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Friday, July 04, 2008 - 8.45 GMT
Climate action plan for SAARC

 

Member countries of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) have adopted a three-year action plan to combat climate change, pressing the developed countries to establish a special fund to save them from the drastic effects of the phenomena.

A joint declaration announced that the SAARC is most vulnerable to climate change. The SAARC is most vulnerable to climate change and thereby seriously affecting our agricultural production, crippling our vital infrastructures, diminishing our natural resources and limiting our development options for the future," said the declarion issued at the end of the three-day regional meeting in Dhaka.

The ministers said the region needed more technology to fight climate change, while developed countries needed to reduce their carbon emissions apart from raising a special fund as suggested after the Bali conference.

The six action plans prioritised in the meeting included capacity building for clean development mechanism (CDM) projects, exchange of information about disaster preparedness, exchange of meteorological data and mutual consultation in international negotiations.

Environmentalists have warned that SAARC members Bhutan, the Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh will be among the worst affected in the world by the climate change.

Prior to the day-long ministerial meeting, the SAARC expert group held a two-day conference to hammer out the draft declaration and the three-year SAARC action plan on climate change.







 


 
   
   
   
   

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Last modified: July 22, 2009.

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