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UN
Global Climate Action
10
October
2023 | |
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High-Level
Champions'
Newsletter | |
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Middle
East & North Africa are Ripe for
Transformation - MENA Climate Week
Preview |
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Leaders are arriving in Riyadh,
Saudi Arabia, for the latest Regional Climate Week, which
will focus on delivering a holistic, system-wide
transformation of the Middle East & North
Africa (MENA) region, to drive climate resilient
growth to 2030. It will provide a platform for
policymakers, practitioners, businesses and civil
society to exchange on climate solutions, barriers
to overcome and opportunities and contribute to the Global
Stocktake
process, concluding at COP 28, by bringing focus
to specific, region-relevant, forward-looking
actions to accelerate progress towards a resilient
1.5 C trajectory.
The MENA region is suffering from
severe impacts from climate change, such as
extreme heat, water scarcity, desertification or
floods. Extreme heat waves reached over 50 degrees Celsius in 2021 in Iran,
Kuwait, Oman, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE, for
example. If this trend continues, many cities in
the Middle East may become uninhabitable before the end of
the century. On the other hand, countries from
other MENA sub-regions suffer from unprecedented
flooding as experienced by Libya this year,
plus Levant states —
such as Palestine, Jordan, and Syria — are deeply afflicted by
water scarcity.
As a third of the world’s oil supply
is currently produced in the Gulf, the IEA’s
forecast that demand for oil will peak by the end
of this decade is resonating across the
region. Even if we stop building fossil fuel
assets today, USD 3.6 trillion of global
investment is already committed to building out
fossil fuel infrastructure above the requirements
of net zero. The global transition to clean
energy is accelerating - the age of opportunity
and sustainable transition is here. It is crucial
that the transition to a climate resilient and
low-carbon economy is just and equitable.
Non-State actors’ strategies to tackle the growing
threat of climate change should incorporate the
full range of environmental, social, economic and
governance dimensions and to address transitional
challenges encountered by vulnerable
communities.
With these dual dynamics at play,
the MENA region is ripe for scaling up their
transformation even further. The rapid growth in
clean energy recently provides a narrow corridor to 1.5
degrees C. There is now a major opportunity to
foster climate ambition in the MENA region, and
through building capacity - accelerate emissions
reductions and boost adaptation.
The UN Climate Change High-Level
Champion for COP 28, Her Excellency Razan Al
Mubarak, will actively participate in the MENA
Climate Week, spearheading a comprehensive, shared
roadmap for ambitious climate action by 2030.
Priority actions for MENA include raising
investment in renewables, promoting water
conservation, and implementing climate-resilient
infrastructure.
The key aims for the week
include:
● Building
momentum around the Just Energy Transition
Collaboration (JET-Co) framework, especially
highlighting the vital role of business, cities,
states and regions in fostering just energy
transitions in local communities.
● Highlight
the role of Buildings as a climate solution. E.g.
the ‘Forging Pathways for Sustainable and
Resilient Buildings in the MENA region’
session where the Buildings Breakthrough will be
featured among other initiatives and opportunities
to reflect on the latest Breakthrough Agenda report,
including the recommendation that roadmaps to
near-zero emission and resilient buildings by 2030
should be developed and coordinated by all
national and sub-national authorities.
● Accelerate
the implementation of Nature-based Solutions (NbS)
and ecosystem-based approaches in MENA, plus
promote collaboration to advance the pipeline of
shovel-ready NbS projects and on-the-ground
delivery.
● Recognize
the role of of cities and subnational governments
as vehicles to support the implementation of
national country plans (Nationally Determined
Contributions (NDCS) and National Adaptation Plans
(NAPS)) in the of delivery of the Paris
Agreement,
as they already have plans and projects in
place taking climate action as a matter of
urgency.
● Enhance
resilience in the transportation infrastructure
sector and identify impactful initiatives that can
be elevated at COP 28 on High-Level Champions and
Marrakech Partnership platforms and through the Sharm Adaptation Agenda (SAA).
Taking place less than two months
ahead of COP 28 in Dubai, it provides an important
milestone to accelerate climate action from
non-State actors, to embed real economy solutions
at the core of climate action, and ensure a strong
response to the first Global Stocktake.
