Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. PAMELA S. FALK is CBS News Correspondent based at the United Nations, where she reports on air for CBS News TV & Radio and writes for cbsnews.com. She is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.

  2. Feb 13, 2024 · Pamela Falk, CBS News correspondent for the United Nations based in New York, was also laid off, according to sources. CBS News did not respond to requests seeking comment.

  3. The latest posts from @PamelaFalk

  4. Pamela Falk is an American Correspondent working for CBS News based in New York City. She joined the station in September 2001 as a correspondent.

    • Overview
    • What can be done?

    United Nations — The United Nations said Thursday that new data from its World Meteorological Organization, gathered in partnership with the European Copernicus Climate Change Service, shows July will be the hottest month ever recorded on the planet.

    "Climate change is here. It is terrifying, and it is just the beginning," U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told reporters Thursday.

    "Anthropogenic [human-caused greenhouse gas] emissions are ultimately the main driver of these rising temperatures," said Carlo Buontempo, director of the Copernicus service. "Extreme weather which has affected many millions of people in July is unfortunately the harsh reality of climate change and a foretaste of the future."

    We are now seeing clearly around the world why it is so urgent to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, said Professor Petteri Taalas, the head of the WMO, the U.N.'s weather service. He called climate action "not a luxury, but a must."

    "July's record is unlikely to remain isolated this year ... seasonal forecasts indicate that over land areas temperatures are likely to be well above average, exceeding the 80th percentile of climatology for the time of year," according to Carlo Buontempo of Copernicus' climate change service.

    "Climate change will likely combine to fuel global temperature increases and we anticipate we'll see the warmest year on record sometime in the next five years," Dr. Christ Hewitt, WMO director for Climate Services, said Thursday during a briefing for journalists. He predicted that there was "a 98% likelihood that at least one of the next five years will be the warmest on record."

    "We can still stop the worst," Guterres said as he laid out a series of steps to be taken to accelerate action to reduce global emissions. Here are some of the things the U.N. chief said could and should be done:

    •The multilateral development banks should "leverage their funds to mobilize much more private finance at reasonable cost to developing countries — and scale up their funding to renewables, adaptation and loss and damage.

    •World leaders need to come to the "Climate Ambition Summit" on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly in September in New York with stronger commitments to reduce their nations' emissions and help other countries cope with the changing climate.

    •Developed countries need to honor their commitments to provide $100 billion a year to developing countries for climate support and to present "clear and credible" roadmaps to double finance by 2025 for the cause.

    •Countries should plan to protect their people from "the searing heat, fatal floods, storms, droughts, and raging fires that result" from hotter global temperatures.

    •Financial institutions must stop lending money to fund fossil extraction, shifting their underwriting and investments to renewables instead.

    • CBS News And Stations
    • 5 min
  5. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, in New York for U.N. meetings on Ukraine and the Middle East, told CBS News correspondent Pamela Falk in an exclusive interview that the new generation...

    • 4 min
  6. Pamela Falk is a CBS News correspondent and an international lawyer, based at the United Nations.

  1. Searches related to pamela falk cbs

    pamela falk cbs newspamela falk wiki
  1. People also search for