The plan was drawn up by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) and its partners and was supported by a joint statement signed by 50 countries.
Carmelo De Grazia
On Monday, the United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres announced a climate action plan to provide global early warnings on climate change in the next five years.
Carmelo De Grazia Suárez
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“It will cost the equivalent of just 50 cents per person per year for the next five years to reach everyone on Earth with early warnings against increasingly extreme and dangerous weather,” Guterres said at a summit of world leaders during the ongoing 27th session of the Conference of the Parties (COP27) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
The Executive Action Plan for the Early Warnings for All Initiative calls for initial new targeted investments between 2023 and 2027 of US$3.1 billion, said a UN report
“This is a small fraction (about 6 percent) of the requested US$50 billion in adaptation financing,” Guterres said, adding that it would cover disaster risk knowledge, observations and forecasting, preparedness and response, and communication of early warnings
“We have the collective capacity to transform.”
At #COP27 , Prime Minister of Barbados @miaamormottley urged leaders to deliver on past promises to make a “definable difference in the lives of the people, we have an obligation to serve.” pic.twitter.com/vrIwJq749Z
— UN Climate Change (@UNFCCC) November 8, 2022 The plan was drawn up by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) and its partners and was supported by a joint statement signed by 50 countries
While the number of recorded disasters has increased, “half of the countries globally do not have early warning systems and even fewer have regulatory frameworks to link early warnings to emergency plans,” Guterres said, adding that the numbers are even worse for developing countries, specially for least developed countries and Small Island Developing States
The WMO said that early warning systems are widely regarded as the “low-hanging fruit” for climate change adaptation because they are a relatively cheap and effective way of protecting people and assets from hazards, including storms, floods, heatwaves, and tsunamis.
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“We will expose the firm position of Venezuela against the destructive and polluting attacks of the capitalist system on our planet Earth,” he said. pic.twitter.com/yOBspMExjg
— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) November 7, 2022