Muscat Daily

Nations failing to fund climate adaptation of 2015 accord: UN

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Paris, France - The world is falling short of promises made under the Paris climate deal to help the most vulnerable nations deal with the increasing­ly devastatin­g impacts of climate change, according to the United Nations.

Adaptation - reducing the fallout among communitie­s and increasing their capacity to deal with climate-related disasters such as floods and drought - is a pillar of the landmark 2015 accord, which aims to chart a path away from catastroph­ic warming.

The deal requires signatorie­s to implement adaptation measures through national planning, but also through funding to atrisk countries.

The UN Environmen­t Programme Adaptation Gap report found that the current finance levels of around US$30bn annually for adaptation fell far short of the annual cost in developing nations of US$70bn.

It said the true cost of adapting to climate impacts in these nations could be as high as US$300bn every year by the end of the decade and US$500bn by mid-century.

“The hard truth is that climate change is upon us,” said Inger Andersen, UNEP executive director. “Its impacts will intensify and hit vulnerable countries and communitie­s the hardest - even if we meet the Paris Agreement goals of holding global warming this century to well below 2°C.”

UNEP called for a drastic scale-up of public and private finance for adaptation, as well as increased investment in naturebase­d solutions such as protecting and sustainabl­y restoring ecosystems.

With just over 1°C of warming since the start of the industrial era, Earth is already experienci­ng more intense and frequent extreme weather such as droughts and flooding, as well as storms supercharg­ed by rising seas.

Much of the devastatio­n wrought by climate-linked disasters falls on developing nations, and despite promises to help out financiall­y, richer countries still aren’t hitting their adaptation funding targets.

UNEP said funding for adaptation currently represente­d just five percent of all climate finance.

With the cost of natural disas

ters set to skyrocket this century, hard-hit nations are finding it difficult to secure the finance to rebuild after extreme events.

Mozambique, which was battered by twin cyclones in early 2019, said that one year since the disasters it had received less than a quarter of the estimated US$3bn it needed to recover.

The UN report found that cutting greenhouse gas emissions will provide a long-term economic benefit by reducing the costs associated with climate change.

Achieving the 2°C Paris Agreement temperatur­e rise limit could curb losses in annual growth to 1.6 per cent, compared with 2.2 per cent for 3°C of warming - the current trajectory if nations’ current Paris pledges are upheld.

 ?? (AFP) ?? This file photo shows climate activists preparing for action before the first hearing in the case against France over climate inaction, near the Pont Marie, in Paris on January 14
(AFP) This file photo shows climate activists preparing for action before the first hearing in the case against France over climate inaction, near the Pont Marie, in Paris on January 14

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