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Showing posts from June, 2026

Between Commitment and Delivery: The Coordination Gap in Climate-Aligned Tourism Implementation

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  Guest contribution for SUNx Malta  |  Based on the TSSF–SIIL Implementation Architecture Research Sequence (Papers #01–#11) and applied destination diagnostics by Suzanne Duffour, Yun Consultancy A Question the Intergovernmental Process Has Not Yet Answered Under the Paris Agreement, Parties submit Nationally Determined Contributions. In tourism-dependent economies, these contributions increasingly reference nature-based tourism as a climate co-benefit and identify tourism infrastructure among climate adaptation priorities. As the global stocktaking process matures and implementation expectations intensify, a question has moved to the foreground that the commitment architecture alone cannot resolve: how do these national-level pledges actually reach the operators, destinations, and workforce systems responsible for delivering them? The frameworks exist. The commitments are genuine. Yet across destination ecosystems — from protected-area tourism corridors...

Introducing the FoodDiplomacy Network

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Guest blog by Stefanos Fotiou , he is an international development and sustainability strategist with three decades of experience at the intersection of economic policy, environmental sustainability, and global governance. Over twenty of those years were spent inside the UN system, where he served in senior and director-level roles across three agencies — UNEP, UNESCAP and FAO — working at the table where global sustainability policy is shaped, negotiated and brought to life. First published here. Food is no longer just about agriculture or trade. It is about power, sovereignty and global stability. Multiple crises have exposed how fragile and politically contested food systems have become — and how quickly disruptions in food, energy and supply chains can destabilise economies, governments and societies. Yet global governance still approaches food mainly as a technical issue. The deeper political questions — who controls food systems, who bears the risks, and who is left vulnerable —...

Climate Change Conference in Bonn - SB 64 what to expect

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Guest Blog by Ana Mulio Alverez , who is an expert in Geopolitics and Climate Diplomacy. I analyze and influence international climate agreements and the international finance architecture reform so desperately needed to make climate action happen. This blog and others can be found here. It's my time to confess: I love Bonn and the UNFCCC midyear negotiations. Why? Because they're the best opportunity for all countries to come together, share priorities, tackle sticking points, and start moving the agenda forward before the COP. For adaptation, SB64 is packed. ๐ŸŒ Work will continue on the Global Goal on Adaptation (GGA), including the policy alignment of the new Belรฉm Adaptation Indicators through the Belรฉm–Addis Vision and it's technical taskforce, which will shape how we measure and track progress on global climateresilience. ๐Ÿ“Š Negotiators will also advance discussions on adaptation communications, the Nairobi Work Programme, and the long-overdue review of the Adapta...