Ruth Yared, African View
December 4, 2023
On a sideline event held in Dubai at the World Bank Pavilion, the importance of speeding up climate action and finance in areas affected by fragility, conflict, and violence (FCV) was highlighted. It showcased various activities from the World Bank, government, and humanitarian sectors.
The managing director of operation at the World Bank, Anna Bjerde, has claimed there is an urgent need to accelerate climate action in fragile and conflict-affected countries. Not only are countries affected by fragility, conflict, and violence (FCV) amongst those most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change, they face severe constraints to their capacity to adapt and respond to intertwined threats from global challenges such as climate change, pandemics, food insecurity and FCV.
Experiences from Chad, Mozambique, and Yemen were presented as examples that can be replicated and expanded to enhance resilience to multiple shocks and stresses. The panelists also emphasized the need to address knowledge and capacity constraints for scaling climate action and financing in fragile and conflict-affected environments.
Climate change can also worsen the drivers of fragility and conflict, further undermining efforts to reduce poverty and maintain peace. Left unchecked, the impacts of climate change are expected to push an additional 132 million people into extreme poverty by 2030, a significant proportion of which will be living in countries affected by FCV.
Addressing the adaptation gap in FCV setting requires working across sectoral boundaries and at scale. This event will discuss FCV-sensitive approaches to climate action, opportunities to accelerate access to climate financing in FCV settings, and efforts to enhance synergies between climate action, conflict prevention and peace building.
Source: World Bank
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