WEST AFRICA: Taking on climate change as a region
Source: IRIN
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COTONOU, 23 October
2008 (IRIN) - Climate experts and ministers in West Africa have committed to coordinating national efforts to fight climate change, at the conclusion of an
Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) meeting in Benin's economic capital, Cotonou, on 22 October. Benin's UN Development Programme representative, Edith Gasana, told participants "no
country will be able to handle the struggle alone." Experts on the UN-convened independent climate panel, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), wrote in their most recent report that
warming global temperatures can cut West African agricultural production by up to 50 percent by the year 2020, in a region that according to the 2008 Global Hunger Index already has the most severe
hunger in the world. Rice prices have quadrupled worldwide in the last two years, according to the UN Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO), hitting rice import-dependent countries at a time when
fuel prices have also climbed. At the end of the five-day ministerial meeting, ECOWAS members agreed to create a regional structure that will "allow West Africa to have one voice in international
climate change negotiations," said commission president, Mohamed Ibn Chambas. The officials did not set a timeline. At the December 2007 UN climate change conference in Bali, Indonesia, more than
180 countries set a two-year deadline by the next UN climate change conference in Copenhagen, Denmark to agree on international standards to fight climate change. Chambas added that
any West African climate change control strategy should have as its goals poverty reduction and improved food security through better water and energy management. Commmunicate- don't duplicateBenin's Minister of Environment, Juliette Koudénoukpo, told IRIN a coordination strategy, rather than institutions, is what has been missing in West Africa. "We decided not to create any more
institutions in the region for the pleasure of just creating more. There are already enough. What we need to do is reinforce the ones already in place." Justin Ahanhanzo, oceanographer with the UN
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), told IRIN it is important for countries in West Africa to have at their disposal proper technology to interpret climate change. Environment Minister Koudénoukpo added that consistent regional dialogue is needed on climate change. "ECOWAS has recognised the necessity to institutionalise dialogue to give us the chance to
meet regularly. This didn't exist before. We just each went on our own way." gc/pt/np © IRIN. All rights reserved. More humanitarian news and analysis: http://www.IRINnews.org










