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Players rally against FIFA, Saudi Aramco partnership over climate concerns, women’s rights

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In what looks like a bold move, over 100 professional female footballers from across five continents have called for FIFA to sever ties with Saudi Aramco, one of the world’s largest oil companies, as its primary sponsor.

Gianni Infantino
FIFA president, Gianni Infantino

Representing 24 countries, including captains and former captains from national teams like Canada, Italy, Croatia, the United States, and Afghanistan, these players collectively hold over 2,300 international caps.

The players’ letter highlights Saudi Arabia’s human rights violations, particularly concerning the rights of women, and calls into question FIFA’s commitment to sustainability, given Aramco’s record of contributing to global pollution and lobbying against climate action.

“As we all suffer from the consequences of climate change, Saudi Arabia profits, and FIFA is enabling this,” the letter states, pointing to the recent floods, wildfires, and extreme heat impacting the world of football and beyond.

The players argue that FIFA’s decision to partner with Aramco is incompatible with the sport’s equality, inclusion, and sustainability values.

The letter was released alongside polling data from fans across the UK, Spain, Brazil, the US, and Australia, showing that 72% of women’s football supporters believe FIFA should drop the Aramco sponsorship.

Fans are calling for FIFA to seek alternative sponsors whose values align more closely with those of women’s football, even if it results in less financial support for the next four years.

This protest also arrives just two months before Saudi Arabia is expected to announce its bid to host the 2034 FIFA World Cup, raising the stakes even further.

Prominent footballers have spoken out in support of the letter.

Ayisat Yusuf-Aromire, a retired Nigerian female football player who now lives in Finland, said, “As a woman who had to overcome countless obstacles to play football, I deeply value the freedoms many of us in the game now enjoy. We must speak up for those who don’t have these same freedoms. Aramco, one of the world’s biggest polluters, is making the planet unsafe.

“We must stand in solidarity with the women of Saudi Arabia, who are imprisoned for peacefully advocating for their rights, and call on FIFA to drop this sponsorship — for the sake of women’s rights and our planet.”

Danish international Sofie Junge Pedersen also stated, “FIFA’s choice to partner with Aramco allows the Saudi regime to distract from their harmful treatment of women and the environment. We as players refuse to be part of that distraction.”

Former US National Team captain Becky Sauerbrunn, added, “We stand with women like Manahel al-Otaibi and Salma al-Shehab, whom the Saudi regime has imprisoned for simply advocating for their rights. FIFA’s alignment with such a regime is unacceptable.”

Canadian national team captain Jessie Fleming, underscored the sport’s power to unite people: “Football can bring people together. This partnership, however, only divides and prioritizes profit over human rights and environmental responsibility.”

The global unity among these players appears to send a clear message: the values of women’s football cannot be compromised for financial gain. As the world watches, FIFA must now decide where it stands on human rights, women’s rights, and the planet’s future.

UN pledges to support Nigeria achieve SDGs

The UN Resident Coordinator in Nigeria, Mohammed Fall, has restated the body’s commitment to support the country in achieving Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

Mohamed Malick Fall
Mohamed Malick Fall, the United Nations Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in Nigeria

Fall gave the assurance on Thursday, October 24, 2024, in Abuja at a news conference to commemorate the 79th anniversary of the UN Day.

He described Nigeria as a very important country, adding that the organisation would not achieve SDGs if Nigeria did not achieve it.

Fall said, “In less than five years, we have to achieve Agenda 2030, the Summit of the Future and its landmark outcome.

“The ‘Pact for the Future’ has highlighted enough of these goals.

“The pact highlights five strategic priorities: SDG financing for development; international peace and security; science, technology and innovation; youth and future generation; and global governance.

“’The Nigeria we want’ is also reflected in the pact. At the UN, our focus is to ensure Nigeria achieves the SDG.

“This is why we work closely with the government at all levels. We work with all the development partners and the civil society to put the SDGs on track in Nigeria.”

He noted that humanitarian assistance alone could not substitute a solution to people’s problems, adding that there should be collective efforts to tackle such problems.

Also speaking, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) Country Resident Representative in Nigeria, Elsie Attafuah, said that the future of development would focus on science, technology, innovation and digitalisation.

According to her, the programme will support the ecosystem of Nigeria, in a special way.

“We have, for the very first time, established what we call university ports, 10 of them by the end of this year and where when you go into a university, you will have a space to create such prototype.

“This development means we will have space where young people in universities and communities can test the ideas and hopefully, we create some unicorns.

“We believe that, in the next 36 months, we will also establish 36 of them,” she said.

She added that the programme would support Nigeria in mitigating the impact of climate change by reducing emissions and linking it to the country’s development.

On her part, Vaneessa Phala-Moyo, the Country Director of the International Labour Organisation (ILO) Office for Nigeria, Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone, pledged to promote social justice in the country.

