Scientific Meeting Focuses on Impacts, Adaptation, Vulnerability to Climate Change

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, or IPCC, has begun a two-week meeting to consider a report that assesses the impact of the world’s changing climate and how humans might adapt.

Hundreds of scientists meeting virtually will lay out the latest evidence on how past and future changes to the Earth’s climate system are affecting the planet.

The report under review is the second of three installments that will comprise the IPCC’s Sixth Assessment Report, which will be released later this year.

In August, the scientific body approved the first contribution of Working Group I, which dealt with the physical science basis of climate change.

The second part, currently under review, highlights the role of social justice and diverse forms of knowledge, such as indigenous and local knowledge, might play to strengthen climate change action and reduce the risks.

The chair of the IPCC, Hoesung Lee, said the report focuses on solutions and productive areas for action.

“It will be more strongly integrated, the natural, social and economic sciences. And it will provide policymakers with sound data and knowledge to help them shape policies and make decisions. The need for the Working Group II report has never been greater because the stakes have never been higher,” he said.

The United Nations-backed IPCC was established in 1988 to provide political leaders with periodic scientific assessments regarding climate change. The panel previously issued five assessment reports that spotlighted climate change as an issue of growing global importance.

The Paris Agreement on climate change calls for limiting human-induced global warming to well below 2 degrees Celsius, preferably 1.5 degrees Celsius, above pre-industrial levels. The IPCC warns that mark will be exceeded this century, unless drastic action is taken.

Secretary-General of the World Meteorological Organization, Petteri Taalas, said weather-related disasters have been increasing dramatically over the past two decades.

He said vulnerable areas in tropical latitudes, especially in Africa, Southern Asia and the Pacific are suffering the worst impacts of climate-driven disasters.

He said he often uses a sports analogy to communicate the seriousness of climate change to humanity.

“We have at the moment Winter Olympics going on in China. We have high-performing athletes. And if you give them doping, then they perform even more expertly. So, that is what we have done with the atmosphere. We have been doping the atmosphere,” said Taalas.

The contribution by Working Group III, dealing with the mitigation of climate change, will be finalized in April. The concluding synthesis of IPCC’s Sixth Assessment Report will be made in September.

Source: Voice of America

Laos logs 216 new Covid-19 infections, three new fatalities

Some 216 new Covid-19 cases and three new deaths attributed to Covid-19 have been reported nationwide over the previous 24 hours, bringing the total to 139,244 including 597 deaths and 3,800 active cases.

Of the new infection, some 200 cases were classified as domestic infections and 16 as imported cases.

The local infections included 27 cases reported in Vientiane, 21 each in Xieng Khuang and Borikhamxay, 20 in Xekong and 16 each in Savannakhet and Attapeu, and 15 in Saravan.

The imported infections were documented in Vientiane with 14 cases and Borikhamxay and Savannakhet, one each.

Yesterday, some 123 Covid-19 patients were discharged from hospitals nationwide.

As of Feb 14, over 4.8 million people, representing 65.68% of population in the country, have been vaccinated with at least one dose of the Covid-19 vaccine, according to Deputy Director General of the National Center for Laboratory and Epidemiology, Ministry of Health, Dr Buaphanh Khamphaphongphan.

Meanwhile, over 4.2 million people, representing 57.71% of the population, have been administered with all recommended doses of the Covid-19 vaccine.

Source: Lao News Agency

WFP Lao PDR Country Brief, December 2021

In Numbers

558.2 mt of food distributed

US$ 880,000 six-month (Jan 2022 – June 2022) net funding requirements

81,222 people assisted In December 2021

Operational Updates

• In response to the needs of communities affected by recent floods and the socio-economic impacts of COVID19, WFP in partnership with the Ministry of Labour and Social Welfare and the Lao Red Cross distributed 524 mt of rice and 40 mt of fortified cooking oil to 20,406 beneficiaries (10,172 women) in Xayaboury and Savannakhet provinces.

• In partnership with the Ministry of Labour and Social Welfare, WFP conducted a warehouse management training in December 2021, supporting 30 Government staff (three women) from Salavane, Attapeu and Sekong Provinces with enhanced capacities in emergency logistics preparedness and response.

• As part of the Agriculture for Nutrition programme, nutrition awareness training sessions were conducted at village level in 12 districts reaching a total of 12,226 participants, most of them pregnant and lactating women and mothers with small children under 5 years old. In addition to the training sessions, WFP distributed 1,290 garden and livestock grants to households who completed the before mentioned farmer nutrition schools across the 12 target districts in the north. The grants of around USD 110 each aim to improve household food production and thus enhance the availability and diversity of nutritious food in the households.

• WFP joined the annual 16 Days against Gender-Based Violence campaign, through a joint initiative with 46 other development partners, consisting of civil society organizations, government partners, international development organizations, embassy representatives and UN partners. A WFP all-staff event, held online, gathered staff in all locations to learn about GenderBased Violence and disabled women’s lives in Lao PDR.

• WFP completed a pilot training for 180 smallholder women to enhance their agricultural productivity for growing nutritious crops locally, in support of the school meals programme. The women came from six communities in two districts of Oudomxay Province, where school meals programmes operate with the support of WFP and the Government of Lao PDR. Following the training, WFP distributed a livelihood grant of USD 170 to each participant, to help participating women practice enhanced agricultural knowledge and skills, and also to address the gender inequalities in these rural communities.

Source: World Food Programme