The high-level segment, which will
include ministerials on the just energy
transition, finance, adaptation and the Global
Stocktake and all main track sessions and events
with webcast links can be found off the main
MENACW website and interactive
programme. | |
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2023
Annual Meetings of the World Bank Group and the
International Monetary
Fund | |
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Dr. Mahmoud
Mohieldin, the UN Climate Change High-Level
Champion for COP27 will participate in the
2023
Annual Meetings of the World Bank Group and the
International Monetary Fund from October 9 - 15 in
Marrakech, Morocco. The meetings bring together
central bankers, ministers and representatives
from the private sector and civil society among
others to discuss issues of global concern
including climate change.
Dr. Mohieldin’s
participation will include attending the 10th
Ministerial Meeting of the Coalition of Finance
Ministers for Climate Action to discuss greening
the financial system. For the first time ministers
will present a Climate Action Statement (CAS)
representing the Coalition’s collective drive
towards climate action. Finance Ministers will
also share insights on effective approaches to
engaging with the finance community and highlight
challenges that need to be addressed to drive
ambitious climate ambition. In addition, Dr.
Mohieldin will attend a dialogue with Finance
Ministers from the Vulnerable Twenty Group (V20)
countries to underline the need to reform the
global financial system to facilitate equitable
access for the climate vulnerable and address debt
sustainability.
Dr. Mohieldin will
also participate in a closed-door roundtable
together with representatives from the IMF, World
Bank and Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net
Zero (GFANZ) to discuss how more effective public
and private sector collaboration can contribute to
supporting country platforms, such as the
Just Energy Transition Partnerships (JETPs).
Country platforms can play a crucial role in
helping emerging markets and developing economies
accelerate their climate ambitions and attract
necessary climate
investments. | |
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Coral
Reef Breakthrough spawns recovery of the world’s
most threatened
ecosystems | |
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The Champions have
partnered with the International Coral Reef
Initiative
(ICRI), a network including 45 countries who
represent over 75% of the world’s coral reefs,
plus the Global Fund for Coral Reefs (GFCR), to launch
the
Coral Reef Breakthrough.
The Coral Reef
Breakthrough aims to secure the future of at least
125,000 km2 of shallow-water tropical coral reefs
with investments of at least US$12 billion. Around
500 million people, including vulnerable coastal
communities, earn their livelihoods from the
fishing stocks and tourism opportunities that
coral reefs provide. Reefs also buffer shorelines
from the effects of increasing hurricanes in
regions ranging from the United States and the
Caribbean to the Philippines.
The Breakthrough is
geared to boosting the resilience of coastal
communities by restoring coral reefs; supporting
more than half a billion people globally by 2030,
while accelerating broad-based climate
action.
Key
Coral Reef Breakthrough actions
include:
- Stopping
drivers of loss: Mitigating local
drivers of loss including land-based sources of
pollution, destructive coastal development, and
overfishing.
- Doubling
the area of coral reefs under effective
protection: Bolstering
resilience-based coral reef conservation efforts
by aligning with and transcending global coastal
protection targets including ‘30by30.’
- Accelerating
Restoration: Assisting the
development and implementation of innovative
solutions at scale and climate smart designs
that support coral adaptation to impact 30% of
degraded reefs by 2030.
- Securing
investments of at least USD 12 billion by
2030:
from public and private sources to conserve and
restore these crucial ecosystems.
Commenting on the
Breakthrough, H.E Ms. Al Mubarak said:
“Coral reefs are more than
just beautiful; they are our lifelines. They are
essential to the security and resilience of many
nations, especially those in low-lying island
states. These are nations staring down the barrel
of climate change. The Coral Reef Breakthrough is
an initiative for the world, for the hundreds of
millions who depend on these coastal
communities.” | |
COP
28 Presidency Amplifies Voice of Indigenous
Peoples at COP
28 | |
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H.E.
Ms. Al Mubarak and Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim,
Coordinator of the Association of Indigenous Women
and Peoples of Chad (AFPAT), and Co-Chair, the
International Indigenous Peoples Forum on Climate
Change
(IIPFCC). | |
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H.E. Ms. Al Mubarak
has announced a series of measures to enhance the
participation of Indigenous Peoples and the
visibility of Indigenous People-led solutions at
the crucial COP 28 climate summit.
The range of measures
has been designed to ensure that Indigenous
Peoples play an active role at the climate summit,
including:
● Financial support for
Indigenous elders, including those from each of
the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous
Issues
socio-cultural regions, will receive support to
attend COP 28.
● Subsidized
accommodations for Indigenous Peoples during COP
28.
● Interpretation
services for the 10th Meeting of the Local Communities and Indigenous
Peoples Platform (LCIPP) Facilitative Working
Group to
attend COP 28.
Among the announced
initiatives was a Global Data Study on Indigenous
Peoples. It will seek to understand opportunities
in investing in Indigenous Peoples’ funds and
organizations. The study has the potential to
address a key challenge faced by Indigenous
peoples organizations: limited direct access to
finance.
Speaking at an event
co-hosted by the COP28 Presidency and the
International Indigenous Peoples Forum on Climate
Change, H.E. Ms. Al Mubarak highlighted that even
though Indigenous Peoples are observers of the
UNFCCC “... their valuable perspectives remain
underrepresented in multilateral climate
processes, and they receive a very small share of
the international funding for climate
action.”
H.E. Ms. Al Mubarak
added:
“This is far more
than a moral imperative. We simply won’t be able
to solve the climate crisis without authentically
incorporating the leadership of Indigenous Peoples
and other traditionally underrepresented groups
such as women and youth.”
Spanning 90
countries, there are an estimated 476 million
Indigenous Peoples, primarily residing in Asia,
who offer a wealth of ecological and traditional
knowledge, particularly within Indigenous Peoples'
forestlands where deforestation rates are
significantly lower compared to other regions.
Indigenous Peoples' long-recognized practices play
a crucial role in addressing climate and
biodiversity challenges.
Hindou Oumarou
Ibrahim, the Coordinator of the Association of
Indigenous Women and Peoples of Chad (AFPAT), and
the Co-Chair of the International Indigenous
Peoples Forum on Climate Change (IIPFCC),
said:
“The initiatives
represent progress towards the inclusion and
recognition of the rights and knowledge of
indigenous communities, especially for COP 28.
Indigenous peoples can bring concrete solutions
for climate adaptation and mitigation, and their
voice needs to be heard. I hope that COP 28 will
lead to concrete results for climate action and
support to those who are on the front line of
climate
change.” | |
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Climate
Week NYC 2023: Mobilising action on adaptation,
decarbonisation, nature and climate
finance | |
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Dr.
Mohieldin (centre) speaking at the SDG Action
Weekend. | |
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Climate Week New York
recently united business leaders, political change
makers and civil society representatives -
showcasing progress and calling for stronger
climate commitments to place the planet on a
science-based 1.5 C, resilient
path.
The Champions’ programme covered a
range of critical themes - from decarbonisation to
adaptation, from resilience to loss and damage, as
well as the urgent need to accelerate climate and
nature finance and the central role of nature,
youth and indigenous peoples in tackling climate
change.
Key highlights of the week included:
● The
High-Level Champions presented a finance blueprint
to narrow the climate & nature funding gap in
Emerging Markets and Developing Economies (EMDEs).
Two important papers provided key
recommendations to help to secure the USD 1
trillion in annual finance that developing
countries need by 2030 to take effective climate
action and restore nature, as shown in the Sharm-El-Sheikh Adaptation Agenda
(SAA), and the 2030 Breakthroughs.
● The
UN Secretary-General’s Climate Ambition Summit
showcased “first movers and doers” responding to
the call for accelerated climate action. The
entirety of the business, finance, city and
subnational government trailblazers that spoke
at the event are members of Race to Zero partner
initiatives.
● H.E.
Ms. Al Mubarak participated in the SDG 2023
Summit: ‘Challenges & Progress of
Environmental Philanthropy for Achievement of the
SDGs.’ She raised the potential for philanthropic
organisations to leverage resources strategically;
collaborate and form alliances, and invest in
solutions and change makers - in areas ranging
from biodiversity conservation to sustainable
agriculture.
● During
the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals Action
Weekend, Dr. Mahmoud Mohieldin convened a side
event on the outcomes of the Regional Platforms
for Climate Projects which mobilises funds for
climate projects
● Dr.