Phala-Moyo said: “ILO, as an organisation, is charged basically with promoting social justice.

“We have been doing a lot of work, since 1960 when Nigeria joined the ILO, and we are working within the country’s decent work programme.

“This articulated priorities that Nigeria, including our social partners like Nigeria Labour Congress, TUC, NECA and Nigeria Employers Consultative Association, as tripartite partners, work on developing the country’s programme that gives attention to key priorities to partners.”

By Fortune Abeng

CEPI’s 100-day mission to protect Africa from climate-driven epidemics – Official

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The Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) is advocating for a critical initiative to protect Africa from the risk of epidemics fueled by climate change.

Muhammad Ali Pate
Muhammad Ali Pate, the Coordinating Minister of Health & Social Welfare

The Head of the coalition’s Lassa Fever Engagement, Ms Oyeronke Oyebanji, made this known in an interview on Friday, October 25, 2024, in Abuja.

She said that “CEPI has an ambitious mission to develop vaccines within 100 days of an outbreak to contain diseases before they spread.”

Oyebanji added that the initiative could be transformative for countries like Nigeria, where diseases such as Lassa fever and Mpox threaten public health and economic stability.

She explained that “with the growing impact of climate change, diseases like Lassa fever and Mpox may spread more unpredictably.

“Our 100-day mission is more critical than ever, focusing on rapid vaccine development that can save lives and limit transmission, and build capacity to do this rapidly.”

She warned that rising temperatures and extreme weather were contributing to the spread of infectious diseases, many of which were already prevalent in Africa.

She said that warmer temperatures and unpredictable rain patterns can increase the habitats for disease vectors like rodents and insects, raising the likelihood of outbreaks.

She added that as diseases such as Mpox and Lassa fever continue to emerge, public health systems across Africa must evolve measures to tackle spread.

She said that achieving the 100 days mission would require an unprecedented level of coordination among governments, researchers, the private sector and civil society.

She said that African governments were being called upon to strengthen investments in measures to prevent, prepare, detect and respond to infectious disease outbreaks.

She said that CEPI’s mission highlighted the need for local vaccine manufacturing and robust healthcare infrastructure in Africa.

“With support from international organisations and local stakeholders, Nigeria and other African nations are working to build health resilience against both familiar and emerging threats,” she said.

However, she said that realising this vision requires sustainable funding, noting that “CEPI has called for greater investment in vaccine research and development to secure the resources necessary for its mission.”

She stressed that funding must go beyond emergency response, focusing on long-term preparedness and building healthcare systems capable of tackling climate-driven epidemics.

By Abujah Racheal

EDEN calls for laws to protect people against environmental rights abuses

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The Environmental Defenders Network (EDEN) says it will not relent in its efforts to challenge the activities of oil multinationals, to speak up on environmental rights violations and issues of environmental degradation in Delta State and other parts of Nigeria.

EDEN
EDEN officials and guests at the opening of the group’s office in Ughelli, Delta State

This was stated at the opening of EDEN office in Ughelli, Delta State, as part of its efforts to take environmental activism, environmental justice, climate justice and environmental protection to the needed communities in Delta State and its environs.

Speaking at the opening, Executive Director of EDEN, Chima Williams, who was represented by the Deputy Executive Director of EDEN, Alagoa Morris, stated that the Niger Delta region is one of the most polluted places in the world, without environmental legislature to protect the people.

According to him, EDEN is invested in protecting the common interest of the people through environmental rights protection, the demand for climate justice, reparation, remediation and payment of loss and damages for affected communities.

He revealed that data and information on oil spill issues in the Niger Delta collated by EDEN and its staff in the environmental struggle has facilitated several litigations against oil multinationals and drawn the attention of the world to the environmental issues in the Niger Delta, with data collection as a tool in environmental field monitoring, that facilitates efforts towards environmental protection and development.

Comrade Morris also pointed out that the UNEP report which has facilitated the Ogoni cleanup should be implemented in all oil producing areas in the Niger Delta, and should be backed up with an environmental report, as recently carried out by the Bayelsa State Ministry of Environment.

While delivering the Philosophy of EDEN, Director of Climate Justice and Energy of EDEN, Ubrei-Joe Maimoni Mariere, stated that EDEN was founded with the intention of bridging the gap left behind by ERA in the environmental struggle, to fight against corporate impunity on the environment, climate injustice, environmental/human right abuses against the people, linking the environmental struggle to world struggle.

He added that Delta is one of the states where pollution is happening silently, and the people subjected to untold levels of environmental and human rights abuses.

He pointed out that EDEN is open to collaborate with CSOs, communities and other stakeholders to expose oil spillages and environmental degradation in Delta State.

Also speaking at the opening, the Vice Chancellor of the Federal University of Petroleum Resources, Professor Akpofure Rim-Rukeh, who was represented by the Acting Director of Centre for Waste Management and Sustainable Resources, Dr. Akinyemi Ogunkeyede, acknowledged the gap between environmental research conducted by the academia and the role of advocacy in environmental protection.

