Ocean Climate Action Making Waves
Ocean Climate Action Making
Waves
Global Climate Action at
COP22
http://newsroom.unfccc.int/climate-action/ocean-climate-action-making-waves/
Marrakech,
Morocco, 12 Nov, 2016 – A special Oceans Action
Event at the UN Climate Change Conference in Marrakech
(COP22) is bringing together over 400 high-level
participants from around the world to advance oceans and
climate change issues and to pledge concrete actions in
support of the objectives of Sustainable Development Goal
number 14, which is to conserve and sustainably use the
oceans, seas and marine resources.
The global ocean is
fundamental to sustaining life on Earth. It is a major
carbon sink; it absorbs heat, and produces half the oxygen
we breathe. It sustains the lives and livelihoods of the
coastal and island communities who call it home, and who
rely on its bounty to meet their nutritional needs.
The
important role our oceans play was recognized at the 43rd Session of the UN's
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in Nairobi,
Kenya earlier this year, which decided to prepare a special,
scientific report on climate change and the oceans.
But
while oceans are key to mitigating climate change, a warming
planet also places them, and the services they provide, at
great risk. Climate variability and change, habitat
degradation and ocean acidification all pose additional
risks to the conservation and sustainable use of our oceans,
and to the well-being of dependent coastal and island
communities.
Ocean Climate Action Announcements
Made in Marrakech
At today’s
event, the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the
United Nations, the World Bank and the African Development
Bank has announced the African Package for
Climate-Resilient Ocean Economies. This
ambitious package of technical and financial assistance will
support ocean economies in Africa, and build greater
resilience of coastal areas to climate change, tailoring
approaches based on the countries’ specific priorities and
objectives. The initiative will mobilize 500-900 million USD
and implement programs linked to climate change adaptation
and mitigation over the period 2017-2020.
The Kingdom of
Morocco has announced its Blue Belt Initiative
aimed at building the resilience of coastal
communities and promoting sustainable fisheries and
aquaculture in keeping with SDG14 expectations. Focus areas
will include integrated coastal monitoring systems,
sustainable fisheries and aquaculture throughout the entire
value chain. Solutions for adaptation and contributions to
curbing greenhouse gas are proposed as part of a priority
roadmap for implementation. The initiative is supported by
an investment plan and capacity building program of 60
million USD over the period 2017-2020, building on the Blue
Growth initiative launched at COP 21 in Paris.
COP22
Ocean Action partners released the Strategic Action
Roadmap on Oceans and Climate: 2016 to 2021, which
provides a vision for action regarding oceans and climate in
the next five years, addressing six ocean and climate issue
areas: the central role of oceans in regulating climate,
mitigation, adaptation, displacement, financing, and
capacity development.
“These ambitious programmes aimed
at strengthening the resilience of African coastal
communities are critical to meeting the challenges and
opportunities of climate change - especially for vulnerable
Small Island Development States,” according to Maria
Helena Semedo, FAO’s Deputy Director-General for Natural
Resources. “African coastal communities are some of the
most affected by climate change. FAO is fully engaged and
ready to be at the heart of these significant developments
to work alongside countries and communities to reduce their
vulnerabilities, build their resilience, and maximize
opportunities emerging from climate change.”
"The World
Bank is pleased to be a part of the international
mobilization of financing in response to the Mauritius
Communiqué. The package presented today could make a
significant contribution to meeting the adaptation needs of
African countries as they develop their ocean economies. We
plan to ramp up our own concessional financing in this area
and look forward to working with our partners to increase
the effectiveness of overall development assistance" said
Laura Tuck, World Bank Group Vice President for Sustainable
Development.
Dr. Biliana Cicin-Sain, Global Ocean Forum,
noted that “the Global Strategic Action Initiative on
Oceans and Climate (involving Parties, IGOs, NGOs, academic
institutions, private sector groups, and local authorities
from all world regions) will implement actions identified in
the Roadmap to safeguard the health of the oceans and the
wellbeing of coastal and island populations, reporting on
progress at the yearly COPs.”
The full day of
discussions addressed numerous challenges faced by oceans
under climate change scenarios. Sessions addressed
challenges to food security and resilience, adaptation
challenges and solutions, country mitigation efforts, access
to finance and capacity building, and science solutions to
moving forward to achieve SDG 14.
About Global
Climate Action
France and
Morocco's global climate champions have set out their
detailed agenda to boost cooperative action between
governments, cities, business, investors and citizens to cut
emissions rapidly and help vulnerable nations adapt to
climate impacts and build their own clean energy,
sustainable futures.
Message from the
Champions
“A year after COP 21, the great
dynamic of climate action is now growing strong. As we all
gather to Marrakech time has come to start to take stock of
what has been achieved during the last year. To be
consistent with the long-term goals, all actors will have to
work together, not only to achieve the national targets of
the NDCs, but also to go further and bridge the gap of
emissions. This sense of urgency should guide us all into
accelerating immediate efforts and delivering ambitious
action. We must identify what concrete policy options and
what tools we will have to mobilize in the short term. The
science is clear: the path towards achieving the long-term
goals should bring us to peaking GHG emissions by 2020. This
is a challenge, and we are not there yet. On the current
trends, we will be in 2030 between 11 to 14 GT above
Paris-compatible pathways. The purpose of these days is to
strengthen all efforts and take them to the next level to
stay on track for the objectives: stay well below 2°C and
if possible 1,5°C, increase adaptation and resilience
capacities and reorient financial flows. It is our
responsibility, as champions, to make the link between the
real world and the COP process. Political leaders from all
around the world should hear and be inspired by the
solutions at our reach.”
Climate Champions Laurence
Tubiana (France) and Hakima El Haité
(Morocco)