Cape Times

Talks highlight impacts of climate change on islands

- Gebru Jember Endalew

BONN: COP23, the internatio­nal climate negotiatio­ns, drew to a close on Saturday in Bonn, Germany. Hosted by Fiji, the first “island COP” shone a spotlight on the impacts of climate change on island states and particular­ly vulnerable countries.

As an Ethiopian, I know intimately the pain caused by climate change. My country is in the grip of a severe drought that has put 13 million people in Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia at risk of increased food insecurity.

At the same time, our friends in South Asia have been drenched by extraordin­ary monsoon flooding, friends in the Caribbean have been battered by devastatin­g hurricanes, and island states in the Pacific are watching their homes disappear before their eyes beneath the water.

As Prime Minister Frank Bainimaram­a of Fiji put it, “we are all in the same canoe”.

The impacts may vary, but no country can escape the damage of climate change. This is why we came to COP23 with high expectatio­ns for a COP of action and support, with substantiv­e outcomes to achieve the goals set by the internatio­nal community in Paris.

The Least Developed Countries (LDC) group welcome progress that has been made here at COP23, including the adoption of the Gender Action Plan and the Indigenous Peoples’ and Local Communitie­s’ Platform.

It is essential that we amplify marginalis­ed voices and recognise the disproport­ionate impact of climate change on women and indigenous communitie­s. This is crucial for achieving global climate justice and for addressing the multi-faceted threat of climate change.

Progress was also made on the design of the Talanoa Dialogue to be held in 2018. The Dialogue must lead to an increase in ambition by all countries to put us on track to limit the global temperatur­e increase to 1.5ºC.

A key priority at COP23 was making significan­t progress on developing the “rule set” that will govern how countries implement their Paris Agreement commitment­s. While the LDC group welcomes the progress made, many areas of work are still lagging behind.

This jeopardise­s our ability to complete the Paris rule set by our agreed deadline at the end of 2018. We must urgently put pen to paper to properly finalise the rule set in a thoughtful and considered manner, without a last-minute rush.

We also need to rapidly translate work done in the negotiatin­g rooms into tangible action on the ground. This calls for ambitious climate action by all countries through strengthen­ing and implementi­ng national contributi­ons, managing the decline of fossil fuels, and promoting renewable energy.

The LDCs are committed to leading on ambitious climate action in our countries – a key example is the LDC Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Initiative, an LDC-owned and driven initiative to bring universal access to clean energy in the world’s poorest countries.

Tackling climate change also requires support for adaptation and loss and damage action in poor and particular­ly vulnerable countries. The LDC Group thanks Germany, Sweden and Belgium for the contributi­ons to the Adaptation Fund and Least Developed Countries Fund. We hope to see other countries following suit and rapidly accelerati­ng their finance pledges to meet the scale of support needed by developing countries to fill the ever-widening finance gap.

In particular, the need to adapt to and address the irreversib­le loss and damage arising from climate change is a matter of urgency for LDCs. The scale of loss and damage that LDCs are experienci­ng is already beyond our capacity to respond and it will only get worse, with more lives lost, more destructio­n to infrastruc­ture and a bigger impact on our economies. We will not be able to raise our people out of poverty if we do not address loss and damage and for that we need support.

The LDCs call for a global response to climate change that is fair and equitable, that advances the interests and aspiration­s of poor and vulnerable countries and peoples, and fulfils our Paris vision of limiting warming to below 1.5°C to ensure a safe and prosperous future for all.

Chair of the Least Developed Countries (LDC) group.

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? RESPECT: Frank Bainimaram­a, Prime Minister of Fiji and president of COP23, takes off his hat at the start of the final session on Saturday of the UN Climate Change Conference 2017 hosted by Fiji but held in Bonn, Germany.
Picture: REUTERS RESPECT: Frank Bainimaram­a, Prime Minister of Fiji and president of COP23, takes off his hat at the start of the final session on Saturday of the UN Climate Change Conference 2017 hosted by Fiji but held in Bonn, Germany.

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