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J. Tuyet Nguyen, a journalist with years of experience, has covered major stories in New York City and the United Nations for United Press International, the German Press Agency dpa and various newspapers. His reports focused mostly on topics with international interests for readers worldwide. He was president of the United Nations Correspondents Association (2007 and 2008), which is composed of more than 250 journalists representing world media with influence over policy decision makers. He has chaired the organization of the annual UNCA Awards, which seeks to reward journalists around the world who have done the best broadcasts and written reports on the UN and its specialized agencies. He has traveled the world to cover events and write stories, from politics to the environment as well cultures of different regions. But his most important reporting work has been with the United Nations since the early 1980s. He was bureau chief of United Press International office at the UN headquarters before joining dpa in 1997. Prior to working at the UN, he was an editor on the International Desk of UPI World Headquarters in New York. He worked in Los Angeles and covered the final months of war in Vietnam for UPI.

Climate change is a long-term threat to global economy, World Economic Forum says

Geneva/New York, January 11, 2023 – The Global Risks Report published by the World Economic Forum ahead of its annual meeting at Davos, Switzerland said climate change will remain the biggest and long-term challenge to the economy unless world leaders tackle it collectively and decisively.

The report said the current energy and food supply crises are likely to persist for the next two years and costs of living and debt servicing are expected to strongly increase. Those crises at the same time will undermine efforts to fight problems related to climate change, biodiversity and investment in human capital.

Read the Global Risks Report 2023 . The Marsh McLennan and Zurich Insurance Group produced the report, drawing on the views of over 1,200 global risk experts, policy-makers and industry leaders. Read WEF’s Global Risks Initiative which promotes greater common understanding of short-, mid- and long-term global risks to enable learning on risk preparedness and resilience.

“The short-term risk landscape is dominated by energy, food, debt and disasters,” said Saadia Zahidi, WEF Managing Director. “Those that are already the most vulnerable are suffering – and in the face of multiple crises, those who qualify as vulnerable are rapidly expanding, in rich and poor countries alike. In this already toxic mix of known and rising global risks, a new shock event, from a new military conflict to a new virus, could become unmanageable. Climate and human development therefore must be at the core of concerns of global leaders to boost resilience against future shocks.”

The report said failure by world leaders to start cooperating more effectively on climate mitigation and climate adaptation will lead to continued global warming and ecological breakdown over the next 10 years.

John Scott, Head of Sustainability Risk, Zurich Insurance Group, said: “The interplay between climate change impacts, biodiversity loss, food security and natural resource consumption is a dangerous cocktail. Without significant policy change or investments, this mix will accelerate ecosystem collapse, threaten food supplies, amplify the impacts of natural disasters and limit further climate mitigation progress. If we speed up action, there is still an opportunity by the end of the decade to achieve a 1.5ᵒC degree trajectory and address the nature emergency. Recent progress in the deployment of renewable energy technologies and electric vehicles gives us good reasons to be optimistic.”

Carolina Klint, Risk Management Leader, Continental Europe, Marsh, said: “2023 is set to be marked by increased risks related to food, energy, raw materials and cyber security, causing further disruption to global supply chains and impacting investment decisions. At a time when countries and organizations should be stepping up resilience efforts, economic headwinds will constrain their ability to do so. Faced with the most difficult geo-economic conditions in a generation, companies should focus not just on navigating near-term concerns but also on developing strategies that will position them well for longer-term risks and structural change.”

2023 Davos meeting January 16-20

This year’s World Economic Forum will be under the theme ‘Cooperation in a Fragmented World’. The forum will draw 2,700 leaders from 130 countries including 52 heads of state/government.

“Multiple crises are deepening divisions and fragmenting the geopolitical landscape. Leaders must address people’s immediate, critical needs while also laying the groundwork for a more sustainable, resilient world by the end of the decade,” WEF said.

Klaus Schwab, Founder and Executive Chairman of WEF, said, “We see the manifold political, economic and social forces creating increased fragmentation on a global and national level. To address the root causes of this erosion of trust, we need to reinforce cooperation between the government and business sectors, creating the conditions for a strong and durable recovery. At the same time there must be the recognition that economic development needs to be made more resilient, more sustainable and nobody should be left behind.”

WEF said the 53rd annual meeting will focus on solutions and public-private cooperation to tackle the world’s most pressing challenges. “It encourages world leaders to work together on the interconnected issues of energy, climate and nature; investment, trade and infrastructure; frontier technologies and industry resilience; jobs, skills, social mobility and health; and geopolitical cooperation in a multipolar world. Special emphasis is on gender and geographical diversity across all sessions.”

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U.N. agencies and aid groups protest Taliban’s ban of women in humanitarian work

New York, December 28 – Heads of United Nations agencies and humanitarian groups denounced the Afghan Taliban government’s ban of women working with non-governmental organizations as a life-threatening measure against the Afghan people.

A joint statement issued by 20 Principals of the Inter-Agency Standing Committee on Afghanistan demanded that women’s participation in aid delivery must continue.

“The decision by Afghanistan’s de facto authorities to ban women from working in humanitarian non-governmental organizations is a major blow for vulnerable communities, for women, for children, and for the entire country,” the statement said.

“Female staff are key to every aspect of the humanitarian response in Afghanistan. They are teachers, nutrition experts, team leaders, community health workers, vaccinators, nurses, doctors, and heads of organizations,” it said.

The statement said women have access to certain populations that male colleagues cannot have and their professional work is indispensable and can save lives.

“Banning women from humanitarian work has immediate life-threatening consequences for all Afghans,” the statement said.

The statement said the ban is taking place at a time when more than 28 million people in Afghanistan are struggling to survive while the country is grappling with “famine conditions, economic decline, entrenched poverty and a brutal winter.”

