An international  conference opened in Guatemala today to help in the reconstruction of  the Central American country after devastating volcanic eruptions and  torrential rains, with Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon pledging full  United Nations support.
“The United Nations system has been deeply engaged in the humanitarian  response to Guatemala’s recent catastrophes, and our co-sponsorship of  this meeting is a further sign of our commitment,” he said in a message delivered by UN Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) Executive Secretary Alicia Bárcena.
“We will continue to work hand-in-hand with national authorities and  partners to provide coherent and responsive support to Guatemala in its  effort to achieve its stated goal of ‘recovery and reconstruction with  transformation,’” he added, noting that the “tremendous human suffering,  material destruction and economic losses” have raised concerns over the  effects of extreme weather associated with climate change.  
Such tragedies “highlight the need for concrete action at the upcoming  Conference of Parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change [UNFCCC], which begins next month in Cancún, [Mexico],” he stressed.
On Saturday, UNFCCC Executive Secretary Christiana Figueres said  countries at a meeting in Tianjin, China, had made progress in defining  what could be achieved at the Cancún talks to be held from 29 November  to 10 December as part of the world effort to stabilize human-caused  greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere that could lead to  global warming, violent storms and fierce droughts.
Guatemala: UN-backed meeting opens to spur recovery from floods, eruptions