“Abandoning small villages, killing means the future of Italy”
“Designing together to rebuild“: In the title of the event organizer a Monte Grimano Terme the invitation to synergies between institutions and strategic sectors and to a fruitful dialogue between public administration and economic realities, to relaunch the country after the pandemic. In the small village of the Marche region, they met, in presence and remotely, politicians, managers, entrepreneurs, scholars. Under the lens the crisis of raw materials, the increase in energy costs, the challenge of autonomy. To govern the ecological transition, and not undergo it. “A real risk” – warns the mayor of Monte Grimano Elia Rossi, which underlines the need to move in time and with competence, above all involving the best minds of the country. “It is a detail that none of us had foreseen. However, as the pandemic made us grow in terms of technology, this crisis can give us the opportunity to reverse the trend that still saw us too much to natural gas, to that which was the ordinary flow of energy and how we normally recovered that energy. Creating the circular economy and the development we need “.
Focus also on the small villages, which are the real Italy, the beating heart of our economy and our roots, he says Gianni Letta. Words that offer Mayor Rossi an opportunity to appeal to the Government, to increase investments for the revival of micro-territoriality, “leaving the logic of cold numbers” and looking at the social, towards a new equilibrium. “If we forget the small villages – he warns – we forget where we come from, what made us great and what has always made Italy a reference country for the rest of the world. We have the opportunity to start from these small villages and create new well-being. Abandoning them, cutting off their services, killing means the future of Italy ”.
In the report Elia Rossi, mayor of Montegrimano