With less than three weeks to go before the COP15 climate change summit in Copenhagen, diplomats, policy makers and academics from across the Arab region convened to tackle the issue of global warming. Dr. Mostafa Kamal Tolba, president of AFED and co-editor of the report, Impact of Climate Change on Arab Countries, said that far greater effort was required of Arab leaders to tackle environmental damage. "The report for this year reveals a top priority for the whole world, especially given that the Copenhagen summit is happening soon," he said. "Every country in the world will suffer from climate change." Although the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region produces only 5 percent of global carbon emissions, experts warned the area will be especially devastated by projected rises in air and sea temperatures. Dr. Rashed Bin Fahed, the United Arab Emirates environment and water minister, said the issue must be treated as a higher priority by Arab nations. "There is no doubt climate change today is a fact. It's true that our region is not contributing to this. However, the threats of climate change to our region maybe very dangerous," he said. "We need a long term plan because the Arab region is facing many threats. "We all know our government will pay a high cost, but in the future governments will pay a higher cost still." Thomas Egebo, Danish permanent Secretary of State for the Climate and Energy Ministry and president of Copenhagen summit said that any deal on curbing emissions would need international cooperation. Labeling global warning "the challenge of our time," Egebo called on the Arab world to be a key participant in negotiations. "We need your support and help. Our aim is an agreement that will set the world on track. To achieve this, all countries must be part of the effort, respecting the principle of a common but differentiated responsibility," he said. the Copenhagen conference is seeking to draw up a legal framework binding countries to commit to various curbs on their respective CO2 emissions. "We cannot do half at Copenhagen and postpone the rest until later," said Egebo. "The agreement will cover all the key issues. We do not share the view it is possible to do some part of the commitment and not the other. We need the commitment, we need the figures and we need the action." The conference was held under the patronage of President Michel Sleiman. In a statement delivered to attendees, Sleiman stressed that action against climate change required international cooperation. "The diversity of participants [at the conference] highlights the international nature of environmental issues," he said. "Our Arab region, as a part of the earth, is suffering from the negative impact of climate change [such as] scarcity of drinking water ... and the decrease of fertility of land. This is not simple exaggeration; it is fact." Sleiman's statement referred to the issue of water management in Lebanon and criticized Israel for damaging the country natural reserves. "Israel has insistently exploited the use of our water for decades. We need to double our efforts to maintain our water resources," he said. Sleiman also cited the bombing of the Jiyyeh power plant and Israeli cluster bombs as examples of Israeli environmental damage to Lebanon. Thursday's opening featured a presentation from a pan-Arab group of high-school students, who spoke about green initiatives and the importance of preserving natural resources for future generations. Reine Shreiha, 16, from Al-Mawakeb School in Barja, said that a youth contingent at the conference was vital. "Without the youth taking part in any of this, you can't take it for granted that generations to come won't take the same actions as [the current generation]," she said. "The way we are living now is catalyzing [climate change]. If we don't act now, we can't even imagine what will happen." A speech by Suleiman al-Herbish, director general of the OPEC fund for international development (OFID) was interrupted by protesters from Lebanese environmental NGO IndyACT, who stormed the stage and unfurled a banner, which read: "Arabs are more than oil." The gesture emphasizes the challenge facing the oil producing nations of the MENA region. The Gulf alone accounts for a third of the world's crude oil production - exporting roughly 18 million barrels a day - and Herbish stressed that weaning the region onto more sustainable energy forms would not be easy. "This sort of [nonrenewable] energy permitted development for the last 100 years, so moving away from it will be difficult." Tolba criticized Arab governments for not tackling the issue of climate change seriously enough. "We have no Arab policies that are current; in fact, to handle the impact of climate change we have no long term plans," he said. "Efforts from our ministers and ministries are not sufficient at all. We acknowledge that we [humans] are the cause of the problem, but what about the future? Beirut, 20 November 2009 Lebanese President General Michel Sleiman received a delegation of the Arab Forum for Environment and Development board of trustees, who presented to him AFED's annual report about the impacts of Climate Change on Arab Countries. President Sleiman said the state of the environment cannot be improved without the civil society. He told the delegation that, when he was leader of the Lebanese army and saw environmental damage, he dreamt of establishing environmental court martial to stop it, just like military court martial, because these criminal acts cannot wait. The AFED delegation also visited Prime Minister Saad Hariri in the evening and presented the report and the conference recommendations. The AFED annual conference