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Bhutan, Maldives eliminate measles – WHO

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Bhutan and Maldives have eliminated measles, a highly infectious disease that is a major childhood killer globally, the World Health Organisation (WHO) has said.

The two countries have become the first in WHO South-East Asia Region to be verified for having interrupted endemic measles virus transmission, ahead of the 2020 Regional target.

Poonam Khetrapal Singh
Dr Poonam Khetrapal Singh, Regional Director of WHO, South-East Asia

“Bhutan and Maldives have demonstrated how a highly contagious virus like measles can be eliminated. WHO commends them for this momentous public health achievement,” Dr Poonam Khetrapal Singh, Regional Director of WHO South-East Asia, said, announcing the findings and conclusions of the WHO South-East Asia Regional Verification Commission for Measles Elimination and Rubella control.

The Regional Director added, “The strongest political commitment, alongside the concerted efforts of health workers, officials and partners at all levels, has helped achieve this landmark success, which is a boost to the Region’s effort to eliminate measles and control rubella”.

Bhutan and Maldives launched their Expanded Programme on Immunisation in 1979 and 1976 respectively, and since then worked indefatigably to increase access to immunisation services.

“Both countries achieved and maintained high coverage of measles vaccination, despite geographical challenges. They also established strong laboratory-supported surveillance for measles, and have conducted detailed case investigation and tracking, right up to the very last case,” Dr Khetrapal Singh stated.

Maldives has not reported any case of indigenous measles since 2009, and Bhutan since 2012.

To fortify their progress, both countries have been carrying out mass vaccination campaigns with measles and rubella vaccine covering high-risk populations.

“While endemic measles virus transmission has been interrupted, both Bhutan and Maldives continue to be at risk of measles virus importation. Hence, both countries must continue efforts against measles and rubella and protect high-risk populations to effectively deal with any importations,” Dr Khetrapal Singh said.

Measles elimination and rubella control by 2020 has been one of WHO South-East Asia Region’s flagship priority programmes since Dr Khetrapal Singh became Regional Director in February 2014.

An estimated 620 000 measles deaths have been averted in 2016 alone following vaccination carried out by Member countries. Nearly 107 million children have been reached with an additional dose of measles vaccine through mass vaccination between 2013 and 2016.

All countries have introduced two doses of measles containing vaccine and have been making focused efforts and progress against measles and rubella. All countries are conducting case-based surveillance for measles and rubella, and Regional surveillance standards have been revised to meet elimination standards. The measles laboratory network has been expanded from 23 laboratories in 2013 to 39 WHO accredited laboratories in 2016.

“To meet the 2020 measles elimination and rubella control goals, all countries need to make greater efforts to increase measles vaccination coverage through childhood immunisation programmes, as nearly 4.7 million children remain unvaccinated against measles in the Region annually,” Dr Khetrapal Singh said.

The overarching goal of universal health coverage and the core Sustainable Development Goal theme of leaving no one behind provide new opportunities to further improve immunisation programmes, enhance access to new vaccines, and strengthen health systems to sustain the gains made so far, she said.

The measles elimination and rubella control strategy in WHO South-East Asia Region is based on four key approaches – achieving and maintaining at least 95% vaccination coverage with two doses of measles and rubella vaccine through routine and supplementary immunisation; developing and sustaining a sensitive case based surveillance that meets recommended performance indicators; developing and maintaining an accredited measles and rubella laboratory network; and strengthening support and linkages for these strategies.

IUCN: Vaquita exploitation puts Mexican heritage site in danger

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The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has recommended “in-danger” status for Mexico’s World Heritage-listed Islands and Protected Areas of the Gulf of California, after a mission confirmed the vaquita – the smallest and most endangered species of porpoise – is at risk of imminent extinction.

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The vaquita porpoise

This advice to the World Heritage Committee is included in a monitoring report released on Thursday, June 8, 2017 by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO).

The vaquita is a rare species of porpoise endemic to the northern part of the Gulf of California. The word vaquita is Spanish for “little cow”. Porpoises are a group of fully aquatic marine mammals that are sometimes referred to as mereswine.

Despite ongoing efforts by Mexico, illegal gillnet fishing of totoaba, whose swim bladder is in high demand in Asia, is threatening the vaquita with imminent extinction, as the porpoise gets entangled in the illegal nets. An estimated 30 vaquitas only are left in the Islands and Protected Areas of the Gulf of California, the only place on Earth where they can be found.

Following a field mission jointly with UNESCO’s World Heritage Centre, IUCN recommends listing the site as ‘in danger’. A number of urgent measures are recommended, including a permanent ban on gillnets and international cooperation to halt illegal wildlife trade.

The List of World Heritage in Danger is designed to mobilise urgent action to tackle severe issues that can damage the outstanding values of World Heritage sites. Out of 238 sites listed for their natural values, 18 are currently listed as “in danger”.

IUCN’s advice is addressed to the World Heritage Committee, the governing body of the World Heritage Convention, which will meet at its annual meeting in Kraków, Poland from July 2 to 12. IUCN is the advisory body on nature under the Convention and the Committee takes the final decisions.

For the 2017 meeting, IUCN has prepared recommendations together with UNESCO’s World Heritage Centre for 55 natural sites facing threats, and has evaluated 13 proposals to inscribe new sites on the World Heritage List, or extend and modify sites already listed.

UNESCO’s World Heritage Centre on June 8 released a final set of reports, following two dispatches on May 19 and June 2. In addition to the Islands and Protected Areas of the Gulf of California, natural sites featured in the reports issued include: Simien National Park in Ethiopia, the Rainforests of the Atsinanana in Madagascar, and the Historic Sanctuary of Machu Picchu in Peru – a mixed natural and cultural site.

G7 environment ministers commit to Paris Agreement

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The Environment Ministers of Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United Kingdom, and European Commissioners responsible for environment and climate, have reaffirmed their strong commitment to the swift and effective implementation of the Paris Climate Change Agreement.

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The G7 Environment Ministers Meeting in Bologna, Italy

In a communique issued at the end of the G7 Environment Ministers Meeting in Bologna, Italy, on Monday, June 12, 2017, they said: “(The Paris Agreement) remains the global instrument for effectively and urgently tackling climate change and adapting to its effects. We welcome the continued support that the Paris Agreement has received from other countries and subnational and non-state actors around the world.”

The ministers and leading officials also said that the Paris Climate Change Agreement is irreversible and that its full integrity is key for the security and prosperity of the planet, societies and economies.

“Our actions will continue to be inspired and guided by the growing, global momentum to tackle climate change and to accelerate the irreversible transition to low-carbon, climate-resilient and resource-efficient economies,” they said.

In addition, the ministers and leading officials called for an increase in sustainable financing as a fundamental requirement to achieving the central goal of the Paris Climate Change Agreement – which is to limit the global average temperature rise to as close as possible to 1.5 degrees Celsius – and as a requirement to achieve the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals.

“We (…) reaffirm the Copenhagen commitment of developed countries to the goal of jointly mobilising $100 billion annually by 2020  from  public  and  private  sources  to  support  climate  action  in  developing countries. We encourage all potential providers of finance to join in efforts in reaching and surpassing this goal,” they said.

Russia forum elicits interest in New Urban Agenda

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A two-day international conference recently held in the Russian city of Saint Petersburg highlighted the importance of public space for wellbeing in cities.

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The conference explored promoting the implementation of the New Urban Agenda in Russia and the CIS region

“Public space as a place for dialogue: Promoting the implementation of the New Urban Agenda in Russia and the CIS region” was organised by the Ministry of Construction, Housing and Utilities of the Russian Federation, United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-Habitat), the Government of Saint Petersburg, and the ITMO University, provided insights on urbanisation trends in Russia and the region.

Discussions provided an opportunity for other cities and regions in Russia and the CIS to engage in the discussion on sustainable urbanisation and public space. Deputy Minister of Construction, Housing and Utilities of the Russian Federation, Andrey Chibis, shared insights on current work of the Government on improving the urban environment countrywide.

