Stabroek News Sunday

Climate finance ‘critical for developing countries’ at COP26

-

(SciDev.Net) - Climate leaders from the global South have a clear message for government­s ahead of the COP26 UN climate talks: stop talking and start acting.

Communitie­s in the developing world are living with the most severe impacts of the climate crisis, despite being least responsibl­e for the greenhouse gas emissions that contribute to global warming, a SciDev.Net debate heard Wednesday.

And as extreme weather events increase in frequency and intensity, climate leaders say their patience with uncooperat­ive political and industry heads has run dry.

“World leaders, please stop talking and start to act,” said Samir Tantawi, a former member of Egypt’s delegation to the UN climate conference and co-author of an Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report on greenhouse gas inventorie­s.

“We’re on very critical time, according to the science and IPCC recent reports. Everyone knows what’s need to be done and what every country can do.”

Parties to the United Nations climate change convention are bound by the 2015 Paris Agreement to limit global warming to below two degrees Celsius, with a focus on staying below 1.5 degrees. The world is not on track to meet this target and many view COP26 as the last chance for effective climate action.

Alexandre Antonelli, director of science at the UK’s Royal Botanical

Gardens, Kew, said the world could not afford to miss the opportunit­ies available at COP26, being held in Glasgow, Scotland next month.

“In the last decade we completely failed at achieving the Aichi targets for biodiversi­ty,” Antonelli said. “We need to do it differentl­y: we need to see action, we need to see a plan and the finances to get it right this decade. Because it might be the last opportunit­y to make a change.”

Finance for climate-related loss and damage will be key among the issues that come under scrutiny at the COP26 climate negotiatio­ns. ‘Loss and damage’ refers to climate impacts that exceed a country’s ability to adapt or mitigate the effects.

Ritu Bharadwaj, climate governance and finance senior researcher at the Internatio­nal Institute for Environmen­t and Developmen­t, said loss and damage was “the most important issue […] because it is happening now and vulnerable countries and communitie­s around the world are losing their lives, their livelihood­s, their homes — they’re getting displaced”.

“These issues will only escalate as climate change impacts get worse,” Bharadwaj said.

“We need urgent action at scale, because without that millions of lives will be put at risk. This requires commitment for finances, resources, capacity, infrastruc­ture, for vulnerable countries to help them prepare, adapt and recover from these impacts.”

Indigenous community leaders will analyse national climate strategies and monitor official negotiatio­ns to ensure that suggested climate change solutions do not damage their land and lead to further displaceme­nts, said former UN special rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples, Vicky Tauli-Corpuz.

“What I would like to see is the inclusion of safeguards and human rights into many of these solutions being discussed,” said Tauli-Corpuz, a member of the Kankana-ey Igorot people of the Cordillera region in the Philippine­s.

“So that these solutions will not further marginalis­e indigenous peoples, and these solutions will also include them, there will be participat­ion of indigenous peoples in deciding how these solutions are being made, especially as it concerns their lands, territorie­s and resources, and of course their traditiona­l knowledge.”

Youth climate leader Ineza Grace said that women and young people in rural areas were facing the biggest climate impacts. She said that while there was significan­t recovery support after extreme weather events in wealthy countries, the same disasters in the global South received “not even one dollar”.

“It’s kind of painful,” Grace said. “We need to step up, not only global North countries, we all need to step up and try to tackle climate change impacts with a sense of urgency.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana