Egypt, ICESCO, UN organizations sign MoU on green transformation project

The Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities, ICESCO, UNESCO, the United Nations Development Program and Egypt’s Industrial Modernization Center on Friday signed a memorandum of understanding to support the country’s green transition project by converting heritage sites and museums to the use of solar energy as a sustainable alternative that does not affect the environment and contributes in achieving the sustainable development goals.

The signing ceremony was held on the sidelines of the global climate conference, COP27, in Sharm El-Sheikh, with a high-level presence of princes, ministers and officials representing the MoU’s parties and member states, ICESCO said in a statement.

Natural heritage sites affected by climate change increased from 35 to 62 in just three years, it added.

The MoU aims at providing sustainable protection for heritage sites from the negative effects of using unclean energy sources, the statement read.

It also aims to encourage member states to adopt green transition initiatives, it added.

Source: State Information Service Egypt

The Ministry of the Interior: One of the suspects in the Speicher crime recovered from Lebanon

Baghdad, The Ministry of Interior announced the recovery of one of the suspects in the Speicher crime from Lebanon.

The Ministry of Interior stated in a statement: “The Interpol police in Arab and International Police Directorate at the Ministry of Interior succeeded, after an exceptional effort and intelligence tracking, in recovering the so-called (Y.Y.S.), accused of Speicher crime and wanted in accordance with the provisions of Article 4 / terrorism, from the Lebanese Republic. “.

Source: National Iraqi News Agency

Displaced families face winter hardships, UN refugee agency warns

Millions of people displaced by conflict or persecution from Ukraine, Afghanistan and across the Middle East could face a perilous winter as freezing temperatures add to the misery already that they are already suffering from spiralling prices, the lingering impact of COVID-19 and extreme weather linked to the climate crisis, the UN refugee agency, UNHCR, said on Friday.

Agency spokesperson Olga Sarrado said on Friday that millions of the world’s most vulnerable people will be without essential basics.

“For many of the world’s forcibly displaced, this coming winter will be far more challenging than in recent years, with many displaced families having to choose between food and warmth as they struggle to heat their shelters, source warm clothing and cook hot meals”.

Back-to-back freezing winters

Across the Middle East, many displaced Syrians and Iraqis will have to contend with extreme cold and snowstorms once again.

For many, this will be the 12th consecutive winter in displacement.

UNHCR estimates that 3.4 million Syrian and Iraqi refugees and internally displaced people in Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq and Egypt will need critical assistance to prepare for and cope with the upcoming winter.

In Lebanon, where the severe economic crisis is pushing everyone to the brink, nine out of 10 Syrian refugees are already living in extreme poverty, forced to cut back on their food and medical care.

As they try to cover their basic needs, many are falling further into debt.

Plunging temps

Millions of Ukrainians uprooted from their homes by the war are facing winter in displacement or living in damaged homes or buildings ill-suited to protect them from the biting cold – with disrupted energy, heating and water supplies, and lost livelihoods.

In Afghanistan, where winter temperatures can easily plunge to -25°C, many displaced and conflict-affected families will be left exposed to the elements.

Moreover, winter arrives amid a steep economic decline and only months after an earthquake in south-eastern Paktika and Khost provinces that triggered devastating loss and damage to the homes of thousands.

While some regions of Afghanistan continue to report new displacement, there is an ongoing effort to contain a humanitarian catastrophe amidst flash flooding and drought.

Glooming funding outlook

Despite worsening humanitarian needs, the funding outlook for life-saving aid programmes and assistance remains bleak.

Shortfalls have already forced UNHCR to scale back essential programmes in several countries.

However, the UN agency has launched a global winter fundraising campaign in an effort to keep its operations running.

Source: UN News Center

Ukraine War’s Environmental Toll to Take Years to Clean Up

DEMYDIV, UKRAINE — Olga Lehan’s home near the Irpin River was flooded when Ukraine destroyed a dam to prevent Russian forces from storming Kyiv just days into the war. Weeks later, the water from her tap turned brown from pollution.

“It was not safe to drink,” she said of the tap water in her village of Demydiv, about 40 kilometers (24 miles) north of Kyiv on the tributary of the Dnipro River.

Visibly upset as she walked through her house, the 71-year-old pointed to where the high water in March had made her kitchen moldy, seeped into her well and ruined her garden.

Environmental damage from the eight-month-old war with Russia is mounting in more of the country, with experts warning of long-term consequences. Moscow’s attacks on fuel depots have released toxins into the air and groundwater, threatening biodiversity, climate stability and the health of the population.

6 million need clean water

Because of the war, more than 6 million Ukrainians have limited or no access to clean water, and more than 280,000 hectares (nearly 692,000 acres) of forests have been destroyed or felled, according to the World Wildlife Fund. It has caused more than $37 billion in environmental damage, according to the Audit Chamber, a nongovernmental group in the country.

“This pollution caused by the war will not go away. It will have to be solved by our descendants, to plant forests, or to clean the polluted rivers,” said Dmytro Averin, an environmental expert with the Zoi Environment Network, a nonprofit organization based in Switzerland.

While the hardest-hit areas are in the more industrial eastern regions of Donetsk and Luhansk, where fighting between government troops and pro-Russian separatists has been going on since 2014, he said, the damage has spread elsewhere.

“In addition to combat casualties, war is also hell on people’s health, physically and mentally,” said Rick Steiner, a U.S. environmental scientist who advised Lebanon’s government on environmental issues stemming from a monthlong war in 2006 between that country and Israel.

The health impact from contaminated water and exposure to toxins unleashed by conflict “may take years to manifest,” he said.

After the flood in Demydiv, residents said their tap water turned cloudy, tasted funny and left a film on pots and pans after cooking. The village was under Moscow’s control until April, when Russian troops withdrew after failing to take the capital.

Ukrainian authorities then began bringing in fresh water, but the shipments stopped in October when the tanker truck broke down, forcing residents to again drink the dirty water, they said.

“We don’t have another option. We don’t have money to buy bottles,” Iryna Stetcenko told The Associated Press. Her family has diarrhea and she’s concerned about the health of her two teenagers, she said.

In May, the government took samples of the water, but the results have not been released, said Vyacheslav Muga, the former acting head of the local government’s water service. The Food Safety and Consumer Protection agency in Kyiv has not yet responded to an AP request for the results.

Reports by other environmental groups, however, have shown the effects of the war.

In recent weeks, Russia has targeted key infrastructure like power plants and waterworks. But even in July, the U.N.’s environmental authority already was warning of significant damage to water infrastructure including pumping stations, purification plants and sewage facilities.

A soon-to-be-published paper by the Conflict and Environment Observatory, a British charity, and the Zoi Environment Network found evidence of pollution at a pond after a Russian missile hit a fuel depot in Kalynivka, about 30 kilometers (about 18 miles) southwest of Kyiv.

The pond, used for recreation as well as a fish farm, showed a high concentration of fuel oil and dead fish on the surface — apparently from oil that had seeped into the water. A copy of the report was seen by the AP.

Nitrogen dioxide, which is released by burning fossil fuels, increased in areas west and southwest of Kyiv, according to an April report from REACH, a humanitarian research initiative that tracks information in areas affected by crisis, disaster and displacement. Direct exposure can cause skin irritation and burns, while chronic exposure can cause respiratory illness and harm vegetation, the report said.

Crops, livestock, forests affected

Ukraine’s agriculture sector, a key part of its economy, also has been affected. Fires have damaged crops and livestock, burned thousands of hectares of forest and prevented farmers from completing the harvest, said Serhiy Zibtsev, forestry professor at Ukraine’s National University of Life and Environmental Sciences.

“The fires are so massive,” he said, adding that farmers “lost everything they were harvesting for winter.”

The government in Kyiv is helping when it can.

In Demydiv and surrounding villages, flood victims were given the equivalent of $540 each, said Liliia Kalashnikova, deputy head of the nearby town of Dymer. She said the government would do everything it could to prevent long-term environmental effects, but she didn’t specify how.

Governments have an obligation to minimize environmental risks for the population, especially during war, said Doug Weir, research and policy director for the Conflict and Environment Observatory, a U.K.-based monitoring organization.

Some Ukrainians have already lost hope.

“I feel depressed — there’s water all around and under my house,” said Demydiv resident Tatiana Samoilenko. “I don’t see much changing in the future.”

