Sunday, 16 November 2025

World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims 2025; November 16th.

FORUM: “Lost talents. World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims 2025. Every year, millions more road victims are added to the current toll of over 50 million killed and hundreds of millions injured since the first road death. It is an actual pandemic, affecting primarily our vulnerable and our young, which in addition to the trauma of injury and bereavement has also a devastating economic impact for countries, communities and families. Therefore, during the Decade of Action 2021-2030, the World Day has an important role of helping to achieve the 50% road casualty reduction target. When people are killed or severely injured in road traffic collisions before their time, the world loses more than just individuals — it loses their potential, their ideas, their future impact on society. They become lost talents. And lost talents become the soul of our platform. The emptiness left behind after someone is killed or severely injured on the road is powerfully conveyed through scenes of an empty stage, a deserted sports field, or a quiet room — spaces where their presence is deeply missed, and their absence is painfully felt. The objectives of WDoR 2025 are to provide a platform for road traffic victims and their families to remember all people killed and seriously injured on the roads, to Acknowledge the crucial work of the emergency services, to draw attention to the generally trivial legal response to culpable road deaths and injuries and advocate for an appropriately serious response, to advocate for better support for road traffic victims and victim families and to promote evidence-based actions to prevent and eventually stop further road traffic deaths and injuries.Follow the conversation with the hashtags: #Roadsafetydecade, #RoadVictims, #WDoR2024, #19November, #RoadTrafficVictimsDay.


November 16th






STATEMENTS: Every year, the world's roads take over one million of lives and talents.

Statement from Ettiene Krug, Director of the Department of Social Determinants of Health at the World Health Organization, for World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims 2025.

Statement form the UN Secretary General’s Special Envoy, Jean Todt on UN World Day of Remembrance for Road Victims 2025.

Statement from Antonio Avenoso, ETSC on World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims 2025.


CAMPAIGN MATERIALS: The statistic that “of all-cause mortality, road traffic injury remains the leading cause of death for children and young people” is straight-forward and haunting. That’s why we let it speak for itself and directly use it as the main message of our “Lost talents” campaign.
Communication concept “Lost Talents”
Visuals and toolkits are available for everyone to use. Get the materials







International Day for Tolerance 2025; November 16th.

FORUM: "Reflecting on Tolerance" International Day for Tolerance 2025. The "principle of tolerance" can refer to several concepts, most commonly: the social and ethical idea of accepting and respecting diverse beliefs, behaviors, and identities, even if one disagrees with them; and the logical principle that two instances are similar enough to be treated as the same for a given purpose. Socially, tolerance is a cornerstone of peaceful coexistence, allowing individuals to live freely without imposing their views on others. In logic and philosophy, it relates to the choice of language and systems, as with the "principle of tolerance" proposed by Rudolf Carnap for creating new logical systems. The acceptance of different beliefs, actions, and cultures, acknowledging that people have the right to live their own lives, even if their views differ from your own. olerance equires respect and appreciation for human diversity, not indifference or weakness. It means that one's own views should not be imposed on others. The Principle of Tolerance is consistent with human rights and encourages peaceful coexistence by ensuring everyone can live in peace and dignity. The concept of Tolerance, highlighted by philosophers like Karl Popper, questions whether a society should tolerate those who are intolerant. Some argue that a tolerant society must preserve itself and therefore has the right to suppress intolerant ideologies that would undermine its own liberties and freedoms. Follow the conversations with the hashtags: #tolerance, #16November, #InternationalDayforTolerance, #ToleranceDay.


Generate public awareness and emphasize the dangers of intolerance

EVENTS: Commemoration of the 30th anniversary of the 1995 Declaration of Principles on Tolerance UNESCO,

On November 16th; The UNESCO, the UNAOC, the UN ACADEMIC IMPACT and the OHCHR will organize a webinar to mark the International Tolerance Day 2025 to generate public awareness of the dangers of intolerance and to teach the values of peace, responsible citizenship, equality, and tolerance in all circumstances. The United Nations General Assembly recommends that interested intergovernmental and non-governmentalorganizations and specialized agencies exert efforts in their respective fields to contribute to the celebration, and to consider what further contributions they can make toimplement and disseminate the standards affirmed in the Declaration of PrinciplesRegister to participate!

ACTIONS: Inform and mobilize public opinion, as well as the United Nations system to the Principles of Tolerance. The General Assemebly Requests the United Nations Educational, Scientific and CulturalOrganization to continue to coordinate actions in support of tolerance promotion and education in partnership with other United Nations agencies and regional, intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations

PUBLICATION: Read the 1995 Declaration of Principles on Tolerance established by the UNESCO

November 16th



Saturday, 15 November 2025

International Day for the Prevention of and Fight against All Forms of Transnational Organized Crime 2025; November 15th.

FORUM: "Follow the money. Stop organized crime.International Day for the Prevention of andFight Against All Forms of Transnational Organized Crime 2025. This year’s theme, “Follow the money. Stop organized crime.”, highlights how illicit profits drive transnational organized crime. Each year, these crimes generate billions in illicit proceeds, infiltrating economies and supply chains, undermining governance and ultimately causing immense harm to people and planet. With nearly every form of organized crime, whether it’s drug trafficking, firearms trafficking, trafficking in persons, crimes that affect the environment or cyber fraud, there is a money trail. By following the money and exposing this trail, we can cut their lifeline and disrupt organized criminal networks. We call on governments, policymakers, law enforcement, the financial sector, digital platforms, civil society and the public to play their part in stopping organized crime. From strengthening cooperation and financial investigations to safeguarding digital spaces and exposing scams, everyone has a role to Stop Organized Crime. Follow the conversations with the hashtags: #StopOrganizedCrime, #UNTOC_ReviewMechanism, #TOCday, #15november, #OrganizedFraud, #organizedCrime, #UNTOC.



