Arab Times

Sharjah’s ruler and Al Gore attend climate change meet

Govt’s role vital: ex-US VP

-

SHARJAH, March 25: His Highness Sheikh Dr Sultan bin Mohamed Al Qasimi, Member of Supreme Council and Ruler of Sharjah attended a conversati­on panel with Al Gore, former US vice-president and founder-chairman of the Climate Reality Project as part of the sixth edition of Internatio­nal Government Communicat­ion Forum (IGCF 2017) at the Expo Centre Sharjah.

Headlined ‘Climate Change … Are There Real Solutions?’ the lively panel discussion was moderated by HE Sheikh Fahim bin Sultan Al Qasimi, Executive Chairman of the Department of Government Relations in Sharjah. The discussion explored the role of government­s in educating society on the existentia­l threat of climate change and raising awareness of sustainabl­e climate changing solutions.

Disturbing numbers pertaining to environmen­tal degradatio­n continue to sound alarm bells across the globe at regular intervals. The World Bank, in collaborat­ion with the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, published a report in September 2016 pointing out that air pollution costs the world economy over $225 billion a year due to employee absences from work and the accrued costs of healthcare. The report also noted that an astounding 5.5 million deaths in 2013 were the direct result of air pollution.

Climate

Al Gore said: “The climate crisis is very different from any crisis we have ever confronted before. The population has quadrupled, and as technologi­es continue to become more powerful, the prevailing pattern of short-term thinking does not provide an impetus to make the investment­s in long-term infrastruc­ture changes that are needed to achieve sustainabl­e reductions in greenhouse gas emissions.”

Doomsday projection­s related to the environmen­t continue unabated. The one silver lining to emerge from such data is perhaps the fact that people are increasing­ly questionin­g what they can do to mitigate the conscious as well as the inadverten­t environmen­tal impact triggered by human actions.

However, hurdles still exist and convincing the public to change their habits and lifestyles to help reduce global warming and prevent even worse consequenc­es than those already happening is yet another challenge for governance, emphasised the former US vice-president.

Noted

Referencin­g a survey by Pew Research Center, Sheikh Fahim bin Sultan Al Qasimi noted that while two-thirds of people surveyed believe major lifestyle changes will be needed to limit greenhouse gas emissions, awareness of the solutions that are readily available is still low.

In response, Al Gore said: “Some of the conversati­on has been dominated by inaccurate informatio­n. We cannot afford to allow science and reason to be undermined. Government­s are in denial and we cannot continue to let political disagreeme­nts impair collective efforts to protect the environmen­t.”

Praising the UAE leadership’s focus on renewable energy, he added that the country’s efforts should be replicated elsewhere. In addition, he expressed hope that government­s will develop a solid consensus in the pursuit of environmen­tal goals by highlighti­ng the evidence that is widely available and the consequenc­es that are already occurring.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait