Category: United Nations

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Special Event: New Green Jobs in the Forest Sector at Las2017

    Source: United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

    At Las2017, the Joint Session of the UNECE Committee on Forests and the Forest Industry (COFFI) and the FAO European Forestry Commission (EFC), which took place from 9 to 13 October 2017, Warsaw, Poland, the UNECE/FAO Team of Specialists (ToS) on Green Jobs in the Forest Sector – ILO/UNECE/FAO/ Joint Expert Network showed the results of their work.

    From the event description: New Green Jobs in the Forest Sector

    The transition to a greener economy offers important opportunities for new green jobs in the forest sector. Considering the worldwide megatrends in society, the natural environment and technology, European forests give a new boost for jobs, growth and investment in urbanized, but specially and most important also in rural areas.

    Download the presentation on Green Forest Jobs, given by Diarmuid McAree.

    Download the flyer of the event.

    Should you have any questions, please contact the Secretariat.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Criteria and Indicators for Sustainable Forest Management for Armenia

    Source: United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

    National Coaching Workshop in Yerevan, Armenia. Photograph: UNECE/FAO Forestry and Timber Section.

    UNECE/FAO, UNDA National Coaching Workshop

    Национальный семинар ЕЭК ООН/ФАО, СРООН

    Rationale

    The objectives of the coaching workshop on “Criteria and Indicators for Sustainable Forest Management for Armenia” were:

    • to identify the status of national and international forest reporting in Armenia;
    • to analyse the needs, benefits and potential of criteria and indicators (C&I) development for Armenia;
    • to discuss and select national C&I for a preliminary set;
    • to assess the process plan and the best approach for implementation.

    This was achieved through

    • A. REVIEW. Reviewing progress, challenges and lessons with regards to national and international forest reporting in Armenia with a specific focus on lessons from previous C&I related processes and outcomes.
    • B. WHY and WHAT. Ensuring clarity on what the principles purpose, processes and definitions, related to C&I for SFM are.
    • C. HOW. Drawing upon international and national best practice to strengthen skills on how to practically develop C&I.
    • D. DRAFT and PLAN. Drafting an initial set of C&I for SFM and develop a process plan of how to test and select them.

    Цели семинара

    • Определить статус национальной и международной отчетности лесов Армении;
    • Обсудить и отобрать национальные критериев и индикаторов (КиИ) для предварительного свода;
    • Анализ потребностей, преимуществ и потенциала развития КиИ для Армении;
    • Оценка плана процесса и наилучший подход к реализации.

    Цели были достигнуты следующим образом:

    • А. ОБЗОР. Обзор прогресса, вызовы и уроки, связанные с национальной и международной отчетностью по лесам Армении, с особым упором на уроки, извлеченные из прошлых процессов и результатов, связанных с КиИ.
    • Б. ПОЧЕМУ и ЧТО. Для обеспечения ясности принципов, целей, процессов и определений, связанных с КиИ для УУЛ.
    • В. КАК. Усиление навыков практической разработки КиИ опираясь на лучшую международную и национальную практику.
    • Г. НАБРОСОК и ПЛАН. Подготовка исходного набора КиИ для УУЛ и разработка плана процесса их тестирования и выбора.

    Meeting hours

    13 September 2017, Wednesday: 8.30 – 17.30 / 13 сентября 2017 г., Среда: 8.30 – 17.30

    14 September 2017, Thursday: 9.00 – 17.30/ 14 сентября 2017 г., Четверг: 9.00 – 17.30

    15 September 2017, Friday: 9.00 – 17.30 / 15 сентября 2017 г., Пятница: 9.00 – 17.30

    Meeting venue

    UN Conference Hall, 14 Petros Adamyan St., Yerevan 0010, Armenia

    Конференц Зал ООН, 14 Ул. Петроса Адамяна, перед бизнес центром Эребуни Плаза (Erebuni Plaza), Ереван, Армения

    Contact

    Should you have any question, please contact the Secretariat.

    За более подробной информацией обращайтесь в Секретариат.

    More information

    Visit the project’s website.

    Более подробная информация о проекте доступна здесь.

    Topic Language Document
    Programme
    Программа
    ENG-RUS PDF
    ECE/FAO Guidelines for the Development of a Criteria and Indicator Set for Sustainable Forest Management 
    Методические Рекомендации по Разработке критериев и показателей ведения лесного хозяйства
    ENG-RUS ENG
    RUS
    Workshop Report                                                                            
    Отчет семинара                                                                          
    ENG  

    ARM   

    PDF ENG
    PDF_ARM             
    Pictures
    Фотографии
      flickr
    News Release
    Выпуск новостей

    ENG/RUS
    ARM
    ENG

    FAO news 
    PDF

    ECE news release 

    Needs Assessment
    Оценка Потребностей
    ENG-RUS Word

    Information on Armenia / Информация об Армения

       
    FRA Country report ENG PDF
    National Forest Policy Armenia ENG-ARM ENG PDF 
    ARM PDF
    National Forest Program Armenia ENG-ARM ENG PDF 
    ARM PDF
    Topic Presentation
    Facilitator Presentation Day 1 PDF
    Facilitator Presentation Day 2 am PDF
    Facilitator Presentation Day 2 pm PDF
    Facilitator Presentation Day 3 PDF
    Project overview (T. Loeffler) PDF
    Basic C&I for SFM (M. Valgepea) PDF
    Forest sector in Armenia (R. Petrosyan) PDF
    Georgia’s experience in developing and utilization of C&I for SFM (G.Aleksidze) PDF
    NGO perspective (G. Amiryan) PDF
    National examples of SFM C&I processes and outcomes, lessons and recommendations. Estonia (M. Valgepea) PDF ENG

    PDF RUS

       

    The table below provides an overview of useful material and information about Criteria and Indicators for Sustainable Forest Management in English and Russian. This material can be used as a source of information and inspiration to develop national Criteria and Indicators for Sustainable Forest Management. The table is not exhaustive. If you are aware of relevant material that is not yet listed kindly inform the project manager.

    В таблице ниже представлены полезные материалы и информация о критериях и индикторах для устойчивого леспользования на английском и русском языках. Эти материалы могут быть использованы в качестве информации и вдохновения при разработке национальных критериев и индикаторов для устойчивого лесопользования. Таблица не является полной. Если Вы знаете какие-либо подходящие материалы, которые не представлены в данной таблице, пожалуйста, проинформируйте координатора проекта.

                                                                                          Topic/
    Тема
    Language/
    Язык
    Document/
    Документ
    General information
    Общая информация
    ECE/FAO Guidelines for the Development of a Criteria and Indicator Set for Sustainable Forest Management 
    Методические Рекомендации по Разработке критериев и показателей ведения лесного хозяйства
    ENG- RUS ENG pdf
    RUS pdf
    Sustainable Forest Management definition
    Определение устойчивого лесопользования
    ENG-RUS pdf
      Criteria and Indicator definitions
    Определение критериев и показателей
    ENG-RUS pdf
      Useful links
    Полезные ссылки
    ENG-RUS pdf
      Guidelines for Developing, Testing and Selecting Criteria and Indicators for Sustainable Forest Management
    Руководство по разработке, тестированию и выбору критериев и индикаторов для устойчивого лесопользования
    ENG-RUS pdf
    Examples for C&I
    Примеры КиИ
    Criteria and Indicators for SFM in Austria
    Критерии и индикаторы для УЛП в Австрии
    ENG pdf
      Criteria and Indicators for Low Forest Cover Countries
    Критерии и индикаторы для слаболесистых стран
    ENG pdf
    Forest Europe Process
    Процесс Леса Европы
    Pan-European Indicators for SFM
    Общеевропейские индикаторы для УЛП
    ENG pdf
      State of Europe’s Forests report
    Отчет о состоянии лесов Европы
    ENG pdf
      Pan-European Questionnaire
    Общеевропейский вопросник
    More information here
    Дополнительная информация здесь
    ENG-RUS ENG Excel

    RUS Excel

      Relevant Terms and Definitions for Pan-European Indicators
    Соответствующие термины и определения для Общеевропейских индикаторов

    ENG

    pdf

    Montreal Process
    Монреальский процесс
    Montreal Process Criteria and Indicators
    Критерии и индикаторы для Монреальского процесса
    RUS pdf
      Booklet
    Брошюра
    RUS pdf
      Factsheet
    Фактологический бюллетень
    ENG pdf
      Montreal process: criteria and indicators for conservation and SFM of the temperate and boreal zones 2008
    Монреальский процесс: критерии и индикаторы сохранения и УЛП умеренной и бореальной зон 2008
    RUS pdf
    Other publications
    Прочие публикации 
    Forests in the ECE region 2015
    Леса региона ЕЭК 2015
    ENG-RUS ENG pdf

    RUS pdf

      Global Forest Resource Assessment, Synthesis Document
    Глобальная оценка лесных ресурсов, обобщающий документ
    More information here
    Дополнительная информация здесь
    ENG-RUS ENG pdf

    RUS pdf

      Global Forest Resource Assessment, Summary tables for quantitative variables
    Глобальная оценка лесных ресурсов, Сводные таблицы для количественных переменных
    ENG-RUS ENG pdf

    RUS pdf

      Global Forest Resource Assessment, Terms and Definitions
    Глобальная оценка лесных ресурсов, Термины и определения
    ENG ENG pdf
      Global Forest Resource Assessment, Questionnaire
    Глобальная оценка лесных ресурсов, Вопросник
    ENG ENG pdf

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Marianske Lazne +70: Celebrating 70 years of UNECE/FAO cooperation on forests

    Source: United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

    The Czech Republic hosted the International Conference “Marianske Lazne +70” on 5 to 7 September 2017 to celebrate 70 years of fruitful ECE COFFI and FAO EFC cooperation on forests.

    In May 1947, an International Timber Conference was convened in Marianske Lazne, former Czechoslovakia, to address the situation of forests and timber in post-war Europe, addressing both the future demand for timber and the capacity of forests to supply the necessary wood. New intergovernmental bodies were created to improve cooperation and promote mobilisation of wood on a sustainable basis after the wartime levels of harvest: the UNECE Timber Committee, later renamed the Committee on Forests and the Forest Industry (COFFI), and the FAO European Forestry Commission (EFC). 

    For the last 70 years, these two intergovernmental bodies have been working in close partnership for forests and the forest sector. They were able to adapt to changing circumstances and needs, from a focus on urgent post war reconstruction, to becoming a leader of analysis of the forest sector’s long term outlook and an advocate of a “dynamic forest policy”, a forum for exchange of experience and information, to today’s emphasis on monitoring and advocating sustainable forest management and the forest sector’s contribution to the emerging green economy. Find out more about the history of ECE COFFI and FAO EFC cooperation on forests.

    The report of the meeting is available here and you can read the press release issued on the event here.

    To see the pictures of the event, please click here.

     The final programme can be downloaded here.