EVENTS: High-Level Event to mark the International Day for the Prevention of andFight Against All Forms of Transnational Organized Crime 2025 and to Commemorate the 25th Anniversary of the UN Convention AgainstOrganized Crime.

The United Nations General Assembly adopted the United Nations Convention againstTransnational Organized Crime (UNTOC), widely known as the Palermo Convention, on 15 November 2000 and its two protocols- Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in persons, Especially Women and Children, and Protocol against the Smuggling of Migrants by Land, Sea and Air. On 31 May 2001, the General Assembly adopted its third protocol- Protocol against the Illicit Manufacturing of and Trafficking in Firearms, Their parts and Components and Ammunition. The Convention established the first globally legally binding and comprehensive framework to strengthen national capacities and promote international cooperation to prevent and combat transnational organized crime, both in its traditional manifestations and its new, evolving and emerging forms. In March 2024, the General Assembly adopted resolution A/RES/78/267, proclaiming November 15th as International Day for the Prevention of and Fight against All Forms ofTransnational Organized Crime. The observance is intended to raise global awareness of the grave threat posed by organized crime, foster stronger cooperation among States, and reinforce collective commitment to the full and effective implementation of UNTOC and its Protocols. The 2025 International Day commemoration, the second of its kind, carries special significance. It marks the 25th anniversary of the adoption of the UNTOC and its Protocols against Trafficking in Persons and the Smuggling of Migrants, as well as the 20th anniversary of the entry into force of its third Protocol on Firearms. This milestone commemoration offers a unique opportunity to take stock of progress achieved, honour those who have dedicated their lives to advancing the anti-crime agenda, and renew efforts to ensure that the Convention is fully and effectively implemented to uphold the vision of global justice, cooperation and security enshrined in it. The commemoration will convene high-level representatives, diplomats, youth leaders, civil society actors and experts in a ceremony designed to showcase political will, joint commitment and shared vision in the fight against organized crime.


AGENDA PROGRAMME

Time Agenda Speaker 

13:15 – 13:20 Opening remarks • H.E. Mr. Maurizio Massari, Ambassador and Permanent Representative of Italy to the UN 

13:20 – 13:32 Key Interventions (6 min each) • H.E. Ms. Chiara Colosimo, President of the Italian Parliament's Antimafia Commission (Video statement) • Ms. Xiaohong Li, Representative of the UNODC New York Liaison Office 

13:32 – 14:10 Interventions by co-organizers (3-4 min each) • H.E. Mr. Luis Felipe Ugarelli, Director General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Peru • H.E. Mr. Bart De Wolf, Ambassador and Deputy Permanent Representative of Belgium to the UN • H.E. Mrs. Alejandra Hernandez Gonzalez, Ambassador and Deputy Permanent Representative of the Dominican Republic to the UN • H.E. Mr. Umetsu Shigeru, Ambassador and Deputy Permanent Representative of Japan to the UN • Mr. Stefan Pretterhofer, Deputy Permanent Representative of Austria to the UN • Ms. Majda Moutchou, Deputy Permanent Representative of Morocco to the UN • Mr. Robert Pulver, Chief of the DPO/OROLSI Justice and Corrections Service 

14:10 – 14:25 Interventions from the floor 

14:25 – 14:30 Closing remarks • H.E. Ambassador Mr. Maurizio Massari, Permanent Representative of Italy to the UN • Ms. Xiaohong Li, Representative of the UNODC New York Liaison Office


LIVESTREAM: UNTOC at 25



CAMPAIGN STRATEGY:

"Follow the money" is a key strategy for combating organized crime by investigating financial transactions to uncover criminal networks and prosecute masterminds. To stop organized crime, law enforcement and international bodies use this method to trace illicit financial flows, while a multi-layered approach also involves strengthening cooperation, enhancing digital safeguards, and preventing crimes through various means.

Key strategies for following the money

Investigate financial transactions: Track money through bank accounts, utility bills, and other financial records to find connections between criminals and their networks.
Prosecute masterminds: By tracing illicit financial flows, investigators can link lower-level criminals to the high-level masterminds and corrupt networks.
Use financial intelligence: Organizations like the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) set international standards for combating money laundering and terrorism financing, providing a framework for investigation.
Gather evidence: Financial transactions can provide crucial evidence for building a case, such as exposing bribery and corruption.

Broader strategies to stop organized crime

Strengthen international cooperation: The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) and international bodies like the UNTOC work to improve cooperation and intelligence sharing among nations to combat transnational crime.
Implement multi-layered prevention: This includes a "Four P" approach (Prepare, Prevent, Pursue, and Protect) that combines various methods like security systems and surveillance.
Safeguard digital spaces: Acknowledge and address the role of digital platforms and online scams in organized crime.
Build a skilled workforce: Ensure law enforcement agencies have a workforce equipped with the skills for intelligence analysis, surveillance, and inter-agency collaboration to tackle the complexity of organized crime.