He appreciated the presence of EDEN in Delta State, as the environmental issues in the state and the Niger Delta at large are critical and deserve every attention required, according to the SDG goal 17 that speaks on partnership. He pledged he university’s support and collaboration in ensuring environmental justice, advocacy and protection.

On her part, the Councilor of Ward 17 in Ughelli local government area, Florence Ediruo, who represented the chairman of Ughelli North, expressed her gratitude to EDEN for seeing it necessary to champion the course of the common people as relates to the environment.

She drew attention to the disturbing issues of land grabbing in Delta State by suspected herdsmen which, according to her, could lead to food shortage and human right abuses in the future. She also pledged the support of the local government council in environmental and human rights protection.

Flooding: Govt begins assessment of dams to arrest situation, avert recurrence

The Federal Government has begun an assessment of dams across the country to stem the tide of flooding nationwide.

Prof. Joseph Utsev
Prof. Joseph Utsev, Minister of Water Resources and Sanitation

Minister of Water Resources and Sanitation, Prof.  Joseph Utsev, said this in Owerri on Friday, October 25, 2024, while addressing newsmen after an assessment tour of dams in the southeast.

Utsev, represented by Mrs Oluwatosin Abiola, the Deputy Director, Geo-technical Divisional Head, Dams Department in the ministry, said that President Bola Tinubu’s directive was to critically analyse the integrity of dams in Nigeria.

The minister, who heads the inter-ministerial committee, said the committee would also assess the environmental and social impacts on local communities and the extended environment.

“President Bola Tinubu wants all hands on deck to arrest the challenge of flooding, hence the setting up of this inter-ministerial technical committee.

“We have visited the Adada and Ivo dams in Enugu State, as well as the Amauzari and Inyishi dams in Imo and we will return to the committee for further action,” the minister said.

He added that the findings would form an action plan to solve challenges faced by dam construction in Nigeria and address challenges associated with flooding, water supply, irrigation and hydroelectric power generation.

He mentioned the member ministries of the committee to include the ministries of Environment, Housing, Works, Budget and National Planning, Information and National Orientation Agency as well as Finance.

He said that to expedite activities of the committee, he inaugurated a technical sub-committee chaired by his Ministry’s Director of Dams and Reservoir Operations.

According to him, the sub-committee is comprised of technical offices from the member ministries, the Office of the National Security Adviser, Office of the Surveyor General of the Federation, the Nigeria Society of Engineers, the Council for the Regulation of Engineering in Nigeria, and other technical experts.

“The overall mandate is to undertake detailed assessment of dams in Nigeria to determine their structural integrity and impact on downstream conditions as well as on the social and environmental conditions of riparian communities.

“The technical sub-committee also visited the Alau Dam in Borno from October 12 to 16, 2024, alongside the Committee on Assessment of Alau Dam constituted by the Borno State Government,” he said.

By Victor Nwachukwu

Flood displaces 770 households in Benue

No fewer than 770 households have been displaced by flood in Benue State due to the rising water level that overflowed the banks of the River Benue.

Makurdi
Flooding in Makurdi, Benue State

Mr Aondowase Kunde, Benue Commissioner for Humanitarian Affairs, made the disclosure while briefing newsmen on Friday, October 25, 2024, in Makurdi, the state capital.

Kunde who is also the Chairman, Flood and Disaster Management Committee, said that Makurdi was worse hit by the flood.

He said that the displaced persons were taking refuge in temporary camps.

“In most local government areas people managed to stay beyond the riverbanks, but in Makurdi, approximately 770 households were displaced.

“About 520 displaced households are taking shelter in NKST Primary School Wadata, while 250 are in Gaadi Comprehensive Secondary School.

“These individuals have been provided with food and non-food items, including mattresses, containers, and rice, with the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) offering continued support over the past two weeks.

He expressed hope that with the receding water levels, the displaced persons should be able to return to their homes by next week.

Kunde stated that the governor had ordered another assessment of the affected areas to confirm whether they were habitable.

The commissioner said that some homes may need fumigation for potentially dangerous reptiles like snakes as well as insects.

“As a temporary measure, the governed directed that we should assess and repair flood-damaged houses and ensure that they are well maintained before residents return to their homes.

“However, the government’s long-term plan is to construct houses in safer areas and relocate those living in flood-prone areas.

“The governor is committed to addressing these challenges, including post-flood recovery,” he said.

By Peter Amine

COP16: Civil society calls for CBD’s leadership in addressing geoengineering risks

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As first week of negotiations at the sixteenth session of the Conference of the Parties (COP16) to the UN’s Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) comes to an end, civil society including climate justice, Indigenous Peoples, and Youth groups are encouraging CBD to continue its leadership in recognising and addressing the dangers of geoengineering.

Silvia Ribeiro
Silvia Ribeiro, Latin America Director for ETC Group

The CBD is said to have been a global leader since 2010, at COP10 it adopted a historic de facto moratorium on geoengineering, reaffirming it at COP13 in 2016.

“CBD understood early that climate change has a large impact on biodiversity and that some of the measures to ‘tame’ the climate crisis could in fact worsen it. Therefore, CBD took a groundbreaking decision calling for a moratorium on climate geoengineering. Now that there has been an explosion of risky geoengineering proposals aiming to alter marine and land ecosystems, with serious environmental and social impacts, CBD needs to reaffirm precaution,” said Silvia Ribeiro, Latin America Director for ETC Group.

As climate and biodiversity crises continue to deepen, it is essential that CBD uphold its precautionary approach to geoengineering which can have wide reaching impacts on peoples, communities, biodiversity and climate.

Mary Church, Centre for International Environmental Law (CIEL), said: “Geoengineering is a dangerous distraction from the real solutions to the climate crisis – it does nothing to tackle the root causes of climate change and instead gives the illusion that there is a silver bullet or quick fix out there, if only we can find it. If deployed at scale these inherently unpredictable technologies would have profound and potentially irreversible effects on biodiversity and communities.

“Impossible to test for their intended impact on the climate except through large-scale deployment, geoengineering proposes turning the Earth into a risky laboratory. States must take steps to protect biodiversity and prevent the normalisation of geoengineering in climate discourse and policy, including by preventing outdoor geoengineering experiments.”

Geoengineering also brings new risks to the lives and livelihoods of Indigenous Peoples, and traditional communities and fisherfolk who rely on these ecosystems.

Adrienne Aakaluk Titus, Indigenous Environmental Network (IEN), said: “The very existence of the world depends on the rich biodiversity of ecosystems that have been maintained by Indigenous Peoples since time immemorial. Our land is not your science laboratory. It is imperative to make an Indigenous led just transition. To step away from extractive industry and false solutions like geoengineering, climate manipulation that support capitalism. We must put Indigenous stakeholders to the forefront to ensure a healthy Mother Earth for future generations.”

Youth groups are concerned about the lack of transparency around the risks and consequences of geoengineering as it gets pushed as a “fix” for the climate and biodiversity crises.

“Youth deserve honest information, not false promises, about these risky technologies. We demand a global respect for the geoengineering moratorium, with clear protocols to stop all experiments. Communities harmed by these tests have spoken, and we reject tech companies’ false promises and false solutions to ‘solve’ the climate change while profiting from the same systems that caused it. Real solutions come from grassroots communities, not in labs with geoengineers,” added Alejandro Jaimes, Alliance of Non Governmental Radical Youth (ANGRY).

Five-point plan for next-generation NDCs, by World Resources Institute

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By early 2025, countries are due to unveil new national climate commitments under the Paris Agreement, known as nationally determined contributions (NDCs). These commitments form the foundation of international climate action, establishing emissions-reduction targets and other measures that countries promise to implement.

Nationally determined contributions (NDCs)
A Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) document

The Paris Agreement requires nations to put forward new NDCs every five years, with each round stronger than the last. In short, NDCs are important because they are the main vehicle for countries to collectively confront the global climate crisis.

Yet NDCs to date fall well short of what’s needed to avert increasingly dangerous climate impacts and hold global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees C (2.7 degrees F). A recent UN report found current commitments put the world on track for a catastrophic 2.5-2.9 degrees C (4.5 – 5.2 degrees F) of warming by 2100.

Key developments since the last round of NDCs in 2020 can help spur countries to step things up considerably this time around. The question is: Will they rise to the occasion?

The Seeds for Stronger Climate Action Are Taking Root

Indeed, the impetus for ambitious national climate action has never been stronger. For instance, most countries now have targets to achieve net-zero emissions by or around 2050. This round of NDCs will extend to 2035 – the midpoint between 2020 (when many countries began implementing their NDCs) and 2050 – making them an important milestone for aligning near- and mid-term action with long-term aspirations. The new NDCs must also be informed by last year’s Global Stocktake, a UN assessment that reveals the shortcomings in current national climate policies and clearly calls for countries to move away from fossil fuels, as well as transform transportation, food and agriculture, and more.

Countries are also increasingly joining global cooperative initiatives on issues ranging from food and forests to renewable energy and methane; translating those commitments into NDCs could unlock stronger ambition. Finally, new scientific evidence like last year’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report reveals that the impacts of climate change are leading to more devastating consequences sooner than anticipated, reinforcing the urgent need to curb emissions, drive adaptation and significantly increase financing for both.

In the past, too many NDCs fell short of their potential to set out the ambition and actions needed for truly transformative climate action. This time around, NDCs must evolve to set the sights of government on the pace and scale of change needed and advance implementation to deliver it.

