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UNEP at the UN General Assembly highlights

Photo: UN Photo/Rick Bajornas
26 Aug 2024 12:29

High-Level Meeting on Sea Level Rise: 25 September 2024

On 25 September 2024, the President of the UN General Assembly will convene a high-level plenary meeting on “Addressing the existential threats posed by sea-level rise” at the UN headquarters in New York.

Taking place on the heels of the Summit of the Future, the meeting will focus on building common understanding, mobilizing political leadership, and promoting multisectoral, multi-stakeholder collaboration and international cooperation towards addressing the threats posed by sea-level rise.

Participants will work towards developing comprehensive solutions and actionable commitments to combat sea-level rise, ensuring a resilient and sustainable future including for small island developing states and low-lying coastal areas.

Read the full event announcement.

Watch the event live stream.  

19 Aug 2024 10:00

From Chile to China: The global effort to halt desertification

View of a shelter forest fending off the encroaching desert in northwest Chinas Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region
Credit: Reuters Connect

 

In the run-up to the Summit of the Future, we recall key historical moments when nations worked together in multilateral efforts to tackle global environmental problems. First identified as a looming crisis in the 1960s, desertification is now commonly accepted as one of the most pressing environmental issues. “Land degradation and desertification negatively affects 3.2 billion people around the world today,” said Johan Robinson, a Senior Programme Management Officer with UNEP. To make matters worse, desertification “disproportionately harms those who are least able to do anything about it: rural communities, smallholder farmers and the extremely poor,” he added.

UNEP has played a key role in the global effort to slow the process of desertification taking place everywhere from northern Chile to China’s Taklamakan Desert. This effort has been underpinned by the notion that as devastating as desertification can be, it can also be halted and reversed. 

To this end, UNEP has provided scientific data, financed land restoration projects, and built global political consensus on The UN Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD). Adopted in 1994, the UNCCD is the world’s sole legally binding international agreement that explicitly links the environment and development to sustainable land management.

Read the full story.

12 Aug 2024 10:00

World leaders promise to end and reverse deforestation by 2030

Ulet Ifansasti/CIFOR
 Credit: Ulet Ifansasti/CIFOR

 

Leading up to the Summit of the Future, we are highlighting key historical moments when nations joined forces to address global environmental problems through multilateral solutions. At the COP26 UN Climate Change Conference in 2021, more than 100 world leaders promised to end and reverse deforestation by 2030. The pledge, which includes almost USD 19.2 billion of public and private funds, is a landmark move for nature.

Research shows that a forest the size of Portugal is ripped from the earth each year, driving climate change and other environmental crises, including wildfires, species extinction, and food insecurity. As a convener and catalyst, UNEP has played an important role in supporting the global movement to slow deforestation.

“The growing enthusiasm for forests and trees is a good thing,” said Tim Christophersen, former Head of UNEP’s Nature for Climate branch. “Ecosystem restoration will be critical in turning the tide against climate change and achieving the Sustainable Development Goals

Read the full story.

05 Aug 2024 10:00

End of leaded petrol a milestone for human and planetary health: UNEP Executive Director

Маленькие дети на дымной улице
Credit: UNEP/Paul Quayle

 

“Leaded petrol was a huge mistake from the start, even if people may not have known it at the time,” said Rob De Jong, the head of sustainable mobility at UNEP. “The world would be dealing with the consequences for a century.”

In anticipation of the Summit of the Future, we are reflecting on key historical moments when countries united in multilateral efforts to address global environmental problems. Following a 19-year campaign led by UNEP and global partners, that toxic legacy officially came to an end on 30 August 2021. At a press conference in Nairobi, Kenya, UNEP announced the last country to use leaded petrol, Algeria, had phased out the fuel. For the first time since 1923, no driver on the planet will be legally able to fill their tank with lead-infused petrol.

“The successful enforcement of the ban on leaded petrol is a huge milestone for global health and our environment,” said UNEP Executive Director Inger Andersen. The official end of use of leaded petrol has been estimated to prevent more than 1.2 million premature deaths and save USD 2.45 trillion for the global economy per year.

Read the full story.

29 Jul 2024 10:00

UNEP Executive Director calls for forward-thinking multilateralism ahead of Summit of the Future

Inger Andersen addressing the Eleventh Annual Subcommittee meeting of the Committee of Permanent Representatives (CPR)
Photo by Ahmed Nayim/ UNEP

 

On 8 July 2024, UNEP Executive Director Inger Andersen addressed the Committee of Permanent Representatives (CPR) ahead of the Summit of the Future in September 2024. In her speech, she called for more agile and adaptive multilateral cooperation, that responds faster to emerging challenges.

“The Summit of the Future can nudge the UN into a more responsive and united global force for good,” Inger Andersen said. The Summit at the United Nations in New York is a high-level event, bringing together world leaders to forge a new international consensus on how to deliver a better present and safeguard the future.

