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When speaking about climate change, it is necessary to differentiate between two types of response in policymaking. On the one hand, climate change demands a reorganization of societies and international relations as well as shifts in energy, production, and consumption systems. These fundamental transformations are ushered through by transition policies.
On the other hand, even if societies managed to transition tomorrow, past greenhouse gas emissions have locked the world into climate-related disruptions. This calls for adaptation and mitigation policies to rebuild institutional and ecological systems and craft responses that are better suited to dealing with a series of shocks that will accelerate in pace, intensity, and number over multiple geographies.
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PETALING JAYA: Malaysia moved up a rank on the United Nations Human Development Index (HDI) 2020 to be 62 out of 189 countries in the index measuring human progress and well-being.
Additionally, Malaysia s HDI value is 0.810 this year, which is above the average 0.747 value recorded in the East Asia and the Pacific region.
The improvement in the ranking has been attributed to Malaysia’s increase in average life expectancy to 76.2 years (76 previously) and its increase in Gross National Income per capita to USD 27,534 or RM111,554 (which was USD 27,227 or RM110,310 previously).
However, Malaysia s HDI value would have been lower if certain climate and environmental factors were taken into account.
11th December 2020
Botswana has, through the Department of Meteorological Services (DMS), promised to maintain the target of 15 per cent reduction of emission of Green House Gases (GHG) into the atmosphere.
In 2015 countries outlined what climate actions they intended to take under the new international agreement, known as their Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs).
These determine whether the world achieves the long-term goals of the Paris Agreement: to hold the increase in global average temperature to well below two degrees Celsius, to pursue efforts to limit the increase to 1.5 degrees Celsius, and to achieve net zero emissions in the second half of this century. Botswana submitted her NDC in October 2015