A new national climate vision for Arab youth

A new national climate vision for Arab youth

A new national climate vision for Arab youth
Activists rally in solidarity with developing nations during the COP29 summit in Baku, Azerbaijan, on Nov. 21, 2024. (AFP)
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For young people across the Arab world, the climate emergency is deeply alarming. In the cradle of civilization, the Tigris and Euphrates rivers are at their lowest levels in recorded history. Deserts are spreading; saltwater from rising sea levels is seeping into the Nile and Shatt Al-Arab, threatening farmers and food systems; city-dwellers toil under debilitating heatwaves, the intensity of which is magnified by their concrete surroundings. For those touched by conflict, the prospects are even more terrifying.

And these generations are bulging — over half of those living in the region are under the age of 25. This means a future with more demand on resources, more pressure on ecosystems and more demand for jobs that can withstand a changing climate. That young people are anxious about all of this is not only understandable; it is justified. Young people want — and deserve — a new vision for the future.

Fortunately, young people are determined to be a force for good. During COP27 in Egypt, the first youth envoy was appointed and given a seat at the table. At COP28, the UAE advanced these efforts by institutionalizing the Presidency Youth Climate Champion role, ensuring the voices of children and youth were amplified in high-level climate discussions.

As the COP29 Presidency Youth Climate Champion team, we helped ensure that negotiations in Azerbaijan on a new finance deal for developing countries addressed youth priorities. The Baku Finance Goal specifically addressed youth financial inclusion, committing donors to financing the well-being of future generations on the frontlines of the climate crisis.

This year is pivotal. Under the Paris Agreement, countries must submit their updated national climate plans — known as Nationally Determined Contributions — by September. These must plot, in detail, how all sectors of national economies will cut carbon emissions over the next decade. In addition, countries must lay out how they will adapt to the relentless consequences of a warming world. Together, these NDCs form the backbone of our global climate efforts.

First, these documents are our last best chance to keep the temperature goals of the Paris Agreement in reach and stave off the worst effects of climate change.

Second, by highlighting priority industries of the future, setting timelines and targets and demonstrating government commitment, they send powerful market signals which serve as green lights to green investment. This is an opportunity we cannot afford to miss.

And third, today’s young generation is not simply inheriting these plans; we will carry them out. We stand ready and determined to meet this responsibility.

In the next round of climate plans, young people want to see a new vision for our future.

Leyla Hasanova

As governments enter the final few months before submission, they must focus on three essential pillars: consultation, integration and education.

Consultation underpins all effective policymaking, and youth inclusion is no exception. We have proved we can help deliver better outcomes with the Baku Finance Goal at COP29. Now we believe governments must act on the concerns and priorities of their young people. Last year, our team led numerous consultations with youth groups across the world. This experience reaffirmed that meaningful engagement with youth fosters a stronger sense of ownership over the processes we are expected to deliver.

Next, climate plans must be fully integrated into national development strategies and policy frameworks. Across the Arab world, governments are rolling out ambitious national programs — Qatar’s National Vision 2030 and ’s Vision 2030 are just two examples which emphasize environmental stewardship. However, as countries prepare to submit their updated climate plans to the UN, we cannot let them sit on the sidelines — they must be embedded at the heart of national missions. Only then can we turn pledges into progress.

Of course, not all countries have sufficient resources or policy know-how. As COP29 host, Azerbaijan is working closely with the UN as COP29 host to ensure every country has the support necessary to produce the best version of their plans.

And finally, education and skills will be critical. Climate literacy is essential to help young people understand and navigate the challenges ahead. Equally, possessing skills in the industries of the future, from clean energy to regenerative agriculture, will help them seize tomorrow’s opportunities.

At COP29, we launched the Baku Initiative on Human Development for Climate Resilience, spotlighting the importance of integrating education, capacity building and skills into national climate strategies. If governments are truly committed to their pledges, they need to equip the next generation that will be doing the work.

