Expand early warning.




Early warning systems not only save lives but also reduce economic losses. An early warning of just 24 hours can reduce potential damages by 30%. That is why the United Nations Office of Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR) and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) are among the many UN agencies working to expand Early Warnings for All by 2027.

Across seven of the world's most climate-vulnerable nations -- Antigua & Barbuda, Cambodia, Chad, Ecuador, Ethiopia, Fiji and Somalia -- multi-hazard early warning systems are being strengthened, benefitting more than 26 million people. Forecasts, risk assessments and last-mile alerts help communities act early.

We must build on such efforts and scale up successes. Like the Climate Risk and Early Warning Systems (CREWS) initiative, which has expanded early warning services to nearly 400 million people across 77 countries -- more than a third of which are affected by conflict or fragility -- since 2015.

Every extra hour of early warning is a life, a livelihood or a future secured.

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