UN: Embrace the Paris Agreement to Solve the Covid-19 Crisis

António Guterres
UN Secretary General António Guterres. By DFID – UK Department for International Development – https://www.flickr.com/photos/dfid/30720847110/, CC BY-SA 2.0, Link

Guest essay by Eric Worrall

Speech by the UN Secretary General, urging countries to embrace the Paris Agreement and United Nations sustainability agenda as part of their response to the Covid-19 crisis.

19 March 2020

Secretary-General’s opening remarks at virtual press encounter on COVID-19 Crisis

António Guterres 

We are facing a global health crisis unlike any in the 75-year history of the United Nations — one that is spreading human suffering, infecting the global economy and upending people’s lives. 

A global recession – perhaps of record dimensions – is a near certainty.  

The International Labour Organization (ILO) has just reported that workers around the world could lose as much as 3.4 trillion U.S. dollars in income by the end of this year. 

This is, above all, a human crisis that calls for solidarity.   

Our human family is stressed and the social fabric is being torn.  People are suffering, sick and scared.  

Current responses at the country level will not address the global scale and complexity of the crisis. 

This is a moment that demands coordinated, decisive, and innovative policy action from the world’s leading economies.   We must recognize that the poorest and most vulnerable — especially women — will be the hardest hit. 

I welcome the decision by G20 leaders to convene an emergency summit next week to respond to the epic challenges posed by the COVID-19 pandemic – and I look forward to taking part. 

My central message is clear:  We are in an unprecedented situation and the normal rules no longer apply.  We cannot resort to the usual tools in such unusual times. 

The creativity of the response must match the unique nature of the crisis – and the magnitude of the response must match its scale. 
Our world faces a common enemy.  We are at war with a virus. 

COVID-19 is killing people, as well as attacking the real economy at its core – trade, supply chains, businesses, jobs.  Entire countries and cities are in lockdown.  Borders are closing.  Companies are struggling to stay in business and families are simply struggling to stay afloat. 
 
But in managing this crisis, we also have a unique opportunity.  

Done right, we can steer the recovery toward a more sustainable and inclusive path.  But poorly coordinated policies risk locking in — or even worsening — already unsustainable inequalities, reversing hard-won development gains and poverty reduction. 

I call on world leaders to come together and offer an urgent and coordinated response to this global crisis. 

I see three critical areas for action: 

FIRST, TACKLING THE HEALTH EMERGENCY.

Many countries have exceeded the capacity to care for even mild cases in dedicated health facilities, with many unable to respond to the enormous needs of the elderly. 

Even in the wealthiest countries, we see health systems buckling under pressure. 

Health spending must be scaled up right away to meet urgent needs and the surge in demand — expanding testing, bolstering facilities, supporting health care workers, and ensuring adequate supplies – with full respect for human rights and without stigma. 

It has been proven that the virus can be contained.  It must be contained.  

If we let the virus spread like wildfire – especially in the most vulnerable regions of the world — it would kill millions of people.  

And we need to immediately move away from a situation where each country is undertaking its own health strategies to one that ensures, in full transparency, a coordinated global response, including helping countries that are less prepared to tackle the crisis. 

Governments must give the strongest support to the multilateral effort to fight the virus, led by the World Health Organization (WHO), whose appeals must be fully met. 

The health catastrophe makes clear that we are only as strong as the weakest health system.  

Global solidarity is not only a moral imperative, it is in everyone’s interests. 

SECOND, WE MUST FOCUS ON THE SOCIAL IMPACT AND THE ECONOMIC RESPONSE AND RECOVERY. 

Unlike the 2008 financial crisis, injecting capital in the financial sector alone is not the answer.  This is not a banking crisis – and indeed, banks must be part of the solution.  

And it is not an ordinary shock in supply and demand; it is a shock to society as a whole. 

The liquidity of the financial system must be guaranteed, and  banks must use their resilience to support their customers.     

But let’s not forget this is essentially a human crisis.  

Most fundamentally, we need to focus on people — low-wage workers, small and medium enterprises and the most vulnerable. 

