close

UN approves second four-year term for environment chief Inger Andersen

Secretary-General Antonio Guterres sent a note to the 193 members of the General Assembly on January 9 nominating Andersen for re-election

AP United Nations
United Nations

(Shutterstock)

The UN General Assembly elected Inger Andersen of Denmark to a second four-year term as executive director of the United Nations Environment Program, after defeating a Russian-sponsored resolution that would have opened the job to other candidates.

Secretary-General Antonio Guterres sent a note to the 193 members of the General Assembly on January 9 nominating Andersen for re-election. Russia circulated a "draft decision" to the assembly four days later that would have required Guterres "to present candidates for the position of executive director".

The assembly defeated the Russian proposal by a vote of 13-77 with 62 abstentions on Wednesday. It then held a secret ballot on Andersen's nomination, approving her on 136-0 vote with 31 abstentions.

The decision extends her leadership of the UN's environment agency, based in Nairobi, Kenya, from June 15, 2023, until June 14, 2027.

Before taking the helm of UNEP in June 2019, Andersen was director general of the International Union for Conservation of Nature for four years. Previously, she spent 15 years at the World Bank, including as vice president of the Middle East and North Africa region from 2011 to 2015.

Also Read

UN chief Antonio Guterres to appeal for 'massive support' for Pakistan

Andersen to foray into consulting business, says CEO Mark L Vorsatz

Andersen Global sees extraordinary mkt opportunities in India: CEO Vorsatz

UN chief Antonio Guterres says General Assembly debate must be about hope

Averting climate disasters requires bold emission reduction measure: UNEP

Elon Musk depicted as either liar or visionary in Tesla tweet trial

Global tax reform may add $250 bn a year to public coffers, estimates OECD

India's fertility rate dips, but the decline is faster in Bangladesh, Nepal

China publishes 1% more of most-cited scientific papers on AI than others

7.0 magnitude earthquake shakes east Indonesia, no tsunami warning issued

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Jan 19 2023 | 7:10 AM IST

Explore News