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UN
Global Climate Action
04
August
2023 | |
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High-Level
Champions'
Newsletter | |
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Landmark
IMO agreement starts shipping race to
zero | |
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A
monumental agreement charting a course to
decarbonise the shipping sector by 2050 was
recently adopted by Member States of the
International Maritime Organization
(IMO).
For
the first time, all 175 Member States agreed on a
common objective: to achieve net zero GHG
emissions by or around 2050 and ensure a just and
equitable transition to a 20-30% reduction in
shipping emissions by 2030, progressing to a
70-80% reduction by 2040. On a per-ship basis,
these measures would require around a 90-95%
reduction of GHG intensity by 2040.
The
UN Climate Change High-Level Champions for COP 27
and COP 28, Dr Mahmoud Mohieldin and Her
Excellency Razan Al Mubarak, welcomed the
commitment as a vital step towards the goal to
keep global warming to 1.5 °C
and
ensure a just and equitable
transition.
H.E.
Razan Al Mubarak, said the outcome: “...shows what
is possible through international cooperation,
building consensus and working together in
addressing the urgency of the climate crisis. The
emission targets landed in this strategy,
including the 2030 Breakthrough,
send a clear signal that shipping is part of the
climate solution.”
Dr
Mahmoud Mohieldin added: “ …this revised
strategy which aims to achieve net-zero emissions
in the shipping industry by 2050 is a positive
step particularly for developing economies.
Several African countries are already poised to
become major players in a green hydrogen economy,
which can help the shipping industry reduce its
GHG emissions.”
H.E.
Razan Al Mubarak echoed this sentiment in a
recent Thomson Reuters article
stating that shifting the shipping sector to zero
emission fuels would create immense potential to
“buoy up all boats,” especially lower income
regions, such as Africa and India, through
increased
resilience and economic growth.
The
IMO’s agreed GHG strategy:
- Sets
a level of ambition to keep 1.5C within reach,
reducing shipping GHG emissions to net zero by
or around 2050 with ambitious, robust interim
check-points for 2030 and 2040.
- Commits
to a lifecycle approach for assessing emissions
to avoid shifting emissions from sea to
land.
- Specifies
a clear and rapid timeline for adopting and
applying binding regulatory measures.
- Commits
to a green transition for shipping that will be
just and equitable; leaving no one
behind.
As
ships being built now will be in service by 2040,
all ship orders from now onwards must be capable
of running on zero emission fuels by 2040, if they
are to be useful for their full lifespan. The
Baltic and International Maritime Council (BIMCO),
the world's largest direct-membership organisation
for shipowners, charterers, shipbrokers and
agents, commented, “The BIMCO secretariat is of
the firm belief that the revised IMO strategy is a
game changer for the shipping industry, and it is
important for all to understand its implications
for both existing and new ships.”
Global
mandatory measures and regulations will enter into
force in 2027, consisting of a global GHG fuel
standard and an economic measure that sets a price
on GHG emissions based on full lifecycle
emissions. John Butler, President & CEO of the
World Shipping Council (WSC) commented, “The next
two years will be critical – for 2050 targets to
be achievable IMO member nations must develop and
agree on a lifecycle-based global fuel standard
and economic measure by 2025, so they can be
implemented by 2027.”
With
this resolution firing the starting gun on the
race to zero emission shipping, we call for
companies across the maritime value chain to join
the 76 maritime actors already in the Race to Zero
- to collaborate on the shift to a decarbonized
shipping sector. | |
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Dr
Mohieldin addresses the European Regional Forum,
Frankfurt | |
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Mohieldin attended
the
Second European Regional Forum on ‘Climate
Initiatives to
Finance Climate Action and the SDGs during which
he highlighted the role of the Five Regional
Roundtables Initiative, held by the COP27 and
COP28 Presidencies, the UN Regional Commissions
and the High Level Champions, in raising climate
finance, by showcasing bankable, investable, and
implementable projects to investors.
