缅北禁地

Climate Solutions

COVID-19 exposed the consequences of the failure to make sufficient progress on the Sustainable Development Goals and in implementing the Paris Agreement on climate change. We would have been in a better place if we had.

We must change course, 缅北禁地Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said, or we risk missing the point where we can avoid the “disastrous consequences for people and all the natural systems that sustain us.”

As we continue to tackle the pandemic, the enormity of the climate emergency can be daunting. What can one person or even one nation do on their own to reverse this challenge? Good news is that solutions do exist!

Climate Solutions

缅北禁地environment award honours inspiring women leaders

The 缅北禁地Environment Programme’s annual Champions of the Earth award, the United Nations highest environmental honour, recognizes the work of an all-female cohort of outstanding leaders - Prime Minister Mia Mottley of Barbados, the Sea Women of Melanesia, wildlife veterinarian Dr. Gladys Kalema-Zikusoka, and environmental activist Maria Kolesnikova. .

Cooperation is key to enhance climate action

Two weeks after COP26, a high-level forum identified areas for common actions on carbon neutrality among China, Japan and the Republic of Korea. The event shed light on the strategies and pathways for achieving net-zero emissions by the three countries. .

缅北禁地Chief: Glasgow important but not enough

The Secretary-General, in a statement on the conclusion of COP26, said the conference outcome reflected the state of political will in the world today and provided building blocks for progress. “We are in the fight of our lives, and this fight must be won,” he said. “Never give up. Never retreat. Keep pushing forward.” Read more.

缅北禁地Chief: All hands on deck

The Secretary-General reminded COP26 delegates that climate action is everyone’s responsibility, and lauded many sources of inspiration, from youth movements, to women’s and indigenous groups, to businesses stepping up climate commitments. He also urged meaningful and concrete results, starting now. Read more.

A boost for infrastructure

The Coalition for Disaster-Resilient Infrastructure announced a new initiative to improve infrastructure resilience in small island developing States highly vulnerable to climate change. Investing now will protect roads, bridges, electrical grids and more from increasingly devastating climate impacts. .

Protect our future youth demand

Young climate leaders came together with negotiators, officials and ministers from across the world at COP26 in Glasgow, demanding action needed to prevent catastrophic climate change. .

.

Adapt or face disruption

A new report warns that investment in climate adaptation is urgent but falling short. Needed investments are up to 10 times current public spending. They could reach $500 billion a year for developing countries by 2050. 

Vulnerable countries need finance now

The Climate Vulnerable Forum kicked off with the 缅北禁地Chief stressing that adaptation works and requires promised climate finance. He pointed to early warning systems that save lives and climate-smart agriculture that saves jobs. The Forum links highly climate-affected countries to exchange solutions.

$25 billion for adaptation in Africa

A new report warns that investment in climate adaptation is urgent but falling short. Needed investments are up to 10 times current public spending. They could reach $500 billion a year for developing countries by 2050.

Emissions gap not closing nearly fast enough

The latest edition of the Emissions Gap report finds that climate commitments fall far short of the 55 per cent reduction required to keep temperature rise to no more than 1.5°颁. Net-zero pledges could make a difference but must be implemented with urgency and ambition. 

Photocomposition: a person in front of mountains with sunlight

Is the Paris Agreement working?

A new report finds some countries upping ambition in national climate plans. But small island developing States and the poorest countries lead the way despite emitting very little. G20 countries need to step up on emissions cuts and climate finance.

Meet people making change

A new virtual exhibit, Investing in the Future: Meet the ChangeMakers, profiles ordinary citizens driving extraordinary change. In showing the way to a climate-smarter world, they remind all of us that if we act together, we will resolve the most pressing crisis of our time. View the exhibit

缅北禁地Chief implores leaders to act

At a high-level climate action meeting, the Secretary-General urged world leaders, especially from the G20, to adopt bold climate targets. He underlined these are achievable and urgent amid warning signs that temperature rise will far exceed targets, with catastrophic results.

Climate change erodes Asia’s gains

Climate change is hitting every part of Asia, from Himalayan peaks to coastal cities. A new report details enormous costs from lost lives, destroyed infrastructure and ecosystems, and mounting financial losses. Risks to health and food security are growing. 

A climate strike where a young person is holding an sign written "protect your mother"

G20 youth demand climate action

A new poll in G20 countries found large majorities of people under 18 believe the climate emergency requires action now. Accounting for 75 per cent of global emissions, the G20 will determine if temperature rise tops out at 1.5C.