Business Day

Pledges of funds to protect nature get attention at COP28

• Developing countries need hundreds of billions of dollars each year just to adapt to the warming world

- Simon Jessop, David Stanway and Elizabeth Piper

Money pledges are grabbing the spotlight at COP28 in Dubai, and more were expected on Monday as delegates turned their focus to the yawning gap between how much climate finance is needed and what is available.

Monday was expected to see announceme­nts on trade policy, carbon markets and ways for financing projects to protect nature.

Developing countries need hundreds of billions of dollars each year just to adapt to the warming world, and say they will need trillions more to shift to clean energy. Separately, vulnerable countries that are already being hit by costly climate disasters are asking for billions more through a newly formed disaster fund.

“Unless we have an urgent [round] of decision-making, we are going to suffer what every parent suffers from — exciting expectatio­ns and being unable to deliver,” said Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley, who has become a prominent voice in global discussion­s about mobilising climate finance.

In a news conference, she urged countries to go beyond voluntary pledges and pleas to charities and private investors and instead to consider taxes as a way to boost climate funding.

A global 0.1% tax on financial services, for example, could raise $420bn, she said, while a 5% tax on global oil and gas profits in 2022 would have yielded about $200bn.

“The planet needs global governance not in a big-stick way, but in a simple way of us cooperatin­g with each other to be able to work with the institutio­ns that we have,” she added.

Other delegates, including UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres, have called for an end to fossil-fuel subsidies, which have hit a record $7-trillion per year.

Activists with the Asian Peoples’ Movement on Debt and Developmen­t said they are worried the sums pledged will be inadequate.

“The climate finance that they have pledged at this COP28 is simply not enough,” said Pakistani activist Zaigham Abbas, whose country was devastated in 2022 by widespread flooding. “We are not looking for charity here. We are not looking for peanuts ... The scale of the catastroph­e that we are staring is unpreceden­ted.”

MOVING MONEY

The biggest single pledge so far at COP28 came on Friday from the conference hosts, the United Arab Emirates, which pledged $30bn for climate-related projects, of which $5bn would be earmarked for poor countries.

Other pledges include $720m so far from countries for the newly created disaster fund, sometimes called the “loss and damage” fund. Earlier on Monday, Danish investment firm Copenhagen Infrastruc­ture Partners announced plans to raise $3bn for renewable projects in emerging markets.

DELEGATES, INCLUDING UN SECRETARY-GENERAL ANTONIO GUTERRES, HAVE CALLED FOR AN END TO FOSSIL-FUEL SUBSIDIES

This year also features the biggest representa­tion of business at the annual UN summit in its history, amid hopes for more private investment towards climate causes.

Abu Dhabi teamed up with private sector partners including BlackRock and HSBC to launch a climate research and advisory hub to boost financing options in the region.

“The scale of the climate crisis demands urgent and gamechangi­ng solutions from every industry,” COP28 president Ahmed al-Jaber said. “Finance plays a critical role in turning our ambitions into actions.”

 ?? /Reuters ?? Prominent voice: Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley attending a press conference at the COP28 World Climate Summit, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. She urged countries to consider taxes as a way to boost climate funding.
/Reuters Prominent voice: Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley attending a press conference at the COP28 World Climate Summit, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. She urged countries to consider taxes as a way to boost climate funding.

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