Yahoo – AFP,
Marlowe Hood, October 7, 2015
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An Indian
worker walks past lines of solar panels at Roha Dyechem solar plant in the
western Indian state of Rajasthan on August 23, 2015 (AFP Photo/Money Sharma)
|
Rich
nations have stepped up their climate aid for poorer nations, paying $62
billion (55 billion euros) last year, approaching a $100-billion annual target
for 2020, the OECD said Wednesday.
Up from $52
billion in 2013, the figure represented "significant progress towards the
$100-billion goal", said a report from the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development, an intergovernmental research body.
The new
numbers will provide fodder for finance ministers and central bank chiefs
meeting in Lima, Peru this week, where climate change is high on the agenda.
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Street
lamps powered by wind and solar
energy line the side of a road in Kenya
on August 19, 2015 (AFP Photo/Tony
Karumba)
|
"We've
come up with a figure that we do think is credible," said Simon Buckle,
who oversaw the drafting of the report, the first attempt to pull together all
the available numbers.
Requested
by governments, the analysis lays out a much-needed framework for tracking how
money earmarked for climate action moves between countries, development banks
and private sources, the authors said.
Up to now
the lack of clarity on whether money was public or private, in the form of
grants or loans, or earmarked for greenhouse gas reduction or bracing for
climate impacts, has blocked progress in the UN climate negotiations.
Developing
nations, which have made finance a red-line issue, are wary of double-counting
and the inclusion of non-climate projects in the final tally.
"The
report provides transparency by breaking down the aggregate estimate of climate
finance into its main financial elements," the report said.
NGOs and
analysts reacted with caution.
The report,
they said, is encouraging but unlikely to satisfy poor nations looking for hard
assurances.
The promise
to pony up at least $100 billion in climate aid per year from 2020 was one of
the few concrete decisions to emerge from the troubled 2009 UN climate summit
in Copenhagen.
Another was
the goal of capping average planet warming to two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees
Fahrenheit) above mid-19th century levels.
The OECD
analysis does not make projections to 2020.
"The
positive signal is that climate finance flows are on a upward trajectory,"
said Athena Ronquillo-Ballesteros of the World Resources Institute, a
Washington-based think-tank. "Countries still have time to step up."
'Peanuts'
More than
70 percent of the total for 2014 came from the public sector -- $20.4 billion
from multilateral sources such as development banks, and $23.1 billion from
bilateral sources, mainly grants and loans from one government to another.
"We
were pleasantly surprised to see that the lion's share of the number is
actually public finances," said Jens Mattias Clausen, a climate finance
analyst with Greenpeace.
Most
developing countries insist that the bulk of the promised money should be from
public and government funds.
The report
also offers the first estimated breakdown of money for both mitigation, or
greenhouse gas reduction, and adaptation -- preparing for the droughts,
superstorms and water shortages which scientists say will be aggravated by
global warming.
More than
three-quarters of the money went to mitigation, a fact which is likely to upset
poor nations demanding more cash to help them prepare for these impacts.
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An egret
looks for food on cracked mud at the bottom of a dried up reservoir in
Pingdingshan, central China's Henan province on July 30, 2014 (AFP Photo)
|
"This
is a far cry from what developing nations are expecting," said Clausen.
While the
$62 billion is seen as encouraging, experts cautioned that there's still a big
gap to fill before reaching the 2020 goal.
There is
also the question of what happens after that.
"The
report doesn't address the fact that the $100-billion figure itself is
inadequate," said Alden Meyer, a veteran climate policy analyst with the
Washington-based Union of Concerned Scientists.
"Nor
does it address how to assure that climate finance ramps up well beyond $100
billion a year after 2020," he said by email.
Also left
unmentioned is the hugely contentious issue of payouts for damages -- past and
future -- caused by global warming.
Money for
"loss and damage", as it is called, would be over and above what is
already pledged.
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