“While humanitarian organizations continue to engage the de facto authorities, we cannot ignore the operational constraints now facing us as a humanitarian community. “We will endeavor to continue lifesaving, time-critical activities unless impeded while we better assess the scope, parameters and consequences of this directive for the people we serve. But we foresee that many activities will need to be paused as we cannot deliver principled humanitarian assistance without female aid workers.

“We remain resolute in our commitment to deliver independent, principled, lifesaving assistance to all the women, men and children who need it.

“We urge the de facto authorities to reconsider and reverse this directive, and all directives banning women from schools, universities and public life. No country can afford to exclude half of its population from contributing to society.”

Signatories 

• Mr. Martin Griffiths, Emergency Relief Coordinator and Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA)

• Mr. Qu Dongyu, Director-General, Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) 

• Ms. Shahin Ashraf, Chair, International Council of Voluntary Agencies (ICVA) Board, (Islamic Relief) 

• Mr. Ignacio Packer, Executive Director, International Council of Voluntary Agencies (ICVA) 

• Ms. Miriam Sapiro, President and Chief Executive Officer, InterAction 

• Ms. Tjada D’Oyen McKenna, Chief Eexcutive Officer, Mercy Corps 

• Ms. Janti Soerpinto, President and Chief Executive Officer, Save the Children US 

• Mr. António Vitorino, Director General, International Organization for Migration (IOM) 

• Mr. Volker Turk, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) 

• Mr. Andrew Morley, President and Chief Executive Officer, World Vision International 

• Ms. Sofia Sprechmann Sineiro, Secretary-General, CARE International 

• Ms. Paula Gaviria Betancur, United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of Internally Displaced Persons (UN SR on HR of IDPs) 

• Mr. Achim Steiner, Administrator, United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) 

• Dr. Natalia Kanem, Executive Director, United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) 

• Ms. Maimunah Mohd Sharif, Executive Director, United Nations Human Settlement Programme (UN-Habitat) 

• Mr. Filippo Grandi, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) 

• Ms. Catherine Russell, Executive Director, United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) 

• Ms. Sima Bahous, Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director (UN Women) 

• Mr. David Beasley, Executive Director, World Food Programme (WFP) 

• Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General, World Health Organization (WHO) 

Four NGOs stop work in Afghanistan

The non-governmental organizations – Save the Children, the International Rescue Committee, the Norwegian Refugee Council and CARE – have decided to stop humanitarian work after the Taliban banned women in their workforces.

U.N. Security Council denounces ban

The 15-nation Security Council issued a statement on December 27 warning that the ban would have a significant effect on humanitarian operations in country and calling for the full, equal and meaningful participation of Afghan women and girls in schools and universities in Afghanistan.

Such a ban “represents an increasing erosion for the respect of human rights and fundamental freedoms,” the council said.

The council “reiterated its deep concern of the suspension of schools beyond the sixth grade, and its call for the full, equal, and meaningful participation of women and girls in Afghanistan” in the statement.

(By J. Tuyet Nguyen)

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Human rights expert: U.N. Security Council resolution on Myanmar is weak

New York, December 22 – A resolution adopted by the U.N. Security Council demanding Myanmar’s military government to end violence and release political prisoners has no teeth and may provoke further carnage in the country, said Thomas Andrews, the U.N. Special Rapporteur on human rights in Myanmar.

“‘Demanding that certain actions be taken without any use of the Security Council’s Chapter VII authority, will not stop the illegal Myanmar junta from attacking and destroying the lives of the 54 million people being held hostage in Myanmar,” Andrews said in a statement, referring to the provision that allows U.N. peacekeepers to use force under dangerous situations.

“What is required is action,” said Andrews, as reported by U.N. News.

The 15-nation Security Council on December 21 voted 12-0, with three abstentions by Russia, China and India, to approve its first-ever resolution on Myanmar since the military overthrew the civilian government headed by Aung San Suu Kyi on February 1, 2021. But the adopted document specified no concrete action against the military government.

The resolution demanded the release all “arbitrarily detained” prisoners, including Suu Kyi, and to restore democratic institutions. The resolution also demanded that Myanmar’s opposing parties be allowed to pursue dialogue and reconciliation and urged all sides “to respect human rights, fundamental freedoms and the rule of law.”

Andrews admitted that it was “notable” that the council crafted and advanced a draft resolution that managed to avoid a veto by the council’s five permanent members. He said his objection of the weak resolution was made “with all due respect” to that body but the situation in Myanmar would worsen without, strong coordinated action.”

He called for “concrete and immediate actions” towards implementing a peace plan agreed by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), and for upholding “democratic institutions and processes.”

“The systematic gross human rights violations – amounting to war crimes and crimes against humanity – being perpetrated daily on the people of Myanmar by an illegal military junta require strong, coordinated action by U.N. member states,” he said.

He said demands made by the council in the resolution, including an immediate end to all forms of violence, the release of political prisoners, unimpeded humanitarian access and respect for the rights of women and children – are “critically important.” But he said what was missing are “consequences for the failure to meet them and the imposition of sanctions and accountability for crimes the military has committed to date.”

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U.N. summit adopts plan to protect one-third of earth’s lands, oceans, coastal areas, inland waters

In landmark U.N. Biodiversity Agreement, nations decided to protect 30 per cent of Earth’s lands, oceans, coastal areas, inland waters; reduce by $500 billion annual harmful government subsidies and cut food waste in half by 2030.

Montreal, December 19 – Nearing the conclusion of a sometimes fractious two-week meeting, nations of the world have agreed on a historic package of measures deemed critical to addressing the dangerous loss of biodiversity and restoring natural ecosystems.

Convened under UN auspices, chaired by China, and hosted by Canada, the 15th Conference of Parties to the UN Convention on Biological Diversity adopted the “Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework” (GBF), including four goals and 23 targets for achievement by 2030.