And that means wage support, insurance, social protection, preventing bankruptcies and job loss. 

And that also means designing fiscal and monetary responses to ensure that the burden does not fall on those who can least afford it.  

The recovery must not come on the backs of the poorest – and we cannot create a legion of new poor. 

We need to get resources directly in the hands of people.  A number of countries are taking up social protection initiatives such as cash transfers and universal income.  

We need to take it to the next level to ensure support reaches those entirely dependent on the informal economy and countries less able to respond. 

Remittances are a lifeline in the developing world – especially now.  Countries have already committed to reduce remittance fees to 3 percent, much below the current average levels.  The crisis requires us to go further, getting as close to zero as possible. 

In addition, G20 leaders have taken steps to protect their own citizens and economies by waiving interest payments.  We must apply that same logic to the most vulnerable countries in our global village and alleviate their debt burden.  

Across the board, we need a commitment to ensure adequate financial facilities to support countries in difficulties.  The IMF, the World Bank and other International Financial Institutions play a key role. The private sector is essential to seeking and creating investment opportunities and protecting jobs. 

And we must refrain from the temptation of resorting to protectionism.  This is the time to dismantle trade barriers and re-establish supply chains. 

Looking at the broader picture, disruptions to society are having a profound impact. 

We must address the effects of this crisis on women.  The world’s women are disproportionally carrying the burden at home and in the wider economy. 

Children are also paying a heavy price.  More than 800 million children are out of school right now — many of whom rely on school to provide their only meal.  We must ensure that all children have access to food and equal access to learning – bridging the digital divide and reducing the costs of connectivity. 

As people’s lives are disrupted, isolated and upturned, we must prevent this pandemic from turning into a crisis of mental health.  Young people will be most at risk. 

The world needs to keep going with core support to programmes for the most vulnerable, including through UN-coordinated humanitarian and refugee response plans.  Humanitarian needs must not be sacrificed.  

THIRD, AND FINALLY, WE HAVE A RESPONSIBILITY TO “RECOVER BETTER”. 

The 2008 financial crisis demonstrated clearly that countries with robust social protection systems suffered the least and recovered most quickly from its impact. 

We must ensure that lessons are learned and that this crisis provides a watershed moment for health emergency preparedness and for investment in critical 21st century public services and the effective delivery of global public goods. 

We have a framework for action – the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the Paris Agreement on Climate Change.  We must keep our promises for people and planet. 

The United Nations – and our global network of country offices — will support all governments to ensure that the global economy and the people we serve emerge stronger from this crisis.   

That is the logic of the Decade of Action to deliver the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). 

More than ever before, we need solidarity, hope and the political will to see this crisis through together. 

Thank you.

Source: https://www.un.org/sg/en/content/sg/speeches/2020-03-19/remarks-virtual-press-encounter-covid-19-crisis

Mr. Secretary General, what people need right now is reliable and affordable energy to keep their refrigerators and freezers running during the crisis, so they don’t go hungry and leave their homes seeking food when the electricity fails and their frozen perishables spoil.

We could also use cheap and reliable energy to help restart industry when the Covid-19 crisis is resolved.

Expensive, unreliable and utterly useless renewables and sustainability initiatives which contribute nothing to short term prosperity are a waste of precious economic resources.

Imagine where we would be right now if all the billions of dollars wasted on climate and sustainability initiatives like the Paris Agreement, which has utterly failed to contain the rise in global CO2, had instead been spent on medical research.

Please stop playing games and wasting money on stuff which doesn’t matter. In the midst of a crisis, the priority is what helps us all right now to survive with our lives intact. The other stuff can wait.

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March 23, 2020 9:44 pm

“If the guy actually knows how fake his science it, then I’d have to call him smart.”

https://wattsupwiththat.com/2020/02/10/we-must-fight-climate-extremists-before-they-upend-society/#comment-2913622

Gary wrote: “Gee Alan, you mean the US left…”

Actually, I mean ALL the leftists in the western democracies – the global warming/climate change false crisis is a global scam that is embraced by the extreme left in all countries of the western world and it is intended to destroy our democracies and our freedoms.

