By Nneka Nwogwugwu
The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) announced that its long-standing collaborating centre – the UNEP DTU Partnership a leading global research and advisory institution -– will be renamed the UNEP Copenhagen Climate Centre.
The Centre will be supported operationally by the United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS).
Announcing this on Wednesday, the new agreement between UNEP and UNOPS, will be named the UNEP Copenhagen Climate Centre (UNEP-CCC) and operationally supported by UNOPS.
A formal launch of the new centre is planned in April 2022.
The UNEP DTU Partnership – now UNEP-CCC – was established in 1990 as a research and advisory institution and was originally based in the Risø National Laboratory, which subsequently was merged with DTU in 2007.
The UNEP DTU Partnership has operated based on a tripartite agreement between the UNEP, the Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and the Technical University of Denmark.
It supports developing and middle-income countries in their efforts to progress towards a climate-resilient, low carbon future and to integrate climate priorities in national development planning.
“The Danish support to the UNEP Copenhagen Climate Centre demonstrates a long-term Danish commitment to tackle climate change. The new Centre will be able to provide urgently needed support for developing countries to find climate resilient and low carbon pathways. The Centre stands on 30 years of experience from the UNEP DTU Partnership,” Flemming Møller Mortensen, Danish Minister for Development Cooperation, said.
“Climate action is a global priority and UNOPS is committed to helping our partners achieve their 2030 agenda commitments, to build a better future,” said Ms. Grete Faremo, Executive Director, UNOPS.
“This new agreement builds on a firm and long-lasting relationship between UNEP and UNOPS. With UNOPS support, the Copenhagen Climate Centre will continue its important contribution working towards tackling the climate emergency,” she added.