Nigerian businesses race towards resilience and decarbonization
Across Nigeria, hundreds of climate entrepreneurs and businesses are creating innovations to support the country’s transition to a low carbon and resilient economy.
The UN Race to Zero Dialogues wrapped-up this week, a 9-day event series, which featured more than 300 speakers from 65 countries, examining how to drive the transformations needed to cut greenhouse gas emissions to net zero and build resilience to the unavoidable impacts of climate change.
Speakers at the closing event on Thursday included the Prime Ministers of Iceland, Bhutan and Bangladesh, as well as the President of Costa Rica, Carlos Alvarado Quesada, who said: “There is no way we are going to tackle a new economy and tackle the climate crisis without cooperation and multilateralism. I do believe there is hope, but we need to work fast and together.”
Race to Zero Dialogues drive sectoral transformation
UN Climate Change Executive Secretary, Patricia Espinosa said: “It is very clear by now that the deep transformations we need in the world cannot be delivered by governments alone. They require everyone on board.”
The Dialogues demonstrated how to drive these transformations across eight key sectors of the global economy, drawing on a key Climate Action Pathways report released at the beginning of the series of events.
Race to Zero Dialogues foster urgency
Prime Minister of Bangladesh, Sheikh Hasina, said: “The time to take action to save the planet is not tomorrow, but today. Only by unified global action we can overcome the impending crisis.”
This sense of urgency was further underscored by the State of Climate Action report published this Thursday by the World Resources Institute and ClimateWorks Foundation. The report reveals that maintaining historical rates of progress will be highly insufficient to achieve net zero by 2050.
The Dialogues concluded with the launch of the Sustainable Energy for All Energizing Finance report, which found that achieving universal access to sustainable energy by 2030 will determine whether the world reaches net zero carbon by 2050.
Energizing Finance was one of a series of findings that emerged during the two weeks of events, which provided greater understanding of what is needed, what is possible and what is already happening in the race to zero emissions.
Other speakers at the Dialogues included Cardinal Turkson, US Youth Poet Laureate Amanda Gorman, Matt Damon, and WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom. Throughout, youth representatives challenged leaders to set the agenda and hold to account executives from sectors including oil & gas and aviation, urging them to clarify how companies’ commitments are being translated into concrete action, strategy, investment decisions and daily operations.
Key findings and outcomes from the Race to Zero Dialogues
Health
Industry
Transport
Human Settlements
Energy
Water
Oceans
Nature Based Solutions & Land Use
Finance
Watch highlights from the Race to Zero Dialogues.
Across Nigeria, hundreds of climate entrepreneurs and businesses are creating innovations to support the country’s transition to a low carbon and resilient economy.
ACW 2022 will be held from 29 August to 2 September in Gabon. Africa Climate Week 2022 will engage and empower stakeholders to drive climate action across countries, communities and economies.
In less than a month, Latin America and the Caribbean Climate Week (LACCW 2022) will open in Santo Domingo, marking a return to in-person climate weeks in the region.
Giving importance to sustainability is essential to meet investor pressure, consumer demand, regulatory requirements, talent acquisition and ensure increased productivity, explains Talal Rafi, Deloitte Climate and Sustainability Consultant.