World not listening to us, laments Kenyan climate scientist at COP29
BAKU, Azerbaijan (AFP) — Being an expert on global warming from an African nation prone to disaster can depress Joyce Kimutai during the creaking COP climate summits, where politics often drowns out science.
“If the world was listening to science, maybe we wouldn’t be doing these COPs,” the 36-year-old Kenyan climate scientist told AFP on the sidelines of this year’s United Nations (UN) forum in Azerbaijan.
“We are very slow in how we take our action. We are afraid of taking bold steps. And I do not understand why.”
As the conference approaches its second week, the world is no closer to agreeing to increase much-needed assistance for climate-vulnerable countries across Africa, Asia and Latin America.
Without this money, developing countries say they will struggle to move to clean energy, and adapt as climate shocks intensify.
The talks have gone around in circles, with diplomats no closer to consensus, testing those whose communities are at the mercy of ever more erratic and extreme weather.
“It’s really frustrating,” said Kimutai, who has been a lead author of reports by the UN’s expert climate panel, the IPCC.
“I try to be optimistic, but honestly speaking, there are days that I wake up and I am very pessimistic, because you’ve seen the suffering of these communities of people who are vulnerable.”
Kimutai understands the price of climate inaction better than most huddled inside windowless negotiating rooms in a sports stadium in Baku for COP29.
Kimutai is a specialist in attributing humanity’s role in warming the planet to extreme weather, and collaborates with a respected global network of scientists advancing this ground-breaking research.
“But I prefer to be based in the continent of Africa, because that is I feel that’s where my expertise is required,” said Kimutai, who lives in Nairobi.
There, Kimutai is not removed from the data she crunches.
This year, after suffering its worst drought in decades, Kenya was pounded by downpours and floods that killed hundreds of people and destroyed homes and roads in a costly trail of destruction.
Kimutai said in the Rift Valley, a hilly region where high school geography sparked her passion for science, landslides were becoming more frequent, seasons unreliable, and grass and water scarce for cattle.
Climate change was exacting a “terrible” toll in Kenya, she said, but it was no different elsewhere in Africa or other developing regions at the coalface of a warming planet.
“They are not ready for these events,” Kimutai said.
Even wealthy countries would not be “spared”, she said, pointing to recent deadly floods in Spain that caught a nation off-guard.