Zürcher Nachrichten - Joy at 'historic' climate damages deal

EUR -
AED 4.101345
AFN 77.032505
ALL 99.346177
AMD 432.43567
ANG 2.013049
AOA 1036.77807
ARS 1075.022084
AUD 1.638665
AWG 2.009927
AZN 1.903727
BAM 1.957678
BBD 2.255263
BDT 133.478024
BGN 1.96194
BHD 0.420821
BIF 3237.947656
BMD 1.116626
BND 1.443284
BOB 7.718265
BRL 6.064287
BSD 1.116971
BTN 93.354568
BWP 14.765294
BYN 3.655406
BYR 21885.869656
BZD 2.251419
CAD 1.514765
CDF 3205.83349
CHF 0.948568
CLF 0.037681
CLP 1039.724056
CNY 7.877914
CNH 7.876551
COP 4648.301891
CRC 579.545486
CUC 1.116626
CUP 29.590589
CVE 110.369377
CZK 25.076404
DJF 198.897208
DKK 7.459169
DOP 67.044305
DZD 147.724424
EGP 54.187291
ERN 16.74939
ETB 129.612896
FJD 2.456911
FKP 0.850377
GBP 0.839089
GEL 3.048765
GGP 0.850377
GHS 17.559528
GIP 0.850377
GMD 76.478493
GNF 9650.126208
GTQ 8.634359
GYD 233.659928
HKD 8.702442
HNL 27.707575
HRK 7.591952
HTG 147.378717
HUF 393.677561
IDR 16934.414972
ILS 4.208201
IMP 0.850377
INR 93.284779
IQD 1463.20342
IRR 47001.617801
ISK 152.296414
JEP 0.850377
JMD 175.488318
JOD 0.791351
JPY 161.091169
KES 144.067258
KGS 94.062898
KHR 4536.351005
KMF 492.822874
KPW 1004.96277
KRW 1492.18639
KWD 0.340616
KYD 0.930801
KZT 535.514042
LAK 24664.21472
LBP 100022.944684
LKR 340.786863
LRD 223.390262
LSL 19.608883
LTL 3.297107
LVL 0.675436
LYD 5.304278
MAD 10.830976
MDL 19.490869
MGA 5051.754868
MKD 61.661441
MMK 3626.7577
MNT 3794.295108
MOP 8.965839
MRU 44.388973
MUR 51.230572
MVR 17.151745
MWK 1936.622809
MXN 21.621786
MYR 4.695396
MZN 71.296513
NAD 19.608708
NGN 1830.652829
NIO 41.108877
NOK 11.731586
NPR 149.370267
NZD 1.791604
OMR 0.429846
PAB 1.116951
PEN 4.186559
PGK 4.37235
PHP 62.154728
PKR 310.35047
PLN 4.275394
PYG 8714.358307
QAR 4.072206
RON 4.974455
RSD 117.081921
RUB 103.595912
RWF 1505.75772
SAR 4.190263
SBD 9.275742
SCR 15.20849
SDG 671.658527
SEK 11.379804
SGD 1.442608
SHP 0.850377
SLE 25.511892
SLL 23415.083225
SOS 638.317954
SRD 33.334619
STD 23111.9038
SVC 9.773243
SYP 2805.55626
SZL 19.61599
THB 36.878746
TJS 11.873175
TMT 3.908191
TND 3.384446
TOP 2.615244
TRY 38.089784
TTD 7.597151
TWD 35.731768
TZS 3046.939603
UAH 46.168836
UGX 4138.117278
USD 1.116626
UYU 46.153648
UZS 14213.632892
VEF 4045036.356711
VES 41.049924
VND 27474.582801
VUV 132.568082
WST 3.12372
XAF 656.574989
XAG 0.035614
XAU 0.000427
XCD 3.017737
XDR 0.827794
XOF 656.577931
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.519396
ZAR 19.564743
ZMK 10050.970555
ZMW 29.570833
ZWL 359.553117
  • CMSC

    -0.0350

    25.085

    -0.14%

  • SCS

    -0.3800

    12.93

    -2.94%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    25.05

    +0.16%

  • BP

    -0.3950

    32.365

    -1.22%

  • AZN

    -0.4700

    78.43

    -0.6%

  • RIO

    -0.9600

    64.22

    -1.49%

  • BTI

    -0.1460

    37.424

    -0.39%

  • NGG

    0.4300

    69.26

    +0.62%

  • GSK

    -0.5250

    41.095

    -1.28%

  • BCC

    -3.1300

    141.56

    -2.21%

  • RBGPF

    3.5000

    60.5

    +5.79%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.4

    0%

  • RELX

    -0.1200

    48.01

    -0.25%

  • BCE

    -0.3000

    34.89

    -0.86%

  • RYCEF

    0.0100

    6.96

    +0.14%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    10.01

    -0.5%

Joy at 'historic' climate damages deal
Joy at 'historic' climate damages deal / Photo: Paul ELLIS - AFP/File

Joy at 'historic' climate damages deal

Vulnerable nations least responsible for planet-heating emissions have been battling for three decades for wealthy polluters to cough up the cash for climate damages.

Text size:

Their final push took barely two weeks.

The "loss and damage" inflicted by climate-induced disasters was not even officially up for discussion when UN talks in Egypt began.

But a concerted effort among developing countries to make it the defining issue of the conference melted the resistance of wealthy polluters long fearful of open-ended liability, and gathered unstoppable momentum as the talks progressed.

In the end a decision to create a loss and damage fund was the first item confirmed on Sunday morning after fraught negotiations went overnight with nations clashing over a range of issues around curbing planet-heating emissions.

"At the beginning of these talks loss and damage was not even on the agenda and now we are making history," said Mohamed Adow, executive director of Power Shift Africa.

"It just shows that this UN process can achieve results, and that the world can recognise the plight of the vulnerable must not be treated as a political football."

Loss and damage covers a broad sweep of climate impacts, from bridges and homes washed away in flash flooding, to the threatened disappearance of cultures and whole island nations to the creeping rise of sea levels.

Observers say that the failure of rich polluters both to curb emissions and to meet their promise of funding to help countries boost climate resilience means that losses and damages are inevitably growing as the planet warms.

Event attribution science now makes it possible to measure how much global warming increases the likelihood or intensity of an individual cyclone, heat wave, drought or heavy rain event.

This year, an onslaught of climate-induced disasters -- from catastrophic floods in Pakistan to severe drought threatening famine in Somalia -- battered countries already struggling with the economic effects of the Covid-19 pandemic and soaring food and energy costs.

"Everyone also now realises that things have gone way beyond our control," said Harjeet Singh, head of global political strategy at Climate Action Network International.

- Who pays? -

The agreement was a high-wire balancing act, over seemingly unbridgeable differences.

On the one hand the G77 and China bloc of 134 developing countries called for the immediate creation of a fund at COP27, with operational details to be agreed later.

Richer nations like the United States and European Union accepted that countries in the crosshairs of climate-driven disasters need money, but favoured a "mosaic" of funding arrangements.

They also wanted money to be focused on the most climate-vulnerable countries and for there to be a broader set of donors.

That is code for countries including China and Saudi Arabia that have become wealthier since they were listed as developing nations in 1992.

After last minute tussles over wording, the final loss and damage document decided to create a fund, as part of a broad array of funding arrangements for developing countries "that are particularly vulnerable to the adverse effects of climate change".

Other key points of contention were left ambiguous, or put into the remit of a new transitional committee that will be tasked with coming up with a plan for making the decisions a reality for the 2023 UN climate summit in Dubai.

A reference to expanding sources of funding, "is vague enough to pass", said Ines Benomar, researcher at think tank E3G.

But she said debates about whether China -- the world's biggest emitter -- among others should maintain its status as "developing" was likely to reemerge next year.

"The discussion is postponed, but now there is more attention to it," she said.

For his part, China's envoy Xie Zhenhua told reporters Saturday that the fund should be for all developing countries.

However, he added: "I hope that it could be provided to the fragile countries first."

- 'Empty bucket' -

Singh said other innovative sources of finance -- like levies on fossil fuel extraction or air passengers -- could raise "hundreds of billions of dollars".

Pledges for loss and damage so far are miniscule in comparison to the scale of the damages.

They include $50 million from Austria, $13 million from Denmark and $8 million from Scotland.

Some $200 million has also been pledged -- mainly from Germany -- to the "Global Shield" project, launched by G7 economies and climate vulnerable nations.

The World Bank has estimated the Pakistan floods alone caused $30 billion in damages and economic loss.

Depending on how deeply the world slashes carbon pollution, loss and damage from climate change could cost developing countries $290 to 580 billion a year by 2030, reaching $1 trillion to 1.8 trillion in 2050, according to 2018 research.

Adow said that a loss and damage fund was just the first step.

"What we have is an empty bucket," he said.

"Now we need to fill it so that support can flow to the most impacted people who are suffering right now at the hands of the climate crisis."

W.F.Portman--NZN