Hungarian President met Charles III and pharaoh-researcher Hungarian archaeologists in Egypt

Hungarian archaeologists at Egyptian excavations – Meeting with Hungarian archaeologists researching in ancient Thebes, present-day Luxor, Katalin Novák wrote under some photos shared about her official visit in Egypt.
“As the final stop of my official visit to Egypt, I visited the excavation of the Theban cemetery, where Hungarian archaeologists have been working for forty years, initially led by Professor of Egyptology László Kákosy, and now under the leadership of Professors Tamás Bács, Zsolt Vasáros, and Zoltán Fábián.
We can be proud of the Hungarian archaeologists! And now, I am heading to the Climate Summit, where I will speak tomorrow”, she wrote. Here are her photos:
Furthermore, she met with Charles III. “We had a conversation with King Charles III before the opening ceremony about our expectations from the Climate Summit.

The Climate Summit (COP28) is about to begin, and I will be speaking on behalf of Hungary”, she wrote.

President in Dubai: ‘Sustainable future requires sustainable demography’

Family is not the cause but the solution of the climate crisis, a sustainable future requires a sustainable demography, the Hungarian president said in her address at the UN COP28 climate conference in Dubai on Friday. Katalin Novák called climate change one of the few issues in which world leaders shared a common understanding and were uniting their forces.

“Hungary has done its homework. We have one of the world’s most ambitious climate agendas. We have substantially reduced our CO2 emissions while increased economic productivity,” she said.

Novák said Hungary expected to achieve its renewable energy target set for 2030 already by 2026, adding that the country’s greenhouse gas emission target for 2030 was 50 percent of the 1990 level. “Hungary is at the forefront of producing and storing green energy, and we are not giving up on the use of zero-emission nuclear energy, either,” the president said.

She pointed to the problem of welfare states witnessing a dramatic population decline. She said correlation between GDP and fertility was obvious, arguing that “the higher the prosperity, the lower the fertility. The more money, the fewer children.”

“Climate crisis, poverty, equality, biodiversity, water, and the phenomenon of the demographic ice age can only be understood together. What is the point in protecting the Earth if not for our children?”, said Novák .

She warned against “discouraging the youth from childbearing” and called for “giving up the culture of fear” and “listening to Pope Francis saying yes to life”.

The UN COP28 conference is attended by 80,000 participants including the heads of state and government from 140 countries.

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