The Prague Post - 'Where is the money?' COP28 deal throws spotlight on funding

EUR -
AED 4.304283
AFN 79.910818
ALL 96.865313
AMD 448.10823
ANG 2.09768
AOA 1074.751829
ARS 1679.19187
AUD 1.764296
AWG 2.112585
AZN 1.985513
BAM 1.954117
BBD 2.361236
BDT 142.677087
BGN 1.954795
BHD 0.441913
BIF 3498.741139
BMD 1.17203
BND 1.503985
BOB 8.100918
BRL 6.331078
BSD 1.172375
BTN 103.418878
BWP 15.617346
BYN 3.970996
BYR 22971.794341
BZD 2.357959
CAD 1.622781
CDF 3361.965994
CHF 0.934513
CLF 0.028458
CLP 1116.369965
CNY 8.343274
CNH 8.35064
COP 4566.546589
CRC 590.59122
CUC 1.17203
CUP 31.058804
CVE 110.170561
CZK 24.314928
DJF 208.76837
DKK 7.464122
DOP 74.326287
DZD 152.107252
EGP 56.437917
ERN 17.580455
ETB 168.340542
FJD 2.625641
FKP 0.863946
GBP 0.865363
GEL 3.152868
GGP 0.863946
GHS 14.302496
GIP 0.863946
GMD 83.80671
GNF 10167.286879
GTQ 8.988142
GYD 245.276607
HKD 9.121619
HNL 30.715539
HRK 7.535688
HTG 153.407189
HUF 391.035806
IDR 19266.127465
ILS 3.903933
IMP 0.863946
INR 103.444861
IQD 1535.883425
IRR 49313.17636
ISK 143.59707
JEP 0.863946
JMD 188.067984
JOD 0.83101
JPY 173.31105
KES 151.450271
KGS 102.494079
KHR 4698.891878
KMF 491.665928
KPW 1054.769967
KRW 1631.196579
KWD 0.35795
KYD 0.977046
KZT 633.935766
LAK 25422.07556
LBP 104986.213208
LKR 353.736773
LRD 227.485249
LSL 20.347358
LTL 3.460701
LVL 0.708949
LYD 6.330546
MAD 10.557805
MDL 19.472975
MGA 5195.723496
MKD 61.48703
MMK 2460.173079
MNT 4215.607632
MOP 9.398024
MRU 46.801482
MUR 53.30378
MVR 18.055083
MWK 2032.831419
MXN 21.660703
MYR 4.928379
MZN 74.908003
NAD 20.347271
NGN 1760.717592
NIO 43.143017
NOK 11.582765
NPR 165.461341
NZD 1.970077
OMR 0.45064
PAB 1.172435
PEN 4.085798
PGK 4.968741
PHP 66.961615
PKR 332.860568
PLN 4.256644
PYG 8377.782738
QAR 4.279831
RON 5.069617
RSD 117.143251
RUB 97.891375
RWF 1698.814769
SAR 4.396931
SBD 9.638512
SCR 17.653766
SDG 704.972116
SEK 10.947384
SGD 1.504401
SHP 0.921032
SLE 27.407905
SLL 24576.88749
SOS 670.014224
SRD 46.614576
STD 24258.661377
STN 24.478912
SVC 10.257201
SYP 15238.600574
SZL 20.327228
THB 37.194972
TJS 11.032102
TMT 4.102106
TND 3.412845
TOP 2.745009
TRY 48.487422
TTD 7.971031
TWD 35.520485
TZS 2883.194214
UAH 48.333268
UGX 4120.503019
USD 1.17203
UYU 46.959746
UZS 14593.365903
VES 184.631777
VND 30924.020086
VUV 139.967203
WST 3.113989
XAF 655.384014
XAG 0.027799
XAU 0.000321
XCD 3.167471
XCG 2.112953
XDR 0.814879
XOF 655.395188
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.819622
ZAR 20.374221
ZMK 10549.641285
ZMW 27.814682
ZWL 377.393286
  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.35

    -0.16%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    24.38

    0%

  • BCC

    -1.0100

    88

    -1.15%

  • BCE

    -0.0750

    24.215

    -0.31%

  • RIO

    0.3500

    62.89

    +0.56%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.34

    +0.38%

  • SCS

    -0.0600

    16.94

    -0.35%

  • RELX

    0.4600

    46.79

    +0.98%

  • GSK

    -0.2750

    41.205

    -0.67%

  • AZN

    -0.2650

    80.835

    -0.33%

  • JRI

    0.0350

    14.155

    +0.25%

  • BTI

    -0.5700

    56.74

    -1%

  • RYCEF

    0.4600

    15.19

    +3.03%

  • BP

    -0.2550

    34.21

    -0.75%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    11.85

    -0.08%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    77.27

    0%

'Where is the money?' COP28 deal throws spotlight on funding
'Where is the money?' COP28 deal throws spotlight on funding / Photo: Giuseppe CACACE - AFP/File

'Where is the money?' COP28 deal throws spotlight on funding

After COP28's landmark call for the world to move away from fossil fuels, experts say the pressure is on to fast-track -- and fund -- the global energy transition.