    Date     Programme – Overview
    5 Sept. Afternoon: Arrival of participants
    (bus transport from the Vaclav Havel Airport Prague to Marianske Lazne)
    Evening: Welcome Drink
    6 Sept. Morning session: Field trip
    Afternoon session: Roundtable Discussion on Forest Certification in the ECE Region
    Evening: Dinner
    7 Sept. Morning session: Tree planting ceremony; High-level panel on the past and future of the forest sector in the region
    Anniversary Lunch
    Afternoon: Departure of participants

    On Wednesday afternoon, 6 September, a Rountable Discussion on Forest Certification in the ECE Region took place.

    The objective was to provide a platform for forest owners, forest based industries, policymakers, forest certification organizations, NGOs and other stakeholders to discuss the latest trends and developments on forest certification in the ECE region, its future and its complementarity with current legislation, such as the EU Timber Regulation (EUTR) and the US Lacey Act. In particular, the discussion aimed at addressing current issues with certification, including (i) demands of certification schemes, (ii) advantages of certification and disadvantages of non-certification respectively, and (iii) challenges for and interests of various stakeholders; thus bringing together policy and market perspectives. This event offered an opportunity for open discussion, and enhanced the dialogue between different stakeholders.

    Download the full concept note of the Roundtable Discussion on Forest Certification in the ECE Region (as of 31 August).

    Download the introductory presentation on forest certification made by the moderator of the roundtable discussion, Mr Florian Steierer (ECE/FAO Forestry and Timber Section).

    In preparation of the roundtable discussion, a survey had been created to gather information on perceptions of sustainable forest management and on forest certification. The collected information may provide some preparatory insights to the roundtable discussion.

    The survey is still available. To take the survey (15 minutes), please use the following link.

    “Forest certification in the ECE region –are there any limits?”, presented by Florian Steierer.

    “70thanniversary of ECE COFFI and FAO EFC: Celebrating 70 years of regional cooperation on forests”, presented by Ekrem Yazici.

    Presentation given at Stora Enso.

    Historical Forestry Photo Exhibition: Countries shared pictures from the post-war period to nowadays, showing forest workers, forest related meetings, excursions, saw-mills, forest related industries in the UNECE region. This presentation has also been on display at Las2017, the Joint Session of the UNECE Committee on Forests and the Forest Industry (COFFI) and the FAO European Forestry Commission (EFC), which took place in Warsaw, Poland, from 9-13 October 2017.

    Please find the pictures of the event here.

    Should you have any questions or need more information please contact the Secretariat.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 45th session of the joint FAO/UNECE Working Party on Forest Statistics, Economics and Management

    Source: United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

    The forty-fifth session of the joint FAO/UNECE Working Party on Forest Statistics, Economics and Management was held from 22 – 24 May 2024 in Geneva, Switzerland.

    Venues:

    • 22 May 2024: H-207, Building H, Palais des Nations, Geneva
    • 23-24 May 2024: Room III, Building C, Palais des Nations, Geneva

    Contact: Secretariat

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Workshop on Ethics in Modern Statistical Organisations

    Source: United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

    About the meeting

    The workshop will address questions of business and data ethics in the current evolving landscape of Official Statistics. With adoption of new technologies and methodologies, old policy and guidelines of National Statistical Offices are no longer cover all aspects of business operations, so progress in data ethics is now more important than ever. Business ethics is also gaining importance, as NSOs must act as moral agents upholding ethical behavior. Addressing both these questions is essential to maintain public trust and credibility in an evolving and data driven environment.

    The target audience of the includes senior and middle-level managers responsible for business, institutional and data ethics in their NSOs. As well as communication experts who handle ethical issues within their NSOs.

    Detailed information and examples of topics to be covered in the meeting, registration, contributions and other organizational aspects can be found in Information Notice #1.

    Document Title Documents Presentations
    ENG ENG
    Information Notice 1 PDF  
    Information Notice 2 (logistic information) PDF  
    Timetable PDF  
    Report PDF  
    Opening    
    Do statistical ethics apply equally to all – NSOs and other official statistics producers, whether regional/international or other national statistical authorities? Andreas Georgiou (Amherst College)   PDF
    Session 1: Ethics in institutional contexts
    Introducing Session 1: Ethics in Institutional Contexts. Fabrizio Rotundi (Istat, Italy)   PDF
    Democracy dies in darkness without Official Data. Luca Di Gennaro Splendore (University of Malta) PDF PDF
    Structure of ethical issues in new data ecosystems. Marianne Johnson, Timo Koskimäki, Markus Sovala (Statistics Finland) PDF PDF
    Revision of the Swiss Official Statistics Charter: opportunities and risks. Peter Laube (Swiss Ethics Council for Official Statistics), Marcus Baumann (Federal Statistical Office, Switzerland) PDF PDF
    UK Statistic Authority’s Centre for Applied Data Ethics (CADE) – the first three years. Nicola Shearman (Office of National Statistics, UK) PDF PDF
    Investigating Ethical Practices in NSOs – Surveys Results. Katia Ambrosino (Istat) PDF PDF
    Ethics Boot Camp Introduction. Angela Leonetti (Istat, Italy)   PDF
    Session 2: Ethics in daily work life    
    Rules of Professional Ethics in the State Statistics Bodies of the Republic of Belarus. Volha Pazharytskaya (National Statistical Committee of the Republic of Belarus) PDF PDF
    Proposals to Promote Change from Compliance to Ethical Commitment in Istat. Angela Leonetti (Istat)   PDF
    Incorporating ethics in statistical organizations through GSBPM and GAMSO. InKyung Choi (UNECE)   PDF
    French official statistician and ethics: from law to practice. Mylène Chaleix, Olivier Lefebvre (Insee, France) PDF(en) / PDF (fr) PDF
    Ethics in staff and user satisfaction survey (Case of Albania). Vjollca Lasku (Instat, Albania)   PDF
    Session 3: Ethics for new data sources and technology    
    Reimagining how we deliver quality data and statistics: Stats NZ Journey. Emma MacDonald (New Zealand)   PDF
    The Role of Data Ethics to Maintain and Improve Public Trust: The Statistics Canada Experience. Martin Beaulieu (Statistics Canada)   PDF
    Towards a data ethics program for the Australian Bureau of Statistics: Considering privacy, ethics and trust for our innovative data uses. Joanne Hillermann (ABS, Australia)   PDF
    Statistics Netherlands ethics committee – purpose, composition and methods. Esther de Heij (Statistics Netherlands)   PDF
    Ethics of Technology. Milana Karaganis (Statistics Canada)   PDF
    The role of geo-information in ethics within modern statistical institutions. Mirela Deva (Instat, Albania)   PDF
    Session 4: Ethics and proactive communication    
    An ethical approach to the development of social acceptance and its application. John Byrne (Central Statistics Office, Ireland)   PDF
    An assessment of ethics and proactive communication practices in The Nigerian Statistical System. Kumafan Dzaan (Central Bank of Nigeria) PDF PDF
    Ethics and proactive communication: The Istat case. Giulia Peci and Michela Troia (Istat) PDF PDF
    Building trust culture in the office – examples of ethics-driven proactive internal communication at Statistics Poland. Anna Borowska and Olga Świerkot-Strużewska (Statistics Poland)   PDF
    Open discussion for the Reference Book on Ethics    
    Introduction to the Open Discussion for the Reference Book on Ethics. Fabrizio Rotundi (Istat, Italy)   PDF

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Ninth Joint OECD-UNECE Seminar on SEEA Implementation

    Source: United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

    Report PDF
    Programme  PDF
    Get to know the speakers PDF
    Concept note PDF
    Link to the Guidelines for Measuring Circular Economy  
    Session 1: Opening & Setting the Scene 
     
    Updates on related work from OECD PDF
    London Group on Environmental Accounting Update PDF
    SEEA-related activities in Asia and the Pacific, ESCAP PDF
    Relevant outcomes from UN Statistical Commission, and work of UNCEEA PDF
    Online inventory of thematic and extended accounts, UNECE PDF
    Session 2: Utilising SEEA for Measuring Circular Economy
     
    2a: Introduction, information needs, existing measurement frameworks and their links with SEEA
     
    The concept of a Circular Economy and the most important measurement points, University of Exeter PDF
    Circular Economy in EU policy, European Commission, DG Environment PDF
    CES Guidelines for Measuring Circular Economy, Finland PDF
    Circular material use rate indicator: how it is calculated, results and interpretation, Eurostat PDF
    2e: Waste Accounts for measuring circularity
    The difficulty of finding circularity in solid waste accounts, Luxembourg PDF
    Limitations of SEEA waste accounts: conceptual, data collection and experiences from policy use, Australia PDF
    Experimental study: Using waste accounts for measuring plastic flows in the EU economy, Eurostat PDF
    2c: New developments and utilising EGSS for measuring jobs, goods and services related to circular-economy
     
    Conceptual framework pillar “socio-economic opportunities of a circular economy”: main indicators, UNECE PDF
    Updating of related classifications-Classification of environmental purposes (CEP), Eurostat PDF
    Using EGSS data for measuring circular economy, France     PDF
    Comparison of EGSS and structural business statistics data on measuring circular economy, Finland PDF
    2d: Measuring flows of biomass and bio-based material in a circular economy
     
    The concept of a Circular Economy and some key agenda for biological materials, University of Exeter PDF
    The sustainable and circular bioeconomy in the EU, European Commission PDF
    Costa Rica: Use of environmental accounts for policy making on circular economy and bioeconomy PDF
    Measuring stocks in the urban mine to monitor circular economy with SEEA, The Netherlands PDF
    2b: Utilising SEEA for measuring physical flows of plastics
     
    Policy development and the development of a statistical guideline on measuring flows of plastic along the lifecycle, UNEP PDF
    Measuring plastic flows with Plastic-KEYs, UNITAR PDF
    What statistics tell us about international trade of plastics? UNCTAD PDF
    Statistics Canada’s Physical Flow Account for Plastic Material PDF
    The use of SEEA – material flow accounts for deriving circular economy indicators, North Macedonia PDF
    Session 3: Informing climate-change-adaptation and response policies with SEEA
     
    3a: Introduction, information needs, existing measurement frameworks and their links with SEEA
    Climate change adaptation policies and SEEA-related information demands, OECD PDF
    Disaster-related statistics and the linkages to SEEA, ESCAP PDF
    Role of NSOs in Achieving National Climate Objectives, UNECE PDF
    3b: Climate change expenditures 
     
    Update on the revision of the Classification of Functions of Government (COFOG), UNSD PDF
    An integrated Approach to the classification of public environmental expenditure, OECD PDF
    G20 Data Gaps Initiative, IMF PDF
    Climate mitigation investments, The Netherlands PDF
    Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation Expenditures in the Economy: Towards an Operational Definition, United States PDF
    Environmental expenditures account and its application in the Republic of Kazakhstan

    ENG

    RUS

    3c: Measuring ecosystem condition, degradation and loss of ecosystem services
     
    Ecosystem services accounts: from the operational platform (INCA) to their economic bridging (LISBETH), Joint Research Centre  PDF
    The role of the SEEA in the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF), UNSD PDF
    Ecosystem condition accounting in Statistics Lithuania PDF
    Working with blue carbon ecosystem accounts: value of coastal ecosystems in alleviating impacts of climate change, Australia PDF
    Implementation of Environmental Accounts in Ukraine – results and challenges. Estimation of damages caused by war PDF
    Session 4: Conclusions & Recommendations
     
    Draft conclusions and recommendations  PDF

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: CES Seminars on Data ethics and timeliness, frequency and granularity of official statistics

    Source: United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

    The informal part of the 71st CES plenary session was held on Wednesday, 28 June 2023 at the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development Conference Centre, Paris, France.