Here, we propose a five-point plan for the next generation of NDCs:

1) Set 2035 and strengthen 2030 emissions-reduction targets aligned with 1.5-degrees C and net-zero emissions goals.

Research shows that preventing increasingly dangerous impacts of climate change requires limiting global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees C above pre-industrial levels. That means cutting global greenhouse gas emissions by 43% by 2030 and 60% by 2035, relative to 2019.

This is a collective goal supported by 194 vastly different countries, so it’s hard to prescribe a single, objective 2030 and 2035 emissions target at the national level (though various tools can help do so). Two things, however, are clear: First, countries, especially major emitters, must go much further in their emissions cuts than their current NDCs. And second, developed countries – historically the world’s largest emitters – have a responsibility to make the deepest reductions while providing substantially more finance to help developing countries accelerate climate action.

Less ambiguous than the collective 1.5- degrees C goal are the net-zero emissions targets that most countries have now adopted. Those countries should ensure that their 2030 and 2035 targets put them on a realistic path to phasing out emissions entirely by their net-zero target date. The window to align near- and mid-term climate action with long-term goals is finite. Infrastructure, for example, can take decades to turn over. If NDCs continue to lag so far behind, long-term goals will not be met without costly interventions later. The UN invited countries to submit their long-term climate strategies by November 2024, which can help inform countries’ near-term actions in their 2025 NDCs.

Finally, all countries should set targets that include non-CO2 greenhouse gases such as methane. Reining in these potent climate pollutants is among the fastest ways to reduce near-term warming, yet some countries still do not address them in their NDCs. Last year, China made a significant commitment to include non-CO2 emissions for the first time in its new NDC. This is especially important, as China’s non-CO2 emissions alone would rank among the world’s top 10 national emitters of total GHGs.

2) Accelerate systemwide transformations by establishing ambitious, timebound sectoral targets.

Limiting global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees C will require immediate action to transform nearly every sector. To spur such far-reaching changes, countries should set sector-specific targets that underpin their topline emissions-reduction goals, as well as jumpstart a process with ministries to integrate these targets into their strategic planning. Doing so can help guide domestic policymaking across the whole of government, signal the direction of travel to public and private sector investors and enable more effective implementation.

While most NDCs currently commit to reducing economy-wide GHG emissions, fewer feature sector-specific goals. But establishing ambitious, timebound targets for the energy system (which includes energy supply and end use sectors like transport), as well as for food, agriculture and land, will be particularly important, as these sectors collectively emit about 90% of GHGs globally.

A just transition to zero-carbon energy

NDCs should commit to phasing down fossil fuels rapidly this decade, while also scaling up zero-carbon power; electrifying buildings, industry and transport; shifting to low- and zero-carbon fuels in harder-to-abate industries like steel and cement; and improving energy efficiency.

Fortunately, countries aren’t starting from scratch. The Global Stocktake, as well as multilateral commitments like the Global Renewables and Energy Efficiency Pledge, provide building blocks for national target-setting. At COP28, for example, countries agreed to transition away from fossil fuels, triple renewable energy capacity by 2030 and advance efforts to achieve net-zero energy systems by mid-century. These political commitments represent significant progress. NDCs should reaffirm them.

But to limit warming to 1.5 degrees C, countries will also need to go further. One study, for example, finds that zero-carbon power sources like wind and solar must account for at least 88% of electricity generation by 2030, while coal and unabated fossil gas should decline to no more than 4% and 7% of power generation by the end of this decade, respectively. Similarly, decarbonising transport will require bringing jobs, services and goods closer to where people live to avoid motorised travel; doubling public transit infrastructure across urban areas; and increasing the share of electric vehicles in the passenger car fleet to at least 20% this decade.

Countries do not need to progress at the same pace or reach the same target to achieve these global benchmarks. While developed countries have a responsibility to go furthest, fastest, other major emitters also need to decarbonise rapidly to keep the 1.5-degree C limit within reach, though some may require finance and other support to do so. Still, these benchmarks provide a rough approximation of where nations need to be in the near term.

Finally, NDCs should lay the groundwork for a just and equitable energy transition by committing to extend affordable, reliable electricity access to those currently living without it, provide safe and accessible mobility for all, and support those negatively impacted by the shift to zero-carbon energy, such as fossil fuel workers.

A shift to resilient food systems that feed a growing population, help halt deforestation and reduce emissions

Today’s farmers face an enormously difficult task of boosting agricultural productivity to improve food security in the face of intensifying climate change impacts, while also shifting to practices that enhance soil health, safeguard water and mitigate climate change. Agriculture, forestry and other land uses, for example, account for nearly one-fifth of annual GHG emissions globally; when combined with emissions across food supply chains, this share jumps to roughly a third.

