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Tuesday, 15 November 2022 | By Climate Champions
The imperative to power up the transition away from fossil fuels has never been greater. Currently, only 29% of global electricity generation comes from renewables, but given electricity generation accounts for 23% of global greenhouse gas emissions, we have to move further and faster to increase our global renewable power capacity by 2030.
Under the recently launched Sharm-el-Sheikh Adaptation Agenda, the outcomes for energy must meet the needs of the 733 million people still living without access to electricity. As Inger Andersen, Executive Director, United Nations Environment Programme recently stated: “We have missed the opportunity to invest in a low-carbon recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic. Now, we are in danger of missing the opportunity to boost clean and efficient energy as a response to the energy crisis.”
Read on for more news coming out of Energy, Ace and Civil Society day.
Today’s Key Announcements
GLOBAL CLIMATE ACTION EVENTS SCHEDULE
FOR MORE INFORMATION AND WEBCAST, ACCESS HERE
UK COP26 Presidency event: Putting Promises into Practice: Accelerating the Clean Energy Transition
Location: Action Room 2 (Lotus)
Time: 9:00 – 10:30
Marrakech Partnership Energy Action Event, Game Changers Accelerating the Global Energy Transition
Location: Action Room 1 (Ibis)
Time: 10:00 – 12:00
Register here
Marrakech Partnership Implementation Lab: Resilient Energy Systems
Location: Action Room 2 (Lotus)
Time: 12:00 – 13:30
UNFCCC-UNEP special event Emissions Gap Report 2022
Location: Action Room 1 (Ibis)
Time: 13:00 – 15:00
Beating the Heat: Accelerating Access to Sustainable Climate Solutions in Cities
Location: Buildings Pavilion, Area C
Time: 13:30 – 16:30
Marrakech Partnership Implementation Lab, A Cleaner power sector By 2030: Scaling renewable and storage-based systems
Location: Action Room 2 (Lotus)
Time: 14:00-15:30
Register here
Futures of Citizen Climate Action: Futures Lab
Location: Capacity Building Hub
Time: 14:00-15:00
Climate & Clean Air Coalition (CCAC)
Location: Action Room 2 (Lotus)
Time: 18:00 – 20:00
Creating A Consolidated Global Proposition For A Safer Maritime System: Futures Lab
Location: Resilience Hub
Time: 18:15-19:15
EXPLORE COP27
The Children and Youth Pavilion
For the first time ever at a UNFCCC Conference, children and young people will have a dedicated space at COP27 alongside world leaders, ministers, prominent non-State actors and other delegates. Designed to amplify children and youth voices within global climate policymaking, the COP27 Children and Youth Pavilion will be entirely led by young people and has been co-created and run by influential child and youth networks. A full programme of events is here.
The Resilience Hub: Showcasing Resilience Solutions Everyday
The Resilience Hub continues to deliver on its mandate to elevate the knowledge of front line leaders and demonstrate locally-informed resilience solutions which can be implemented at scale. Click here for the full agenda.The Hub is accessible in-person in Area C and virtually here.
On Monday, the Hub hosted the official launch of the Roof Over Our Heads campaign.
As Nigel Topping, UN Climate Change High-Level Champion of COP26 Presidency said: ‘We can’t talk about urban transitions if we don’t take the voice of informal communities seriously.”
L-R: Christina Gamboa, CEO WorldGBC, Saleemul Huq, Director of the International Centre for Climate Change and Development (ICCCAD), Mary Robinson, Chair of The Elders, Sheela Patel, Founder and Director of the Society for the Promotion of Area Resource Centres (SPARC, Nigel Topping UN Climate Change High-Level Champion of COP26 Presidency, Gonzalo Munoz former UN Climate Change High-Level Champion of COP25 Presidency.
No More Fairy Tales: stories to save our planet
Before we can build the resilient zero carbon economy that we have promised future generations, we must first imagine it.
Stay inspired by reading today’s story drawn from an anthology of short stories written by a variety of authors such as Kim Stanley Robinson, Paolo Bacigalupi and others. These stories present positive visions of what a sustainable society might look like and how we might get there.
Each story links to a webpage where readers can see how they can help to make the story a reality. Compiled by the Green Stories Project, in association with Herculean Climate Solutions.
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT…
New report highlights the value of nature in reducing energy consumption and emissions in our cities
In its Growing to Its Potential: The Value of Urban Nature for Communities, Investors, and the Climate report, RMI helps local decision makers and investors make the case for scaling up investment in urban nature concluding that globally, the value of urban nature’s benefits is nine times the costs.
Roof Over Our Heads: Delivering resilient, affordable, low carbon homes for 2bn people by 2050
A new campaign that aims to improve the lives of 2 billion climate vulnerable people living in informal settlements, most impacted by climate change, was launched at COP27 on Monday.
Actions After Impacts – Addressing climate losses and damages
A Future Lab event on Monday presented a set of options to mobilise finance to address climate losses and damages, with a key emphasis on the role of non-State actors.
Ten organisations signed the Joint Statement on Green Hydrogen and Green Shipping, committing to rapid adoption of green hydrogen-based fuels this decade to get on track for full decarbonization of the shipping sector by 2050.
Beyond 8 billion: Focus on women, not population, for reproductive and climate justice
We need to turn away from dramatic headlines about the number of people on the planet and instead focus on the actual issue driving the continued rise of humans on Earth—a lack of rights, for women and girls in particular, argues Kristen P. Patterson, Director, Drawdown Lift, Project Drawdown.
Aya Chebbi: Tackling the climate emergency through a feminist lens
Aya Chebbi, Chair of Nala Feminist Collective, explains why effectively tackling the climate emergency demands greater representation, leadership and participation of women and young people in formal climate decision making processes.