PUBLICATIONExplainer: What is the Organized Crime Convention?, Why does this global commitment still matter today?, What is the Convention and why does it matter? 

25 years ago today, countries united under one commitment: to work together to Stop Organized Crime. Today, we celebrate 25 years of the UN Convention against Transnational Organized Crime. 25 years of partnerships, progress and protection for people and communities worldwide.

The world is at a crossroads when it comes to dealing with illicit economies. Organized crime is undermining democracy, the sovereignty of states, and even international peace and security. The rules-based order that has prevailed for decades is now being exploited by those who don’t play by the rules. Criminal groups are some of the biggest profiteers. Illicit economies reflect broader socio-economic, political and geopolitical processes, because criminals are often the ones who adapt first and take advantage of disruptions such as geopolitical competition, rapid technological innovation, violent conflicts, trade wars and the erosion of democracy. So, the Global Organized Crime Index is not just a tool for measuring crime: it is a mirror reflecting what is going on within states and the international system. Since this is our third edition, we now have three data sets that enable us to track and compare how criminal markets and actors have evolved over the past five years. Among the findings the data of this edition of the Index identifies is that there have been several shifts in the global criminal economy. For example, synthetic drugs and cocaine are rapidly dominating world drug markets. This shows the ability of criminal actors to capitalize on changing consumer preferences, technological developments in production and increasingly interconnected trafficking networks. At the same time, this Index shows a significant and rapidly growing trend: a rise in non-violent forms of crime such as financial and cyber-dependent crimes. These ‘invisible’ forms of organized crime are less reliant on traditional violent methods or corruption, but have become more embedded in transnational financial and digital systems. And they are often harder to detect. Despite the absence of violence in these illicit economies, they still cause untold harm. Financial fraud and cyber-dependent crimes have high costs for their victims – individuals, businesses and states. Counterfeiting, another silent crime, is also becoming more pervasive, the Index finds. Inflation, weak economies, job insecurity and trade wars are fuelling this market as consumers with less purchasing power seek cheaper products. This year’s Index also shows that, while state-embedded actors are the most prevalent criminal actors, yet again, foreign actors registered the sharpest overall increase since the last Index in 2023. This suggests criminal groups are increasingly mobile and that there is closer transnational cooperation between them. Private sector actors are also playing an increasingly significant role in illicit economies, particularly as facilitators of criminal activity, for example in logistics, finance and technology. In addition to analyzing criminal markets and actors, the Index measures resilience. While many criminal markets are witnessing growth, resilience scores appear to have plateaued. An example of this is international cooperation. While this indicator usually outperforms the other 11 resilience indicators, an increasingly fractured international system and a retreat from multilateralism suggest that states are less willing to cooperate to fight crime. This is a worrying trend, not least in this year when we mark the 25th anniversary of the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime. That said, the trajectories of crime can be changed. For example, the Index shows that, statistically, by strengthening key areas of resilience we can reduce the influence of state-embedded actors over illicit activities to a measurable degree, while stronger response measures can shift communities, even societies, into a more positive direction. The Index is both a record of vulnerabilities and a tool for solutions. By charting trends, risks and trajectories across every country, the Index provides a foundation for action to guide reforms, to strengthen institutions and to empower civil society. Its continuity across editions makes it possible to track change over time, offering not only a mirror of today’s realities, but also a compass for the choices that lie ahead. We therefore invite governments, policymakers, civil society and international actors to use the Index as a shared evidence base to transform knowledge into policy, and urgency into action.




Ranking










Friday, 14 November 2025

World Diabetes Day 2025; November 14th.

November 14th.



FORUM
: "Diabetes across life stages.World Diabetes Day 2025. Diabetes can impact people across all life stages, including childhood, the reproductive years, working age and older adulthood. The theme of this year’s obervance recognizes that every person living with diabetes should have access to integrated care, supportive environments and policies that promote health, dignity and self-management. This campaign emphasizes the importance of a life-course approach to diabetes prevention, management and overall well-being. The celebration provide an opportunity to raise awareness about diabetes as a critical global public health issue. Join us in raising awareness, spreading knowledge and creating lasting change for all affected by diabetes. Follow the conversations with the hashtags: #Diabeteslife, #14November, #WorldDiabetesDay, #AccesstoDiabetesCare.

World Diabetes Day 2025



EVENTS: On November 14th; The World Health Organization's World Diabetes Day 2025 live Q&A  #AskWHO will be live-streamed on WHO X, Facebook, LinkedIn and YouTube channels at 2:30pm CET. Learn more about the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) World Diabetes Day commemoration event. Register to participate!

Diabetes across life stages



Día Mundial de la Diabetes 2025



PLEDGE: Let's  work togerher to achieve the Global Diabetes Coverage Targets.