During his virtual
participation at the event in Frankfurt, Mohieldin
emphasized the significance of investing in
renewable projects, which play a crucial role in
reducing carbon emissions. He also stressed the
importance of all European actors participating in
initiatives related to Critical Raw Materials
(CRMs), instrumental in achieving the transition
towards low-emission economies.
In addition he encouraged
investors and financiers to participate in
financing climate and development projects in
developing nations and emerging economies. He also
urged these countries to improve their investment
environments to meet the needs and requirements of
project owners, investors, financiers, and local
communities.
The forum was attended by
officials from international and regional
organizations, as well as European development
banks, including Esther Wandel, Head of Investment
Funds and Sustainable Finance Division at the
German Federal Ministry of Finance, Dmitry
Mariyasin, Deputy Executive Secretary of the
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe, and
Daniel Bouzas, UNEP Regional Coordinator to
Europe. | |
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Paris
Summit for a New Global Financing Pact -
unblocking the climate finance
logjam | |
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Around 50 Heads of State and
scores of representatives of international,
private-sector, and civil-society organisations
recently gathered in Paris to forge a ‘New Global
Financing Pact.’ The meeting was proposed at COP
27 by Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley and
French President Emmanuel Macron to fundamentally
discuss the overhaul of the global financial
system to unlock climate finance for mitigation,
adaptation and nature regeneration.
High-Level Champions H.E.
Razan Al Mubarak and Dr. Mahmoud Mohieldin
attended the event with Mohieldin reporting that steps were taken in
the right direction at the Paris Summit, but “...the challenges and
opportunities of today’s world demand a greater
degree of resolution and persistence to surmount
the obstacles to sustainable
development.”
H.E. Ms. Al Mubarak also
spoke at an event outlining a new roadmap for the
development of high-integrity biocredits and Dr.
Mahmoud Mohieldin attended discussions on
unlocking credit enhancement for
sustainability-linked sovereign finance and
mobilising GFANZ private capital. In addition,
Mohieldin attended the ‘Finance for a just
renewable energy and hydrogen economy” event
organised by the Green Hydrogen Organisation (GH2) and provided closing
remarks at a gathering of the Sustainable Debt
Coalition on actionable recommendations on the
theme of debt and climate change.
At the Summit, Mohieldin and
Bogolo Kenewendo, Special Advisor to the
Champions, zeroed in on the hard reality that it is more expensive to borrow
money for climate action projects in poor
countries than it is in wealthy countries. This logjam is slowing the
flow of finance for low-and middle-income
countries, from $91bn in 2019 to less than $60bn
in 2022, according to the World Bank. To address
this, Mohieldin and Kenewendo laid out the
Champions’ vision for a new financial
architecture, allowing finance to surge into
high-quality, shovel-ready projects that will
decarbonise developing countries.
A rich vein of bankable
projects was showcased at last year’s Regional Finance Forums in the run up to COP 27. For
example, over 30 electric motorcycle startups are
on a mission to electrify East Africa’s
motorcycle-dominated transport sector. With an
addressable market of around 20 million motorcycles in use in
Africa, and a quarter of those in East Africa,
there is a massive investment opportunity to
divert transport down a sustainable highway - by
introducing cheap, clean-running electric
motorcycles. Rwandan start-up Ampersand Solar
provides a cleaner, more profitable alternative
for the ‘boda boda’ taxi drivers which provide
Rwanda’s main source of youth employment. By
switching to e-motos, powered with swappable
batteries, the boda boda drivers can slash their
daily costs by around 40%, compared to running
petrol vehicles - while addressing both carbon
emissions and air pollution. Ampersand plans to
distribute more than 700,000 e-motos, generating
$1.7bn in revenues by 2031 - an outsized impact
made feasible due to finance, plus an innovative
smart ‘Pay-As-You-Go’ mobile payments model for
boda boda drivers.
To unlock finance for
innovative business models such as Ampersand and
many others, the Champions’ propose a “1% for 1.5 °C” model - to extend
below-market-rate, or concessional, capital for
developing countries. Through this, multilateral
development banks, such as the World Bank, could
boost climate resilience in developing countries
by offering a one percent interest rate, a 10-year
grace period, followed by a 20-year repayment
period.
