Here's what to know about the new funding deal that countries agreed to
at UN climate talks
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[November 25, 2024] By
MELINA WALLING
BAKU, Azerbaijan (AP) — In the wee hours Sunday at the United Nations
climate talks, countries from around the world reached an agreement on
how rich countries can cough up the funds to support poor countries in
the face of climate change.
It's a far-from-perfect arrangement, with many parties still deeply
unsatisfied but some hopeful that the deal will be a step in the right
direction.
World Resources Institute president and CEO Ani Dasgupta called it “an
important down payment toward a safer, more equitable future,” but added
that the poorest and most vulnerable nations are “rightfully
disappointed that wealthier countries didn’t put more money on the table
when billions of people’s lives are at stake.”
The summit was supposed to end on Friday evening but negotiations
spiraled on through early Sunday. With countries on opposite ends of a
massive chasm, tensions ran high as delegations tried to close the gap
in expectations.
Here's how they got there:
What was the finance deal agreed at climate talks?
Rich countries have agreed to pool together at least $300 billion a year
by 2035. It’s not near the full amount of $1.3 trillion that developing
countries were asking for, and that experts said was needed. But
delegations more optimistic about the agreement said this deal is headed
in the right direction, with hopes that more money flows in the future.
The text included a call for all parties to work together using “all
public and private sources” to get closer to the $1.3 trillion per year
goal by 2035. That means also pushing for international mega-banks,
funded by taxpayer dollars, to help foot the bill. And it means,
hopefully, that companies and private investors will follow suit on
channeling cash toward climate action.
The agreement is also a critical step toward helping countries on the
receiving end create more ambitious targets to limit or cut emissions of
heat-trapping gases that are due early next year. It’s part of the plan
to keep cutting pollution with new targets every five years, which the
world agreed to at the U.N. talks in Paris in 2015.
The Paris agreement set the system of regular ratcheting up climate
fighting ambition as away to keep warming under 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7
degrees Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial levels. The world is already at
1.3 degrees Celsius (2.3 degrees Fahrenheit) and carbon emissions keep
rising.
What will the money be spent on?
The deal decided in Baku replaces a previous agreement from 15 years ago
that charged rich nations $100 billion a year to help the developing
world with climate finance.
The new number has similar aims: it will go toward the developing
world's long laundry list of to-dos to prepare for a warming world and
keep it from getting hotter. That includes paying for the transition to
clean energy and away from fossil fuels. Countries need funds to build
up the infrastructure needed to deploy technologies like wind and solar
power on a large scale.
Communities hard-hit by extreme weather also want money to adapt and
prepare for events like floods, typhoons and fires. Funds could go
toward improving farming practices to make them more resilient to
weather extremes, to building houses differently with storms in mind, to
helping people move from the hardest-hit areas and to help leaders
improve emergency plans and aid in the wake of disasters.
The Philippines, for example, has been hammered by six major storms in
less than a month, bringing to millions of people howling wind, massive
storm surges and catastrophic damage to residences, infrastructure and
farmland.
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Mukhtar Babayev, COP29 President, applauds as he attends a closing
plenary at the COP29 U.N. Climate Summit, Sunday, Nov. 24, 2024, in
Baku, Azerbaijan. (AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)
“Family farmers need to be
financed," said Esther Penunia of the Asian Farmers Association. She
described how many have already had to deal with millions of dollars
of storm damage, some of which includes trees that won't again bear
fruit for months or years, or animals that die, wiping out a main
source of income.
“If you think of a rice farmer who depends on his or her one hectare
farm, rice land, ducks, chickens, vegetables, and it was inundated,
there was nothing to harvest,” she said.
Why was it so hard to get a deal?
Election results around the world that herald a change in climate
leadership, a few key players with motive to stall the talks and a
disorganized host country all led to a final crunch that left few
happy with a flawed compromise.
The ending of COP29 is "reflective of the harder geopolitical
terrain the world finds itself in,” said Li Shuo of the Asia
Society. He cited Trump's recent victory in the US — with his
promises to pull the country out of the Paris Agreement — as one
reason why the relationship between China and the EU will be more
consequential for global climate politics moving forward.
Developing nations also faced some difficulties agreeing in the
final hours, with one Latin American delegation member saying that
their group didn't feel properly consulted when small island states
had last-minute meetings to try to break through to a deal.
Negotiators from across the developing world took different tacks on
the deal until they finally agreed to compromise.
Meanwhile, activists ramped up the pressure: many urged negotiators
to stay strong and asserted that no deal would be better than a bad
deal. But ultimately the desire for a deal won out.
Some also pointed to the host country as a reason for the struggle.
Mohamed Adow, director of climate and energy think tank Power Shift
Africa, said Friday that “this COP presidency is one of the worst in
recent memory,” calling it “one of the most poorly led and chaotic
COP meetings ever.”
The presidency said in a statement, “Every hour of the day, we have
pulled people together. Every inch of the way, we have pushed for
the highest common denominator. We have faced geopolitical headwinds
and made every effort to be an honest broker for all sides.”
Shuo retains hope that the opportunities offered by a green economy
“make inaction self-defeating” for countries around the world,
regardless of their stance on the decision. But it remains to be
seen whether the UN talks can deliver more ambition next year.
In the meantime, “this COP process needs to recover from Baku,” Shuo
said.
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Associated Press reporters Seth Borenstein and Sibi Arasu
contributed to this report.
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