We are deeply concerned by calls to postpone COP26 scheduled to take place in Glasgow in November 2021. That would be the second year in a row that critical negotiations, decisions, and actions are put off, while vulnerable countries in Africa and the rest of the global south continue to face ever-worsening impacts of climate change. The past two years have shown that the world is incapable of summoning the political will needed to take urgent and bold decisions to address the climate crisis without physical meetings.
It will be inexpedient, if not reckless, to further delay debates and decisions needed to scale up climate ambition globally, considering the recent IPCC report, which concludes that global warming is speeding up, particularly in Africa and warns that the window of opportunity to prevent catastrophic climate change is fast narrowing.
While the global COVID-19 situation remains worrisome, we maintain that the climate crisis poses an even greater existential threat, which aggravates and becomes costlier to address with every year of inaction. In early September, Kenya declared a national disaster after a sharp drop in rainfall led the drought in semi-arid and arid parts of the country. Similar droughts are affecting the entire Horn of Africa, as well as Madagascar, where the worst drought in 40 years have triggered widespread famine and malnutrition. Elsewhere, Algeria and Tunisia are still reeling out of the impact of deadly wildfires orchestrated by a sweep of heat waves.
COVID-19 has illustrated that a range of vulnerabilities expose Africa not only to the adverse effects of extreme climate but also to multiple stressors acting together to worsen already precarious development outcomes.
We recall that Africa is today among the regions of the world most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change, largely thanks to historical inequalities in the distribution of global wealth and decision making that undermines its voice, unique circumstances and needs. Calls for the postponement of COP26, even if we understand the concerns raised, fail to account for African priorities and the urgency to strengthen resilience on the continent, which already suffers a range of injustices. The lack of broad consultation within Africa reinforce the procedural injustices that the continent and other developing countries suffer, not only in States-led climate dialogue processes but also within the global civil society.
In this regard, the Pan-African Climate Justice Alliance, supported by over 1000 climate justice community leaders, advocates, activists, and academics attending the Nairobi Summer School on Climate Justice demand:
Dr Mithika Mwenda | Executive Director
For more information, contact PACJA Communication | communications@pacja.org
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.