continued its sessions today Friday, about Arab environment: Climate Change. Towards lower carbon economy: challenges and opportunities was the theme of a session chaired my Suleiman Al-Herbish, director general of the OPEC Fund for International Development. Dr. Mohammed El-Ashry, member of the International Commission on Climate and Development, talked about policies of lower carbon economy and implications on developing countries. He said that there is a golden opportunity to confront climate change and to address simultaneously the linked challenges of finance, jobs, energy, health, water and food that the world has been facing recently. In 2008 $155 billion were investment in renewable energy. Recently, a consortium of European corporations and investment banks proposed to develop a massive solar thermal energy project in North Africa generating more than 300,000 megawatts, much of it for export to Europe. Al-Ashry called the Arab countries to become a leader on the mitigation front by investing in clean energy. Carol Sanford, CEO of Development Economics Group International, discussed the transfer from carbon neutral to carbon positive. Dr. Marwan Iskandar, CEO of MIA, noted that while having 60 percent of world oil reserves, Arab countries only supply 20 - 22 percent of world oil consumption. He called Arab countries to sponsor a report on greenhouse gases and development in the Arab world, similar to the Stern Report. An open discussion was followed by two special presentations: State of the Arab environment, and solar feed on the Abu Dhabi grid. Jordanian Environment Minister Khaled Irani chaired a special session about AFED's Arab Green Economy Initiative. Panelists included Hussein Abaza, UNEP Chief of Trade and Economics, Carol Sanford, and Bashar Zeitoun, director of AFED's Corporate Environmental Responsibility Program. It was followed by corporate presentations of good practices, by Louis Hakim, CEO of Philips Electronics ME; Ronald Portelli, Managing Director of AES; and Dr. Aziz Malek from Audi-Saradar Group. Two breakaway meetings were held. The first dealt with sustainable buildings, where architect Wael Al-Masri from Jordan talked about cultural sustainability and learning from traditional architecture, and Dr. Sadek Owainati, founder and former chairman of Emirates Green Building Council, discussed balancing the pillars of the built environment. The second was about how different sectors are addressing climate change. Faris Hasan, OFID's director of corporate planning and economic services, highlighted biofuels environmental impacts and food security issues. Paul Roach, tendering director at AVERDA, discussed waste management to reduce climate change. Participating ministers of environment and energy held a special panel about coherent policies and what needs to be done by Arab countries to face climate change, chaired by Dr. Mostafa K. Tolba. The conference agreed with the AFED Report that Arab countries are among the most vulnerable to the potential negative impacts of climate change, the most significant of which are water stress, decline in food production, impacts of sea level rise, loss of biodiversity, and worsening human health. The conference called upon Arab governments to develop and implement long-term national low-emission development plans and clear emission reduction targets
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
The most comprehensive report documenting and discussing the projected impacts of climate change on the Arab world has been released by the Arab Forum for Environment and Development (AFED) in Beirut last week, within the proceedings of the second annual conference for AFED.
This report, edited by Mostapha Tolba and Najib Saab is the second of a series of annual reports produced by the Arab Forum for Environment and Development (AFED). The first, released in 2008 under the title ‘Arab Environment: Future Challenges’, covered the most pressing environmental issues facing the region. The 2009 AFED report is designed to provide information to governments, business, academia and the public about the impact of climate change on the Arab countries, and encourage concrete action to face the challenge.
The report analyzes the Arab response to the urgent need for adaptation measures, and uses the latest research findings to describe the vulnerabilities of natural and human systems in the Arab world to climate change and the impacts on different sectors. In an attempt to help shape adequate policies, the report discusses options for a post-Kyoto regime and outlines the state of international negotiations in this regard.
The report can be downloaded as a PDF document from the following link, either as one complete document or by chapters. http://www.afedonline.org/afedreport09/default.asp
Regarding the conference itself, here is the press release prepared by AFED
Thursday 19-11-2009
The second Annual Conference of the Arab Forum for Environment and Development (AFED) got under way in Beirut on Thursday with a dire warning: We are not doing enough to prevent catastrophe.
As secretaries of state from the Gulf, North Africa and Europe assembled in the lavish conference hall at Beirut's Habtoor Hotel, environmental experts warned that the effects of climate change could devastate the Arab region if carbon emissions continue unchecked.
AFED is an initiative of Lebanon's Environment and Development magazine, whose publisher and editor in chief Najib Saab co-wrote the report with Tolba.
"We need to cooperate on an international level; there's no other alternative."
| Bookmark this post: | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
Add a Comment
Add a Comment
<<Home











Stumble It!