President
Trump’s Executive Order on Climate Change will have far reaching impacts on
many developing countries, especially in Africa, that are already bearing the brunt
of the negative impacts of climate change.
African
Civil Society, under the umbrella of the Pan African Climate Justice Alliance
(PACJA), says reversing the Obama climate plan is one of the greatest
injustices and an onslaught on Mother Earth, especially in the fight against
climate change.
The
Energy Independence Executive Order, signed by US President, Donald Trump on
March 29, 2017, has been hailed by groups in the fossil fuels business, but
condemned by environmental campaigners as over a dozen measures enacted by
President Obama to curb climate change have been suspended.
“Trump’s
Climate Change Executive Order is rolling back the many years of global efforts
that yielded the Convention and the Paris Agreement. The global community and
other world leaders should resist the temptation of following the footstep of
Trump to take the world several steps back in the fight against climate
change,” said Mithika Mwenda, PACJA Secretary-General.
For
a safer world, countries that are party to the United Nations Framework Convention
on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the Paris Agreement will urgently need to raise
their ambition to increase the level of their greenhouse emission reduction
targets communicated to the UNFCCC and keeping the global temperature to below
1.5OC.
The current aggregate level of the
communicated Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) are estimated to lead
to the average global temperature increase above 30C by 2030, unless
radical emissions reduction targets are urgently adopted by Parties.
The
NDC of the United State of America submitted to the UNFCCC on March 31, 2015
commits USA to cutting its greenhouse gas emissions by 26%–28% below the 2005
level by 2025.
The
US effort constitutes a part to the global comity of nations’ efforts to keep
the planet safe.
“As
one of the major contributors to the greenhouse gas emissions, the US continues
to owe a huge ecological debt that can only be paid by the demonstration that
it is committed to servicing this climate debt in an equitable, fair and just
manner. Such efforts should align with the principle of Common But
Differentiated Responsibility and Respective Capacity (CBDRC) of the Convention,”
said a statement from PACJA.
African
Civil Society is worried efforts to improve people’s vulnerability to climate
change are being eroded by Trump’s Executive Order.
Currently,
impacts of drought and famine in the Horn of Africa have led to deaths of
humans and livestock in the region. Farmers in most parts of the Africa are
feeling impacts of the changing climate in their agricultural production and
productivity.
According
to Sam Ogallah, Programme’s Manager at PACJA, Trump's action on climate change is
likely to exacerbate the current migrant crisis.
"Climate
change impacts are pushing many youth out of developing countries in search of
better lives in developed countries. Some of these youth in an attempt to
migrate to Europe have lost their lives. Addressing climate change in
developing countries can go a long way to solving migrant crisis in Europe and
other developed countries,” he said.
By
Kofi Adu Domfeh
No comments:
Post a Comment