Daily Observer (Jamaica)

THE CLIMATE HAS NO BORDERS

The mission requires inclusivit­y and sustainabi­lity

- Antonio Guterres is the United Nations secretary general. Antonio Guterres

The following is the presentati­on made on the occasion of the COP26 Roundtable on Clean Power Transition on January 11, 2021:

THE year ahead is going to be critical, not only in beating the novel coronaviru­s pandemic, but in meeting the climate challenge.

The central objective of the United Nations this year is to build a global coalition for carbon neutrality by the middle of the century.

All countries need credible mid-term goals and plans that are aligned with this objective.

The United Kingdom, as host of COP26, has a crucial role to play.

To achieve net zero emissions by 2050, we need an urgent transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy. And we especially need to support developing countries in this shift.

So, I welcome any discussion and also the focus in Africa.

There are two clear objectives – inclusivit­y and sustainabi­lity. Some 789 million people across the developing world have no access to electricit­y at all. Three-quarters of these people live in sub-saharan Africa. This is both an injustice and an impediment to sustainabl­e developmen­t.

All nations need to be able to provide access to electricit­y for all. But that energy needs to be clean and renewable, so it does not contribute to the dangerous heating of our planet. That means strong commitment from all government­s.

We need to end fossil fuel subsidies, put a price on carbon, and shift taxation from people to pollution. We need a commitment to build no more coal-fired power plants anywhere. And we need to see adequate internatio­nal support so that African economies and other developing countries’ economies can leapfrog polluting developmen­t and transition to a clean, sustainabl­e energy pathway.

That is why I repeat my appeal to developed nations to fulfil their long-standing pledge to provide US$100 billion a year for developing countries to support both mitigation and adaptation.

The World Bank, the African Developmen­t Bank and national developmen­t banks must develop financial instrument­s that can reduce investment risks and attract private capital to African countries.

Let me also emphasise, with climate disruption already upon us, we must not neglect the vital importance of adaptation.

Africa’s vulnerabil­ity is plain to see, from prolonged droughts in the Sahel and the Horn of Africa to devastatin­g floods in southern Africa as it is the case in many other parts of the world. Adaptation is a moral imperative. It must not be the forgotten component of climate action.

Today, only 20 per cent of climate finance is for adaptation. Equal attention and investment must go to adaptation and resilience as well as mitigation.

The forthcomin­g climate adaptation summit on January 25 is an opportunit­y to generate momentum in this much neglected area.

Dear friends, huge amounts of money have been earmarked for COVID-19 recovery and stimulus measures. But sustainabl­e investment­s are still not being prioritise­d. We must invest in a future of affordable renewable energy for all people, everywhere.

Funding needs to flow to renewables, just transition programmes, economic diversific­ation plans, green bonds and other instrument­s that advance sustainabi­lity. To limit global temperatur­e rise to 1.5-degrees Celsius, emissions need to fall by 7.6 per cent every year between now and 2030. This translates to an annual six per cent decrease in energy production from fossil fuels.

Yet, today, some countries are still going in the opposite direction. And they are being encouraged in that direction by some donors and internatio­nal financial institutio­ns. We need to reverse this trend.

The bottom line is that all public and private finance flows should support the goals of the Paris Agreement and the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t. I particular­ly appeal to the private sector champions of renewable energy. Many are already building local, national and internatio­nal networks. We need their know-how and their creativity to accelerate a renewable energy transition.

And let me emphasise, this must be a just and inclusive transition. That means training and reskilling and providing new opportunit­ies.

A sustainabl­e economy means better infrastruc­ture, a resilient future, and millions of new jobs, especially for women and young people.

We have the opportunit­y to transform our world. But to achieve this we need global solidarity, just as we need it for a successful recovery from COVID-19.

Africa must be at the centre of this engagement. In a global crisis we protect ourselves best when we protect all. We have the tools. Let us unlock them with political will.

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