Paris
summit - key outcomes:
- The IMF has
fulfilled a pledge to make $100bn in Special
Drawing Rights available to climate-vulnerable
countries, providing them with much-needed
liquidity.
- Senegal reached a
$2.7bn deal for clean energy investments from
developed countries, while Zambia locked in
$6.3bn of debt restructuring.
- World leaders
including Joe Biden, Emmanuel Macron, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Ursula von der Leyen, Fumio Kishida and William
Ruto signed an open letter, agreeing to collaborate
to address the interrelated shocks of
intensifying poverty, debt, income disparity -
alongside the deterioration of the
climate.
These are
important developments, but as Mohieldin stressed
in a TV interview with “Al Arabiya”
from the Paris Summit, curtailing dangerous
climate change requires funding of about $2.5
trillion annually. There is much unfinished
business that needs to be tackled this year –
including at the Africa Climate Summit in September and COP 28 in
November, to overhaul the financial system to
protect climate-vulnerable countries, and the
world at large, from the intensifying climate and
nature
crises. | |
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Africa
Climate Week 2023: A Major Opportunity
Ahead | |
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Excitement is building for
Africa Climate Week, to be hosted in Nairobi,
Kenya, from 4-8th September, which provides a
decisive pre-COP 28 moment to unite stakeholders
behind a just transition in
Africa.
The Champions will show up in
force to drive systems transformation, by
encouraging collaboration between cities, regions,
businesses and investors, to deliver enormous
benefits for the continent and globally through
four events under the thematic tracks of:
- Energy systems
and industry.
- Cities, urban and
rural settlements, infrastructure and
transport.
- Land, oceans,
food and water.
- Societies,
health, livelihoods and economies.
Importantly, this year, the
Champions aim is that adaptation is featured
within 50% of both the content and outcomes of
each track event that they are planning to
convene.
Registration
for ACW2023 is now open. To find out useful
information for trip planning and participation in
ACW2023, please visit this
FAQ
page. | |
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‘Advancing
Clean Energy Together’ - the 14th Clean Energy
Ministerial | |
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The
world’s energy community gathered at the 14th
Clean Energy Ministerial
in Goa, India alongside the G20 Energy Transitions
Ministerial meetings. Governments,
companies, technologists and civil society came
together under this year’s theme, ‘Advancing Clean
Energy Together,’ to promote policies and
programmes and share knowledge.
The
key focus of the Champions was to rally leaders
behind the Breakthrough Agenda,
which is designed to make key clean technologies
attractive, accessible and affordable to all. We
already have all of the technologies we need for a
1.5
°C resilient world,
now we need to focus on demand creation and
raising finance to enable technologies to be
deployed at scale. The Climate Champions Team’s
Director of Policy and Engagement, Nathan Cooper, led
a panel at the event to showcase
progress of the Breakthrough Agenda
in hard-to abate sectors, including power, steel,
and road transport.
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Rio
De Janeiro embraces Mangrove
Breakthrough
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Rio
De Janeiro’s Secretary of State for the
Environment and Sustainability, Thiago Pampolha,
recently committed to
align the State with the Mangrove Breakthrough
initiative,
which aims to secure the future of 15 million
hectares of mangroves globally by 2030. The
State’s proposed initiatives
include:
- The
restoration of 59 hectares of mangroves in the
Guapimirim Environmental Protection Area and 14
hectares in the Guaratiba Biological Reserve,
through the ‘‘Forests of Tomorrow Program’’
and other state initiatives.
- The conservation of
mangroves via the ‘Olho no Verde’ forest
monitoring program, detecting deforestation
using high-resolution satellite images and
alerts that are automatically sent to inspection
teams.
- The reintroduction
of endangered/extinct fauna, including the
protected Guará bird, which is a symbol of the
mangroves, which will be reintroduced into the
State through the ‘Volta Guará’ project.
- The compilation of
a State Forest Inventory, to monitor the
quality and quantity of mangroves in the State
territory, totalling 18 thousand hectares along
19 coastal municipalities.
