World

Russia blocks UN resolution on climate change as global security threat

Several diplomats lambast Moscow over veto of monumental agreement

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 14 Dec 2021 7:10AM

Russia blocks UN resolution on climate change as global security threat
The United Nations resolution linking climate change to global security won the support of 12 of the Security Council's 15 members. – Pixabay pic, December 14, 2021

UNITED NATIONS – Russia yesterday vetoed a United Nations Security Council resolution formally linking climate change and global security that was supported by a majority of UN member states.

Backed by Niger and Ireland, the draft resolution calls on UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to “integrate climate-related security risk as a central component into comprehensive conflict-prevention strategies”.

The text won support from 12 of the council’s 15 members.

China abstained, while India voted against, arguing that global warming is chiefly an issue related to economic development rather than international security.

The resolution had called on the UN chief to report within two years “on the security implications” of climate change on issues addressed by the Security Council, and sought recommendations on how these risks can be addressed.

For diplomats speaking on condition of anonymity, Russia’s opposition was hard to understand given that the resolution itself “is not radical”, according to one of them.

The United States ambassador to the UN, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, said there is “no justification” for Moscow’s veto.

“The climate crisis is a security crisis,” she said.

Ireland’s UN envoy, Geraldine Byrne Nelson, said yesterday before the vote that the resolution is only a “modest first step”.

“We need to better understand this link” between security and climate change, she said. “We need to look at it globally.”

Her counterpart from Niger, Abdou Abarry, called opposition to the draft “short sighted”.

Following the vote, Nelson and Abarry denounced vetoes – which permanent council members the US, Britain, France, Russia and China have been able to wield since the UN was founded after World War II – as “an anachronism”.

“This council will never live up to its mandate for international peace and security if it does not adapt. It must reflect the moment we are now living in; the threats to international peace and security that we now face,” they said.

It is the latest in a series of Russian vetoes at the Security Council, on issues ranging from Ethiopia and Libya, to Sudan and the Central African Republic.

China has often aligned with Russia at the council, where the US under President Joe Biden has done little to act as a counterweight.

Russia’s ambassador to the UN, Vassily Nebenzia, said a resolution would “create confusion and duplication” with other UN forums tackling climate change.

“For us, the direct link between terrorism and climate change is far from obvious,” he said. – AFP, December 14, 2021

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