News

Adaptation Action Plan Needed To Reduce Vulnerability: COP28 DG

The leaders also urged G20 nations to raise the importance of defining a Global Goal on Adaptation (GGA) and operationalising the loss and damage fund and funding arrangements “to an equal level, to ensure that the human face of the climate change is at the center of all our decisions.”
COP28 UAE And UNFCCC Urge G20 Nations To Show Leadership On Climate Change Mitigation And Adaptation Photo: The leaders also urged G20 nations to raise the importance of defining a Global Goal on Adaptation (GGA) and operationalising the loss and damage fund and funding arrangements “to an equal level, to ensure that the human face of the climate change is at the center of all our decisions.”
info_icon

The COP28 presidency has called for urgent action to strengthen global adaptation action at all levels to reduce vulnerability and strengthen resilience for vulnerable communities, ecosystems and economic sectors at the Korea Global Adaptation Week 2023. 

During the opening session of the Global Adaptation Dialogue, ambassador Majid Al Suwaidi, director-general and special representative of COP28, reiterated the presidency's commitment to prioritize adaptation and resilience. 

“The COP28 Presidency has positioned adaptation and resilience firmly in our presidential action agenda,” said ambassador Al Suwaidi. “Under the focus of putting people and communities back the heart of climate action, we are working to deliver on the Global Goal on Adaptation, and to elevate issues across food, health, water, nature and relief and recovery.” 

Advertisement

He added the forthcoming global stocktake at COP28 will enable a thorough assessment of successes and gaps, representing a significant moment to raise ambition and action for adaptation. 

The COP28 director-general said there is an urgent need to “adopt a framework on the Global Goal on Adaptation (GGA), ensuring that it is complemented by a robust, differentiated, and actionable agenda for building resilience.” 

The GGA framework “must help reduce vulnerability, build adaptative capacities, and strengthen resilience for the most vulnerable populations, ecosystems, and economic sectors. And it must be both comprehensive in outlook, but also flexible in details to reflect the diversity of challenges and capacities inherent to our global community,” said ambassador Al Suwaidi. 

Advertisement

He called on developed countries to uphold their commitment to doubling adaptation finance by 2025, a pledge made at COP26. Multilateral development banks (MDBs) and development finance institutions (DFIs) were also urged to scale up adaptation finance. 

He pointed to the presidency’s focus on championing solutions at the intersection of climate and nature, such as ecosystem-based approaches such as restoring wetlands and ecosystems that protect against storms and sea surges, and forest conservation to stabilize soil and run-off during floods. 

On COP28’s water agenda, the presidency plans to give unprecedented attention to water risks and opportunities, prioritizing the conservation and restoration of freshwater ecosystems, enhancing urban water resilience and bolstering water-resilient food systems. 

While in South Korea, ambassador Al Suwaidi also held bilateral meetings with Yoo Jeong-bok, mayor of Incheon, Mafalda Duarte, executive director of the Green Climate Fund and Dr. Frank Rijsberman, director general of the Global Green Growth Institute.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement