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CLIMATE SCIENCE
World Bank urges 'substantial' pre-2020 climate funds
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) July 9, 2015


We're headed for Titanic-like crash, climate talks hear
Toronto, Canada (AFP) July 9, 2015 - The governor of California has likened the state of the planet to the Titanic in an attempt to drive home his growing fears about climate change.

"A lot of people are asleep, they are on the Titanic and they drink champagne, while we are about to crash," Jerry Brown, whose state is struggling to cope with a historic drought that many blame on climate change, told the Climate Summit of the Americas.

Meanwhile in Canada, host of the two-day conference that ended Thursday, an unusually active wildfire season has prompted alarm and accusations climate change is again to blame for the hundreds of blazes.

Those and other concerns dominated the talks and are sure to come up again at a crucial international meeting in Paris at the end of November, when countries will try and reach a global agreement to save the Earth.

A central theme of the Toronto talks were accusations that many lawmakers in Canada and the US are still not taking the threat of climate change seriously enough, particularly with the key Paris talks drawing ever-nearer.

Kathleen Wynne, premier of the host province of Ontario, said: "Economic growth that irreversibly alters the climate of our planet is not real growth.

"It's false and it's futile. The kind that will ultimately undermine the standard of living that we value so highly."

American former vice president and climate change leader Al Gore agreed, saying more needed to be done to inform people in the Americas about the benefits and necessity of a green economy.

Although those in attendance -- politicians, members of the business community and civil society groups -- largely agreed that more needed to be done, they were not joined by the Canadian federal government, which controversially was not there.

In a statement to AFP, Environment Minister Leona Aglukkaq suggested the record of the government spoke for itself and said the ruling Conservatives were the "first in Canadian history to have managed a net reduction in greenhouse gas emissions."

Putting money on the table for pre-2020 climate adaptation projects in poor countries, may help unlock an ambitious global pact in December, a senior World Bank official said Thursday.

Commitments of cash for the coming five years would boost goodwill from poor countries and those at high climate risk, according to the bank's vice president and climate envoy Rachel Kyte.

"For some developing countries, the money is the litmus test" in UN negotiations for a world agreement to curb global warming through greenhouse gas emissions cuts, she said.

Kyte was speaking to journalists in Paris, which will host a November 30 to December 11 UN conference for 195 countries to thrash out and sign the final text.

The deal will take effect in 2020, seeking to limit average global warming to two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) over pre-Industrial Revolution levels.

"There remains a pressing need for much more financing to be spent on adaptation (to the effects of climate change) in particular, between now and 2020," said Kyte.

"The impacts of climate change are already having a severe economic impact on a number of developing countries."

Financing is a key dispute between rich and developing nations, which have been negotiating the new pact for years.

Developing countries insist that rich nations must show how they intend to keep a promise made in 2009 to boost climate finance to $100 billion (91 billion euros) per year from 2020.

They also want money in the interim, to finance the costly shift from fossil fuel-based to sustainably-powered economies, and to bolster their defences against climate effects that can no longer be avoided.

"We also hope that countries and the private sector and partnerships will come to Paris with some fairly substantial commitments that will operate between 2015 and 2020," said Kyte.

"Some substantial and material commitments of financing in the short term, especially to least-developed and small island developing states... that's a very important piece of buying the political trust that's necessary to get a comprehensive deal in Paris."

There must also be more transparency about money flowing in, "to reassure people this is not smoke and mirrors, that it's real," she added.

To this end, Kyte announced that the world's largest multilateral development banks would improve their tracking of climate adaptation finance -- making sure they count spending on the same types of projects, using the same formula, in a further attempt to boost trust in the fractious UN negotiations process.

Money for adaptation is a much smaller component of international climate funding than mitigation -- the jargon used for the switch to lower-emissions economies.

Developing countries are demanding that adaptation be given much more prominence in the Paris pact.


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