    All the documents are available on the main web page of the CES 71st plenary session. For documents, please click on items 8 and 9 at the bottom of the webpage.

     

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Workshop on Financial Accounts | UNECE

    Source: United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

    Agenda   PDF PDF
    Report   PDF PDF
    Session 1: Recapitulation from the previous workshop
    Session 1: Video recording   Part 1, Part 2 Part 1, Part 2
    Consistency and Balancing (IMF)   PDF PDF
       Practical exercise, including solutions   EXCEL EXCEL
    Financial account in Kazakhstan   PDF PDF
    Financial accounts in Kyrgyzstan    PDF PDF
    Session 2: Financial accounts and monetary data      
    Session 2: Video recording   Video Video
    Monetary aggregates and financial accounts (Eurostat)   PDF PDF
    Monetary aggregates and financial accounts. Responses to the exercise (Eurostat)   PDF PDF
    Session 3: Whom-to-whom matrices      
    Session 3: Video recording   Part 1, Part 2 Part 1, Part 2
    Who-to-whom matrices (ECB)   PDF PDF
    Compiling the who-to-whom matrix for Belgium   PDF PDF
    Session 4: Issues related to financial corporations      
    Session 4: Video recording   Part 1, Part 2 Part 1, Part 2
    Compiling financial corporations sub-sectors (ECB)   PDF PDF
    Automation of the preparation process of financial corporations statistics with Python (Türkiye)   PDF PDF
    Financial corporations and interest rates, sectors’ sensitivity to interest rates, FISIM (Eurostat)   PDF PDF
    Financial corporations and interest rates. Interest rates – practical exercise, including solutions   PDF PDF
    Sessions 5: Issues related to non-financial corporations and household sectors      
    Session 5: Video recording   Part 1, Part 2, Part 3 Part 1, Part 2, Part 3
    Analysing non-financial corporate and household sectors issues using institutional sector accounts (IMF)   PDF PDF
    Analysing non-financial corporate and household sectors issues using institutional sector accounts. (IMF) OFVB exercise   EXCEL EXCEL
    Analysing non-financial corporate and household sectors issues using institutional sector accounts. (IMF) OFVB solution   EXCEL EXCEL
    Financial Accounts of the Household Sector: Sources, Compilation and some Results (Netherlands)   PDF PDF
    Compilation and utilisation of the financial account of the household sector (Indonesia)    PDF PDF
    Session 6: Conclusions and future work      
    Conclusions and way forward   PDF PDF
    Session 6: Video recording   Video Video

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Twentieth session of the Joint Task force on Environmental Statistics and Indicators

    Source: United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

    16 October (9:30) – 17 October (17:30) 2023

    Palais des Nations, Geneva Switzerland

    Agenda and Information Note

    Agenda item 4 – Implementing the mandate and terms of reference

    Agenda item 5 – Ongoing developments with relevance for the work of the Joint Task Force

    Agenda item 6 – Review of the Guidelines for the Application of Environmental Indicators

    Agenda item 7 – Ongoing and planned capacity development activities

    Agenda item 8 – Data needs, statistics and indicators to manage environment-related human health issues

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: HLG-MOS Workshop on the Modernisation of Official Statistics 2023

    Source: United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

    About the meeting

    The High-Level Group for the Modernisation of Official Statistics (HLG-MOS) was established by the Bureau of the Conference of European Statisticians (CES) in 2010 to actively steer the modernisation of statistical organisations. The mission of the HLG-MOS is to work collaboratively to identify trends, threats and opportunities in modernising statistical organisations and provide a common platform for experts to develop solutions in a flexible and agile way. The purpose of the workshop was to ensure that the work of HLG-MOS is community driven and that activities and initiatives are aligned with the implementation of the HLG‑MOS vision, avoiding duplication and maximising efficiency. The workshop will also include sessions where the broad official statistics community could share ongoing initiatives related to modernisation and innovation, thus creating synergies among the organisations and opportunities for further collaboration, which will further enrich the work programme of HLG-MOS.

    The target audience of the workshop is experts, managers and leaders in statistical organisations who work on modernisation and innovation initiatives. This includes experts who have participated in the HLG-MOS activities this year as well as those with a broad knowledge of the recent developments in this area and understanding of international cooperation.

    Document Title

    Documents

    Information Notice 1 (concept note)

    PDF

    Information Notice 2 (logistic information)

    PDF

    Provisional Timetable

    PDF

    Report PDF

    Opening

    Where to go next: a maturing HLG-MOS Anil Arora (Statistics Canada, chair of HLG-MOS)

    Presentation

    HLG-MOS Projects Reporting

    Cloud for Official Statistics John Conway (CSO Ireland) and Claude Julien (UNECE Project Manager)

    Presentation

    Data Governance for Interoperability Framework (DAFI) Project Juan Munoz (INEGI, Mexico) and Carlo Vaccari (UNECE Project Manager)

    Presentation

    ModernStats Carpentries (phase 2 Meta Academy)  Eric Anvar (OECD), Andrew Tait (UNECE), Jonathan Wylie (Statistics Canada)

    Presentation

    Generative AI and Official Statistics

    HLG-MOS White Paper on LLM/GPT Cathal Curtin (Statistics New Zealand)

    Presentation

    Building a SAS to R translation assistant with ChatGPT Florian Givernaud (INSEE, France)

    Transforming the Search for Public Information in Mexico with Advanced Language Models Juan Munoz (INEGI, Mexico)

    Can AI better satisfy users of statistical information? A case study in Istat – Michela Troia, Sara Letardi and Mauro Bruno (Istat, Italy)

    Presentation

     

    Presentation

     

    Presentation

    The Promises of Generative AI and What It Means for the Modernisation of NSOs – Doug Smith (Microsoft)

    Presentation

    Innovation Radar

    Digital Twins for Official Statistics  Steve MacFeely (WHO) and Hossein Hassani (International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis)

    Presentation

    ESS Innovation  Jean-Marc Museux (Eurostat)

    Presentation

    Co-development of open source solutions: the .Stat Suite business case Eric Anvar (OECD)

    Presentation

    HLG-MOS Blue Skies Thinking Network Barteld Braaksma (Statistics Netherlands)

    Presentation

    HLG-MOS Modernisation Group Reporting and Plans

    HLG-MOS Expert Meetings InKyung Choi (UNECE)

    Presentation

    Applying Data Science and Modern Methods Gary Dunnet (Statistics New Zealand) 

    Activity Proposals 2024:

    Presentation 

    Capabilities and Communication Anna Borowska (Statistics Poland), Elaine O’Mahoney (CSO Ireland), Fabrizio Rotundi (Istat) and Jeremy Visschers (Statistics Netherlands) 

    Activity Proposals 2024:

    Presentation 

    Supporting Standards Flavio Rizzolo (Statistics Canada)

    Activity Proposals 2024:

    Presentation 

    Setting Modernisation Agenda for 2024

    Soapbox

     

    HLG-MOS Project Proposals for 2024:

     

    Small group discussion

    Instruction Notes

    Summary and conclusions – Anil Arora (Statistics Canada, chair of HLG-MOS), Jennifer Banim (CSO Ireland, co-chair of HLG-MOS Executive Board) and Stéphane Dufour (Statistics Canada, co-chair of HLG-MOS Executive Board)

     

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: UNECE workshop: “Forest Landscape Restoration in the Republic of Moldova – Feasibility study on the production of forest reproductive material”

    Source: United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

    The workshop will focus on “Forest Landscape Restoration in the Republic of Moldova – Feasibility study on the production of forest reproductive material” and discuss follow-up needs for the technical cooperation and capacity-building to support Moldova’s afforestation and reforestation programme.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Secretary-General’s remarks to the Ambassadorial-Level meeting of the Peacebuilding Commission [as delivered]

    Source: United Nations secretary general

    It is a pleasure to be here with you today.
    I wish to start by congratulating the Member States that have recently been elected to the Peacebuilding Commission.
    I also congratulate Brazil for leading the PBC during its 18th session and welcome Germany’s candidacy for the chair of the 19th session.
    Excellencies,
    Our world is in trouble. 
    We see spreading conflicts and widening geopolitical divisions.
    We face a deepening climate crisis and widening inequalities.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Italy and WFP partner with the Government of Iraq to strengthen community resilience and women empowerment for green opportunities in Iraq

    Source: World Food Programme

    BAGHDAD – The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) welcomed a generous contribution from the Italian Government through the Italian Agency for Development Cooperation (AICS) to strengthen community resilience and empower women through green opportunities, to address the challenges climate change poses to agriculture and food security in Iraq.

    WFP will work together with the Ministry of Agriculture and Ministry of Environment to empower local communities in food security and climate action decisions. WFP will also provide capacity building and technical expertise to local government authorities, helping them implement sustainable farming and livelihood solutions that can withstand climate challenges. 

    This project takes an innovative approach to support vulnerable women-led households, crisis-affected people, and smallholder farmers. It aims to help communities become more adaptable and resilient to climate change shocks by promoting inclusive coordination, active participation, and income-generating activities with a focus on empowering women, youth, and persons with disabilities. The project will be implemented in Ninewa, Salah al-Din, Thi-Qar, and Basra.

    Iraq’s agricultural sector is one of the main sources of income for vulnerable populations and the second-largest contributor to the country’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) after oil revenues. More frequent droughts and continued water scarcity are increasing challenges to farmers who face reduced crop yields and loss of arable land, leading to an overall decline of agriculture in Iraq. 

    “Iraq, ‘the land of two rivers,’ faces a serious problem with water scarcity, desertification, rising temperatures and other climate impacts that heavily affect its agriculture and, in turn, its food security. WFP is committed to working with the Government of Iraq to support local governments and communities in developing scalable and sustainable climate-smart solutions that not only address those issues, but enable the people to adapt and overcome them,” said WFP Representative and Country Director Mageed Yahia. “To build long-term resilience, it is essential to involve all members of the community—especially women, people with disabilities, and other marginalized groups—in decision-making processes that support food security and sustainable livelihoods.”

    WFP will partner with the Government of Iraq, academia and a number of Italian experts to provide technical solutions, equipment and expertise, fostering innovative ecosystems that draw from the extensive experience on providing technical capacity building to public institutions and national organizations.

    Collaboration with the private sector and academia will help drive innovative and sustainable solutions to empower women in agriculture. This includes improving food production, processing, storage, and distribution, as well as promoting responsible farming practices, diverse income opportunities, and reducing waste. The project also focuses on the connection between agriculture, energy, and the environment to create lasting change. 

