Climate Vulnerability Forum

Hardest Hit by Climate Change Seek to Amplify Pressure at Bangladesh Ministerial-Level Conference, Nov 13 & 14

A Climate Vulnerability Forum is happening in Dhaka. Ministers and representatives of some 30 countries, among the most vulnerable to the harmful effects of climate change, will gather in Dhaka, Bangladesh on 13th and 14th November 2011. This Climate Vulnerability Forum is just ahead of UN climate talks in Durban (COP17). Vulnerable countries are seeking heightened awareness, accountability, and support in the face of real and growing damages and suffering caused by climate change.

This forum of most vulnerable seeks leadership on green development, and assistance in technology, capacity, and finance to adapt and pursue low-carbon growth.

The government of People’s Republic of Bangladesh, supported by DARA, is convening a unique global conference of countries worst affected by the growing climate crisis. The ministerial-level meeting of the Climate Vulnerability Forum (CVF) will see high representatives from vulnerable countries of Africa, the Americas, Asia, and the Pacific. They will gather in the Bangladesh capital of Dhaka. Delegates are expected to issue a declaration firming united political calls from vulnerable countries for action by industrialized nations and urgent support. This support is necessary to limit increasing loss of human life and other damages. They are also expected to affirm their own determination to pursue green development and to manifest moral leadership on low-carbon development.

Climate Vulnerability Forum

DARA Trustee and Former President of Costa Rica, Mr. José María Figueres said:

The CVF first spoke out in 2009, just prior to the UN climate conference at Copenhagen. At that time, its leaders confronted us with one voice on the painful reality of our climate crisis. They also outlined a compelling commitment of their own to lead the low-carbon transition. We’ve seen only cautious global progress since that time. Emissions are still rising nearly everywhere. Countries at the front-line increasingly suffer from the impacts of climate change. We should be paying close attention to the Climate Vulnerability Forum message. With this particular challenge, the fate of the world is firmly tied to the fate of its most vulnerable groups.

Bangladesh Foreign Minister, Dr. Dipu Moni speaking of the forthcoming Forum said:

“Absence of a clear will and concrete steps to reduce emissions place our countries at the risk of peril. So, we must raise our voice unitedly and demand accountability for inaction. While doing so, we, as the most affected, ought not to simply wait for international support. We must manifest our firm resolve to act, to the extent possible, autonomously and pursue green growth paths in our endeavors.”

Dhaka Meeting

The Forum’s Dhaka ministerial meeting, at the threshold of the Durban climate change talks, will provide a significant platform for the growing activities of the participant states. This Climate Vulnerability Forum initiative includes global powers like China, the US, and the UN as observers. The Dhaka meeting aims to lay the path for what will become a series of regular interactions. These interactions are for raising awareness on the dangers of climate change and expressing the shared concerns of vulnerable countries in all relevant global forums.

The group intends to maintain concerted pressure for enhanced low-carbon leadership among industrialized countries, and external support for adapting to climate stresses. This includes pursuing independent green development through a combination of finance, capacity building, and technology transfer. None of these have been adequately forthcoming from 16 previous annual conferences on climate change. These conferences are since parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) first met in Berlin in 1995.

UNFCCC FRAMEWORK for Climate Vulnerability Monitor and Forum

The CVF co-published, together with DARA, the Climate Vulnerability Monitor last December. That report pointed to a rapidly worsening climate crisis. It stated that between 2010 and 2020, this crisis could claim up to 5 million lives. These will be mainly among children in developing countries unless effective remedial actions are taken. It estimated that nearly 350,000 people already die each year as a result of the negative effects of climate change.

Participants seated at a conference table listening intently during a ministerial-level meeting on climate change in Dhaka, Bangladesh.

DARA Director General, Ross Mountain commented:

Vulnerable countries possess the vision to do more. However, they face chronic shortages of technological means, capacity, and finance to truly act. Industrialized countries have the means but lack vision, despite the fact that floods, storms, drought, desertification, and sea level rise heavily affect developed countries. Helping even harder-hit vulnerable countries to take action will limit negative effects that everyone ultimately also suffers. This includes, for instance, drought in the Horn of Africa or on the far-off islands of Tuvalu. Supporting green development among vulnerable countries will also make it cheaper for developed countries to reduce their dependency on a costly, insecure, and unsafe carbon economy. This Forum can help to forge that partnership with the Climate Vulnerability Forum at its core.

Source: Climate Vulnerability Forum 

The Climate Vulnerability Forum (CVF) is the first global partnership of nations from Africa, Asia, the Americas, and the Pacific. They are united against a common threat as some of the countries most vulnerable to the effects of climate change. CVF countries have contributed least to a problem that threatens, in many cases, their very survival.

The CVF first convened in the Maldives in November 2009 and adopted a declaration that expressed alarm. It was about the pace of change to the Earth caused by climate change. The declaration sealed the commitment of participating nations to work in concert towards strong action tackling global warming and its negative effects.

Participating countries include: Antigua and Barbuda, Bangladesh (Incoming Chair), Barbados, Bhutan, Costa Rica, Ethiopia, Ghana, Grenada, Guyana, Kenya, Kiribati (Present Chair), Liberia, Maldives (First Chair), Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Nepal, Philippines, Rwanda, Saint Lucia, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Tanzania, Timor-Leste, Tuvalu, Vanuatu, and Vietnam. For more information on the CVF visit: www.mofa.gov.bd