Monday, November 6, 2023

A01501 - Saleemul Huq, Bangladeshi Advocate for Climate Change Reparations

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Saleemul Huq (b. October 2, 1952, Karachi, Pakistan – d. October 28, 2023, Dhaka, Bangladesh) was a Bangladeshi-British scientist who was the Director of the International Centre for Climate Change and Development (ICCCAD) based in Bangladesh.  Huq was also Professor at Independent University, Bangladesh (IUB). He was elected one of Nature's 10 top scientists in 2022.


Huq was an expert in the field of climate change, environment and development. He worked extensively on the inter-linkages between climate change mitigation, adaptation and sustainable development, from the perspective of developing countries, particularly in the least developed countries (LDCs). He was a lead author of the chapter on Adaptation and Sustainable Development in the Third Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and was one of two coordinating lead authors of "Inter-relationships between adaptation and mitigation" in the IPCC's Fourth Assessment Report (2007).


In addition, Huq contributed to the Fifth Assessment Report of the IPCC. Having established the climate change research group at the International Institute for Environment and Deveolopment (IIED), based in the United Kingdom, in 2000, he later became a senior fellow, and was also Senior Adviser on Locally Led Adaptation with Global Centre on Adaptation (GCA).


Huq strived to grow the capacity of Bangladesh stakeholders, while enabling people and international organizations to benefit from training in Bangladesh. His teaching experiences included at Imperial College London, the University of Dhaka and United Nations University. He was the founder and the Chairman of the Bangladesh Centre for Advanced Studies (BCAS), a leading research and policy institute in Bangladesh.


Huq attended all sessions of the Conference of the Parties (COP) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) from 1995 until his passing. He actively engaged as an adviser on adaptation, loss and damage and climate finance to the Least Developed Countries (LDC) Group in the UNFCCC and provided training to LDC negotiators. He was also involved as a board member of the Climate Vulnerability Forum under UNFCCC. 


Huq, who trained as a botanist, was perhaps the principal proponent of the idea that the developed world’s emissions of greenhouse gases were having a disproportionate impact on the climate in poorer countries, and that wealthy countries should pay for measures to curb or reverse those effects.


For his contributions at addressing the climate change issues, Huq was awarded 2020 National Environment Award by the Government of Bangladesh.  Huq was also appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2022 New Year Honours for services to combating international climate change.


Huq received his early education in Germany, Indonesia, and Kenya. He later went and received Bachelor of Science degree in Botany from the Imperial College at London University in the United Kingdom in 1975, and a Ph.D. in Botany from the same university in 1978.


Before joining IIED, Huq was the director of the Bangladesh Centre for Advanced Studies, which he founded in 1984. He was founding director of the International Centre for Climate Change and Development at the Independent University, Bangladesh. He was involved in the work of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, for which he has served as the lead author and coordinating lead author in Working Group II, which focused on impacts, vulnerability and adaptation.


Huq published reports and articles on climate change, particularly on adaptation to climate change. He was the lead author of the chapter on Adaptation and Sustainable Development in the third assessment report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). He was a Senior Fellow in the Climate Change Group at the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED) and the director of the International Centre for Climate Change and Development.  


As a researcher, Huq contributed to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). His work with the IPCC and ICCCAD contributed significantly to Goal 13 (Climate Action) and Goal 17 (Partnerships for the Goals).


Under Goal 13, Huq's research helped to achieve the following targets:

  • Target 13.3: Build knowledge and capacity to meet climate change
  • Target 13.a: Implement the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change
  • Target 13.b: Promote mechanisms to raise capacity for planning and management

Saleemul Huq died from a heart attack in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on October 28, 2023, at the age of 71.

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Saleemul Huq, 71, Bangladeshi Spearhead on Climate Change, Dies

He pressed rich nations to compensate poorer ones for the disproportionate “loss and damage” they’ve endured because of greenhouse gas emissions.

Mr. Huq, in a blue blazer and a blue and white striped shirt, speaking into a microphone while standing in wood-paneled room as people in the foreground listen.
Saleemul Huq speaking in Bangladesh last year. He deemed “world leaders” largely responsible for the greenhouse gas problem. “It is not that they are not doing anything,” he said, “but that they are doing too little too late.”Credit...IIED
Mr. Huq, in a blue blazer and a blue and white striped shirt, speaking into a microphone while standing in wood-paneled room as people in the foreground listen.

Saleemul Huq, a Bangladeshi-British scientist who played a leading role in trying to get rich nations to compensate poorer ones for the damaging effects of climate change largely brought about by the developed world, died on Saturday in Dhaka, Bangladesh, the capital. He was 71.

His death was confirmed by the International Center for Climate Change and Development in Dhaka, a research organization he directed and helped found. The newspaper The Daily Star in Bangladesh, to which he contributed a column, said the cause was a heart attack. He died at home, a family member said.

Mr. Huq (pronounced hook), who trained as a botanist, was perhaps the principal proponent of the idea that the developed world’s emissions of greenhouse gases were having a disproportionate impact on the climate in poorer countries, and that wealthy countries should pay for measures to curb or reverse those effects.

