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£100 million for vulnerable countries tackling climate change: Andrew Mitchell

£100 million for vulnerable countries tackling climate change: Andrew Mitchell

DUBAI   (  Web News  )

£100 million of United Kingdom funding will help climate-vulnerable populations adapt to climate change.

At COP28 Summit on Sunday the UK called for bolder action to fight the impact climate change is having on health. Package that contributes towards the £1.6 billion of climate aid announced by the Prime Minister on Friday.

The UK Government made commitments to help vulnerable countries strengthen their resilience to the increasingly frequent and severe effects of climate change at the COP28 Summit on Sunday (3 December).

International Development and Africa Minister Andrew Mitchell announced £100 million to support some of the most climate-vulnerable countries tackle climate change. This will support an initiative to strengthen early warning systems in countries on the front line of climate change, giving people advanced warning of cyclones, flooding and other extreme weather so they can move away from danger, saving lives and protecting vulnerable communities.

The funding will also help make health care in these areas more resilient and able to withstand disasters, like floods, and ready to deal with spikes in infectious diseases, like cholera and malaria, due to floods caused by climate change.

Recognising the urgency of the situation, which forces 26 million into poverty every year, the Government will also join calls for bolder collective action to protect the lives, health and livelihoods of those most impacted by climate change.

This supports the Prime Minister announcing major funding for climate projects and stressing the need for ambitious, innovative and pragmatic action.

International Development and Africa Minister Andrew Mitchell, said:

“The devastating effects of climate change hit the most vulnerable the hardest.

“These funding commitments will help countries and people be better prepared and protected against extreme weather events and natural disasters. They will help roll out measures such as early warning systems, and open up access to climate finance to build resilient health services.

“The UK will continue to press for a bold and ambitious approach to support those on the frontline of our changing climate, and to create a safer planet for us all.”

On behalf of the UK, Minister Mitchell will endorse the ‘Getting Ahead of Disasters’ Charter, the ‘COP28 Declaration on Relief, Recovery and Peace’, and the ‘COP28 Declaration on Climate and Health’.

Speaking at COP28, he will outline details of the funding package, which include:

At the COP28 Summit on Sunday, the UK convened experts and thought leaders for a panel discussion on climate security. It was the first time that the UK hosted such an event, with the US, the EU, Iraq, Kenya, Mali, NATO, and United Nations Development Programme expected to attend. It aims to improve collective understanding of the security implications of climate change, including global instability and conflict, while exploring best practice to respond to these risks through data-informed policy making, stress testing, analytical foresight capability, and international cooperation.

Background:

o   £5 million for the Climate Risk and Early Warning Systems (CREWS) initiative to enable the least developed countries and Small Island Developing States to better prepare for climate shocks and extreme weather;

o   £7.4 million to fund drought insurance protection for Somalia over the next three years through African Risk Capacity (ARC), Africa’s risk pool, which will provide rapid payouts to vulnerable communities if rains fail;

o   £7.1 million to fund disaster insurance cover in Senegal, Somalia, Madagascar and Zimbabwe over two years through the Start Network, which allows members to pool funds and risks in order to stretch funding further and provide additional cover. This will also cover locally-led responses to the impact of El Niño-driven extreme weather across multiple countries.

o   £18 million for the UK’s flagship Climate Resilient and Sustainable Health Systems Programme;

0  £20 million for a newly approved Climate and Health Research Programme;

o   Increased funding to UNICEF to help develop the climate resilience of Water, Sanitation and Health services and to unlock climate finance.

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