2023 Environment and Emergencies Forum (EEF)
Environmental Emergency Centre
The Environment and Emergencies Forum (EEF) is an inclusive global forum focused on the interface between the environment and humanitarian emergency response. It brings together stakeholders from around the world to showcase progress in environmental emergency preparedness and response and highlights current efforts and existing challenges as well as opportunities in integrating environmental risk in humanitarian action. The Forum offers environment, humanitarian aid and disaster management practitioners a unique opportunity to discuss global policy, share experiences and knowledge, forge new partnerships, and agree on key actions to make sure that our common response to emergencies is more efficient, local and sustainable.The Forum has been organized every two years since 1995, as requested by Member States through a 1993 UN Environment Programme (UN Environment) Governing Council Decision. Unfortunately, the 2021 Forum was cancelled due to COVID-19. In 2019, it was held as a strategic retreat to inform the stakeholders of the 5-year strategy. The 2017 EEF was held at the UN Gigiri compound in Nairobi, Kenya.The 2023 Environment and Emergencies Forum is organized by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), through their Joint Environment Unit (JEU), and is hosted by the Directorate-General for European Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid Operations (DG – ECHO). The event will take place from 22 to 23 March 2023 in Brussels, Belgium, and it will explore the nexus of environmental risk, disasters, humanitarian crisis and other trends. It will provide a platform for taking action to strengthen environmental resilience through an increased focus on the readiness of member states, regional and national organizations, civil society, and academia, to respond to the environmental dimensions of emergencies.
- Enhance current and generate further partnerships for a strengthened environmental emergency preparedness and response;
- Promote commitment and actions to further integrate the environment in humanitarian action;
- Serve as a platform for discussion and exchange of lessons-learned, ideas and best practices, and showcase the breadth of on-going initiatives in this area.
- Identified concrete actions to develop national and regional capacities to address environmental emergencies and to integrate environment in humanitarian action;
- Increased partnerships with Member States and Regional Organizations across the different global regions;
- Enhanced awareness among participants, international stakeholders and the global community of the risks, challenges and priority actions associated with environmental emergencies in a fast-changing world.
THEME 1: Readiness for response Environmental emergencies can arise as result of “natural” disasters, conflicts, or industrial/technological events. Hence, it is very important to ensure a quick, efficient, and appropriate response. Anticipating risks is essential to define the needs, and to design and implement effective preparedness actions and response operations. All humanitarian action therefore needs to be informed by risk assessment and analysis, which includes climate and environmental risks, and should consistently complement a needs-based approach. This theme will explore ways to enhance environmental emergency response readiness by examining best practices and innovative ideas. For this purpose, the Forum will focus on the following topics:
- The importance of building and developing national and local capacities: the Environment and Emergencies Training (EET) and its potential replication across regions.
- Identifying and assessing potential impacts of industrial hazards in high-risk countries as a key to a dynamic and rapid response: introduction to the Flash Environmental Assessment Tool (FEAT)
- The Gamification of training: the future of capacity building?
- The necessity of a multi-sectoral assessment and analysis strategy in environmental emergencies: OSOCC/ UNDAC Assessment & Analysis cell (A&A)
- Post-disaster environmental rehabilitation, importance of building links to (green) recovery
- Sharing lessons learned and evaluations of recent environmental emergency missions.
- The importance of a comprehensive disaster waste management strategy: case study of Beirut explosion
- The importance of technology and innovation in environmental emergency preparedness: case study of the use of the NEAT+
- The Joint Initiative on Sustainable Humanitarian Assistance Packaging Waste Management
- Building resilience for adaptation to climate change in countries prone to environmental emergencies