16 October 2006 – With the growing number of
ratifications of major environmental agreements suggesting that more countries
are committed to addressing global ecological issues, the true test remains
implementation and enforcement, especially with regard to greenhouse gases,
United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan warned today.
“Action on climate change is particularly urgent, given
its profound implications for virtually every aspect of human well-being, from
jobs and health to growth and security,” he said in a message to a seminar in
New York organized by the International Union for Conservation of Nature and
Natural Resources (IUCN).
“Until we stop treating climate change as a strictly
environmental concern, and instead recognize the full nature of this threat, our
action will fall short.”
He noted that last year’s World Summit at UN
Headquarters decided on a number of measures aimed at protecting the global
environment, including a call for a more coherent institutional framework to
tackle ecological challenges.
“Ensuring environmental sustainability is one of the
main pillars of the global fight against poverty, and is essential for achieving
the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs),”
he said referring to the targets set by the UN Millennium summit of 2000 to
dramatically slash poverty, illiteracy, maternal and infant mortality and a host
of other global ills by 2015.
Ensuring environmental sustainability is number seven on
the list of eight goals.
The Fourth IUCN Academy of Environmental Law Colloquium
will continue until 20 October at the Pace Law School, White Plains, New York,
on the theme “Implementing Environmental Legislation: The Critical Role of
Enforcement and Compliance.”
Source: UN News Service
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