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Children are increasingly exposed to climate or environmental hazards like flooding, drought, heat waves, cyclones, and air pollution. As these extreme weather events increase in frequency and ferocity, they threaten children’s lives, jeopardise their access to healthy food for their development, and destroy infrastructure critical to their well-being, such as schools, health care facilities, and children’s playgrounds. For the most vulnerable children, climate impacts worsen their situation, placing additional risk to their rights and further reducing their access to basic services.
Zimbabwe too is impacted. Climate change is causing frequent occurrences and increasing severity of floods, tropical cyclones, droughts, and heatwaves. The Country is ranked high in the 2021 UNICEF Children’s Climate Risk Index.
While children are the least responsible for climate change, they suffer the biggest brunt of it. Still, children are largely missing from the climate dialogue.
UNICEF today launched a communication campaign to raise awareness on the impact of climate change on children, put children at the centre of the climate change debate, and make the climate budget child-focused. Today, only 2.4 % of Multilateral Climate Funds globally are set aside for children and young people. More funds need to be allocated directly to interventions that benefit children.
UNICEF’s website, www.unicef.org/zimbabwe, will be dedicated to the climate campaign, with studies, research, and stories. The campaign will centre around children by providing them with a platform to share their views and make calls for more child-centered climate funding. It will also run a petition campaign for everyone to join.
To deal with the challenges of climate change, energy and environment UNICEF calls for urgent action on four fronts:
In Zimbabwe, UNICEF works with Government and partners to ensure children are an essential part of climate change strategies and disaster response plans.
Distributed by APO Group on behalf of UNICEF Zimbabwe.
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