Rich countries failed to meet their climate funding goal
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[July 30, 2022]
By Kate Abnett
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Rich nations failed to
meet a long-standing pledge to deliver $100 billion to help poorer
countries cope with climate change, the OECD said on Friday.
Back in 2009, developed countries promised that by 2020 they would
transfer $100 billion per year to vulnerable states hit by increasingly
severe climate-linked impacts and disasters.
In fact, they provided $83.3 billion in 2020 - falling $16.7 billion
short of the target, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development (OECD) said.
The missed goal is no surprise. The OECD uses U.N. data processed with a
two-year delay, and rich countries have already signalled the target
would not be met until 2023.
But it is a blow ahead of COP27, the United Nations' annual climate
summit in November, where countries will face pressure to cut CO2
emissions faster.
Finance has become a sore point in these talks, and developing economies
say they cannot afford to curb pollution without support from the rich
nations responsible for most of the CO2 emissions heating the planet.
"Honouring that commitment is central to renew trust," said Yamide
Dagnet, Climate Justice Director at the Open Society Foundations, though
she said $100 billion is a slither of vulnerable states' actual needs.
"We need developed countries to present credible plans to escalate their
climate finance," Dagnet said.
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A view shows emissions from the chimneys of Yara France plant in
Montoir-de-Bretagne near Saint-Nazaire, France, March 4, 2022.
REUTERS/Stephane Mahe
The OECD does not break down the data by individual countries. It
said it was not clear how the COVID-19-induced economic slump may
have hit countries' contributions, which include public loans,
grants, and private investments that public bodies helped mobilise.
In recent years the European Union and its 27 member countries have,
together, been the biggest climate finance provider.
As crop-shrivelling droughts, rising sea levels and deadly heat
strike the world's poorest nations, they are also demanding
compensation for these escalating climate-linked losses.
The United States, EU and other big polluters have so far resisted
steps that could lead to such payments - but some officials said
positions were beginning to shift.
"I believe a Loss and Damage Funding Facility is gaining traction,"
said Carlos Fuller, Belize's Ambassador to the United Nations.
"We now need to work on those developed countries who remain
hesitant," he said.
(Reporting by Kate Abnett; Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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