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Tuesday, April 30, 2024

Cutting disaster risk will boost equality, foster resilience

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UN chief António Guterres called on countries everywhere to boost resilience and adaptation to build a safer and more just future for all, marking the recent International Day for Disaster Risk Reduction,

Up to 75 percent of extreme weather events, according to various estimates, are currently connected to climate change, fueled by carbon emissions.

The countries experiencing the greatest losses from disasters are those who contribute the least to the problem.

Climate forecasters consult data from an early warning system. UN News

UN figures reveal that from 1970 through 2019, some 91 percent of all of deaths from weather, climate, and water hazards occurred in developing countries.

The UN Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR) forecasts that by 2030, the world will face some 1.5 significant disasters per day. In light of such trends scaling up disaster risk reduction efforts is a must.

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“Those with least are often at greatest risk from extreme weather. They may live in places that are more susceptible to flooding and drought; and they have fewer resources to deal with damage and to recover from it,” said the UN chief, marking the day under the theme: “Fighting inequality for a resilient future.”

Guterres urged countries to break the cycle of poverty and disaster by honoring the 2015 Paris Agreement, striving to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and implementing the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction.

One of the tools to tackle inequality at the global level is the Loss and Damage Fund which is expected to be operationalized at the COP28 climate conference in early December.

Another important initiative aims to ensure that that every person on Earth is covered by an early warning system by 2027.

At the September UN Climate Ambition Summit, the UN Development Program (UNDP) announced a large-scale, collaborative push to establish the Early Warning Systems in some of the world’s most climate-vulnerable countries, for which an initial injection of US$1.3 million from the Green Climate Fund (GCF) will be used for the first group of countries. UN News

These include Antigua and Barbuda, Cambodia, Chad, Ecuador, Ethiopia, Fiji and Somalia. UN News

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