Myanmar Climate Change Alliance

Myanmar Climate Change Alliance We make climate change a priority in Myanmar. Its goal is to mainstream climate change into the Myanmar policy development and reform agenda.

The Myanmar Climate Change Alliance (MCCA) was launched in 2013 with the support of the Global Climate Change Alliance (GCCA), and is being implemented by the United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN Habitat) and the United Nations Environment Programme (UN Environment) with the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Conservation (MoNREC) of Myanmar.

Your everyday choices can help tackle the climate crisis. Chat with us for climate action ideas on how to the planet.
19/10/2022

Your everyday choices can help tackle the climate crisis. Chat with us for climate action ideas on how to the planet.

Early warning and Early Action for AllInternational Day for Disaster Risk Reduction (IDDRR) 2022The United Nations Gener...
13/10/2022

Early warning and Early Action for All
International Day for Disaster Risk Reduction (IDDRR) 2022

The United Nations General Assembly has designated 13 October as International Day for Disaster Risk Reduction to promote a global culture of disaster risk reduction. Climate change is undermining the ability to achieve the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, including the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction.

One-third of the world’s people, mainly in least developed countries and small island developing states, are still not covered by early warning systems. As per World Meteorological Organization (WMO) 2021 report, over the past 50 years (1970-2019), a weather, climate or water-related disaster has occurred on average every day – taking the lives 115 people and causing US$ 202 million in losses daily.

We must step up to build/strengthen the early warning systems and take early actions to prevent loss of life & environment, and reduce the economic impacts of disasters. Through Myanmar Climate Change Alliance, UN-Habitat is working in Myanmar to build climate resilience of vulnerable communities through gender and youth inclusive action.

🤩“သဘာဝဘေးအန္တရာယ်နဲ့ ပတ်သက်တဲ့ ဗဟုသုတရစရာ မေးခွန်းလေးတွေဖြေဆိုပြီး ဖုန်းဘေ(၃၀၀၀)ယူကြမယ်”🙌

အားလုံးပဲ စောင့်မျှော်နေတဲ့ U-Quiz Time အစီအစဉ်လေး ထပ်မံရောက်ရှိလို့လာပါပြီ...🥳
U-Quiz Time ဆိုတာကတော့ မေးခွန်းလေးတွေမှန်အောင်ဖြေဆိုပြီး ဖုန်းဘေရယူနိုင်တဲ့အစီစဉ် လေးပဲဖြစ်ပါတယ်နော်...

ဒီတစ်ခါမှာတော့ အပြည်ပြည်ဆိုင်ရာ သဘာဝဘေးအန္တရာယ် ထိခိုက်ဆုံးရှုံးနိုင်ခြေလျှော့ချရေးနေ့ မေးခွန်းလေးတွေ မေးသွားမှာဖြစ်ပါတယ်။

ဘယ်လိုပါဝင်ရမှာလည်းဆိုရင်တော့...
💙-U Report Myanmar messenger (သို့) Viber မှာ “UQuiz” လို့ရိုက်ပြီးပို့ပေးပါ။
💙- သဘာဝဘေးအန္တရာယ်နဲ့ ထိခိုက်ဆုံးရှုံးနိုင်ခြေလျှော့ချမှု မေးခွန်းလေး ၈ ခုကို အကုန်မှန်အောင်ဖြေဆိုရမှာဖြစ်ပြီးတော့ Screen Shot လေးရိုက်ပြီးဒီ post ရဲ့အောက်မှာ လာမန့်ပေးရမှာဖြစ်ပါတယ်။
💙-ဒီ Post ရဲ့ အောက်မှာ မန့်တဲ့သူ တွေအကုန်လုံးထဲကမှ အယောက် (၃၀၀) ကိုဖုန်းဘေ (၃၀၀၀)မဲနှိုက်ရွေးချယ်ပြီး ကြေညာပေးသွားအုန်းမှာဖြစ်ပါတယ်။

ကဲ...အားလုံးပဲ ကံကောင်းကြပါစေနော်...😁🙌

Messenger: m.me/UReportMyanmar
Viber: https://www.viber.com/u-reportmyanmar

USA launches Initiative to Modernize Building Codes, Improve Climate Resilience, and Reduce Energy CostsNew Building Cod...
06/06/2022

USA launches Initiative to Modernize Building Codes, Improve Climate Resilience, and Reduce Energy Costs

New Building Codes Initiative will boost resilience to the impacts of climate change, lower utility bills for homes and businesses, and prioritize underserved communities

New Building Codes Initiative will boost resilience to the impacts of climate change, lower utility bills for homes and businesses, and prioritize

World Environment Day 2022  "Only One Earth""Cities both contribute to and are affected by climate change. The world’s c...
05/06/2022

World Environment Day 2022 "Only One Earth"

"Cities both contribute to and are affected by climate change. The world’s cities are responsible for up to 70 per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions while occupying just 2 per cent of the world’s land surface. This trend is likely to continue in the future with most population growth taking place in cities. At the same time, the effects of climate change, such as rising sea-levels and extreme weather events, can impact negatively on the urban infrastructure and people, and more broadly on economic growth."

In the universe are billions of galaxies, In our galaxy are billions of planets, But there is Only One Earth. Lets come together to save the earth.

"အနာဂတ်ကမ္ဘာမြေ ကျန်းမာဖို့ လူငယ်အားလုံးပါဝင်စို့" >>> U-Talk Show ( လူငယ်စကားဝိုင်း )

သဘာဝပတ်ဝန်းကျင် ပြန်လည်ကျန်းမာကောင်းမွန်လာစေဖို့ လုပ်ဆောင်တဲ့နေရာမှာ လူငယ် အားလုံးရဲ့ ပူပေါင်းပါဝင်မှုက ဘယ်လောက်ထိအရေးကြီးလဲ ဆိုတာကို မနက်ဖြန်မှာ U-Report Myanmar Pageကနေ လူငယ်တွေက ကိုယ်တိုင် သူတို့ရဲ့ အတွေ့အကြုံတွေနဲ့ အတွေးအမြင်တွေကို ပြန်လည်ဆွေးနွေးဝေမျှသွားမှာပါ...🌏

မနက်ဖြန်...ဇွန်လ (၅)ရက်နေ့၊ တနင်္ဂနွေနေ့၊ ညနေ ၇နာရီ အချိန်မှာ U-Report Myanmar page က U-Talk Show ကို Live ကို မမေ့ဘဲ စောင့်ကြည့်ဖို့ သတိပေးလိုက်ပါတယ်နော်
https://www.facebook.com/1676444222644090/posts/3198384480450049/ ဒီ link လေးမှာလဲ reminder ယူထားလို့ရပါပြီ ❤


🌳🌲🌳🌲🌳

We are Hiring...Myanmar Climate Change Alliance is looking for Team Leader (P4) for its 2nd phase of the programme. The ...
05/10/2020

We are Hiring...

Myanmar Climate Change Alliance is looking for Team Leader (P4) for its 2nd phase of the programme.
The Team Lead (TL) is a substantive expert, providing the team with substantive direction and support specifically, the TL will be the person in-charge of the project recruited team in the Joint Programme Management Unit, along with a Government counterpart based in the Environment Conservation Department of the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment Conservation (MoNREC).

Eligibility Criteria
Education

Advanced university degree (Master's degree or equivalent) in a relevant field of environment, social sciences, public administration and management, environmental engineering, business management, sustainable development, development planning or a related field is required. A first level university degree in combination with two additional years of qualifying work experience may be accepted in lieu of the advanced degree.

Work Experience

A minimum of seven (7) years of progressively responsible experience in project or programme management in environment-focused programmes is required.

At least three (3) years of relevant experience in complex climate change programmes in developing countries in desirable.

At least one (1) year of relevant experience on integrating climate change into development planning in developing countries is desirable.

Experience implementing country-level or organizational environmental policies, guidelines and standards is desirable.

Experience in developing and/or implementing international environmental programmes involving various partners, clients and social actors is desirable.

For more details about this position kindly check:

Posting Title: Programme Officer (Team Leader), P4 Job Code Title: Programme Management Officer, Human Settlements Department/Office: United Nations Human Settlements Programme Duty Station: ...

21/09/2020

We are Hiring......

Exciting opportunity to work with Myanmar Climate Change Alliance Programme (Myanmar Nationals Only) .. Looking for an experienced and well qualified person for the post below.. Deadline: 23rd September 2020

Vacancy Announcement: Monitoring, Evaluation and Communication Officer (Re-advertisement)
--------------------------------
Job Title: Monitoring, Evaluation and Communication Officer (Re-advertisement)
Project: Myanmar Climate Change Alliance II
Location: Nay Pyi Taw
Duration: 02 months (extendable subsequently)
Starting date: As soon as possible
Type of Contract: LICA
No. of Position/s: 1
SUBMISSION OF APPLICATIONS
The application comprises a one-page cover letter explaining the applicant’s interest and suitability for the post and a CV with a Passport Photograph, updated United Nations Personal History Form (P11) and copy of certificates and a letter of recommendation.
Interested candidates (Myanmar Nationals) should submit their application in writing, clearly
indicating on the sealed envelope the Post Title and Duty Station, to UN-Habitat Office, No. 8C, Saw Mahar Street (off Bogyoke Museum Rd), Bahan Township, Yangon or by email with Subject: “Post Title and Duty Station” to: Email: [email protected], Cc to: [email protected]
Please note that applications received after the closing date 23 September 2020 will not be given consideration for this cycle but will be kept in records. Only shortlisted candidate whose application responds to the evaluation criteria will be contacted for interview.
UN-Habitat regrets its inability to reply individually or attend to telephone queries on the advertised posts.
The successful candidate may be required to work from home town in the start of the project. Onboarding at the duty station will be decided based on the pandemic situation in the country.
Please download P11 Form from:
http://www.fukuoka.unhabitat.org/.../Personal_History_P11...
For more information, please download the PDF document.
http://unhabitat.org.mm/advertisement/vacancy-announcement-monitoring-evaluation-and-communication-officer-re-advertisement/

Effective climate change adaptation brings everyone to the table, recognizing the value of their knowledge and their pot...
03/01/2020

Effective climate change adaptation brings everyone to the table, recognizing the value of their knowledge and their potential as agents of change.

Through our research and science, IISD develops and delivers innovative solutions to some of the world's biggest challenges.

If you are interested to watch live streaming of Climate Action Summit 2019 from New York ,Follow this link
23/09/2019

If you are interested to watch live streaming of Climate Action Summit 2019 from New York ,
Follow this link

Leaders of France, Germany, New Zealand and other countries gather in New York City for UN Climate Action Summit on Monday, September 23. The summit is hoste...

23/09/2019

Stay tuned with MCCA for coverage on 2019.

As Climate Action Summit will start today in next few hours in New York, here is the press release on Climate Action Summit

New York, 23 September—Leaders from government, business, and civil society today announced
potentially far-reaching steps to confront climate change at the United Nations Secretary-General’s Climate Action Summit in New York.
As carbon pollution, temperatures, and climate destruction continue to rise, and public backlash mounts, the Summit has offered a turning point from inertia into momentum, action, and global impact– if everyone gets on board.
The UN estimates that the world would need to increase its efforts between three- and five-fold to contain climate change to the levels dictated by science – a 1.5°C rise at most – and avoid escalating climate damage already taking place around the world.
However, the Paris Agreement provides an open-door framework for countries to continuously ratchet up their positive actions, and today’s Summit demonstrates how governments, businesses, and civilians around the world are rising to the challenge.
“The best science, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, tells us that any temperature rise above 1.5 degrees will lead to major and irreversible damage to the ecosystems that support us,” said United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres. “Science tells us that on our current path, we face at least 3-degrees Celsius of global heating by the end of the century.”
“The climate emergency is a race we are losing, but it is a race we can win.”
“This is not a climate talk summit. We have had enough talk,” he added. “This is not a climate negotiation summit. You don’t negotiate with nature. This is a climate action summit.” He said, “Governments are here to show you are serious about enhancing Nationally Determined Contributions under the Paris Agreement. Cities and businesses are here showing what leadership looks like, investing in a green future. Financial actors are here to scale-up action and deploy resources in fundamentally new and meaningful ways. Coalitions are here with partnerships and initiatives to move us closer to a resilient, carbon-neutral world by 2050.”
“And young people are here providing solutions, insisting on accountability, demanding urgent action.”

Increased Ambition, Accelerated Action
The Summit, designed to showcase government, business, and civil society efforts to increase their commitments under the Paris Agreement and work toward reducing emissions to essentially zero by mid-century:

• Many countries used the Summit to demonstrate next steps on how by 2020 they will update their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) with the aim to collectively reduce emissions by at least 45 percent by 2030 and prepare national strategies to achieve carbon neutrality by mid-century. President of Chile, Sebastián Piñera, announced the “Climate Ambition Alliance,” which Chile hopes to build in the lead-up to COP25 in Santiago. The Alliance brings together nations upscaling action by 2020, as well as those working towards achieving net zero CO2 emissions by 2050. 59 nations have signaled their intention to submit an enhanced climate action plan (or NDC), and an additional 9 nations have started an internal process to boost ambition and have this reflected in their national plans. In terms of the 2050 group, 66 governments are joined by 10 regions, 102 cities, 93 businesses and 12 investors – all committed to net zero CO2 emissions by 2050.
• The UN Global Compact demonstrated that business is moving, as companies with a combined market capitalization of more than US$2.3 trillion and annual direct emissions equivalent to 73 coal-fired power plants pledged to take action to align their businesses with science-based targets.
• Many of the more than 70 key announcements showcase the concrete ways in which countries
can better adapt to climate change and cut emissions while getting the necessary technical and financial support many of them need.
• Getting out of coal is a priority. The Powering Past Coal Alliance expanded to include 30 countries, 22 states or regions, and 31 corporations committed to stopping the building of new coal power plants in 2020 and rapidly transitioning to renewable energy.
• The Summit participants recognize that to limit climate change to 1.5°C, action needs to start now.
• The Secretary-General has stated that he, and the entire UN System, will remain engaged in the follow-up of the commitments made today and will work to further scale up and monitor the initiatives to achieve the promised goals and objectives. All initiatives presented to the Secretary-General in the General Assembly Hall will be captured on the UNFCCC Global Climate
Action portal. The portal will track the progress of commitments in order to guide the implementation phase of the Paris Agreement post-2020 and towards the global stocktake in 2023.

Climate Finance
• The Asset Owner Alliance, a group of the world’s largest pension funds and insurers, responsible for directing more than US$2 trillion in investments, committed to transitioning to carbonneutral investment portfolios by 2050. The members of the Alliance will immediately start to engage with companies in which they are investing to ensure they decarbonize their business models.
• The International Development Finance Club (IDFC) – a leading group of 24 national and regional development banks from all over the world, with a majority active in emerging and developing countries – announced for the first time a quantitative target of mobilizing US$1 trillion by 2025, with at least $100 million for adaptation. In addition, IDFC will launch a partnership with the Green Climate Fund to promote direct access to international climate finance and a new US$10 million Climate Facility to increase capacity to support its members on climate finance.

