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Friday, January 22 2021 - 12:00
AsiaNet
Global Center on Adaptation (GCA) : Nobel Laureates, Global Scientists call on World Leaders to Accelerate Climate Adaptation as part of Post-Covid Economic Stimulus
ROTTERDAM, Netherlands, Jan. 22, 2021 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

Today, five Nobel Laureates and more than 3,000 scientists from over 100 
countries signed up to the "Groningen Science Declaration" ( 
https://gca.org/reports/global-scientists-call-for-economic-stimulus-to-address-climate-adaptation-and-covid/ 
) calling on world leaders, decision-makers and investors, to change the way we 
understand, plan and invest for a changing climate to ensure we limit future 
damage. The signing took place ahead of the virtual Climate Adaptation Summit 
(CAS 2021) ( https://www.cas2021.com/ ) on 25th-26th January. 

Logo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1044191/GCA_Logo.jpg 

The statement, initiated by Patrick Verkooijen, CEO of Global Center on 
Adaptation (GCA) ( http://www.gca.org/ ), is released as figures from the first 
"GCA State and Trends in Adaptation 2020" ( 
https://gca.org/reports/state-and-trends-in-adaptation-report-2020/ ) report 
show that climate adaptation is likely to have suffered a single-digit 
percentage fall in 2020 and that global climate adaptation funding needs to 
increase ten-fold, to US$300 billion a year, to meet estimates of what is 
needed to respond to escalating climate risks.

In the Groningen Science Declaration the scientists state that "our failure to 
adapt and mitigate Covid-19 parallels the disruption to come if we do not act 
immediately to mitigate and adapt our world in response to our changing climate 
[….] unless we step up and adapt now the results will be increasing poverty, 
water shortages, agricultural losses and soaring levels of migration with an 
enormous toll on human life." 

Ban Ki-moon, 8th Secretary General of the United Nations and Chair of the 
Global Center on Adaptation, speaking during the launch said: "Even if 
mitigation targets outlined in the Paris Agreement are reached, it still won't 
be enough. Climate change is already happening and so we must adapt to its 
impacts. The Groningen Scientific Declaration makes it clear that we, as 
humans, have caused climate change and so we must accelerate adaptation to 
ensure we can all live in a sustainable and resilient world that leaves no-one 
behind."

Patrick Verkooijen, CEO of the Global Center on Adaptation said:
"As a result of the pandemic we are facing interlinked health, economic and 
climate crises. We must implement interventions to support a resilient recovery 
and we must act now before climate change accelerates beyond the capabilities 
of nature and humans to adapt. The science community, in signing this 
declaration, know the stakes could not be higher."

Dr. Tawakkol Karman, Nobel Peace Prize 2011 said:
"Our climate emergency poses the severest threat to peace and security. As 
extreme weather events continue to accelerate and sea levels rise, people have 
to compete over scarce resources and deal with the accelerated degradation of 
the environment around them. If we don't act and adapt and soon, we will 
inevitably see greater instability, conflict and increased migration."

Professor Sir Christopher Pissarides, The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic 
Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 2010 said:
"The Covid-19 crisis has devastated our economies but it will soon be history; 
the climate-related disasters that are occurring with increasing frequency will 
only get worse, if we don't do anything about it. Our economies are as 
vulnerable to them as they were to Covid-19. We need to improve the way we 
manage such disasters and take steps to reduce them. Investments in 
sustainability should be given priority: they should, and usually do, give 
higher returns in the longer term. We need to focus on inclusive green job 
creation, to help families in need and prepare ourselves better for the future. 
It is of paramount importance that governments, through their Covid-19 recovery 
packages, invest in climate adaptation and resilience against multiple shocks, 
focused on green job creation and long-term sustainable growth."

Professor Brian Schmidt, Nobel Prize in Physics 2011 said:
"COVID-19 has shown just how brittle our environment is – that our world and 
way of life can be upended so fundamentally and so quickly. But the pandemic 
has also shown governments all across the world can listen to science and 
expert advice, to protect their people and their societies. They are doing the 
same with the science of climate change. Now is the time to invest in and drive 
the innovative climate solutions we already have at our disposal to create new 
jobs, to stimulate our economies, to develop the industries and products of 
tomorrow, while at the same time building a climate resilient, a climate smart 
and a climate just future."

Professor Donna Strickland, Nobel Prize in Physics 2018 said:
"I believe that climate change adaptation requires the depth and breadth of 
expertise best achieved through interdisciplinary collaborations and engagement 
with policy-makers. Working with the Optical Society, together we have 
communicated to those in public policy the vital role optics can play in 
measuring the effects of climate change and the effectiveness of remediation 
efforts. If scientists and engineers worked together on developing innovative 
sensor technologies with the support of governments, the resulting innovation 
could be a milestone achievement in addressing climate change." 

Prof Hoesung Lee, Chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 
also present at the virtual launch event said:
"The climate is already changing, and we will have to adapt to address the 
further global warming that is coming because of past emissions of greenhouse 
gases. But we must also understand that there are limits to adaptation, and the 
more we can limit future warming the greater the scope for successful 
adaptation measures."

Professor Jouke de Vries, President of the University of Groningen said:
"Our University and the city of Groningen are proud to host the Science 
Declaration and the launch event with Nobel Laureates and other distinguished 
guests. Our professors, researchers, educators and students work tirelessly 
with national and international partners towards the local, regional and global 
Green Transition. It is clear that mitigation of climate change goes 
hand-in-hand with adaptation, and our research and Master Degree programs 
reflect this, with a focus on human health, behavioural sciences, climate law 
and clean energy."

Prof. Joseph Stiglitz, The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in 
Memory of Alfred Nobel 2001 also signed the Groningen Science Declaration 
during the virtual launch.

Contact
Alexandra Gee
Global Center on Adaptation
Alex.gee@gca.org
+447887 804594

SOURCE: The Global Center on Adaptation 

    

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