Mohieldin also spoke at an event on mobilising
private climate finance in emerging markets and
developing countries, where he explained his
vision for an impactful climate finance
marketplace.
● Delhi
became the 84th city to join the Race to
Resilience (details below)
● Following
April’s UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues
(UNPFII), H.E. Al Mubarak met with forum members
to discuss the progress on meaningful inclusion
and engagement of Indigenous values and knowledge
systems at COP
28. | |
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(From
left to right: Minister Sonia Guajajara, H.E.
Razan Al Mubarak, Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim during
the UNPFII
dialogue) | |
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Dr.
Mohieldin addresses members of the NZBA in New
York during Climate
Week. | |
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● H.E.
Ms. Al Mubarak spoke at an event titled ‘The
Future of COPs’ attended by the President and
Youth Climate Champion for COP 28. At the event,
H.E. Ms Al Mubarak raised her vision for action,
inclusivity and opportunity at the upcoming COP,
including engaging the private sector to protect
nature and biodiversity.
● Major
developments were announced for the Mangrove
Breakthrough with support from the UAE and
Salesforce (details below)
● Dr Mohieldin
chaired a session on ‘Transformative
L&D Financing Facility for V20 Small Island
Developing States (SIDS)’. Mohieldin called for
fair and efficient financial support for SIDS to
enable them to adapt to climate change and deal
with the losses and damages resulting from
it.
● H.E. Ms. Al Mubarak
opened the World Biodiversity Summit, highlighting
that biodiversity loss is already costing the
global economy 10% of its output each year, and
nature-based Solutions currently only receive 8%
of public climate finance and 17% of private
finance.
● At the ‘Sustainable
Ocean Economy’ High Level Event H.E. Ms. Al
Mubarak urged all coastal countries to present
ocean-related goals for COP 28, including
accelerating the implementation of the Ocean
Breakthrough goals.
During the official opening ceremony
organized by the Climate Group, H.E. Ms. Al
Mubarak, highlighted the significance of COP 28 in
Dubai - in the context of the first Global
Stocktake of the Paris Agreement:
“Although we are far off target, we
know of solutions that will rapidly help close the
gaps. With partnership and science we have
identified the key levers of change, and nature
will play a central role given it also supports
the most vulnerable of populations.”
For more news from Climate Week NYC,
please click here. | |
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Inspiring
‘fence sitters’ to become climate
leaders | |
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Guest
Q&A - Feike Sijbesma, Honorary Chairman
(former CEO) of DSM; Co-chair,
CEO-Climate-Alliance, and Climate Champions Global
Ambassador | |
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At
Climate Week, the UN Secretary-General's
Climate Ambition Summit provided a
platform for the "first movers and doers" that are responding
to the call for accelerated climate
action.
To
understand how to shape a transformation mindset,
we spoke with Climate Champions Global Ambassador,
Feike Sijbesma. Feike led the metamorphosis of
Royal DSM from a bulk-chemical company into a
purpose driven science-based company, focused on
nutrition, health and sustainable living. He also
co-chairs the Global Center on Climate Adaptation
(GCA).
What’s
the current state of play of corporate climate
action?
“Climate change is one
of the major challenges faced by mankind - and as
the engines of our economies, companies have a
vital role to play in driving the transition to a
net zero, nature positive world. Increasingly, I’m
seeing that companies are stepping up to this
responsibility, shown through the increased
commitments to curb emissions to net zero by 2050,
plus to halve emissions by 2030.
There’s much work to be
done to strengthen existing targets. But, overall,
corporate disclosure is rising, with both
mandatory and voluntary standards, such as TCFD
and ISSB, respectively, increasing
accountability.”
What
approaches are companies taking to reduce their
impact on the planet?
“Collaboration between
companies is opening up numerous innovative ways
to decarbonise global value chains.
For
example, the CEO Climate Leaders
Alliance is a
group of 125 major global companies which, through
stimulating and inspiring each other, SBTi linked
target-setting and knowledge-sharing are
uncovering myriad new ways of turning their
climate promises into reality.
Of
course companies reduce their own emissions by
cleaner processes, but also look for greener
alternative energy sources for their operations.
On top: energy savings are important as
well.