Recent years have seen this sector rise up the political agenda, with an increasing number of countries referencing it in their current NDCs, the inclusion of ecosystem conservation within the Global Stocktake and the Global Goal on Adaptation’s target to attain climate-resilient food systems. Complementary commitments like the Glasgow Leaders’ Declaration on Forests and Land Use and the Emirates Declaration on Sustainable Agriculture, Resilient Food Systems and Climate Action have also received widespread support from countries.

Though these developments are welcome news, NDCs must go further to deliver the Paris Agreement’s goals, including to protect vulnerable farmers, particularly smallholders, from intensifying impacts and to lower food systems’ emissions.

On the demand-side, all countries should set targets to halve food loss and waste by 2030, while those in high-consuming regions (the Americas, Europe and Oceania) should aim to lower per capita consumption of emissions-intensive beef, lamb and goat to two servings per week or less by the end of this decade. Supply-side, 1.5-degree C benchmarks call for reducing global GHG emissions from agricultural production by 22% this decade, while also sustainably boosting crop yields by 18% and building resilience. Pairing these food and agriculture goals with those focused on halting and reversing ecosystem loss, particularly for forests, peatlands, mangroves and grasslands, is also urgently needed to help conserve the world’s carbon sinks and stores.

Critically, efforts to achieve these targets must be pursued in tandem. Failure to do so risks unintended consequences, such as farms expanding into forests and accelerating biodiversity losses, tree-planting across productive croplands that harms farmers’ livelihoods and threatens food security, or adoption of agricultural practices that increase yields but heighten vulnerability to climate change by degrading soil or overdrawing groundwater.

3) Build resilience to increasingly dangerous and irreversible impacts.

With escalating climate impacts like heatwaves, severe storms and wildfires, as well as longer-term, slow onset effects like sea level rise and desertification, it’s increasingly crucial for countries to step up their efforts to adapt and build resilience. Despite their focus on mitigation, NDCs – along with other tools like national adaptation plans (NAPs) – play a vital role in elevating the political profile of adaptation and facilitating much-needed shifts in policies and finance.

This next generation of NDCs follows adoption of the first Global Goal on Adaptation, which outlines sectoral adaptation targets. Countries can refer to these global priorities when identifying national and local priorities, such as attaining climate-resilient food and agricultural production and distribution; building resilience to climate change-related health impacts; and reducing climate impacts on ecosystems and biodiversity, among others.

This requires conducting periodic vulnerability assessments, undertaking cost-benefit analyses (using the “triple dividend” approach), and consulting mayors and local communities to prioritise opportunities for enhancing adaptation and strengthening actions to keep pace with intensifying climate impacts. Once implementation begins, progress should be tracked through the development of monitoring, evaluation and learning (MEL) systems.

The NDC process also offers countries the opportunity to engage the most vulnerable communities and Indigenous Peoples in developing national adaptation measures. Inclusive stakeholder participation helps ensure that investments in adaptation and climate-resilient development meet local needs. The principles for locally led adaptation can help guide implementation.

Finally, NDCs offer countries a chance to prioritise loss and damage, and thereby raise awareness of areas in which the limits to adaptation are likely to be exceeded. This can include providing specific information on financial costs and technical and capacity needs to respond to the most severe impacts of climate change, as well as national efforts related to disaster-risk reduction, humanitarian assistance, rehabilitation, migration and slow-onset events, such as loss of biodiversity and erosion of cultural heritage.

4) Spur investment and strengthen governance to turn targets into practice.

It is critical that NDCs not only make commitments, but also lay the groundwork for implementing them. This includes a vision for how government ministries, subnational governments, the private sector and civil society, as well as others, will work together to turn ambition into reality, including through policies, institutions and finance.

To start with, implementing NDCs will require a whole-of-government effort. The profile, legitimacy and associated international scrutiny of the NDC process can shift the political calculus, creating opportunities to strengthen climate governance accordingly. For example, as they develop their NDCs, countries can pass laws or foster coordination across the entire government – from the head of state and all-important economic ministries to line ministries and regulatory bodies.

The process can also help facilitate consensus-building and integrate climate issues into mainstream planning, policy, finance and legislative decisions. The NDC document itself can describe allocation of responsibility for implementation to certain ministries and note whether the country is establishing or strengthening national climate bodies that can drive forward integration and accountability. Leveraging these opportunities may prove critical to establishing the legal and institutional infrastructure necessary to implement ambitious goals.

The NDC process is also an opportunity to actors such as cities, states, regions and local communities. This can achieve several goals: ensuring alignment between local and national climate goals; strengthening subnational implementation via policies and budgets; and increasing countries’ overall ambition.

Implementation of NDCs will also depend on investment and finance. Ambitious targets and policy objectives in a country’s NDC can send strong signals to investors and finance providers that the government is committed to the climate agenda. This signal is even stronger if NDC targets, policies and institutional measures are integrated into core national and sectoral plans. This can help to mobilise the finance and investment to carry out national commitments.

