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Graphic shows climate finance for developing countries and OECD projections.
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COP26

الدول الغنية لم تف بوعود بـ 100 مليار دولار بشأن المناخ

By Duncan Mil

November 5, 2021 - قبل اثني عشر عاماً، تعهدت الدول المتقدمة بتقديم 100 مليار دولار للبلدان الفقيرة بحلول العام 2020 لمساعدتها على التكيّف مع تغير المناخ. حتى الآن، الدول الغنية ما زالت مقصرة.

Figures for 2020 are unavailable, and those who negotiated the pledge don’t agree on accounting methods. Still, a report last year for the UN by the Independent Expert Group on Climate Finance concluded that “the only realistic scenarios” showed the $100-billion target was out of reach. “We are not there yet,” conceded UN secretary-general António Guterres.

Pledges ahead of the COP26 climate talks in Glasgow, UK, have led to hopes that, by 2023, wealthy nations will manage to transfer $100 billion annually.

The OECD has assessed that wealthy nations contributed $79.5 billion in climate finance to developing countries in 2019, up from $78.3 billion in 2018. Although wealthy nations collectively agreed to the $100-billion goal, they made no formal deal on what each should pay.

An October report from the U.S.-based World Resources Institute calculated that the U.S. should contribute 40–47 per cent of the $100 billion. But its contribution from 2013 to 2018 was only around $8.9 billion, the WRI estimates.

U.S. President Joe Biden has promised $11.4 billion in annual financing by 2024, but much of that funding requires U.S. Congressional approval.

On the other hand, Japan, Germany and France have transferred more than their fair share -- $56.2 billion, $35.4 billion and $22.6 billion, respectively.

“It isn’t a great sign,” says Joe Thwaites, a climate finance specialist at the WRI.

Sources
PUBLISHED: 05/11/2021; STORY: Graphic News; PICTURES: Getty Images
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