Unlocking the Potential of Nature in Climate Action
• Several countries launched the Global Campaign for Nature, which aims to conserve 30 percent of the Earth’s lands and oceans by 2030.
• A new initiative by Central American countries aims, by 2030, to establish and manage 10 million hectares of "sustainable productive landscapes that are resilient to climate change," with a goal of no less than 40 percent reduction in emissions from the baseline year of 2010.
• Launch of a High-Level Panel for the Sustainable Ocean Economy, representing 14 countries that cover approximately 30 percent of the world's coastlines, 30 percent of the world’s exclusive economic zones, 20 percent of the world’s ocean catch, and 20 percent of the world’s shipping fleet, including a new initiative to build resilience for the ocean and marine-protected areas.
• The Central African Forest Initiative (CAFI) will increase the climate ambition and maintain the forest cover of Gabon, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Republic of Congo, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Equatorial Guinea, allowing the Central African rainforest to continue to provide livelihoods of 60 million people and maintain regional rainfall patterns.
• The One Planet Business for Biodiversity, led by the World Business Council for Sustainable Development, will protect and nurture biodiversity through commitments structured around scaling up regenerative agriculture practices, providing a more diversified product portfolio to consumers, and supporting the protection and restoration of high-value ecosystems – including forests.
• More information on Unlocking the Potential of Nature in Climate Action initiatives and announcements can be found here.

Live, Work, and Move Green
• The Zero Carbon Buildings for All Initiative pledges to make new buildings 100 percent net zero carbon by 2030 and existing buildings by 2050. Multilateral development banks and private financial institutions committed to aligning their financing of buildings with the Paris Agreement and national climate policies—a move that could lead to a potential US$1 trillion in “Paris Compliant” buildings investment in developing countries by 2030.
• Two thousand cities committed to strengthening their capacities in project preparation by 2030, placing climate risk at the center of decision making, planning, and investments. Specifically, they committed to creating 1,000 bankable, climate-smart urban projects, linking 1,000 of such projects to finance by 2030 and creating new, innovative financing mechanisms that are utilized by 100 projects until 2025.
• The “Action Towards Climate Friendly Transport” initiative includes actions to plan city development to avoid the need to travel, shift from fossil-fueled vehicles to non-motorized and
public transport, and improve existing modes of transport through zero-emission technologies.
• More information on Live, Work, and Move Green initiatives and announcements can be found here.

Assistance for the Least Developed Countries (LDCs)
• The Climate Investment Platform will seek to directly mobilize US$1 trillion in clean energy investment by 2025 in 20 least developed countries. The platform will provide a menu of services to governments and private sector clients in their efforts to scale-up energy transition and accelerate investments for low carbon, climate-resilient development. It will also enable the delivery of ambitious NDCs.
• The LIFE-AR initiative, led by least developed countries, will strengthen South-South cooperation, aim to mobilize US$30-40 million, and deliver pathways to climate-resilient development by 2030 and net zero emissions by 2050.
Small Island Developing States
• Small Island Developing States made a collective commitment to raise the ambition of their NDCs by 2020 and move to net zero emissions by 2050, contingent on assistance from the international community. They intend to move to 100 percent renewable energy by 2030 and provide support for initiatives that aim to address immediate adaptation needs and the transition to climate resilience.

Cutting GHG Emissions Now with Cooling and Energy Efficiency
• The “Three Percent Club” – a coalition of countries, businesses, and institutions – commit to putting in place more ambitious energy efficiency policies and working to drive a 3 percent annual global increase in energy efficiency, a target necessary to meet global climate goals while enhancing economic prosperity in all countries.
• The Cool Coalition will address cooling as a “major blind spot” by delivering up to 1 degree on the pathway to a 2050 net zero carbon world. With emissions from air conditioning and refrigeration expected to rise 90 percent from 2017 levels by 2050, the collective platform will set ambitious cooling targets and support cross-sectional national strategies and policies such as National Cooling Action Plans.
• More information on Cutting GHG Emissions Now with Cooling and Energy Efficiency can be found here.

