Climate
EGY | Nov 8, 2022

COP27: Hosts launch plan to help poorest adapt to climate change

/ Our Today

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Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry. (File Photo: REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz)

SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt (Reuters)

The hosts of the COP27 climate talks today (November 8) launched a global plan to help the world’s poorest communities withstand the impacts of global warming.

Unveiling the Sharm-El-Sheikh Adaptation Agenda, named after the Egyptian resort where the talks are being held, the plan sets out 30 goals to hit by the end of the decade to enhance the lives of four billion people.

The hope is that, by setting targets across themes including food and agriculture, water and nature, and coastlines and oceans, the public and private sectors will work with common goals and accelerate adaptation to change.

Urgent targets highlighted by the COP27 Presidency include moving the world to more sustainable agriculture practices that could increase yields by 17 per cent and cut emissions by 21 per cent.

Other goals include protecting three billion people from catastrophic weather events by installing early warning systems to help them prepare; investing US$4 billion into mangrove restoration, which protects against flooding; and expanding clean cooking options to 2.4 billion people to reduce indoor air pollution.

“The Sharm-El-Sheikh Adaptation Agenda is a critical step at COP27,” COP27 President and Egypt’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Sameh Shoukry said in a statement.

“The COP27 presidency has long articulated our commitment to bringing together state and non-state actors to progress on adaptation and resilience for the four billion people that live in the most climate vulnerable regions by 2030.”

An aerial view of the flooded Obagi community in Ahoada, Rivers state, Nigeria October 22, 2022. (File Photo: REUTERS/Temilade Adelaja)

In total, the plan seeks to mobilise up to US$300 billion a year from private and public investors. By contrast, the world’s biggest multilateral development banks spent $17 billion on adaptation finance for poorer countries in 2021, a report by the lenders published last month showed.

The majority of climate finance goes towards mitigation efforts, such as reducing emissions, despite UN pleas that half of all funding should be channelled into helping vulnerable countries adapt.

Africa, hosting its first COP, receives just three per cent of total climate finance globally and was being “short changed”, Akinwumi Adesina, president of the African Development Bank, told a conference session on the theme of adaptation.

Participants walk outside of the Sharm El Sheikh International Convention Centre before the COP27 climate summit opening in Egypt’s Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt November 6, 2022. (File Photo: REUTERS/Thaier Al-Sudani)

Among specific Africa-focused projects to be announced at COP27 that will help meet the adaptation targets are a plan to improve water resilience for 29 million people across 100 cities.

Going forward, the UN Climate Change High-Level Champions for COP27, which form a link between the hosts of the COP, other national governments and non-state actors such as companies, said they would continue to refine and expand the targets.

UN climate chief Simon Stiell said: “The Sharm el-Sheikh Adaptation Agenda firmly puts key human needs at its core, along with concrete, specific action on the ground to build resilience to climate change.”

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