Among the global targets for 2030:

Effective conservation and management of at least 30% of the world’s lands, inland waters, coastal areas and oceans, with emphasis on areas of particular importance for biodiversity and ecosystem functioning and services. The GBF prioritizes ecologically-representative, well-connected and equitably-governed systems of protected areas and other effective area-based conservation, recognizing indigenous and traditional territories and practices. Currently 17 per cent and 10 per cent of the world’s terrestrial and marine areas respectively are under protection.

Have restoration completed or underway on at least 30% of degraded terrestrial, inland waters, and coastal and marine ecosystems; Reduce to near zero the loss of areas of high biodiversity importance, including ecosystems of high ecological integrity; Cut global food waste in half and significantly reduce overconsumption and waste generation; Reduce by half both excess nutrients and the overall risk posed by pesticides and highly hazardous chemicals.

Progressively phase out or reform by 2030 subsidies that harm biodiversity by at least $500 billion per year, while scaling up positive incentives for biodiversity’s conservation and sustainable use; Mobilize by 2030 at least $200 billion per year in domestic and international biodiversity-related funding from all sources – public and private.

Raise international financial flows from developed to developing countries, in particular least developed countries, small island developing States, and countries with economies in transition, to at least US$ 20 billion per year by 2025, and to at least US$ 30 billion per year by 2030; Prevent the introduction of priority invasive alien species, and reduce by at least half the introduction and establishment of other known or potential invasive alien species, and eradicate or control invasive alien species on islands and other priority sites; Require large and transnational companies and financial institutions to monitor, assess, and transparently disclose their risks, dependencies and impacts on biodiversity through their operations, supply and value chains and portfolios

Warns the GBF: “Without such action, there will be a further acceleration in the global rate of species extinction, which is already at least tens to hundreds of times higher than it has averaged over the past 10 million years.”

The framework’s four overarching global goals:

GOAL A – The integrity, connectivity and resilience of all ecosystems are maintained, enhanced, or restored, substantially increasing the area of natural ecosystems by 2050;

Human induced extinction of known threatened species is halted, and, by 2050, extinction rate and risk of all species are reduced tenfold, and the abundance of native wild species is increased to healthy and resilient levels; The genetic diversity within populations of wild and domesticated species, is maintained, safeguarding their adaptive potential.

GOAL B – Biodiversity is sustainably used and managed and nature’s contributions to people, including ecosystem functions and services, are valued, maintained and enhanced, with those currently in decline being restored, supporting the achievement of sustainable development, for the benefit of present and future generations by 2050.

GOAL C – The monetary and non-monetary benefits from the utilization of genetic resources, and digital sequence information on genetic resources, and of traditional knowledge associated with genetic resources, as applicable, are shared fairly and equitably, including, as appropriate with indigenous peoples and local communities, and substantially increased by 2050, while ensuring traditional knowledge associated with genetic resources is appropriately protected, thereby contributing to the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity, in accordance with internationally agreed access and benefit-sharing instruments.

GOAL D – Adequate means of implementation, including financial resources, capacity-building, technical and scientific cooperation, and access to and transfer of technology to fully implement the Kunmin-Montreal global biodiversity framework are secured and equitably accessible to all Parties, especially developing countries, in particular the least developed countries and small island developing States, as well as countries with economies in transition, progressively closing the biodiversity finance gap of $700 billion per year, and aligning financial flows with the Kunmin-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework and the 2050 Vision for Biodiversity.

Held at Montreal’s Palais des Congrès Dec. 7-19, representatives of 188 governments on site (95% of all 196 Parties to the UN CBD, as well as two non-Parties – the United States and The Vatican), finalized and approved measures to arrest the ongoing​​ loss of ​terrestrial and marine ​biodiversity and set humanity in the direction of a sustainable relationship with nature, with clear indicators to measure progress.

In addition to the GBF, the meeting approved a series of related agreements on its implementation, including planning, monitoring, reporting and review; resource mobilization; helping nations to build their capacity to meet the obligations; and digital sequence information on genetic resources.

Digital sequence information on genetic resources – a dominant topic at COP15 – has many commercial and non-commercial applications, including pharmaceutical product development, improved crop breeding, taxonomy, and the monitoring of invasive species.

COP15 delegates agreed to establish within the GBF a multilateral fund for the equitable sharing of benefits between providers and users of DSI, to be finalized at COP16 in Türkiye in 2024.

The agreement also obligates countries to monitor and report every five years or less on a large set of “headline” and other indicators related to progress against the GBF’s goals and targets. Headline indicators include the percent of land and seas effective conserved, the number of companies disclosing their impacts and dependencies on biodiversity, and many others.  The CBD will combine national information submitted by late February 2026 and late June 2029 into global trend and progress reports.

* * * *

Emphasized throughout the approved documents are the needs to foster the full and effective contributions of women, persons of diverse gender identities, youth, indigenous peoples and local communities, civil society organizations, the private and financial sectors, and stakeholders from all other sectors. Also emphasized: the need for a “whole-of-government and whole-of-society approach” to implementing the GBF.

Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework: 23 targets

TARGET 1 – Ensure that all areas are under participatory integrated biodiversity inclusive spatial planning and/or effective management processes addressing land and sea use change, to bring the loss of areas of high biodiversity importance, including ecosystems of high ecological integrity, close to zero by 2030, while respecting the rights of indigenous peoples and local communities,

TARGET 2 – Ensure that by 2030 at least 30 per cent of areas of degraded terrestrial, inland water, and coastal and marine ecosystems are under effective restoration, in order to enhance biodiversity and ecosystem functions and services, ecological integrity and connectivity.

