UNEA president AL-AMRI, CS BARASA issue firm environmental call

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The Seventh Session of the United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA-7) opened in Nairobi, running from 8th to 12th December 2026, not merely as another global convening, but as a clear reminder that Kenya has become one of the central engines of international environmental diplomacy.

As home to the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the venue where ministers from every region gather to set the world’s environmental direction, Kenya now carries a unique responsibility: to give meaningful life to the Assembly’s theme, “Advancing Sustainable Solutions for a Resilient Planet.” Cabinet Secretary for Environment, Climate Change and Forestry, Dr. Deborah Barasa, delivered a firm call to action, stressing that UNEA-7 must be more than ceremonial. She highlighted the need to rigorously review UNEP’s Medium-Term Strategy and Programme of Work, framing them as decisive instruments that must embed ambition, equity, and innovation into the global environmental agenda.

Dr. Barasa stated: “This session of UNEA-7 is expected to consider and approve the Medium-Term Strategy (MTS) and Programme of Work, a key document that will shape UNEP’s strategic direction and collective environmental action for the years ahead.” Stressing that ” Kenya looks forward to constructively contributing to its finalisation, ensuring that the MTS reflects ambition, science-based policy, equity, and opportunities for innovation, especially for developing countries.”

Her stance aligned closely with UNEA President H.E. Abdullah Bin Ali Al-Amri’s message urging delegates to anchor their negotiations in trust, transparency, compromise, and inclusiveness. “We will consider a set of resolutions and decisions, the Ministerial Declaration, and UNEP’s Medium-Term Strategy (2026–2029) and Programme of Work and Budget (2026–2027), the instruments that will anchor our vision for a resilient planet.”

He noted Adding that “ I wish to emphasize that our success this week depends not only on the outcomes we adopt but also on how we reach them, through trust, transparency, the spirit of compromise, and inclusiveness. The presidency will ensure that every voice is heard and that the Assembly proceeds in a spirit of collaboration and cooperation.”

Together, Al-Amri and Barasa positioned Kenya not only as a host nation but as a nerve centre of science, policy, diplomacy, and innovation.

Their statements underscored that global environmental commitments must translate into funded projects that strengthen climate resilience, investments that accelerate renewable energy adoption, legal frameworks that uphold environmental accountability, and measurable indicators that allow countries to track real progress.

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