*[Enwl-eng] Here is the latest news from the High-Level Champions!

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Apr 26, 2023, 1:13:50 PM4/26/23
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UN Global Climate Action
26 April 2023
High-Level Champions'
Newsletter
23 venture capital firms join Race to Zero
Race to Zero is delighted to approve Venture Climate Alliance (VCA) as a formal partner. The VCA has been created by leading global venture capital firms to define, facilitate, and realize net zero-aligned pathways for early-stage investments with a goal to build a robust movement within the venture industry to combat climate change. 


The VCA has been approved by the Race to Zero under the leadership of the UN Climate Change High-Level Champions, and constitutes a new sector-specific alliance under the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero (GFANZ). The VCA will work alongside other sector-specific alliances within GFANZ to develop methodologies and tools appropriate for early-stage investments, and to share expertise on climate solutions across the broader financial sector. 

UN Climate Change High-Level Champions for COP27 and COP28 Presidencies, Dr. Mahmoud Mohieldin and Razan Al Mubarak said:
”Venture capital funding is crucial to advancing the climate agenda. It plays a key role in the development of climate mitigation technology which is urgently needed to keep us within a 1.5 °C limit. Race to Zero’s 25 Partners and around 11,000 members are working hard to implement the campaign’s robust, science-aligned criteria. 

Two-thirds of the largest companies in Race to Zero have shifted from pledges to science- based transition plans, driving down emissions in their operations by 6.5% on average. A total of 70% have set an absolute reduction target by 2030. We look forward to supporting and collaborating with the Venture Climate Alliance as together we build on this significant momentum in this year of the Global Stocktake.”

Membership in the VCA is open to any venture capital firm, or a division of a larger firm that is engaged primarily in venture investing, that agrees to fulfill VCA’s commitments and to actively contribute to the organization as appropriate. For more information, or to become a member, please visit ventureclimatealliance.org.
High-Level Champions lock in 2023 Marrakech Partnership Work Programme
The High-Level Champions and Marrakech Partnership’s programme of work for 2023, to drive short-term ambition, action and alignment among non-Party stakeholders (NPS) on the Paris goals, has been finalized by the High-Level Champions.

The 2023 work programme sets out short-term goals for the delivery of the five-year plan of the Marrakech Partnership, released at COP26, to engage NPS with the ambitious, just, equitable and inclusive transitions needed for a 1.5°C resilient world in 2050. 

The work programme reflects the shared vision of the High-Level Champions, emerging priorities of the COP 28 Presidency, plus a recent stakeholder consultation. It also places specific emphasis on addressing the adaptation gap and strengthening resilience, increasing just finance for climate action, mobilizing mitigation ambition and action, and building credibility through enhanced accountability. The programme encourages active participation from NPS in the first Global Stocktake. 
 
Building on the Marrakech Partnership five-year plan, the 2023 programme is structured to deliver the following actions:

  • Mobilizing NPS towards credible, transparent, science-based goals to maximize ambition and action, through the Race to Zero and Race to Resilience campaigns.
  • Driving systems transformation through cross-sector, cross-region collaboration - to mobilize action on finance, technology and capacity building.
  • Engaging NPS in the UNFCCC processes, particularly the GST - to create the conditions to ratchet-up global ambition.
  • Enhancing accountability, by improving transparency tools and processes for tracking NPS climate commitments, including the Global Climate Action portal (GCAP).

Overall, the 2023 work programme is designed to promote an all-of-society and systems transformation approach across every sector, guided by radical collaboration, and strengthened support, which are needed to deliver national plans through a positively reinforcing “ambition loop”.
Respecting, promoting and enacting the rights of Indigenous Peoples
Razan Al Mubarak, UN Climate Change High-Level Champion for the COP28 Presidency and President of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), urged for greater inclusion of indigenous peoples as “full partners in decision-making processes that affect their lands, health, resources and way of life” at the 22nd Session of the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues (UNPFII). 
 
During her keynote address, Ms. Al Mubarak said: “The Paris Agreement states that climate change is a common concern for all humankind and when taking action to address climate change, the rights of indigenous peoples should be respected, promoted and enacted.”

