Private sector has a key role to play in battle against climate change, says US diplomat

US Presidential Envoy for Climate John Kerry speaks during the World Economic Forum annual meeting in Davos on January 17, 2023. (AFP)
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Updated 18 January 2023
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Private sector has a key role to play in battle against climate change, says US diplomat

  • Kerry said governments alone do not have the resources, so world must “create the incentives that bring the private sector to the table”

LONDON: The private sector is “absolutely key to our ability to be able to win” the battle against climate change, according to US climate envoy John Kerry.

Speaking during a session at the World Economic Forum on Wednesday titled “Keeping the pace on climate,” he said the world must find a way to “create the incentives that bring the private sector to the table.”

Governments alone do not have the money required to combat climate change, he added, and so the private sector needs to be involved in the global efforts to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels.

“I believe the private sector is ultimately going to get on side,” Kerry said. “I’ve met a bunch of young entrepreneurs who are doing amazing things in startups; they’re taking risks, their investors are taking risks, and they’re producing new batteries that may have a longer life that allows you to balance your entire grid. I’ve seen folks who are chasing green hydrogen.”

The number of global users of energy will increase from about 5 billion now to 9 or 10 billion in the next 30 years, he added, with demand for electricity to power services, heat and comfort rising as a result.

“And so this is a marketplace,” Kerry said. “And it has the ability to be able to move very, very rapidly, if we will create the right framework and unleash private-sector ingenuity and innovation and capacity to get this done.”

He expressed optimism about the amount of effort and investment going into new technologies to power renewable energy and limit global warming.

“I am hugely encouraged, I mean much more so than I bet at anytime in the last years, by what is happening right now, which opens up an even greater possibility of achieving this,” he said.

“Because so much human energy is going into the new technologies and the innovations that are occurring, they’re going to multiply and magnify on themselves.”

He said that emissions are still the biggest threat and the world must continue to act to reduce them.

“Our enemy is our emissions, and we have to go after the emissions and, therefore, cannot afford to build out a whole new infrastructure of one fossil fuel or another that is going to be with us for 20, 30, 40 years unless they are able to capture those emissions,” Kerry said.

“We don’t have that indication yet or even that full capacity.”


’Our children are next’ fear Kenyans as drought wipes out livestock

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’Our children are next’ fear Kenyans as drought wipes out livestock

MANDERA: In drought-hit northeastern Kenya, villagers have been forced to drag their dead livestock to distant fields for burning to keep the stench of death and scavenging hyenas away from their homes.
Mandera county along Kenya’s borders with Ethiopia and Somalia has seen no rain since May and is now on the point of a full-blown water emergency.
“I have lost all my cows and goats, and burned them here,” Bishar Maalim Mohammed, 60, a resident of Tawakal village, told AFP.
In his village, where most are pastoralists relying heavily on their animals, the only remaining bull can no longer stand. He has lain in the same spot for nearly a week, severely dehydrated with bones protruding through his skin, as his owner watches helplessly.
In the nearby town of Banissa, the man-made watering hole that once held 60,000 cubic meters of water is dry, leaving a barren expanse that children have turned into a playground.
Herds of goats, cattle and camels must now trek up to 30 kilometers (20 miles) to the nearest watering hole at Lulis village, jostling for the remaining water that officials are rationing.
“In two weeks this water will be finished... we are in a very bad state,” said local resident Aden Hussein, 40.
More than two million people across 23 counties in Kenya are facing worsening food insecurity after the October-December short rains failed, with rainfall two-thirds below average.
The National Drought Management Authority has placed about nine counties on alert, while Mandera County is at the “alarm” phase, one step short of an official emergency.
The Famine Early Warning Systems Network recently said 20 to 25 million people in Kenya, Somalia and Ethiopia need humanitarian food assistance, more than half because of drought.
“Our children are the next ones who are going to die,” said Maalim Mohammed in Tawakal.

- ‘No milk at all’ -

At Banissa’s main hospital, an influx of severely malnourished children — some arriving from neighboring Ethiopia — has overwhelmed the paediatric ward.
During a recent visit, AFP saw eight children suffering from severe malnutrition, including a 32-month-old girl weighing just 4.5 kilograms and another child who had been readmitted after returning to a household with no food.
“Children are not getting an adequate diet because of this drought...they depend on camel and goat milk but there is now no milk at all,” said hospital nutritionist Khalid Ahmed Wethow.
The hospital, which serves around 200,000 people, has only eight tins of therapeutic milk remaining in its paediatric unit, which were expected to run out this week.
The unit depends on donations from organizations such as the World Food Programme, but with Western countries slashing aid budgets over the past year, it has not received any supplies in six months.
The Kenyan government and aid groups such as the Red Cross have increased water-trucking efforts, food assistance and cash support, but say they cannot keep up with demand.

- ‘Tried to escape’ -

In desperation, Bishar Mohamed, no relation to the first villager, traveled more than 150 kilometers with his herd of 170 goats in search of pasture. Around 100 died along the way and the rest died after he returned home to Hawara village.
“We have tried to escape in search of better places and failed,” he told AFP, standing in a field where the carcasses of his goats were piled up. “I have been moving by foot... my head is severely in pain... we are thirsty.”
In nearby Jabi Bar village, enrolment at a nearby school has dropped by more than half, headteacher Ali Hajji Shabure told AFP.
“Only 99 children are in school, most of them have left with their parents,” Shabure said.
The next rains — if they come — are not due before April.
Bishara Maalim, a mother of 10 in Hawara, has only one hope for her children: “May God save them.”