During the discussion, Executive Director of UN-Habitat, Dr Joan Clos, shared his views on the prerequisites of sustainable urbanisation, while Vladimir Grigoryev, Chief Architect of Saint-Petersburg, provided an insight on how Saint Petersburg manages its public spaces, and how the city mobilises funds for such work.

After the plenary discussion, work in sections continued. The National Urban Policy for Urban Renewal section addressed what constitutes a national urban policy and affirmed the relevance of many of such policies’ components in Russia and the CIS region. Participants in the section on the Role of Public Spaces in Urban Renewal learned about the UN-Habitat Global Public Space Programme and contributed to the development of public space programme in the region. The section on the Planning for Urban Renewal discussed advanced urban planning approaches.

UN-Habitat signed Memorandum of Understanding with the CIS Inter-Governmental Council for Cooperation in Construction Activities in 2012, and stated that would continue to work jointly with Russian and other Governments in the region through its office in Moscow, on implementing the New Urban Agenda, and improving the quality of life in cities.

Elephants now poached for their skins – WWF

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Endangered elephants are now being slaughtered in the Southeast Asian country of Myanmar for their skin, the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) has disclosed.

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Poaching: Forest elephants are poached for their ivory and skin, and threatened with extinction

Described as a new kind of poaching for parts, the wildlife conservation organisation has expressed displeasure over the development, even as it seeks to address the situation.

Traditionally, elephants are killed by poachers for their tusks (or ivory). In fact, despite a ban on the international trade in ivory, elephants are still being poached in large numbers.

But poaching elephants for their skin seems to be gaining prominence and a worried WWF has set a deadline of Friday, June 30, 2017 to take action.

“As a WWF Global Ambassador, I’m committed to and passionate about doing all I can to help ensure that endangered species, like elephants, survive. I was deeply disturbed to learn about a new poaching trend of killing elephants for their skins,” says Jared Leto, the WWF Global Ambassador.

“There are fewer than 50,000 Asian elephants left in the wild, and fewer than 2,000 in Myanmar. Already facing many threats to their survival, they are now being confronted by this horrifying new threat. And poachers don’t discriminate – whole families, including mothers and calves, are targeted.”

According to him, elephant poaching rates since January have already surpassed the annual average for Myanmar, a development he describes as “a crisis”.

He adds: “Most of the poaching is happening in two areas: Bago Yoma and Ayeyarwady Delta, where poachers can gain easy access. At this rate, wild Asian elephants could vanish from these areas in just one or two years.”

He however discloses that the organisation intends to urgently address the development, and that the WWF has set a target of June 30 to raise about $230,000 to execute its plan.

His words: “The WWF has an emergency action plan to stop the poaching. We will train, equip and deploy 10 anti-poaching teams to the most vulnerable areas, and implement a thorough plan to stop the slaughter.

“Right now, there are no anti-poaching patrols in the Bago Yoma and Ayeyarwady Delta regions. We must act immediately to ensure the survival of wild elephants. If we don’t act now, wild elephants could disappear from two key areas in a year or two,” adds Leto.

Messi, Ronaldo shift rivalry to hotel business

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World football stars, Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo, have taken their rivalry from footballing to hotel business.

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Lionel Messi of FC Barcelona and Cristiano Ronaldo of Real Madrid. Photo credit: Alex Gallardo

Both players, who have been rivals for almost a decade, Messi (Barcelona) and Ronaldo (Real Madrid), have invested in hotels worth millions of Pounds.

Ronaldo in December 2015 in partnership with Pestana Hotel Group launched a chain of CR7 Lisboa Hotels, was officially opened in Madeira, with branches in Funchal, Madrid and New York, worth £54 million.

And following his rival’s footstep, Messi recently bought a £26 million luxury hotel in a beach town close to the Catalonian city.

The Argentine who bought the four-star hotel, with 77 rooms, boast of a panoramic terrace overlooking the sea and stunning views, is situated close to the beach and seafront promenade of Sitges, 40 km from Barcelona.

It has been renamed MiM and, built in 2013, prices at the hotel range from €250 to €300 per night.

Messi makes the purchase after recently establishing a new company for investment in hotels and apartment, where he is the President and his brother Rodrigo, the sole administrator.

