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IFRC: Devastating floods displace huge swathes of the population across West and Central Africa
United in Science report 2024: huge progress, but gaps remain
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Heat action day 2024
Events

Heat action day 2024

National Societies worldwide (left, Honduras) marked global heat action day 2024 with a huge array of activities, centred on urban art as a platform for raising awareness of the dangers of the “silent killer” of climate change: extreme heat. The Climate Centre commissioned artists Andrew Rae and Ruskin Kyle to create images depicting the impact of heatwaves on urban areas.

The climate crisis is “turning up the heat around the world,” the IFRC said on social media for 2 June, while calling on officials and leaders particularly in cities to make proactive plans to #BeatTheHeat.

National Society heat story-book
podcast

@rcclimate

Responding to @WMO #UnitedinScience report, @liz_stephens, @wxpizza advocate for benefits of advances in #AI, #MachineLearning to extend to vulnerable (& data-scarce?) communities; Corrie Butler file pic, science class in @ZrcsRed-supported high school - http://bit.ly/47vPQhQ

#DREFinAction
From July to September 2024, Pakistan experienced an unusually intense monsoon season, with rainfall levels reaching up to 318% above normal in some regions. With the help of IFRC-DREF, @PRC_official aims to support 5,600 people in flood-affected areas by providing…

Devastating floods are currently impacting people around the globe.

From Central Europe to Africa and Asia, our @IFRC teams are on the ground, working around the clock to provide life-saving support.

No matter the challenges, no matter where we are, our teams are always…

Brief

Climate action journey

The IFRC has now outlined the full seven-step climate action journey – summarized in English, French, Spanish and Arabic – that has been trialled by the National Societies of Malawi, Nigeria and Pakistan (photo) and encompasses climate-smart operations and, the end goal, locally led adaptation.

The first three steps were published in 2023 in A guide to climate-smart programmes (also in summary form); the last four – climate strategy, engagement with communities, locally-led adaptation, and implementation – are detailed now in a new brief, The importance of scaling up locally led adaptation, to be expanded later in 2024.

Take the journey
Climate action journey

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