He was one of the few who had been to every United Nations-organized climate summit, or COP (for Conference of the Parties), since the first one in 1995.

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At the most recent summit, in Egypt in 2022, he helped push through an international commitment to create a fund to pay for the damage. “It’s unfortunate that he won’t be able to see the fruit of it,” the family member, who asked not to be identified, said in a telephone interview. “He’s obviously irreplaceable.”

The British journal Nature named Mr. Huq one of “10 people who helped shape science in 2022.”

Those who knew him said he was deeply influenced by what he saw happening in his country. Climate change appeared to be unfolding in front of him, in real time, with effects on many Bangladeshis.

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Cyclone Amphan, intensified by warmer ocean temperatures, displaced thousands in Bangladesh in 2020 after the storm destroyed their homes. “This is loss and damage to the livelihoods of the people,” he told The New York Times in 2021, using a phrase he called “a euphemism for terms we’re not allowed to use, which are ‘liability and compensation.’”

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A muddy, barren landscape surrounded by floodwaters under a tufts of clouds in a blue sky.
Cyclone Amphan left a trail of destruction in Bangladesh, from flooding and landslides, in August 2020. The storm was intensified by warmer ocean temperatures that have been attributed to human-caused climate change.Credit...Kazi Salahuddin Razu/Nurphoto, via Associated Press
A muddy, barren landscape surrounded by floodwaters under a tufts of clouds in a blue sky.

In his last piece of writing, a column in The Guardian written with Farhana Sultana of Syracuse University and published on Nov. 1, Mr. Huq struck a pessimistic note.

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“Unfortunately, in many cases the damage has already been done,” the authors wrote. “In increasing numbers of places, adaptation is no longer possible — for instance, where displacement, ecosystem damage and loss of homeland to sea-level rise has already occurred. This is ‘loss and damage’ in real time.”

In The Daily Star, Mr. Huq wrote on Oct. 4 about the “world leaders” he deemed largely responsible for the greenhouse gas problem: “It is not that they are not doing anything, but that they are doing too little too late.”

In June, he wrote an open letter to the president of the forthcoming COP, in Dubai, describing how in Bangladesh, “every single day, over 2,000 climate-displaced people arrive by foot, cycle, boat and bus in Dhaka and disappear into the city slums.”

“No one is looking after them,” he added, “but they are people being forced to move by human-induced climate change and are hence the responsibility of the U.N.F.C.C.C.,” the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.

He was not generally a pessimist, however. Colleagues remembered him as an inspirational figure whose continued insistence that poorer countries have a say in the global struggle over climate change appeared to be finally paying off.

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Mr. Huq was a familiar and friendly presence at the COP and other global meetings on climate change, as ready to speak with journalists as to buttonhole movers and shakers.

Asif Saleh, the executive director of the Bangladesh-based international development organization BRAC, wrote of Mr. Huq in a tribute on LinkedIn: “At the COP event, he was one of the most sought after figures — journalists, negotiators, NGOs, young activists, govt ministers — all looked for a few minutes with him. He did not disappoint either. He would sit on a table and there would be a steady stream of people paying their dues to him.”

Mr. Huq’s fundamental message was that “climate change is real, and it is happening in these places, in the far corners of Bangladesh and Burundi,” said Achala Abeysinghe, Asia regional director at the Global Green Growth Institute in Seoul, in a phone interview.

“Unless there is a champion to talk about them,” she said, “nobody will.”

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Mr. Huq sitting at a table in shirt sleeves and holding a sheet of paper while gesturing as he spoke. He wore glasses and had dark hair and a graying mustache.
Mr. Huq in 2015. He was a familiar and friendly presence at global meetings on climate change, as ready to speak with journalists as to buttonhole movers and shakers.Credit...International Center for Climate Change and Development
Mr. Huq sitting at a table in shirt sleeves and holding a sheet of paper while gesturing as he spoke. He wore glasses and had dark hair and a graying mustache.

Saleemul Huq was born in Karachi, Pakistan, on Oct. 2, 1952, to Zahoorul and Shajeda Huq. His father was in Pakistan’s diplomatic service, and Mr. Huq grew up in Berlin, Nairobi, Djakarta and London.

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He received a doctorate in botany from Imperial College London. In Bangladesh, he was a lecturer in botany at Dhaka University and helped found the Bangladesh Center for Advanced Studies, an environmental research organization.

Mr. Huq was also an associate of the International Institute for Environment and Development in London, and he contributed to the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

He is survived by his wife, Kashana Huq; his daughter, Sadaf Huq; and his son, Saqib.

“For him, the main thing was, there are no ‘victims’ of climate change,” said Dr. Lisa Schipper of the University of Bonn in Germany, an expert on climate change in the global south. “Everybody is an actor. He wanted us to look at people in Bangladesh as people with knowledge. He talked about Bangladesh as a laboratory. He wanted scholars and policymakers to come to Bangladesh, and he wanted to make sure developing countries got the money they were owed.”

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