6 November 2006 – Kenyan Environment Minister
Kivutha Kibwana
opened the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Nairobi today with a
warning that climate change could endanger whatever gains have been made against
poverty. He urged countries to work together to ensure that real action is
achieved on the issue of adaptation to climate change.
“Climate change is rapidly emerging as one of the most
serious threats that humanity may ever face,” said Mr. Kibwana, who is also the
President of the conference.
More than 5,000 participants from 178 countries are in
Nairobi for the two-week meeting, which will focus on adaptation to climate
change, developing market mechanisms to reduce carbon emissions, and the future
of post Kyoto cooperation. The Kyoto Protocol expires at the end of 2012.
This is the twelfth Conference of the 189 Parties to the
UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)
and the second meeting of the 166 Parties to the Kyoto Protocol. The conference
is the first UN climate summit in sub-Saharan Africa.
“We face a genuine danger that recent gains in poverty
reduction will be thrown into reverse in coming decades, particularly for the
poorest communities on the continent of Africa,” Mr. Kibwana warned. He added
that scarce resources that would otherwise be channelled into essential projects
to further economic development would instead be used for other emergencies,
such as health care crises, water shortages or food stock failures.
The UNFCCC’s Executive Secretary Yvo de Boer called for
specific activities to be agreed within the five-year work plan on impact,
vulnerability and adaptation.
“We expect countries to take decisions in Nairobi that
will enhance action on adaptation on the ground,” he said. “Ministers meeting in
Nairobi have an opportunity to reach agreement on critical elements of the
governance and management of the Adaptation Fund.”
The Adaptation Fund is financed by a share of proceeds
generated by the Kyoto Protocol’s clean development mechanism that permits
industrialized countries which are members of the Protocol to invest in
sustainable development projects in developing countries, and thereby generate
tradable emission credits.
While there may not be pressure to conclude an agreement
on future, post-Kyoto policies, Mr. de Boer said “there is a strong sense of
mounting international consensus on the urgent need to act to avoid serious
consequences of climate change.” He added that a recently released report
clearly suggests that the price of inaction will be much greater than the costs
of addressing the problem.
Source: UN News Service
Return to: Environmental News
Main Page