ISLAMABAD: The European Union and World Wide Fund-Pakistan (WWF-P) on Sunday joined hands to promote action on climate change by celebrating Climate Diplomacy Day. The event brought together people from diverse backgrounds to become part of the exchanges taking place worldwide in the crucial reflection on how to explore the opportunities arising through the irreversible transition to low carbon economies while ensuring equitable access to sustainable development. The event kicked off with participants cycling from the Pakistan National Council of the Arts on a designated route as a symbolic gesture to raise awareness to curtail the growth of greenhouse emissions by promoting eco-friendly modes of transportation. The event then moved on to a screening of documentary ‘Thank You For The Rain’, which is the story of a Kenyan farmer Kisilu, who started using his camera to capture the life of his family, his village and the damages of climate change, five years ago. When a violent storm brings him and a Norwegian filmmaker together, we see him transform from a father to a community leader and to an activist on global stage. To highlight environmental awareness and to contribute towards a greener tomorrow, WWF and the EU also launched a Climate Diplomacy Art Competition this year for students to let out their creative side and encourage their love for art. The theme of the competition was Challenges of Climate Change – Pakistan’s Youth on the Front Line. Students between 14 to 16 years of age were eligible for participating in this competition. A total of 15 government schools and colleges from Karachi, Islamabad and Lahore participated in the competition, with each institute able to submit up to 10 art pieces making it a total of 150 entries. The best art pieces were displayed at the event. The winner Amna Ayaz from Islamabad College for Girls, received a cash prize of Rs 25,000 and a certificate for becoming the EU Youth Climate Change Ambassador. EU Ambassador Jean-François Cautain said, “The EU remains committed to the Paris Agreement and its full implementation while progressing steadily with the finalisation of the measures to reduce emissions by at least 40 percent by 2030. By strengthening and widening its partnerships, the EU has progressively become the flag holder of the fight against climate change. The objective of this sustained engagement is for the EU to raise global climate ambition together with its partners, in particular those the most exposed to the negative side effects of climate change. Climate change requires collective action and the EU remains committed to continue working hand in hand with Pakistan, listed amongst the most vulnerable countries despite the low level of its global carbon emissions.” WWF-P Director General Hammad Naqi Khan stressed the importance of promoting a common worldwide understanding of the need for action to mitigate climate change. “No matter how people perceive climate change, the phenomenon is real – we are experiencing an array of environmental shifts, such as infrequent weather events, untimely glacial melt, glacial lake outbursts floods and changes in animal and bird migration patterns, highlighting irrefutable linkages to climate change taking place in full effect.” Adviser to the Prime Minister on Institutional Reforms & Austerity Dr Ishrat Hussain was the chief guest of the event. Each year, the EU around the world celebrates Climate Diplomacy Day with events taking place to highlight climate action in the EU and beyond. Conferences, citizens’ debates, exhibitions, films and social media activities aim to encourage informed debate and a joint response to the climate challenge. These events build on the momentum of the Paris Agreement – the first-ever universal, legally binding global climate deal agreed in Paris in December 2015. Published in Daily Times, September 8th 2018.