Next to this,
circularity is a massive area of opportunity. It’s
an approach to (re-)designing, producing, and
consuming goods to minimise waste, maximise reuse
and recycling - therefore reducing the strain on
resources. In essence, it’s good for business and
the planet.
Companies can only make
their businesses more circular through
collaboration with other companies in their value
chain. For example, sometimes a company must
redesign the way that raw materials enter the
beginning of the value chain to be able to
increase recycling at the other end. So, companies
need to work transparently with their suppliers,
as well as with fellow industry players, to
develop new technologies, and approaches. Of
course, companies need to be careful to avoid
infringing on anti-trust laws, but in most cases
new approaches are implemented in tandem with
legal teams, so this is not a risk.
It
is important that companies also anchor
sustainability and reducing emissions in their
businesses: that would make sustainability more
sustainable.”
Have
you got any examples of these business models in
action?
“The company I led in
the past, DSM, has many examples of this. One is
Bovaer, or ‘Clean Cow’ in the
past - a new feed supplement that safely
suppresses the enzyme that combines hydrogen and
carbon to produce methane, to significantly reduce
the environmental footprint of cows, one of the
biggest emitters of greenhouse gases.
DSM
is collaborating on this across the value chain to
introduce this. For example, DSM is
working with food producers, such as dairy
companies, to encourage its adoption in farms
around the world to reduce their
emissions.”
How
can we expand the ‘first movers and doers’ in the
climate space?
“Leadership is an
important topic. As with any development in the
world - whether in business or government, there
is always a relatively small group of leaders. And
there’s a group of laggards. And there’s a large
group of people who sit still a bit on the fence
in between.
The
major conferences, like New York Climate Week, and
COP and Davos, are important moments for business
and governments to come together to shape the
conditions for new leaders to step up. It’s vital
that the leaders of today stay focused on bringing
the larger group of ‘not so fast movers, or a bit
of fence sitters’ with them by sharing results
with industry peers. There are many actions
companies can take. For example, new governance
systems can be embedded into boards, such as
aligning financial and remuneration targets with
climate action. Most important: anchor it in your
business and don’t see it as CSR, only.
In
this way, the fence sitters come to understand
that embedding sustainability is not a cost or an
‘add-on’, but it’s actually a genuine route to
future proofing a company. Once potential leaders
have witnessed the evidence, then it’s a question
of encouraging them to take the first step towards
climate leadership.”
How
can leaders foster a culture of
transformation?
“To
make organisations more sustainable, the leaders
need to set the direction, shape the vision and
steer action. Leaders must ensure that internally
the vision is well understood and connected across
the business, so that people understand their
role. It’s essential for leaders to take their
people with them on the journey.
Leaders should also
ensure that sustainability is anchored at the
heart of the business. It should not only exist at
the extreme ends of the company. Sustainability
shouldn’t just exist in the annual sustainability
report, on the edges, or for the top of the
organisation for the CEO to present on stage. It
should be anchored at the core, anchored with core
competencies of companies.
Sustainability should
also be central to the way that companies make
money. Leaders should integrate financial economic
success with doing good for the world. By doing
so, companies futureproof themselves. So, leaders
need to align the vision with the organisation,
explain it, and bring the whole organisation
alone. It takes a lot of effort, but once it is
set it is long lasting. In other words: doing well
(financially/economically) by doing good (for the
world).”
How
would you summarise the climate challenge
ahead?
“Climate is a huge
challenge for mankind - it will influence people
today and generations to come. We all have a
responsibility - as governments, as companies, as
civil society to step up. I am confident with the
rate of advancement of innovation, coupled with a
collaborative mindset, we can curtail and adapt to
climate change.
It’s vital that we go
in this direction together. The argument for
inaction usually comes from a place of uncertainty
about whether the transition will cost money and
jobs, especially for poor or even middle income
people. But by the same token, many regions, such
as Africa and South Asia, are already facing the
effects of climate change, and can’t provide their
own food supply anymore - and so, there is a major
impetus to accelerate action in emerging and
developing economies.
Overall, it’s clear
that the burden of climate change should be
distributed amongst the strongest shoulders -
otherwise we will only face resistance. So we need
a fair and inclusive approach, also regarding the
bill of all of this. Lastly, shareholders need to
also take responsibility, by stimulating change in
the companies that they have invested
in.
