Today marks the countdown to Rio+20.
100 days to go to a conference and a summit that UN Secretary-General Ban ki-Moon has described as a "once in a life time opportunity".
If the UN Conference on Sustainable Development 2012 or Rio+20 is to make a difference it needs all citizens to be on board-from women and indigenous peoples to farmers, youth, city fathers and mothers, political leaders and captains of industry.
It will not happen on its own.
The official UN slogan is "The Future We Want"-the future you want may be many things.
But it cannot be a future based on the status quo.
A lot has been achieved in the past two decades from putting the health of the ozone layer back on track in order to spare the Earth from the sun's deadly ultra violet rays to meeting the poverty related Millennium Development Goal on access to safe water.
But the fact is that a lot remains to be done, it is at best a work in progress.
Far too many of the dials on the sustainability dashboard are or are heading into the red including the buildup of greenhouse gases to the plight of the world's fisheries and youth unemployment.
According to UNEP's report, "Keeping Track of our Changing Environment: From Rio to Rio+20" - produced as part of UNEP's "Global Environmental Outlook-5 (GEO 5) series":
This is happening in a world of seven billion people-1.5 billion more than in 1992-set to rise to over nine billion by 2050.
One of the two overarching themes of the UN Conference on Sustainable Development or 'Rio+20' is a Green Economy in the context of sustainable development and poverty eradication.
Is there a smarter and more intelligent way of implementing sustainable development-one that grows economies but with positive social and environmental outcomes? UNEP believes there is.
The other is an institutional framework for sustainable development-in short do we have the best structures and institutional arrangements to deliver a sustainable century.
It is time to raise your voice, like the unprecedented voices raised and actions taken 20 years ago across all sections of society.
The UN's Department of Public Information would like to hear it along with your solutions, vision and ideas for the Future We Want in order to inform Rio+20 and the wider world.
Please share your vision and aspirations for Rio+20 at: http://www.uncsd2012.org/rio20/index.php?menu=117