Countries: Afghanistan, South Sudan, Sudan, World, Yemen
Source: UN Secretary-General
[Watch the video on webtv.un.org]
Mr. President, Excellencies,
I thank the British Presidency for convening this debate and for your invitation to brief on a subject of grave concern.
The climate emergency is the defining issue of our time.
The last decade was the hottest in human history. Carbon dioxide levels are at record highs, and wildfires, cyclones, floods, and droughts are the new normal. These shocks not only damage the environment on which we they also weaken our political, economic and social systems.
The science is clear: we need to limit the global temperature increase to 1.5 degrees Celsius by the end of the century.
And our duty is even clearer: we need to protect the people and communities that are being hit by climate disruption.
We must step up preparations for the escalating implications of the climate crisis for international peace and security.
Mr. President,
Climate disruption is a crisis amplifier and multiplier.
Where climate change dries up rivers, reduces harvests, destroys critical infrastructure, and displaces communities, it exacerbates the risks of instability and conflict.
A study by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute found that eight of the ten countries hosting the largest multilateral peace operations in 2018 were in areas highly exposed to climate change.
The impacts of this crisis are greatest where fragility and conflicts have weakened coping mech where people depend on natural capital like forests and fish stocks for their livel and where women who bear the greatest burden of the climate emergency do not enjoy equal rights.
In Afghanistan, for example, where 40 percent of the workforce is engaged in farming, reduced harvests push people into poverty and food insecurity, leaving them susceptible to recruitment by criminal gangs and armed groups.
Across West Africa and the Sahel, more than 50 million people depend on rearing livestock for survival. Changes in grazing patterns have contributed to growing violence and conflict between pastoralists and farmers.
In Darfur, low rainfall and recurrent droughts are increasing food insecurity and competition for resources and we are seeing the result. The consequences are particularly devastating for women and girls, who are forced to walk farther to collect water, putting them at greater risk of sexual and gender-based violence.
Vulnerability to climate risks is also correlated with income inequality.
In other words, the poorest suffer most.
Unless we protect those most exposed and susceptible to climate-related impacts, we can expect them to become even more marginalized, and their grievances to be reinforced.
High levels of inequality, that climate change enhances, can weaken social cohesion and lead to discrimination, scapegoating, rising tensions and unrest, increasing the risk of conflict.
Those who are already being left behind will be left even farther behind.
Climate disruption is already driving displacement across the world.
In some small island nations in the Pacific, entire communities have been forced to relocate, with terrible implications for their livelihoods, culture and heritage.
The forced movement of larger numbers of people around the world will clearly increase the potential for conflict and insecurity beyond their suffering.
When I was High Commissioner for Refugees, I spent time with people who had been uprooted by the impact of climate change, in the Horn of Africa, Darfur, the Sahel and elsewhere.
Listening to their stories, I understood the deep suffering and trauma of families forced to abandon homes and land that had been theirs for generations.
Mr. President,
Much more needs to be done to address the specific risks the climate crisis poses to peace and security.
I see four priority areas.
First, we need a greater focus on prevention through strong, ambitious climate action.
We must get the world on track to achieve the goals of the Paris Agreement and avoid climate catastrophe.
We must create a truly global coalition to commit to net-zero emissions by the middle of the century.
And we must mobilize a decade of transformation through a successful COP26 in Glasgow. That requires all Member States to present, well before November, ambitious Nationally Determined Contributions with targets that will allow us to cut global emissions by 45 percent by 2030 from 2010 levels.
We are also asking all companies, cities and financial institutions to prepare concrete and credible decarbonization plans.
We still have a long way to go, and we look to the major emitters to lead by example in the coming months. This is a credibility test of their commitment to people and planet.
It is the only way we will keep the 1.5-degree goal within reach.
Second, we need immediate actions to protect countries, communities and people from increasingly frequent and severe climate impacts.
We need a breakthrough on adaptation and resilience, which means dramatically raising the level of investments.
All donors and multilateral and national Development Banks must increase the share of adaptation and resilience finance to at least 50 per cent of their climate finance support. And we must make these funds accessible to those on the frontlines of the climate crisis.
Developed countries must keep their pledge of channeling $100 billion annually to the Global South. They have already missed the deadline of 2020.