WHO Member States endorsed 5 global diabetes coverage targets to be achieved by 2030:
  • 80% of people with diabetes are diagnosed;
  • 80% of people with diagnosed diabetes have good control of glycaemia;
  • 80% of people with diagnosed diabetes have good control of blood pressure;
  • 60% of people with diabetes of 40 years or older receive statins; and
  • 100% of people with type 1 diabetes have access to affordable insulin and blood glucose self-monitoring.
Panel Discussion


About the Regional Revolving Funds

The PAHO Regional Revolving Funds (RRFs) are technical cooperation mechanisms that enable countries in the Americas to access quality medicines, vaccines, and public health supplies at affordable prices in a timely and transparent manner. Their main objective is to reduce economic and logistical barriers that impede access to essential treatments, including quality medicines and technologies for diabetes care

Through the Regional Revolving Funds, The PAHO:
  1. Advises countries on the joint procurement of essential supplies, including medicines and technologies.
  2. Promotes transparency, efficiency, and quality in procurement processes.
  3. Strengthens national capacities to ensure a continuous and equitable supply.

Since their inception, the Regional Revolving Funds have been a vital instrument for guaranteeing access to health supplies in the Americas. They have been key in the fight against HIV/AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis, and have directly contributed to improving immunization, reducing maternal and infant mortality, and eradicating polio, among other advances. The PAHO Regional Revolving Funds are an essential tool for improving health and well-being in the Americas. They help countries ensure that everyone has access to the health supplies they need. More information about the fund.


Monday, 10 November 2025

World Science Day for Peace and Development 2025; November 10th.

FORUM: "Trust, Transformation, and Tomorrow: The Science We Need for 2050." World Science Day for Peace and Development 2025. Join us live from the 43rd session of the UNESCO General Conference as we celebrate the day with a forward-looking conversation on the future of science. This event invites participants to reflect on what kind of science—and what kind of relationship between science and society—will be needed to meet the demands of the coming decades. Together, experts and policymakers will envision the scientific and societal landscape of 2050 and discuss how science can shape a more just, sustainable, and peaceful future. The General Conference is UNESCO’s highest decision-making body, gathering delegates from all 194 Member States every two years to set the Organization’s global priorities and guide its actions for peace, inclusion, and sustainable development. Through this dialogue, UNESCO reaffirms its leadership as the foundation of global scientific cooperation and the driving force behind the Science Decade for Action. To join the global conversation on the science we need for 2050; Follow the conversations with the hashtags: #Science4Policy, #sciencematters, #ScienceDay, #10November, #sustainableDevelopment, #WorldScienceDayforPeaceandDevelopment.



EVENT: On November 10th; 2025 from 1:15 pm - 2:50 pm, at the Room IX - Delegates Meeting Room #3 in Uzbekistan will celebrate the World Science Day for Peace and Development 2025 during the 43rd session of the UNESCO General Conference in Samarkand, Uzbekistan. Organized under the umbrella of the International Decade of Sciences for Sustainable Development (2024–2033), this event celebrates World Science Day for Peace and Development by fostering forward-looking dialogue on the evolution of science and its role in shaping a just, sustainable, and peaceful future.The Participants will be invited to envision the scientific and societal landscape of 2050 and reflect on, and make informed forecasts about, the evolving role of science in shaping a more just, sustainable, and peaceful future. Participants will consider how feasible this may be and what changes are required to achieve it. It will explore the foundations of a renewed social contract with science, one anchored in public trust, diversified funding sources, a transformed scientific paradigm, open science practices, ethical responsibility, and inclusive engagement.

Key discussion themes

November 10th.



Agenda Programme

13:15 – 13:20 Opening remarks
Ms Lidia Brito, Assistant Director-General for Natural Sciences of UNESCO
13:20 – 13:35 Keynote speech
A renewed social contract with science
Ms Dilfuza Egamberdieva, Head of the Department of Biological Research and Food Safety at the Institute of Fundamental and Applied Research, National Research University, Uzbekistan
13:35 – 13:50 International Decade of Sciences for Sustainable Development
H.E. Ms Monique van Daalen, Co-Chair of the International Decade of Sciences for Sustainable Development and Ambassador of the Netherlands to UNESCO

13:50 – 14:40 Panel discussion
Q & A 
14:40 – 14:50  Closing remarks
H.E. Mr Samir Addahre, Chair of the Science Commission and Ambassador of the Kingdom of Morocco to UNESCO 




Message from Ms Audrey Azoulay, Director-General of UNESCO, on the occasion of World Science Day for Peace and Development, 10 November 2025.

Science offers concrete solutions to the greatest challenges of our time: climate disruption, pandemics, resource scarcity and growing inequalities. It is a common good, a universal language, capable of bringing us together beyond borders and differences, linking knowledge to the pursuit of the collective good. Yet, in a world faced with widespread misinformation and distrust, we must come together to ensure that science is not reduced to a mere commodity or a political instrument. Science must instead be guided by ethics and solidarity, serving the common good. It is in this spirit that we celebrate World Science Day for Peace and Development under the theme “Trust, Transformation and Tomorrow: The Science We Need for 2050”. Trust cannot be demanded or decreed – it must be built. It grows through open and sustained dialogue between researchers, policymakers, private actors and citizens alike. Rebuilding trust in science lies at the heart of UNESCO’s 2021 Recommendation on Open Science, which calls for a global commitment to transparency, participation and accessibility. Through this recommendation, we can renew trust in science and ensure that it benefits all. But to produce the science of tomorrow, we must unlearn certain habits: we must move beyond silos – refusing to privilege certain forms of knowledge over others, or to confuse innovation with accumulation. Instead, we must relearn how to diversify, share, collaborate and listen. This means listening to researchers, but also to local and Indigenous peoples, whose insights and traditions enrich the collective understanding of our world. Only through active public participation can science truly serve everyone. To mark this year’s World Science Day, UNESCO is proud to publish a landmark anthology tracing 80 years of science at UNESCO, bringing together 46 essays by Nobel laureates, written for UNESCO between 1948 and today. It retraces the evolution of international scientific cooperation and diplomacy, the creation of leading institutions such as CERN and SESAME, the establishment of the Intergovernmental Hydrological Programme, and the development of global ethical frameworks on bioethics, artificial intelligence and neurotechnology. As part of the International Decade of Sciences for Sustainable Development (2024-2033), UNESCO is deepening this commitment by breaking down barriers in research, stimulating international cooperation and strengthening academic networks, and ensuring that science informs public policy at every level. On this World Science Day for Peace and Development, UNESCO reaffirms its conviction that open, inclusive, and ethical science – designed for the collective good – is the cornerstone of lasting peace.

