Dubai Telegraph - Climate talks host urges rich nations to break stalemate

EUR -
AED 3.852359
AFN 76.573998
ALL 100.123142
AMD 412.965101
ANG 1.887922
AOA 960.323198
ARS 1115.763042
AUD 1.679788
AWG 1.888128
AZN 1.789104
BAM 1.960051
BBD 2.115067
BDT 127.274849
BGN 1.952945
BHD 0.395379
BIF 2955.445415
BMD 1.04896
BND 1.412564
BOB 7.265139
BRL 6.265647
BSD 1.047582
BTN 91.485434
BWP 14.560623
BYN 3.428236
BYR 20559.620276
BZD 2.104164
CAD 1.512564
CDF 3012.613818
CHF 0.940707
CLF 0.025986
CLP 997.193754
CNY 7.640411
CNH 7.65379
COP 4336.034406
CRC 528.250824
CUC 1.04896
CUP 27.797446
CVE 111.976102
CZK 25.023971
DJF 186.421024
DKK 7.45817
DOP 65.402252
DZD 141.34209
EGP 53.118796
ERN 15.734403
ETB 134.997548
FJD 2.458501
FKP 0.833913
GBP 0.82506
GEL 2.921344
GGP 0.833913
GHS 16.219455
GIP 0.833913
GMD 74.9988
GNF 9098.23229
GTQ 8.090096
GYD 219.305865
HKD 8.156888
HNL 26.889578
HRK 7.535721
HTG 139.066297
HUF 407.855737
IDR 17361.19323
ILS 3.770524
IMP 0.833913
INR 91.755363
IQD 1374.455321
IRR 44059.050619
ISK 147.060116
JEP 0.833913
JMD 164.539288
JOD 0.743717
JPY 157.495609
KES 135.731326
KGS 91.730549
KHR 4205.088434
KMF 497.574319
KPW 944.064057
KRW 1533.418895
KWD 0.324288
KYD 0.860154
KZT 522.597091
LAK 22736.699476
LBP 93941.622839
LKR 309.600652
LRD 208.437894
LSL 19.604818
LTL 3.097307
LVL 0.634505
LYD 5.123332
MAD 10.466746
MDL 19.508366
MGA 4952.901803
MKD 61.973777
MMK 2202.367041
MNT 3640.40496
MOP 8.404006
MRU 41.962895
MUR 48.913041
MVR 16.195763
MWK 1818.404828
MXN 21.485333
MYR 4.677541
MZN 66.709242
NAD 19.604818
NGN 1572.328736
NIO 38.47042
NOK 11.719146
NPR 146.877397
NZD 1.86212
OMR 0.403844
PAB 1.04896
PEN 3.890924
PGK 4.210002
PHP 60.799736
PKR 293.261201
PLN 4.226121
PYG 8317.033552
QAR 3.818009
RON 5.031712
RSD 118.408992
RUB 93.835009
RWF 1470.723125
SAR 3.933629
SBD 8.844519
SCR 15.621455
SDG 628.28786
SEK 11.047686
SGD 1.417355
SHP 0.833531
SLE 23.968807
SLL 21996.17721
SOS 600.037331
SRD 37.080898
STD 21711.358674
SVC 9.17877
SYP 13638.461848
SZL 19.604818
THB 35.899749
TJS 11.455177
TMT 3.671361
TND 3.320863
TOP 2.519095
TRY 38.211203
TTD 7.119261
TWD 34.552315
TZS 2715.154693
UAH 43.679777
UGX 3856.669633
USD 1.04896
UYU 44.633825
UZS 13507.874126
VES 67.554645
VND 26790.009761
VUV 130.162049
WST 2.970736
XAF 663.432425
XAG 0.033109
XAU 0.000363
XCD 2.832963
XDR 0.801345
XOF 663.432425
XPF 119.331742
YER 259.912369
ZAR 19.512249
ZMK 9441.90492
ZMW 29.973425
ZWL 337.764762
  • RBGPF

