NAIROBI, Kenya
Kenya hopes to use a gathering
of African leaders and delegations attending the inaugural Africa Climate
Summit in Nairobi next week to discuss how to confront the devastating effects
of climate change on the continent.Britain's Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, helps a schoolboy to plant a tree at the Chobe National Park, Botswana.
Kenyan President William Ruto
says the three-day summit, which kicks off on Monday, will take place at a time
when the Africa continent faces unprecedented challenges and setbacks on global
progress.
“Between 4th and
6th of September," he explained," Nairobi will host
the Africa Climate Summit where our continent will gather to define and refine
its fresh and distinctive position regarding how humanity should engage in
effective action in order to save this planet from a climate catastrophe and at
the same time lift hundreds of millions out of poverty.”
Kenya will co-host the
inaugural Africa Climate Summit with the African Union Commission in Nairobi
next week, starting on Monday through Wednesday.
Soipan Tuya, Kenya’s
Environment, Climate Change and Forestry Cabinet Secretary, said, "The
summit will be unique and special as it will be the first of a kind where all
African heads of states and governments are convening under the umbrella of African
Union dedicated to climate discussions. His Excellency President Ruto is clear
that the summit will chart a green growth pathway for the African continent.”
As the impacts of climate
change continue to intensify, the World Bank reports that millions of people
across Sub-Saharan Africa are facing extreme poverty and suffering.
The increasing exposure to
climate change and its associated costs has led to catastrophic droughts in the
Horn of Africa, triggering a food shortage crisis exacerbated by the war in
Ukraine.
The United Nations
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres is expected to attend the Nairobi summit.
Ambassador Stephen Jackson,
the United Nations resident coordinator in Kenya, said, “What we found most
inspiring in what the entire Kenyan leadership had to say was there are
important questions to discuss about loss and damages; there are important questions
to discuss about climate financing for adaptations, but this is not Africa
coming with the begging bowl. This is Africa coming with solutions, and saying
we have the solutions not only for the continent but for the globe.”
The establishment of a Loss
and Damage Fund was the highlight of the last year’s United Nations Climate
Conference (COP 27) in Egypt and the culmination of decades of pressure from
climate-vulnerable developing countries.
FILE - Steam comes from a coal-fired power station in Witbank, now called Emalahleni, South Africa, Oct. 11, 2021. Courtesy |
Officials say the Nairobi
meeting, the first of its kind on the continent, will bring together leaders
from Africa and beyond to come up with actions and solutions for tackling
climate change, while prioritizing Africa’s development agenda.
No comments:
Post a Comment