UN Chief: G20 Meeting | United Nations

  Рет қаралды 660

United Nations

United Nations

Күн бұрын

Opening remarks by the Secretary-General of the UN, António Guterres 2nd Foreign Ministers meeting of G20 Brasil 2024
"This is a historic first.
The G20, the United Nations system and the Bretton Woods institutions and other international financial institutions deal with some of the most important challenges of our time: inequality, financing for development, the climate crisis, the impact of new technologies.
In all these areas, progress is slipping out of reach as our world becomes more unsustainable, unequal and unpredictable.
Conflicts are raging, the climate crisis is accelerating, inequalities are growing, and new technologies have unprecedented potential for good - and bad.
Global institutions must work together - not on parallel or conflicting tracks.
They must cooperate and collaborate for the good of humanity and the Summit of the Future was an essential first step.
It has created opportunities and possibilities for reform across the board.
But without implementation, it will be meaningless.
The work starts today.
Excellencies,
The Pact for the Future is about action in the here and now.
And G20 countries can act in three specific areas.
First, finance.
We need ambitious reforms of the international financial architecture to make it fully representative of today’s global economy, so it can provide strong support to implement the Sustainable Development Goals.
I commend the leadership of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund for making important progress.
But the resources available are still dwarfed by the size of the needs.
Many developing countries are being hit by a double whammy of climate chaos and debt.
To support low- and middle-income developing countries effectively, multilateral development banks must be bigger, bolder and better.
We need a far more robust financial safety net to shield countries in a world of frequent shocks.
Voting rights and decision-making rules should reflect the changing global landscape.
And access to concessional finance should be based on needs and vulnerabilities, not just on income.
All parts of the global financial system must work together to reduce the cost of finance and the inequalities that blight our world.
This demands action on debt - starting with an effective mechanism to deal with debt relief and restructuring.
As a first step, I welcome the commitment by the International Monetary Fund to review the debt architecture - as set out in the Pact for the Future.
I look to all G20 countries to push for deep reforms so that global financial institutions reflect today’s world and respond to today’s challenges.
One of those challenges is global hunger. It is shameful that in our world of plenty, around one person in ten regularly goes without food for an entire day or more - known as severe food insecurity.
I welcome President Lula and Brazil’s focus on global hunger during the G20 presidency and call on all G20 countries - and all UN Member States - to strengthen efforts to end this affront to our common humanity.
Excellencies,
The second area for action is climate.
We are at a critical moment: a battle to prevent temperatures from rising above the agreed limit of 1.5 degrees.
Today’s decisions and actions will determine the course of our world for decades to come.
The climate crisis transcends borders and politics. Climate action cannot be a victim of geopolitical competition.
Under G20 leadership we will be able to have drastic reductions in fossil fuel production and consumption as an essential element for climate action.
By 2030, global production and consumption of all fossil fuels must decline by at least thirty per cent - and global renewables capacity must triple.
This requires OECD countries to phase out coal by 2030 and to fully decarbonize power generation systems by 2035.
And it means non-OECD countries must phase out coal by 2040.
I have been strongly advocating for no new coal or upstream oil and gas projects for all G20 nations.
New national climate plans due next year are an opportunity for countries to align energy strategies and development priorities with climate ambition, taking into account the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities.
They must also show how each country intends to transition away from fossil fuels, in line with the outcome at COP 28.
Excellencies,
There has never been a greater global challenge than the climate crisis.
There has never been more agreement on the solution: a just transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy.
And renewable technologies have never been better - or cheaper.
The obstacle to the renewables revolution is not economics, or a lack of solutions.
It is mindsets, and lack of vision.
Those that lead the renewables revolution are already reaping the rewards." [Excerpt].
Full remarks: www.un.org/sg/...

Пікірлер: 11
@meeranraees3183
@meeranraees3183 2 сағат бұрын
Open trail harsting mr guterres
@meeranraees3183
@meeranraees3183 2 сағат бұрын
Mr guterres finishing jobs of United nation what is including illegaly activate
@meeranraees3183
@meeranraees3183 Сағат бұрын
United nations property father's of mr guterres
@meeranraees3183
@meeranraees3183 2 сағат бұрын
United nations in the hunder general scientist globally peace and policy of general scientist globally peace
GIANT Gummy Worm Pt.6 #shorts
00:46
Mr DegrEE
Рет қаралды 78 МЛН
The Joker wanted to stand at the front, but unexpectedly was beaten up by Officer Rabbit
00:12
Do you choose Inside Out 2 or The Amazing World of Gumball? 🤔
00:19
escape in roblox in real life
00:13
Kan Andrey
Рет қаралды 81 МЛН
LIVE: Pentagon press briefing
Associated Press
Рет қаралды 993
China Is Deploying a Starlink-like Megaconstellation
11:24
Dongfang Hour
Рет қаралды 8 М.
GIANT Gummy Worm Pt.6 #shorts
00:46
Mr DegrEE
Рет қаралды 78 МЛН