Our generation may have our whole lives ahead of us, but we are in a race against time. In the next round of climate plans, young people want to see a new vision for our future. We want something positive. And we want plans that we can work towards.

Leyla Hasanova is a COP29 presidency youth climate champion
 

Disclaimer: Views expressed by writers in this section are their own and do not necessarily reflect Arab News' point of view

European World Cup qualifying: Spain reigns, Tuchel’s England emerges and Mbappé keeps France steady

European World Cup qualifying: Spain reigns, Tuchel’s England emerges and Mbappé keeps France steady
Updated 27 sec ago

European World Cup qualifying: Spain reigns, Tuchel’s England emerges and Mbappé keeps France steady

European World Cup qualifying: Spain reigns, Tuchel’s England emerges and Mbappé keeps France steady
  • Erling Haaland’s five-goal haul in Norway’s 11-1 beating of Moldova pushed Italy closer to the playoffs in a group where goal difference could be decisive
  • Germany also could risk ending up in the playoffs next March

GENEVA: Spain still looks the best team in Europe, England finally put on a show in World Cup qualifying, and France got back-to-back wins while almost dropping points despite Kylian Mbappé’s goals.
Every European team have now begun their qualifying group, and it was a good week for 40-year-old greats Cristiano Ronaldo, in Portugal’s fast start, and Luka Modrić, with Croatia leading its group.
Erling Haaland’s five-goal haul in Norway’s 11-1 beating of Moldova pushed Italy closer to the playoffs in a group where goal difference could be decisive.
Italy had perhaps the strangest week in their quest to avoid missing a third straight World Cup.
The four-time champion earned six points and scored 10 goals yet ended with new coach Gennaro Gattuso filmed aiming expletives at an Israel player on the field after a wild 5-4 win.
Germany also could risk ending up in the playoffs next March after stumbling to an opening 2-0 loss at Slovakia. It was a first-ever German loss on the road in World Cup qualifying.
Slovakia might yet regret winning only 1-0 at Luxembourg from a 90th-minute goal. Only the group winner advance directly in November and goal difference is the first tiebreaker.
Stylish Spain
Euro 2024 winner Spain were denied adding a 2025 Nations League title only by a penalty shootout loss against Portugal at a final where it twice led.
Already Spain look Europe’s best hope at the 2026 World Cup. If a 3-0 win at struggling Bulgaria was routine, the 6-0 thrashing of Euro 2024 quarterfinalist Turkiye in Istanbul was a standout result.
A hat trick from midfielder Mikel Merino meant Spain did not need goals from Lamine Yamal though the 18-year-old star had two assists.
Spain look balanced, young and still improving for Luis de la Fuente, the understated coach. Hosting Georgia and star winger Khvicha Kvaratskhelia on Oct. 11 in Elche should be a highlight of the next international break.
Tuchel’s England emerge
England demolished Serbia 5-0 in one of Europe’s more intimidating stadiums in Belgrade.
The style of victory should end talk that the Euro 2024 finalist are failing to fire under German coach Thomas Tuchel despite racking up wins and clean sheets. Tuchel called it “a statement victory against a difficult opponent in a difficult environment.”
The fine link-up play for the second goal between Noni Madueke, Elliot Anderson and Morgan Rogers, before Madueke scored, was extra impressive by players from three different clubs who combined have just 19 games for England.
France had a trickier first week and eked out wins against Ukraine (2-0) and Iceland (2-1), which were denied a late leveler in Paris by video review. Mbappé scored in each game and now is second on Les Bleus’ all-time list with 52 goals, trailing Olivier Giroud’s 57.
Swiss summit
A quarterfinal exit at Euro 2024 — in a penalty shootout against England — seemed to mask how good Switzerland were at the tournament. Dominant wins in the US in June against World Cup co-hosts Mexico and the US also went under the radar.
Switzerland were impressive starting a tight-looking qualifying group and used home advantage in Basel to full effect: Four first-half goals in a 4-0 win over Kosovo, then three before halftime to beat Slovenia 3-0.
Three of the seven goals were scored by Breel Embolo, fulfilling the promise he showed as a teenager. Captain Granit Xhaka is still running the show in midfield. Trips to Sweden and Slovenia follow in October.
San Marino’s hopes
The chance of the “world’s worst team,” 210th-ranked San Marino, getting into the European qualifying playoffs looks slim. San Marino are in contention because they are among 14 winners of a UEFA Nations League group last year.
The 16-nation playoffs in March involve the 12 runners-up in November of qualifying groups, plus four teams via their Nations League ranking. Those four will have finished no higher than third in qualifying groups.
San Marino are ranked No. 14 in Nations League standings so need at least 10 of the top 13 to win or place second in their World Cup qualifying group.
As it stands, Sweden — which took just one point this week from games against Slovenia and Kosovo — and Romania could need back-door entry to the playoffs. So too Northern Ireland, Wales or North Macedonia, plus Moldova. All would get in above San Marino.
World Cup draw in DC
There is a clear scenario for Italy being the team to avoid at the World Cup draw on Dec. 5 in Washington. Pay attention Brazil and Argentina, US and Canada.
For the second straight men’s World Cup, not all entries will be finalized before the tournament draw must be made.
Six placeholders will join 42 confirmed qualifiers to take account of playoff brackets decided in March. Four are in Europe and two in the intercontinental section.
All six placeholders come out of seeding pot 4 of lowest-ranked teams, even if a playoff contender is Italy (currently No. 11 in the FIFA rankings ) or Germany (No. 9).
For top-seeded teams, like the South American powers or the co-hosts, Italy would not be an ideal option.
Still, in the lopsided 48-team format — where third-placed teams in eight of the 12 groups must advance to the expanded first knockout round of 32 teams — everyone has a better chance than in the balanced 32-team group-stage format.


