Malawi, serving as the Chair of the Least Developed Countries (LDC) Group on Climate Change, is hosting the LDC Strategy and Ministerial Meetings from 26th to 28th August 2024 at Bingu Wa Mutharika International Convention Centre (BICC).
This
crucial and timely gathering will unite high-level representatives, including
ministers, climate negotiators, and experts from all 45 LDCs, marking a
significant step in the global climate dialogue.
Under
the theme "Uniting for 1.5°C – Aligned Climate Action and
Resilient Futures," the meeting will focus on reviewing progress in
international climate negotiations, addressing critical issues, and crafting
strategies to ensure impactful engagement at COP29 in Baku, Azerbaijan.
Participants
will align on priorities, set goals, and explore future strategies while
building support for LDC-led initiatives.
This
meeting follows a technical strategy session held in March in Lilongwe and the
60th UNFCCC Subsidiary Bodies (SB 60) sessions in Bonn, Germany. The leaders
will tackle highly important topics such as the New Collective Quantified Goal
on Climate Finance (NCQG), the remaining rules on Article 6 on carbon trading,
mitigation outcomes for COP29, financing to address loss and damage, and common
position on matters related to the Global Goal on Adaptation (GGA).
Evans
Njewa, Chair of the LDC Group, highlighted the meeting’s significance: “This
gathering represents a crucial moment in our unified efforts to achieve an
ambitious outcome at COP29. Our goal is clear: to set an ambitious new goal for
climate finance that reflects the needs of our countries, to limit global
temperature rise to below 1.5°C and bolster resilience in our most vulnerable
nations.”
Njewa
stressed the LDCs’ commitment to impactful action: “The outcomes of this
meeting will be instrumental in shaping our collective positions and priorities
moving forward. The Lilongwe meeting will play a key role in setting a unified
agenda for the LDCs, strengthening our negotiating stance at COP29, and
advancing towards a sustainable and resilient global climate framework.”
Highlights
of the meeting will culminate into the Lilongwe Declaration, accompanied
by a detailed report and follow-up plan, reflecting positions informed by
latest climate science, the needs of LDCs and the overall outcomes of the
Global Stocktake (GST).
This
declaration will be shared with participants and relevant LDC representatives
to ensure a unified approach at COP29, aiming to raise ambitions and address
the urgent need for financial support for the most vulnerable countries.
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