Toward a Resilient Future, Making People Safer
• A coalition led by the private sector – representing more than 20 institutions with US$8 trillion assets under management – was launched at the Summit with the goal of developing and piloting the first framework for the pricing of physical climate risks in infrastructure investing.
• African Heads of State announced the African Adaptation Initiative to ensure the continent adapts to climate change in the immediate and longer term and supports regional cooperation.
• In an effort to shield vulnerable populations from the economic burden of climate impacts, InsureResilience Partnership 2025 was announced. This effort by governments,
multilateral organizations, the private sector, and civil society will help ensure that 500 million poor people worldwide will be covered against climate shocks by pre-arranged risk finance by 2025.
• Led by the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies and the United Kingdom, the Risk-Informed Early Action Partnership will help communities and businesses to take early action to prevent disaster. The partnership brings together the humanitarian, development, and climate communities aiming to make 1 billion people safer from disaster, and will deliver new and improved early warning systems.
• Recognizing that traditional ways of life have already shifted dramatically in a changing climate, the Governments of Norway, Germany, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom, as well as the World Bank and the Gates Foundation, announced a plan to support 300 million small-scale farmers in enhancing their resilience to climate shocks and extreme events, increase household incomes and food security, and reverse ecological decline.
• More information on Toward a Resilient Future, Making People Safer initiatives and announcements can be found here.

People Centered Action Now
• The International Labor Organization (ILO) and other members of the Summit’s Social and Political Drivers Action Area, co-led by Spain and Peru, launched the “Climate Action for Jobs” initiative, with the goal of developing a framework for countries that considers job creation, social protection, skills development, and technology and knowledge transfer when taking climate action.
• The Safe Air Initiative will call on governments—both national and at the regional or state level—to commit to achieving air quality that is safe for populations and to align their climate change and air pollution policies by 2030, backed up by commitments from financial institutions and funds.
• Thirty-two national governments committed to implementing gender-responsive climate change action plans, policies, and strategies and empowering women as leaders of climate action.
• More information on People Centered Action Now initiatives and announcements can be found here.
The Economy Moving from Grey to Green
• A coalition of public and private entities working on the heavy industry transition towards net
zero emissions by mid-century set out pathways for carbon intensive sectors to reach net zero emissions by 2050.
• The shipping industry launched the Getting to Zero Coalition, bringing together decision makers from across the shipping value chain to reduce GHG emissions by at least 50 percent by 2050 and make the transition to full decarbonization possible. The coalition will develop and deliver a roadmap with tangible steps to accelerate the deployment of zero emissions vehicles.
• More information on The Economy Moving from Grey to Green initiatives and announcements can be found here.

For further information, please contact Dan Shepard, UN Department of Public Information, 1 212 963
9495, cel. 1 646 675 3286 email [email protected] , or Matthew Coghlan, Climate Action Summit Team,
[email protected]

UN Climate Action Summit 2019, New YorkUN Secretary-General António Guterres is calling on all leaders to come to New Yo...
20/09/2019

UN Climate Action Summit 2019, New York
UN Secretary-General António Guterres is calling on all leaders to come to New York on 23 September with concrete, realistic plans to enhance their nationally determined contributions by 2020, in line with reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 45 per cent over the next decade, and to net zero emissions by 2050.
Global emissions are reaching record levels and show no sign of peaking. The last four years were the four hottest on record, and winter temperatures in the Arctic have risen by 3°C since 1990. Sea levels are rising, coral reefs are dying, and we are starting to see the life-threatening impact of climate change on health, through air pollution, heatwaves and risks to food security.

The impacts of climate change are being felt everywhere and are having very real consequences on people’s lives. Climate change is disrupting national economies, costing us dearly today and even more tomorrow. But there is a growing recognition that affordable, scalable solutions are available now that will enable us all to leapfrog to cleaner, more resilient economies.

The latest analysis shows that if we act now, we can reduce carbon emissions within 12 years and hold the increase in the global average temperature to well below 2°C and even, as asked by the latest science, to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels.

Global emissions are reaching record levels and show no sign of peaking. The last four years were the four hottest on record, and winter temperatures in the Arctic have risen by 3°C since 1990. Sea levels are rising, coral reefs are dying, and we are starting to see the life-threatening impact of c...