UNESCO Director-General.

Thursday, 6 November 2025

International Day for Preventing the Exploitation of the Environment in War and Armed Conflict 2025; November 6th.

FORUM: "Climate and security: environmental impact of armed conflict and climate-driven security risks." International Day for the Protection of the Environment in War and Conflicts 2025. Armed conflict increasingly generates severe and lasting environmental harm, with direct implications for international peace and security. Warfare damages ecosystems; contaminates air, soil and water; destroys agricultural land; accelerates deforestation and biodiversity loss; and devastates urban infrastructure. These impacts erode livelihoods, aggravate humanitarian need, fuel displacement and entrench cycles of instability by intensifying competition over scarce resources. The United Nations estimates have found that a quarter of the world’s population, approximately 2 billion people, live in conflict-affected areas.1 This widespread conflict not only destabilizes human populations but also drives the degradation of natural resources, which include renewable resources like water, land, forests and other ecosystems. In turn, this environmental decline deepens fragility and worsens humanitarian crises. Illustrative cases underline the global scope. For instance, in Sierra Leone, even two decades after the end of its conflict, the conflict’s legacies include degraded water resources and farmlands and weakened environmental governance. 2 In Gaza, the collapse of urban systems has generated hazardous rubble and wastewater discharge and contaminated soils and groundwater, posing grave public health and ecological risks. 3 In Sudan/Darfur, climate variability and land-water stress intersect with fighting, accelerating deforestation and aquifer depletion and deepening humanitarian needs. 4 In Ukraine, 5 strikes on industrial and energy infrastructure, contamination from munitions and mines, forest and peatland fires, and massive debris have created cross-border pollution risks and long-term remediation needs; extensive croplands are mined or contaminated, threatening food security. These examples, in addition to others in Africa, the Middle East and Asia-Pacific, show that environmental degradation is both a casualty and a driver of insecurity. The discussion will, however, be anchored in a growing normative context: the observance by the General Assembly of November 6th as the International Day forPreventing the Exploitation of the Environment in War and Armed Conflict (Assembly resolution 56/4); the International Law Commission’s draft principles onprotection of the environment in relation to armed conflicts; the Kunming-MontrealGlobal Biodiversity Framework; and relevant United Nations Environment Assembly resolutions encouraging assistance and recovery in conflict-affected areas. It is in this regard that the Security Council has acknowledged climate- and environment-relatedsecurity risks in several country situations and thematic debates, encouraging risk assessment and mitigation that uphold international law, including international humanitarian law and international human rights law.

Answer to the Guiding questions:
1. How should the Security Council more systematically reflect conflict-linked environmental risks in mandates, reporting and political guidance? How can missions and United Nations country teams better integrate environmental risk management, mine action for agricultural recovery and nature-based stabilization into planning and resourcing? 2. What measures should parties adopt during hostilities to minimize environmental harm? 3. What are the steps needed to advance implementation of international human rights obligations and the principles on protection of the environment in relation to armed conflicts, including training, reporting and cooperation on investigations, remediation and accountability, including for the proposed crime of ecocide? 4. What are the minimum standards and support needed for safe debris management, hazardous-waste handling and resilient urban reconstruction? 5. Which financing options can expand predictable support for environmental recovery and climate adaptation in conflict-affected. Follow the conversations with the hashtags: #EnvironmentalProtection, #EnvironmentconflictDay, #6november.

November 6th.



EVENT: On November 6th, At the UNHQ, Starting at 16:00 PM EST, the U.N. Security Council will held a meeting entitled ''Climate and security: environmental impact of armed conflict and climate-driven security risks". Under the agenda: Threats to international peace and security.

Briefers:
  • Under-Secretary-General for Political and Peacebuilding Affairs
  • Executive Director of the United Nations Environment Programme
  • Charles C. Jalloh, professor, University of Miami Law School, and member of the International Law Commission
  • Civil society representative.
Armed conflict increasingly generates severe and lasting environmental harm, with direct implications for international peace and security. Warfare damages ecosystems; contaminates air, soil and water; destroys agricultural land; accelerates deforestation and biodiversity loss; and devastates urban infrastructure. These impacts erode livelihoods, aggravate humanitarian need, fuel displacement and entrench cycles of instability by intensifying competition over scarce resources.

