The main purpose of this ongoing blog will be to track extreme, or record temperatures related to climate change. Any reports I see of ETs will be listed below the main topic of the day. I’ll refer to extreme or record temperatures as ETs (not extraterrestrials).😉
Main Topic: COP29 Is Not Delivering for Poor Southern Nations
Dear Diary. The annual Conference of the Parties held this year in Azerbaijan is making little progress towards globally limiting CO2 emissions. When the Paris Accords was originally ratified in 2015 it was agreed that richer global north countries would help global south countries cope with our changing climate by setting up a fund for that purpose. Now global south countries are howling that committed money pledged for that fund has not been spent such that the whole COP process has been put in jeopardy going forward.
Should the Paris Accords collapse, there will not be much hope for the planet staying below the recommended value of +2.0°C above preindustrial conditions. Beyond what is happening this year at Azerbaijan, Trump has promised to pull out of the Paris Treaty in 2025, weakening the Accords substantially. Here are more details from Common Dreams:
https://www.commondreams.org/news/climate-finance-cop29
Advocates of rich countries paying their climate debt to the Global South gather at the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP29) in Baku, Azerbaijan, on November 22, 2024. (Photo: Kiara Worth/United Nations Climate Change)
With the United Nations’ annual climate summit scheduled to end Friday in Baku, Azerbaijan, green groups denounced the latest draft finance deal, which would direct the Global North to provide just $250 billion per year to help developing countries with emission cuts and adaptation—far below the $1.3 trillion campaigners demanded.
Although the figure represented progress from Thursday, when there was a placeholder “X” for the new collective quantified goal (NCQG) on climate finance, Oil Change International global public finance manager Laurie van der Burg still stressed that “this text is an absolute embarrassment. It’s the equivalent of governments handing the keys to the firetruck to the arsonists.”
There is a broader goal to raise $1.3 trillion in annual climate finance, but that would include funding from private sources.
“The vague $1.3 trillion investment target is not to be relied on and the $250 billion goal is not debt-free. Previous suggestions to end fossil fuel handouts and make polluters pay have all been axed,” Van der Burg noted. “This amounts to a cop-out for polluters and allows rich countries to dodge their responsibilities by relying on the private sector and even developing countries to cover the bill, creating a debt trap for countries most vulnerable to the climate crisis.”
She was far from alone in calling out developed nations, which previously failed to deliver on a 2009 pledge of $100 billion annually for poorer countries impacted by the climate emergency by 2020.
“With a paltry climate finance offer of $250 billion annually, and a deadline to deliver as late as 2035, richer nations including E.U. countries and the United States are dangerously close to betraying the Paris agreement,” Rachel Cleetus, policy director of the Union of Concerned Scientists’ Climate and Energy Program, said from Baku.
Parties to the 2015 Paris agreement hope to keep global temperature rise this century “well below” 2°C, relative to preindustrial levels, with a target of 1.5°C. However, a U.N. analysis revealed last month that the world is currently on track for 2.6-3.1°C of warming by 2100.
“The central demand coming into COP29 was for a strong, science-aligned climate finance commitment, which this appalling text utterly fails to provide” Cleetus highlighted. “Wealthier nations seem content to shamefully renege on their responsibility and cave in to fossil fuel interests while unjustly foisting the costs of deadly climate extremes on countries that have contributed the least to the climate crisis.”
Jess Beagley, policy lead at the Global Climate and Health Alliance, a consortium of over 200 health professional and civil society groups, warned that “if COP29 agrees on the text shown to us today, it would sign a death sentence for millions.”
The alliance’s executive director, Jeni Miller, pointed out that “many of the countries most impacted by climate change are already paying more to service their international loans than the combined budgets for their health systems and education, with devastating impacts on people’s health and well-being.”
“It is unconscionable that wealthy countries are proposing a climate finance deal that could worsen the debt burden of countries facing the brunt of a climate crisis they did not cause,” Miller asserted. “As people around the world experience firsthand the devastating impacts of heat, storms, floods, and droughts, the failure of developed countries to step up to their responsibilities is completely unacceptable, not to mention profoundly shortsighted.”
Oxfam International’s climate justice lead, Safa’ Al Jayoussi, took aim at the summit’s host, saying: “This is a shameful failure of leadership. The COP29 Presidency’s top-down ‘take-it-or-leave-it’ approach has sidelined progressive voices. All while rich countries boycott climate justice by refusing to pay up and putting only false solutions on the table.”
“No deal would be better than a bad deal, but let’s be clear—there is only one option for those grappling with the harshest impacts of climate collapse: trillions, not billions, in public and grants-based finance,” Al Jayoussi added.
Power Shift Africa director Mohamed Adow said that “our expectations were low, but this is a slap in the face. No developing country will fall for this. What trick is the presidency trying to pull? They’ve already disappointed everyone, but they have now angered and offended the developing world.”
“The figure of $250 billion is about 20% of what developing countries have asked for. Are we really settling for a fifth of the ambition needed to tackle the climate crisis?” he continued. “It seems that building an ambitious climate finance outcome in Baku is not the ballgame this presidency is playing.”
The U.N. climate summits often run into overtime, but there are concerns that COP29 talks could collapse entirely, given that there must be unanimous support for final deals. There are also fears that rich countries may fail to deliver on any pledge—again—especially with the return of U.S. President-elect Donald Trump, who ditched the Paris agreement during his first term.
“The Global North must stop playing poker with people’s lives and pay their overdue debt,” declared Namrata Chowdhary, chief of public engagement at 350.org, one of the groups calling for an overhaul of the COP process. “We need real leadership—from wealthy nations and the presidency—to land this deal. If they can’t deliver, they must step aside, because we will not accept a bad deal that fails to meet the moment.”
“As the world watches what should be the final day of this year’s climate talks, the agreement we came here for remains elusive. This new climate finance goal is three years in the making, and the global majority remains leaps and bounds ahead of the governments who are continuing to stall and let progress slip away in the name of profits,” Chowdhary concluded. “But we will not be silenced. At COP29, we hold the line in our demand for more climate finance, not this bare minimum offer.”
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Jessica Corbett is a senior editor and staff writer for Common Dreams.
Much More:
Here are more “ETs” recorded from around the planet the last couple of days, their consequences, and some extreme temperature outlooks, as well as any extreme precipitation reports:
Here is More Climate News from Sunday:
(As usual, this will be a fluid post in which more information gets added during the day as it crosses my radar, crediting all who have put it on-line. Items will be archived on this site for posterity. In most instances click on the pictures of each tweet to see each article. The most noteworthy items will be listed first.)