By Felix Simire 

Federal varsity, Ebonyi seek to bridge food chain gap

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The Federal University Ndufu-Alike Ikwo (FUNAI) and the Ebonyi State Government through its Ministry of Agriculture and Natural Resources are partnering to improve agriculture and bridge the palpable gap in food production in the state.

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Vice Chairman of Afikpo Local Government Area, Mrs. Patricia Obila, speaking during the event

The collaboration is part of the university’s community service geared towards educating farmers, extension officers, staff of the Ministry of Agriculture and other critical stakeholders in the state on the modern ways of cultivating rice, cassava, cashew and other economic farm produce.

Flagging off the programme recently at Abakaliki Local Government Area, the state governor, David Umahi, represented by the Commissioner of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Uchenna Orji, said the partnership with the university was strategically positioned to equip the farmers and staff of the Ministry of Agriculture with the requisite modern knowledge and technical skills to improve farming activities in the state in other to ensure food security.

He noted that the Ebonyi State Government could not help but take advantage of the qualities and experiences of academics in the university to proffer solutions to the challenges hindering modern farming in the state, adding that it was high time farmers in the state imbibed new farming techniques.

He further stated that the collaboration would avail farmers in the state with the opportunity to learn how to improve soil nutrients, effective weed and pest control mechanism and effective marketing strategy, all geared towards increasing their harvest and financial intake

Decrying the crude farming methods still being used by most farmers in the state, Orji challenged the participants to use the opportunity provided by the workshop to improve their farming methods and thereby increase food production in the state.

Speaking on behalf of the local government stakeholders, the Vice Chairman of Afikpo Local Government Area, Mrs. Patricia Obila, noted that the training programme was very apt and strategic, adding that it would help local farmers to enhance their farming techniques.

She thanked the Ebonyi State Government and FUNAI for such a worthwhile partnership, advising the state government to make the training a yearly activity.

The three-day workshop was held at the three senatorial zones of the state – Abakaliki, Onueke and Afikpo.

Paris Agreement: How President Trump got it wrong – Climate Scorecard

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Climate Scorecard, a citizen-based effort to monitor and report on efforts to implement the Paris Agreement, believes that President Donald Trump does not get the Paris Agreement or American resolve to ensure that the Agreement succeeds

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Donald Trump, US president

The rest of the world is aware that US President Trump does not get the Paris Climate Agreement. His decision to withdraw the United States from the Agreement betrays a lack of knowledge, not just about climate change, but about what it means today to be a country in an interdependent and interconnected world.

The Paris Climate Agreement is a voluntary agreement that 195 countries have signed because it represents a realistic way of cooperating to solve a global problem. A global problem cannot be solved by a single country acting on its own. President Trump’s stated concern is that the Agreement will force America to do things that are not in its interest. But this is not true. The Agreement does not compel America to do anything other than what it thinks is reasonable to contribute to the global goal of limiting global warming to 1.5 degree Celsius. This is the atmospheric tipping point beyond which scientists tell us that global warming will cause irreversible harm to the planet. Under the Paris Agreement, each country is asked to pledge what it can do in a fair and transparent way to reduce emissions. The expectation is that over time countries will continue to reduce their emissions until the Agreement’s global goal is met and the planet’s well being is preserved for future generations.

The Paris Agreement is about doing what is needed to solve the human-caused problem of global warming; but it also is about the need for countries to collaborate to solve global problems. We are living in a world where the sovereign rights of nation-states are no longer absolute and unassailable. Climate change and a growing list of other problems challenge countries to work together, and challenge leaders-including Donald Trump-to care about what happens in the world and to participate in collaborative efforts with other countries to make the whole planet a better and safer place.

President Trump unfortunately does not get this. By withdrawing the US from the Paris Agreement he is denying the science behind climate change and saying that America can solve this problem on its own. Trump says that the US will renegotiate the Paris Agreement so it is a better deal for the US. But he does not get that the Agreement, as it stands, is already in America’s favor. It will help prevent American cities from drowning, forests from burning, and farmland from drying up. The Agreement will do this, not just because of what happens inside the US, but also because of what other countries do outside the US.

