City
Epaper

Tackle climate, growing inequality together at COP26: Oxfam India

By IANS | Updated: October 30, 2021 16:30 IST

New Delhi, Oct 30 A day ahead of the annual climate summit at Glasgow in the United Kingdom, ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Oct 30 A day ahead of the annual climate summit at Glasgow in the United Kingdom, Oxfam India has called upon the government of India to tackle the twin challenges of climate and growing inequality together at the COP26 summit.

"A failure to confront extreme carbon inequality at this historic juncture will only mean enabling prevalent injustices that will be catastrophic for India," Oxfam India said in a statement.

Oxfam International's 2020 briefing 'Confronting Carbon Inequality' had shown that over the past 20 to 30 years, our limited global carbon budget was squandered in the service of increasing the consumption of the already affluent, rather than lifting people out of poverty. The richest 1 per cent (around 75 million people) were responsible for twice the cumulative emissions of the poorest 50 per cent (3.1 billion people). The two groups that suffer this injustice worst are those least responsible for the climate crisis poorer and marginalised people and our future generations.

Starting Sunday, India and other world nations come together at Glasgow to deliberate on mechanisms to contain emissions to restrict global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees compared to pre-industrial era.

"Climate change is happening now. It is already causing extreme weather that is pushing millions of people deeper into hunger and poverty, even though they did the least to cause this crisis. India must demand that developed countries provide more for climate finance to adapt to the impacts of climate change and compensate for loss and damage and enable a just transition," said CEO of Oxfam India, Amitabh Behar.

Stating that "we are dangerously close to missing the 1.5 degrees Celsius goal of the Paris Agreement," Behar said, "The Government of India must demand that developed countries bring down their per capita material and carbon footprint to global average by 2030."

Demanding that there is also a need to prepare and plan for a 'Just Transition' to ensure that the millions of unorganised workers and local communities dependent on the current economy do not suffer due to the eventual and much needed closing of mines and power plants, Project Officer, Access to Energy at Oxfam India, Sandip Chowdhury said, "It is important to ensure social justice is done in this shift towards a renewable future crucial for a climate resilient society."

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: OxfamNew DelhiGlasgowOxfam IndiaThe new delhi municipal councilDelhi south-west
Open in App

Related Stories

National‘Harassing Crores for a Few’: Ex-CEC S.Y. Quraishi Criticises SIR Process at Lokmat National Conclave 2025

NationalLokmat National Conclave 2025: Manoj Jha Flags ‘Freebies Culture’, Says Elections Are No Longer Fair

CricketVirat Kohli Spotted at Delhi Airport Ahead of India's Tour of Australia, Video Goes Viral

InternationalUS Government Shutdown: US Embassy in India’s X Account to Pause Regular Updates Until Full Operations Resume

CricketIND-W vs AUS-W, 3rd ODI: Australia Women Win Toss, Opt to Bat Against India in Series Decider; Check Playing XIs

National Realted Stories

National1,400 km Delhi roads to be renovated for curbing pollution, safety: Parvesh Verma

NationalRajasthan Accident: Truck Overturns on Car at Silor Bridge in Bundi, Four Dead

NationalCM Vijayan orders probe as CCTV footage shows police assault on pregnant woman

NationalTerrorists, OGWs and supporters must be treated alike: J&K L-G

NationalGujarat CM takes stock of 2025-26 budget expenditure