• SPX
  • $5,917.11
  • 0 %
  • $0.13
  • DJI
  • $43,408.47
  • 0.32 %
  • $139.53
  • N225
  • $38,026.10
  • -0.85 %
  • -$326.17
  • FTSE
  • $8,085.07
  • -0.17 %
  • -$13.95
  • IXIC
  • $18,966.14
  • -0.11 %
  • -$21.33

New COP29 proposal shows wide gap persists on climate funding deal

By Reuters   |   Nov 20, 2024 at 11:50 PM EST
New COP29 proposal shows wide gap persists on climate funding deal

By William James, Simon Jessop and Gloria Dickie

BAKU (Reuters) -The United Nations climate body published on Thursday fresh options for the COP29 summit's primary goal of agreeing how much money richer countries should provide poorer ones to help them tackle climate change.

Getting a deal on the money has proved slow-going at the talks in Azerbaijan's capital of Baku, and the latest draft of the negotiating text arrived several hours later than scheduled as delegates entered, in theory, the closing 48 hours.

While the summit is set to wrap up on Friday, the new document showed much remains to be decided on key questions, such as what counts towards the annual figure, who pays and how much.

"We are far from the finish line," said Li Shuo, a climate diplomacy expert at the Asia Society Policy Institute. "The new finance text presents two extreme ends of the aisle without much in between."

Developing countries need at least $1 trillion annually by the end of the decade to cope with climate change, economists told the U.N. talks last week.

Although the 10-page document was slimmed to less than half the size of the previous version by stripping out some options, it summed up the opposing positions of blocs of developed and developing nations established before the event.

One focused on ensuring the funds were grants or grant-equivalent in form, and that contributions from developing countries to each other - a nod to large potential donors such as China - were not formally part of the target.

The other, repeating the position of richer countries, aimed to broaden the types of finance that count toward the final annual goal, not just grants from developed countries, and included contributions from others.

Both options avoided specifying the total amount of money that countries would aim to invest each year, leaving the space marked with an 'X'.

"Crucially, the text misses a number that defines the scale of future climate finance, a prerequisite for negotiation in good faith," Li added.

That was perhaps not surprising as key donor countries, including those in the European Union, have said they want more clarity on the structure and contributor base before publicly discussing how much they could chip in.

(Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

Did you find this insightful?


We are preparing, please wait

×
New Alert

Select an alert type

Choose sentiment spike or mentions spike or both to receive email alerts and app notification for the selected stock.
Note: Please be aware that you will receive an email only once a day, around 8:00 AM (EST), in the event of any spike.
In future if you don't want to receive any email then delete stocks added into alert section.

New Alert

Setup alert

×

Premium Content

This content is only available for premium members. Please become a paid member to access.

Download App

Currently, memberships can only be purchased through the app.

×

Log In


or

download app using google store Continue with Google download app using apple Continue with Apple

Email Verification

An email with a verification code has been sent to your email address.

Welcome to Stocks.News!

Create Your Account

Email Verification

An email with a verification code has been sent to your email address.