On the eve of the global climate conference in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, the Executive Secretary of UN Climate Change (UNFCCC) says COP28 must show a clear agreement to leave fossil fuel dependency behind.
Simon
Stiell says governments must agree to triple renewable energy this decade, and
double energy efficiency.
“Only
renewable energy offers safe, affordable, secure energy, as well as far more
jobs, stronger economic growth, less pollution and better health for people in
every country,” he said.
Over
160 world leaders are attending this year’s climate conference, which comes as
the climate crisis enters a new phase – and shows its full force, harming
billions of people, and costing trillions.
According to Simon
Stiell, no country is immune to the climate crisis as everyone is now on the
frontlines; “yet most governments are still taking baby steps, when bold
strides are urgently needed”.
“So – on the eve of
the COP28, the problem is clear: business-as-usual is breaking our
planet. At the COP28 climate conference, leaders must get to work fixing
it,” he said.
He
expects governments to pick up from the Global Stocktake completed by UN Climate
Change this year, by agreeing what bolder actions need to be taken and how
to deliver them.
“At
COP28, governments must deliver on two time frames: a surge in climate action
now, and a springboard for next two crucial years, and beyond,” said Stiell.
Last
year’s COP in Egypt delivered an historic Loss and Damage Fund, which is
important to developing nations starved of climate justice and resilience for
long.
Simon
Stiell expects COP28 to put real money on the table.
“COP28
in Dubai must show that finance is the great climate enabler. It needs to flow
to developing in countries in torrents, not trickles, to boost climate
resilience right now.
“The
reality is that without much more finance flowing to developing countries, a
renewables revolution will remain a mirage in the desert. COP28 must turn it
into a reality,” he said.
With
the climate crisis hitting every country and every economy, the Executive
Secretary of UN Climate Change believes “climate action is a chance to unite
around a common cause: survival, justice, prosperity”.
He
says leaders leaving Dubai after the opening Summit, must have a clear message
to their negotiators: “don’t come home without a deal that will make a real
difference”.
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