    “Climate change poses significant risks to Iraq’s agricultural sector, threatening livelihoods and food security all over the Country, and especially for women-led households” highlighted H.E. Niccolò Fontana, Ambassador of Italy to Iraq. “Various regions across Iraq face the harsh realities of water scarcity, land degradation, and rising temperatures. This project directly addresses these challenges by promoting green skills and expanding the private sector workforce, enhancing agricultural value chains, supporting women’s entrepreneurship in climate-resilient sectors. Italy is proud to commit to fostering a green transition that will benefit not only the environment, but also the population, empowering their communities and nurturing sustainability.”

    WFP will continue working with the Government of Iraq to support communities affected by climate change by aligning its project implementation with the Government’s priorities, particularly focusing on the addressing unemployment, improving water management in irrigation to drive up production and empower women to seek and maintain sustainable livelihoods. 

    #                           #                         #

    The United Nations World Food Programme is the world’s largest humanitarian organization, saving lives in emergencies and using food assistance to build a pathway to peace, stability and prosperity for people recovering from conflict, disasters and the impact of climate change.

    Follow us on Twitter @WFP_Iraq @wfp_mena @wfpgovts

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: World Food Programme warns that efforts to ramp up food aid to famine-impacted Sudan being impeded

    Source: World Food Programme

    WFP/Abubakar Garelnabei WFP trucks refuelling before departing Port Sudan for Khartoum in December 2024

    As WFP teams work around the clock to reach key locations for first time, fighting and arbitrary obstructions by local authorities hinder consistent flow of vital aid.

    ROME/NAIROBI/PORT SUDAN – The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) is working tirelessly to expand food and nutrition assistance to millions more people across Sudan – aiming to triple the number of people it supports to 7 million. WFP’s top priority is to deliver life-saving assistance to locations facing famine or teetering on its brink.

    Today, intensified fighting and the arbitrary obstruction of humanitarian convoys are hindering the fast and consistent movement of desperately needed aid.

    Since launching a large-scale surge of food aid in late 2024, WFP has pushed into hard-to-reach areas, including Zamzam Camp in North Darfur, south Khartoum, and Gebaish in West Kordofan. In January, WFP even reached Wad Madani in Gezira State after the city became safe enough to get trucks of food and nutrition supplies through. Over 2.5 million people per month received much-needed food and nutrition assistance in the last quarter of 2024, including many for the first time, since the conflict began. 

    “We have made significant breakthroughs in getting aid deliveries to hard-to-reach areas in the last three months, but these cannot be one-off events,” said Alex Marianelli, acting Country Director for Sudan. “We urgently need to get a constant flow of aid to families in the hardest hit locations, which have also been the most difficult to reach.” 

    A convoy headed to areas already in famine, or at-risk of famine, in Darfur, took three times longer to reach its destination due to interferences. After crossing the Adre border in mid-December, local officials from the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) held-back some 40 humanitarian trucks for nearly three weeks, requiring new clearances and inspections. As a result, the WFP-led convoy had to be redirected to another famine-risk area in the Darfur region. On arrival, the RSF held the trucks again and made additional demands. Finally, the convoy finally reached its destination earlier this week, a full six weeks after its departure, for a journey that would normally take a maximum of two weeks.

    Meanwhile, a national liquidity crisis has led to widespread cash shortages. WFP cash and in-kind food distributions for over 4 million people have been delayed for over one month due to a lack of sufficient bank notes to help pay porters to load trucks. Recent efforts by Sudan’s Central Bank and Ministry of Finance to ease the crisis, and increase cash availability, has meant that WFP’s operations can gradually resume.

    WFP calls on all parties on the ground in Sudan to remove all unnecessary barriers and obstacles that are preventing a full-scale humanitarian response to Sudan’s growing hunger crisis. The neutrality and independence of aid workers and humanitarian work must be respected. The safe passage of humanitarian assistance to hard-to-reach, famine-struck areas must be guaranteed.

    Sudan continues to face a catastrophic humanitarian situation with approximately 24.6 million people – nearly half of Sudan’s population – facing acute food insecurity (IPC Phase 3+). Twenty-seven locations across Sudan are either in famine or at risk of famine, while more than one-third of children in the hardest hit regions are acutely malnourished, well above the threshold for a famine declaration.

    #                 #                   #

    The United Nations World Food Programme is the world’s largest humanitarian organization saving lives in emergencies and using food assistance to build a pathway to peace, stability and prosperity for people recovering from conflict, disasters and the impact of climate change.

    Follow us on Twitter @wfp_media @wfp_sudan 

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: AfDB and WFP support families affected by flooding in Cameroon’s Far North

    Source: World Food Programme

    YAOUNDE –The Government of Cameroon and the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) welcome a US$ 1 million contribution from the African Development Bank (AfDB) to support 42,000 people affected by the 2024 floods in Cameroon’s Far North region.

    “The African Development Bank is steadfast in its commitment to supporting Cameroon’s flood response efforts,” said Serge N’Guessan, African Development Bank Director General for Central Africa Region. “By partnering with the Government and WFP, we ensure that those affected by the floods receive the assistance they need while also setting the stage for long-term recovery.

    Between July and October 2024, devastating floods caused by heavy rains affected over 450,000 people, destroying over 85,000 hectares of farmland and many homes. Over 5,000 livestock also died, the majority in Diamare, Mayo-Danay, Mayo-Kani, Mayo-Tsanaga and Logone-et-Chari divisions. This climate shock exacerbates food insecurity in a region already in the grips of a dire humanitarian situation due to ongoing conflict, population displacements, and rising food prices. Since July 2024, high food prices have soared by 20–30%, leaving many families in rural areas unable to meet their food and nutrition needs.

    With the AfDB funding, WFP in close collaboration with the Government of Cameroon is providing general food distributions comprised of cereals, vegetable oil and salt to the most affected families enabling them to meet their immediate food and nutrition needs for one month.  WFP will also distribute fortified cereal to pregnant women, breastfeeding mothers, and children aged 6 to 59 months to address acute malnutrition.

    “The devastating floods in Cameroon’s Far North Region are a stark reminder of how the impacts of climate change are worsening, sparing no one and calling for a coordinated action,” said Alamine Ousmane Mey, Minister of Economy, Planning and Regional Development. “With support from partners like AfDB, WFP, and other development Partners, we are addressing immediate food needs while paving the way for a resilient recovery. The Government of Cameroon is committed to ensure assistance reaches those in need and prioritizing anticipatory actions to better prepare for future crisis.”

    The Far North region of Cameroon is characterized by high rates of severe acute malnutrition (SAM), reaching 2.9%, exceeding the World Health Organisation emergency threshold of 2%. Chronic malnutrition also remains a concern in the region, with an alarming rate of 49.2% among internally displaced people.

    “WFP is committed to supporting families affected by floods and the growing food insecurity in Cameroon’s Far North Region,” said Gianluca Ferrera, WFP’s Representative and Country Director in Cameroon. “With AfDB’s contribution, many will be reached with lifesaving assistance; however, the scale of the crisis demands more than emergency response”. 

    To ensure continued lifesaving assistance to crisis-affected people in Cameroon through July 2025, WFP requires US$ 48.7 million.

    #           #                #

    About WFP: 

    The United Nations World Food Programme is the world’s largest humanitarian organization saving lives in emergencies and using food assistance to build a pathway to peace, stability and prosperity for people recovering from conflict, disasters, and the impact of climate change.

    Follow us on X, formerly Twitter, via @wfp_media @WFP_Cameroon

    About AfDB:

    The African Development Bank (AfDB), a multilateral development finance institution dedicated to promoting economic development and social progress in Africa, is a long-term partner of its member states, providing unwavering assistance during and aftermath emergencies. Its objectives align with WFP’s goals in Cameroon, focusing on poverty reduction, food security, and sustainable development.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Israel’s new laws banning UNRWA already taking effect

    Source: United Nations 4

    Peace and Security

    Israeli legislation banning the UN agency for Palestine refugees, UNRWA, is due to enter into force in the coming hours, bringing fundamental changes to its operations in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, according to the agency and Palestinians they serve in Gaza who spoke with UN News on Wednesday.

    Soundcloud

    If implemented, the two new laws passed in October will simultaneously prohibit Israeli authorities from contacting UNRWA and ban the agency from operating in war-ravaged Gaza and East Jerusalem and the West Bank, according to UNRWA spokesperson Jonathan Fowler.

    As such, poised to change are Israel’s role as the occupying power and the work of the UN General Assembly-mandated agency known since 1949 as the backbone of humanitarian aid assisting nearly six million Palestine refugees today.

    Check out UN Photo’s essay What UNRWA Built here.

    © UNRWA

    The war in Gaza has seen an unprecedented number of attacks on UN premises and staff. (file)

    Evacuation and relocation

    Israel as the occupying power is responsible for issuing visas to international staff from humanitarian organizations like UNRWA, whose headquarters in occupied East Jerusalem comprise a compound protected by the 1946 Convention on Diplomatic Relations.

    © UNRWA

    UNRWA has been called the backbone of humanitarian assistance in war-ravaged Gaza.

    The Knesset legislation has yet to come into force but is already impacting UN operations in the region.

    Israel has shortened all visas for UNRWA’s international staff to expire on Wednesday, which “is tantamount to being evicted” or declared persona non grata, Mr. Fowler said.

    As such, UNRWA’s international staff at the East Jerusalem office had to evacuate and relocate to Amman, Jordan earlier in the day. Office equipment and vehicles have been moved out, and efforts are continuing to digitise its archives.

    National staff will remain in East Jerusalem, but they face risks, including upcoming demonstrations by Israeli protestors, Mr. Fowler said. During the Gaza war, the compound had faced security issues, including arson attacks and violent protests.

    UNRWA had to comply with Israeli orders due to visa requirements despite East Jerusalem being recognised as occupied territory under international law, he added.

    Will UNRWA shut down completely?

    UNRWA’s mandate has remained the same for decades and it will not be ceasing all operations, said Mr. Fowler. It is unique as a working model that has provided core services such as healthcare and education to refugees and their descendants in line with its General Assembly-approved mandate.

    The agency also provides services to Palestinians in Jordan, Lebanon and Syria.

    UNRWA remains absolutely committed to stay and deliver,” Mr. Fowler said.

    “We will not stop. We’re not bowing down to this. But, we do know that the practical impacts, the uncertainty mean that our operations could be substantially affected.”

    © UNRWA

    UNRWA and partners begin the second round of the polio vaccination campaign in Gaza in 2024. (file)

    Backbone of aid in Gaza

    Up to the current fragile ceasefire, Israeli forces killed more than 47,000 Palestinians – according to local health authorities – and 270 UNRWA staff members in Gaza. Yet, despite challenges, agency staff in Gaza continue to operate, providing essential humanitarian aid, Mr. Fowler said.

    Over the first three days of the 19 January ceasefire, UNRWA provided food for one million people and one million blankets.

    Indeed, the UN agency is responsible for over half of deliveries inside the Gaza Strip and over half the aid coming in.

    The ceasefire has allowed UNRWA to scale up aid, but the situation remains precarious, he stressed.

    © UNRWA

    Aid is delivered to Gaza as Palestinians return to their homes during the ceasefire.

    Impact on services

    The Israeli laws could halt all UNRWA operations in Gaza, East Jerusalem and the West Bank, affecting schools, healthcare centres and other services, Mr. Fowler explained.

    Some Palestinians in Gaza are worried at the prospect of losing UNRWA, including Iman Hillis, who is currently staying in an UNRWA school with her family.

    “We will have nothing to eat or drink, and this will affect us greatly,” she told UN News. “All the people will be destroyed and will not have food, water or flour.”

    International response amid ‘biggest fears’

    UNRWA supporters, UN Member States and UN officials have pressed Israel to reverse course up to the last minute. However, there is concern about the precedent this situation could set for other UN operations worldwide, Mr. Fowler said.

    The current situation is as unique as the agency itself. Israel’s ban is unprecedented. Never before has a UN Member State tried to undo the mandate of a UN organization.

    ‘We’re at the 11th hour’

    We face the risk of this becoming an example, which would then eventually morph into some kind of new normal,” Mr. Fowler said.

    In other places around the world, that “new normal” is a “very, very nightmarish scenario”, he warned.

    The multilateral system is not perfect, but it’s the system that we have, and this is a unilateral blow against multilateralism,” he said.

    “We’re at the 11th hour. We all have to continue efforts to convince Israeli authorities to at least freeze this decision or void the laws completely. Our biggest fear is there is no Plan B.”

    Why can’t other aid agencies just take over?

    Uniquely, the UN General Assembly makes the decisions on UNRWA and how and where it operates.

    No other agency has the scale and depth to do what we do,” Mr. Fowler said.

    However, under international humanitarian law, the occupying power is responsible to assure the wellbeing of the population under occupation, he added.

    By voiding our mandate, the Israeli officials who have promoted this need to think hard about the fact that if there’s any Plan B, it’s on them,” he said.

    Soundcloud

    How will Israel’s role change?

    As the occupying power, Israel is and has been responsible for all services to the populations living in Occupied Palestinian Territory since it seized the areas in 1967.

    An agreement in 1967 between Israel and UNRWA recognised the UN Palestine relief agency and its General Assembly-mandated tasks serving Gaza, East Jerusalem and the West Bank.

    With the new legislation that, in effect, cancels that agreement, Israel continues to be responsible as the occupying power, including for all public services.

    As such, Israel will need to absorb the cost. UNRWA’s annual budget runs at about $1 billion every year.

    UN News

    Over 20,000 displaced Palestinians are taking shelter in a UNRWA school in Gaza.

    What is UNRWA?

    Since 1950, the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) has contributed to the welfare and human development of Palestine refugees, defined as “persons whose normal place of residence was Palestine during the period 1 June 1946 to 15 May 1948, and who lost both home and means of livelihood as a result of the 1948 war”.

    © UNRWA

    Humanitarian aid delivered to Gaza.

    • The agency operates in Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, Gaza and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem. Established by a UN General Assembly resolution, UNRWA is funded almost entirely through voluntary contributions from UN Member States.
    • UNRWA has long faced misinformation and disinformation, including about its staff and operations. This has intensified since the war in Gaza began on 7 October 2023.
    • An example is the claim that the UN agencies that deliver humanitarian assistance in crisis zones across the globe would be better placed to do the work currently carried out by UNRWA.
    • In fact, UNRWA’s established infrastructure – the agency directly manages critical public-like services (schools, health centres, social protection), relying on 30,000 staff members, most of them Palestine refugees – and its cost-effectiveness have no equivalent elsewhere in the UN.
    • Find out more about the work UNRWA does here.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: From policy to progress: UN deputy chief Mohammed outlines path for Africa’s clean energy transformation

    Source: United Nations 4

    Economic Development

    United Nations Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed highlighted on Tuesday the critical need for collaborative and urgent action to achieve the ambitious goal of bringing electricity to 300 million Africans by 2030.

    “Access to electricity is not just a matter of convenience; it is a fundamental human right that underpins economic growth, education, healthcare, and gender equality,” Ms. Mohammed told African Heads of State attending the Mission 300 Africa Energy Summit in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.  

    The Summit brought together African leaders and development partners to discuss Mission 300, an initiative by the African Development Bank and the World Bank. The initiative addresses energy access challenges and aims to create jobs for Africa’s youth and support future development.

    “We must work together, with a sense of urgency and commitment, to ensure that no one is left behind in this transformative journey,” Ms. Mohammed, stressed.

    Africa’s energy landscape presents a paradox. Despite being rich in renewable resources, the continent grapples with one of the lowest levels of energy access globally. As the UN deputy chief pointed out, nearly 600 million Africans lack access to electricity, making it essential to leverage the continent’s abundant renewable energy resources and critical minerals.

    Unlocking Africa’s potential

    “Africa has immense potential to show the world what a new economic development paradigm grounded in sustainability, resilience, justice, and inclusivity can look like,” Ms. Mohammed stated, and underscored the interconnectedness of enhanced energy access with broader development goals, such as health, education, and gender equality.

    “By advancing long-term energy security and sovereignty, we can foster peace, create green jobs, and build resilient livelihoods – paving the way for improved stability and prosperity across the continent,” she said.  

    She highlighted that with renewable energy now being the cheapest source of new electricity, the Mission 300 initiative represents a transformative opportunity for Africa.

    A shining example: Tanzania’s progress

    Ms. Mohammed praised Tanzania as a beacon of success, showcasing how rural electrification and off-grid renewable energy solutions can transform lives, particularly in remote and underserved areas.  

    “The country has made remarkable strides, with electricity access increasing from just 14 per cent in 2011 to 46 per cent in 2022,” she noted. This progress has led to over one million new connections, driving the rural electrification rate to 72 per cent.

    “This progress means that more boys and girls in remote areas can now study in well-lit classrooms, health workers can deliver life-saving services to off-grid populations, and rural businesses can thrive with reliable power,” said the UN deputy chief, emphasizing that energy access is not just about electricity – it’s about opportunity, equity, and the foundation of a brighter future.

    Policies and reforms for transforming African energy

    In a panel discussion that was held Monday on the theme Policies and Reforms for Transforming African Energy, Ms. Mohammed reiterated the need for comprehensive reforms to accelerate electrification across the continent. She stressed the role of renewable energy in driving sustainable development and reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

    “Africa is rich in renewable energy resources, from solar and wind to hydro and geothermal power,” she said. “By harnessing these resources, we can not only provide electricity to millions but also create green jobs, improve health outcomes, and protect the environment.”

    The Deputy Secretary-General highlighted three key areas for policymakers to focus on: fostering policy coherence, mobilizing finance and support, and enhancing transparent international cooperation.

    UN Tanzania/Muntazar Abuhaidary

    Fostering policy coherence

    Ms. Mohammed underscored the importance of coherent and aligned policies with Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), the individual climate action plans submitted by each country under the Paris Agreement.  

    “Policy makers and the international institutions need to strive to ensure sector-wide plans are coherent and aligned with the achievement of the SDGs due in 2030, while investors need robust regulatory laws in place to ensure business can operate aligned with them,” she stressed.

    She added that “NDCs must coordinate the transition from fossil fuels with scaling of renewables and grid modernization and expansion, ensuring energy security and affordability.”  

    Ms. Mohammed also emphasized that NDCs represent a unique opportunity for all countries to align their new climate plans and energy strategies, together with addressing adaptation needs.

    Mobilizing finance and support

    While private sector investments are crucial, Ms. Mohammed stressed the importance of public financing, especially in modernizing grid infrastructure to expand access and integrate renewables. “Blending concessional public funds with commercial funds can help multiply renewable energy investments in developing countries,” she noted.

    “We must work to strengthen the health of Africa’s public finances and tackle unsustainable debt burdens that are crowding out essential public investments,” the UN deputy chief added, calling for long-term concessional finance and the implementation of the $1.3 trillion roadmap agreed last year at the UN climate conference in Baku.

    Transparent international cooperation

    Ms. Mohammed went on to emphasize the importance of international investments and cross-border partnerships in delivering electricity projects at a massive scale. “Public private partnerships need to be subject to stable and transparent public procurement rules throughout the whole project cycle,” she said.

    “Transparency and accountability should be a hallmark of Mission 300 and set a new standard for cooperation across the continent,” she concluded.

    African Heads of State commit to energy reforms

    The summit saw African Heads of State commit to concrete reforms and actions to expand access to reliable, affordable, and sustainable electricity. The Dar es Salaam Energy Declaration, endorsed by the summit, outlines the commitments and practical actions needed to achieve the Mission 300 goals.

    “Today, we have taken a significant step towards transforming Africa’s energy landscape,” said President Samia Suluhu Hassan of Tanzania. “By working together and implementing these reforms, we can ensure that our citizens have access to clean and affordable energy, which is essential for their well-being and economic prosperity.”

    Africa can lead clean energy transition

    In her closing remarks, Ms. Mohammed expressed optimism about Africa’s potential to lead the global clean energy transition.  

    “With the right policies and reforms, Africa can become a model for sustainable development and resilience,” she said. “Let us seize this opportunity to create a brighter future for our continent and its people.” 

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Aid efforts in Gaza escalate as risks from deadly unexploded ordnance grows

    Source: United Nations 4

    Humanitarian Aid

    As more than 423,000 displaced Palestinians return to their homes in northern Gaza following the opening of key roads, UN agencies are scaling up humanitarian aid and addressing the growing risks posed by unexploded ordnance such as landmines (UXO). 

    “Hope returns to Gaza, but it’s fragile,” said Corinne Fleischer, World Food Programme (WFP) Regional Director for the Middle East and North Africa. “With open crossings and sustained efforts, Gaza’s recovery can take root,” she emphasised.

    The WFP has doubled its aid deliveries, bringing in 22,000 metric tons of food in the past six days – more than the entire supply that entered Gaza in November.

    Scaling up essential services

    UN Spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric highlighted further relief efforts, noting that six fuel tankers were delivered to northern Gaza on Wednesday.

    Aid workers stationed along the Salah ad Din and Al Rashid roads continue to assist people making their way back north to shattered homes, providing food, water, and hygiene kits, with the UN Children’s fund (UNICEF) distributing identification bracelets for children to help families stay connected.

    To support vulnerable groups, the World Health Organization (WHO) has supplied fuel, tents and equipment to establish trauma stabilization points along Al Rashid Road in collaboration with the Palestine Red Crescent Society.

    Meanwhile, efforts to provide emergency nutrition continue, with high-energy biscuits distributed to 19,000 people south of Wadi Gaza and 10,000 in the north.

    Shelter assistance is also being scaled up, with humanitarian partners distributing tents to families – many of whom are returning to homes that have been completely destroyed.

    Water remains a critical concern and aid workers are ramping up water trucking operations. In Rafah alone, 300 cubic meters of potable water – enough for 50,000 people – is being distributed daily.

    Danger underfoot

    Despite the increasing humanitarian response, returning residents face significant risks from UXO contamination.

    The UN Mine Action Service (UNMAS) has warned that between 5 to 10 percent of weapons fired into Gaza have failed to detonate, leaving behind deadly hazards.

    Since October 2023, at least 92 people have been killed or injured by explosive ordnance. Informal reports suggest 24 victims since the ceasefire began, according to Luke Irving, Chief of the UN Mine Action Programme (UNMAS) in the occupied Palestinian territories, briefing the press on Wednesday from the enclave.

    “Humanitarian convoys are finding items more and more, as we reach new areas which we previously could not get to, including large aircraft bombs, mortars, anti-tank weapons, rockets and rifle grenades,” he explained.

    © WFP

    An area of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip lies in ruins.

    Rubble removal

    To mitigate risks, UNMAS and its partners are conducting awareness sessions, distributing safety leaflets and escorting humanitarian convoys along high-risk routes.

    A newly established UN-led Gaza Debris Management Framework aims to ensure the safe removal of rubble, but progress is being hindered by UXO contamination, exposure to hazardous materials and complex property disputes.

    Several UN agencies are collaborating to address both the environmental and housing concerns associated with these issues.

    Deteriorating situation in West Bank

    Meanwhile, in the occupied West Bank, violence and military operations continue to escalate.

    The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) has reported a drastic deterioration in the humanitarian situation, particularly in the governorates of Jenin and Tulkarm.

    “We’ve repeatedly expressed our concern over the use of lethal, war-like tactics in law enforcement operations,” Mr. Dujarric said.

    Israeli military operations in these areas have led to significant destruction of civilian infrastructure.

    In Tulkarm, access to water and electricity has been disrupted and initial estimates suggest that nearly 1,000 people have been displaced in recent days.

    Sustained humanitarian access

    With humanitarian efforts scaling up, UN agencies are calling for unhindered access to deliver aid safely and ensure the protection of both civilians and humanitarian workers.

    Mr. Dujarric reiterated the urgent need for safe passage for humanitarian workers, the protection of civilians and the acceleration of reconstruction efforts to support those returning home. 

    Soundcloud

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Four years after the coup, Myanmar remains on the brink

    Source: United Nations 4

    By Vibhu Mishra

    Peace and Security

    Four years after the military coup which plunged Myanmar into turmoil, the country is facing an unprecedented “polycrisis,” marked by economic collapse, intensifying conflict, complex climate hazards and deepening poverty, according to a new report by the UN Development Programme (UNDP).

    Myanmar’s Enduring Polycrisis: Four Years into a Tumultuous Journey, launched on Wednesday, points to the bleak picture of a nation in freefall, with nearly half the population living below the poverty line, essential services crumbling and the economy in disarray.

    With no political resolution in sight, the crisis is expected to worsen in the coming year.

    The coming year will test Myanmar’s resilience to its limits,” the report warns, calling for urgent international engagement to mitigate further suffering and prevent total collapse.

    “A more stable and peaceful Myanmar that thrives on a legal economy, protects it human and natural resource assets and invests in the safety and prosperity of all its people is also in the self-interest of its neighbours and the international community writ large,” it added.

    Source: UNDP

    Myanmar’s economy has sharply declined since 2021.

    Black market boom

    Since 2020, Myanmar’s gross domestic product (GDP) has contracted by nine per cent, reversing the economic progress of the previous decade.

    Inflation reached 25.4 per cent reached in 2024, further eroding household purchasing power. The trade deficit ballooned to 2.2 per cent of GDP, exacerbated by severe restrictions on cross-border commerce, and the currency plummeted over 1,330 kyat per US dollar in 2021 to 4,520 in 2025, making imports unaffordable and sending prices soaring.

    The economic situation worsened further as the country was blacklisted by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) for failing to combat money laundering and terrorist financing.

    Against this backdrop, Myanmar’s illicit economy is thriving and it has become the world’s leading producer of opium and heroin, and one of the largest manufacturers of methamphetamines.

    The jade industry, valued at billions of dollars annually, remains largely unregulated, fuelling corruption and environmental degradation. Illegal gambling, human trafficking, and scam operations have flourished along the country’s porous borders.

    Society in crisis

    Myanmar’s ongoing conflict has displaced more than 3.5 million people within the country and driven many more across its borders. Internally displaced persons (IDPs) lack vital assistance and protections, and host communities are reeling under the strained resources.

    Hunger is reaching catastrophic levels and agricultural productivity has declined by 16 per cent since 2021, largely due to conflict and climate-related disasters.

    Fertilizer shortages, skyrocketing fuel prices, and trade disruptions have driven the price of the staple rice up by 47 per cent in some regions. The western state of Rakhine is particularly vulnerable, with food production projected to meet only 20 per cent of local needs by mid-2025, raising fears of famine-like conditions.

    Public services are also severely affected, with over half of the country lacking access to electricity and hospitals out of service in conflict zones.

    Looming brain drain

    The dire economic and security situation has led to an exodus of Myanmar’s youth, with 3.7 million having migrated to Thailand by 2023. Many face exploitation and forced labour due to restrictive legal migration pathways, while those who remain are at risk of forced conscription into the military.

    School enrolment rates have also dropped significantly as access to educational facilities has been disrupted by conflict and economic hardships. In the 2023/2024 academic year, over 20 per cent of children were not attending school.

    Crisis or opportunity?

    The outlook for Myanmar remains precarious. If current trends continue, poverty will rise further, migration will intensify and the country’s fragile economy will struggle under the weight of continued conflict and international isolation, the report warns.

    Despite Myanmar’s deepening crisis, opportunities for recovery exist.

    The report highlights the resilience of local communities and the potential of civil society organizations in rebuilding social cohesion. Engaging the diaspora through education and skills development could help retain and attract talent, while expanding opportunities for women in business and employment could boost household incomes.

    Agricultural revitalisation, through climate-resilient crops and irrigation, is crucial for food security, while investment in environmental protection – such as reforestation and mangrove restoration – could safeguard jobs in the future.

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Secretary-General Appoints Lieutenant General Ulisses de Mesquita Gomes of Brazil Force Commander, UN Stabilization Mission in Democratic Republic of the Congo

    Source: United Nations General Assembly and Security Council

    United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres announced today the appointment of Lieutenant General Ulisses de Mesquita Gomes of Brazil as Force Commander of the United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUSCO).

    Lieutenant General Gomes succeeds Acting Force Commander Major General Khar Diouf of Senegal, to whom the Secretary-General is grateful for his dedication and service.

    Lieutenant General Gomes brings to the position 35 years of experience in crisis response, conflict management and peacekeeping.  He has both operational and strategic expertise as well as diplomatic experience.  His last position was with his national military, where he served as Deputy Chief of Army Logistics Command.  Prior to that, he was the Brazilian Military Attaché to the United States of America.

    He previously served as the 7th Infantry Brigade Commander in Brazil, the Defence Adviser of the Minister of Strategic Affairs of the Brazilian Government and the Chief of Planning and Operations of the 11th Infantry Brigade.  His international experience includes his deployment with the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH) (2008-2009) and his appointment as the Chief of the Current Military Operations Service and Policy & Doctrine Team in the Office of Military Affairs of the UN Department of Peace Operations (2017-2019).

    Lieutenant General Gomes holds a bachelor’s degree in law from the Federal University, Brazil, and a master’s degree in military science and law from the Brazilian Army Staff College.  He is fluent in English, French, Portuguese and Spanish.

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Crisis in DRC: UN peacekeepers protecting civilians – and themselves – from large-scale offensive operations by M23 rebels

    Source: United Nations – Peacekeeping

    The resumption of hostilities in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) is taking a devastating toll on civilians and risks a broader, regional war, the spokesman for the UN Secretary General warned this week. “Since the beginning of the year, the M23 has launched large-scale offensive operations in the east of the DRC with the support of the Rwandan armed forces,” reported peacekeeping’s Under-secretary General Jean-Pierre Lacroix, as clashes continued to escalate.  

    On January 26th, the M23 and the Rwanda Defence Forces launched an attack on the strategically important city of Goma, reported Vivian van de Perre, MONUSCO’s Deputy Special Representative for Protection and Operations, during a Security Council briefing on Tuesday. “These attacks continue to ravage the city, killing, injuring, traumatizing, and displacing civilians and exacerbating the crisis,” she said.

    MONUSCO forces have been supporting the armed forces of the DRC (FARDC) and associated regional forces for days, including with direct fire support from MONUSCO artillery. However, faced with a determined attack by a superior force directly supported by the Rwanda military, MONUSCO was forced to relocate non-essential personnel by air and road and many of the Mission’s remaining peacekeepers were forced to take shelter in bunkers as the fighting raged around them. The protection of UN personnel and assets became the primary concern but running short of supplies including ammunition and water, MONUSCO blue helmets found themselves at the limits of what a peacekeeping mission can do in the absence of a political process.

    In this volatile and dangerous context—three UN peacekeepers made the ultimate sacrifice on the cause of peace and at least 20 others have been injured in a matter of days—while the Mission continues to protect civilians, receiving large numbers of people at its facilities and working with partners to implement protection measures for human rights defenders and civil society organizations. However, ultimately MONUSCO’s bases cannot accommodate the large numbers of vulnerable populations in need of safety. Moreover, the bases themselves are not safe. “Two mortars fell in MONUSCO’s bases and compounds in the last three days,” Ms. Van de Perre said, “as well as countless bullets.”  

    Amid the worsening crisis, Ms. van de Perre called for the urgent establishment of humanitarian corridors and the protection of civilians, and called on all parties to “cease hostilities and commit to political dialogue in order to prevent further civilian suffering.” The Secretary General urged Rwanda and the DRC to remain engaged in the Luanda peace process and bring an end to the conflict. Ultimately, the crisis in the DRC requires an inclusive pollical solution, as stated by the Security Council which called on Rwanda and the DRC to “return to diplomatic talks to achieve a lasting and peaceful resolution of the protracted conflict in the region”.

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: DR Congo crisis: A public health ‘nightmare’ is unfolding, warns WHO

    Source: United Nations 4

    Peace and Security

    As UN agencies reported “relative calm” on Wednesday in the city of Goma in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), humanitarians warned that the chaos caused by advancing M23 rebel forces could fuel a region-wide health emergency.

    The internet also remains down in the provincial capital and only mobile phone networks are functioning, with M23 fighters apparently in control of “a significant portion of the city” after intense clashes with the Congolese armyUN agencies reported on Wednesday.

    Aid teams from the UN World Health Organization (WHO) “cannot move freely to support the hospitals, even ambulances cannot run. It’s a situation that in public health is a nightmare,” said Dr Boureima Hama Sambo, WHO Representive in DRC.

    ‘Vulnerable people need us’

    Speaking to UN News, Dr Sambo added: “We just hope that the situation will return to normal for the Government … vulnerable people really need us.”

    Conditions in provincial capital Goma remain “dire”, he added, with no running water, electricity cut and civilians trapped – including health professionals.

    Echoing those concerns, a senior UN peacekeeping official warned that the level of suffering among those caught up in the violence was “unimaginable”.

    Vivian van de Perre, Deputy Special Representative for Protection and Operations in the UN Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUSCO) told the Security Council late Tuesday that there was a need for “urgent and coordinated international action” to stop the fighting between Rwanda-backed M23 rebels and Congolese forces as they battled for control of Goma.

    Massive displacement and fear

    Before M23 fighters closed in on Goma, more than 700,000 internally displaced people lived around the provincial capital. But hundreds of thousands fled in anticipation of clashes between the Rwanda-backed rebels and DRC troops, prompting renewed alarm about the further spread of deadly disease.

    “When you have as many as 700,000 people living in camps, you can imagine the human suffering,” the WHO official told UN News, pointing to “a lot of ongoing [disease] outbreaks” in North and South Kivu – two mineral-rich regions close to the Rwanda border, where dozens of armed groups have held sway for decades.

    Disease ever-present

    Repeated mass displacement in DRC has created ideal conditions for the spread of many endemic diseases in camps and surrounding communities in the Kivus, including cholera (more than 22,000 cases and 60 deaths in 2024), measles (close to 12,000 cases and 115 deaths) and malaria, as well as chronic child malnutrition. 

    In August last year, WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus also declared the mpox outbreak a public health emergency of international concern.

    Despite a “robust” initial response to the mpox threat by WHO and national partners that has been coordinated from Kinshasa and field offices in Goma and South Kivu, Dr Sambo warned that mpox patients had fled at least one camp’s treatment centre and were now living now in host communities and with families.

    “So, we are there’s a fear for the disease to be spreading widely in communities, but at this point we cannot say because we have not been able to get there and assess what’s happening right now.”

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Myanmar on the brink as conflict fuels hunger

    Source: World Food Programme

    YANGON – Hunger has reached alarming levels in Myanmar with the situation set to worsen in 2025, the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) warned today. A staggering 15 million people are expected to face hunger in 2025, up from 13.3 million last year.

    Those living in active conflict areas, particularly in Chin, Kachin and Rakhine states, as well as Sagaing Region, are experiencing the highest levels of food insecurity in the country.  Almost 20 million people – 1 in 3 – will need humanitarian assistance this year, according to the Myanmar Humanitarian Needs and Response Plan.

    “Growing conflict across the country, access restrictions, a crumbling economy and successive weather-related crises are driving record levels of hunger,” said Michael Dunford, WFP’s Representative and Country Director. 

    More than 3.5 million people are displaced in Myanmar due to armed conflict and violence,  a number projected to increase to 4.5 million in 2025 as conflict takes root and spreads to new areas. 

    Food is the biggest need for displaced people but spiraling costs and rapid inflation have made it unaffordable for many. The cost of basic staples – including rice, beans, oil and salt – has increased by 30 percent in the past year. 

    “Food prices in Myanmar continue to rise each and every month. Even if some food is available in local markets, people simply don’t have the resources to buy the basics, which means they are eating less and going hungry,” said Dunford. 

    The rapid escalation in humanitarian and food security needs in Myanmar has been overshadowed by international political turmoil and a surge in global crises, which have drawn public attention away from Myanmar.

    “The world cannot afford to overlook Myanmar’s escalating crisis. Without immediate and increased international support, hundreds of thousands more will be pushed to the brink,” said Dunford. 

    WFP aims to reach at least 1.6 million people in Myanmar with life-saving food, nutrition, and resilience-building support in 2025. WFP is engaging with all parties to the conflict and expanding partnerships with local organizations to ensure its life-saving assistance effectively reaches those who depend on WFP for vital support. 

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: WFP and Chad’s meteorological agency partner to modernize weather forecasting and enhance climate response in Chad

    Source: World Food Programme

    N’DJAMENA –The World Meteorological Organization’s Systemic Observations Financing Facility (SOFF) and the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) have launched a five-year project aiming to modernise Chad’s meteorological network, improve weather forecasts, and anticipate the consequences of climate events in Chad.

    The US$ 6.98 million project, led by WFP in collaboration with Chad’s National Meteorological Agency (ANAM) with technical support from GeoSphere Austria, involves installing six new surface stations and four upper-air stations, while renovating 27 existing stations across the country. The project prioritizes national capacity-building to enhance synergies between development programmes and maximize the SOFF project’s impact.

    “Strengthening ANAM’s capacities through the SOFF project aligns perfectly with the government’s vision and policies, providing users with high-quality forecasts to anticipate climate extremes and mitigate disaster risks affecting populations and natural resources” said Fatima Goukouni Weddeye, Minister of Transport, Civil Aviation, and National Meteorology.

    Upgraded meteorological infrastructure will improve the anticipation and management of climate extremes like droughts and floods, while strengthening national capacities through sustainable data management.

    “Collaborating along the meteorological value chain is key to leveraging weather and climate data” said Markus Repnik, Director of the SOFF Secretariat. “Closing Chad’s data gap significantly improves weather and climate forecasts for Chad, Africa, and the world, as forecasts beyond three days require global data, including from Chad. SOFF’s investments support Chad’s objectives of increasing climate resilience, protecting communities, and the agricultural sector”

    Sarah Gordon-Gibson, WFP’s Country Director and Representative in Chad, noted, “The people of Chad are among the hardest hit by the current climate crisis and face some of the highest levels of food insecurity globally. Reliable meteorological data is essential to anticipate, alert, and respond to crises and their impact on people’s food security”.

    The latest Cadre Harmonisé food security analysis indicates that over 2.4 million people in Chad will face food insecurity by 2025, potentially rising to 3.7 million during the June-August lean season. Food insecurity in Chad is primarily driven by conflicts and a decline in agricultural production, particularly due to recent floods in the south, the country’s breadbasket.

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    The United Nations World Food Programme is the world’s largest humanitarian organization saving lives in emergencies and using food assistance to build a pathway to peace, stability and prosperity for people recovering from conflict, disasters and the impact of climate change.

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Japan and WFP join forces to strengthen food security of vulnerable populations in Cameroon

    Source: World Food Programme

    YAOUNDE – The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) welcomes a Japanese Yen 200 million (approx. US$ 1.27 million) contribution from the Government of Japan to provide lifesaving food assistance to crisis-affected people across six regions in Cameroon

    In collaboration with the government, WFP will provide general food distributions to 17,000 most vulnerable refugees, internally displaced people, vulnerable host populations, including primary school-aged children in the Far North, North, East, Adamawa, North-West and South-West regions of Cameroon. 

    The funding will also enable WFP to reach 8,200 primary school children with nutritious meals sourced from Japan. Additionally, WFP will extend its integrated food and nutrition assistance to 8,800 refugees, IDPs, and vulnerable host communities located in the Far North, and Eastern regions (East, North, and Adamawa).

    “Japan’s support is more than just a lifeline—it is an investment in resilience and hope. By addressing urgent food and nutrition needs, we are creating pathways toward sustainable change for the most vulnerable populations in Cameroon,” said Gianluca Ferrera, WFP’s Country Director in Cameroon. “We are profoundly thankful for Japan’s unwavering dedication to the fight against hunger.”

    The humanitarian situation remains critical in Cameroon with 1.1 million people internally displaced as of December 2024, due to the protracted crisis in the lake Chad, North-West and South-West regions, and the adverse effects of climate change such as frequent droughts and floods.  The country also hosts 281,488 refugees from the Central African Republic in the Adamawa, East, and North regions. According to the November 2024 Cadre Harmonisé food security analysis over 2.7 million people are projected to experience acute hunger between June and August 2025. 

    “Through this partnership, the Government of Japan aims to address food security of communities and build their resilience,” said H.E. Mr. Kentaro Minami, Japanese Ambassador to Cameroon. “Our contribution reflects a balanced approach, addressing essential food and nutrition needs while laying the foundation for long-lasting solutions to improve livelihoods of vulnerable populations.”

    Overall, in Cameroon, WFP focuses on addressing food insecurity and malnutrition through emergency relief and recovery programmes. This includes the provision of cash and food assistance to crisis-affected people, school meals to primary school children, nutrition support and services to children under 5, pregnant women, and breastfeeding mothers, and food assistance for asset creation. The main objective is to improve school attendance and learning, enhance local agricultural productivity, improve access to nutrition, and strengthen community resilience to climate shocks. WFP is dedicated to supporting vulnerable populations and fostering sustainable development throughout the country.

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: New Permanent Representative of Mauritania Presents Credentials to the Director-General of the United Nations Office at Geneva

    Source: United Nations – Geneva

    Aicha Vall Verges, the new Permanent Representative of Mauritania to the United Nations Office at Geneva, today presented her credentials to Tatiana Valovaya, the Director-General of the United Nations Office at Geneva.

    Prior to her appointment to Geneva, Ms. Verges had been serving as Director of the Office of the Prime Minister of Mauritania since 2021.  She has also held various leadership roles within the Mauritanian Government, including as Minister of Social Affairs, Children and Families (2012–2013), State Inspector General (2011-2012), Secretary of State for Information and Communication Technologies (2008), and Deputy Director General of the National Agency for the Promotion of Youth Employment (2005-2008).

    Ms. Verges also has experience in Geneva, having served as a member of the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women for a four-year term from 2016.  A staunch defender of women’s rights, she has also served as President of the Association for Preventive Health for Women since 2008, and of the Network of Mauritanian Women Leaders since 2018.  Further, she has written numerous publications addressing issues related to gender and women’s rights.

    Born in Kiffa, Mauritania, in 1965, Ms. Verges holds master’s degrees on the management of political economics (2003) and on the management of economic sciences (1991).

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    Produced by the United Nations Information Service in Geneva for use of the information media; not an official record.

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Lieutenant General Ulisses De Mesquita Gomes of Brazil – Force Commander of the United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUSCO)

    Source: United Nations MIL-OSI 2

    nited Nations Secretary-General António Guterres announced today the appointment of Lieutenant General Ulisses De Mesquita Gomes of Brazil as Force Commander of the United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUSCO).

    Lieutenant General Gomes succeeds Acting Force Commander Major General Khar Diouf of Senegal, to whom the Secretary-General is grateful for his dedication and service.

    Lieutenant General Gomes brings to the position 35 years of experience in crisis response, conflict management and peacekeeping.  He has both operational and strategic expertise as well as diplomatic experience.  His last position was with his national military, where he served as Deputy Chief of Army Logistics Command.  Prior to that, he was the Brazilian Military Attaché to the United States of America.

    He previously served as the 7th Infantry Brigade Commander in Brazil, the Defence Adviser of the Minister of Strategic Affairs of the Brazilian Government and the Chief of Planning and Operations of the 11th Infantry Brigade.  His international experience includes his deployment with the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH) (2008-2009) and his appointment as the Chief of the Current Military Operations Service and Policy & Doctrine Team in the Office of Military Affairs of the UN Department of Peace Operations (2017-2019).
     
    Lieutenant General Gomes holds a bachelor’s degree in law from the Federal University, Brazil, and a master’s degree in military science and law from the Brazilian Army Staff College. He is fluent in English, French, Portuguese and Spanish.

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: ‘Africa Can Lead Clean Energy Transition,’ Deputy Secretary-General Tells Region’s Energy Summit

    Source: United Nations General Assembly and Security Council

    Following are UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed’s remarks at the opening of the African Heads of State Energy Summit, in Dar es Salaam, United Republic of Tanzania, today:

    It is a pleasure to join you here all today.  I extend my heartfelt thanks to Her Excellency President Hassan and her Government of the United Republic of Tanzania for hosting the Mission 300 Africa Energy Summit.