Key objectives are to:
  • Elevate recognition of conflict-driven environmental harm as a security risk that
  • compounds humanitarian crises, undermines governance and can fuel renewed conflict;
  • Draw lessons from diverse conflict contexts on impacts on ecosystems,
  • agriculture, water systems, urban infrastructure and public health;
  • Identify practical tools to prevent, monitor and remediate environmental damage during and after conflict, integrating these into political, peacekeeping, humanitarian and development responses;
  • Promote United Nations system coherence (United Nations Environment Programme, Department of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs, Department of Peace Operations, United Nations Development Programme and Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs) and partnerships with regional organizations and international financial institutions to align financing for remediation, stabilization and climate adaptation.

Related Documents: Letter dated 28 October 2025 from the Permanent Representative of Sierra Leone to the United Nations addressed to the Secretary-General (S/2025/687). Register to participate!

Climate and security: environmental impact of armed conflict and climate-driven security risks




Speech delived by Inger Andersen, UNEP Executive director during the United Nations Security Council Briefing on Climate and Security – environmental impact of armed conflict driven security risks.

Madam President, Excellencies,

I thank the Government of Sierra Leone for convening this timely meeting.

In 2001, the United Nations General Assembly invited the United Nations system, and international and regional organizations, to mark 6 November each year as the International Day for Preventing the Exploitation of the Environment in War and Armed Conflict – an enduring reminder that protecting nature is inseparable from protecting people in times of crisis.

In doing so, Member States recognized that environmental harm during armed conflict can degrade ecosystems and natural resources long after hostilities end, often across national borders and beyond the present generation.

My first point is that environmental damage caused by conflicts continues to push people into hunger, disease and displacement – and therefore increasing insecurity.

Conflicts lead to pollution, waste and the destruction of critical ecosystems, with long-term implications for food security, for water security, for economies and for human health.

Since 2023, in the Gaza Strip, for example, we have seen the loss of 97 per cent of its tree crops, 95 per cent of its shrubland and 82 per cent of its annual crops. Freshwater and marine ecosystems are polluted by munitions, untreated sewage and other contaminants. Over 61 million tonnes of debris must now be cleared, with sensitivity, to avoid further contamination.

Conflicts elsewhere lead to pollution and damage to water infrastructure, either accidental or deliberate. For example, in Libya, Syria and Yemen, 180 instances of deliberate targeting of water infrastructure were recorded during the 2010s. In Haiti, the conflict has worsened soil and water contamination in lowland slum areas, dramatically increasing the risks of disasters, such as flash floods and infectious diseases.

In many conflicts, internally displaced persons have sought refuge in ecologically fragile areas because this is one of the few options for refuge available. But clearance of forests, for fuel and shelter, only accelerates challenges like desertification and soil erosion, further intensifying environmental damage.

Destruction of the Kakhovka Dam in Ukraine, as an example, led to the flooding of more than 600 km² of land, resulting in severe loss of natural habitats, plant communities and species through prolonged inundation of ecosystems.

The production and use of weapons and munitions increases the release of greenhouse gases and a variety of other pollutants, leaving an unacceptable legacy for future generations. The environmental recovery from conflict-related damage can therefore take decades and why, as the International Law Commission has made clear, preventing damage to the environment during conflict is critical.

My second point is that climate change exacerbates tensions, and – under some conditions – contributes to conflicts.

While conflicts rarely have a single cause, and while climate-conflict pathways are complex, climate change is not infrequently one of the peels of the onion – with other peels often reflecting conflicts over resources, such as water and land, ethnic conflict, religious conflicts and so on.

But somewhere in the mix, there is often also the added driver of climate change. Climate change, therefore, accompanied by other challenges, can contribute to a dangerous downward spiral. As the Secretary-General has noted in a previous address to this Council, “Both climate disasters and conflict inflame inequalities, imperil livelihoods and force people from their homes.”

Climate change has an especially disruptive impact in regions in which people are already vulnerable and depend heavily on agriculture or natural resources.

In this context, it is important to note the powerful influence climate change has on the water cycle, making it more erratic and extreme. In the past six years, only about one-third of the global river catchment area had normal discharge conditions compared to the 1991-2020 average, according to the latest data from the World Meteorological Organization.

People are suffering cascading impacts of either too much or too little water. Dry areas have also been devastated by these disruptions to the water cycle. Across a broad region between Mauritania and Afghanistan, with the Mediterranean at its centre, temperatures have been increasing faster than the global average, and rainfall has become much more erratic.

Exposure to climate-related hazards has increased because of population growth and expansion of irrigated agriculture. Vulnerability has also increased, especially where conflicts have undermined communities’ and countries’ ability to cope with drought.

In Syria, we are now witnessing the consequences where – following an exceptionally dry winter and high summer temperatures – much of the wheat harvest has failed. Earlier this year, Syria also suffered devastating forest fires, further diminishing the economic safety net provided by critical ecosystems.

Syria’s Minister of Emergency and Disaster Management has issued an urgent call for government, international partners and local stakeholders to work together “to protect livelihoods and strengthen our preparedness for the future”.

There is also growing evidence that droughts and high temperatures increase the risks of various forms of conflict. World Bank research found that that most contexts affected by fragility and conflict also experience consistently drier, more severe drought periods.


The countries that were chronically unstable during the first two decades of this century also experienced more severe droughts on average during the same period. But there is no simple causal chain: increased rainfall can also make violent conflict more likely in certain settings, for example through the targeting of rich agricultural areas by armed groups or states.