At 17, sprinter Gout Gout is drawing comparisons with Usain Bolt before the track worlds

At 17, sprinter Gout Gout is drawing comparisons with Usain Bolt before the track worlds
Updated 14 min 33 sec ago

At 17, sprinter Gout Gout is drawing comparisons with Usain Bolt before the track worlds

At 17, sprinter Gout Gout is drawing comparisons with Usain Bolt before the track worlds
  • The track and field world championships will be a short, sharp learning curve for the 17-year-old high school senior
  • Gout will contest the 200 meters in a big field that includes US star Lyles at Tokyo’s Olympic Stadium

BRISBANE: Gout Gout will try to catch up again with world champion Noah Lyles, deal with those inevitable comparisons with Usain Bolt, and then race back to school in Australia.
The track and field world championships will be a short, sharp learning curve for the 17-year-old high school senior who has taken track and field by storm Down Under.
Gout will contest the 200 meters in a big field that includes US star Lyles at Tokyo’s Olympic Stadium, where he’s hoping to lower the Australian record again. He made headlines in December when he ran 20.04 seconds to shatter the national mark that had stood since 1968, making him the fastest 16-year-old ever over the distance. He lowered that to 20.02 at the Ostrava Golden Spike meet in June.
Early hype
Gout will enter the worlds, which start Saturday, ranked 16th internationally in the 200 — he didn’t enter the 100 or the 4x100 relay — but his ranking belies the promise. He’s almost four years younger than the next-youngest runner in the World Athletics’ top 16. He was born a decade after Lyles, who has won the 200 at the last three worlds and who won the Olympic gold in the 100 at Paris last year.
“He may be 17, but I think it’s possible for him to reach the 200-meter final in Tokyo, which would be an extraordinary achievement at his age — even Usain Bolt couldn’t do that,’’ long-time sports commentator Bruce McAvaney said in his preview for Australia’s SBS TV. ”It’s going to be fascinating to watch his journey.”
He certainly has the attention of sports fans everywhere in Australia, where Gout is already being tipped to win gold at the 2032 Olympics in Brisbane.
Gout has posted two wind-assisted times under 20 seconds, clocking 19.84 and 19.98 in April, but neither was considered legal because the wind was above allowable threshholds.
Even without those two sub-20 times, he’s still in the top seven all-time for Under-20s in the half-lap sprint, a list that includes Bolt.
“My top-end speed is my secret, so I’ve just got to focus on the first 100, first 50, and once I get out of that bend, I know I can run people down,” Gout said. “So stay relaxed, stay focused, and just power through.”
Familiar style
Australian TV audiences have seen plenty of vision of Gout running — and some have compared the upright technique, high knee lift and dramatic acceleration with the style made famous by Bolt, the greatest sprinter of all time.
“In the moment, it feels great because everyone wants to be compared to Usain, but at times it does get a bit overwhelming,” Gout said on his Australian Athletics profile. “Now that I’ve grown up and I’m a bit mature, my circle really helps me stay level and I’m just basically trying to make a name for myself. Although I do run like Usain Bolt, I do maybe look like him in a couple of ways. I’m just trying to be myself.”
Starting out
