Rich nations have promised to pay for the climate crisis – but will they? | Gordon Brown
For too long pledges have gone unmet, so at Cop28 new solutions need to be explored
Gordon Brown is the WHO ambassador for global health financing
On Sunday, loud cheers from Sharm el-Sheikh greeted the announcement of a new initiative - the global loss and damage fund - to right historical wrongs by compensating climate-hit developing countries. This breakthrough brought back memories of another, the 100bn a year agreed at the 2009 Copenhagen climate summit to help poor countries mitigate the effects of the climate crisis.
That money has never fully materialised. If our 13 years' experience of the 100bn fund that never was is anything to go by, eulogies of praise will soon turn into allegations of betrayal. The president of next year's Cop28 will have to answer for yet another fund without funders. Far from the loss and damage fund narrowing the credibility gap on climate action, it is likely to bridge nothing if money fails to flow from rich to poor.
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