Meetings and conferences
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

Addressing loss and damage: actions to respond, recover and reduce the risk

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Format
Online
Date

Time

2-3:30 pm (BST)

About

Loss and damage is happening now and will only escalate with every increment of global warming. Despite the scale of this gathering crisis, limited action is being taken to address the risks of loss and damage the most vulnerable countries and communities face, who are already being hit by climate shocks with increasing frequency and intensity.

In this IIED Debates event, we will explore what type of action affected and at-risk countries and communities can take to address loss and damage and how they can mobilise finance to support those actions.

The latest report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) shows that we already live in the era of losses and damages. In 2021 alone, extreme weather events around the world shattered records, displaced millions, and killed thousands. If action is not taken urgently, effectively and at scale to address the losses and damages caused by these shocks, billions of people will become exposed to catastrophic risks.

To date, attention to the issue of Loss and Damage has focused on political questions of compensation, reparations and responsibility, and have been largely confined to COP negotiations. As losses and damages mount across the Global South, we ask how national and local actors and communities can take action now to address the loss and damage impacts and risks that are affecting them.

This online IIED Debates event will launch a new report that explores the loss and damage risks that communities face. Working with partners and allies from at-risk countries across the Global South, we have identified seven key features of loss and damage risk and ten attributes of good practice that should be considered and used to guide the design and delivery of actions to address loss and damage.

Speakers from IIED, the IPCC, the Climate Vulnerable Forum, the LDC Group of negotiators, the Scottish Government and affected communities will reflect on the current situation of loss and damage in the Global South. Our panel will share the lived experiences of communities facing loss and damage and explore the range of solutions that governments and civil society organsiations (CSOs) can adopt.

What measures do countries and communities already have that respond to, recover and reduce the risk of loss and damage now and in the future? How can we overcome the political challenges that impede loss and damage action at the international level? And how can we access and mobilise finance to reach the right solutions, in the right place at the right time to aid the people that need support the most?

About the speakers

Moderator

Simon Addison is a principal researcher in IIED's Climate Change group and team leader for public policy for climate resilient development.

Keynote speakers

Clare Shakya is director of IIED’s Climate Change group and works on improving access to climate finance as well as on its quality and quantity.

Jemima Gordon-Duff is the deputy director for International Climate change for the Scottish Government.

Report authors

Ritu Bharadwaj is a principal researcher in IIED’s Climate Change group with expertise in social protection, climate resilience, watershed and forest management, migration, gender and food security.

Nora Nisi is a researcher in IIED’s Climate Change group and focusses on climate change governance, climate risk management, loss and damage, and locally-led climate-resilient development.

Discussants

Saleemul Huq is the director of ICCCAD in Bangladesh, and is an expert on the links between climate change and sustainable development, particularly from the perspective of developing countries.

Emeline Siale Ilolahia is the executive director of the Pacific Islands Association of Non-Governmental Organisations (PIANGO).

Emily Boyd is a professor in sustainability studies for Lund University Centre for Sustainability Studies and a leading social scientist with a specialist focus on environment and climate change.

Hafij Khan is an advocate of the Supreme Court of Bangladesh, co-coordinator of the Loss and Damage Team for the LDCs Climate Group at the UNFCCC, and is a member of the Warsaw International Mechanism for loss and damage.

About IIED Debates

This event is part of the IIED Debates series. Through the convening of expert speakers and external stakeholders, IIED brings together an international community to discuss critical issues.

IIED Debates encompass both physical and digital events, including critical themes, breakfast debriefs and webinars. These events are public and are hosted regularly throughout the year online and when possible in our London and Edinburgh offices.

About attending

Webinars are online workshops that people can attend via the internet from their desk or portable internet device.

This webinar will use the Zoom video conferencing platform. For those who have not attended a Zoom webinar before, please read this guide to participation as an attendee.

The event will be recorded to be distributed publicly afterwards. By registering for this event, you agree to give your consent for this.

The information you provide will be held on our database to process your booking. We do not share data with any third parties. We may contact you in the future about other IIED events. Please let us know if you do not want to receive any further information from us.

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