We need to scale up early warning systems and early action on climate-related crises, from droughts and storms to the emergence of zoonotic diseases.
We also need stronger social protection to support those impacted.
These actions must start now, with transformative policies as we emerge from the pandemic.
Economic and financial systems must incorporate climate risk into financial analysis, so that it is captured in business models and investment decisions.
We must invest in renewable energy and green infrastructure.
In short, we must close the finance gap by increasing support to the countries and communities that are suffering the worst impacts of the climate crisis.
That support must reach women and girls, who bear the brunt of the climate and constitute eighty percent of those displaced by climate change.
Third, we need to embrace a concept of security that puts people at its centre.
The COVID-19 pandemic has shown the devastation that so-called non-traditional security threats can cause, on a global scale.
Preventing and addressing the poverty, food insecurity and displacement caused by climate disruption contributes to sustaining peace and reducing the risk of conflict.
The Nobel Committee recognized this when it awarded the Nobel Peace Prize to the World Food Programme last year.
Respect for human rights, particularly women s rights, the rule of law, inclusion and diversity, are fundamental to solving the climate crisis and creating more peaceful and stable societies.
The 2030 Agenda and the Sustainable Development Goals are the global blueprint for action.
Monsieur le Pr sident,
La quatri me priorit , c est le renforcement des partenariats au sein du syst me des Nations Unies et au-del .
Nous devons tirer parti des comp tences des diff rentes acteurs, notamment de ce Conseil, de la Commission de consolidation de la paix, des institutions financi res internationales, des organisations r gionales, de la soci t civile, du secteur priv , des universit s et d autres encore.
Le M canisme de s curit climatique, qui r unit le D partement des affaires politiques et de la consolidation de la paix, le Programme des Nations Unies pour le d veloppement et le Programme des Nations Unies pour l environnement, constitue un mod le pour ce type de collaboration au sein du syst me des Nations Unies.
Monsieur le Pr sident,
Tandis que l Organisation des Nations Unies travaille la r alisation de ces objectifs, nous nous effor ons de montrer l exemple en veillant ce que nos propres op rations tiennent pleinement compte de la crise climatique.
Nous uvrons afin de nous assurer que nos strat gies de m diation, nos analyses et nos rapports, y compris l intention ce Conseil, prennent syst matiquement en compte les risques climatiques.
Au Soudan du Sud, par exemple, notre op ration de maintien de la paix s est appuy e sur des donn es de l impact des changements climatiques pour n gocier un accord local sur la gestion du b tail.
Au Y men, le Fonds pour la consolidation de la paix a soutenu l action visant restaurer et renforcer les structures locales de gouvernance de l eau, att nuant ainsi les tensions intercommunautaires.
Nous r duisons galement l empreinte cologique de l Organisation des Nations Unies, gr ce notamment l utilisation accrue des nergies renouvelables.
Monsieur le Pr sident,
La crise climatique est le d fi multilat ral de notre poque.
Elle a d j des r percussions sur tous les domaines de l activit humaine.
Surmonter cette crise requiert une coordination et une coop ration d une envergure encore in dite.
L engagement de tous les organismes multilat raux, notamment de ce Conseil, peut jouer un r le d cisif dans cette entreprise.
J exhorte les membres du Conseil user de leur influence au cours de cette ann e charni re pour assurer le succ s de la COP26, et mobiliser les autres acteurs, notamment les institutions financi res internationales et le secteur priv , pour qu ils fassent leur part.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson, I guarantee the full support of the United Nations for the British presidency of COP26, together with the Italian co-chairs.
2021 is a make-or-break year for collective action against the climate emergency.
Thank you.
******
[all-English version]
Mr. President, Excellencies,
I thank the British Presidency for convening this debate, and for your invitation to brief on a subject of grave concern.
The climate emergency is the defining issue of our time.
The last decade was the hottest in human history. Carbon dioxide levels are at record highs, and wildfires, cyclones, floods, and droughts are the new normal. These shocks not only damage the environment on which we they also weaken our political, economic and social systems.
The science is clear: we need to limit the global temperature increase to 1.5 degrees Celsius by the end of the century.
And our duty is even clearer: we need to protect the people and communities that are being hit by climate disruption.
We must step up preparations for the escalating implications of the climate crisis for international peace and security.