Source: Voice of America

Egyptian, Australian agriculture ministers discuss bilateral cooperation on sidelines of COP 27

Minister of Agriculture and Land Reclamation El Sayyed El Quseir discussed with his Australian counterpart Reece Whitby means of boosting bilateral cooperation in the agriculture field.

This came during his participation in the 27th Conference of the Parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC COP27).

During their meeting, the two sides discussed boosting intra-regional trade between the two countries, as well as benefiting from Australia in providing means of shipping strategic goods from Australia to Egypt at competitive prices.

They also discussed decisions related to importing live sheep from Australia.

The meeting also dealt with cooperation in the field of agricultural research and the transfer of modern technologies used in the field of agriculture and the production of improved seeds, which are drought tolerant, resistant to endemic pests and diseases, particularly those related to strategic goods, such as wheat, corn and soybeans.

The two ministers agreed to prepare a draft memorandum of understanding to boost bilateral cooperation in the fields of agriculture.

They also agreed on forming a joint agricultural committee that convenes once a year in each of the two countries, respectively.

Source: State Information Service Egypt

Planning min. stresses importance of moving to decarbonized economy

Minister of Planning and Economic Development Hala El said stressed the importance of moving to decarbonized economy to face up to climate changes, especially that the net-zero shift would help create millions of green job opportunities.

During her participation Friday in a session entitled “Technical education for changing climate”, held on the sidelines on the United Nations Climate Change Conference, COP27, the minister said supporting green job opportunities would in turn help improve energy efficiency, raw material availability, as well as reducing gas emissions, with a view to limiting any resource loss, curbing pollution, restoring the eco-system and enhancing climate change adaptions.

Decarbonization and shifting to zero-emissions would highly contribute to pressing ahead with further involving circular economy and generating future jobs, ElSaid said. She pointed out to the necessity of adapting current jobs to go with the new green model, saying that all drives would necessitate identifying required skills to build up toward an inclusive green economy.

ElSaid underscored the importance of rallying efforts of the public and the private sector in this regard, along with linking environment policies to efforts related to the education and training fields, to accelerate green job transition.

Meantime, she highlighted the importance of introducing green strategies into all academic curricula and the setting up of schools, along with technical technological universities to address green transformation needs.

Source: State Information Service Egypt

Shoukry asserts importance of strategic ties with US

Foreign Minister and president-designate of the 2022 UN Climate Change Conference (COP27) Sameh Shoukry asserted the importance of strategic ties and distinguished cooperation between Egypt and the US in various fields.

Shoukry’s remarks came during his meeting with US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi and her accompanying delegation, who are currently taking part in COP27, Foreign Ministry’s Spokesman Ahmed Hafez said on Friday.

Pelosi pointed to the US keenness to develop its deeply-rooted relations with Egypt within a framework of maintaining regional security and achieving stability and prosperity.

The US delegation was keen on getting posted on the Egyptian stance toward several issues, topped by the climate change issues.

In this regard, Shoukry asserted that the Egyptian presidency of COP27 pays attention to listening to all points of view of all parties on the conference’s agenda, affirming his keenness to achieve the balance between aspirations and hopes, the current international context and the challenges it poses to reach an enforceable solution.

The meeting touched on water issues and the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) as the top diplomat reviewed Egypt’s efforts to maintain its water resources.

He emphasized Egypt’s firm stance regarding the necessity of reaching a legally binding agreement on the filling and operation of GERD to achieve the common interests of all parties and preserve Egypt’s water security.

Source: State Information Service Egypt

Egypt participates on COP27’s ICAO session on Net Zero Emissions by 2050

The Ministry of Civil Aviation participated Friday in a session held by the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) on the sidelines of COP27 regarding the ambitious global goal for international aviation to reach zero carbon emissions by 2050.

The ambitious net zero goal must be matched by mechanisms for implementation and the provision of financial resources through global donors, technology transfer and training, Vice-Chairman of ICAO’s Committee on Aviation Environmental Protection (CAEP) Abdel Ghaffar El Sayyed told the session.

El Sayyed reviewed Egypt’s experience in activating the Supreme National Committee for Monitoring Carbon Emissions.

Amira El Sayed, Environmental Adviser at the Ministry of Civil Aviation, stressed the importance of developing mechanisms for using sustainable fuels as one of the major challenges that require advanced technology, high costs and international support.

Source: State Information Service Egypt