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The Interfaith Center for Sustainable Development (ICSD) is a nonprofit organization that engages in inter-religious projects on environmental sustainability. Its projects encourage the cooperation and training of religious leaders, teachers, and communities on ecological issues. Founded in 2010, ICSD is based in Jerusalem.

Interfaith Climate and Energy Conference
The ICSD and the Konrad Adenauer Stiftung, held the Interfaith Climate and Energy Conference in Jerusalem on March 19th, 2012. The Conference featured Jewish, Muslim, and Christian leaders from Israel, and via pre recorded religious leaders who spoke on the ethical need and religious basis for improvements on climate change and the use of renewable energy. The conference aimed to promote change for environmental sustainability within religious communities in Israel and worldwide. A video was filmed of part of the conference. This conference was reported on from approximately thirty news outlets worldwide.

Interfaith Eco Forum
In July 2011, ICSD held a panel discussion featuring Christian, Jewish, and Muslim religious figures speaking on the importance of environmental conservation and how it relates to their respective religions. One speaker, Auxiliary Bishop to the Latin Patriarch Msgr. William Shomali, stressed, "We are tourists on this land, and we will leave it one day, but we must leave it clean for the next generations, we must be accountable for how we use this common home." These sentiments were echoed by Deputy Minister of the Palestinian Authority’s Ministry of Religious Affairs Haj Salah Zuheika and AJC International Director of Interreligious Affairs Rabbi David Rosen, who agreed that respect for nature is equivalent to a respect for G-d and for G-d's creations.

2011 United Nations Climate Change Conference
ICSD collaborated with the Southern Africa Faith Communities Environment Institute and The Interfaith Declaration on Climate Change to organize two events in conjunction with the 2011 United Nations Climate Change Conference. The events featured a number of religious leaders and scientists who called for immediate action to address climate change. The speakers included Bishop Geoff Davis representing Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu, Christiana Figueres, head of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, and Ela Gandhi, granddaughter of Mohandas Gandhi and a Member of Parliament in South Africa from 1994-2004. The Interfaith Declaration on Climate Change issued a statement at the press conference, part of which stated, "We recognize that climate change is not merely an economic or technical problem, but rather at its core is a moral, spiritual and cultural one. We therefore pledge to join together to teach and guide the people who follow the call of our faiths. We must all learn to live together within the shared limits of our planet ... In this spirit, we call upon our leaders, those of our faiths, and all people of Earth to accept the reality of the common danger we face, the imperative and responsibility for immediate and decisive action, and the opportunity to change."

One Home Video Project
ICSD released a video in June 2012 that features world religious leaders, including the Dalai Lama, Patriarch Bartholomew, and Chief Rabbi Sacks, speaking out on environmental sustainability. This is the most recent video produced by the organization in a series of videos featuring faith leaders advocating action for environmental sustainability. The video was posted on a number of sites including Deseret News and the Huffington Post.

Holy Land Faith Leaders
The ICSD submitted a statement to the Council of Religious Institutions of the Holy Land pertaining to the Rio +20 United Nations Earth Summit. CRIHL represents the highest religious authorities in Israel. The statement by the ICSD proposed that inter-religious strife should be put aside so that people can work together to better the future of future generations. The statement also called on leaders everywhere to adopt science based targets that society as a whole can work towards.

In May 2011, The Council of the Religious Institutions of the Holy Land endorsed a statement submitted by ICSD calling for religious and political leaders and faith communities to act to curb climate change. Some of the statement read, "We call on adherents of our faiths in the Holy Land and worldwide to address this crisis by undertaking a deep reassessment of our spiritual and physical relationship to this God-given planet and how we consume, use and dispose of its blessed resources ... We hope that environmental challenges in our common home of the Holy Land and Planet Earth move religious adherents to overcome inter-religious strife and work together for ours and our children’s common well-being."

Interfaith Seminary Students Sustainability Project
The Interfaith Seminary Students Sustainability Project brings together Jewish, Muslim, and Christian seminary students from Israel for seminars on coexistence and ecological sustainability. These seminary students use their religious backgrounds to address the pressing matters of the environment. The seminars focus on environmental sustainability and human sustainability. Each session includes explorations of modern ecological and social challenges which are led by experts of the Jewish, Muslim, and Christian faiths.

Jewish Eco Seminars
Jewish Eco Seminars is another ICSD initiative that works with a range of groups on the connection between modern Israel, ecological innovation, and Jewish wisdom. Programs include outdoor, experiential activities as well as talks and site visits, offered in English, Hebrew, and Spanish in both Israel and North America.

Eco Israel Tours
Eco Israel Tours is a branch of the ICSD which provides a range of eco-tourism programs in Israel. Tours include visiting nature sites, eco innovation sites, and eco volunteering. These trips cover topics from "Israel in the Age of Globalized Food. Machane Yehuda Market, Jerusalem" to "Addressing Israel's Water Challenge. Ein Sataf Nature Reserve, Jerusalem Hills."