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The
Power to Persuade: finance leaders raise their
voices for science-based policy
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Leading
financial institutions are aligning their advocacy
efforts with their net-zero commitments, to drive
transformational change in their sector - and
beyond. The capacity to persuade is a critical
component of the Race to Zero criteria, which
involves organisations actively going beyond their
internal climate action policies to call for
ambitious regulation on net zero and
resilience.
Financial
systems are the endoskeletons of our economies,
and the three limbs of the system: insurance,
banking and investment carry tremendous potential
to drive transformation, through engagement. For
example, when finance institutions advocate for
self-regulation to create a level playing field
for decarbonisation, this can send positive and
impactful signals to governments. Areas where
banks, insurers and investors can advocate for
change include internalising the cost of carbon
pollution onto corporate balance sheets,
introducing emissions trading schemes, and
campaigning to phase out fossil fuel
subsidies.
Net Zero Asset Managers
(NZAM)
member,
Aviva Investors,
for example, has proposed an ambitious roadmap to
reset and repurpose the global financial
architecture - by reorienting markets to support,
not undermine, the Paris Agreement goals, and
working in the collective interests of all
countries and stakeholders.
In
1944, the original Bretton Woods Conference
created the financial architecture the world
needed to lift us from the Second World War. Now,
Aviva has set out a vision to hold a ‘New Bretton
Woods’ meeting in 2024 to realign the priorities
of the global financial system to deal with
climate change. Aviva’s Climate Emergency Roadmap for the
International Financial Architecture
is clear: a meaningful cost on carbon – with clear
market guidance on the rising future price curve,
increases in minimum pricing and measures to avoid
carbon leakage – “...is a necessary and essential
part of the required response to the climate
emergency.”
Aviva
is also advocating for the creation of a ‘unified
global transition plan,’ combining the transition
plans of all governments, policymakers,
regulators, supervisors, market participants and
corporations. This vision for transition plans as
a lever for accountability is evident within the
UK government’s Transition Plan Taskforce,
(an initiative that Aviva co-chairs), to introduce
mandatory transition plans across all
corporations, to deliver the country’s legally
binding net zero target.
Aviva
is not alone; other financial institutions,
including Legal & General, Phoenix Group,
NN Group and Nordea,
also rank highly in
InfluenceMap’s league
table of companies that direct lobbying towards
sustainable finance policy. Forward-thinking
investors are also joining the groundswell.
The
Global Investor Statement to
Governments on the Climate Crisis,
for example, calls for ambitious government policy
to leverage private capital for climate action. It
has been signed by 603 investors, representing $41
trillion USD assets under management. The
Statement contains bold investor-led policy
recommendations, for example, calling for enhanced
national commitments; implementation of the
Global Methane Pledge;
strengthened climate disclosure; and increased
climate financing for developing
countries.
Actively
calling for ambitious net zero policies that bring
all actors along shows a wholehearted commitment
to tackling climate change. To encourage this in
finance and other sectors, such as healthcare and
education, Race to Zero recently launched its
‘5th P (Persuade) Handbook’
at London Climate Action Week. The Handbook shows
‘pockets of the future in the present;’ outlining
how a wide range of non-Party stakeholders are
engaging in science-based advocacy. In this
video,
climate voices, from the UN High-Level Expert Group on the
Net-Zero Emissions Commitments of Non-State
Entities
- to Influence Map, explain the significance of
the ‘5th
P’. | |
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London
Climate Action Week Advances Global Net Zero,
Nature and Resilience Agenda
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London
Climate Action Week (LCAW) in July hosted a wide
range of meetings to drive global impact on net
zero, climate adaptation and
resilience.
At
the opening of LCAW,
and marking the third anniversary of Race to Zero,
H.E. Ms. Al Mubarak addressed the Champions-hosted
event, ‘The Race is On: Net Zero & Nature
Positive for Climate Action’ where she
acknowledged the immense challenge of climate
change and nature loss, calling it “one of the
greatest challenges that we all face.” However,
she found hope in “ambition in the real economy,”
underscored by the 11,000 Race to Zero members
that are driving towards the collective goal to
halve emissions by 2030.