Pointing to reports from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the Paris Agreement and the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, Ms. Al Mubarak recognized the myriad of contributions by indigenous peoples to tackling the climate crisis from advocacy to environmental stewardship. 

A seat at the table: G7 acknowledges subnational Climate Action  
The G7 Ministers’ Meeting on Climate, Energy and Environment in Sapporo, Japan, has promised to speed up the phaseout of unabated fossil fuels and the shift towards renewable energy. According to the world’s seven largest advanced economies, this is necessary to achieve net-zero emissions in energy systems by 2050 at the latest. The G7 countries underscored that the net zero by 2050 goal is in line with the trajectories required to limit global average temperature rise to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels. Addressing ministers at the meeting, UN Climate Change Chief Simon Stiell called on the entire international community to urgently accelerate its exit from all fossil fuels to avoid the worst impacts of climate change.

It also concluded with the announcement of the first-ever G7 Round-table on Subnational Climate Actions in collaboration with Urban7 (U7) - the voice of local governments at the G7 process.

In their final Communiqué, the G7 Ministers for Climate, Energy and Environment addressed, “the vital role of subnational actors in realizing the transformation toward net zero, climate-resilient, circular, and nature positive economies, furthering socioeconomic opportunities based on local capacity, needs and individual environmental conditions.” 
The Ministers committed to “catalyze support for actions by subnational actors, encourage sharing best practices and promote city-to-city cooperation”.

Concretely, the Ministers established the G7 Round-table on Subnational Climate Actions, as a forum “for G7 members to share national policies and programs promoting subnational climate actions both domestic and across borders”. The Ministers explicitly recognized the Urban7 (U7), noting that they “look forward to facilitating a dialogue with the U7 at the Round-table.” 

The outcomes of the Round-table will be presented to the G20 and at COP 28 in the UAE later in the year. 
Scaling up green hydrogen projects in Africa

Africa could meet nearly a quarter of its energy needs from indigenous and from clean renewable energy by 2030 and increase that to as much as two thirds by 2050, according to the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA). But while the continent is rich in potential energy resources, it requires further support and strengthened capacities to leverage these opportunities.

One of those sources is green hydrogen. Currently, the majority of green hydrogen projects that have reached final investment decision are located in developed countries. 
A recent forum organised by the Mauritanian Government and the Africa Green Hydrogen Alliance (AGHA) with the support of the Green Hydrogen Organisation and UN Climate Change High-Level Champions, addressed the issue of financing large-scale renewable energy and green hydrogen projects in developing countries and emerging economies.  

Over two hundred representatives from African governments, renewable energy and green hydrogen project developers and development finance institutions (DFIs) among others came together for the two-day event.

During the meeting, a new report Getting the right blend: Innovative development finance for the large-scale renewable and green hydrogen economy was published which draws on the experiences of a wide group of DFIs, export credit agencies, developers and institutional investors. It looks in detail at what ‘financial close’ for a large-scale renewable energy and green hydrogen project could look like and the most effective financial instruments that should be scaled up.

In addition, the forum concluded with the publication of the Nouakchott Message; a set of recommendations calling on DFIs and their shareholders to enable the African green hydrogen economy as soon as possible.

It is a contribution to the wider Bridgetown Agenda for the Reform of the Global Finance Architecture, an initiative launched by the Government of Barbados, and was delivered by the Mauritanian government to the World Bank and IMF Spring Meetings on 15 April.
Stockholm Climate Week
To coincide with a recent meeting of EU Environment Ministers in Stockholm, the city held its first Climate Week, providing four days of live climate broadcasting.

The Climate Champions Team (CCT) joined leading scientists at the opening plenary to highlight how leading companies are taking action in line with science to cut both their own emissions, and those they influence through their business activity. 
In addition, the CCT talked to industry leaders on the exponential growth of electric vehicles, mobility as a service, and micro mobility in cities, driven by smart technologies. Electric Vehicle charging infrastructure is expected to hit a tipping point around 2025 with price parity between fossil fuel and electric cars.