TARGET 3 – Ensure and enable that by 2030 at least 30 per cent of terrestrial, inland water, and coastal and marine areas, especially areas of particular importance for biodiversity and ecosystem functions and services, are effectively conserved and managed through ecologically representative, well-connected and equitably governed systems of protected areas and other effective area-based conservation measures, recognizing indigenous and traditional territories, where applicable, and integrated into wider landscapes, seascapes and the ocean, while ensuring that any sustainable use, where appropriate in such areas, is fully consistent with conservation outcomes, recognizing and respecting the rights of indigenous peoples and local communities including over their traditional territories,

TARGET 4 – Ensure urgent management actions, to halt human induced extinction of known threatened species and for the recovery and conservation of species, in particular threatened species, to significantly reduce extinction risk, as well as to maintain and restore the genetic diversity within and between populations of native, wild and domesticated species to maintain their adaptive potential, including through in situ and ex situ conservation and sustainable management practices, and effectively manage human-wildlife interactions to minimize human-wildlife conflict for coexistence.

TARGET 5 – Ensure that the use, harvesting and trade of wild species is sustainable, safe and legal, preventing overexploitation, minimizing impacts on non-target species and ecosystems, and reducing the risk of pathogen spill-over, applying the ecosystem approach, while respecting and protecting customary sustainable use by indigenous peoples and local communities.

TARGET 6 – Eliminate, minimize, reduce and or mitigate the impacts of invasive alien species on biodiversity and ecosystem services by identifying and managing pathways of the introduction of alien species, preventing the introduction and establishment of priority invasive alien species, reducing the rates of introduction and establishment of other known or potential invasive alien species by at least 50 per cent, by 2030, eradicating or controlling invasive alien species especially in priority sites, such as islands .

TARGET 7 – Reduce pollution risks and the negative impact of pollution from all sources, by 2030, to levels that are not harmful to biodiversity and ecosystem functions and services, considering cumulative effects, including: reducing excess nutrients lost to the environment by at least half including through more efficient nutrient cycling and use; reducing the overall risk from pesticides and highly hazardous chemicals by at least half including through integrated pest management, based on science, taking into account food security and livelihoods; and also preventing, reducing, and working towards eliminating plastic pollution.

TARGET 8 – Minimize the impact of climate change and ocean acidification on biodiversity and increase its resilience through mitigation, adaptation, and disaster risk reduction actions, including through nature-based solution and/or ecosystem-based approaches, while minimizing negative and fostering positive impacts of climate action on biodiversity.

TARGET 9 – Ensure that the management and use of wild species are sustainable, thereby providing social, economic and environmental benefits for people, especially those in vulnerable situations and those most dependent on biodiversity, including through sustainable biodiversity-based activities, products and services that enhance biodiversity, and protecting and encouraging customary sustainable use by indigenous peoples and local communities.

TARGET 10 – Ensure that areas under agriculture, aquaculture, fisheries and forestry are managed sustainably, in particular through the sustainable use of biodiversity, including through a substantial increase of the application of biodiversity friendly practices, such as sustainable intensification, agroecological and other innovative approaches contributing to the resilience and long-term efficiency and productivity of these production systems and to food security, conserving and restoring biodiversity and maintaining nature’s contributions to people, including ecosystem functions and services.

TARGET 11 – Restore, maintain and enhance nature’s contributions to people, including ecosystem functions and services, such as regulation of air, water, and climate, soil health, pollination and reduction of disease risk, as well as protection from natural hazards and disasters, through nature-based solutions and ecosystem-based approaches for the benefit of all people and nature.

TARGET 12 – Significantly increase the area and quality and connectivity of, access to, and benefits from green and blue spaces in urban and densely populated areas sustainably, by mainstreaming the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity, and ensure biodiversity-inclusive urban planning, enhancing native biodiversity, ecological connectivity and integrity, and improving human health and well-being and connection to nature and contributing to inclusive and sustainable urbanization and the provision of ecosystem functions and services.

TARGET 13 – Take effective legal, policy, administrative and capacity-building measures at all levels, as appropriate, to ensure the fair and equitable sharing of benefits that arise from the utilization of genetic resources and from digital sequence information on genetic resources, as well as traditional knowledge associated with genetic resources, and facilitating appropriate access to genetic resources, and by 2030 facilitating a significant increase of the benefits shared, in accordance with applicable international access and benefit-sharing instruments.

TARGET 14 – Ensure the full integration of biodiversity and its multiple values into policies, regulations, planning and development processes, poverty eradication strategies, strategic environmental assessments, environmental impact assessments and, as appropriate, national accounting, within and across all levels of government and across all sectors, in particular those with significant impacts on biodiversity, progressively aligning all relevant public and private activities, fiscal and financial flows with the goals and targets of this framework.

TARGET 15 – Take legal, administrative or policy measures to encourage and enable business, and in particular to ensure that large and transnational companies and financial institutions:

(a) Regularly monitor, assess, and transparently disclose their risks, dependencies and impacts on biodiversity including with requirements for all large as well as transnational companies and financial institutions along their operations, supply and value chains and portfolios; (b) Provide information needed to consumers to promote sustainable consumption patterns; (c) Report on compliance with access and benefit-sharing regulations and measures, as applicable; in order to progressively reduce negative impacts on biodiversity, increase positive impacts, reduce biodiversity-related risks to business and financial institutions, and promote actions to ensure sustainable patterns of production.

TARGET 16 – Ensure that people are encouraged and enabled to make sustainable consumption choices including by establishing supportive policy, legislative or regulatory frameworks, improving education and access to relevant and accurate information and alternatives, and by 2030, reduce the global footprint of consumption in an equitable manner, halve global food waste, significantly reduce overconsumption and substantially reduce waste generation, in order for all people to live well in harmony with Mother Earth.

TARGET 17 – Establish, strengthen capacity for, and implement in all countries in biosafety measures as set out in Article 8(g) of the Convention on Biological Diversity and measures for the handling of biotechnology and distribution of its benefits as set out in Article 19 of the Convention.

TARGET 18 – Identify by 2025, and eliminate, phase out or reform incentives, including subsidies harmful for biodiversity, in a proportionate, just, fair, effective and equitable way, while substantially and progressively reducing them by at least 500 billion United States dollars per year by 2030, starting with the most harmful incentives, and scale up positive incentives for the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity.