But the NDCs’ targets and measures, even if strengthened through integration into core national and sectoral planning, cannot stand alone if they are to succeed. They’ll need to be buttressed by credible strategies to mobilise investment and financing. Such strategies would build on but go beyond the estimates some developing countries made in previous NDCs of the cost of their proposed actions. They can also delineate the actions countries could finance domestically and those which would be conditional on international finance.

Strategies can also identify a pipeline of bankable projects. Clear finance strategies will not only strengthen the viability and credibility of countries’ NDC targets, but also help turn commitments into action.

NDC investment strategies can also provide a rallying point that enables developing country governments to bring together public financing partners (e.g. Multilateral Development Banks, Development Finance Institutions, Climate Funds, donors, philanthropists) and the private sector to coordinate how they will support countries’ targets. Such coordination processes – which should be driven by a country’s own objectives and internal alignment could enable the co-creation of project pipelines, structure investment programmes, and help identify policies that encourage greater investment.

5) Put people at the centre, ensuring climate action creates jobs, improves health and more.

Given the widespread ramifications of climate change and the many potential benefits of tackling it, NDCs will need to draw clear linkages to a wide range of issues that are critical for peoples’ lives – from employment to health to local economies and beyond. Doing so is essential to maximise the economic, development and social opportunities from well-planned climate policies, as well as for managing challenges like loss of livelihoods for workers in the fossil fuel industry or certain types of land use. Taking these issues into account is also critical for building public and political support for greater climate action.

Some NDCs have already highlighted connections between the actions they lay out and the Sustainable Development Goals, while others refer to “just transitions,” decent work and gender rights. Yet most current NDCs only skim the surface on these issues.

While NDCs cannot provide fully granular policies across all issues, what they can do is outline clear plans for a just transition, including working directly with communities, workers and other affected groups to develop strategies for an inclusive zero-carbon and resilient transition.

NDCs can also outline ways in which countries will support communities that might be negatively affected by zero-carbon, resilient development. These approaches could include employment creation and worker retraining, support for community development and economic diversification, social safety nets and more.  NDCs can also provide quantitative goals on objectives such as access to high-quality green jobs, health improvements through pollutant reduction, and equitable access to renewable energy and sustainable transport.

What’s Next?

By 2035, the world needs to be on a radically different pathway if we have any hope of overcoming the climate crisis. The NDCs that countries submit by next year will show in black and white which countries are committed to slash emissions and accelerate adaptation quickly enough to get there.

Our five-point plan offers a blueprint for success: setting ambitious emissions-reduction targets aligned with the 1.5 degrees C limit, accelerating sectoral transformations, building resilience across all systems, catalysing multi-stakeholder action and investment, and putting people at the centre of climate action. By embracing these principles as they craft next-generation NDCs, countries can not only help avoid the devastating impacts of climate change, but also unlock opportunities for sustainable development, job creation and better public health.

By Jamal SroujiTaryn FransenSophie BoehmDavid WaskowRebecca Carter and Gaia Larsen, World Resources Institute (WRI)

Originally published here https://www.wri.org/insights/next-ndcs-5-point-plan?apcid=0065e0b07f09392dce581a03&utm_campaign=cli-ndc-new-sector-page-la&utm_content=cli-ndc-new-sector-page-la&utm_medium=email&utm_source=ortto on April 25, 2024

Africa faces mounting climate challenges as global emissions gap persists, UNEP report finds

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The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) has released the “Emissions Gap Report 2024”, presenting stark warnings and critical insights into the global progress, or lack thereof, in reducing greenhouse gas emissions. The report highlights an urgent need for more ambitious climate action to meet the Paris Agreement goal of limiting global warming to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels.

Ali Mohamed
Ali Mohamed, Chair, African Group of Negotiators (AGN)

As the world looks ahead to COP29, African nations face unique climate challenges, with the region disproportionately affected by climate change despite contributing only about 4% of global emissions. The 2024 report calls for both immediate and transformative measures globally, including in Africa, to avoid the devastating effects of climate change on food security, water availability, and economic stability.

Key Highlights of the Emissions Gap Report 2024

1. Current Emissions Trajectory: The report finds that despite some progress, the world is still on a trajectory to reach 2.7°C of warming by the end of the Century, far exceeding the Paris Agreement targets. Global emissions need to be cut by 45% by 2030 to keep the 1.5°C target within reach.

2. Fossil Fuel Dependency: The ongoing reliance on fossil fuels remains a significant barrier. While renewables are expanding, coal, oil, and gas continue to dominate the global energy mix, especially in regions with fast- growing energy demand. The report stresses the need for rapid and just decarbonisation of the energy sector and a shift towards renewable energy, particularly in Africa, where energy access is a pressing development issue.

