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четверг, 30 мая 2019 г.

‘Save Tuvalu; save the world’; UN chief echoes rallying cry from front lines of global climate emergency




UNICEF/Sokhin

A 16-year-old child swims in the flooded area of Aberao village in Kiribati. The Pacific island 
is one of the countries worst affected by sea-level rise.


29 May 2019

Climate Change


Further inaction on climate change is “simply not an option”, United Nations
 Secretary-General António Guterres said on Wednesday in an opinion piece 
where he called for “rapid and deep change in how we do business, 
generate power, build cities and feed the world.” 


If the world is to prevail against climate change, “then we must find the political 
will to take transformative measures,” declared the UN chief. 


UN Photo/Mark Garten | Secretary-General António Guterres on the Pacific Ocean island of 
Tuvalu. (17 May 2019)

“Leaders must come to the UN summit in September armed with solutions as well as
 speeches”, he stressed, referring to the action-focused meeting he is convening in 
September to mobilize political ambition on climate change and push forward the goals 
of the Paris Agreement, which encompass greenhouse-gas-emissions mitigation, adaptation, 
and finance.

On his recent Pacific tour to the frontlines of the global climate emergency, he heard the 
rallying cry “Save Tuvalu; save the world,” while visiting the tiny island archipelago that
 is battling sea level rise and coastal erosion as warming temperatures threaten the region.

“I was there to show solidarity with those suffering the worst impacts of climate change 
and to draw attention to the innovative climate action underway in the region,” explained
 the UN chief.

Sea level rise in some Pacific countries is “four times greater than the global average”, he
 stated, saying that it poses “an existential threat to several island States”.

“Oceans are in serious trouble, from coral bleaching to biodiversity loss to plastic pollution”, 
he warned. “Extreme weather events are on the rise, jeopardizing lives and livelihoods”.

Mr. Guterres spelled out: “Nowhere have I seen the heartbreaking impacts of climate change 
more starkly than in Tuvalu, a remote coral atoll nation where the highest point is less than
 five metres above sea level.”

He recounted a visit to the home of a family “who live in a state of perpetual anxiety about 
inundation by the relentlessly rising seas just steps away”.

The UN chief was “deeply moved by the warmth of the Tuvaluan people and their intense 
devotion to their land, way of life and cultural heritage”, he said, adding that while these 
communities have contributed almost nothing to climate change, because of big emitters, 
“they are now fighting to preserve their country’s very existence”. 

The ‘whole planet’ at stake

“Make no mistake: it is not just Tuvalu, or small islands, or the Pacific at stake”, underscored 
the Secretary-General. “It is the whole planet”.

Lauren Day/World Bank | Building seawalls along the coastline in Tarawa, Kiribati, to to
 protect against high tides or tsunamis.

What is happening to these countries “is a sign of what is in store for the rest of us”, he 
warned. “People all over the world are starting to feel the impacts of the climate emergency – 
and these will only worsen”.

The UN chief recalled meeting young children who “are already fearful for their future and 
are relying on my generation to secure it”.

“As Secretary-General of the UN, I have many battles”, he said. “But as a grandfather, the
 struggle against climate change is the fight of my life”.

Noting that “we are not winning”, Mr. Guterres urged that political will must be
 fund “to take transformative measures”.

“We must acknowledge the moral authority of the Pacific nations, frontrunners in the race 
against the climate emergency”, he stated

“And we must find sustainable solutions, invest in renewable energies and increase resilience 
and adaptation”. 

Achieving ‘essential’ goals

The clearly laid-out goals of the scientific community to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050 
and limit global warming to 1.5C by the end of the century, are “essential”, according to the 
UN chief.

Thomas Michael Perry/World Bank | Fishermen on Vanuatu's Malekula Island launch their 
outrigger canoe.

As the global community pursues those goals, he restated his message to Governments to “shift 
taxes from salaries to carbon”, saying “we should tax pollution, not people”.

He also urged them to “stop subsidizing fossil fuels” because “taxpayers’ money should not be 
used to boost hurricanes, spread drought and heat waves, and melt glaciers”.

“Stop building new coal plants by 2020”, he continued. “We need a green economy, not a grey 
one”.

He stressed that we have the tools to tackle the climate crisis, to “save lives and property, breathe 
less polluted air, access cleaner water and protect biodiversity”. 

“Climate action could also yield a direct economic gain of $26 trillion, compared to business 
as usual, through to 2030, making it a cost-effective option” argued the UN chief.

Turning to his climate action summit, Mr. Guterres flagged that he is asking world 
leaders to come “not just with speeches” but with “plans to transform energy, mobility, 
industry and agriculture”, and to implement their commitments to climate financing, 
“not out of generosity but enlightened self-interest”.

“Urgent climate action is a choice we can – and must – make”, concluded the 
Secretary-General. 
“As the people of Tuvalu know all too well: Saving them will save us all”.

 

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