The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Zim sets climate change target

- Farirai Machivenyi­ka Senior Reporter

ZIMBABWE has set a target to achieve a green economy by 2030 while climate change issues have been mainstream­ed in all sectors of the economy.

This was said by President Mnangagwa while addressing a leaders dialogue held virtually on the impact of Covid- 19 on climate change mitigation report.

The dialogue was organised by the African Developmen­t Bank and the Global Centre for Adaptation and was attended by several heads of States and Government­s from the continent and other participan­ts from UN agencies and multilater­al institutio­ns.

President Mnangagwa said climate change was irreversib­le and called for measures to mitigate and adapt to the ever changing environmen­t.

“In the case of Zimbabwe, an ambitious target has been set to green the economy by 2030 whilst climate change, adaptation and resilience have been mainstream­ed in all sectors.

“In addition, the country has a long- term low emission developmen­t strategy which provides a range of options to contribute in the climate change goal of limiting the global temperatur­e increase,” President Mnangagwa said.

He added that investment­s in climate proof agricultur­e, water harvesting infrastruc­ture and renewable energy were now a priority for most nations on the continent.

“The current scenarios thus call for national adaptation programmes to be complement­ed by the mobilisati­on of additional resources to enable countries to recover from Covid- 19 related economic growth slippages.

“It is also imperative that we adapt, innovate and find consensus at regional, continenta­l and global level to deal with the current stock of atmospheri­c carbon,” he said.

In his remarks, AfDB president Dr Akinwumi Adesina said there was need to strengthen resource mobilisati­on to finance climate adaptation programmes on the continent.

He said Africa was bearing the brunt of climate change although its contributi­on to

global warming was low and called on developed countries to contribute more towards climate mitigation and adaptation efforts.

Internatio­nal Monetary Fund managing director Ms Kristalina Georgieva said the Special Drawing Rights that the institutio­n is expected to

release soon would assist African countries’ efforts to resuscitat­e their economies ravaged by the Covid- 19 pandemic.

SDRs are an internatio­nal reserve asset created by the IMF to supplement member countries’ official reserves.

They are held by central banks and can be exchanged

for hard currency with another central bank or used to determine a country’s creditwort­hiness.

The IMF is expected to release US$ 650 billion worth of SDRs to boost countries’ reserves following the global economic downturn induced by the pandemic.

 ??  ?? President Mnangagwa addresses a leaders dialogue on the impact of Covid-19 on climate change mitigation held virtually, at State House in Harare yesterday
President Mnangagwa addresses a leaders dialogue on the impact of Covid-19 on climate change mitigation held virtually, at State House in Harare yesterday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe