Just three days after Typhoon Haiyan, the biggest storm to ever make landfall, devastated my homeland, I attended the opening of the UN climate change talks in Poland. With a deep sense of anxiety about the fate of my family and friends, I pleaded with delegates to recognise that vulnerable
Naverev Sano: Let's unite to fight hunger and climate change
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But the story does not end here. The prospect of a serious global food crisis looms on the horizon because of the worsening impacts of climate change. Yet, as my own country's experience and a new Oxfam report, "Hot and hungry - how to stop climate change derailing the fight against hunger", shows, our food systems are woefully unprepared for the challenge. However, while no country - rich or poor - can afford to be complacent, it is the world's poorest and most food insecure countries that are the least prepared and most at risk. They stand to suffer the most.
We are at a critical moment in history and the window of opportunity is narrow. Time is not on our side.
We need urgent support for adaptation, particularly in the poorest and most vulnerable countries, to stop millions more people from going hungry in the next two decades as a result of climate change impacts that are already locked in. This need not break the bank. Poor countries' adaptation needs are estimated to be around $100 billion a year - equivalent to just 5 per cent of the wealth of the world's richest 100 people.
We also need urgent and ambitious emissions reductions to avoid a runaway global food crisis that could have grave repercussions for our children's lives. Our gluttony for dirty energy stands in the way of a global solution to the problem of climate change and food. We must end this fossil-fuels gluttony.
People all over the world are already fighting climate change. Unfortunately, too few governments and big businesses are taking the threat seriously enough. We must act together to pressure them, and make changes in our own lives, in order to stop climate change from worsening hunger in our world. We are at war with climate change and hunger. It is a war we cannot afford to lose, but a war I believe we can win together.
Naderev M. Sano is Climate Change Commissioner for the Philippines.