WFP and IFRC join forces to strengthen the response to anticipated climate shocks in MENA

DUBAI –The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) and The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) today signed a regional Memorandum of Understanding to support joint advocacy, capacity development, and resource mobilization for the coordinated national level implementation of anticipatory action in response to climate shocks in the Middle East and North Africa region.

The signing took place at the conclusion of an event, “Road to COP27: Anticipatory Action Milestones and Way Forward in MENA”, that was hosted by the International Humanitarian City (IHC), Dubai, United Arab Emirates and attended by high-level speakers and representatives from the UAE government, Ministry of Climate Change and Environment, WFP, IFRC, Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre and national societies, regional and international humanitarian organisations including UNDRR, FAO, Start Network, REAP.

The event emphasized the ongoing importance of acting early ahead of climate-related disasters, through anticipatory action. Anticipatory is action is effective way of mitigating the worst consequences of predictable climate risks, which are expected to become more frequent and intense because of climate change and conflict in the MENA region.

“In a region where climate hazards such as droughts, floods, and heatwaves are increasing humanitarian needs, anticipatory action aims to reduce or mitigate the impact of these hazards on the most vulnerable people,” said Mageed Yahia, WFP Representative to the GCC. “We are grateful for the strong representation from the UAE in this event today, an important ally in the quest to make the humanitarian system as anticipatory as possible,” he added.

Over the last few years, WFP and IFRC have been making progress in setting the scene for an anticipatory action (AA) approach in the MENA region for acting earlier ahead of disasters.

“Let us not forget that COP27 goals and vision are mitigation, adaptation, finance, and collaboration. Today we are addressing these four main elements, as Anticipatory Action allows for the mitigation and adaptation of climate change impacts,” said IFRC MENA Deputy Regional Director, Rania Ahmad. “This collaboration between IFRC and WFP will allow for increased sharing of experiences and financing and make the most vulnerable populations better prepared and enhance their resilience.”

During the event, WFP and the Overseas Development Institute (ODI) also launched the “Anticipatory Action in the MENA Region: State of Play and Accelerating Action” report, supported by the Swedish government, which highlights the state of anticipatory action in the region, and its potential to help avoid and reduce the impacts of disasters.

Regional coordination and collaboration across all stakeholders will be necessary to complement efforts and engagements to scale up the anticipatory actions agenda in the region with tangible results.

To support this, IFRC and WFP are establishing the “MENA Anticipatory Action regional community of practice” as a space for technical and advocacy coordination, collaboration, learning exchange and capacity strengthening on anticipatory action and acting earlier ahead of disasters in the region. The initiative will bring together UN agencies, the Red Cross Red Crescent movement, as well as international organizations, governments, NGOs, the public and private sector, and academia, to coordinate and work together to effectively scale up and deliver anticipatory action programmes as the threat of climate shocks continues to grow.

Source: World Food Programme

Polio this week as of 10 August 2022

Summary of new polioviruses this week:

• Afghanistan: one WPV1 positive environmental sample

• Pakistan: seven WPV1 positive environmental samples

• Algeria: three cVDPV2 positive environmental samples

• DR Congo: nine cVDPV2 cases

• Ghana: one cVDPV2 positive environmental sample

• Madagascar: seven cVDPV1 positive environmental samples

• Mozambique: one cVDPV1 case

• Yemen: 26 cVDPV2 cases

Source: Global Polio Eradication Initiative

Desert Locust Bulletin 526 (11 August 2022)

KEY POINTS

• Current situation: calm in all regions

• July: rains started in summer breeding areas

• August–September: above-normal rains likely in summer breeding areas for small-scale breeding

• October: potential locust increase in African Sahel, Yemen, Indo-Pakistan border

The Desert Locust situation continued to remain calm during July.

Only low numbers of solitarious adults and hoper groups were reported from different sites in the summer breeding areas in the interior of Sudan, and few isolated immature solitarious adults were reported in the summer breeding areas of Marib Governorate in Yemen.

July was characterized by the heavy rains in the Sahel region (Mali, Niger and Mauritania), Oman, Yemen and India (Gujarat, Bikaner and Nagaur). Moderate rainfalls were recorded in the North African countries (southern Algeria, Libya and Morocco). Moderate to high rains fell in Eritrea, Ethiopia, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Somalia (Somaliland), and Sudan, while low to moderate rains fell in Djibouti and Egypt.

The rains fell during July in the breeding areas have contributed to the creation of favourable ecological conditions (vegetation and soil moisture) for locust breeding, where vegetation was found greening/green and soil was observed to be wet or moist in breeding areas in several countries.

