COP27 Preview WEB
Metadata
- COP27 Preview WEB
- November 3, 2022
- Content Type Package
- Language English
- Transcript/Script English USAGM SHARE ((PLAYBOOK SLUG: COP27 PREVIEW HEADLINE: Syrian families Call for Action Ahead of UN Climate Conference TEASER: World Leaders to gather Sunday for COP27 in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt PUBLISHED AT: 11/3/2022 at 10:35am BYLINE: Heather Murdock DATELINE: ISTANBUL VIDEOGRAPHER: Mouneb Taim, Moawia Atrash, Yan Boechat, Hamada Elrasam, Khalil Ahmed VIDEO EDITOR: SCRIPT EDITORS: Reifenrath, MAS VIDEO SOURCE (S): VOA, Reuters PLATFORMS (mark with X): WEB __ TV _x_ RADIO __ TRT: 2:37 VID APPROVED BY: MAS TYPE: TVPKG EDITOR NOTES:)) ((INTRO: As climate change-related disasters escalate around the world, international efforts to slow deaths, prepare for crises and help poor nations recover from droughts, floods and fires have never been more urgent. On November 6th, the United Nation’s 27th annual climate conference, known as COP27, begins amid calls for action. VOA’s Heather Murdock has more from Istanbul.]] ((NARRATOR)) Millions of families in Syria have survived 12 years of war, displacement and abject poverty. But as farms dry out in the worst drought in living memory, some of these families are not sure they can survive climate change. ((Um Jumaa, Displaced Syrian)) ((Female in Arabic)) “Climate change has affected us very dramatically before and after our displacement. The cold has become very cold. Heat has become very hot. Our children are often sick.” ((NARRATOR)) In East Africa, children are dying from hunger as they also suffer through the worst drought in 40 years. Besides water shortages in Africa, the Middle East, Europe, America and China, experts say extreme weather-related disasters are increasing around the globe at an unprecedented pace. Floods alone this year have killed more than 2,300 people, mostly in Pakistan and Nigeria. Fires have devastated lives and livelihoods on almost every continent. The world is also suffering from heat waves, deadly storms and rising sea levels. Officials of the 2022 United Nations Climate Change Conference, known as COP27, in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, say the event will focus on getting countries to implement policies and promises that they have already made but have so far failed to carry out — policies that aim to slow the warming global temperatures at the heart of these disasters. ((Hans-Otto Pörtner, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change)) ((Male in English)) “What we see in the world is a huge implementation gap in terms of climate action. So there is a deficiency in terms of the action on mitigation, there is a deficiency in terms of the actions on adaptation.” ((NARRATOR)) Additionally, officials expect renewed efforts to get wealthy polluting countries to pay for the devastation in the poorest, most impacted countries. But on the farms and in the villages of northwestern Syria, residents say they have little hope that powerful nations will act in time. ((Um Jumaa, Displaced Syrian)) ((Female in Arabic)) “Drought means hunger. I wish something would prevent this drought from getting worse.” ((NARRATOR:)) Local farmers in Syria say every year their resources dwindle as their land dries, and without immediate action, they may soon join the millions of people already displaced by climate change. ((HEATHER MURDOCK, VOA NEWS, ISTANBUL))
- Transcript/Script USAGM SHARE ((PLAYBOOK SLUG: COP27 PREVIEW HEADLINE: Syrian families Call for Action Ahead of UN Climate Conference TEASER: World Leaders to gather Sunday for COP27 in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt PUBLISHED AT: 11/3/2022 at 10:35am BYLINE: Heather Murdock DATELINE: ISTANBUL VIDEOGRAPHER: Mouneb Taim, Moawia Atrash, Yan Boechat, Hamada Elrasam, Khalil Ahmed VIDEO EDITOR: SCRIPT EDITORS: Reifenrath, MAS VIDEO SOURCE (S): VOA, Reuters PLATFORMS (mark with X): WEB __ TV _x_ RADIO __ TRT: 2:37 VID APPROVED BY: MAS TYPE: TVPKG EDITOR NOTES:)) ((INTRO: As climate change-related disasters escalate around the world, international efforts to slow deaths, prepare for crises and help poor nations recover from droughts, floods and fires have never been more urgent. On November 6th, the United Nation’s 27th annual climate conference, known as COP27, begins amid calls for action. VOA’s Heather Murdock has more from Istanbul.]] ((NARRATOR)) Millions of families in Syria have survived 12 years of war, displacement and abject poverty. But as farms dry out in the worst drought in living memory, some of these families are not sure they can survive climate change. ((Um Jumaa, Displaced Syrian)) ((Female in Arabic)) “Climate change has affected us very dramatically before and after our displacement. The cold has become very cold. Heat has become very hot. Our children are often sick.” ((NARRATOR)) In East Africa, children are dying from hunger as they also suffer through the worst drought in 40 years. Besides water shortages in Africa, the Middle East, Europe, America and China, experts say extreme weather-related disasters are increasing around the globe at an unprecedented pace. Floods alone this year have killed more than 2,300 people, mostly in Pakistan and Nigeria. Fires have devastated lives and livelihoods on almost every continent. The world is also suffering from heat waves, deadly storms and rising sea levels. Officials of the 2022 United Nations Climate Change Conference, known as COP27, in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, say the event will focus on getting countries to implement policies and promises that they have already made but have so far failed to carry out — policies that aim to slow the warming global temperatures at the heart of these disasters. ((Hans-Otto Pörtner, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change)) ((Male in English)) “What we see in the world is a huge implementation gap in terms of climate action. So there is a deficiency in terms of the action on mitigation, there is a deficiency in terms of the actions on adaptation.” ((NARRATOR)) Additionally, officials expect renewed efforts to get wealthy polluting countries to pay for the devastation in the poorest, most impacted countries. But on the farms and in the villages of northwestern Syria, residents say they have little hope that powerful nations will act in time. ((Um Jumaa, Displaced Syrian)) ((Female in Arabic)) “Drought means hunger. I wish something would prevent this drought from getting worse.” ((NARRATOR:)) Local farmers in Syria say every year their resources dwindle as their land dries, and without immediate action, they may soon join the millions of people already displaced by climate change. ((HEATHER MURDOCK, VOA NEWS, ISTANBUL))
- NewsML Media Topics Arts, Culture, Entertainment and Media
- Network VOA
- Embargo Date November 3, 2022 10:39 EDT
- Byline Heather Murdock
- Brand / Language Service Voice of America