At the closing ceremony, the CCT joined Johan Falk, CEO and Co-founder, Exponential Roadmap Initiative to discuss how world leaders in science, policy, and business can and must work together to accelerate the implementation of existing solutions for the greatest challenge of our time: halving global emissions by 2030. 

You can watch the event here.
In Case You Missed It
  • The Energy Transitions Committee estimates that at least US$130bn a year is needed to protect the most at-risk areas of tropical forest by the end of the decade, alongside reductions in beef and dairy consumption and government bans on deforestation. Its ‘Financing the Transition: The Cost of Avoiding Deforestation’ report suggests money needed to counter the economic incentive to destroy forests for cattle ranching, agriculture and other causes could come from carbon markets, wealthy governments and philanthropists. It also states that urgent actions including a ban on clearing forests, developing businesses that rely on standing forests and reducing demand for commodities linked to deforestation, such as palm oil, soya, beef and cocoa are also necessary.

  • Climate change is compounding inequalities faced by women in agriculture according to a new report from the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). Some of the findings in ‘The status of women in agrifood systems’ concluded that women working in agriculture 'tend to do so under highly unfavourable conditions' often in the face of 'climate-induced weather shocks and in situations of conflict.’

  • Pakistan plans to induct 14,000 megawatts of renewable energy into the national grid over the next 10 years in a bid to supply low-cost electricity to consumers and fight climate change. In February 2023, Pakistan’s total energy production stood at 7,756 gigawatt-hours (GWh) of which 5% was renewable energy. 

  • As we are in the decisive decade for climate action, reaching our 2030 climate change targets requires us to add an average of 1,000 GW renewable energy each year, according to a recent IRENA report.


  • The temperature of the world’s ocean surface has hit an all-time high since satellite records began according to US government data. Climate scientists said preliminary data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa) showed the average temperature at the ocean’s surface has been at 21.1 °C since the start of April – beating the previous high of 21 °C set in 2016.

  • California has issued a progress report on actions over the past year to build climate resilience across the state. The Climate Adaptation Strategy outlines projects and programs throughout the state helping to protect people from the impacts of climate change. California Governor Gavin Newsom said: “Climate change is happening all around us. In just the last year, California experienced a record heat wave and communities suffering from years of drought are now facing historic flooding. We are acting now with an all-of-the-above approach to help all Californians prepare and adapt. California’s Climate Adaptation Strategy recognizes that extreme weather and other climate impacts threaten communities in every part of our state and accelerates actions to protect the most vulnerable. While we have made great progress over the last year, the climate crisis demands we move further and faster to reduce risks to our people.”

  • Uganda Development Bank (UDB), has launched the UDB Climate Finance Facility (CFF), a strategic Fund that will make available affordable finance that aims to promote climate-smart agriculture, ensure climate resilient infrastructure and low carbon industries. Addressing guests at the launch, the Managing Director of UDB Ms. Patricia Ojangole said; “The increasing threat of climate change and environmental degradation has the potential to present high socio-economic risks to the economy. As the impacts continue to manifest through floods, drought, landslides, animal and crop epidemics, among other signs in different parts of the country, they are more deleterious to the poor and marginalized who depend largely on natural resources for their livelihoods.”


  • With respect to the Global Stocktake process that enables countries and other stakeholders to see where they’re collectively making progress toward meeting the goals of the Paris Agreement, the summary report of the second meeting of the technical dialogue convened at COP 27 has been published. In addition, the co-facilitators of the technical dialogue invite Parties to the Paris Agreement and non-Party stakeholders to submit a one-page poster before 22 May, summarizing their inputs to the third and final meeting of the technical dialogue (TD1.3), to be displayed at the Bonn Climate Change Conference in Bonn, Germany this June. The High-Level Champions submission ahead of TD1.3 can be found here. Also, the first workshop for non-State Actors in Brazil was held in Sao Paulo on April 11th. The event, organized by CDP, the Climate Champions Latin America Team and supported by the Climate and Society Institute (iCS) aimed to promote capacity building around the Global Stocktake and engage relevant stakeholders in the discussions. 