As the predictable weather models indicated above-normal rains are likely in summer breeding areas during August and September, small-scale breeding will occur in the northern Sahel from Mauritania to western Eritrea, and in breeding areas with sufficient rainfall, particularly in Sudan and Yemen, and along both sides of the Indo-Pakistan border. Limited breeding may also occur in northeast Ethiopia and Somalia if good rains fall during the forecast period.

These breeding activities will cause locust numbers to increase slightly by the end of the forecast period

Source: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations

“I lost friends, relatives, our house” [EN/AR/ZH]

“I lost friends, relatives, our house, our livelihood, our possessions,” said Marinel Ubaldo. “We are being deprived of our basic human rights, including our right to a safe environment.”

Ubaldo, who is from a coastal community in Samar, in the eastern Philippines, recounted her experience during the 2013 Typhoon Haiyan, one of the strongest tropical cyclones ever recorded.

Hers was one of the dramatic stories heard at a recent panel discussion on the adverse effects of climate change at the United Nations Human Rights Council.

More people have been forced to flee their homes because of drought and other natural disasters caused by climate change than by armed conflict, and the scale of human displacement is growing every year, experts at the panel warned.

“We are facing a growing tide of people displaced by the impacts of climate change. This is an intolerable human rights tragedy. Tragically there are people, due to their particular circumstances, who cannot escape these disasters. These are ones trapped and left behind,” said Ian Fry, Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of human rights in the context of climate change.

Fry said that in 2021, 59.1 million people had been displaced by extreme weather events made worse by climate change, up from 19.2 million in 2018 and 24.9 million in 2019.

“More people are being displaced by climate change than armed conflict, although in many cases, the two are closely linked.”

A report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change estimated that at least 3.3 billion people are highly vulnerable to climate change.

Cattle dying, land too dry to farm

Before the panellists spoke, the audience was shown a video from the Collective for Climate Rights network with testimonies from people directly affected by the impact of climate change.

Roland Ngam, project manager for Climate Justice at the Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung Southern Africa office, said lack of rains meant that cattle were dying in large numbers in Angola, Namibia and South Africa, threatening livelihoods, and that about two million people had been affected by drought in southern Madagascar.

“A million people in South Africa already have stopped farming because it is too dry to farm,” Ngam said.

Ivonne Yanez said the glaciers in the Ecuadorean Andes were disappearing and that millions of people ran the risk of not having water in the future, while Merryl Habchy from Lebanon spoke of the damage that wild fires and high temperatures had caused to her country’s agricultural sector.

From Vanuatu, in the Pacific Islands, Marie Joanita Meltebury made an appeal to governments to end fossil fuel subsidies everywhere.

“The people and communities of Blue Pacific are living in a climate emergency, a crisis that sadly is ignored by many countries including those nearest to our islands,” Meltebury said.

“The right for life, a decent life, a peaceful life, and a healthy life will be destroyed by climate change if it is not addressed, since climate change affects all kinds of human rights, without any exception.“

NISREEN ELSAIM, CHAIR OF THE YOUTH ADVISORY GROUP ON CLIMATE CHANGE

Opening the panel, High Commissioner Michelle Bachelet, said that climate change is “affecting the human rights of everyone, everywhere.”

But she pointed out that marginalised and communities in vulnerable situations are at a higher risk of suffering the most severe consequences, from deforestation to food security to the loss of land and traditional livelihoods. Communities in vulnerable situations include indigenous peoples, rural communities, migrants, children, women, and persons with disabilities.

“In rural communities, climate change can restrict access to food, with devastating impacts for local communities and peasants. The impact on women and children in rural areas, who are more likely to be living in poverty or suffer from malnutrition, is particularly significant,” Bachelet said.

The High Commissioner called for a human rights-based approach to climate finance to ensure that support in the form of grants rather than loans is accessible to those most in need.

Carroll Muffett, president of the Center for International Environmental Law, said that while the members of the Group of 20 major economies (G20) are responsible for 80% of global emissions, small island and developing States and least-developed countries combined account for only about 2% of those emissions.

“The responsibility for the climate crisis is not shared equally and the responsibility for climate action must fall most heavily on those who have driven the crisis across history and across the world,” said Muffett.

Sara Oliveros López, a member of the Nahua indigenous community in Mexico and secretary of the Indigenous Peoples’ and Community Conserved Territories and Areas (ICCA), said the voice and experience of the indigenous communities must be heard loud and clear at international climate summits.

“There is growing evidence of the role that indigenous peoples and local communities play in biodiversity conservation and in the immediate and effective responses to climate change that we can offer the planet,” she said.

Source: UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights