Nearly 200 countries agreed to triple the amount of
money available to help developing countries confront rapidly warming
temperatures. But the deal reached at
the close of the two-week COP29 summit in Azerbaijan resulted from fractious
and at times openly hostile negotiations, producing an agreement that even its
supporters may see as insufficient and disappointing. The process of global
climate cooperation will lurch forward from here under the weight of heavier
existential questions.
Global temperature rise is on the cusp of 1.5C — a
critical tipping point for avoiding the most catastrophic consequences of
climate change.
“We needed to leave Baku with an agreement to keep
the multilateral system alive,” said Juan Carlos Monterrey-Gomez, Panama’s
special representative for climate change.
“We kept the system alive. But I think 1.5 is dead.”
Rich countries have pledged to provide at least
$300 billion annually by 2035, through a wide variety of sources, including
public finance as well as bilateral and multilateral deals. The agreement also
calls on parties to work toward unleashing a total of $1.3 trillion a year,
with most of it expected to come through private financing.
Developed and
developing countries entered the negotiations far apart. At one point on Saturday, 23 Nov,the talks appeared to be on the brink
of collapse, before numerous closed-door meetings brought a deal closer.