3. Finance and Technology for Africa: Africa is cited as a region where significant climate finance and technology transfer are crucial. Despite the
$100 billion annual climate finance commitment made by developed nations, actual flows to Africa have lagged. The report emphasises the urgent need for scaled up finance and investments in adaptation and mitigation technologies across the continent to build climate resilience.

4. Sectoral Transformations: To bridge the emissions gap, the report calls for radical transformations across key sectors:

i. Energy: The energy transition is critical. Africa’s abundant renewable resources, such as solar and wind, present a unique opportunity for clean energy leadership.
ii. Agriculture and Land Use: With agriculture forming the backbone of many African economies, sustainable practices and investments in climate-smart agriculture are necessary to protect food security while reducing emissions.
iii. Urbanisation: The rapid urban growth in Africa presents both challenges and opportunities. Sustainable urban planning and infrastructure development can mitigate emissions while fostering economic growth.

5. Adapting to a Warmer Future: The report highlights that climate adaptation remains a priority for Africa, where extreme weather events – droughts, floods, and heatwaves – are becoming more frequent and severe. Strengthening local and national capacities for adaptation is vital, alongside enhancing climate resilience in sectors such as health, water management, and infrastructure.

African Leadership in Climate Action

The Nairobi Declaration, adopted at the inaugural Africa Climate Summit in 2023, noted that, despite the global challenges, African nations are making significant strides in climate leadership. This year at COP29 (‘the Finance COP’), Africa is calling for an ambitious, accessible and predictable climate finance goal and enhanced international cooperation to drive impactful climate action and support full implementation of Africa’s NDCs, NAPs, Loss and Damage and Just Transitions.

Call to Action from Amb Ali Mohamed

As the world prepares for COP29, the Emissions Gap Report 2024 serves as a clarion call for all nations to raise their climate ambitions.

Amb Ali Mohamed, the Kenya Special Envoy for Climate Change and Chair of the African Group of Negotiators (AGN), underscores the importance of global solidarity and climate justice, especially for vulnerable regions like Africa that are bearing the brunt of climate impacts.

He urges that, with stronger financial commitments, technological innovation, and bold political leadership, there is still a chance to bridge the emissions gap and secure a sustainable future for Africa and the world.

Scientific group raises health concern over GMO foods in Nigeria

A scientific group, the Living Science Foundation (LSF), has raised concern over the potential adverse health effects of Genetically Modified Organism (GMO) foods in the country.

GMOs
GMOs

The group raised the observation in a statement issued on Thursday, October 24, 2024, at the ongoing 9th annual National Conference on Environmental and Health, in Ile-Ife, Osun State.

The statement was jointly signed by Prof. Joshua Ojo, the president of the group and Dr Adebiyi Oginni, chairman of the organising committee of the conference.

The statement said that the deployment of GMO foods such as maize, cassava, sweet potatoes, in the markets could result in a serious health implication for consumers.

It said that a well-established adverse health effects of chronic ingestion of GMOs included cancers, organ damage, allergic reactions, antibiotic resistance and reductions in nutritional content.

“At the beginning of the year, on January 11, approval was given for the cultivation of GMO TELA Maize in Nigeriaand on the heels of this were the announcements that GMO cassava and potatoes are also on their way.

“Transgenic rice and sorghum are also known to be lurking somewhere in the pipeline and since 2019, Nigerians have been officially eating the world’s first genetically modified beans (Bt Cowpeas).

“The frightening implication of all these, is that virtually all the basic staples in Nigeria are being bioengineered and released for commercial cultivation.

“The germlines for the GMOs being released are proprietary products, designed and developed by multinational monopolies with history of aggressive and ruthless commercial operations.

“There are very good reasons to doubt the thoroughness of the approval processes for these products in Nigeria,” it said.

It said for instance, the Germany-based Testbiotech e.V., Institute for Independent Impact Assessment of Biotechnology, published an extensive peer-reviewed report on the products.

According to the statement, the company documented the utter incredible shoddiness characterising the risk assessment exercise used to greenlight GM cowpea (beans) in Nigeria.

It said the report had been largely ignored by concerned authorities in the country.

“Worse, even the basic legal and reasonable requirement that GMO food products be appropriately labelled (Section 23(2) h of the NBMA Act 2015)10 is flouted with outright impunity,” it said.

It called on the Nigeria Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA) and the National Agency for Foods and Drugs Administration and Control, NAFDAC) to conduct appropriate chronic toxicity testings.

According to the statement, the tests will transparently ascertain the safety of GM food products before their deployment for public consumption in the country.

It, however, applauded the discovery and production of Malaria Vaccine, but warned against the incorporation of it into Routine Childhood Immunisation in the country.

It said that it was not an appropriate public health response and would be a colossal waste of the country’s meager resources.

“The huge amount to be deployed to this can be used to carry out better and sound public health interventions like biological control of the vector and environmental sanitation,” the statement said.

By Olajide Idowu

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