Text size:

The agreement was a compromise wrestled out of countries with sharply conflicting interests by the oil-rich United Arab Emirates, hosting COP28 in the last days of the hottest year humans have recorded so far.

It calls for "transitioning away from fossil fuels in energy systems, in a just, orderly and equitable manner" -- after three decades without naming the main driver of planet-heating pollution.

With rapidly-accelerating climate impacts slamming communities across the planet, observers said this was both a major milestone and the very minimum needed to steer the world onto a safer track.

The bigger challenge will be turning the promise of the COP28 agreement into sweeping global decarbonisation that comes close to the goal of limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius from preindustrial levels.

COP28's goal to triple global renewables capacity and double the rate of energy efficiency improvements by 2030 will require significant investment, particularly in developing countries least responsible for warming.

An editorial in Indonesia's Jakarta Post on Thursday called on rich polluters to scale up finance.

"COP28, where is the dough?" it asked.

The Dubai text acknowledged that trillions of dollars are needed by debt-stricken developing countries to meet their climate targets this decade as they face worsening warming impacts.

But Senegal's climate envoy Madeleine Diouf Sarr, Chair of the Least Developed Countries Group, said it "fails to deliver a credible response to this challenge", calling for 2024 UN climate talks to work to close the gap.

- Dangerous, expensive, uncertain -

Countries in Dubai were tasked with responding to a damning assessment of progress on the world’s existing flagship climate promise -- the 2015 Paris deal’s commitment to limit warming to "well below" 2C and preferably to the safer 1.5C threshold.

At 1.2 degrees of warming, scientists have said climate change was a major driver of the extreme heat that has scorched across the planet this year and stoked massive fires in parts of Canada.

It increased the severity of devastating drought in the Horn of Africa -- and then exacerbated catastrophic flooding in the same region.

"Until fossil fuels are phased out, the world will continue to become a more dangerous, more expensive and more uncertain place to live," said Friederike Otto, senior Climate Science lecturer at the Grantham Institute, Imperial College London.

Before COP28, Earth was heading towards disastrous heating of between 2.5C and 2.9C by 2100, according to the UN Environment Programme (UNEP).

The Dubai decision had not changed the reality that the world is not on track, said its Executive Director Inger Andersen.

"Now the hard work of decarbonisation must begin," Andersen said, calling for greater financial support for poorer countries in their energy transitions.

Observers said a lack of specifics on finance in the COP28 text sets the stage for the issue to dominate COP29 talks next year in Azerbaijan and ups the pressure for sweeping climate-focused reforms of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund.

Nicholas Stern, of the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics, said countries should respond to the COP28 decision with "a huge increase in investment" in clean energy and green growth.

That is particularly needed in developing countries, except China, which face an estimated $2.4 trillion annual cost by 2030 to meet their climate and development priorities.

- End of an era? -

The International Energy Agency estimates global clean energy investments need to reach $4.5 trillion a year by 2030.

That is a steep increase from the $1.8 trillion this year, helped by policies in the United States, Europe, China and India.

IEA chief Fatih Birol called on countries to follow through on COP28 with more "concrete policies", in a post on X, formerly Twitter.

Nevertheless, "spectacular" growth of technologies like wind and solar, as well as electric vehicles, has enabled the IAE to forecast that world fossil fuel demand will peak this decade.

That prognosis has been shrugged off by fossil fuel producers.

They plan to continue to expand oil, gas and coal despite the message from climate scientists that this would push the world beyond the 1.5C target.

Observers say loopholes in the Dubai text include the focus on fossil fuels for energy -- potentially leaving out polluting products like plastics and fertilisers -- as well as a nod to gas as a "transition fuel".

Bill McKibben, the founder of environmental campaign group 350.org, said while the COP28 call to shift from fossil fuels may seem like "the single most obvious thing one could possibly say about climate change", it could give activists a powerful new argument.

"We need to insist that the clear, plain meaning of the language is, the fossil fuel era is over," he wrote in his newsletter.

D.Kovar--TPP