Hasina wins UN Environ Prize

block
UNB, Dhaka :
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has been announced as one of the winners of the United Nations’ highest environmental accolade in recognition of Bangladesh’s far-reaching initiatives to address climate change.
With a population of more than 159 million, Bangladesh is one of the world’s most populated countries.
It is also one of the most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change.
Cyclones, floods and droughts have long been part of the country’s history, but they have intensified in recent years, according to a message received here on Monday. Serving as Prime Minister of Bangladesh-one of the world’s least-developed countries-Sheikh Hasina has proven that investing in climate change is conducive to achieving social and economic development.
The Champions of the Earth Award in the Policy Leadership category, which the Prime Minister will accept at a ceremony in New York 27 September 2015, recognizes Bangladesh’s first-off-the-block initiatives under Prime Minister Hasina’s government to prepare the ecologically fragile country for the challenges it faces from climate change.
UNEP Executive Director Achim Steiner said, “Through a number of forward-looking policy initiatives and investments, Bangladesh has placed confronting the challenge of climate change at the core of its development.
These initiatives, from climate change adaptation measures to ecosystem preservation legislation, mean that current and future generations of Bangladeshis are better prepared to address climate change risks and reverse the impacts of environmental degradation.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has demonstrated leadership and vision in both making climate change an issue of national priority and advocating for an ambitious global response.”
As an early adopter and advocate of climate change adaptation policy, she continues to be an example to follow as world leaders seek to take action on climate change as part of the Sustainable Development Goals and the Paris climate conference in December.”
The award cites the progressive Bangladesh Climate Change Strategy and Action Plan of 2009, which made Bangladesh the first developing country to frame such a coordinated action plan.
Bangladesh is also the first country to set up its own Climate Change Trust Fund supported by nearly $300 million of domestic resources from 2009-2012.
The government currently earmarks 6-7 per cent of its annual budget – some $ 1 billion – on climate change adaptation, with only 25 per cent of this coming from international donors.
A ‘Climate Change Fiscal Framework’ is also in the works to enable the government to track the demand and supply of climate change funds.
For the first time, climate change is no longer merely an additional demand, it is central to the country’s development prospects. In addition, under her leadership, the Bangladesh Constitution was amended in 2011 to include a constitutional directive to the State to protect the environment and natural resources for current and future generations.
Prioritised in the constitution along with wetlands and wildlife, the forestry policies initiative by Prime Minister Hasina has provided a natural barrier from some extreme weather events and the country’s forests cover has increased by almost 10 per cent.
Moving beyond physical and capital investment in climate change adaptation, the government is implementing a wide range of measures to help citizens prepare for an increasingly unpredictable future.
block