Trump states that America will lose jobs through the Paris Agreement, but studies show that America will in fact gain jobs through shifting to the cleaner energy sources needed to reach the Agreement’s global goal, such as solar and wind. For example, the US natural gas industry employs 362,000 workers, solar 374,000 and wind has 102,000 jobs, according to an Energy Department report. Coal companies employ 160,000 workers-a number which has been in decline for decades.

Trump says that China and India will gain subsidies through the Paris Agreement but the Agreement contains no such subsidies. Trump says that the Agreement will force the United States to pay billions of dollars to support its implementation, but the only financial aspect of the Agreement is the Green Climate Fund, a voluntary effort to raise funds to support the impact of climate change on the poorest nations. It is totally up to each country whether it contributes to such a fund.

Trump’s decision reveals (yet again) his short-term, misguided, go-it-alone, American-centric, irrational, point of view.

Climate Scorecard is a citizen-based effort to monitor and report on efforts to implement the Paris Agreement by the leading greenhouse gas emitting countries in the world.

In the 18 months since the Agreement was signed Climate Scorecard has found that most countries are working hard to honor their commitments. There are some countries that are even doing better than expected, such as China, India, the European Union and, until last week, the United States.

However, even though President Trump withdrew the US from the Paris Agreement, American efforts to implement the Agreement are increasing at a sub-national level. States like California, New York, Massachusetts, and Vermont and cities like New York, Boston, San Francisco, and Pittsburgh are moving ahead to implement programmes that will honour the Obama administration’s commitment to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in the US by 28% below 2005 levels by 2025.

US-based corporations like Exxon/Mobil, Walmart, Apple, and General Electric recognise that stabilising our climate makes good business and economic sense. Seeing that renewable energy is the future, they have reasserted their commitments to help achieve the goals of the Paris Agreement.

These efforts demonstrate that American states, cities, and businesses see what President Trump does not; that the Paris Agreement is a crucially important effort by the countries of the world to cooperate with one another to solve the human-made problem of climate change that affects all of them. President Trump does not get the Paris Agreement or American resolve to ensure that the Agreement succeeds.

Dangote donates N200m worth of food items to Borno IDPs

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In an effort aimed at complementing government’s humanitarian intervention to bring relief to the victims of insurgency and other Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) in Borno State, Africa’s foremost businessman, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, has donated food items worth more than N200 million to the people.

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Alhaji Aliko Dangote

He said he had always felt for those in the IDP camps and that the donation became more urgent given that it is the Ramadan period.

The business mogul, who made the donation of the items through his Foundation, The Aliko Dangote Foundation, pledged that he would be willing to complement any government efforts designed to ameliorate the suffering of the IDPs anywhere.

Chief Executive of the Foundation, Zouera Youssoufou, who made the donation and distribution of the food materials on behalf of Dangote, explained that the gesture was part of the Foundation’s humanitarian efforts contributing to the well-being of Nigerians in need.

“This gesture is in continuation of the Group’s efforts to provide succor to Internally Displaced Persons in Borno State,” she stated.

According to her, the decision to bring down to Borno the food items was the demonstration of the Foundation’s undertaking “to ensure that the IDPs also have a successful Ramadan period just as their other Muslim counterparts in other parts of the world.”

“The Foundation is providing food items worth N200 million to support the IDPs in the state. Today, the items the Aliko Dangote Foundation have delivered include: Rice, Spaghetti, Sugar, Salt, Millet, Maize, Noodles, Semolina and Wheat Meal,” she said.

Governor of Borno state, Alhaji Kashim Shetima, who formally flagged-off the distribution, thanked the Dangote Foundation for its continuous support to the people of Borno, especially to the victims of insurgency.

He said, “Words are not enough to describe how grateful the people of Borno are to Alhaji Aliko Dangote and his Foundation, who has relentlessly come to support and share in our plight in our time of need.”

He asserted that, since the inception of the insurgency, the Dangote Foundation remains the largest single individual donor to the IDPs in the state after the federal and state governments.