    0.2200

    65.07

    +0.34%

  • CMSC

    0.0800

    23.47

    +0.34%

  • RIO

    1.0050

    61.565

    +1.63%

  • RELX

    0.3650

    48.735

    +0.75%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    23.61

    +0.21%

  • BTI

    0.7200

    39.65

    +1.82%

  • GSK

    0.3950

    37.985

    +1.04%

  • SCS

    -0.1300

    12.03

    -1.08%

  • RYCEF

    0.7000

    10.11

    +6.92%

  • NGG

    -0.4100

    61.72

    -0.66%

  • BCC

    -0.3650

    103.295

    -0.35%

  • AZN

    0.0750

    76.285

    +0.1%

  • BP

    -0.9250

    32.195

    -2.87%

  • VOD

    0.1700

    8.98

    +1.89%

  • BCE

    0.2300

    23.35

    +0.99%

  • JRI

    0.1240

    13.144

    +0.94%

Climate talks host urges rich nations to break stalemate
Climate talks host urges rich nations to break stalemate / Photo: JOHN MACDOUGALL - AFP

Climate talks host urges rich nations to break stalemate

The host of this year's UN climate summit on Wednesday urged governments to start compromising to break a deadlock over how to help poorer countries tackle global warming.

Text size:

This November's COP29 summit in gas-rich Azerbaijan is meant to produce a global agreement on how much rich nations should pay developing countries for climate assistance, but talks have stalled.

While poorer nations are the least responsible for carbon emissions, they suffer the most from a warming planet.

Developing countries need massive investments in energy systems to cut their own carbon footprints and money to strengthen defences against the effects of global warming.

But a diplomatic meeting in Bonn last month ended in stalemate. Countries were unable to advance on an issue that has eroded trust at climate talks for years.

In a letter to the roughly 200 nations that have signed up to UN climate accords, COP29 president Mukhtar Babayev lamented the absence of "necessary progress".

Time was running out, he warned.

"We clearly need a rapid increase in the pace of our work," wrote Babayev, a government minister and former executive at Azerbaijan's national oil company.

"Time lost is lives, livelihoods and the planet lost," he added.

"We call on all parties to increase the pace of their work and move on from their early negotiating positions."

- 'Supercharge' efforts -

Babayev's appeal comes in the hottest year on record and as extreme heatwaves, floods and wildfires batter communities around the globe.

UN climate chief Simon Stiell, whose own homeland of Grenada was devastated by hurricane Beryl earlier this month, urged countries to put the fight against global warming back on the political agenda.

"Rather than just counting the costs of climate carnage, all governments must supercharge efforts to prevent them," said Stiell.

He was speaking during a visit to the island of Carriacou, where his grandmother's house was among many destroyed.

"Standing here, it's impossible not to recognise the vital importance of delivering climate finance," he added.

Wealthy nations have been under pressure to commit to new financing targets that go well beyond the $100 billion a year they promised in 2009.

Developing nations excluding China will need about $2.4 trillion a year in climate investment by 2030, according to an expert assessment commissioned by the UN.

That is nearly 25 times more than the present levels.

But nations are nowhere near agreeing on a dollar aid figure, with talks bogged down over who should pay, what form the money should take, and who should receive it.

- Informal talks -

Under a 1992 climate accord, only a small handful of the wealthiest industrialised nations at the time were obligated to pay climate finance.

Some want the pool of contributors widened, most notably to include China, which is today vastly wealthier than 30 years ago, and the largest emitter of greenhouse gases.

But this has been a non-starter for developing nations, who have accused wealthy countries of trying to shirk their responsibility.

To break the ice, Azerbaijan will host the negotiating teams for an informal two-day retreat starting July 26.

They have named two experienced diplomats -- Dan Jorgensen of Denmark and Yasmine Fouad of Egypt -- to help the parties make headway.

Babayev said the impasse would "not be solved by negotiators alone", calling for political leadership on the sidelines to help move discussions toward consensus.

K.Javed--DT