Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Climate chaos, food crises threaten global peace: UN chief

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THE U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Tuesday warned that climate change and food crises pose increasing threats to global peace, saying “empty bellies fuel unrest.”

Guterres urged the U.N. Security Council to address the impact of food shortages and rising temperatur­es on internatio­nal peace and security – a view echoed by many countries but not Russia.

“Climate and conflict are two leading drivers of (our) global food crisis,” the secretary-general said. “Where wars rage, hunger reigns - whether due to displaceme­nt of people, destructio­n of agricultur­e, damage to infrastruc­ture, or deliberate policies of denial.”

“Meanwhile, climate chaos is imperiling food production the world over,” he said.

Guterres said the world is teeming with examples of “the devastatin­g relationsh­ip between hunger and conflict.”

In war-torn Gaza, he said, no one has enough to eat and the tiny strip accounts for 80% of the 700,000 hungriest people in the world. After more than a decade of war in Syria, he said, 13 million Syrians go to bed hungry every night. And in Myanmar, prospects of ending hunger have gone into reverse because of conflict and instabilit­y, he said.

Simon Stiell, the United Nations climate chief, told the council that climate change is contributi­ng to food insecurity and to conflict.

He said one in 10 people on the planet today already suffers from chronic hunger and if climate change accelerate­s, “it will become worse.”

“Rapid, sustained action to cut greenhouse gas emissions and to increase resilience is needed now to help stop both from spiraling out of control,”

Stiell said.

The executive secretary of the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change said the Security Council “must acknowledg­e more can be done rather than hoping the problem will go away – which it won’t.”

The U.N.’s most powerful body should be requesting regular updates on climate security risks, he said.

NO FOOD, NO PEACE

Beth Bechdol, deputy director of the U.N. Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on, said scientific evidence is clear: “Climate change is compromisi­ng food security, and its impacts are a growing threat to internatio­nal peace and security.”

She reiterated a longtime FAO warning: “There is no food security without peace, and no peace without food security.”

Bechdol said 258 million people in 58 countries are facing high levels of food insecurity and over two-thirds of them – 174 million people – are at high hunger levels because of climate and conflict.

“While there may not be a direct causality between the two, there is clear evidence that climate change increases risks and drivers of conflict and instabilit­y, such as disputes over land and water,” Bechdol said. “And conflict contribute­s to climate change vulnerabil­ity, especially for people who are forced to leave their homes and migrate.”

As an example of the complex relationsh­ip between climate change and conflict, she pointed to West and Central

Africa herders who had peacefully crossed borders with their livestock in search of water and pasture for years. But climate change, environmen­tal and security pressures have led to increased tensions and competitio­n between herders and farmers for scarce resources including water and land, she said.

Bechdol stressed that climate change and conflict affect not only livestock but crop production, fishing and forestry “which are intimately and inextricab­ly linked to climate change.”

She urged the U.N. and others to focus on agricultur­e “as a key solution to the growing threats from climate change, conflict and their impacts on food security.”

Guyana’s President Mohamed Irfaan Ali, whose country holds the council presidency this month and chaired the meeting, said the impact of climate change and food insecurity on internatio­nal peace and security was chosen as the topic for the meeting because of the increasing links. About 90 countries were expected to speak over two days.

“Conflict is the primary driver of acute food insecurity in Africa, and the same can be said about Haiti,” Ali told the meeting, adding the war in Gaza is putting tons of carbon emissions into the atmosphere.

“The Security Council must take into account the consequent­ial effects on food security and climate in addressing the issues of conflict and war,” the president said, stressing that “these issues are intricatel­y linked to the rule of law, democracy and governance.”

 ?? ?? A woman carries a bucket of water on her head in the French Indian Ocean territory of Mayotte, Oct. 12, 2023.
A woman carries a bucket of water on her head in the French Indian Ocean territory of Mayotte, Oct. 12, 2023.

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