The breakdown of the world’s weather systems is the biggest threat facing humanity today.
The effects of global warming are being felt the world over, but this is particularly true in countries and communities in which Charity Project PK helps people emerge from poverty and suffering. Unless emissions stop, we all face a catastrophe of food insecurity and social breakdown which will lead to the deaths of billions of people.
Charity Project PK supports all efforts that will prevent this from happening.
Since at least 2007, Charity Project PK has been contributing to efforts to address the worst impacts of climate change and to limit global warming to 1.5°C. In 2015, we brought together international scholars to construct the Islamic Declaration on Global Climate Change, while the Climate Change Policy of the same year, revised in 2018, outlined our positions on these issues.
As global temperatures rise, it is essential that people and systems adapt and are prepared for the changes we know will be taking place. In response to the climate crisis we campaign and advocate for climate change adaptation.
The new Charity Project PK Climate Policy responds to the rapidly changing landscape, to present positions on the developing challenges.
With a focus on sustainable development, Charity Project PK programmes are designed to help protect the environment, while providing vulnerable people better access to essential services, and the opportunity to improve their livelihoods and lift themselves out of poverty, permanently.
Across the globe we are raising awareness of climate change and the adaptation measures that can be taken to build resilience among the most vulnerable communities.
We develop new principles to capture our locally-led approach to adaptation, ensuring that local knowledge, ideas and experience are at the heart of how we support communities worst affected by climate change.
We have implemented climate-smart solutions for farmers in drought-affected parts of Ethiopia; helped people in Pakistan to better prepare for the changing climate; and assisted families in Kenya to find more climate-resilient ways to earn a living in the face of increasingly unpredictable and extreme weather patterns, to name a few.
The impact of climate change has uprooted more than 260 million people from their homes. Only a small proportion of climate finance is invested in climate adaptation. Through our climate change adaptation advocacy and programmes, we are helping to pave the way in changing that, and in doing so, saving and improving the lives of vulnerable families across the globe.