His father Bona and mother Monica moved from South Sudan via Egypt to Australia and arrived in 2006. Gout Gout was born in December 2007 in Ipswich, a one-hour bus ride from 2032 Olympics host city Brisbane.
He caught the attention of coaches at an Ipswich Grammar School athletics carnival in 2020 and soon after, with his first pair of spikes, competed at a prestigious meet for mostly private schools at the age of 12. The following year, he joined long-time coach Di Sheppard’s training squad and things really took off.
“She basically told me I could be great,” Gout reflected, “and that was the first time anyone ever told me something like that.”
Sheppard has declared to Australian media that Gout can win a gold medal in 2032, and the young sprinter is happy to run with that.
He won a silver medal at the 2024 world junior championships in Lima, Peru and signed with Adidas last October. He was back to racing at high school meets in November and December, caught up with Lyles in the US, and then returned to Australia to pull crowds for the open track season.
In the name
In a television interview last December, Gout’s father said the young athlete’s name had long been misspelled and should be Guot — pronounced Guot, not like the painful inflammatory joint ailment gout.
But James Templeton, the young sprinter’s manager and agent who has worked previously with the likes of David Rudisha and Bernard Lagat, later told Australian radio station SEN that for now, “Categorically, it’s Gout Gout ... it’s how it’s going to be.”
Templeton said he has been basically giving a “blanket no” to every media request for Gout for 18 months because of his young age.
“It’s all going to be ahead of him,” Templeton said. “We want his life to be as normal as possible for as long as possible.”


’s Crown Prince addresses Shoura Council

’s Crown Prince addresses Shoura Council
Updated 29 min 17 sec ago

’s Crown Prince addresses Shoura Council

’s Crown Prince addresses Shoura Council

RIYADH: ’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman addressed the Shoura Council on Wednesday.

 


Two-time Grand Slam champion Lleyton Hewitt suspended for 2 weeks for pushing anti-doping official

Two-time Grand Slam champion Lleyton Hewitt suspended for 2 weeks for pushing anti-doping official
Updated 24 min 47 sec ago

Two-time Grand Slam champion Lleyton Hewitt suspended for 2 weeks for pushing anti-doping official

Two-time Grand Slam champion Lleyton Hewitt suspended for 2 weeks for pushing anti-doping official
  • Hewitt denied the charge, pleading self-defense
  • The ITIA referred the case to an independent tribunal which upheld the charge of offensive conduct

LONDON: Two-time Grand Slam champion Lleyton Hewitt has been suspended for two weeks for pushing an anti-doping official.
The International Tennis Integrity Agency said Wednesday that the sanction will be in effect from Sept. 25 until Oct. 7, so as not to be “unduly punitive” on Hewitt by impacting his Davis Cup schedule.
The incident occurred last November after Hewitt, Australia’s captain, pushed a 60-year-old volunteer anti-doping chaperone after his team’s semifinal loss to Italy.
Hewitt denied the charge, pleading self-defense.
The ITIA referred the case to an independent tribunal which upheld the charge of offensive conduct, stating that Hewitt’s actions “did not meet the requirements of self-defense” and that his behavior was “not reasonable and proportionate.”
The 44-year-old Hewitt, a former No. 1-ranked men’s tennis player, has also been fined around $20,000.


