Manon Fossat 1:46 p.m., September 6, 2021

The day after the Giverny Forum, the annual CSR meeting, the general manager of the "French impact" association, Stéphanie Goujon, was Dimitri Pavlenko's guest on "Europe Matin".

She delivered her vision of ecological transition and affirmed that we had to act collectively to achieve our goals.

INTERVIEW

It is the first concern of the French, whatever their age, their level of income or their political affiliation: climate change.

Of the 100 billion euros of the recovery plan announced last year by the government, 30 are devoted to ecological transition.

Guest of

Europe Matin on

Monday, Stéphanie Goujon, general manager of the association "French impact" returned to the Giverny Forum, the annual meeting of CSR (corporate social and environmental responsibility) in which she participated this week. -end and on his vision of the transformation that the country must initiate. 

>> Find the morning show of the day in replay and podcast here

"What we defend is that the funds mobilized go more to local projects which allow jobs that cannot be relocated and which are, because they are in direct contact with their environment, more concerned with these ecological issues, "she explained, expressing concern that the 30 billion euros allocated by the state does not irrigate small regions.

"Create a lot more bridges"

"The revival must be at the same time social, territorial and ecological. And for that, it is necessary to create much more bridges between what is often decided at the national level and the projects of the smallest companies and organizations which consider that they constitute a extremely important economic fabric, ”she continued.

"For companies, CSR was not to hurt and the impact is to do well. The impact is therefore a triple performance, both economic, social and environmental," he said. -she explains.

READ ALSO

- These companies which abandon the company car in favor of the bicycle

According to her, to succeed in respecting the Paris Agreement, there is urgency and all stakeholders must get their hands dirty. Because it is indeed collective action that will make it possible to move things forward. "It is cooperation between the government, NGOs and large groups that will allow us to achieve our objectives," said Stéphanie Goujon, who recalls, "the impact is a transformation".