TARGET 19 – Substantially and progressively increase the level of financial resources from all sources, in an effective, timely and easily accessible manner, including domestic, international, public and private resources, in accordance with Article 20 of the Convention, to implement national biodiversity strategies and action plans, by 2030 mobilizing at least 200 billion United States dollars per year, including by:

(a) Increasing total biodiversity related international financial resources from developed countries, including official development assistance, and from countries that voluntarily assume obligations of developed country Parties, to developing countries, in particular the least developed countries and small island developing States, as well as countries with economies in transition, to at least US$ 20 billion per year by 2025, and to at least US$ 30 billion per year by 2030;

(b) Significantly increasing domestic resource mobilization, facilitated by the preparation and implementation of national biodiversity finance plans or similar instruments according to national needs, priorities and circumstances

(c) Leveraging private finance, promoting blended finance, implementing strategies for raising new and additional resources, and encouraging the private sector to invest in biodiversity, including through impact funds and other instruments;

(d) Stimulating innovative schemes such as payment for ecosystem services, green bonds, biodiversity offsets and credits, benefit-sharing mechanisms, with environmental and social safeguards

(e) Optimizing co-benefits and synergies of finance targeting the biodiversity and climate crises,

(f) Enhancing the role of collective actions, including by indigenous peoples and local communities, Mother Earth centric actions and non-market-based approaches including community based natural resource management and civil society cooperation and solidarity aimed at the conservation of biodiversity

(g) Enhancing the effectiveness, efficiency and transparency of resource provision and use;

TARGET 20 – Strengthen capacity-building and development, access to and transfer of technology, and promote development of and access to innovation and technical and scientific cooperation, including through South- South, North-South and triangular cooperation, to meet the needs for effective implementation, particularly in developing countries, fostering joint technology development and joint scientific research programmes for the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity and strengthening scientific research and monitoring capacities, commensurate with the ambition of the goals and targets of the framework.

TARGET 21 – Ensure that the best available data, information and knowledge, are accessible to decision makers, practitioners and the public to guide effective and equitable governance, integrated and participatory management of biodiversity, and to strengthen communication, awareness-raising, education, monitoring, research and knowledge management and, also in this context, traditional knowledge, innovations, practices and technologies of indigenous peoples and local communities should only be accessed with their free, prior and informed consent20, in accordance with national legislation.

TARGET 22 – Ensure the full, equitable, inclusive, effective and gender-responsive representation and participation in decision-making, and access to justice and information related to biodiversity by indigenous peoples and local communities, respecting their cultures and their rights over lands, territories, resources, and traditional knowledge, as well as by women and girls, children and youth, and persons with disabilities and ensure the full protection of environmental human rights defenders.

TARGET 23 – Ensure gender equality in the implementation of the framework through a gender-responsive approach where all women and girls have equal opportunity and capacity to contribute to the three objectives of the Convention, including by recognizing their equal rights and access to land and natural resources and their full, equitable, meaningful and informed participation and leadership at all levels of action, engagement, policy and decision-making related to biodiversity.

* * * * *

CONTACT: Terry Collins & Assoc. | www.tca.tc | @TerryCollinsTC | LinkedIn.com/in/terrycollins | In the News 2021: https://adobe.ly/3FRijQA, Toronto, M6R1L8 Canada

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UPDATE: U.N. calls for peace pact with nature at biodiversity summit

Montreal/New York, December 7 – The United Nations called on governments attending the international conference on biodiversity to adopt an ambitious “true peace pact with nature” that can deliver a green planet earth.

Representatives from 192 governments that are parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity opened a two-week meeting with the intention to negotiate a new, 10-year agreement that will guide humans how to use nature and biodiversity in more sustainable ways.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said humans are “waging war against nature” as the conference began its work. “Ecosystems have become playthings of profit. Human activities are laying waste to once-thriving forests, jungles, farmland, oceans, rivers, seas and lakes. Our land, water and air are poisoned by chemicals and pesticides, and choked with plastics.”

“It’s time for the world to adopt an ambitious biodiversity framework — a true peace pact with nature — to deliver a green, healthy future for all,“ he said.

Organizers of the summit said negotiations are expected to be difficult as they cover some two dozen targets ranging from land and water, fisheries and rainforests which are affected by climate change as well as degradation caused by humans.

The Montreal summit starting on December 7 is the 15th Conference of the Parties to the convention, which was first signed in the Rio Earth Summit in 1992 by 150 governments. More than 15,000 people have registered to attend, with the majority of them representatives of governments, non-governmental organizations and the media.

Guterres said deforestation and desertification, among a multitude of activities, are creating wastelands of once-thriving ecosystems.

“Our land, water and air are poisoned by chemicals and pesticides, and choked with plastics. Our addiction to fossil fuels has thrown our climate into chaos — from heat waves and forest fires to communities parched by heat and drought, or inundated and destroyed by terrifying floods,” he said.       

“Unsustainable production and consumption are sending emissions skyrocketing, and degrading our land, sea and air. Today, one-third of all land is degraded, making it harder to feed growing populations. Plants, mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish and invertebrates — all are at risk. A million species teeter on the brink.”

He called on government leaders to develop “bold national action plans” that “re-purpose subsidies and tax breaks away from nature-destroying activities towards green solutions like renewable energy, plastic reduction, nature-friendly food production and sustainable resource extraction.” He also supports the rights of Indigenous peoples and local communities because they have always been the most effective guardians of biodiversity.

He called on the private sector to “recognize that profit and protection must go hand-in-hand. In our globalized economies, businesses and investors count on nature’s gifts from all corners of the world. It’s in their best interests to put protection first. That means the food and agricultural industry moving towards sustainable production and natural means of pollination, pest control and fertilization.”

