In Gaza’s shadow, COP28 climate summit is also about war and peace

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From protests to pilot projects, the issue of war and peace has arrived at the United Nations’ climate summit in Dubai. The Israel-Hamas conflict is very much in thought, and participants here say conflict and climate can no longer be treated as separate issues in a fragile world reeling from both.

Gaza, for example, faces not just war but also rising water scarcity and saltwater intrusion into groundwater due to rising sea levels.

Why We Wrote This

The Israel-Hamas war has reached even into this week’s global climate summit. But some say that’s appropriate. Worldwide, addressing climate change can create conditions for peace.

Already one major outcome of the summit this week is the COP28 Declaration on Climate, Relief, Recovery and Peace. Governments are pledging to fund climate resilience in war-torn or fragile nations and communities.

Governments and U.N. organizations also said they’ll develop pilot projects on resilience in the Horn of Africa – a region hit by drought and floods, and home to three ongoing conflicts and 3 million refugees.

The next step, many COP28 participants say, is to ensure pledges are translated into action.

“People on the front lines are experts in the field. They have their own solutions but lack the resources to act,” says James Thuch Madhier, a participant at COP28 from South Sudan. With resources, “not only will they provide their own solutions to adapt to climate change, but this can even lead to solutions to conflict.”

Protest chants at this week’s global climate summit have been dominated by calls for a cease-fire as well as for cutting carbon. People are focused not just on 1.5 – the threshold degrees, in Celsius, of warming set by the Paris Agreement that the world is at risk of overshooting – but also on 14,000, the number of Palestinians reported killed in Gaza. 

Activists from as far away as Colombia and the Marshall Islands are setting their eyes on militaries and war along with big oil as major spoilers to climate progress. 

In more ways than one, the issue of war and peace has arrived at the United Nations’ annual Conference of Parties (COP) on climate here in Dubai. Simply put, policymakers and activists say conflict and climate can no longer be treated as separate issues in a fragile world reeling from both. 

Why We Wrote This

The Israel-Hamas war has reached even into this week’s global climate summit. But some say that’s appropriate. Worldwide, addressing climate change can create conditions for peace.

To a degree not seen in the prior 27 COP meetings, participants are highlighting the need to collaborate proactively to prevent climate and conflict from feeding on each other, both now and in the hotter future that scientists predict for the planet. For leaders here, this means, for one thing, looking to boost climate adaptation and resilience for at-risk communities and to address climate stressors before they exacerbate or reignite conflict.

The next step, many COP28 participants say, is to ensure pledges are translated into change on the ground. 

“The focus placed this year on fragile and conflict affected countries is very welcomed as it means the most vulnerable communities, which are the front lines of climate change, are explicitly included in the climate action,” Nimo Hassan, COP delegate and director of the Somalia NGO Consortium, representing Somali nongovernmental organizations, told the Monitor on Tuesday. “But how will success be measured? By the number of policies adapted, pledges to commit funds, or by the impact on affected communities’ lives and livelihood?”



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