Andrew
Steer, President & CEO of the Bezos Earth
Fund, reinforced this point, highlighting the
vital role of “tipping points” — moments of
dramatic, rapid change — that are emerging in
various sectors, such as green hydrogen. For
example, Steer pointed out that the cost of an
electrolyzer, a significant component of green
hydrogen production, has fallen by 70% in the last
decade, providing major investment opportunities
in low-income countries that are rich in renewable
resources, such as India and countries across
Africa.
H.E.
Ms. Al Mubarak also promoted regional climate
action, encouraging the implementation of metrics
for the involvement of women and small and
medium-sized enterprises, as well as greater
engagement with the world’s youth. Central to
progress towards the Paris Agreement goals, she
said, was nature. She argued that nature is “not
ornamental, but fundamental” in our quest for a
net zero and resilient future, reflecting her
vision for a nature-positive economy that was
recently published in the
Economist.
H.E.
Razan Al Mubarak, also joined Race to Resilience
(RTR) Ambassadors Gonzalo Muñoz and Feike Sijbesma
at the event, ‘Catalyzing Action for Climate
Adaptation & Resilience – Making the Business
Case,’
co-hosted by Resilience First, a partner of RTR,
in collaboration with the World Economic Forum,
PwC, and WSP. The event emphasized the six Task Forces
that
were newly launched to deliver the
Sharm-El Sheikh Adaptation
Agenda
(SAA) and
advance the Race to Resilience, and importance of
private sector leadership to drive a just
transition and catalyze business
resilience.
In
addition, Dr. Mahmoud Mohieldin spotlighted
the Race to Zero’s ‘5th P Handbook’,
a guide for non-state actors on how they can align
their advocacy, policy and engagement with net
zero goals, in the context of just
transition. | |
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New
corporate reporting standards
launched | |
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An
important milestone for corporate sustainability
reporting was announced during LCAW, with the
establishment of the International Financial
Reporting Standards (IFRS)'
inaugural company disclosure
standards
— which usher in a new era of
sustainability-related disclosures in capital
markets worldwide. In a discussion focused on
policy and regulation, Mardi McBrien, Director of
Strategic Affairs at IFRS explained the potential
of the International Sustainability Standards
Board (ISSB)’s first two sustainability standards:
S1, a general requirement standard covering all
sustainability information, plus S2, a climate
standard based on the recommendations of the
Task Force on Climate-related
Financial Disclosures (TCFD).
The new comprehensive standards for biodiversity,
land aggregation, and just transition, provide
much needed clarity on reporting requirements for
areas financially material to businesses,
including their supply chains. The increased
granularity on corporate disclosure is expected,
in turn, to improve investor confidence in the
transition and inform investment
decisions.
Marco
Rossi, the Director of Standardization and
Technical Policy at ISO, also contributed,
highlighting that the direction of travel towards
standardized reporting metrics is driving
ambitious action and integrity in the transition
to net zero and nature
positive. | |
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Race
to Zero latest developments:
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The
Exchange Group rings the opening bell on climate
action | |
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Race
to Zero has gained a powerful ally in its mission
to decarbonise financial systems. The Exchange
Group, which owns the London Stock Exchange, and
is a member of the Net Zero Financial Service Providers
Alliance (NZFSPA),
has become the campaign's latest partner. The
partnership demonstrates a shared commitment to
promoting ambitious non-Party stakeholder
leadership in the quest to halve emissions by
2030.
The
Champions commended the Exchange Group’s
commitment to a net zero future and expressed
their desire for continued collaboration: “We
warmly welcome the Net Zero Financial Service
Providers Exchange Group as an official partner of
the Race to Zero, highlighting the pivotal role of
stock exchanges in catalysing the transition to a
sustainable future. This partnership harnesses the
collective power of financial service providers
committed to achieving net zero emissions,
exemplifying the collaborative spirit essential to
tackling the climate crisis and inspiring others
to join the global movement towards a just
transition to a net-zero resilient
world.”
