Thursday, October 17, 2013
Malta's Leo Brincat – Climate change adaptation a central issue in development
Malta Today: The Minister for Sustainable Development and Climate Change, Leo Brincat, said that efforts must be made to integrate climate change adaptation into the development process. Brincat was speaking at a conference on climate change, '2015 and Beyond: What is the future of development and development education in Malta?' which was held this morning at Dar Ewropa in Valletta.
"We do not need to see a post-2015 scenario unfold before reaching the stark and clear conclusions that the link between climate change and development exists and has existed for many years," he said. "In order to counter the threats of climate change to development, we need to foster more proactive policies that address the need for climate change vulnerability, resilience, knowledge and learning," he said.
Brincat stressed that the vulnerable groups in society, such as the ones with low-incomes, were the people most affected by climate change. "We do not need to await fresh earthquakes or tsunamis to go in search of fresh evidence. It is a given that climate change is already affecting the world's poorest and most vulnerable people, who often lack the robust systems and capacity needed to cope with such concerns," he said.
Brincat believed that these people should be "central to the rapidly expanding climate change research and policy agenda"....
Saint Paul's Bay in Malta, shot by Azhitsky, Wikimedia Commons via Flickr, under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license
"We do not need to see a post-2015 scenario unfold before reaching the stark and clear conclusions that the link between climate change and development exists and has existed for many years," he said. "In order to counter the threats of climate change to development, we need to foster more proactive policies that address the need for climate change vulnerability, resilience, knowledge and learning," he said.
Brincat stressed that the vulnerable groups in society, such as the ones with low-incomes, were the people most affected by climate change. "We do not need to await fresh earthquakes or tsunamis to go in search of fresh evidence. It is a given that climate change is already affecting the world's poorest and most vulnerable people, who often lack the robust systems and capacity needed to cope with such concerns," he said.
Brincat believed that these people should be "central to the rapidly expanding climate change research and policy agenda"....
Saint Paul's Bay in Malta, shot by Azhitsky, Wikimedia Commons via Flickr, under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license
Labels:
climate change adaptation,
governance,
Malta
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