 Climate change is transforming migration and internal displacement patterns worldwide every day. Rising sea level, droughts, cyclones, floods, coastal erosion, among others, they impact the mobility of millions every year. In 2021 alone, disasters displaced 23.7 million people with the needs of women, children and youth still remaining mostly invisible in displacement data. Last month, during the International Migration Review Forum in New York, Member States confirmed the importance of addressing environmental migration challenges across the world and highlighted the need for people to be able to choose mobility options in a safe and regular way, including in the context of climate change. We must meet the target of 1.5 degrees to protect humanity from further adverse effects of climate change, but also put in place climate change adaptation measures and commit resources to avert and minimize displacement and where still possible, strengthen people's resilience. Time is running out. Every second comes. We have an obligation to accelerate climate action and prevent the worst for the most vulnerable populations and above all for our future generations. On World Environment Day, I joined the voices of UN leaders to call for urgent collective, transformative action on a global scale to celebrate, protect and restore our planet's health. We have only one Earth.