SUSTAINABLE
ENERGY
UN Security Council to discuss the ‘gravest
threat’ to global peace and stability
PUBLISHED
TUE, FEB 23 20213:44 AM EST
https://www.cnbc.com/2021/02/23/climate-change-threatens-global-peace-un-security-council.html
Climate change represents a “grave threat” to global
peace and security, the U.K. will say when it chairs a special session of the
UN Security Council on Tuesday.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson is due to warn the UN
Security Council that unless the global community takes “urgent action to
tackle climate change, the world risks worsening conflict, displacement and
insecurity,” the government said in a statement.
Bloomberg |
Bloomberg | Getty Images
Climate
change represents the “gravest threats” to global peace and security, the UN
Security Council will hear on Tuesday.
Prime
Minister Boris Johnson is due to warn the UN Security Council that unless the
global community takes “urgent action to tackle climate change, the world risks
worsening conflict, displacement and insecurity,” the government said in a
statement.
The U.K.
currently has a one-month presidency of the Council, which is charged with
ensuring international peace and security. Its permanent members are China,
France, Russia, the U.K. and U.S. Johnson will address the group at 1.30 p.m.
London time.
Ahead of
the session, Johnson said the Council “is tasked with confronting the gravest
threats to global peace and security, and that’s exactly what climate change
represents … From the communities uprooted by extreme weather and hunger, to
warlords capitalising on the scramble for resources – a warming planet is
driving insecurity.”
He added
that “unlike many issues the Council deals with, this is one we know exactly
how to address” and that by helping vulnerable countries adapt to climate
change, and cutting global emissions to net zero, “we will protect not only the
bountiful biodiversity of our planet, but its prosperity and security.”
Well known
naturalist and TV personality David Attenborough will also address the Council
on Tuesday. He said in a statement released late Monday that “if we bring emissions
down with sufficient vigour we may yet avoid the tipping points that will make
runaway climate change unstoppable.”
He said the
upcoming UN climate change meeting, known as COP26, that will take place in
Glasgow in November, could be the “last opportunity to make the necessary
step-change.”
“If we
objectively view climate change and the loss of nature as world-wide security
threats – as indeed, they are – then we may yet act proportionately and in
time,” he said.
UN
Secretary General Antonio Guterres and Sudanese climate activist Nisreen Elsaim
will also brief the Security Council live on Tuesday.
Briefing
ahead of the session, the U.K. noted that “the impacts of climate change are
already being felt around the world, with the effects of rising temperatures
and extreme weather forcing population movements and creating competition over
increasingly scarce natural resources. Of the 20 countries ranked most
vulnerable to rising global temperatures, 12 are already in conflict.”
For its
part, the U.K. has committed in law to reach net zero emissions by 2050 and has
pledged to cut greenhouse gas emissions by at least 68% by 2030 – the steepest
reduction of any major economy.
Alongside
the UN Security Council’s permanent members there are 10 non-permanent members
elected for two-year terms. These members are currently Estonia, India,
Ireland, Kenya, Mexico, Niger, Norway, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Tunisia,
and Vietnam.
Global
efforts to tackle climate change are high on the agenda for the international
community, although environmental experts fear that too little too late is
being done to combat the issue.
The U.S. is
the world’s second-largest emitter of greenhouse gases behind China. Under
President Joe Biden’s administration, the country has now officially rejoined
the Paris climate agreement, a landmark pact among nations to reduce carbon
emissions, having left under former President Donald Trump.
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