New agreement for 2020-30 under negotiations

The COP15 summit was originally scheduled to take place in Kunming, in China’s Yunnan province, in 2020. But it was postponed because of Covid-19 and was moved to Montreal. If governments are to agree on the new, 10-year plan it would replace the previous one adopted in Aichi, Japan, in 2010.

Under discussion in Montreal is a draft agreement for the Global Biodiversity Framework Structure which comprises fourmajor Goals: 1. Ecosystems, species, genetic diversity; 2. Nature’s contributions to people; 3. Access and benefit sharing and 4. Means of implementation; and 23 targets.

Targets: 1. Land and sea use planning; 2. Ecosystem restoration, connectivity, priority ecosystems; 3. Land, seas protection and conservation; 4. Active management of species, genetic diversity; 5. Harvest, trade and use of wild species; 6. Invasive alien species; 7. Pollution; 8. Minimizing the impact of climate change; 9. Sustainable use of biodiversity and benefit sharing; 10. Sustainable agriculture, aquaculture, forestry; 11. Regulation of air quality, water quality and quantity, and protection from hazards and extreme events; 12. Access to green and blue spaces; 13. Genetic resources and equitable benefit sharing; 14. Mainstreaming biodiversity; 15. Sustainable production and supply chains; 16. Unsustainable consumption; 17. Impacts of biotechnology; 18. Harmful incentives / subsidies; 19. Financial resources, capacity-building; 20. Traditional knowledge, awareness, education and research; 21. Equitable, effective participation in decision-making; 22. Gender equality;  23. Adopting a human / animal / ecosystem “One Health” approach.

(By J. Tuyet Nguyen)

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U.N.: Russia’s war in Ukraine inflicts “colossal” torment to millions of people

New York, December 6 – The U.N. Security Council was told that Russia’s “senseless war“ in Ukraine, which started on February 24 this year, has killed 17,023 civilians, including 419 children, but the real toll is “far greater.”

“The torment it continues to bring to the people of Ukraine and beyond is colossal,” Martin Griffiths, the coordinator for the U.N. humanitarian affairs and emergency relief, briefed the 15-nation Security Council.

“The widespread death, destruction, displacement and suffering caused by this senseless war, ongoing humanitarian operations and the challenges that the humanitarian community continues to face,” Griffiths said.

He said over 14 million people remain forcibly displaced from their homes in Ukraine, including 6.5 million internally displaced, and over 7.8 million refugees recorded across Europe. The number of civilian deaths was recorded by the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights as of December 1.

Griffiths said that since February 24, 1,148 children had been killed or injured, “while millions have fled, been uprooted from their homes, separated from their families or put at risk of violence”.

The U.N. official said Ukraine is now facing winter and temperatures are already below freezing and are expected to drop to below minus 20 degrees Celsius. On the other hand, Russia has launched attacks on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, including power stations and heating plants, which have left millions of people without access to heat, electricity, and water, adding another dangerous dimension to the humanitarian crisis caused by the war.

“In Ukraine today, the ability of civilians to survive is under attack.,” he said

Griffiths told the council that close to 690 humanitarian partners, most of them local organizations, have provided life-critical aid and protection services to 13.5 million people in Ukraine.

He said the U.N. has also received unprecedented assistance from a member state and other donor support to the Ukraine Flash Appeal, with $3.1 billion received of the $4.3 billion required through the end of 2022.

“To date, we have transferred almost $1 billion in humanitarian cash assistance to more than 4.3 million people. But more must be done to close the funding shortfall. Continued support is critical to sustain humanitarian operations through 2023.”

Following the briefing by Griffiths, UK Ambassador Barbara Woodward said, “We know what Russia is trying to do: it is trying to bring terror and suffering to the civilian population in a war of subjugation. It is barbaric, illegal, and horribly cruel.” 

“The statistics we have heard from the U.N. today are shocking, more than 17,000 civilians have been killed in Ukraine by Russia’s senseless war. It is a devastating number of innocent lives lost, and we’ve heard today in particular the impact Russia’s war is having on children in Ukraine: The trauma inflicted by Russia will last for generations.”

“President, the response from this Council, and the wider U.N. Membership, has been consistent: a call for an end to conflict; for peace.”  

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U.N. calls for $51.5 billion to help 230 million most vulnerable people in 2023

Geneva/New York, December 1 – The United Nations is reaching out to generous donors, asking a record $51.5 billion so it can assist 230 million people in 70 countries next year who are directly affected by the war in Ukraine, climate change and Covid-19.

Martin Griffiths, the chief Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, said the needs are “shockingly high” at the launch of the Global Humanitarian Overview 2023 in Geneva.

See more information: Global Humanitarian Overview

“The needs are going up because we’ve been by smitten by the war in Ukraine, by COVID, by climate,” he said. “I fear that 2023 is going to be an acceleration of all those trends, and that’s why we say … that we hope 2023 will be a year of solidarity, just as 2022 has been a year of suffering.”

The background provided by Griffiths and his Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said millions of people in 2022 suffered from the devastation wrought by conflicts, climate shocks, COVID-19 and the socioeconomic repercussions of the war in Ukraine. In addition more than 100 million people are  displaced worldwide.

It said “50 million people were on the brink of starvation. Many households saw family members die due to lack of food, and the number of people experiencing acute food insecurity is expected to climb to more than 220 million by January 2023.”

“Donors have been generous, meanwhile, the number of crises is overwhelming, and the global economic outlook is looking grim. We have more conflicts than at any time since the end of the Second World War.”

The U.N. said climate change has caused unprecedented droughts in the Horn of Africa, massive flooding in Pakistan and Afghanistan, more powerful cyclones in the Caribbean, and more aggressive tsunamis in the Pacific. The war in Ukraine has “exacerbated inflation worldwide and contributed to tighter financial conditions for many donors and magnifying financial vulnerability for fragile states.”

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3.6 billion people face water shortage a month per year under climate change: U.N.

Geneva/New York, November 29 – An estimated 3.6 billion people currently have inadequate access to fresh water at least a month per year and that number will increase to more than 5 billion by 2050, the World Meteorological Organization said in its first ever State of Global Water Resources report.

The report said large areas of the globe were drier than normal in 2021 as climate change and La Nina effects severely influenced normal precipitation patterns. The areas in the world with below average streamflow were about twice larger than those with above average.

The report said 74 per cent of all natural disasters between 2001 and 2018 were water-related. With water shortage becoming a major global issue, the recent climate change summit at Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, has decided for the first time to call on governments to further integrate water into their national climate adaptation efforts.

See report: State of Global Water Resources report 

Professor Petteri Taalas, Secretary-General of WMO, said, “The impacts of climate change are often felt through water – more intense and frequent droughts, more extreme flooding, more erratic seasonal rainfall and accelerated melting of glaciers – with cascading effects on economies, ecosystems and all aspects of our daily lives. And yet, there is insufficient understanding of changes in the distribution, quantity, and quality of freshwater resources.”

“The State of Global Water Resources report aims to fill that knowledge gap and provide a concise overview of water availability in different parts of the world. This will inform climate adaptation and mitigation investments as well as the United Nations campaign to provide universal access in the next five years to early warnings of hazards such as floods and droughts,” he said.

Csaba Kőrösi,President of the U.N. General Assembly, welcomed the first report saying that it “fills an important knowledge gap, supporting the assessment of effects of climate, environmental and societal change on the Earth’s water resources. It confirms that the conception and sustainable implementation of resilient food and energy systems is possible based on informed scientific analysis. Knowing how much water is available where and when is key to water security as well as a catalyzer of cooperation.”

WMO said in a press release that its first edition of the global report looks at streamflow – the volume of water flowing through a river channel at any given time. It also assesses terrestrial water storage – all water on the land surface and sub-surface and the cryosphere (frozen water).

The press release said information and accompanying maps are largely based on modelled data (to achieve maximum geographical coverage) and remotely sensed information from NASA’s GRACE (Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment) mission for terrestrial water storage. The modelled results were validated against observed data, wherever available).

The report highlights the lack of accessible verified hydrological data. WMO’s Unified Data Policy seeks to accelerate the availability and sharing of hydrological data, including river discharge and transboundary river basins information.

(Following are excerpts from the press release)

Streamflow

Large areas of the globe recorded dryer than normal conditions in 2021, compared to the average of the 30-year hydrological base period.

These areas included South America’s Rio de la Plata area, where a persistent drought has affected the region since 2019, the South and South-East Amazon, and basins in North America including the Colorado, Missouri and Mississippi river basins.

In Africa, rivers such as the Niger, Volta, Nile and Congo had less than normal discharge in 2021. Similarly, rivers in parts of Russia, West Siberia and in Central Asia had lower than average discharge in 2021.

There was above normal river discharge in some Northern American basins, the North Amazon and Southern Africa (Zambezi and Orange), as well as China (the Amur river basin) and northern India.

Approximately one third of the areas analysed was in line with the 30-year average.

Significant flood events with numerous casualties were reported, among others, from China (Henan province), northern India, western Europe, and countries impacted by tropical cyclones, such as Mozambique, the Philippines and Indonesia.

Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia have faced several consecutive years with below-average rainfall causing a regional drought.

Terrestrial water storage

Terrestrial water storage is all water on the land surface and in the subsurface.

In 2021, terrestrial water storage was classified as below normal (in comparison to average calculated from 2002-2020) on the West coast of the USA, in the central part of South America and Patagonia, North Africa and Madagascar, Central Asia and the Middle East, Pakistan and North India.

It was above normal in the central part of Africa, the northern part of South America, specifically the Amazon basin, and the northern part of China.

On a longer-term basis, the report pointed out several hotspots with a negative trend in terrestrial water storage. These include Brazil’s Rio São Francisco basin, Patagonia, the Ganges and Indus headwaters, as well as south-western USA.

In contrast, the Great Lakes Region exhibits a positive anomaly, as does the Niger basin, East African Rift and North Amazon basin.

Overall, the negative trends are stronger than the positive ones. Some of the hotspots are exacerbated by over-abstraction of groundwater for irrigation. The melting of snow and ice also has a significant impact in several areas including Alaska, Patagonia and the Himalayas.

The Cryosphere

The cryosphere (glaciers, snow cover, ice caps and, where present, permafrost) is the world’s biggest natural reservoir of freshwater. Mountains are often called natural “water towers” because they are the source of rivers and freshwater supplies for an estimated 1.9 billion people.

Changes to cryosphere water resources affect food security, human health, ecosystem integrity and maintenance, and leads to significant impacts on economic and social development. Such changes also cause hazards such as river flooding and flash floods due to glacier lake outbursts.

With rising temperatures, the annual glacier run-off typically increases at first, until a turning point, often called ”peak water”, is reached, upon which run-off declines. The long-term projections of the changes in glacier run-off and the timing of peak water are key inputs to long-term adaptation decisions.

Future assessments in the WMO State of Global Water Resources will provide the incentive to regularly assess changes in the cryosphere and the variability of water resources, at basin and regional level.

Media contact: Clare Nullis, WMO media officer, cnullis@wmo.int. Tel +41-79 709 13 97

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U.N. climate summit strikes deal to pay poor countries hit by climate disasters

Sharm el-Sheikh/New York, November 20 – The climate change summit has agreed to set up a fund to compensate vulnerable countries hit by climate disasters, a deal the U.N. said is a step towards justice for victims of climate change.

The summit attended by some 200 governments and international organizations ended on overtime in the Egyptian resort with a final document that disappointed climate activists, particularly regarding the issues of fossil fuels use and rising atmospheric temperatures.

“This COP has taken an important step towards justice,” U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said, referring to the 27th Conference of Parties on climate change. “I welcome the decision to establish a loss and damage fund and to operationalize it in the coming period.”

