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Fighting Climate Change: Human Solidarity In A Divided World
Human Development Report 2007/2008 – United Nations Development Program
Climate change is the defining human development challenge of the 21st
Century. Failure to respond to that challenge will stall and then reverse
international efforts to reduce poverty. The poorest countries and most
vulnerable citizens will suffer the earliest and most damaging setbacks, even
though they have contributed least to the problem. Looking to the future, no
country—however wealthy or powerful—will be immune to the impact of
global warming.
The Human Development Report 2007/2008 shows that climate change is not just
a future scenario. Increased exposure to droughts, floods and storms is already
destroying opportunity and reinforcing inequality. Meanwhile, there is
now overwhelming scientific evidence that the world is moving towards the point
at which irreversible ecological catastrophe becomes unavoidable.
Business-as-usual climate change points in a clear direction: unprecedented
reversal in human development in our lifetime, and acute risks for our children
and their grandchildren.
There is a window of opportunity for avoiding the most damaging
climate change impacts, but that window is closing: the world has less than a
decade to change course. Actions taken—or not taken—in the years
ahead will have a profound bearing on the future course of human development.
The world lacks neither the financial resources nor the technological capabilities
to act. What is missing is a sense of urgency, human solidarity and collective
interest.
As the Human Development Report 2007/2008 argues, climate change poses
challenges at many levels. In a divided but ecologically interdependent world,
it challenges all people to reflect upon how we manage the environment of the
one thing that we share in common: planet Earth. It challenges us to reflect on
social justice and human rights across countries and generations. It challenges
political leaders and people in rich nations to acknowledge their historic
responsibility for the problem, and to initiate deep and early cuts in
greenhouse gas emissions. Above all, it challenges the entire human community
to undertake prompt and strong collective action based on shared values and a
shared vision.
Kermal Davis, Administrator, UN Development
Program
Achim Steiner, Executive Director, UN Environment Program
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