Figueres and Fabius awarded peace prize for work on Paris Agreement

Madeleine Cuff
clock • 1 min read

Leading players at Paris Summit awarded Ewald von Kleist peace award in recognition of their part in securing climate treaty, highlighting growing link between global warming and national security

The UN's top climate official Christiana Figueres and former French foreign secretary and COP 21 president Laurent Fabius have been awarded the Ewald von Kleist peace award for their work in securing an international deal on climate change in Paris in December.

The award, which honours "eminent personalities with an outstanding record in contributing to international peace and conflict resolution" was presented to Figueres and Fabius at the Munich Security Conference on Saturday.

The move was heralded as growing recognition of climate change as a "risk multiplier" of security threats. Last month the World Econmic Forum's influential Global Risks report named environmental risk as the top threat facing the world economy for the first time since its launch in 2006.

Meanwhile, in May President Obama said global warming poses an "immediate risk" to national security, while commentators have repeatedly suggested the conflict in Syria may have been intensified due to climate-related droughts in the region.

Previous winners of the prize have included American diplomat Dr Henry Kissinger and American politician Joseph Lieberman.

This article is part of BusinessGreen's Road to Paris hub, hosted in association with PwC.

More on Politics

Good COP or bad COP? Weighing up the Belém Summit's successes and failures

Good COP or bad COP? Weighing up the Belém Summit's successes and failures

COP30 may not have delivered the outcome climate science shows the world needs, but it demonstrated that the multilateral UN Paris Agreement process is alive, writes Corporate Leaders Group UK director Bev Cornaby

Bev Cornaby, Corporate Leaders Group UK.
clock 27 November 2025 • 6 min read
Here's how Britain's new energy flexibility market facilitator can force order and cut bills

Here's how Britain's new energy flexibility market facilitator can force order and cut bills

The flexibility Market Facilitator has the potential to become a cornerstone of our modern energy system - but potential is not enough, writes Labour MP and ADE vice president James Naish MP

James Naish MP
clock 27 November 2025 • 3 min read
Budget: There was good news for climate action, but it was hidden among the chaos

Budget: There was good news for climate action, but it was hidden among the chaos

Rachel Reeves sent a series of mixed signals to the green economy, which could have been avoided if only there had been a clearer narrative

James Murray
clock 26 November 2025 • 7 min read