Mr. President,
Climate disruption is a crisis amplifier and multiplier.
Where climate change dries up rivers, reduces harvests, destroys critical infrastructure, and displaces communities, it exacerbates the risks of instability and conflict.
A study by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute found that eight of the ten countries hosting the largest multilateral peace operations in 2018 were in areas highly exposed to climate change.
The impacts of this crisis are greatest where fragility and conflicts have weakened coping mech where people depend on natural capital like forests and fish stocks for their livel and where women who bear the greatest burden of the climate emergency do not enjoy equal rights.
In Afghanistan, for example, where 40 percent of the workforce is engaged in farming, reduced harvests push people into poverty and food insecurity, leaving them susceptible to recruitment by criminal gangs and armed groups.
Across West Africa and the Sahel, more than 50 million people depend on rearing livestock for survival. Changes in grazing patterns have contributed to growing violence and conflict between pastoralists and farmers.
In Darfur, low rainfall and recurrent droughts are increasing food insecurity and competition for resources and we are seeing the result. The consequences are particularly devastating for women and girls, who are forced to walk farther to collect water, putting them at greater risk of sexual and gender-based violence.
Vulnerability to climate risks is also correlated with income inequality.
In other words, the poorest suffer most.
Unless we protect those most exposed and susceptible to climate-related impacts, we can expect them to become even more marginalized, and their grievances to be reinforced.
High levels of inequality, that climate change enhances, can weaken social cohesion and lead to discrimination, scapegoating, rising tensions and unrest, increasing the risk of conflict.
Those who are already being left behind will be left even farther behind.
Climate disruption is already driving displacement across the world.
In some small island nations in the Pacific, entire communities have been forced to relocate, with terrible implications for their livelihoods, culture and heritage.
The forced movement of larger numbers of people around the world will clearly increase the potential for conflict and insecurity beyond their suffering.
When I was High Commissioner for Refugees, I spent time with people who had been uprooted by the impact of climate change, in the Horn of Africa, Darfur, the Sahel and elsewhere.
Listening to their stories, I understood the deep suffering and trauma of families forced to abandon homes and land that had been theirs for generations.
Mr. President,
Much more needs to be done to address the specific risks the climate crisis poses to peace and security.
I see four priority areas.
First, we need a greater focus on prevention through strong, ambitious climate action.
We must get the world on track to achieve the goals of the Paris Agreement and avoid climate catastrophe.
We must create a truly global coalition to commit to net-zero emissions by the middle of the century.
And we must mobilize a decade of transformation through a successful COP26 in Glasgow. That requires all Member States to present, well before November, ambitious Nationally Determined Contributions with targets that will allow us to cut global emissions by 45 percent by 2030 from 2010 levels.
We are also asking all companies, cities and financial institutions to prepare concrete and credible decarbonization plans.
We still have a long way to go, and we look to the major emitters to lead by example in the coming months. This is a credibility test of their commitment to people and planet.
It is the only way we will keep the 1.5-degree goal within reach.
Second, we need immediate actions to protect countries, communities and people from increasingly frequent and severe climate impacts.
We need a breakthrough on adaptation and resilience, which means dramatically raising the level of investments.
All donors and multilateral and national Development Banks must increase the share of adaptation and resilience finance to at least 50 per cent of their climate finance support. And we must make these funds accessible to those on the frontlines of the climate crisis.
Developed countries must keep their pledge of channeling $100 billion annually to the Global South. They have already missed the deadline of 2020.
We need to scale up early warning systems and early action on climate-related crises, from droughts and storms to the emergence of zoonotic diseases.
We also need stronger social protection to support those impacted.
These actions must start now, with transformative policies as we emerge from the pandemic.
Economic and financial systems must incorporate climate risk into financial analysis, so that it is captured in business models and investment decisions.
We must invest in renewable energy and green infrastructure.
In short, we must close the finance gap by increasing support to the countries and communities that are suffering the worst impacts of the climate crisis.
That support must reach women and girls, who bear the brunt of the climate and constitute eighty percent of those displaced by climate change.
Third, we need to embrace a concept of security that puts people at its centre.
The COVID-19 pandemic has shown the devastation that so-called non-traditional security threats can cause, on a global scale.