If
we can work together with different stakeholders,
across industries to meet different interests then
I’m sure we can succeed. We have no choice, since:
No one can be successful in a world that
fails.”
The full article and a
video of Feike Sijbesma can be found here. | |
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Responding
to the Breakthrough Ambition Report
2023 | |
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The events at Climate Week NYC also
provided a key opportunity for stakeholders to
respond to the recently launched Breakthrough Agenda report,
which calls for strong and targeted international
collaboration in high emissions sectors, such as
power, transport, industry, buildings and
agriculture, to deliver faster, smoother and
cheaper transitions for all.
The latest report’s recommendations
span financial assistance, research and
development, demand-creation, infrastructure,
standards and trade, to accelerate the transition
in key hard-to-abate sectors. Coordinated action
in each of the sectors will help to mobilise
investment, and create the economies of scale
required to bring down the price of crucial
technologies and sustainable agriculture
solutions.
Key highlights in the 2023 report
included:
● Membership
of the Breakthrough Agenda increased to 48
countries, now totalling over 80% of global GDP.
● Two
new sectors – Buildings and Cement were added in
2023, taking the footprint to over 60% of global
emissions. (Breakthroughs for these sectors are
planned to be launched at COP 28).
● Notable
progress in international cooperation across
sectors was found in research and innovation,
where countries have committed USD 94 billion to
clean energy demonstration projects.
However, only modest progress has
been made in strengthening international
collaboration in the last year, for example in
expanding financial assistance to developing
countries, and in joint research and development
initiatives. However, much more progress is needed
in ‘harder’ areas, such as aligning standards
and policies to create demand for clean
technologies, and to establish crucial dialogue on
trade in sectors.
The report launch event can be
watched back here. | |
Race
to Zero latest
developments: | |
|
● Race
to Zero membership has almost doubled from 7,760
to 12,566 over the past 18 months and continues to
grow, against a challenging landscape.
● At
Climate Week NYC, Race to Zero and Oxford Net Zero
ran the ‘Road to Regulation’ event, where 30+
attendees shared insights on the benefits of using
the Global Stocktake this year to translate
ambitious voluntary action into net zero-aligned
policy and regulation.
● Read
the UN Climate Change High-Level Champions’
perspective on how we need to help turn net zero
promises into policy.
● Race to Zero partner,
Pledge to Net Zero hit a major
milestone, as it announced that its members from
across the global environmental industry have
collectively cut their emissions by around 600,000
tonnes across Scopes 1 – 3, against their
baselines.
● Not-for-profit
organisation for senior business leaders and Race
to Zero partner, Business Declares hosted a
‘Queue for Climate & Nature’ for UK
professionals. Learn more about the campaign here.
● At
Solutions House during New York
Climate Week, Race to Zero Accelerator Environmental Defense Fund’s +
Business team launched the Net Zero Action
Accelerator (NZAA), a new climate action hub to
help businesses fast track climate progress, reach
their sustainability goals and galvanise
leadership across supply chains. Learn more about
the NZAA here.
● At
the ‘Impact of the Health Sector on Climate
Change: Carbon Footprint in Health Centres
Meeting’ that took place within the agenda of the
Spanish Presidency of the Council of the European
Union, Race to Zero Accelerator Comunidad Sanidad #PorElClima, an
initiative of Por El Clima, presented the results
from the calculation of the carbon footprint of
Spanish health centres. Por El Clima is
collaborating with the Ministry of Health to
develop the first Carbon Footprint Reduction Plan
in the Spanish healthcare sector.
● The
COP 28 UAE Presidency and SME Climate Hub launched
the COP 28 & SME Climate Hub for
MENA. The major initiative will provide small
and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in MENA with
access to the Race to Zero campaign, and free
tools and resources to implement emissions
reductions strategies across their business and
report on progress annually. The SME Climate Hub
platform, available globally in English and
Spanish, has now been translated to Arabic for
accessibility and is a first of its kind in the
MENA
region. | |
Race
to Resilience latest
developments: | |
Delhi
joins Race to Resilience, vows to achieve 25%
green coverage
India’s capital city has joined the
Race to Resilience, unveiling a set of commitments
at Climate Week NYC to both bolster climate
resilience and promote sustainable
development.
