Gulf Today

COP28 in UAE to create global architectu­re for all capital actors

Polit ical will, pr ivat e capit al and homegr own innovat ion r equir ed t o t ackle climate crisis as$100trillio­n of addit ional investment r equir ed t o t r ansit ion t o net zer o by 2060

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At a special session on climate philanthro­py hosted at the World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting in Davos, public, private and philanthro­py leaders gathered to amplify efforts to achieve net zero and nature positive goals. The session, titled ‘Philanthro­py: A Catalyst for Protecting Our Planet,’ took place as the United Arab Emirates prepares for hosting COP28 Emirates Climate Conference later this year.

In opening remarks, Borge Brende, President of the World Economic Forum, pointed out that less than 2% of global philanthro­py currently goes towards climate change action and called for greater collaborat­ion between stakeholde­rs to scale impact. He was followed by John F. Kerry, US Special Presidenti­al Envoy for Climate, who spoke of the urgent need to harness the power of catalytic philanthro­py to protect our planet.

Moderated by Gim Huay Neo, Managing Director, Centre for Nature and Climate, World Economic Forum, the session convened business and policy leaders including Mark Carney, UN Special Envoy for Climate Action and Finance, Desmond Kuek, CEO, Temasek Trust, Dr Rania Al-mashat, Minister of Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n, Egypt, and Badr Jafar, CEO of Crescent Enterprise­s.

Currently, between $7.5-12.5 billion of global philanthro­py is spent on climate action with funding for climate mitigation tripling in the past 5 years. The discussion focused on the opportunit­y for strategic philanthro­py to unlock trillions in private capital and government-procured funds towards meeting climate goals, while also highlighti­ng the important role for philanthro­py across global growth markets including the Middle East and North Africa to help create an enabling environmen­t to accelerate action.

Badr Jafar, CEO, Crescent Enterprise­s, who is also the Founding Patron of the Centre for Strategic Philanthro­py based at the University of Cambridge and Strategic Philanthro­py Initiative at NYU Abu Dhabi, commented: “Climate change affects us all. It has the potential to deeply impact human health and capital assets with issues such as extreme heat, water scarcity and poor air quality already creating systemic challenges for global growth markets. Rising to the challenge of tackling these issues requires a truly collaborat­ive approach, and a combinatio­n of political will, private capital and home-grown innovation if we are to unlock the $100 trillion additional investment needed to transition to net zero.”

The meeting also witnessed the launch of the World Economic Forum’s Giving to Amplify Earth Action (GAEA), a public-private-philanthro­py partnershi­p for climate and nature calling for a multi-stakeholde­r and multi-sector approach to embrace global philanthro­py to catalyse climate action, announcing Badr Jafar as a Champion of the initiative.

“As we witness the largest generation­al transfer of wealth of over 60 trillion dollars take place in the coming years, we have a unique opportunit­y to embrace a cultural shit in giving, to use this vast wealth to atain sustainabl­e and inclusive prosperity­globally,”badrjafarr­emarked.“regions like the Middle East and Africa stand the most to gain from climate adaption and mitigation investment­s, and COP28 in the UAE will create a global architectu­re for all capital actors to act together at speed and at scale,” he added.

The discussion was hosted as part of WEF’S climate multi-sector collaborat­ive to unlock the private finance and public funds needed to regenerate the earth systems across nature, ocean, conservati­on, restoratio­n, air quality, water, food systems, biodiversi­ty, industry decarbonis­ation and green technology deployment.

Crescent Enterprise­s is a leading multinatio­nal company, growing diversifie­d global businesses that are sustainabl­e, scalable, and profitable.

Headquarte­red in the United Arab Emirates, with business operations in 15 countries.

Saudi Arabia, represente­d by the Ministry of Economy and Planning (MEP), has joined the World Economic Forum’s (WEF) Jobs Consortium, it was announced at the organizati­on’s 2023 Annual Meeting in Davos.

The Jobs Consortium is a coalition of CEOS, IOS, ministers and other leaders with a common aim to promote a beter future of work for all by enabling job creation and job transition­s. The community of leaders works to boost foresight on labor market trends, support high job quality and fair wages, and identify investment­s in key sectors leading to good job creation.

The Kingdom’s membership in the Jobs Consortium aligns with Saudi Vision 2030 and its commitment to building a thriving, vibrant economy that creates new sectors, hundreds of thousands of new jobs, and cross-cuting innovation.

“People are the key driver of any successful transforma­tionandthe­sustainabi­lityofitso­utcome. Everything we do is focused on empowering our people by equipping them with the evolving set of tools and skills, and creating the opportunit­ies for them to capture, grow, and flourish,” said His Excellency Faisal bin Fadhil Alibrahim, Minister of Economy and Planning.

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A panel discussion is in progress at the event in Davos.
↑ A panel discussion is in progress at the event in Davos.

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