SPIE welcomes UNESCO endorsement for annual International Day of Light

Wide international support behind proposal to establish International Day as legacy for International Year of Light

20 October 2016
Eugene Arthurs at UNESCO

SPIE CEO Eugene Arthurs,
speaking on the
IYL 2015 Final Report
at UNESCO headquarters

BELLINGHAM, Washington, USA, and CARDIFF, UK — Endorsement by UNESCO of a proposal to establish an annual International Day of Light, as a legacy of the highly successful International Year of Light and Light-based Technologies 2015 (IYL 2015), is being welcomed by SPIE, the international society for optics and photonics, and other Founding Partners of IYL 2015.

John Dudley, Steering Committee Chair of IYL 2015, and Jean-Paul Ngome Abiaga, Assistant Programme Specialist in UNESCO’s International Basic Sciences Programme, announced today that the Executive Board of UNESCO has endorsed a proposal for an enduring follow-up to IYL 2015 in the form of an annual International Day of Light. The celebration would be held 16 May every year from 2018, marking the anniversary of the first successful firing of a laser.

“SPIE welcomes, and strongly supports, the establishment of an International Day of Light by the United Nations,” said SPIE President Robert Lieberman. “Optics and photonics — light science and technology — touch human lives every day, and profoundly influence society through improved health, better communication, cleaner energy, more efficient manufacturing, greater agricultural production, and many other ways.”

In increasing awareness of the extraordinary role of light in all our lives, said SPIE CEO Eugene Arthurs, “the UN-declared IYL 2015 observance made many of us more aware of widespread inequities such as light poverty, the many with no access to even simple eyeglasses, and the very uneven access to the light-powered internet for education and commerce.”

“Establishing the International Day of Light will provide an annual reminder of the progress of photonics-enabled technologies,” Arthurs said. “It will help us inspire more talented young people to take up careers in the field, to fulfil the enormous potential of which the IYL gave us a glimpse. And we can judge ourselves by how much progress we have made in bringing the gifts of light to all humankind.”

Lieberman emphasized the broad reach that illustrates the “tremendous success of the IYL 2015 observance in stimulating global awareness of the wonders and capabilities of modern optics and photonics.”

“SPIE’s members, joining others, reached millions of people in more than 147 countries, sharing a message of hope, and a sense of wonder, that resonated around the world,” he noted. “More and more people now understand that, from lasers to eyeglasses, from microscopes to telescopes, and from machines that make computer chips to machines that weld rocket ships, our field is changing things for the better. SPIE is delighted at this opportunity to expand upon and reinforce this important message every year.”

The International Day of Light proposal was introduced by sponsors Ghana, Mexico, New Zealand and the Russian Federation and examined by the UNESCO Executive Board during its 200th Session in Paris 4-18 October.

The resolution was adopted with 15 additional co-sponsors from Argentina, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Egypt, Iran, Lebanon, Malaysia, Morocco, Nicaragua, Serbia, Nigeria, Paraguay, Qatar, Vietnam, and Uganda.

The purpose of an International Day of Light will be to provide an annual focal point for the continued appreciation of the central role that light plays in the lives of the citizens of the world in areas of science, culture, education, sustainable development, and in fields as diverse as medicine, communications and energy, Dudley and Ngome Abiaga said in their announcement.

As with IYL 2015, they noted, the broad theme of light will allow many different sectors of society to participate in activities around the world that will raise awareness of science and technology, as well as art and culture and their importance in achieving the goals of UNESCO in promoting education, equality and peace.

The first International Day of Light celebration is planned for 16 May 2018 following its official Proclamation at the General Conference of UNESCO in November 2017.

IYL 2015 Founding Partners were the American Physical Society (APS), Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft (DPG), European Physical Society (EPS), IEEE Photonics Society (IPS), Institute of Physics (IOP), International Society for Optics and Photonics (SPIE), lightsources.org International Network, American Institute of Physics (AIP), The Optical Society (OSA), International Centre for Theoretical Physics (ICTP), 1001 Inventions, and Light: Science & Applications.

The Final Report of IYL 2015 was delivered to UNESCO in Paris during a special half-day meeting on 3 October and also presented to the United Nations Second Committee in New York on 18 October.

About SPIE

SPIE is the international society for optics and photonics, an educational not-for-profit organization founded in 1955 to advance light-based science, engineering and technology. The Society serves nearly 264,000 constituents from approximately 166 countries, offering conferences and their published proceedings, continuing education, books, journals, and the SPIE Digital Library. In 2015, SPIE provided more than $5.2 million in support of education and outreach programs. www.spie.org


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