As part of the campaign, the Delhi
government has also committed to increase the
city’s green space and tree planting, aiming to
boost the city’s green cover from 23% to 25% over
the next five years.
Delhi is now one of India’s hottest
cities and it is particularly vulnerable to heat
waves due to its large population and a
significant concentration of lower-income groups.
The tree planting commitment is one of a range of
sustainable cooling and heat resilience
strategies. Other commitments announced by Delhi
include investments in circular economy practices
to reduce and repurpose waste, as well as
renewable projects, such as meeting 10% of Delhi’s
annual energy demand through rooftop solar
plants.
H.E. Ms. Al Mubarak, praised Delhi’s
ambitions and pragmatic approach, highlighting
their use of clean energy through residential
rooftop solar plants and advancements in local air
pollution monitoring technology.
Dr Mohieldin also commended Delhi
for joining the campaign and aligning with the
Sharm El-Sheikh Adaptation Agenda, emphasising
that Delhi’s actions exemplify holistic,
inclusive, and affordable climate solutions for
investors and the community.
H.E. Ms. Al Mubarak, said:
“Communities must build resilience
to climate change, and Delhi’s ambitions are
exemplary. We can learn from the pragmatic,
realistic and just solutions-oriented approach
that the City of Delhi is providing. For example,
boosting clean energy using rooftop solar plants
in residential areas, or advancing the technology
used for monitoring local air pollution. I look
forward to supporting these plans and offering a
blueprint for other cities in India, Asia, and
further across the world. Further information is
available
here.
Salesforce announces
support for Mangrove Breakthrough
During Climate Week NYC, Race to Zero
member, Salesforce, in partnership with the
Climate Policy Initiative (CPI), announced its
support for the
Mangrove Breakthrough as part of
a USD 8.3 million grant towards climate justice
and nature-based solutions.
Part of the Marrakech Partnership Adaptation and
Resilience Breakthroughs, the
Breakthrough initiative aims to conserve and
restore 15 million hectares of mangrove ecosystems
globally by 2030. With coastal communities already
facing the impacts of a changing climate, there is
an urgent need to invest in mangroves as effective
nature-based solutions.
The support for the Mangrove
Breakthrough is a keystone in Salesforce’s climate
finance strategy. While still early in its
journey, Salesforce’s climate finance strategy
also includes a mix of climate finance
instruments, including commitments to invest USD 100 million in Carbon Dioxide
Removal, purchase 280,000 MWh in renewable energy
certificates from small,
distributed energy projects, and a USD 100 million Ecosystem Restoration
& Climate Justice Fund.
Natalia Alekseeva, Coordinator of
the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration at UNEP,
said:
“Salesforce is the first private
sector entity announcing their support to the UN
World Restoration Flagships – the most ambitious
initiatives connecting people and nature. We
welcome this commitment and urge more companies to
step up in our race to restore
Earth.” |
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Launch
of the Global Climate Action
Awards | |
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The UN Global Climate Action Awards,
spearheaded by UN Climate Change since 2011, aim
to recognize the world’s most innovative efforts
to tackle climate change and to inspire global
action among non-party stakeholders.
This year, the Awards seek to
highlight the climate action that young people
around the world are undertaking to ensure their
communities are more sustainable, resilient, and
equitable places to live. Two youth award
categories were announced at the launch of the
2023 UN Global Climate Action Awards on 18
September in Bonn:
1. Youth leading the energy
transition: Recognizing the efforts of
youth (under 35 years of age) in driving renewable
energy and/or energy efficiency activities that
are locally led and/or community focused.
2. Youth supporting nature
and ecosystems-based climate
action: Recognizing innovative work by an
individual or group of young people in indigenous
and/or local communities to restore, maintain, or
enhance nature’s resilience or its contributions
to people, through nature-based solutions and/or
ecosystem-based approaches.
Nominations for the 2023
Award will be accepted until midnight 15 October 2023
(CEST) through here. The winners
will be celebrated at COP28. Further information
on award categories and benefits are available here.
