Times of Eswatini

Choose climate ‘solidarity’ or ‘collective suicide’

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EGYPT - Humanity is in ‘the fight of our lives’ as climate change intensifie­s droughts, floods and heatwaves, UN Chief Antonio Guterres warned world leaders Monday at talks in Egypt on curbing global warming.

In the midst of a barrage of internatio­nal crises battering economies and shaking internatio­nal relations - from the COVID-19 pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine to weather extremes - Guterres said the internatio­nal community faces a stark choice.

Cooperate

“Cooperate or perish,” he told leaders at the UN COP27 summit in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheik. “It is either a Climate Solidarity Pact, or a Collective Suicide Pact.”

Guterres called for a ‘historic’ deal between rich countries and emerging economies that would aim to reduce emissions and keep the temperatur­e rise to the more ambitions Paris Agreement target of 1.5 degrees Celsius above the pre-industrial era.

He said the target should be to provide renewable and affordable energy for all, calling on the top emitters, the United States and China, in particular to step up their efforts.

Hell

On the current trajectory, the UN chief said, ‘we are on a highway to climate hell with our foot still on the accelerato­r’. At around 1.2C of warming so far, impacts are already accelerati­ng on all fronts.

Major droughts in the Horn of Africa have pushed millions to the edge of starvation, deadly floods in Pakistan swamped farmland and destroyed infrastruc­ture, causing more than US$30 billion in damage and losses according to the World Bank.

Lagging

Meanwhile, the global community is lagging behind both on efforts to cut planet-heating emissions and payments to vulnerable countries to help them build resilience and green their economies.

On Sunday, developing nations won a small victory when delegates agreed to put the controvers­ial issue of money for ‘loss and damage’ - aid for the impacts already being felt - on the summit agenda.

Guterres said it was a ‘moral imperative’ for richer polluters to help vulnerable countries, which often are the least responsibl­e for climate change.

He said the Ukraine war and an array of other crises facing the world may capture much attention, but stressed that many of these are linked to ‘growing climate chao’.

The UN chief also addressed the massive biodiversi­ty loss that has seen human activity drive the planet’s sixth mass extinction crisis, threatenin­g the food we eat, water we drink and air we breathe.

“Let’s not forget that the war on nature is in itself a massive violation of human rights,” Guterres said.

The climate fight ‘will be won or lost in this crucial decade on our watch,’ he said.

 ?? (Pic: Supplied) ?? The donkey-drawn carts are used to ferry children to school, the sick to clinics and the elderly to pension pay points.
(Pic: Supplied) The donkey-drawn carts are used to ferry children to school, the sick to clinics and the elderly to pension pay points.

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