But Guterres said, “Clearly this will not be enough, but it is a much-needed political signal to rebuild broken trust.”

Expressing his disappointment, Guterres pointed out that the final document left critical climate issues untouched.

“We need to drastically reduce emissions now – and this is an issue this COP did not address,” he said.

Negotiators at the summit under the Egyptian presidency adopted the deal known as loss and damage sought by poor countries to get developed nations, including the biggest carbon polluters like China and the United States, to pay for damage caused by floodings, wildfires and the likes.

But details of the agreement to create a fund for loss and damage such as which countries and how much will they contribute to the fund remain to be sort out at future talks.  

The agreement on the loss and damage program helped the two-week long summit to adopt a final document on climate change. The loss and damage program and creation of a new financial facility to compensate for climate disasters were key demands of developing countries.

Egypt’s Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry, president of the climate meeting, said decisions taken by negotiators before they adopted the final document were “a gateway that will scale up implementation and will enable us to transform to future of climate future neutrality and climate resilient development.”

“I call upon all of you to view these draft decisions not merely as words on paper but as a collective message to the world that we have heeded the call of our leaders and of current and future generations to set the right pace and direction for the implementation of the Paris agreement and the achievement of its goals.”

“The world is watching, I call on us all to rise to the expectations entrusted to us by the global community, and especially by those who are most vulnerable and yet have contributed the least to climate change.”

Negotiators concluded the meeting with the adoption of the loss and damage facility with a commitment to financially support vulnerable countries by the next climate summit in 2023 as well as the post-2025 financial goal for mitigation work program to reduce emissions faster, catalyze impactful action, and secure assurances from key countries that they will take immediate action to raise ambition and keep us on the path towards 1.5 degrees Celsius.

When the summit opened on November 6, it was strongly urged to implement programs agreed at previous meetings such as reduce emissions and finance projects to help countries adapt to climate consequences.

The U.N. said over 40,000 people have registered to attend, including government officials of the 197 countries that signed the UNFCCC, businesses, non-government organizations and civil society groups. The U.N. said COP27 programs include finance, science, youth and future generations, decarbonization, adaptation and agriculture, gender, water, energy, biodiversity and solutions.

At the COP26 in Glasgow, Scotland, in 2021, governments agreed to act on  climate plans agreed upon at the Paris conference in 2015, which called for limiting atmospheric warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius by the end of the centuryand for developed countries to provide $100 billion a year to assist developing countries.

But a study published by the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) on October 26 said plans submitted by countries to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions, which contribute to earth warming, have failed their targets and temperatures may rise to at least 2.5 C, a level deemed catastrophic.

(By J. Tuyet Nguyen)

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U.N. climate summit needs extra time to work on final document

Sharm el-Sheikh/New York, November 18 – The annual climate change summit attended by some 200 governments and international organizations failed to agree on a final document as it was closing and would need more time, the president of the meeting said citing outstanding climate-related issues.

The 27th Conference of the Parties (November 6-18) at the Egyptian resort city will close one day later than expected after calling on negotiators to “shift gears” so an agreement can be reached on the remaining sticking points, U.N. News reported.

“I remain concerned at the number of outstanding issues, including on finance mitigation, adaptation, loss and damage and their inter linkages,” COP27 President, Sameh Shoukry, told delegates at the Sharm el-Sheik International Convention Centre.

U.N. News said Secretary-General António Guterres held separate intensive talks with members of the European Union and the Group of 77 and China, which groups developing countries, to spur negotiations on the final text.

“As the negotiations draw to a close, the Secretary-General urges parties to aim for maximum ambition on loss and damage and in reduction of emissions,” the U.N. leaders said in a note issued in Sharm el-Sheikh by his spokesperson.

The document under negotiations reaffirmed the 1.5-degree Celsius target to curb global warming and welcomes reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). It also called for “deep, rapid emission cuts” as well as an acceleration of clean energy transitions in the 2020s.

The document also keeps language reached at the 2021 climate summit in Glasgow on “phasing down coal power” and calls on parties to “rationalise fossil fuel subsidies” and urges new climate action national plans by 2023, UN News said. The document welcomes the loss and damage agenda item, but it does not mention the creation or a funding facility.

The European Union has presented an official proposal for creating a loss and damage fund, sparking hope for what some delegations from developing countries said might be a “breakthrough.”

As the negotiations on the final document dragged on and appeared to miss the deadline on closing date, Guterres said, “There is clearly a breakdown in trust between North and South, and between developed and emerging economies. This is no time for finger-pointing. The blame game is a recipe for mutually assured destruction.”

“The world is watching and has a simple message: stand and deliver,” Guterres said at the conference center.

When the summit opened on November 6, it was strongly urged to implement programs agreed at previous meetings such as reduce emissions and finance projects to help countries adapt to climate consequences.

The U.N. said over 40,000 people have registered to attend, including government officials of the 197 countries that signed the UNFCCC, businesses, non-government organizations and civil society groups. The U.N. said COP27 programs include finance, science, youth and future generations, decarbonization, adaptation and agriculture, gender, water, energy, biodiversity and solutions.

At the COP26 in Glasgow, Scotland, in 2021, governments agreed to act on  climate plans agreed upon at the Paris conference in 2015, which called for limiting atmospheric warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius by the end of the centuryand for developed countries to provide $100 billion a year to assist developing countries.

But a study published by the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) on October 26 said plans submitted by countries to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions, which contribute to earth warming, have failed their targets and temperatures may rise to at least 2.5 C, a level deemed catastrophic

Guterres said in a message at the opening of COP27 that the last eight years have been the warmest on record, “making every heatwave more intense and life-threatening, especially for vulnerable populations.”

Citing a report by the World Meteorological Organization, he said, “Sea levels are rising at twice the speed of the 1990s – posing an existential threat for low-lying island states, and threatening billions of people in coastal regions. Glacier melt records are themselves melting away – jeopardizing water security for whole continents.”

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