  • Shifting to a low-carbon economy can unlock new jobs and opportunities but it must be done in a way that is as socially and economically fair as possible for everyone, according to on-the-ground case studies contained in a new report from UN Climate Change.

  • From renewable energy in Ghana to sustainable transport in Cambodia - experts supporting the UNFCCC's Technology Mechanism have been looking at transferable and scalable examples of climate action that can bolster national climate plans under the Paris Agreement.

  • The 2023 United Nations Small Island Developing States Partnerships Awards are now accepting applications. The Awards aim to reward the most successful SIDS partnerships, highlight best practices, increase the visibility of the SIDS Partnership Framework, motivate the creation of new SIDS partnerships and incentivize the registrations of new partnerships for SIDS. The deadline for the application is Friday 28 April 2023. 
Keeping up with the Champions
  • Razan Al Mubarak attended the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues(UNPFII) this week. Together with Indigenous Youth Leader Taylor Behn-Tsakoza and with COP28 Director-General Majid Al Suwaidi in attendance, the High-Level Champion co-hosted an Indigenous Youth Dialogue to better understand how to meaningfully engage on global health, food and water security, as well as nature and biodiversity. In addition, Al Mubarak co-moderated a panel discussion with, amongst others, Ms.Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim, Co-chair of the International Indigenous Peoples Forum on Climate Change( IIPFCC’s) and Global Ambassador to the Race to Zero and the Race to Resilience Ms. Xiye Bastida. During the discussion Al Mubarak emphasized the importance of including and respecting Indigenous values and knowledge systems for planetary health and climate change. 

  • As many celebrate Ramadan, Passover and Easter, Al Mubarak called for the shared principle of compassion to unite us in our fight against climate change in an op-ed published in Arabian Business. Al Mubarak said the belief in treating others as we’d like to be treated exists in every religion, and the reminder to take care of each other is especially pertinent this month.

  • In an op-ed published by Reuters, Mahmoud Mohieldin outlined his proposal to address the current inequality of poorer nations paying both the highest human cost of climate change as well as the capital to shield themselves from it. In the article, Mohieldin sets out his “1% for 1.5C” proposal. The idea is for Multilateral Development Banks to extend concessional finance terms to middle-income, as well as low-income countries to help them pay for renewable energy and essential infrastructure that can help them deal with the increasing risks of climate change. They would be able to borrow at a 1% interest rate, with a 10-year grace period during which they wouldn’t have to pay anything back, and then a 20-year repayment phase. The difference between the artificially low 1% rate the countries pay and their market cost of finance could be subsidized in part through the as-yet unpaid portion of the promised $100 billion climate finance pledge, estimated conservatively at $20 billion annually.

  • In an opinion piece for The Korea Herald, Mohieldin highlighted the important role innovation, smart technology and public-private partnerships are playing in supporting Korea’s climate agenda. 

  • Mohieldin and Ms. Hannah Beswick, Senior Advisor to Al Mubarak met with the High-Level Champions’ network of Global Ambassadors. The group convenes global leaders with a range of expertise and knowledge across regions and sectors to support the Race to Zero and Race to Resilience. During the session Mohieldin and Beswick thanked the group for their continued support, outlined key priorities for both campaigns and discussed opportunities and areas for collaboration with the Ambassadors in the year ahead. 

  • Mohieldin was invited to speak at The European House - Ambrosetti’s annual workshop on ‘Sustainable Finance and its Impact on the Future of Business.”. During the session, Mohieldin urged that advancing climate action must go hand in hand with action on the Sustainable Development Goals.

  • During the World Bank/IMF Spring Meetings, Mohieldin attended the Sustainable Debt Coalition high level meeting. The Coalition was launched at COP27 to provide a framework for collaboration between creditor and borrower nations, focusing on the nexus of sustainability and debt management. During the discussion in Washington D.C., Mohieldin urged the need to unlock climate finance for developing countries through various financial instruments; grants, equity, debt for nature and climate swaps. He also outlined how non-State actors can participate in sustainable debt management using philanthropic finance and private finance to catalyse financing for development.
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