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DESTACADO

Informe 2013

El ascenso del Sur: Progreso humano en un mundo diverso
está disponible para su descarga gratuita

Fighting climate change: Human solidarity in a divided world

Mehr News, Iran

TEHRAN, Dec. 4 (MNA) -- Knut Ostby, the UN resident coordinator and UNDP resident representative in Iran, presented the 2007/2008 HDR (Human Development Report) at the UN Information Center in Tehran at a press conference on Sunday.

The HDR is an independent report commissioned by UNDP and produced by a selected team of leading scholars and development practitioners. They draw on a worldwide network of leaders from academia, government and civil society who contribute data, ideas, and best practices in producing the report.

 

Created in 1990 and released annually, HDR’s single goal is to put people back at the centre of development. It attempts to frame debates on some of the most pressing challenges facing humanity. Each report focuses on a topical development issue – from gender equality, to democracy, to human rights, environment, globalization and cultural liberty.  It also contains substantive data on development indicators, ranking every country each year in areas such as per capita income, literacy, life expectancy and respect for women's rights.

 

Following is the text of the report:

 

•     Climate change is not just a future scenario. Increased exposure to droughts, floods and storms is already destroying opportunity and reinforcing inequality. Meanwhile, there is now overwhelming scientific evidence that we are getting closer to an irreversible ecological catastrophe. This could lead to an unprecedented reversal in human development in our lifetime and acute risks for our children and their grandchildren.

 

•     Climate change is affecting the Earth’s ecosystems. We depend on these ecosystems for a range of services and resources – from water to agriculture to livelihoods and many others.  Therefore, climate change poses a serious threat to our ability to meet the eight Millennium Development Goals. The fact that the poor are already seeing its impacts only underscores the worsening situation if significant efforts to stop climate change are not taken.

 

•     The Human Development Report 2007/2008 “Fighting climate change: Human solidarity in a divided world” seeks to understand the implications of climate change on the opportunities the world has at present and its implications for the future of human development. One of its distinctive features is the work done for the understanding how climate events impact on the poor.

 

•     Climate change is the defining human development challenge of the 21st Century. Failure to respond to that challenge will stall and then reverse international efforts to reduce poverty. The poorest countries and populations will suffer the earliest and most damaging setbacks, even though they have contributed least to the problem. Looking to the future, no country—however wealthy or powerful—will be immune to the impact of climate change.

 

•     The poor are suffering and will suffer more with climate change. Given that 40 per cent of the world’s population live in poverty and are unable to meet their daily basic needs, these 2.6 billion people are at risk to face firsthand the impacts of dangerous climate change and human development reversals.

 

•    The Report makes a case for the urgency with which climate change needs to be addressed. Time matters for all of us. Today we are living with what we did yesterday; tomorrow we will all live with what we do today. We need to take action now.

 

Key statistical facts

 

•     We estimate in this Report that if all of the world’s people generated greenhouse gases at the same rate as some developed countries (i.e Canada and the United States), we would need nine planets (to absorb the GHGs and avoid dangerous climate change)

 

•     With 15% of the world’s population, rich countries account for almost half of (annual, global) emissions of CO2.

 

•     We estimate that avoiding dangerous climate change will require rich nations to cut emissions by at least 80% by 2050, with cuts of 30% by 2020. Emissions from developing countries will peak around 2020, with cuts of 20% by 2050.

 

•     Some 262 million people were affected by climate disasters annually from 2000 to 2004, over 98% of them in the developing world.

 

•     Global temperature increases of 3-4°C could result in 330 million people being permanently or temporarily displaced through flooding. Over 70 million people in Bangladesh, 6 million in Lower Egypt and 22 million in Vietnam could be affected.

 

•     With 3°C of warming, 20-30% of land species could face extinction.

 

•     An additional 220-400 million people could be exposed to malaria – a disease that already claims around 1 million lives annually.

 

Recommendations

 

•     There is a window of opportunity for avoiding the most damaging climate change impacts, but that window is closing: the world has less than a decade to change course. Actions taken—or not taken—in the years ahead will have a profound bearing on the future course of human development. The world lacks neither the financial resources nor the technological capabilities to act. What is missing is a sense of urgency, human solidarity and collective interest.

 

•     The Report demonstrates and emphasizes the need to address adaptation in developing countries in the face of impending climate change. It advocates for human solidarity, collective action and social justice as the keys to meeting the challenges posed by climate change and as the pillars of international cooperation moving forward from the 13th Conference of Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change which is set to start tomorrow (today) in Bali, Indonesia.

 

•     As the Human Development Report 2007/2008 argues, climate change poses challenges at many levels. In a divided but ecologically interdependent world, it challenges all people to reflect upon how we manage the environment of the one thing that we share in common: planet Earth. It challenges us to reflect on social justice and human rights across countries and generations. It challenges political leaders and people in rich nations to acknowledge their historic responsibility for the problem, and to initiate deep and early cuts in greenhouse gas emissions. Above all, it challenges the entire human community to undertake prompt and strong collective action based on shared values and a shared vision.

 

•     The Human Development Report 2007/2008 emphasizes that both mitigation; that is reducing the damage being done to the climate daily; and adaptation; that is adjusting our lives to the change; need to be addressed in order to truly fight climate change and the threats it poses to humanity.

 

•     Most wealthy countries, specifically industrialized countries, are failing to meet their targets for cutting greenhouse gas emissions under the Kyoto Protocol. Even countries with the most ambitious goals or praised plans are not on track to reduce emissions levels sufficiently. The resulting effects will be felt first—and hardest—by the world’s poor.

 

•     Wealthy countries must assume responsibility for the effects of warming trends on the world’s poor, and Asian countries, while adapting to their effects, need to continue to develop, but cleanly. The report recommends international cooperation on financing for low-carbon technology transfer to developing countries, e.g. China and India, to avoid the increasing use of coal as a source of energy.

 

•     The United Nations is built on the foundations of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The Preamble to that document talks of the inalienable rights of the human family to “freedom, justice and peace”. Climate change is an immense threat to these rights. Yet it is also a reminder that we are a single, interdependent human family sharing a common home on Planet Earth. The United Nations, and the values that underpin it, has a central role to play in providing a forum for dialogue, negotiation and action on climate change. The United Nations is best placed to take leadership in the fight against climate change. Climate change is exactly the kind of global challenge that the United Nations is best suited to address. This is why the Secretary-General has made it his personal priority to work with Member States to ensure that the United Nations plays its role to the full.

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