The 2023 Awards are implemented in
partnership with the International Renewable
Energy Agency (IRENA), the International Union for
Conservation of Nature (IUCN), and the Permanent
Representative of the United Arab Emirates to
IRENA. | |
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Keeping up with the
Champions | |
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● Dr. Mohieldin
participates in a pre G20 Summit press briefing on
developing MDB’s and IFI’s Performance for
Financing Development and Climate
Action
The event, entitled “G20 SUMMIT: How to fix the world's
broken financial system and fund a fairer
future” was organized by ONE Campaign, and
also attended by representatives from the Gates
Foundation, Costa Rica, and ONE Campaign.
● H.E. Ms. Al Mubarak
joins Food Day Event at the UN General Assembly
(UNGA)
At the event, attended by the
Rockefeller Foundation, WWF and the Global
Alliance for the Future of Food, H.E. Ms. Al
Mubarak announced that the Champions are producing
a Food Systems Call to Action for Non-Party
Actors, to go alongside the state-level
Declaration on Resilient Food Systems, Sustainable
Agriculture & Climate Action.
● Dr. Mohieldin highlights
concerns that EU Carbon Border Adjustment
Mechanism (CBAM) fails to account for climate and
development action in developing countries
Speaking at an event entitled
‘Implications of CBAM on Egypt’ Mohieldin
highlighted the impact of this tax on the activity
of companies operating in hard-to-abate sectors
such as fertilizers, cement, iron, steel and
hydrogen, and thus on the economies of developing
countries as a whole.
● Dr Mohieldin shares
vision for Africa with GFANZ Network
The GFANZ Africa Network held
its Advisory Board meeting on the sidelines of the
Africa Climate Summit in Nairobi, where the GFANZ
Africa Network also announced a partnership with
the Africa Development Bank. Here, Mohieldin shared an update on
what’s next for the Network and the role the
continent plays on the road to net zero.
● Dr. Mohieldin attends
meeting
at the United Nations High Commissioner for Human
Rights in Geneva
Mohieldin highlighted that enjoying a clean and
healthy environment is integral to human rights,
as it helps to maintain the right to life, health,
water, food, housing and a decent standard of
living.
● Mohieldin
participated in an event to discuss the role of
advanced technology and Artificial Intelligence
(AI) in addressing climate change
In his remarks at the
event, entitled "Harnessing the potential of AI
for urban climate action" organized by The New
School, Google.org, the Centre for Public Impact
and the World Resource Institute, Mohieldin
said AI
can play a key role in reducing carbon emissions
if included in de-carbonization
efforts.
https://english.ahram.org.eg/News/508878.aspx | |
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● At its High-level
Pledging Conference on 5 October, twenty-five
countries pledged support to the Green Climate
Fund (GCF) with USD 9.3 billion over the next four
years (2024-2027). The conference
brought together government ministers and top
climate experts to drive the Fund’s second
replenishment cycle or GCF-2. More information is
available here.
● The UNFCCC
secretariat, under the guidance of the chairs of
the subsidiary bodies, published a synthesis
report on 4 October on the submissions on views on
the elements for the consideration of outputs (or
‘political’) component of the
first global stocktake. Parties and non-Party
stakeholders were invited to submit their views to
serve as input to the Intersessional October
Workshop.
The
report is available here.
● The High-Level
Champions’ submission on the above
highlighted, among others, the Breakthrough Agenda
and 2030 Breakthroughs for providing an
overarching vision and framework for continually
strengthening collective action across sectors, to
support Parties to make transitions faster, less
difficult, and lower cost. The HLCs also
emphasized their mobilization of NPS around
specific adaptation and resilience outcome targets
through the Race to Resilience and Sharm el-Sheikh
Adaptation Agenda. They also referred to their
efforts of advancing a global pipeline of
implementable, financeable and investable projects
for emerging markets and developing economies,
covering all areas of adaptation, resilience and
mitigation.
● A new report released
on 22 September summarizes the challenges and
opportunities identified during the first global
dialogue under the Sharm el-Sheikh mitigation ambition
and implementation work programme, with a focus on
“accelerating the just energy transition”. The
dialogue took place in conjunction with SB 58 in
June and brought together Parties and non-Party
stakeholders to discuss best practices, challenges
and opportunities. The report by the co-chairs of
the work programme is accessible here. | |
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