My third point is that conflict-affected countries and communities must be supported with tools to protect natural resources and the environment.

Conflict events have doubled in the past five years. Environmental challenges are escalating, whether countries are in conflict or not.

I wish to highlight three priorities that would enhance environmental support to conflict-affected countries.

Priority one: Rebuild national capacity for environmental management, supported by science-based assessments and tools.

Local and national governance institutions are often weakened during periods of conflict. Rebuilding national environmental governance capacities enables governments to manage natural resources for sustainable development, economic recovery and climate adaptation – work that can help reduce poverty, hunger and aid dependency.

Here, the United Nations system can help rebuild national capacity by acting as a trusted knowledge partner, providing high-level and technical advice, supporting peer exchange, and helping governments navigate complex policy trade-offs in ways that are independent, technically sound and normatively grounded.

Conflict-related environmental assessments are key in supporting stakeholders to understand both immediate and longer-term risks, providing an essential knowledge basis for priority-setting during the recovery.

Remote sensing can – when used correctly – show changes in environmental status to facilitate remediation action. Modelling can help decision-makers understand different environmental policy options and trade-offs. Frameworks for managing conflict-related debris can lower contamination risks and reduce the financial and environmental costs of reconstruction.

On top of this, there is substantial evidence that empowering women to manage natural resources in conflict-affected settings can also contribute to enhanced environmental management, conflict resolution and community stability.

Priority two: Facilitate and enable work across sectors and actors.

At an international and national level, management of natural resources – including water, rangelands and forests – requires cooperation between ministries and sectors, including the private sector and, in some cases, security actors.

The UN system must also ensure seamless coordination among environmental, humanitarian, peace and security, human rights and development entities. Deploying expert advisors to engage with all relevant stakeholders helps us to identify viable environmental solutions, enabling prompt recovery.

At the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), we deployed our first advisor to a UN integrated peacebuilding mission in 2010, to support Sierra Leone’s transition and ensure environmental dimensions were incorporated fully into the country’s recovery process.

The integration of environmental and climate security advisors into UN peace operations has now been scaled up following the establishment of the Climate Security Mechanism, a joint United Nations effort that addresses the links between climate, peace and security. Environmental advisors, working at national and regional levels, provide a light footprint, flexible contribution to building peace and support to help accelerate recovery.

Priority three: Increase investments in climate adaptation in conflict-affected countries.

UNEP’s latest Adaptation Gap Report, issued last month, highlights a significant gap in adaptation finance for developing countries. This adaptation gap is putting lives, livelihoods and entire economies at risk.

For conflict-affected countries, the adaptation gap is even greater. Between 2014 and 2021, people living in severely conflict-affected countries received an estimated US$2 per capita in climate finance, compared to US$162 per capita in more stable countries. So, it is clear that action on adaptation helps to address compounding risks faced by vulnerable populations in regions experiencing both climate shocks and ongoing conflict.

Excellencies,

As we head to COP30 in Belém, Brazil, high ambition is needed both on adaptation and on mitigation. Every fraction of a degree avoided means lower losses for people and ecosystems – and greater opportunities for peace and prosperity.

Thank you.

Wednesday, 5 November 2025

World Tsunami Awareness Day 2025; November 5th.

FORUM "Be Tsunami Ready: Invest in Tsunami Preparedness" World Tsunami Awareness Day 2025. For the 10th anniversary of World Tsunami Awareness Day, we call on all countries to Invest in Tsunami Preparedness to boost global efforts to strengthen tsunami preparedness. By the year 2030, an estimated 50 % of the world’s population will live in coastal areas exposed to flooding, storms and tsunamis. Scaling up international cooperation to developing countries will help ensure that 100% of communities at risk of tsunami are prepared for and resilient to tsunamis by 2030. It's time to reflect on the goal of the Sendai Framework about reducing disaster losses; Some actions can be taken by promoting resilience building measures that protect lives, livelihoods, and economies from the devastating impacts of tsunamis from all sources, including volcanos. Follow the conversations with the hashtags: #GetToHighGround, #Ocean&ClimateChange, #TsunamiSafety, #TsunamiAlert, #WaterLevels, #TsunamiCoastalObservations, #WorldTsunamiAwarenessDay, #5november, #TsumaniDay, #DisasterResponse, #DisasterResilience.




EVENT: In New York, UNHQ; On November 5th, starting at 4:00 PM EST will be held a high-level event to mark the World Tsunami Awareness Day 2025 organized by the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR). Register to participate and Watch the Livestream!

In Geneva, The Observance call for preparedness, inclusion, and cooperation.


High-Level Event


High-level Events


Statement of the United Nations Secretary-General on World Tsunami Awareness Day 2025; November 5th.

Tsunamis are rare events whose consequences can be extremely deadly.

They can claim thousands - even hundreds of thousands - of lives.

But there are ways to keep people safe.

After the catastrophic 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami, the world chose to invest in early warning systems.

Decades later, that decision is paying off.

The massive earthquake off the Russian coast in late July triggered alerts to millions - from the shores of Japan, to the Pacific Islands, to California.

But the disaster risks continue to evolve.

With sea levels rising, and more and more people living by the coast, early warning systems need investment and improvement.

That is the purpose of 'Early Warnings for All', a UN initiative to establish multi-hazard early warning systems that protect every person on earth by 2027.