Preventing and addressing the poverty, food insecurity and displacement caused by climate disruption contributes to sustaining peace and reducing the risk of conflict.
The Nobel Committee recognized this when it awarded the Nobel Peace Prize to the World Food Programme last year.
Respect for human rights, particularly women s rights, the rule of law, inclusion and diversity, are fundamental to solving the climate crisis and creating more peaceful and stable societies.
The 2030 Agenda and the Sustainable Development Goals are the global blueprint for action.
Mr. President,
Fourth, we need to deepen partnerships across and beyond the United Nations system.
We must leverage and build on the strengths of different stakeholders, including this Council, the Peacebuilding Commission, international financial institutions, regional organizations, civil society, the private sector, academia and others.
The Climate Security Mechanism, which brings together the Department of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs, the United Nations Development Programme and the United Nations Environment Programme, is a blueprint for such collaboration within the United Nations System.
As we work to deliver these goals, the United Nations is striving to lead by example by making sure our own operations take full account of the climate crisis.
We are working to ensure that our mediation strategies, analysis and reporting, including to this Council, consistently reflect climate risks.
In South Sudan, for example, an awareness of the impact of climate change helped our peacekeeping operation to mediate a local agreement on cattle management.
In Yemen, the Peacebuilding Fund supported efforts to restore and strengthen local water governance structures, reducing intercommunal tensions.
We are also reducing the United Nations environmental footprint, including through the increased use of renewable energy.
Mr. President,
The climate crisis is the multilateral challenge of our age.
It is already impacting every area of human activity.
Solving it requires coordination and cooperation on a scale we have never seen before.
The engagement of all multilateral bodies, including this Council, can play an important role in facing this challenge.
I urge Council members to use their influence during this pivotal year to ensure the success of COP26, and to mobilize others, including international financial institutions and the private sector, to do their part.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson, I guarantee the full support of the United Nations for the British presidency of COP26, together with the Italian co-chairs.
2021 is a make-or-break year for collective action against the climate emergency.
Thank you.
Sunday 28 February 2021
reliefweb - 5 days ago
World: Secretary-General s remarks to the Security Council - on addressing climate-related security risks to international peace and security through mitigation and resilience building [EN/FR]


Febrero se convierte en el mes con más muertes notificadas por coronavirus desde la primera ola
- 20minutos
¿Tendré que usar mascarilla después de recibir la vacuna contra la Covid? La ciencia lo explica
- 20minutos
Crean la mayor turbina eólica marina del mundo, que da energía a 20.000 hogares y ahorra 38.000 toneladas de CO2
- 20minutos
La primera dificultad para los afectados por una enfermedad rara es poner nombre a esa enfermedad”
- 20minutos
Sofá, peli, manta y...un palomitero rebajado de Amazon para preparar tu propio popcorn en casa
- 20minutos
Los mejores cepillos faciales de silicona para limpiar tu piel: del precio a las prestaciones para cuidar tu rostro
- 20minutos
Comer, casarse o ir a la sauna en una telecabina, la última idea para protegerse de la Covid
- 20minutos
Verge TS, la moto eléctrica que acelera de 0 a 100 km/h en cuatro segundos, ya se puede reservar
- 20minutos
Isa Pantoja deja sin palabras a Jorge Javier Vázquez en el Deluxe : Me mudaría con mi madre a Cantora
- 20minutos
César Carballo, sobre Victoria Abril: Es una excelente actriz y una analfabeta científica
- 20minutos
Melani Olivares, en el Deluxe : Tengo un novio y una novia, las relaciones convencionales no me interesan
- 20minutos
Daily news update: Dudu Myeni visits Nkandla, Prasa gets permanent CEO and second batch of vaccines arrives in SA
- citizen
News24.com | Aussie selector insists under-fire Finch will be Australia T20 World Cup captain
- news24
Una diputada mexicana denuncia que fue agredida con harina, la apodan #LadyMontajes y ella afirma que se trató de un ataque electoral (VIDEO)
- rt
COVID-19 LIVE UPDATES | Australia receives AstraZeneca vials as it ramps up vaccination drive
- timeslive
News24.com | SA s Smith predicts eight years before Italy can match rivals after 30th straight Six Nations loss
- news24
News24.com | Dog won t eat : England coach Eddie Jones bites tongue over referee after Wales loss
- news24
República Dominicana anuncia que construirá un muro en la frontera con Haití y esta es la razón
- rt
VIDEO: Un rival falla burdamente al intentar derribar a Messi y se gana las burlas de los internautas
- rt
López Obrador propondrá a Biden impulsar un programa que permita a los migrantes indocumentados trabajar legalmente en EE.UU.
