Actualités Climate Action

Focus sur l'action climatique

L'urgence climatique est une conséquence directe de l'utilisation des terres et de l'agriculture, des transports, des bâtiments et des processus industriels à forte intensité de carbone, ainsi que des sources d'énergie polluantes. En l'absence de changements profonds dans ces secteurs et d'une réduction drastique de l'empreinte carbone, il y a peu d'espoir de protéger la planète des effets dévastateurs d'un monde plus chaud. 

Ce flux en direct vous tiendra au courant de toutes les dernières nouvelles de la Conférence des Nations Unies sur le changement climatique, connue sous le nom de 29e Conférence des Parties (COP29) à la Convention-cadre des Nations Unies sur les changements climatiques (CCNUCC), qui se tiendra à Bakou, en Azerbaïdjan. 

21 Nov 2024 14:29

UNEP head: We must protect water, our most valuable resource

Inger Andersen
UNEP/Florian Fussstetter

UNEP Executive Secretary, Inger Andersen has highlighted the importance of protecting the world's water supplies.

Speaking at the launch of the Baku Dialogue on Water for Climate Action, she underscored the fragility of our water systems. 

"Nearly three billion people face water scarcity. Over 90 per cent of disasters are water-related, including drought, desertification, fires and floods," she said.

Andersen proposed "a dramatic shift from sectoral thinking to an economy-wide approach across the entire water cycle. Linking national water resources management processes to biodiversity, climate and development action plans is essential."

She emphasised that this will take all sections of society working together, while governments must increase finance. 

"They can do this through greater certainty in policies to protect, conserve and restore freshwater ecosystems. Through efforts to manage water demand more effectively and equitably and improve cost-recovery to enable continuous maintenance and investments," she added.

 

21 Nov 2024 13:46

UN SG: Climate finance a down payment for a safer future

UN SG
UN Climate Change/Kiara Worth

United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres urged negotiators at COP29 to "soften hard lines, navigate through difference and keep your eyes on bigger picture."

Speaking as negotiations continued on the draft texts, he emphasised the role of climate finance in protecting the future of humanity. 

“Finance is not a handout but an investment against devastation that unchecked climate chaos will inflict on us all, a down payment for a safer future for every nation on earth,” he said.

"This is a COP to deliver justice in face of climate catastrophe, to move us closer to securing  a decent world for all humanity.”

Reflecting the reality of what has been a sometimes frustrating week, he urged action.

"I sense an appetite for agreement, but lets be frank: many substantial differences are still remaining. Success is not yet guaranteed."

21 Nov 2024 13:27

Why nature holds the key to meeting climate goals

mangroves
Pexels/Amit Choudhury

Climate and nature are interlinked, and the Paris Agreement goals cannot be met without protecting and restoring ecosystems. 

UNEP research shows that land-based and marine ecosystems play a vital role in regulating the climate. They currently absorb half of the human-made carbon emissions, with the ocean and the world’s forests, mangrove and peat bogs acting as natural carbon sinks. 

Read more about why nature holds the key to meeting climate goals. 

21 Nov 2024 12:23

Water is in the spotlight during COP29. Here’s why.

River
Pexels/Rido Alwarno

Water is the lifeblood of our planet and freshwater ecosystems play a key role in sopping up planet-warming carbon dioxide emissions and making our societies resilient to climate disasters. But the delicate balance of water availability and the habitats that keep it clean and supply it are under mounting pressure from climate change and often receive short shrift during international climate talks. 

That is poised to change this week at the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP29). On 21 November, COP29 Presidency Azerbaijan will launch the Baku Dialogue on Water for Climate Action, a formal series of discussions to be held each year during the UN climate summit. These dialogues will bring together governments, businesses and other groups to ensure that water remains central to negotiations on climate change, biodiversity loss and pollution.

So, why exactly is all this so important? Susan Gardner, Director of UNEP’s Ecosystems Division, explains the importance of the Baku Water for Climate Action Dialogue and how action on water and freshwater ecosystems can help keep the Paris Agreement goals alive.

21 Nov 2024 11:58

Draft texts published to mixed response as negotiations intensify

Baku
UN Climate Change/Habib Samadov

The draft texts were released early this morning in Baku and met with a muted response, particularly on climate finance where no figure has been yet put forward, instead being marked with an “x” on the page.  