Respecting the ocean means recognising its power.

On this 10th World Tsunami Awareness Day, let us invest in preparedness - for every coastline, and every community, everywhere.

Untited Nations Secretary-General.

Attachments

In English: The Secretary-General message for World Tsunami awareness day.
In Arabic: The Secretary-General message for World Tsunami awareness day - Arabic.
In French: Le secrétaire général message publié à l’occasion de la journée mondiale de sensibilisation aux tsunamis.
In Chinese: 秘书长在2025年11月5日世界海啸意识日之际的致辞.
In Russian; ГЕНЕРАЛЬНЫЙ СЕКРЕТАРЬ ПОСЛАНИЕ ПО СЛУЧАЮ ВСЕМИРНОГО ДНЯ РАСПРОСТРАНЕНИЯ ИНФОРМАЦИИ О ПРОБЛЕМЕ ЦУНАМИ.
In Spanish: El secretario general mensaje con motivo del día mundial de concienciación sobre los tsunamis 
In japanese; 世界津波の日(11月5日)に寄せるアントニオ・グテーレス国連事務総長メッセージ (Japanese) 

Statement of the Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General for Disaster Risk Reduction on World Tsunami Awareness Day 2025; November 5th.

As we mark 80 years since the founding of the United Nations, it is important to celebrate the moments when international cooperation tangibly improved people’s lives.

Among the great successes was the expansion of tsunami early warning systems in the aftermath of the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami.

Thanks to those crucial investments 20 years ago, many countries now have access to life-saving tsunami alerts.

We saw this in action just a few months ago, when an 8.8-magnitude earthquake off the coast of Russia triggered tsunami warnings across the region – from Southeast Asia and Japan, to the small islands of the Pacific, and as far as the western coast of the United States.

But we must not become complacent. Disaster risks are evolving. More people and economic assets are in coastal regions. And with rising sea levels, due to global warming, tsunami waves can travel farther inland than before.

To stay ahead, countries need to continuously reassess community vulnerabilities, strengthen the resilience of critical infrastructure, and enhance early warning systems so that no one is left behind.

Sustained investment is essential.
Invest in tsunami preparedness

That is why, for the 10th anniversary of World Tsunami Awareness Day, we call on all countries to “Invest in Tsunami Preparedness.”

These investments pay for themselves when we consider that a warning of only 24 hours can reduce damages by up to 30% and that every dollar spent on making infrastructure resilient in developing countries saves at least four dollars in averted disaster losses.

This year, the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction is proud to once again partner with the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO to promote the Tsunami Ready Programme and to support the Indian Ocean-wide tsunami exercises – IO Wave.

We also extend our sincere gratitude to Japan for its steadfast support for World Tsunami Awareness Day since its establishment ten years ago. Japan’s leadership has been instrumental in advancing global disaster risk reduction.

Tsunamis are rare, but they are among the deadliest and most devastating hazards we face.

On this World Tsunami Awareness Day, let us commit to build on the progress we have made, and to invest the funds needed to enhance tsunami preparedness and resilience for all.

Thank you.


Kamal Kishore, Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General for Disaster Risk Reduction.

November 5th

Upcoming events;

In Zagreb, 5 November 2025 - International Conference Tsunami Risk at Adriatic Sea
Online, 5 November 2025 - Tsunami emergency planning in Australia
In Bangkok5 November 2025 - Film Screening and High-Level Dialogue on Financing Tsunami Resilience
Online, 6 November 2025 - Training event on Early Warning for All: Tsunami warning communication and dissemination in the Americas and the Caribbean
5-7 November 2025 -World Tsunami Awareness Day 2025 in Timor-Leste

Past events:
In Cascais, On November 1st 2025 In person observance entitled ''From Memory to Resilience: 270th commemoration event of the 1755 Lisbon earthquake and tsunami'' was held.



CAMPAIGN: The World Tsunami Awareness Day 2025 Campaign is dedicated to advancing tsunami resilience through alignment with the Tsunami Ready Programme, a global initiative aimed at strengthening community resilience through awareness and preparedness strategies. This campaign seeks to highlight the importance of proactive measures in mitigating tsunami risks, fostering collaboration among all stakeholders - governments, academia, local leaders, and the public to enhance tsunami preparedness.

Calls for action:

  • We call on national and local governments, finance ministries, development banks, insurers, and private investors to commit multi-year financing for tsunami preparedness and multi-hazard early warning systems.
  • We call on coastal municipalities, community groups, school systems, tourism operators, and media partners to elevate tsunami readiness, enrol in recognized community frameworks, and showcase real-world success stories.
  • We call on disaster management authorities, educators, NGOs, and local media to co-develop and distribute tsunami risk-communication toolkits, and to institutionalize regular public education and community drills aligned with readiness indicators.
  • We call on mayors, civil protection leads, school principals, health and port authorities, and faith/youth leaders to serve as visible champions for tsunami preparedness in their communities.
  • We call on research institutions, technology providers, and public agencies to promote international awareness and knowledge-sharing of disaster-risk-reduction technologies adapting and piloting them in high-risk coastal areas.

Download
World Tsunami Awareness Day 2025: Be Tsunami Ready PDF, 0.3 MB English
Día Mundial de la Concienciación Sobre Tsunamis 2025: Actúe ante tsunamis PDF, 0.2 MB Spanish