A race against time and against ourselves. Against the dangerous idea that we can’t do this, that there is no way.
Unlike most races, it won’t have one winner. In this race we all win, or we all lose. Winning it requires a radical, unprecedented level of collaboration, from all corners of our world. From our cities, businesses, regions and investors. From people everywhere.
Together we’re racing for a better world. A zero carbon and resilient world. A healthier, safer, fairer world. A world of wellbeing, abundance and joy, where the air is fresher, our jobs are well-paid and dignified, and our future is clear.
To get there we need to run fast, and get faster. We need more and more people to join the race, and right now. This is not about 2050, it’s about today.
Together, we can do this. And we’re already on our way.
Razan Al Mubarak: There is no Paris Agreement without protecting, restoring, sustaining and managing nature
By Climate Champions | March 3, 2023
“We recognize the irreplaceable value of forests for nature, for people, for the economy, for common humanity, but also as a prime solution to address climate change,” H.E Ms Razan Al Mubarak, President of the IUCN and UN Climate Change High-Level Champion for COP28 told Heads of State, including the Presidents for Gabon and France, Ali Bongo Ondimba and Emmanuel Macron, at the One Forest Summit this week.
This summit, held in Gabon from 1-2 March, brought Heads of States and governments, leaders of international organizations, financial institutions, the private sector, international NGOs, think tanks and research centres, Indigenous peoples and civil society together to discuss how to progress and renew ambition to preserve and sustainably manage forests, critical to tackling the most pressing interrelated global challenges.
Speaking of the potential of forests as Nature-based Solutions to climate change and biodiversity loss, Ms Al Mubarak, said there was “no Paris Agreement without protecting, without restoring, without sustaining and managing nature,” adding this cannot be done without Indigenous Peoples, Youth and Finance.
“This is the decade in which we must reverse biodiversity loss, slash emissions, address resilience, and advance equity, and we must do this all simultaneously. To do this, we need capital. Trillions of dollars need to be unlocked, but we must remember that it is not just the quantity of finance but the quality of finance,” she added.
Inclusion, Ms Al Mubarak said, was driving the planning and execution of COP28 across all initiatives. “At COP28 we are putting nature and inclusivity at the heart of our agenda. COP28 will be a COP of action, and it will be a COP where the global south will be front and centre,” she said.
During the summit, Ms Al Mubarak met with Frannie Leautier, CEO of SouthBridge Investments and chair of FSD Africa and James Mwangi, Co-Founder of Climate Action Platform for Africa (CAP-A). SouthBridge Investments are the first African investment house to sign the deforestation-free finance commitment.
Climate Champions Ocean Lead, Ignace Beguin Billecocq was also in attendance, convening a event on the Mangrove Breakthrough, a science-based, measurable, and achievable goal for non-state actors and governments to collectively restore and protect mangroves at the scale needed to secure the future of these vital coastal forests.
Discover how a Libyan CSO is championing the fight against desertification and land degradation in the Al-Jabal al-Akhdar region, striving to preserve Libya’s vital forests, unique wildlife and local communities.
In June 2021, the Nature-based Solutions for Climate, Biodiversity & People in the UAE Project was launched, focusing on the management and restoration of key coastal ecosystems, including mangroves, seagrasses and saltmarshes.
Since its announcement at COP27, the Mangrove Breakthrough has gained significant momentum and brought much-needed attention to mangroves, critical coastal forests that provide essential benefits to society, biodiversity, and climate.
Tres miembros de la Delegación de la Comunidad de Primera Línea (FCD), María Pedro de Pedro, Briseida Iglesias López de Guerrero y Maricela Fernández Fernández, arrojan luz sobre las realidades urgentes enfrentadas por quienes están más directamente afectados por el cambio climático. Sus historias revelan no sólo los desafíos, sino también la resiliencia y las soluciones encontradas dentro de las comunidades de primera línea.