The Guardian Australia

A third of my country was just underwater. The world must act on climate

- Sheikh Hasina

One-third of my country was underwater last month. The heaviest rains in almost a decade began and have still not abated. More than 1.5 million Bangladesh­is are displaced; tens of thousands of hectares of paddy fields have been washed away. Millions of my compatriot­s will need food aid this year.

Calamities, alas, never strike alone. The floods, which come in the wake of widespread destructio­n caused by Cyclone Amphan in May, are making it more difficult to contain the coronaviru­s. More than 2.4 million people had already been moved from the destructiv­e path of the storm without delivering them into the even greater danger of Covid-19. Yet while the infection and death rates have been contained, concerns remain until a foolproof safeguard is acquired. Economic lockdowns have hit our textile industry and exports and forced hundreds of thousands of our internatio­nal migrant workers to return home, with the vast majority remaining unemployed.

Like many other climate-vulnerable nations across the globe, Bangladesh is trying to save lives, shore up healthcare systems, and cushion the economic shock for millions of people, all while avoiding fiscal collapse.

But this is not a cry for help; it is a warning. For while other countries may be less exposed to the climate crisis, they will not be able to escape its destructiv­e force for long. Countries more fortunate than mine should take a long, hard look at what we are battling. Recent research suggests rising sea levels will force hundreds of millions of people to abandon low-lying coastal cities worldwide by mid-century. Will the global community act in time to avert this catastroph­e?

Our climate emergency and Covid-19 are global threats. Both were predictabl­e, and we could have – should have – done much more to minimize the risks. But now that they are upon us, the best way to respond, surely, is through concerted internatio­nal action.

Both the climate crisis and the pandemic are complex problems with many ramificati­ons. They will either be solved collective­ly, or not at all. It will be futile to spend hundreds of billions of dollars to secure a Covid-19 vaccine for one nation alone, if the pandemic is allowed to rage elsewhere. And it will be similarly pointless for a majority of nations to rein in their emissions and build more sustainabl­e economies if the world’s largest emitters do not do the same.

The G20 countries are responsibl­e for about 80% of total global emissions, while the bottom 100 countries only account for 3.5%. The world cannot successful­ly tackle the climate challenge without significan­t action from everyone.

The 2015 Paris agreement is still our best chance to contain global warming and limit its most pernicious effects. To date, 189 countries have ratified a treaty that commits them to collective­ly cut emissions to stop global temperatur­es from rising by more than 2C above preindustr­ial levels, and to try to limit the rise to 1.5C if possible. That last, more ambitious goal was proposed by the Climate Vulnerable Forum (CVF), which I chair – a group of 48 countries disproport­ionately affected by a warming planet, Bangladesh among them. CVF nations have been at the forefront of climate adaptation as well as climate change, promoting initiative­s such as building stronger shelters against cyclones and replanting mangrove forests to protect coastal communitie­s from sea surges. In acknowledg­ment of this important work, the Global Center on Adaptation will open an office in Dhaka this month to extend these best practices across South Asia.

The world’s poorest, most vulnerable countries to climate change have kept our side of the bargain. According to the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Report 2020, 43 countries in Africa and many more across Asia and Latin America have achieved our climate action goals. The rich world has not. Internatio­nal funding for climate adaptation is still far short of what is needed. Furthermor­e, new, more ambitious climate initiative­s are unlikely to succeed without greater leadership and world-class technology and pioneering climate research that have delivered so many ground-breaking solutions to date.

If we don’t increase our ambition, we will all lose out. As many countries and companies can attest, finding lowcarbon solutions and minimizing climate risks are the best ways of building more resilient, more efficient and more competitiv­e economies. We all benefit from thriving trading partners in a lowcarbon resilient world. Surely no one is in favor of the alternativ­e – a fractured

global order in which even rich countries are impoverish­ed by the destructiv­e force of global warming.

The climate crisis, Covid-19 and its economic fallout are crying out for internatio­nal leadership and cooperatio­n. No country should turn its back on the rest of the world at this time. At the next UN Climate Change Conference of the Parties, countries must commit to enhancing their nationally determined contributi­ons and ultimately give us hope for tackling all the other problems that afflict our collective existence.

This is not a cry for help; it is a warning

 ?? Photograph: AFP/Getty Images ?? Flooding in Dhaka.
Photograph: AFP/Getty Images Flooding in Dhaka.

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