    But, I would also like to underscore that it is because of her incredible leadership and her vision, that we are all here today and gathered as an African continent.  I would also thank the African Union for keeping the fire under our feet to do right thing for the continent.

    Congratulations to my two brothers, the African Development Bank Group, Akin, and the World Bank Group, Ajay.  These are incredible partnerships, that bring genuine experience, decades of work from the public sector to the private sector.

    That is why we are looking to them for the success of this union.  But, we also look to the Rockefeller Foundation for a strong and meaningful partnership — one that brings key stakeholders together in this room.  Your bold investments are a testament to Africa’s potential for a sustainable and resilient future.

    Today, Africa has one of the lowest levels of energy access, as we have heard, but it is also one of the most vulnerable to intensifying climate shocks.

    Yet, our continent is rich in renewable energy resources and critical minerals.  Which are all essential for the energy transition, and benefit from limited sunk costs in fossil fuel-intensive energy infrastructures.  Africa is also home to a vibrant, young and enterprising population.

    This provides immense potential for Africa to show the rest of the world what a new economic development paradigm grounded in sustainability, resilience, justice and inclusivity can look like.

    Enhanced energy access, affordability and reliability is not only crucial for achieving our Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 7, but also serves as a catalyst for broader development goals.  Access to clean and sustainable energy underpins progress in health, in education, in gender equality, while driving economic growth and climate action — many of the 17 Goals.

    By advancing long-term energy security and sovereignty, we can foster peace, we can create green jobs and build resilient livelihoods — paving the way for improved stability and prosperity across the continent.

    With renewables now being the cheapest source of new electricity almost everywhere on earth, Mission 300’s bold commitment to connect 300 million people to electricity by 2030 represents a transformative opportunity for Africa.

    Combined with systemic initiatives like the African Continental Free Trade Agreement, Africa is uniquely positioned to lead the global energy transition.

    By powering essential sectors such as healthcare, education and commerce, bolstering industries like solar manufacturing, grid infrastructure and clean energy solutions, renewable energy can unlock unprecedented economic potential.

    With reliable energy access, the continent’s 147 million small and medium-sized enterprises — key drivers of economic growth — will have the tools to scale, innovate and create jobs, turning energy into a true catalyst for inclusive and sustainable progress.

    The United Republic of Tanzania stands as a shining example of how rural electrification and off-grid renewable energy solutions can transform lives, particularly in remote and underserved areas.

    The country has made remarkable strides, with electricity access increasing from just 14 per cent in 2011 to 46 per cent in 2022.  And what does that mean?  It has led to over 1 million new connections, driving the rural electrification rate to 72 per cent. 

    In November 2024, more than 60,000 social institutions were connected by REA [Rural Electrification Agency], benefiting 12,905 educational institutions, 6,768 health facilities, over 8,000 places of worship and 29,000 commercial areas.

    This progress means that more boys and girls in remote areas can now study in well-lit classrooms, health workers can deliver life-saving services to off-grid populations and rural businesses can thrive with reliable power.  The United Republic of Tanzania demonstrates how energy access is not just about electricity — it’s about opportunity, equity and the foundation of a brighter future and a life in dignity for everyone.

    We must ensure that Mission 300 seizes the opportunity that lies ahead.  With five years to the endpoint of the SDGs and having completed the first decade of implementing the African Union’s Agenda 2063, it is clear that transformation efforts remain insufficient.

    I would like to deeply commend the African leadership that is here today, as you seek solutions to address Africa’s energy access, climate vulnerability and development challenges holistically.

    We must accelerate our collective efforts to fast-track solutions for SDG7, but also the Paris Agreement and propel Africa to become a clean energy powerhouse.  This requires urgent action in three key areas beyond this Summit.

    First, creating the right enabling environment to attract scaled private and public investments through stronger, stable and more coherent policy and regulatory frameworks.

    We are very pleased to see — thank you, Ajay — the private sector that is here today and we hope they will accompany us through this very difficult but at the end profitable journey.

    This year, every party to the UN Climate Convention has committed to submit a new economy-wide national climate action plan, that is aligned with the 1.5°C world that we need, well before COP30 [thirtieth Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change] in November.

    If done right, these climate plans should align with national energy strategies and development priorities — and they would doubling as investment plans to seize the potential of renewables, helping to eradicate poverty and achieve the Sustainable Development Goals and the Paris Agreement.

    Furthermore, the Secretary-General’s panel on Critical Energy Transition Minerals offers important Principles and Actionable Recommendations to ensure we do not repeat historical patterns of exploitation on this continent.

    Second, mobilizing affordable, accessible and adequate finance. The chronic underinvestment in renewable energy in Africa, and long-standing structural barriers, such as exorbitant capital costs, mean that a continent with the potential to be a renewable powerhouse accounts for less than one percent of global installed solar capacity.

    It is why we are calling for an SDG Stimulus to scale up affordable, long-term financing for developing countries, and for the “Baku-to-Belém Roadmap to $1.3 trillion” to bridge the climate finance gap by leveraging all sources and by addressing unjust and structural barriers.

    Last year’s Pact of the Future sent an unequivocal message — reform of the international finance architecture is urgent and essential to:

    And this Pact would have not gotten over the line, if not for the leadership of the African leaders in the United Nations.  It spoke to strengthening the voice and the representation of developing countries.  It spoke to mobilizing far greater levels of financing for the SDGs, and directing that financing to countries most in need.  It spoke to enabling countries to borrow sustainably, and with confidence, to invest in their long-term development.  But, it also spoke to provide effective and equal support to countries during systemic shocks.

    Finally, multilateralism — our international cooperation — still remains our best hope for delivering solutions at the necessary scale and speed.

    And I note to many of us, as I look to the geopolitical challenges that we have today.  Multilateralism does not seem like the best offer on the table — but it is.  It is a place that we come to.  It is a global town hall for our global village.  It is where we have visibility and where we can shine a light on the opportunities.  But, also, where we can give hope to the millions that look to us — to serve them.

    The United Nations remains dedicated to supporting your efforts every step of the way.  Through our UN expertise and presence in the country, we are committed to supporting Mission 300, the African Development Bank and the World Bank.  And we are committed to help identify and attract investments, strengthen policy, and secure the support you need to make Mission 300 a success.

    Finally, I would like to also commend our Special Representative.  It is not often that we have women in leadership positions.  Today, we are hosted by a great leader that is a woman. But, we also have the Special Representative of the UN on Sustainable Energy for All, Damilola Ogunbiyi, who is playing a critical role within the Mission 300.

    In this critical countdown to 2030, let us ensure that Mission 300 delivers concrete outcomes towards the SDGs, the Paris Agreement and Agenda 2063.

    Let us seize this moment to accelerate and to deliver transformative progress.  Together, I am sure that Africa can lead the clean energy transition, creating lasting prosperity and resilience for generations to come and actions and aspiration fulfilled today for our women and our youth.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Endorsing Resolution, General Assembly Calls Upon All Stakeholders to Implement 2024–2034 Programme of Action for Landlocked Developing Countries

    Source: United Nations General Assembly and Security Council

    Text on UN Cooperation with Community-Portuguese-Speaking Countries Also Adopted

    The General Assembly today adopted a resolution containing the “Programme of Action for Landlocked Developing Countries for the Decade 2024–2034” — which focuses on diversifying economies, promoting trade, supporting jobs and enhancing climate resilience over the next 10 years in that group of nations — calling upon all stakeholders to commit to implementing it.

    In that action programme — listed in the annex of document A/79/L.21 — the Assembly recommitted to expediting action on the Sustainable Development Goals, calling for increased investment, including through international cooperation, and taking necessary measures to harmonize skills development and training programmes at the national and regional levels.

    The Programme of Action, which was originally adopted 24 December 2024 (see Press Release GA/12671), also lays out Member States’ commitments to substantially increasing investment from all sources in research and development, and in building accessible, reliable and affordable digital infrastructure.  The Assembly committed to doubling the contribution of manufacturing value added to the gross domestic product (GDP) of the landlocked developing countries by 2034.  Further, 193-member body urged development partners to support landlocked developing countries in strengthening strategic coherence between trade and investment policies, and industrial policy objectives.

    “The 570 million people living in the landlocked developing countries deserve nothing less,” said Assembly President Philémon Yang (Cameroon).  “For too long, they have faced unique challenges to trade, connectivity and development,” he added.  Recent shocks, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, rising prices worldwide, geopolitical tensions and the deepening impact of climate change, have only intensified their vulnerabilities.

    “The combined gross domestic product of landlocked developing countries in 2023 came in at 8 per cent below pre-pandemic projections,” he went on to say, commending these countries for their “resilience and ability to quickly reverse negative trends”.  The Assembly, “the great drum that gives voice to all peoples and nation”, will monitor implementation of the programme of action, he pledged.

    Rabab Fatima, Secretary-General of the third United Nations Conference on Landlocked Developing Countries, said the group of countries face profound challenges.  To address their issues, the new Programme of Action proposes regional agricultural hubs, which can help transform the sector and spearhead efforts toward sustainable development.

    “Internet usage is far below the global average,” she added, emphasizing the need to bridge the gender gap in the area.  On trade, she said that landlocked developing countries face 40 per cent higher trade costs than coastal States.  Climate finance remains grossly insufficient for landlocked developing countries, she added, noting that the Programme of Action underscores the need to urge development partners to honour their official development assistance (ODA) commitments.

    “This instrument must be a catalyst to eliminate structural barriers,” said Diego Pary Rodríguez (Bolivia), Chair of the Group of Landlocked Developing Countries.  Many of these countries have taken many measures to diversify their economies, but the Programme of Action has the potential to build new alliances that can provide them with the economic, political and technological tools to overcome barriers.

    He pointed out that the lack of development of regional transport corridors continues to undermine their participation in global trade. “Trade remains a critical means for the landlocked developing countries to achieve economic growth,” he said.  “We also ask for your support in capacity-building initiatives that will allow landlocked developing countries to comply with global trade standards,” he added, stressing the importance of fostering international cooperation in the transfer of clean technology to strengthen responses to climate change. 

    Cooperation between United Nations and Community of Portuguese-Speaking Countries

    By adopting a text titled “Cooperation between the United Nations and the Community of Portuguese-speaking Countries” (document A/79/L.43), the Assembly also stressed the importance of strengthening the cooperation between the Community and United Nations specialized agencies and other entities and programmes.

    By other terms of that resolution, the Assembly stressed the importance of partnership and cooperation between the UN and other relevant organizations, including the Community, to improve coordination and cooperation in peacebuilding and sustaining peace.

    Appointment of Member of Advisory Committee on Administrative and Budgetary Questions 

    On other matters, the Assembly appointed Alexandra Arias (Dominican Republic) as a member of the Advisory Committee on Administrative and Budgetary Questions (ACABQ) for a term of office beginning on 31 January and expiring on 31 December.  She replaces Olivio Fermín, also of the Dominican Republic, who resigned effective 31 January.

    Application of Article 19 of UN Charter 

    The Assembly also noted that Antigua and Barbuda has made the payments necessary to reduce its arrears in assessed contributions to the United Nations below the amount specified in Article 19 of the Charter.

    MIL OSI United Nations News