EMME is an acronym in the English language for a grouping of 18 nations situated in and around the Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East.[1] The diverse region reflects cultural, economic, and environmental similarities.

Eastern Mediterranean & Middle East (EMME)

Members edit

EMME has members from three continents: Africa, Asia, and Europe. They are:[1]

  1. Bahrain  
  2. Cyprus  
  3. Egypt  
  4. Greece  
  5. Iran  
  6. Iraq  
  7. Israel  
  8. Jordan  
  9. Kuwait  
  10. Lebanon  
  11. Oman  
  12. Palestine  
  13. Qatar  
  14. Saudi Arabia  
  15. Syria  
  16. Turkey  
  17. United Arab Emirates  
  18. Yemen  

Climate change "hot spot" edit

The academic journal EOS reported that EMME, "faces rapid climate change" and that "Observational and modeling studies identify the Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East as a prominent climate change hotspot associated with weather extremes that have major impacts on society."

According to the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe[1] and the CORDIS EU Research of the European Commission,[2] the EMME Climate Change Initiative,[3] launched by the president of Cyprus, aims to bring these countries together to develop a concerted regional response to address the climate crisis, in line with the goals of the Paris Agreement.

This initiative states that "450 million inhabitants of the eighteen countries comprising the EMME region are at risk of a 5°C increase in mean annual temperature by the end of the century, under a “business as usual” scenario. This will lead to a catastrophe of unprecedented scale, inducing social collapse and mass migration, unless immediate action is taken on mitigation and adaptation through strong regional cooperation."[4]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "UN to support the new Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East Climate Initiative | UNECE". unece.org. Retrieved 2023-03-18.
  2. ^ CORDIS EU Research Results, European Commission (7 July 2017). "Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East – Climate and Atmosphere Research Centre".
  3. ^ "ΕΜΜΕ Climate Change Initiative (EMME-CCI)". ΕΜΜΕ Climate Change Initiative (EMME-CCI). Retrieved 2023-03-27.
  4. ^ "About". ΕΜΜΕ Climate Change Initiative (EMME-CCI). Retrieved 2023-03-18.