Current:Home > InvestLow-income countries want more money for climate damage. They're unlikely to get it. -Quantum Finance Bridge
Low-income countries want more money for climate damage. They're unlikely to get it.
View
Date:2025-04-16 07:20:31
Facing mounting pressure to compensate low-income countries for damages they're suffering from climate change, wealthy nations may try to move money they've already promised to other global warming goals rather than come up with new funding, according to experts and participants at the United Nations climate conference in Egypt.
A draft document released this week at the talks says money for loss and damage — a key issue in the negotiations — should be added to climate financing that's already going to low-income countries to help them limit and adapt to global warming. The current funding arrangement, which was created more than a decade ago, reflects the fact that industrialized nations such as the United States have emitted most of the pollution heating the Earth, while poorer countries are bearing the brunt of the harm caused by rising temperatures.
But industrialized countries for years have failed to fully fund those pledges. That makes the odds slim for a big new cash infusion for loss and damage, especially as countries deal with the threat of recession and the war in Ukraine. And it's raising the possibility that developed nations will now look to transfer money from older financing commitments to potentially new loss and damage obligations, without actually increasing overall funds that low-income nations need to cope with climate change.
"We do need to see money, extra money, flow towards" loss and damage, says Michai Robertson, an advisor to the Alliance of Small Island States, which represents communities that are especially vulnerable to climate change. However, he says that a reshuffling of climate funds is likely to be "a reality that we're gonna have to contend with a lot going forward."
Failure to deliver new money for loss and damage would mean that richer countries would continue their chronic underfunding of developing nations. That's heightening fears that this year's climate conference won't galvanize a strong global response to climate change despite the urgency signaled by deadly events across the world.
Without more money, loss and damage could eat into adaptation efforts
One of the challenges of dealing with climate change is that countries have to do several things at once to protect their people, experts say. Countries need to limit, or mitigate, further warming. They need to adapt to risks people are facing. And they need to compensate poorer nations for damage already done and for impacts that can't be avoided, like communities being displaced by rising seas. All that takes funding, which, given the scope of the problem, should increase over time.
So far, several countries have pledged money for loss and damage. But the amounts are relatively small, and the money isn't new, says Taylor Dimsdale, a director at E3G, a climate change think tank. Rather, countries are "just dividing the same climate finance pie up in different ways."
If money is pulled away from mitigation and adaptation efforts, it could mean that more places and people will experience irrevocable losses and damage.
Over time, the amount of money that's available to low-income countries will probably grow, so that claims for loss and damage don't eat into funding for adaptation to extreme weather, says Gaia Larsen, director of climate finance access and deployment at the World Resources Institute's Sustainable Finance Center. But right now, "developed countries are pushing back, mostly because they don't want to provide a lot more money," she says.
Reached for comment, a spokesperson for John Kerry, the U.S. special presidential envoy for climate change, pointed to recent comments in which Kerry said the country "has been very clear about its support to deal with the loss and damage issue."
Debate centers on creating a new fund for loss and damage
It's still unclear, though, what sort of action world leaders would be willing to commit to in Egypt.
Frans Timmermans, executive vice president of the European Commission, suggested on Wednesday that a decision on whether to create a new fund or financial mechanism for addressing loss and damage should be delayed while details are worked out, including whether certain developing countries like China should contribute and how money would be distributed. China is the world's largest emitter of heat-trapping pollution and the second-biggest economy.
"Now, we believe that a process should be started where the [financial] facility could be one of the outcomes," Timmermans said in Egypt. "But we also believe that the existing instruments we have could be mobilized immediately to support the most vulnerable."
The European Union and several member states said Wednesday that they're providing more than 1 billion euros ($1.04 billion) of new and existing funds for adaptation programs in Africa. An EU spokesperson said the bloc is contributing 220 million euros of new funding, including 60 million euros for loss and damage.
"So you see that we have tools, funds, mechanisms to deliver financial assistance now and to move it quickly," Timmermans said.
Kaveh Guilanpour, vice president of international strategies at the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions, says there could be "good reasons" to hold off on creating a new fund for loss and damage at this year's climate conference.
It isn't clear whether such a fund would "rapidly result in the flow of new finance," Guilanpour says. And world leaders are looking for ways to use limited public money to attract other forms of financing, he says, including from the private sector.
Guilanpour says climate litigation along with better attribution science linking extreme weather events to climate change could expose fossil fuel companies to greater liability for the impacts of rising temperatures. That could provide a valuable source of funding for loss and damage claims.
"There is a willingness and there's a recognition [among industrialized countries] that more finance is needed for loss and damage," Guilanpour says. "But I think there's also a question about where and how is the money going to come from."
Developing countries are also looking for safeguards to ensure they get whatever they're promised.
Even if world leaders decide this week to create a new loss and damage fund, "we're gonna still have the blurring of the lines and the rebranding that you see a lot of developed countries doing right now," says Robertson of the Alliance of Small Island States.
"We're gonna need to make sure to establish some clear rules on this and what can count as funding towards this cause," Robertson says, "especially to keep them accountable."
veryGood! (1)
Related
- Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
- Why dominant win over LSU shows Florida State football is back
- 'It was like I hit the lottery': Man charged with grand larceny after taking bag containing $5k
- Icebreaker, 2 helicopters used in perilous Antarctic rescue mission as researcher falls ill
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Delaware man who police blocked from warning drivers of speed trap wins $50,000 judgment
- Ukraine's counteroffensive brings heavy casualties as families contend with grief, loss
- 'Holly' review: Stephen King's ace detective takes a star role in freaky thriller
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- New York AG seeks legal sanctions against Trump as part of $250M lawsuit
Ranking
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Georgia football staff member Jarvis Jones arrested for speeding and reckless driving
- Joe Jonas and Sophie Turner Break Up After 4 Years of Marriage
- Federal court rejects Alabama's congressional map, will draw new districts to boost Black voting power
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- Revisiting Joe Jonas and Sophie Turner's Love Story Will Have You Sending Out an S.O.S
- 13-year-old boy drowned in Las Vegas floodwaters caused by heavy rain
- Joe Jonas Says His Marriage With Sophie Turner is Irretrievably Broken
Recommendation
Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
Mark Meadows, 5 more defendants plead not guilty in Georgia election case
Watch: Biscuit the 100-year-old tortoise rescued, reunited with Louisiana family
Alex Murdaugh's lawyers accuse court clerk of jury tampering and demand new trial
Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
The Best Labor Day 2023 Sales You Can Still Shop: Nordstrom Rack, Ulta, Sephora, Madewell, and More
Rhode Island voters to decide Democratic and Republican primary races for congressional seat
California lawmakers vote to become first state to ban caste-based discrimination