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Wealthy countries must keep their promises to close the widening adaptation finance gap
If at-risk low-income countries do not receive increased financial support, climate change impacts will be even more catastrophic.
If at-risk low-income countries do not receive increased financial support, climate change impacts will be even more catastrophic.
Join us in supporting a whole generation of women and girls who are on the frontline of the impacts AND solutions to the climate emergency.
93% of the climate finance reported by wealthy countries between 2011 and 2020 was taken directly from development aid, new research from CARE has found, potentially threatening the progress of the Sustainable Development Goals.
The vast majority of the investments to fight climate change impacts reported by wealthy countries was taken directly from development funds that support low-income countries.
The inaugural climate meeting with African leaders has failed to address the needs of women, girls and other vulnerable groups in its final declaration.
We can't achieve climate justice without gender justice.That means that addressing the root causes of the climate emergency will require the engagement of men and boys as actors with agency working alongside women allies.
Maryam Imtiaz is a Communications Assistant at CARE Pakistan. In 2022, she worked closely in the response to the floods that left nearly one-third of the country underwater and impacted over 30 million people. She shares with us her experience.
Six months after a series of earthquakes struck southern Türkiye and northwest Syria, families are struggling to rebuild their lives while coping with record-high temperatures that are further stretching limited water resources.
CARE recognises that to achieve our global vision we must prevent, reduce, and mitigate our own impact on climate change and environmental crises.
In FY2023, CARE worked around the world, contributing to saving lives, fighting poverty, and increasing social justice.