Rich nations are blockading efforts to reach consensus on financial climate pledges in Bonn, Germany this week as the upcoming United Nations climate talks approach—a move which could derail the entire process, a bloc of developing nations said Thursday.
The Group of 77 (G77) and China, a coalition of nations and alliances that represent more than 80 percent of the world’s population, said wealthy UN member states were shirking their financial responsibilities to help developing nations stave off the impacts of climate change and attempting to shift those obligations onto institutions like the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF).
The latest blueprint of climate pledges reportedly omits key mechanisms that were included in previous drafts, such as financing for poorer countries and accountability for wealthier ones, according to AllAfrica.
“When you take out the issues of others, you disenfranchise them, and disempower those who suffer the most,” said G77 chair and South Africa climate envoy Nozipho Mxakato-Diseko.
With the COP21 talks approaching fast, and no more chances to negotiate after the Bonn session ends this week, those roadblocks could mean a difference of life or death for frontline nations, Mxakato-Diseko said.
“It’s a matter of life or death…and we are dead serious,” Mxakato-Diseko told journalists in a media briefing on Thursday. While the G77 had come to an agreement on financial positions, she said, “developed countries have not negotiated, in the hope that it will be sorted [out] external to the agreement, where we are weakest.”
Legally binding financial mandates for wealthy nations must be included in the agreement to guarantee that frontline countries actually receive funds to address the impacts of climate change, Mxakato-Diseko continued. “Otherwise we are left to the whim of charity, the whim of individual countries to decide if and when [to pay], depending on the circumstances.”
According to a recent report by the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), a number of sources including government funds, private institutions, and development banks raised $62.8 billion in 2014 to stock up the climate war chest. Developed nations previously swore to mobilize $100 billion by 2020 to help frontline countries adapt to the impacts of global warming, such as sea level rise.
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