From one country to another, the strategies and tactics are similar in both scope and timing – that is the conclusive evidence of the global scope of this climate scam – it is the greatest scientific/political fraud in the history of humanity.

Further, there is NO credible scientific evidence to support the CAGW scam – it has been disproved numerous times with highly credible evidence, and nobody could be this stupid for this long – there’s been decades of delusion. The proponents of the climate scam know they are lying to the public – and the gullible imbeciles of our society believe them.

ferdberple
Reply to  ALLAN MACRAE
March 23, 2020 10:06 pm

Which cities in the US said they were going to follow the Paris Agreement even if the US withdrew. Aren’t those same cities the hardest hit by C-19? That would seem to indicate that the Paris Agreement is promoting the coronavirus pandemic.

Marc
March 23, 2020 10:04 pm

He can’t even state the basic facts correctly. He states that women “will be the hardest hit”. Perhaps he should look at the data (I know- that would be something new for the UN). The majority of those infected and the majority of deaths are men.

Patrick MJD
March 23, 2020 10:41 pm

So, a one-world Gummint, socialism, solar panels and windmills and of course taxes on the air will stop viral outbreakes?

I hear ya! I don’t believe ya, but there are suckers who do!!

March 24, 2020 12:10 am

Didnt take long for the eco-fascists to spot an opportunity.

High Treason
March 24, 2020 12:42 am

The cat is out of the bag-the UN is a giant fraud. It is a please explain moment- just what has the Paris Agreement got to do with a virus?

Do note, any Government around the world that continues to bow down to these would be world dictators is either terminally incompetent or traitors.

Keitho
Editor
Reply to  High Treason
March 24, 2020 2:35 am

Hard to tell the difference tbh.

Rod Evans
March 24, 2020 1:38 am

The UN jumping on the bandwagon they have had a hand in constructing, was inevitable.
Viruses come and they go. Climate changes, and it changes back. The similarities between the two unseen threats to normal living variables and their outcome are natural events, but that variability is like catnip to the UN. Anything that can be presented as requiring collective effort, no matter how pointless, is what the UN craves.
It’s an organisation desperate to establish some legitimacy, but has failed on virtually every cause it championed or assumed control of.
It can’t be long now, before the UN demands all national governments consign a set %age of GDP be paid directly into the UN sustainability fund.
If you want to know what happens when that state of affairs is achieved. by an unaccountable bureaucracy look no further than the EU with its growing crises. The EU bureaucrats and their champion spokespersons, simply demand ever more authority and even greater control of peoples freedoms. To them, the answer is always give us more power.
If the UN genuinely championed the needs of the poor, rather than its own self interests, it would be headquartered in somewhere like Burkina Faso, putting its (actually ours) money, where its mouth is.

March 24, 2020 2:25 am

If one was a religious individual (which I’m not) one might imagine that Gods master plan to create a liveable planet nearly went belly up during the last ice age when atmospheric CO2 reached it’s lowest levels at ~180ppm.

Anticipating the threat he set in motion the apparatus for humankind to develop, endowing it with a unique sense of curiosity and the ability to learn, confident that the abundant store of CO2 accidentally sequestered over millennia would be discovered and released.

What he seems not to have anticipated is that mankind’s Losers and Chicken Little’s would rise to prominence and attempt to stymie his ambitions to once again green the planet.

However, at the 11th hour he sneaked Coronavirus past the gatekeepers believing it will divert attention from the Losers and Chicken Little’s by suppressing the money supply they so desperately covet.

Remember that £3tn+ Boris Johnson pledged to fight climate change?

Forget it buddy, it seems God may have delivered the worlds greedy and overly ambitious an uppercut, followed up with a roundhouse, starving these people of money. The global economic recovery from this global pandemic will be long and tedious.

Climate change mitigation will be consigned to the very small back burner for long enough that it falls down the memory hole of really, really stupid ideas.

But then I’m not a religious man, so it’s doubtless all nonsense.