The
Exchange Group's Net Zero Target Framework,
developed collaboratively with 56 industry experts
from 28 organizations, equips capital market
infrastructure operators to set credible net zero
targets. The Exchange Group's eight committed
members will now turn these targets into
actionable steps within their respective markets,
customizing their strategies to fit local
circumstances and ensuring transparency in
reporting
progress. | |
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Environmental
Defense Fund and CLG Chile join the Race to
Zero | |
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The
Environmental Defense Fund’ Net Zero Action
Accelerator
team has joined the Race to Zero as an
Accelerator. Bringing cutting-edge science,
policy, and economic expertise, they equip leading
companies and their value chains with the
resources and capacity to act on their emission
reduction goals.
Race
to Zero also welcomes CLG Chile as an Accelerator
of the Race. CLG Chile was formed in 2009, after a
visit from His Majesty King Charles III, and due
to the joint management of the Faculty of
Economics and Business of the University of Chile,
the British Embassy and the British Chilean
Chamber of Commerce. The Group is currently made
up of 25 leading climate action companies and its
objective is to influence public policies in an
open, transparent, serious, and informed manner.
Supporting its developers in the design of
instruments that facilitate the transition towards
a carbon-neutral economy, seeking to maintain a
favourable space for business and aiming to
generate and attract development opportunities for
Chile.
Accelerators
drive us faster on the Race by enabling the
implementation of our criteria, and encouraging
future members to join Partner initiatives. Learn
more about them here. | |
Built
Environment reaches critical point, as 20% of key
actors set ‘Breakthrough
Ambition’ | |
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The
Built Environment sector, a key contributor to
global GHG emissions and resource extraction, has
achieved a critical point, as 20% of major actors
in the value chain, have now aligned their
ambition to transform the sector, by joining
Race to Zero.
Through
joining Race to Zero, these actors, which include
The Sustainable City in
Dubai
and French multinational Saint
Gobain,
signal an emerging alignment in the sector to
achieve the ‘2030 Breakthrough Outcome,’
whereby every project due for completion by 2030
will operate with net zero emissions and have at
least 40% less embodied carbon than today’s
standards. 20% of the Built Environment’s major
actors is momentous as their collective revenues
exceed $700 billion, representing a significant
level of GHG emissions - together they can drive
exponential systems transformation in how human
settlements are built and operated.
Despite
the emerging alignment of non-Party stakeholders,
we must not lose sight of the fact that the Built
Environment sector is not on track
to achieve decarbonization by 2050, as efforts to
decarbonise have been overtaken by the growth of
the sector globally. Responsible for almost 40% of
global energy-related carbon emissions and 50% of
all extracted materials, the Built Environment
sector is increasingly recognized as a critical
sector for climate action - most recently with the
COP 28 Presidency decision to include ‘Built
Environment’ within the conference programme. | |
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Race
to Resilience latest developments:
| |
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There
has been incredible recent progress in the Race to
Resilience (RTR),
with the continued efforts of global actors once
again proving that the race to a sustainable and
resilient future is well and truly on.
The
RTR Methodological Advisory Group (MAG) which
supports the development and refinement of the RTR
metrics framework, welcomes six new members
from different backgrounds and
expertise.
Adaptation
and resilience featured prominently at London
Climate Action Week, with the Champions team
contributing to events on resilient cities and
regions, building standards, re/insurance, and
water and sanitation.
| |
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Sheela
Patel, Society for the Promotion of Area Resource
Centres (SPARC) India (left) participating at the
London Climate Action Week event, ‘Cities
Dialogue: Adapting Urban Infrastructure to a
Changing
Climate.’ | |
News
from Race to Resilience
Partners | |
|
The
International Coalition for Sustainable
Infrastructure is calling for case studies for the
second issue of the Climate Resilient
Infrastructure report. This issue will take a
closer look at the relationship between
infrastructure and nature and will look to
highlight projects that incorporate nature in
their design, processes, or materials, or that
positively impact natural systems.
