Contribute more to tackle climate change: PM to developed nations

Photo: UNB
Photo: UNB

Prime minister Sheikh Hasina on Wednesday urged the developed nations and the development partners to come forward to help the countries vulnerable to climate change in a more effective way, other than making pledges only.

"We formulate various programmes regarding the climate change issue, we receive numbers of pledges, but no-one fulfills those pledges," she said, reports UNB.

The PM said this while inaugurating the two-day Bangladesh Development Forum 2020 at Bangabandhu International Conference Centre (BICC).

Economic Relations Division (ERD), Ministry of Finance is organising the BDF which is a high-level multi-stakeholder participatory forum, periodically hosted by the ERD, providing a platform for effective dialogues among development partners, national and international NGOs, development think tanks, development practitioners, leaders from business and industry.

Sheikh Hasina said that as the developed countries and the development partners are not fulfilling their pledges properly, Bangladesh government has formed a Trust Fund in this regard to face the challenges of the climate change.

"We have formed the Fund with our own money. We receive very little money as assistance," she said.

Sheikh Hasina asked the developed countries and development partners to step forward further to help the climate change affected countries like Bangladesh.

"More assistance is needed. Not only Bangladesh, the small islands and other countries which will be affected due to climate change, will need this assistance," she said.
She also said that Bangladesh is not responsible at all for climate change, but the country is going to be affected.

"For this, those who are responsible most for climate change should contribute the highest," she said.

The prime minister said that the government has formulated the Delta Plan 2100 to save Bangladesh from the effect of climate change and started to implement it.

She also said that the development partners, who are rather giving too many conditions, should come forward to help in those areas where Bangladesh has started moving forward and advance the country properly.

Finance minister AHM Mustafa Kamal, senior vice president of JICA Dr Junichi Yamada, World Bank's vice president for the South Asia Region Hartwig Schafer, vice-president (Operations 1) of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) Shixin Chen, United Nations resident coordinator and UNDP resident representative in Bangladesh Mia Seppo and Economic Relations Division (ERD) secretary Monowar Ahmed also spoke at the programme.