Kathmandu, March 14: Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal 'Prachanda' has underlined the need of a comprehensive strategy to address complex challenges of climate change, health and social justice.
In his address to an inaugural
session of the South and Southeast Asia Regional Conference on Connecting the
Dots between Climate Change, Health, and Equity here today, the Prime Minister
highlighted the need of a unified and comprehensive approach to addressing
these pressing issues.
"While acknowledging the
significance of this monumental event, the Government of Nepal sees it as a
crucial step forward in our journey towards a future characterized by justice,
sustainability, and fairness," he said.
He further added that the
challenges posed by climate change are immense, touching every corner of our
planet, impacting our societies, health systems, and the natural
environment.
"The trumpet call from climate
scientists is clear and urgent: we must significantly reduce greenhouse gas
emissions to avoid surpassing the critical threshold of 1.5° Celsius. This is
especially vital for nations like ours, with our beautiful yet vulnerable
mountainous landscapes and as a Least Developed Country (LDC), where the
consequences of climate change are not just abstract statistics but harsh
realities,'' he said.
"The scientists have
explicitly said that the emission of green house gases should be significantly
reduced to maintain the temperature limit of 1.5 degree Celsius. Not only the
harsh reality of climate change, but also its consequences are significant
especially for least developed and mountainous country like ours," he
said.
Noting that landslides, floods,
wild fires, glacial lake outburst and drought are becoming more frequent and
deadlier, PM Dahal said, "Such disasters have impacted the most vulnerable
populations. The poor, women, children and indigenous nationalities have been
impacted of all."
The Prime Minister, referring to
the latest reports, said that one-third of the global natural resources,
including in the Himalayan range, have been lost and these loss and damage have
not only put at risk the biodiversity but also the livelihood of billions of
people living in the coastal areas.
Recalling that he has voiced in the
international forums from the COP-28 held in Dubai to the 78th General Assembly
of the United Nations on various challenges the least developed nations are
facing due to climate change, he called on the developed economies to support
the least developed and vulnerable countries by means of the urgently needed
resources and technologies. (RSS)