One can but hope though. 🙂

Marc
Reply to  HotScot
March 24, 2020 3:46 am

Excellent post. As a religious person I would point out that in the Bible got promises to, from time to time, “confound the wisdom of man”. Whether you subscribe these happenings to God, or to the happenstance of nature, it does seem the “climate emergency” is being currently confined to the back of the bus- a place it hopefully occupies for some time a the world addressing truly pressing problems- as opposed to fraudulently designed problems created by hucksters and power grabbing politicians.

Flight Level
March 24, 2020 3:52 am

Mr. Guterres,

You want to manage the world ? Then why the hell don’t you start by your hometown airline which in time, and even more now with the recent due to covirus panic stranded abandoned passengers, has reached a reputation lower than the lowest of all low costs and keeps digging?

Josie
March 24, 2020 4:14 am

Atta creep. Getting emotional while usually I’m calm and not a social media type.

Vincent Causey
March 24, 2020 4:22 am

I think a lot of people are anxiously awaiting the start of summer in the hope (rightly or wrongly) that the hot weather will stymie the corona virus. Cooler weather is the last thing any sane person is wishing for right now.

Reply to  Vincent Causey
March 24, 2020 1:06 pm

While we are just coming out of colder weather (aka “winter”) in the North Hemisphere, the Southern Hemisphere is just coming out of warmer weather (aka “summer”). WHO statistics show COVID-19 propagating quite easily over the last month in both Southern Hemisphere countries, and also in those countries in the Tropics (adjusting to infections-per-capita per time-period-since-first-case).

In other words, don’t get your hopes up too much.

David Dirkse
March 24, 2020 7:11 am

Another demonstration the UN is governed by idiots.

Olen
March 24, 2020 7:18 am

Article: We must keep our promises for people and planet.

If people caught the CLAP they would call it an opportunity.

Curious George
March 24, 2020 7:22 am

We have two ways to handle the coronavirus crisis:
1. The idea by Mr. Guterrez: Sign the Paris agreement.
2. The idea by Nancy Pelosi: Allow ballot harvesting.

What great ideas our enlightened leaders provide!

Joel Snider
March 24, 2020 7:47 am

The lack of shame of these utter slime-bags staggers the imagination.

Steve Borodin
March 24, 2020 8:46 am

COVID19 is killing people. The Paris Agreement is killing people. Is that what he means by good coordination?

The UN is surplus to human requirements.

Joe Lynch
Reply to  Steve Borodin
March 25, 2020 2:50 pm

Humans are surplus to the UN’s requirements, more likely!

PaulH
March 24, 2020 8:47 am

Disgraceful, but not unexpected. It’s the UN after all.

Al Miller
March 24, 2020 9:03 am

IN a desperate attempt to keep their scam alive the UN says…

March 24, 2020 9:06 am

Come on Mr. António Guterres, just say it out loud: Now is the time to institute one world government control!

By your statements, you’ve made quite clear your belief that a one world government would bring about social justice for all, equal renewable energy for all, equal health care for all, equal opportunity for all, and equal economic status for all . . . the last, of course, translating to equal poverty for all .

Unfortunately for you, we’ve heard such claims before, Sir “über alles in der Welt” .

Curious George
Reply to  Gordon Dressler
March 24, 2020 9:30 am

He looks rather prosperous, doesn’t he?

Reply to  Curious George
March 24, 2020 12:49 pm

Prosperous AND pompous.

Tom Abbott
March 24, 2020 11:03 am

I’m looking for some news on seriously ill Wuhan virus victims suddenly getting well after being treated in New York City hospitals with the malaria drug, hydroxychloroquine.

If we start seeing this it will change the whole picture. We should be getting these kinds of reports in a matter of days, if the drug is working the way we hope it will.

We shouldn’t try to project the future until we find out definitively if these drugs are effective. They look like they are. We will know soon.

JimB
March 24, 2020 8:20 pm

Take all the $$$ being wasted on global warming and give them to the fight against the virus. There, found the funding for thr fight.

Russell Johnson
March 25, 2020 6:22 am

We have heard from the enemy! Without a doubt it’s the UN.

C Lynch
March 25, 2020 10:12 am

“Come into my parlour said the spider to the fly….

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