Climate scientists and government officials are gathered in Switzerland this week to agree the final summary for policymakers in the latest blockbuster series of reports from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) on global warming and how to keep it in check.
Coming before an important review of global progress on climate goals at the end of this year, it doesn't take a PhD to work out that the key message will be along the lines of "must do better".
Planet-heating emissions and fossil fuel use are still rising - as is the average global temperature. And, as the U.N. chief has reminded us, that means nearly half the global population "is living in the danger zone of climate impacts".
It's already too late to side-step loss and damage that is already happening because of a warming climate - as seen with the longest-recorded tropical cyclone that has whipped southern African countries like Mozambique and Malawi several times in the past month.
Malawi is one of six nations - along with Bangladesh, Nepal, Senegal, Trinidad and Tobago and Vanuatu - participating in a new initiative to set up national funds that will tap and work out how best to use finance to tackle growing climate-driven loss and damage.
The move comes in anticipation of the global facility countries agreed on last year at the U.N. climate summit - but as well-known Bangladeshi scientist Saleemul Huq told our correspondent Tahmid Zami: "In the meanwhile, the impacts are happening and we cannot wait."
Vanuatu's prime minister joins forces with Ugandan youth climate activist Vanessa Nakate to write for us this week on why countries must get behind his country's bid to secure an advisory opinion on climate change and human rights in a vote at the United Nations due late this month.
Cyclone Freddy hits, in Quelimane, Zambezia, Mozambique, March 11, 2023. UNICEF Mozambique/2023/Alfredo Zuniga/Handout via REUTERS