“Looking forward, the world will need strong science and knowledge, delivered in a timely and accessible manner to inform decision-making,” Inger Andersen noted. “UNEP is doing its part through stronger engagement with UN country teams, providing scientific expertise for environmental action,” she added.

Read the full speech.

23 Jul 2024 15:52

Rebuilding the ozone layer: how the world came together for the ultimate repair job

Photo by NASA
Photo by NASA

 

As far as decades go, the 1980s were nothing if not tumultuous. The fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 reshaped the future, heralding the dawn of a new world order. In the run-up to the Summit of the Future, we recall another significant, but lesser known, event of that decade which took place two years earlier when governments came together to tackle a key global environmental challenge: to reverse damage to the ozone layer and ensure we had a viable future to reshape. 

The adoption of the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer on September 16, 1987 marked a turning point in environmental history and became one of the biggest success stories of multilateral cooperation. It also showed that when science and political willpower join forces, the results can change the world.

“In the face of a triple planetary crisis – climate, nature and pollution - the Montreal Protocol is one of the best examples we have of the positive and powerful outcome of multilateralism,” said Meg Seki, Executive Secretary of the United Nations Environment Programme’s (UNEP’s) Ozone Secretariat. “When sound science is the basis for universal action, we can overcome what may seem insurmountable global environmental challenges.” 

Read the full story.

Watch a film on the Montreal Protocol, narrated by Sir David Attenborough.

17 Jul 2024 20:20

Messages from the UN Environment Assembly

Abdullah Bin Ali Amri, Chairman, Environment Authority of Oman, and President of UNEA-7
Photo: IISD-ENB/Kiara Worth

In week two, the HLPF was addressed by H. E. Abdullah Bin Ali Amri, President of the seventh session of the United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA).

"We gather at this Forum not only as Member States but as stewards of our planet, united by a common purpose: to accelerate the implementation of the 2030 Agenda with the aim of eradicating poverty and deliver sustainable, resilient, and innovative solutions for a sustainable future in a healthy planet," Bin Ali Amri of Oman said.

"Enhancing sustainable consumption, and production is imperative. UNEA has called on Member States to adopt policies that decouple economic growth from environmental harm," he noted.

In his statement, Bin Ali Amri urged world leaders to use every piece of knowledge and engage scientists, Indigenous peoples, and the youth who are not afraid to try something new, and to leverage solutions that ensure a future where sustainable development is a reality for all, leaving no one behind.

Read the full speech.

Watch the session recording.

16 Jul 2024 15:51

UNEP on 16 July at HLPF 2024

A delegate walks through the UN General Assembly hall
Photo: IISD-ENB/Kiara Worth

As dialogues considering the world’s path towards a just and resilient future at HLPF 2024 continue, UNEP is taking part in the following events on 16 July 2024. Time zone: EDT.

1010-1015 hrs | UNEA Message

1000-1300 hrs | Parliamentary Forum

1300-1430 hrs | Critical Energy Transition Minerals to Accelerate Progress Towards the SDGs

1315-1430 hrs | Keeping 1.5 within Reach, Setting NDCs 3.0 in Motion

15 Jul 2024 16:34

Global Foresight Report launch at HLPF 2024

Illustraion of a girl looking at a sunset
Image: UNEP

As HLPF 2024 enters its second week, UNEP will be launching the Global Foresight Report.

The report offers valuable insights into potential challenges that may hinder environmental sustainability and impede the achievement of the SDGs, posing risks to both planetary health and human wellbeing. It represents the culmination of 18 months of data collection and participatory learning conducted by UNEP in collaboration with partners, reflecting a shift towards a forward-thinking culture as part of "United Nations 2.0" initiative.

Watch the event live stream.

Access the report.

12 Jul 2024 12:38

SDG 13 on climate action and interlinkages with other SDGs

SDG wheel with a focus on SDG 13
Photo: IISD-ENB/Kiara Worth

On day three of the first week of HLPF 2024, delegates turned their attention to Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 13 on climate action. UN Secretary-General António Guterres has described climate action as the 21st century’s greatest opportunity to drive forward all the SDGs.

"Addressing climate change is about equity and inclusiveness, today and tomorrow, addressing both opportunity and challenges to poverty reduction, including energy poverty, and economic development, but also climate related health, disasters, and environmental impacts," a UNEP statement outlined.

Climate-driven impacts (such as hurricanes and flooding) on ecosystems are causing measurable economic and livelihood losses around the world. By integrating climate resilience into development planning, we create opportunities for sustainable economic growth and improved livelihoods.

Clean energy will reduce the deadly air pollution that shrouds our cities and associated health impacts and improve health, productivity, livelihoods, security, and educational achievements. Collaborations between governments, international organizations, businesses, and civil society can amplify our collective impact and create incentives for more effort in socially valuable technologies.

Read the UNEP statement.

Watch the SDG 13 session recording.

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