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Latest UNDP Human Development Report Presented in Armenia

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  • Latest UNDP Human Development Report Presented in Armenia

    PRESS RELEASE
    UNITED NATIONS DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM
    Yerevan, P. Adamyan 14
    Contact: Sona Hamalian
    Tel: (37410) 566073, Fax: (37410) 543811
    Website: www.undp.am,
    email: [email protected]


    LATEST UNDP HUMAN DEVELOPMENT REPORT PRESENTED IN ARMENIA



    Yerevan, November 28, 2007 - Today Ms. Consuelo Vidal, UN Resident
    Coordinator and UNDP Resident Representative, Mr. Simon Papyan, First
    Deputy Minister of Nature Protection, and Mr. Nerses Yeritsyan, Minister
    of Trade and Economic Development, presented the UNDP's Human
    Development Report 2007/2008 to the Armenian public, during a press
    conference held at the UN House.

    Published annually since 1990, the Human Development Report (HDR)
    provides a thorough and objective analysis of the current state of human
    development and draws worldwide attention to issues vital for humanity,
    concentrating on a specific theme of global significance. The latest
    report, subtitled `Fighting Climate Change: Human solidarity in a
    divided world,' focuses, particularly, on global warming, its
    devastating consequences, and the urgency of taking action to help
    curtail them.

    `The well-being and future development of humanity hinge on the highest
    level of awareness regarding the issues facing our world and, as
    importantly, the will to address them in a truly collaborative manner,'
    Ms. Vidal commented. `The UNDP Human Development Report has fast become
    the global standard in the study and mitigation of core problems
    affecting our planet.'

    The findings of the HDR are factored into the Human Development Index
    (HDI), which is designed to assess the relative human-development level
    of every country in three basic dimensions: a long and healthy life,
    access to knowledge, and a decent standard of living. For 2007/2008,
    Armenia's HDI value stands at 0.775, ranking it at 83 out of 177
    countries. These figures represent a gain of .007 points but a
    three-level drop in ranking compared with 2006. However, if today's
    revised HDI criteria were to be applied to the 2006 rankings, Armenia
    that year would have stood at 90 and thus advanced by seven levels this
    year, not dropped by three. In terms of HDI ranking for 2007/2008, the
    closest to Armenia from Central and Eastern Europe and the CIS countries
    are Ukraine, Georgia, and Azerbaijan, ranked 76th, 96th, and 98th,
    respectively. Armenia's other neighbours, the Islamic Republic of Iran
    and Turkey, are ranked 94th and 84th, respectively.

    The latest HDR shows that climate change is no longer a matter of
    speculation. It goes on to state that exposure to droughts, floods, and
    storms is already destroying opportunity and reinforcing inequality.
    'There is now overwhelming scientific evidence that the world is moving
    towards the point at which irreversible ecological catastrophe would be
    unavoidable,' it says.

    As in previous years, the 2007/2008 HDR stresses that climate change is
    not purely an environmental issue but rather a complex phenomenon which
    poses a great challenge to the development of humanity and realization
    of the UN Millennium Development Goals.

    The report indicates that the poorest countries and populations will
    suffer the earlier and most damaging setback, even though they have
    contributed the least to the problem. Some 262 million people, over 98%
    of them in the developing world, were affected by climate-related
    disasters annually from 2000 to 2004. Further temperature increases of
    3-4° C could result in 330 million people being permanently or
    temporarily displaced as a result of floods, and 20-30% of land species
    could face extinction. An additional 220-400 million people could be
    exposed to malaria - a disease that already claims around 1 million
    lives annually. These eventualities represent only a tiny fragment of
    the consequences of climate change.

    According to the report, in order to effectively fight climate change
    and the threats it poses to humanity, mitigation and adaptation must go
    hand in hand.
    According to the First National Report to the United Nations Framework
    Convention on Climate Change, in Armenia the scenario of a 2° C increase
    in temperature over the 21 century would have the following consequences:

    - Decrease of total annual flow of water by 15-20%;
    - Reduction of precipitation by 10%;
    - Expansion of desert and semi-desert areas by 33%;
    - Reduction of livestock by 30% and dairy production by 28-33%;
    - Reduction of crops by 8-14%.

    Though the overall economic cost of such scenarios in Armenia has not
    yet been calculated, the global picture is clear. The HDR report
    indicates that if no action is taken now for a drastic reduction of
    greenhouse-gas emissions, the overall cost of adaptation measures may
    total around US $86 billion annually by 2015, representing close to 0.2%
    of the GDP of developed countries. As significant as these figures may
    seem, they pale in comparison to the human and financial costs of the
    expected damages in health, livelihoods, ecosystems, property, and
    infrastructure if no immediate measures are taken.

    `Climate change is exactly the kind of global challenge that the United
    Nations is best suited to address,' Ms. Vidal said. `This is why we have
    initiated a study of the actual economic costs of climate change, which
    will become a baseline document to help the government of Armenia
    institute appropriate adaptation strategies, integrate them into
    sectoral policies, and take relevant measures to curb the impact of
    climate change in the country.'
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