 1999 ENO Concept • Learning about environment through hands-on activities • Sharing the results of learning during ENO Campaigns locally and globally • Children and youth as ambassadors of environment • A shared expertise and community involvement Studied ENO Topics • Based on different dimensions of sustainable development: ecological, economical, social and cultural • Most favourite topics: forests, climate change, ecological footprint, water, cultural heritage 2000 • Administrated by the Eno municipality • Started as an umbrella project for NetDays Europe, supported by European Commission and National Board of Ed • 50 schools from 30 countries • Awards: III prize in EcoGallery Europe (Spain) 2001 • 73 schools in 43 countries • Chats between students, summaries of material available • Awards: III prize in Childnet Awards, Washington DC 2002 • 105 schools in 51 countries • A finalist in the Stockholm Challenge Awards and Global Junior Challenge Awards (Rome) • First ENO conference in Eno, July 2002 2003 • ENO moved under the administration of the city of Joensuu • 132 schools in 53 countries • Schools started to do twinning projects • Climate change was firstly introduced • Awards: 1) Quality Prize in eLearning, Ministry of Education 2) Cyber Oscar in WSIS, Geneva 2004 • 180 schools in 168 countries • ENO Tree Planting Day first time in 21th of September 2004 • Awards: WWF Panda Award • ENO Conference in Mooiriver, Kwa Zulu Natal, South Africa 2005 • • • • 200 schools in 75 countries Memorandum of understanding with UNEP ENO joined Helsinki Conference Her Majesty Queen Noor and EU commissioner Margot Wallström joined ENO Mothers Network 2006 • • • • 300 schools in 90 countries Dr Jane Goodall joined ENO Mothers ENO Africa meeting in Finland Awards: Special mention in the Stockholm Challenge Awards • A pledge of 100 000 trees to UNEP’s Billion Tree Campaign 2007 • 400 schools in 104 countries • ENO Tree Planting Play was performed simultaneously at 200 schools in 65 countries 29th of May 2010 (in 40 languages) • Over 1000 schools joined ENO Tree Planting Day in September and planted 123 000 trees • Awards: Winner of Global Junior Challenge Awards, Rome 2008 • 1500 schools in 122 countries • 600 000 trees planted • ENO Conference in Finland, participants from 43 countries/ ENO Africa Declaration • The launch of ENO 100 Million Trees by 2017 in June 2008 2009 • Administrated by ENO Programme Association/ ENOverkkokoulun tuki ry • 3000 schools in 134 countries • 3.5 million trees planted • ENO Conference in Joensuu, Finland • Awards: 1) Energy Globe Awards, Prague 2) Forestry Achievement 2009, Helsinki 2010 • National ENO coordinators and secretaries in 134 countries • National websites in 30 countries • The first meeting of ENO Advisory Board • Spread to 150 countries, 6 000 schools take part • Preparing for 2011, The international year of forests and conference in Finland Another 10 years, how? • We will work on that but need assistance from all of you. Together for sustainability. A message from Jane Goodall