The
Global Fund for Coral Reefs (GFCR) has announced an investment of up to
$6 million into Carbonwave,
the world's leading developer of
ultra-regenerative advanced biomaterials from
seaweed. By efficiently up-cycling sargassum
seaweed, Carbonwave's biorefinery addresses toxic
and reef-damaging substances polluting the ocean
and shorelines in Mexico and the wider
Mesoamerican Reef (MAR) Region
Build
Change launches “Resilient Housing Across the
Americas”, a new web-series launched that brings a
series of conversations with leaders across
diverse countries and industries discussing the
future of housing. See the first episode featuring
Mayor Mitch Roth of Hawaii County and stay tuned
for future episodes, with World Economic Forum
leaders and more.
Extreme
Heat Resilience Alliance (EHRA), launched the Heat
Season Campaign, to raise awareness around the
impacts of extreme heat,
drive passion and urgency, reach city decision
makers, and provide solutions-focused guidance and
act as a catalyst for change.
The
Resilience Hub will be back with a pavilion at
COP28, as they aim to showcase the level of
support and collaboration for resilience as part
of the climate action agenda. To do this, they are
proposing a ‘community’ mobilisation which will
see the wide-range of partners involved in the
Race to Resilience.
Race
to Resilience Solution Stories: Every
week, the RTR is showcasing the efforts of
partners working towards building the resilience
of people and nature worldwide through solution
stories. Explore the latest stories
here:
Planting the seeds of resilience:
How agroforestry is redefining cocoa farming in
Central Africa
Partner:
The Climakers
Implementer:
CNOP-CAF (Concertation Nationale des Organisations
Paysannes de Centrafrique)
Country:
Central Africa Republic
Impact
System: Food and Agriculture
Hectares:
100ha planted
How innovative insurance solutions
are protecting Mesoamerican reefs and
communities
Partner:
Ocean Risk Resilience Alliance (ORRAA),
Insurance Development Forum (IDF) &
Coalition for Climate Resilient Investment
(CCRI)
Member:
Willis Towers Watson WTW
Implementer:
Mesoamerican Reef Fund (MAR Fund)
Countries
and region: Mexico, Belize, Guatemala, and
Honduras / Latin America and the
Caribbean
Impact
System: Ocean and Coastal / Finance
How oysters are helping protect
Apalachicola’s vulnerable shoreline
Partner:
International Coalition for Sustainable
Infrastructures (ICSI) / Member: WSP
Implementer:
Apalachee Regional Planning CouncilCountry and
Region: Franklin County, Florida, USA / North
America
Impact
systems: Infrastructure / Ocean and
Coastal
People
directly benefited: < 12,500
Turning money into mortar:
Transforming the housing landscape in
disaster-prone Philippines
Partner:
Build Change
Location
& Region: Philippines, Asia
Impact
Systems: Infrastructure and Human Settlements /
Finance
Direct
Beneficiaries: 45,000 people
Building coastal resilience in
Portsmouth: A city under siege by the sea
Partner:
Cities Race to Resilience
Implementer:
Portsmouth Local Authority
Location
& Region: Portsmouth, UK. Europe
Impact
System: Ocean and Coastal / Infrastructure &
Human Settlements
Beneficiaries:
+ 10,000 homes and 704 commercial
properties | |
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Keeping up with the
Champions | |
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H.E.
Ms. Al Mubarak and Dr. Mohieldin attend a
roundtable on Credibility ahead of the SG’s
Climate Ambition Summit
In
preparation for the Secretary-General’s Climate
Ambition Summit in September this year, both
High-Level Champions attended a roundtable on the
credibility and accountability of net-zero pledges
by non-State actors, convened by the Assistant
Secretary-General on Climate Action. During that
Meeting, H.E. Ms. Al Mubarak reminded of the
urgency to put Nature at the forefront of climate
action while Dr. Mohieldin urged more private
sector actors to use the Voluntary Carbon Markets
platforms to move towards a net zero resilient
pathway in a truthful and accountable
manner.
H.E.
Ms. Al Mubarak meets US Chamber of Commerce on COP
28 ‘GreenTech Mission’
H.E.
