THE SECRETARY-GENERAL
MESSAGE ON THE
INTERNATIONAL
DAY FOR DISASTER RISK
REDUCTION
Dr. Jassim Taqui
DG Al-Bab
Institute for Strategic Studies
Islamabad,
October 14, 2022: Climate disasters are
hurting countries and economies like never before.
Ever-rising greenhouse
gas emissions are supercharging extreme weather events across the planet.
I saw first-hand the
devastation unleashed by the recent floods in Pakistan.
These increasing
calamities cost lives and hundreds of billions of dollars in loss and damage.
Three times more people
are displaced by climate disasters than by war.
Half of humanity is
already in the danger zone.
The world is failing to
invest in protecting the lives and livelihoods of those on the front line.
Those who have done the
least to cause the climate crisis are paying the highest price.
Entire populations are
being blindsided by cascading climate disasters without any means of prior
alert.
People need an adequate
warning to prepare for extreme weather events.
That is why I am
calling for universal early warning coverage in the next five years.
Early warning systems –
and the ability to act on them -- are proven life-savers.
This is shown clearly
by a new report today from the World Meteorological Organization and the United
Nations Office of Disaster Risk Reduction.
The report reveals that
such services are woefully lacking for those who need them most.
At the COP27 climate conference
in Egypt, I will launch an action plan to provide early warning systems for all
within five years.
I urge all governments,
international financial institutions, and civil society to support it.
This new report is yet
another reminder that real and concrete action on loss and damage must be a global
priority.
Delivering on loss and
damage at COP27 will be an important litmus test for rebuilding trust between
developed and developing countries.
On this International
Day for Disaster Risk Reduction, I call on all countries to invest in early
warning systems and support those who lack capacity.
Extreme weather events
will happen.
But they do not need to
become deadly disasters.
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