Also, the Executive Chairman of the State Emergency Management Agency, Ahmed Satome, said that the Dangote Foundation is unique in the sense that it provides all classes of food required by the IDPs in line with the global acceptable standards.

While commending the efforts of the Foundation, he said that a total of 371,000 individuals would benefit from the Ramadan intervention.

Other dignitaries at the occasion include the Speaker and Deputy Speaker of the Borno State House of Assembly and other members of the Borno State Executive Council.

It will be recalled that following the report of unhealthy conditions in which the IDPs live in 2016, Alhaji Dangote visited some of the camps and his Foundation made a jumbo donation of N2 billion and hundreds of millions of Naira worth of food items.

Within a spate of five years, the total amount donated to various camps of IDPs across the country by the Dangote Foundation has grown significantly to N6.3 billion. The Foundation donated N364 million to IDPs in Kaduna, Bauchi and Gombe states after the 2011 post-election violence which rendered many homeless, while in another breath the sums of N100 million and N60 million were respectively donated to victims of flood disaster in Lagos and Oyo states also in 2011.

UN, GCF, support Ghana, Tonga’s clean energy, drought resilience drive

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In what looks like the first collaboration of its kind, the Governments of Ghana and Tonga will receive Readiness and Preparatory Support from the Green Climate Fund (GCF) for green technology assistance delivered by the Climate Technology Centre & Network (CTCN), thus marking a new engagement between the Finance and Technology Mechanisms of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

Jukka Uosukainen
CTCN Director, Jukka Uosukainen

“The country parties of the Climate Change Convention have been calling for this type of engagement between the CTCN and the Green Climate Fund. Such collaboration opens a wide range of possibilities to foster integrated implementation of countries’ climate commitments,” said the CTCN Director, Jukka Uosukainen.

Like many small island states, Tonga has depended entirely on imported fossil fuel for its energy. In recent years, the island kingdom has invested significantly in introducing renewable energy sources, such as off-grid solar photovoltaic systems. However, the Tongan government recognises that energy efficiency strategies must also be incorporated in order to achieve continued and sustainable development while further curbing the island’s oil dependency.

Tonga’s government therefore requested the CTCN’s assistance in the development of an energy efficiency plan for power, transport, infrastructure, tourism, education, fisheries and agriculture sectors, which will assist Tonga in meeting its Nationally Determined Contribution to improve energy efficiency.

As part of its technical assistance, the Climate Technology Centre will conduct data collection and a baseline/benchmarking study to measure Tonga’s energy use, energy costs, and greenhouse (GHG) emissions, including gender-focused baseline studies, for key sectors. Based on these findings, the CTCN will propose energy efficiency and GHG targets as well as cost-effective and gender responsive means of achieving these objectives. Initial training for Tongan Energy Department staff and identification of a longer-term capacity building plan will also be delivered.

Due to the limited use of irrigation in Ghana, the majority of its agricultural sector is highly vulnerable to temperature changes and increased frequency of drought, which threatens the country’s food security. Improving resiliency of crops to drought through strengthened early warning capabilities is a priority for the country and was included as part of Ghana’s national climate commitment under the Paris Agreement.

The Climate Technology Centre is providing technology transfer and capacity building to relevant Ghanaian organisations and government agencies for dry season management and planning. The support aims to enhance knowledge of spatially distributed drought issues; increase data accessibility of satellite information; and build capacity for drought forecasting and warning system management in order to enable national and local decision makers, including farmers, to use the transferred knowledge, practices and technologies actively for dry season planning.

The Climate Technology Centre and Green Climate Fund collaboration builds upon existing efforts between the two initiatives, which include organising parallel regional meetings for national designated representatives of both mechanisms.

The CTCN promotes the accelerated development and transfer of technologies for energy-efficient, low-carbon and climate-resilient development. As the implementation arm of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Technology Mechanism, the CTCN is a key institution assisting nations to achieve their commitments under the Paris Agreement.

Hosted and managed by the UN Environment in collaboration with the United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO), CTCN utilises the expertise of these institutions, as well as a global network of nearly 300 civil society, finance, private sector, and research institutions, to deliver tailored technical assistance and capacity building at the request of developing countries.

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