Ms. Al Mubarak met with
representatives of the U.S. Chamber during a
recent ‘GreenTech Business Mission’ to the UAE to
connect leading U.S. businesses with potential
investment opportunities in the UAE, and to learn
about plans and priorities for
COP28.
Dr
Mohieldin highlights need for investment in human
capital to achieve ‘triple transition’ at Spanish
Ministry of Foreign Affairs event
Mohieldin
spoke at a Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs
workshop entitled ‘The Role of the European Union in
Enhancing International Cooperation to Deal with
the Digital, Social and Green Transition,’
where he stressed that investment in education,
health and employment services is just as
important as infrastructure, to achieve a fair,
digital, and green transition.
Green
Climate Fund Is Gaining Momentum, Dr Mohieldin
Advises GCF Board meeting
During
his participation in the 36th meeting of the Green
Climate Fund (GCF) board in South Korea, Mohieldin
advised that the Fund's second replenishment is
gaining momentum among European country
contributors and beneficiaries
alike. | |
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Dr
Mohieldin attends launch of the COP 27 Business
Leaders Group
At
the first meeting of the COP 27 Business Leaders
Group, Mohieldin stressed the need to improve
capacity building and provide technological
solutions in developing countries, as
indispensable elements to enable the private
sector to participate in a just
transition.
Dr
Mohieldin addresses ‘Advocacy for Climate and
Development Priorities’ within the OPEC Fund for
Development Forum
Speaking
at the OPEC Fund for Development Forum,
Mohieldin stressed the need to reform the global
financing system, to provide sufficient, fair and
effective financing for development and climate
action.
Dr
Mohieldin addresses Ministerial on Climate Action
in Brussels
The
meeting
was convened to enhance cooperation in the
field of mitigation measures, mechanisms for
countries to accelerate global cooperation in the
field of renewable energy and energy efficiency in
the near term, ways to accelerate the just
transition of energy, and achieve the goals of the
Paris Agreement and sustainable
development.
Dr
Mohieldin addresses the 2023
Forum of the Standing Committee on Finance (SCF):
Financing Just Transitions
During
his virtual participation at the event
in Bangkok, Mohieldin highlighted that debt swaps
for investment in nature and climate, carbon
markets and PPPs are vital tools to mobilize
climate finance to address the current
gap.
Dr
Mohieldin delivers keynote intervention at
the first workshop under the Sharm-el
Sheikh dialogue in 2023
Mohieldin
talked about the ways Article 2, paragraph 1c), of
the Paris Agreement, which is about making finance
flows consistent with a pathway towards low GHG
emissions and climate-resilient development, may
complement Article 9 of the Paris Agreement, which
stipulates how developed countries provide
financial resources to assist developing countries
with respect mitigation and
adaptation. | |
- In
a letter
from the President-Designate of COP 28, the COP
28 Presidency has announced their priorities and
the thematic programme for COP 28, highlighting
the sectors and topics raised by stakeholders
during consultations, including the themes which
are part of the COP agenda each year, and new,
critical topics like health, trade and relief,
recovery, and peace.
- The
Chairs of the subsidiaries bodies of the UNFCCC
have prepared guiding questions
to support Parties and non-Party stakeholders in
preparing for the consideration of outputs
component of the first global stocktake (GST),
in particular, in preparing submissions of views
on the elements for the consideration of outputs
component by Friday, 15 September 2023, and in
holding events at local, national, regional and
international level, in support of the GST.
Guidelines on how to make submissions can be
found here.
- Extreme
weather and climate shocks are becoming more
acute in Latin America and the Caribbean, as the
long-term warming trend and sea level rise
accelerate, causing spiralling impacts on
countries and local communities. However, there
is the potential to tap into solar and wind
resources and the region’s vital role in
producing food and ecosystem services that
benefit not only the region itself, but the
entire planet, according to WMO’s State of the Climate in
Latin America and the Caribbean 2022
report.
- UNEP
and the UN Climate-Change-convened Fashion
Charter launched the Sustainable Fashion Communication
Playbook,
a guide for consumer-facing communicators in the
global fashion industry to align efforts to
sustainability targets, incorporating both
environmental and social factors.
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