In recent decades, many international initiatives, workshops, and meetings at the highest levels have raised public awareness of the serious risks that climate change poses, on the one hand, and the distortions generated by globalization, on the other. From this perspective, the idea of a transition towards a so-called “post-carbon” and “human-faced” society is slowly gaining ground, with the main objectives being: reducing greenhouse gas emissions, developing selfsufficiency regarding carbon energies, and enhancing sufficient capacity to adapt to climate change in addition to having growth that is more inclusive. At the COP 22 held in Morocco in 2016, debates focused on alternatives to the dominant
economic model, in order to encourage the other way of doing business that combines profitability, social utility and climate protection. A way that places the human, solidarity and the environment at the heart of all projects. And this is what the SDGs (Sustainable Development Goal) of the UN 2030 agenda aspire to achieve. The latter advocates the “leave no one behind” policy. By sharing growth and securing one another’s growth, long-lasting and sustainable development can be ensured and anchored in a principle of inclusiveness and sharing.