 the global experience of extreme temperatures, rising sea levels, droughts and storms have made climate change a defining issue of our time. On World Humanitarian Day, we focus on vulnerable populations that are hardest hit by the global climate emergency. Last year, more than half of all new displacements worldwide were due to weather-related disasters. Millions lost their homes, access to food and water and their entire livelihoods due to worsening and more frequent natural hazards. These are climate migrants and we will be seeing many more of them in the years to come. Excerberated by a global pandemic, the impacts of climate change have further stretched the ability of frontline workers and the humanitarian community as a whole to respond. The climate emergency is a race against time, one that requires an all-inclusive response from all stakeholders, governments, the profit sector, civil society, you and me. As the world marks World Humanitarian Day, we stand together with those affected by climate change, including migrants. We call for a further scaling up of emergency preparedness and resilience building and also for more work to be done in climate change adaptation and mitigation. This is a humanitarian crisis that knows no borders, a crisis that affects the entire human race and its solution will not require the participation of Minutarians, but yes, of everyone.