UN Opens Applications for Youth Climate Summit in New York, Announces “Green Tickets” to Recognize Young People Driving ...
08/07/2019

UN Opens Applications for Youth Climate Summit in New York, Announces “Green Tickets” to Recognize Young People Driving Climate Action , Deadline: 19th July 2019



New York, 1 July — Starting today, young people from around the world are formally invited to apply to participate in the United Nations Youth Climate Summit to take place at UN Headquarters in New York on 21 September.

To recognize the vital role of young people in driving climate action, the UN today announced that it will offer over 100 “Green Tickets” – funded opportunities for young people, in particular from the least developed countries, to participate in the Youth Climate Summit. The Green Ticket will include travel to and from New York – which will be carbon neutral.

The Youth Climate Summit will bring together young innovators, entrepreneurs, change-makers and activists to showcase their solutions, exchange ideas and grow networks, and take their place on the global stage with decision-makers across governments, business and civil society, in line with the UN Youth Strategy: Youth 2030 launched by the Secretary-General last year.

Young people around the world will also be able to participate in Youth Summit activities from their own communities, through a variety of virtual and digital engagement opportunities, and continue to play their part in driving global climate action.

Applications for the Youth Climate Summit are being accepted from today until 19 July, and all applicants will be considered for a Green Ticket. Youth between 18 and 29 can apply through the Youth Climate Summit website www.un.org/en/climatechange/youth-summit.shtml, which also includes information on participation in the Summit for youth under 18, recognizing the powerful role younger people are playing in countries around the world.

“It is inspiring to see the leadership of young people in driving climate actions and solutions,” said UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina J. Mohammad, announcing the Green Tickets and general applications today.

“The Youth Climate Summit is about both recognizing and empowering our youth, and I urge young people from all countries who have a passion for finding climate solutions to apply. It will be an incredible experience, and we need all the talents of our youth on board to have the impact we urgently need.”

The Deputy Secretary-General also invited members of the business community and any others interested in supporting the Green Ticket initiative to contact [email protected].

Successful Youth Climate Summit applicants, including recipients of Green Tickets, will be selected on the basis of merit – including a demonstrated commitment to climate action and problem-solving – as well as considerations of need. The allocation of Green Tickets will ensure that youth from all regions of the world have an equitable and realistic chance to participate in the Youth Climate Summit.

Applications will be assessed by a panel led by the Secretary-General’s Envoy on Youth. The panel will include experts from within the UN and from civil society with experience across the Sustainable Development Goals, reflecting the interdependence of climate action and sustainable development.

The Youth Climate Summit precedes the Secretary-General’s Climate Action Summit, which will take place at UN Headquarters on 23 September, and comes just a day after the Fridays for Future Global Climate Strike on 20 September, where an unprecedented mobilization of young people from the global south and north is expected to declare the global climate emergency.

The Secretary-General has called upon all leaders to come to the Climate Action Summit with bold actions and a major increase in climate ambition, backed up by concrete plans.

The Green Tickets announcements was made in Abu Dhabi today, where over 1,700 people from more than 160 countries, including youth delegates, gathered for a key preparatory meeting in the build-up to the Climate Action Summit. During the opening ceremony of the Abu Dhabi meeting the Secretary-General held a live-streamed intergenerational dialogue with youth delegates.

“Having an opportunity to participate has shown me that there are other young people all around the world who share the same passion for climate justice and climate action, and we need action urgently,” said Amelia Radinivugalei, a youth delegate from Fiji participating in the Abu Dhabi meeting.

“Youth are showing us the way on climate action,” said the Secretary-General’s Special Envoy Luis Alfonso de Alba. “This week in Abu Dhabi we focused not only on the energy transition, but on the role of youth in climate action. You could say renewable energy is powering both.”

For further information, visit the website at www.un.org/en/climatechange/youth-summit.shtml

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For media inquiries, please contact:
Dan Shepard, UN Department of Global Communications, 1 646-675-3286, [email protected]
Yassamin Ansari, Climate Action Summit Team, [email protected]

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