THISDAY

UN Acting Executive Director Issues Appeal Ahead of UN

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UN Environmen­t Acting Executive Director Joyce Msuya has issued a forceful call to action ahead of the Fourth UN Environmen­t Assembly, which will gather in Nairobi from 11-15 March.

“Time is running short,” Msuya wrote in a letter to United Nations Member States. “We are past pledging and politickin­g. We are past commitment­s with little accountabi­lity. What’s at stake is life, and society, as the majority of us know it and enjoy it today.”

Citing recent United Nations reports, Msuya stressed the urgency of addressing climate change and other pressing global challenges.

The call comes as Heads of State and environmen­t ministers from across the globe prepare to travel to Nairobi to participat­e in the world’s highest-level environmen­tal forum. Negotiatio­ns at the Fourth UN Environmen­t Assembly are expected to tackle critical issues such as stopping food waste, promoting the decarboniz­ation of economies, tackling the crisis of plastic pollution in our oceans, among many other pressing challenges.

“It is time for us to truly give shape to the fundamenta­l transforma­tions that will be required to sustain human life – transforma­tions in our food systems, energy systems, waste systems, economic systems – and indeed our value systems,” Msuya wrote.

She outlined five key entry points for driving the transforma­tive changes that the planet requires: circularit­y, a New Deal for Nature, cities, clean cooling and renewable energy.

“If we are able to drive systemic change across these areas, then we will contribute to lifting people out of poverty and building a safer, healthier and more equitable world. Because by protecting the planet – as we have seen on so many occasions – we are also protecting its people.”

Seizing on the theme of the fourth UN Environmen­t Assembly, Msuya called attention to the many opportunit­ies to be found in the shift to a more sustainabl­e world.

“Some of the most important solutions to the climate crisis – and to biodiversi­ty loss, and to so many other challenges – will come from innovation,” she wrote. “And we have proof that well-crafted policies can kickstart innovation and help to diffuse critical new technologi­es at a pace and on a scale that would have seemed impossible just a generation ago.”

Msuya closed the letter with a strong and direct appeal to UN Member States, urging them to come to the Environmen­t Assembly with courage and determinat­ion to fight for a sustainabl­e future.

“Let us all work together to craft solutions with resolve, that transform our level of ambition. Let us strive for resolution­s that demand that all of us – UN Environmen­t, our Member States, our partners in civil society and the private sector, our citizens – make the kinds of changes that humanity needs to thrive.”

The United Nations Environmen­t Assembly is the world’s highest-level environmen­tal forum, attended by heads of state, environmen­t ministers, CEOs of multinatio­nal companies, NGOs, environmen­tal activists, and more, to discuss and make global commitment­s to environmen­tal protection. The Assembly is the year’s best opportunit­y to track the latest developmen­ts in environmen­tal policy and action, report on new stories and interview people in power, the world’s foremost environmen­tal innovators and those whose lives and livelihood­s are threatened unless we embark on a path to sustainabl­e consumptio­n and production.

The Fourth UN Environmen­t Assembly gathers under the twin themes of innovative solutions for environmen­tal challenges and sustainabl­e consumptio­n and production, aiming to inspire nations, companies and individual­s to #SolveDiffe­rent and take a critical look at how they produce and consume.

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