- rt
Maduro ordena a revisar a fondo todas las relaciones con España luego que la canciller de ese país visitara la frontera entre Venezuela y Colombia
- rt
Amplían la detención del tío abuelo del niño de 3 años encontrado muerto en Chile, principal sospechoso del crimen
- rt
Israel afirma que su evaluación inicial es que Irán está detrás de la explosión de un barco de propiedad israelí en el golfo de Omán
- rt
World: Le Conseil de sécurité appelle à faciliter un accès équitable et abordable aux vaccins contre la COVID-19 dans les situations de conflit - résolution 2565 (2021)
- reliefweb
México supera las 185.000 muertes totales a causa del coronavirus desde el inicio de la pandemia
- rt
VIDEO, FOTOS: Al menos 13 detenidos en una nueva jornada de protestas en Barcelona por el encarcelamiento del rapero Pablo Hasél
- rt
Johnson Johnson: Estados Unidos aprueba la vacuna de una sola dosis contra el coronavirus
- BBC Spanish
Cristiano Ronaldo ha empeorado a la Juventus y su fichaje ha sido un fracaso , asegura el exdelantero italiano Antonio Cassano
- rt
EE.UU. autoriza el uso de una tercera vacuna contra el covid-19 de la farmacéutica Johnson Johnson
- rt
Emma Coronel se habría entregado a la Justicia de EE.UU. en busca de protección a cambio de información sobre el Cártel de Sinaloa
- rt
Seasonality of Acute Malnutrition and its Drivers in Sila Province, Chad: a mixed methods analysis
- reliefweb
IRC: U.S. and Mexico governments meeting promises progress in response to regional migration crisis
- reliefweb
Crisis-Sensitive Educational Planning for Refugees and Host Communities: Lessons from Ethiopia
- reliefweb
Brasil confirma más de 60.000 nuevos casos y 1.386 muertes por coronavirus en las últimas 24 horas
- rt
Italy: After the drowning of dozens of migrants in the Mediterranean, Euro-Med Monitor stresses that the EU should send official rescue missions
- reliefweb
Matías Prats bromea por poner mayores de 55 años con un bastón: Ya sabemos de qué pie cojea nuestro grafista
- 20minutos
Pedro Sánchez dice que son inaceptables los actos de vandalismo y violencia en Barcelona
- 20minutos
Guardiola justifica la millonada que se ha gastado el Manchester City porque lo hicieron Real Madrid y FC Barcelona
- 20minutos
Las terrazas de los bares de una calle en A Coruña impiden a una ambulancia recoger a un enfermo de Covid
- 20minutos
Buffett califica el progreso en EE.UU. como lento, desigual y, a menudo, desalentador , pero advierte que nunca se debe apostar contra ese país
- rt
Un total de 67 acertantes de la Bonoloto se llevan más de 3.800 euros y el bote sube a 1,2 millones
- 20minutos
Ataques a bancos y un hotel y tiendas saqueadas tras la manifestación en Barcelona a favor de Pablo Hasel
- 20minutos
Prenden fuego a una furgoneta de la Guardia Urbana con agentes, que han tenido tiempo de salir
- 20minutos
El mensaje de esperanza de un doctor del Marañón: Por primera vez podemos decir que se ve la luz al final del túnel
- 20minutosHashtags:
World
|Secretary
|General
|remarks
|Security
|Council
|addressing
|climate
|related
|security
|risks
|international
|peace
|security
|through
|mitigation
|resilience
|building
|
Caso Alcàsser: la jueza ordena buscar al hombre con quien contactó Antonio Anglés durante su fuga
- 20minutos
Un cirujano se conecta para declarar en un proceso judicial mientras está operando en un quirófano
- rt
Despiden a una profesora luego de que circularan entre sus exalumnos fotos y videos en los que sale desnuda
- rt
Desarrollan una herramienta que permite animar fotos para así dar vida a seres queridos ya muertos
- rt
Milagroso rescate de un perro que pasó perdido 43 días y fue hallado en un pozo a temperaturas bajo cero
- 20minutos
