Pakistan) for a “strategic collaboration aimed at tackling environmental challenges and promoting sustainable practices across Pakistan” on its climate change initiative, “Breathe Pakistan.”
Inhale Pakistan was sent off recently to activate residents to integrate natural supportability into their regular routines. ” At DawnMedia, we have confidence in the force of solidarity — meeting up for one aggregate reason, regardless of whether in humble ways,” First light President Nazafreen Saigol-Lakhani had said.
According to a DawnMedia press release released on Thursday, WWF-Pakistan officials Commander (retired) Ghazi Salahuddin, the Sindh and Balochistan regional head, and Rabia Tahir, the communications director, attended a signing ceremony at the group’s headquarters in Karachi.
It stated that the two organizations aimed to create a ripple effect through their collaboration that would “inspire individuals, corporations, and communities to take action in the fight against climate change,” and that “the ceremony underscored the shared commitment of both organizations to work together for climate advocacy and ecological preservation.”
“This partnership with WWF-Pakistan further strengthens DawnMedia’s commitment to a sustainable future,” the statement reads. “DawnMedia has always taken an active role in promoting social and environmental causes.”
The Breathe Pakistan campaign will include plantation drives, public awareness campaigns, and partnerships with corporations and influencers to promote climate responsibility and raise awareness of the urgent need to address climate change, according to the statement.
“DawnMedia’s broad conventional and computerized stages will assume a key part in spreading the message of supportability and ecological stewardship,” it finished up.
The World Risk Index 2024 report, which was released a month ago, included Pakistan among the 15 nations with the highest risk of disaster.
According to a report by the World Bank that was made public in December of last year, eight out of ten people in Pakistan were concerned about the effects of climate change. According to the report “Climate Silence in Pakistan,” Pakistan has been profoundly affected by climate change, as evidenced by altered weather patterns and devastating floods.
The country’s unprecedented floods of 2022, which were estimated by the government to have impacted 33 million people and killed 1,700 people, are evidence of the devastating effects of climate change.
In August, Facilitator to the State leader on Environmental Change Romina Khurshid Alam stressed the basic test that environmental change presents universally, with Pakistan being quite possibly of the most impacted country.
She stated that Pakistan was one of the top ten countries that were vulnerable to climate change and faced an increasing number of severe weather events, including unprecedented floods, torrential monsoon rains, devastation from heat waves, rapid glacial melting, and floods caused by glacial lake outbursts.