Climate finance refers to dedicating public and/or private financial resources to support climate change mitigation (which aims to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions), or adaptation (which helps build resiliency in the face of climate change). Climate finance can come from public sources, such as government or national and multilateral development banks, or from a growing array of private institutional investors and public-private institutions. Internationally, climate finance is one way to recognize that less-developed countries are often more vulnerable to climate change for which they are relatively less responsible and yet have fewer resources to address. Climate finance also refers to funding mechanisms to support the energy transition to net-zero emissions, such as clean technology development and related infrastructure. The 2015 Paris Agreement calls for developed country governments to commit to increasing climate finance commitments (currently USD $100 billion/year) at specified intervals, such as this year. Therefore, negotiating a “New Collective Quantified Goal” on Climate Finance is a major focus of the 2024 UN climate conference (COP29) in Azerbaijan.
Countries agreed on a deal at the COP29 climate conference on Saturday on rules for a global market to buy and sell carbon...
By Virginia Furness, Kate Abnett and Simon Jessop23 Nov 2024Reuters"The eyes of the world are rather focused on us." — Azerbaijan's COP29 President Mukhtar Babayev
By Reuters23 Nov 2024ReutersAdani Energy Solutions says Kenya's cancellation of a $736M transmission line project did not require regulatory disclosure under Indian stock exchange rules.
By Reuters23 Nov 2024ReutersNegotiators at COP29 in Baku struggle for a deal, continuing a history of failed or contentious climate summits.
By AFP23 Nov 2024Agence France-PresseCOP29 'torturous' talks stretch into overtime as countries struggle to break a climate finance deadlock.
By Rebecca Speare-Cole23 Nov 2024UK PA MediaFossil fuel exports were a hot topic at COP29 in Baku, with calls for accountability for pollution sent to poorer nations.
By Mohamed Ezz and Valerie Volcovici23 Nov 2024ReutersWealthy nations at COP29 agree to raise their climate funding offer to $300 billion annually by 2035 for developing countries.
By Kate Abnett, Valerie Volcovici and Karin Strohecker23 Nov 2024ReutersThroughout the year, the COP29 Presidency has been pushing for a fair and ambitious new climate finance goal, taking into account the needs...
Issued by COP29 Presidency22 Nov 2024It is the fifth such debt-for-nature swap in the world.
By Dánica Coto22 Nov 2024The Associated PressIt comes as part of the UK’s commitment to deliver £11.6 billion in carbon finance by 2026.
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