BSS
  13 Sep 2024, 17:30
Update : 13 Sep 2024, 17:34

Climate finance talks make little progress before UN summit

PARIS, Sept 13, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - International negotiations on money to help
developing countries tackle climate change concluded without a breakthrough
this week, just two months before Azerbaijan hosts the United Nations climate
summit.

The Azerbaijani chair of the COP29 summit voiced concern after the four-day
talks concluded on Thursday, while NGOs accused richer nations of blocking
efforts to reach a deal.

The November 11-22 talks in Baku are meant to produce a global agreement on
how much wealthy nations should pay to help developing countries transition
to renewable energy and cope with the effects of global warming.

"Determination and leadership is needed from all parties to bridge the gaps
that still divide us in this critical final phase," said COP29 president
Mukhtar Babayev, Azerbaijan's ecology and natural resources minister.

"Everyone now needs to take ownership of finding an agreement. Sticking to
set positions and failing to move towards each other will leave too much
ground to be covered at COP29," he said.

Wealthy nations have been under pressure to commit to new financing targets
that go well beyond the $100 billion a year they committed to provide until
2025.

Developing countries say $1 trillion a year are needed.

Under a landmark 1992 UN climate accord, industrialised nations recognised
their historical responsibility for greenhouse gas emissions and laid the
groundwork for them to provide financial assistance to the developing world.

But the United States and the European Union nations now want the pool of
contributors widened to include oil-rich Gulf states and China, now the
world's second biggest economy and top emitter of greenhouse gases.

Gulf states and China reject their call to contribute.

The UN published a draft document in late August setting out seven rough
options for a finance deal, laying bare the conflicting positions between
nations.

Negotiators from around the world failed at this week's four-day talks in
Baku to reconcile their differences.

"There was some progress. But all that could collapse at any moment," said
Rebecca Thissen of the Climate Action Network, which includes 1,900 civil
society organisations from over 130 countries.

Mariana Paoli, global advocacy lead at Christian aid, said developed
countries have yet to put a number on the table.

"It is shameful how developed countries have been undermining these finance
negotiations," Paoli said.

Azerbaijan is seeking to hold a meeting of ministers on the sidelines of the
UN General Assembly on September 27 in order to bridge differences.