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Ban pushes 2015 global deal on disaster risk

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Ban pushes 2015 global deal on disaster risk

United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has stressed that disaster risk reduction and climate change are closely linked.

In do so Mr Ban reiterated to the world community his key priorities through the next year as preparations continue for a 2015 world conference on reducing risk from natural disasters.

Japan_tsunami_12.jpg.scaled1000“The aim is simple: to leave a more resilient world to future generations,” Mr Ban told high-level representatives of member states attending a briefing on the Third World Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction to be held next year in the Japanese city of Sendai.

The main item on that agenda is agreement on a new post-2015 global framework for disaster risk reduction which will succeed the current Hyogo Framework for Action created in the aftermath of the Indian Ocean tsunami.

In 2005, 168 countries endorsed the Hyogo Framework, under which they agreed to achieve by 2015 the substantial reduction of disaster losses, in lives and in the social, economic and environmental assets of communities and countries.

japan-tsunamiThe 10-year plan “gave the world a common approach,” Mr Ban said, leading to strides in monitoring risks, enhancing preparedness and improving early warning.

With the 2015 deadline approaching, calls for a new disaster management blueprint have been gaining traction.

In his remarks, Mr Ban called the agenda “an ambitious vision” and stressed that the new framework, which participants will create, should be based on “evidence, experience and aspirations.”

caribbean-hurricane-climate-changeHe noted that the three major UN goals for the year 2015, meeting the anti-poverty goals known as the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), shaping a development agenda to build on their progress, and paving the way for a climate change agreement, are “closely tied” to the global disaster risk reduction framework.

“To achieve this, we must factor disaster risk into our broader discussions of the post-2015 agenda for sustainable development,” he noted, in reference to ongoing consultations, which have been a priority for the UN General Assembly this year.

The next major UN-related events are due in September when Mr Ban will convene a Climate Summit in New York to mobilise political will for next year’s climate agreement talks, and the UN Conference on Small Island Developing States which is to be held in Apia, Samoa.

CSIRO-south-pacific-fiji-floods“When we address the needs of small island developing States, we can drive progress around the world,” the top UN official said.

UN Member States agreed two years ago to support the 51 highly vulnerable Small Island Developing States (SIDS), a group that was politically recognised at the Rio Earth Summit in 1992, underscored at a major international conference in Barbados in 1994 and again at a follow-up meeting in Mauritius in 2005.

asia-pacific-fishermenThe SIDS group share similar sustainable development challenges, including small but growing populations, limited resources, remoteness, susceptibility to natural disasters, vulnerability to external shocks, excessive dependence on international trade, and fragile environments.

The events in New York and Samoa will take place during the same month that the UN General Assembly will devote its annual high-level segment to deliberations on the sustainable development agenda beyond 2015, the deadline for the MDGs.

More than 8000 people are expected to attend the Sendai conference, including senior government officials, academics, civil society representatives and the private sector.

Sendai was chosen as a host city for the summit given the earthquake and tsunami that killed more than 15,000 people there in March 2011.


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