Rich countries may have met $100 bln climate goal last year -OECD
- November 17, 2023
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Rich countries may have met $100 bln climate goal last year -OECD
Subject :Environment
Section: Climate change
Context:
- Developed nations may have achieved their overdue promise of $100 billion to help poorer countries cope with climate change in 2022, the OECD said.
Details:
- In 2009 at the Copenhagen conference of UNFCCC, developed countries promised that from 2020 they would transfer $100 billion a year to poorer nations hit by worsening climate change-fuelled disasters.
- Rich countries had previously signalled the target would not be met until 2023. The target was not met in 2021. That year, wealthy nations provided $89.6 billion, an 8% increase from 2020 levels.
- Most of the 2021 money – $73 billion – was public finance and, of this, more than two thirds was loans.
- The OECD said poor nations’ actual climate investment needs could total $1 trillion per year by 2025.
What is the USD 100 Billion Target and why does it matter?
- In 2009, at the UNFCCC COP15 (held in Copenhagen),
- The developed country parties, to achieve meaningful mitigation actions and transparency on implementation, jointly set a target of USD 100 billion a year by 2020 to address the needs of developing countries.
- The climate finance goal was then formally recognized by the UNFCCC Conference of the Parties at COP16 in Cancun.
- At COP21 in Paris, Parties extended the $100 billion goals through 2025.
- After COP26 there was a consensus that developed nations will double their collective provision of adaptation finance from 2019 levels by 2025, in order to achieve this balance between adaptation and mitigation.
- Parties established the Green Climate Fund (GCF) at COP 16 in 2010 and designated it as an operating entity of the financial mechanism in 2011.
Source of this article: Reuters