It’s vital that countries agree on a New Common Quantified Goal of Climate Finance (NCQG), and raise the amount of annual climate finance provided by developed to developing countries from a floor of $100 billion. Developing countries need the finance ensure they can reduce emissions and ensure their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) - or climate plans, due in February -  are ambitious enough to cut emissions in line with the 1.5C figure.

Delegates, campaigners are observers will all hope that common ground can be found in the next 48 hours.

 

21 Nov 2024 11:50

On now: Launch of COP29 Presidency Baku Dialogue on Water

mountain valley
Pexels/Pexels/Tomáš Malík

The COP29 Baku Dialogue on Water for Climate Action High-Level Launch Event will see countries endorse the Water Declaration, a call on stakeholders to take integrated approaches when combating the causes and impacts of climate change on water basins and water-related ecosystems, strengthen regional and international cooperation, integrated water-related mitigation and adaptation measures in national climate policies. 

The Baku Dialogue will see a formal series of discussions to be held each year during the UN climate summit, developed with support from the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), the UN Economic Commission for Europe and the World Meteorological Organization.

21 Nov 2024 11:25

Next month’s COP16 to try to stop desertification, land degradation

Sand Field, Wadi Rum Village, Aqaba Governorate, Jordan
Oday Hazeem

While COP29 in Baku is focusing on climate, next month another COP is taking place in Saudi Arabia from Dec 2- 16. UNCCD COP16 will focus on accelerating action on land, drought resilience and green transition in Saudi Arabia, the region and beyond. Desertification and land degradation is a huge issue, with the planet losing 100 million hectares of healthy and productive land each year.  

Global Leaders Dialogue: Aligning Climate Action and Biodiversity Conservation for Achieving a Nature-Positive Future and the Paris Agreement Goals 

21 Nov 2024 07:46

Hope for progress in Baku as COP29 talks enter final stretch

Today focuses on the rather wide-ranging themes of nature and biodiversity, indigenous people, gender equality and ocean and coastal zones. It’s also a day where we will hopefully see progress on negotiations in Baku although much work needs to be done.  

This event will highlight how the UN system is supporting Parties' strategies and plans to scale up and implement water-related mitigation and adaptation measures, including through National Adaptation Plans (NAPs) and Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs).   

Climate change is taking a toll on the South Caucasus, so how can science best translate into policies for adaptation? What does successful regional cooperation look like? This event will dive into these questions and feature the launch of UNEP’s Caucasus Environment Outlook.  

This event will focus on overcoming the predominant barriers faced by nature-based solutions inside urban areas, particularly around policy and regulation; finance; and space and scale. A panel discussion will offer several examples from cities that demonstrate how Nature-based Solutions can be rolled out in cities and made attractive to policymakers. 

20 Nov 2024 17:38

Battery swapping stations speed the shift to electric vehicles in Thailand

batteries
Adobe Stock

Taxi driver Chanjira Ruangchan is weaving her electric motorcycle through the crowded streets of downtown Bangkok when she spots what looks like a bank of airport lockers.     

Ruangchan, 53, pulls over and with a few presses on her phone, a door pops open. Inside is a freshly charged battery. Ruangchan swaps it in for the nearly depleted power cell in her bike and in two minutes speeds off in search of her next fare.  

The battery swap station, which sprung in part from a project supported by UNEP, addresses a major drawback of electric vehicles: the relatively long time it takes to charge a battery from scratch.  Read the full story

20 Nov 2024 16:09

New report: 44 per cent of coral reefs face extinction

coral reef
Pexels/Francesco Ungaro

Forty-four per cent of reef-building coral species globally are at risk of extinction, it was revealed in a new report today

The conservation status of 892 warm-water reef-building coral species has now been reassessed for the IUCN Red List, and analysis shows that 44 per cent are threatened. The threats to reef-building corals were last assessed for the IUCN Red List in 2008, and at that time one third were found to be threatened. 

The report highlights the impact the climate crisis is having on ecosystems, with warming oceans and increased CO2 levels leading to ocean acidification - both impacting coral reefs.