Pilar Rubio recurre al mismo psicólogo que ayudó a Paz Padilla a superar la muerte de su marido
- 20minutos
Chile sanciona a dos laboratorios que distribuyeron anticonceptivos defectuosos y generaron más de 110 embarazos no deseados
- rt
El Departamento de Estado de EE.UU. informa al Congreso que tomará medidas en respuesta al asesinato del periodista saudí Khashoggi
- rt
EE.UU. impone restricciones de visados a 76 ciudadanos de Arabia Saudita en relación con el asesinato de Jamal Khashoggi
- rt
Ethiopia: Time is running out: urgent action needed to address humanitarian crisis in Tigray
- reliefweb
Argentina: 500,000 people will have access to better water, sanitation services and social housing
- reliefweb
El detalle que delataría la identidad de los protagonistas del primer edredoning de La isla de las tentaciones 3
- 20minutos
Cofundador de LinkedIn apuesta por los taxis voladores y espera que empiecen a operar en el 2024
- rt
Se identifica como bandido covid y le da 200 dólares de propina a cada empleado de un restaurante que visitó
- rt
World: Human security focus needed in effective action for climate and conflict-vulnerable communities
- reliefweb
Bosnia and Herzegovina: OSCE welcomes adoption of the BiH Strategy for Control of Small Arms and Light Weapons
- reliefweb
Nunca me callaré sobre las cosas que están mal : LeBron James responde a las críticas de Zlatan Ibrahimovic sobre su activismo político
- rt
Bangladesh: HCTT Monsoon Flood Humanitarian Response Plan: Monitoring Dashboard (22 February 2021)
- reliefweb
Horcajuelo de la Sierra, el único municipio de la Comunidad de Madrid donde no ha llegado el coronavirus
- 20minutos
Solo uno de cada diez infectados por Covid lo transmite a un conviviente, según un estudio
- 20minutos
Conchita Martínez da positivo en coronavirus, pero sigue dirigiendo los entrenamientos de Garbiñe en remoto
- 20minutos
El Boletín Oficial de la Comunidad de Madrid publica las nuevas restricciones que entrarán en vigor el lunes
- 20minutos
Dispo, la red social de fotos anti-Instagram , se populariza y obtiene millones de inversiones: ¿qué es y por qué predicen su éxito?
- rt
Miles de personas desfilan en Moscú ante el lugar donde el opositor Nemtsov fue asesinado
- elperiodico
La brutal violación a la monja Dianna Ortiz que destapó el apoyo de EE.UU. a los regímenes militares en Guatemala
- BBC Spanish
Desarrollan un método que puede modificar el funcionamiento del cerebro para reducir los miedos, cambiar los gustos y aumentar la confianza
- rt
Laura Alonso, jugadora de rugby, evita que la atraquen en su portal dándole una paliza a su agresor
- 20minutos
World: Latter-day Saint Charities Commits US$20 Million in Support of UNICEF’s Global COVID-19 Response
- reliefweb
Más de 400 reclusos se fugan de una cárcel y graban a algunos de ellos paseando por las calles en Haití
- rt
El ex futbolista Pablo Cavallero atropella y mata a una persona en una carretera argentina
- 20minutos
Muere un hombre de 32 años al ser embestido tras quedarse su coche sin gasolina parado en la carretera
- 20minutos
OSCE Special Monitoring Mission to Ukraine (SMM) Daily Report 47/2021 issued on 27 February 2021
- reliefweb
EE.UU. ensaya bombas de la Horda de Oro , capaces de intercambiar información y modificar su ruta
- rt
¿Es ‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ la última película del contrato de Tom Holland con Marvel?
- 20minutos
Los test de pretemporada de F1 se verán por televisión en DAZN en directo, por primera vez en España
- 20minutos
NIGERIA KIDNAPPING - International community calls for release of 317 girls kidnapped in Nigeria
- efe
Muere un joven británico de 19 años de sepsis tras llamar 25 veces a su médico de cabecera para pedir cita
- 20minutos