Side event

SPARC at COP28

SPARC researchers led conversations on topics related to climate action in the drylands of Africa and the Middle East, home to some of the world's most climate-vulnerable people.

Event date and time 30th November 2023 12:00am +04

Promoting innovative solutions Reframing aid and resilience Supporting livelihoods and markets Understanding land and conflict Working in a changing climate Gender equality and social inclusion

For years SPARC has been working at the intersection of climate change and conflict, and at COP28 the programme was involved in a number of high-level events to move forward the conversation on scaling up climate finance and action in fragile and conflict-affected areas. 

In addition to events, at COP28 SPARC has helped shape the debate online around what is needed to scale up meaningful climate adaptation in SPARC’s focal countries. On 18 December SPARC Research Lead Mauricio Vazquez published an editorial in the New Humanitarian on rethinking the role of the humanitarian sector in supporting climate adaptation in fragile and conflict-affected areas. Researcers have also helped shape media pieces in the New Humanitarian and Devex about COP28's Climate, Relief, Recovery and Peace Declaration, which calls for “bolder, collective action” to scale up climate action in fragile and conflict-affected places.

Related SPARC blogs

SPARC Executive Director Guy Jobbins wrote before COP28 about how 'We need a new narrative for climate change in the drylands'. And SPARC researcher Manisha Gulati summarised SPARC's research on climate finance flows in her piece, 'What the case of Somalia can show us about financing climate action in conflict-affected countries'.

Related SPARC research: climate and conflict

Supporting climate action in conflict-affected settings will be a key issue at COP28. Countries affected by protracted conflict and fragility, including those in the drylands of Africa and the Middle East, are among the most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. Yet they continue to face a number of obstacles to climate finance and action. 

SPARC has carried out in-depth research, and convened key stakeholders, to raise awareness about ways to support more meaningful climate action in conflict-affected countries, and how to scale up climate finance so that pastoralists, agropastoralists and farmers can increase their resilience. Our work includes:

Related SPARC research: transboundary climate risks and regional adaptation planning

SPARC research in 2023 has also looked at regional climate risks and adaptation priorities, namely, supporting enhanced understanding of transboundary climate risks in Africa, and how to manage them, including a focus on the climate risks facing pastoralists. This work, which has already fed into discussions at the Nineteenth ordinary session of the African Ministerial Conference on the Environment (AMCEN) in August and the Africa Climate Summit in September, will be relevant to work at COP28 to agree a framework for the Paris Agreement’s Global Goal on Adaptation (GGA). Our research includes:

SPARC's work on the conflict-climate change nexus contributed to COP28's Climate, Relief, Recovery and Peace Declaration which was launched on 3 December.
SPARC's work on the conflict-climate change nexus contributed to COP28's Climate, Relief, Recovery and Peace Declaration which was launched on 3 December.

Source URL: https://www.sparc-knowledge.org/news-blogs/events/sparc-cop28-30-november-2023