Search Site

Honda shares soar 16%

The surge came after the auto giant announced a $7bn buyback.

Mubadala acquires stakes from GHH

It acquired an 80 percent stake in Global Medical Supply Chain.

ADNOC Drilling closes JV

It is a JV between ADNOC Drilling, SLB and Patterson UTI.

Boeing to boost 787 production

The firm will invest$1bn to ramp up production in South Carolina.

ADNOC signs deal with PETRONAS

Under the agreement, ADNOC will supply 1m tons of LNG per year.

Nations far apart in COP29 climate finance talks

Participants listen to speeches during the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP29) in Baku on November 13, 2024. (AFP).
  • A new agreement to boost money for climate action in developing countries is the top priority
  • COP29 runs until November 22 but climate talks often run into overtime

Baku, Azerbaijan – A fresh draft of a UN climate deal released Wednesday offers wide-ranging options to raise funding for poorer countries, signaling that tough negotiations remain at the COP29 talks in Baku.

Landing a new agreement to boost money for climate action in developing countries is the top priority of negotiators at the summit in Azerbaijan.

But it is deeply contentious, and consensus has eluded negotiators from nearly 200 nations for the better part of a year.

According to the latest draft of the long-sought climate finance pact, most developing countries favor an annual commitment from wealthy countries of at least US$1.3 trillion.

This figure is more than 10 times the US$100 billion annually that a small pool of developed countries- the United States, the European Union and Japan- currently pay.

Some donors are reluctant to promise large new amounts of public money from their budgets at a time when they face economic and political pressure at home.

“It is their responsibility to convince their electorate,” a key negotiator from a developing country told AFP.

An earlier version of the draft was rejected outright by developing countries, which considered the proposed terms weighted too heavily toward wealthy nations.

Three options

Fresh submissions were called, and the new document summarises three broad positions.

The first argues that rich, industrialized nations most responsible for climate change to date pay from their budgets.

The second option calls for other countries to share the burden, a key demand of developed countries, while the third puts forward a mix of the two.

A bloc of least-developed nations, mostly from Africa, are asking for US$220 billion while small-island states at threat from rising seas want US$39 billion.

Brazil’s environment minister, Marina Silva, said “There is a convergence that these resources must be in the order of trillions” in public and private money.

Another Brazilian official, Andre Correa do Lago, criticized the negotiating tactics of richer nations.

“We think that the discussion was diverted by developed countries instead of responding as they should by the rules of negotiation taking place,” he told reporters.

Friederike Roder from Global Citizen, a non-government organization, said the draft proposes “more concrete options” for an agreement on a total amount and “specific objectives” for the poorest and most vulnerable nations.

“Unfortunately, this search for precision stops there. The proposals aimed at clearly defining what constitutes climate finance, and ensuring close and transparent monitoring, remain insufficient,” she told AFP.

The latest 34-page draft reflects all the options on the table, said David Waskow, director at the World Resources Institute, a think tank.

“Negotiators now need to work to boil it down to some key decisions for the ministers to wrestle with next week,” he said.

COP29 runs until November 22 but climate talks often run into overtime.