Harris says leaving reelection decision to Biden was ‘recklessness,’ but she defends his abilities

Harris says leaving reelection decision to Biden was ‘recklessness,’ but she defends his abilities
Updated 35 min 55 sec ago

Harris says leaving reelection decision to Biden was ‘recklessness,’ but she defends his abilities

Harris says leaving reelection decision to Biden was ‘recklessness,’ but she defends his abilities
  • “Was it grace, or was it recklessness? In retrospect, I think it was recklessness,” Harris said
  • The remarks are the first time Harris has been publicly critical of Biden’s decision to run again

WASHINGTON: Former Vice President Kamala Harris says it was “recklessness” for Democrats to leave it to President Joe Biden to decide whether to continue seeking another term last year, but she defends his ability to do the job, according an excerpt of her new book.
Harris, in an excerpt of “107 Days” published Wednesday in The Atlantic, writes that as questions swirled about whether the then-81-year-old Biden should seek re-election, she and others left the decision to him and first lady Jill Biden.
“Was it grace, or was it recklessness? In retrospect, I think it was recklessness,” Harris said.
The remarks are the first time Harris has been publicly critical of Biden’s decision to run again — an ill-fated decision that saw him drop out in July 2024 after a disastrous debate performance, leaving her to head up the Democratic ticket and ultimately lose to Republican Donald Trump.
“The stakes were simply too high,” Harris writes in the book. “This wasn’t a choice that should have been left to an individual’s ego, an individual’s ambition. It should have been more than a personal decision.”
Biden’s office did not immediately have a comment Wednesday.
Throughout the campaign and in its wake, Harris had avoided much criticism of the president she served beside and defended him amid questions about his mental acuity.
In the book excerpt, Harris continues to defend Biden’s ability to do the job but describes him in 2024 and especially at the time of his “debate debacle” as “tired.”
“On his worst day, he was more deeply knowledgeable, more capable of exercising judgment, and far more compassionate than Donald Trump on his best. But at 81, Joe got tired. That’s when his age showed in physical and verbal stumbles,” Harris writes. “I don’t think it’s any surprise that the debate debacle happened right after two back-to-back trips to Europe and a flight to the West Coast for a Hollywood fundraiser. I don’t believe it was incapacity.”
She adds that if she believed Biden were incapacitated, she would have said so out of loyalty to the country.
Harris also blames those close to Biden for unflattering media coverage throughout the time she served as vice president and throwing her under the bus to boost Biden’s public standing.
She writes about receiving a high level of scrutiny as the first female vice president but says “when the stories were unfair or inaccurate, the president’s inner circle seemed fine with it. Indeed, it seemed as if they decided I should be knocked down a little bit more.”
Harris writes that she often learned that Biden’s staff was “adding fuel to negative narratives” that surrounded her, such as stories about her vice presidential office being in disarray and having high turnover.
The former vice president also accuses Biden’s staff of being afraid of her upstaging him, describing a speech she gave in Selma, Alabama, in March of last year in which she called for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza and more humanitarian aid to be delivered to people there.
“It went viral, and the West Wing was displeased,” Harris says, “I was castigated for, apparently, delivering it too well.”
She suggests that diminishing her also diminished Biden, especially “given the concerns about his age.”
Harris’ success, she writes, would be a marker of Biden’s good judgment and a reassurance to the public that if something happened to the president, she could step in.
“My success was important for him,” she writes. “His team didn’t get it.”
Harris’ book, whose title is a nod to the length of her abbreviated presidential campaign, is set to be published by Simon & Schuster on Sept. 23.