Monday 11 November 2024

Trillions to "help" poor countries fight "Climate Change", Make UK a Clean Energy Superpower

British Taxpayers asked to pay into UN Sponsored £1 TRILLION fund for poor countries fighting climate change


The UK could be asked to pay into a staggering £1 trillion fund for poor countries fighting climate change at this year's COP29 summit.

Richer and more well-off countries around the globe are set to face mounting pressure to donate money to help poorer nations invest in renewable energy sources during the two-week summit which begins on Monday in Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan.

Leaders in developing nations across the planet are pushing for a mega fund of up to £1 trillion which would be funded from the pockets of wealthier countries and injections of investment from the private sector.

Evans Njewa, the chairman of the Less Developed Countries group at the United Nations negotiations, said: 'A failure to conclude COP29 without a bold new finance goal would be a tragic disservice to both the planet and vulnerable populations.' 

The UK has admitted that more money is required to help poorer countries in the fight against climate change, but has so far refused to spend more than its £11.6billion budget in foreign development aid, which ceases next year.

Evans Njewa, the chairman of the Less Developed Countries group at the United Nations negotiations, said: 'A failure to conclude COP29 without a bold new finance goal would be a tragic disservice to both the planet and vulnerable populations'

Evans Njewa, the chairman of the Less Developed Countries group at the United Nations negotiations, said: 'A failure to conclude COP29 without a bold new finance goal would be a tragic disservice to both the planet and vulnerable populations'

The UK will face calls to pay into a £1trillion pot to help poor countries tackle climate change at the COP29 summit which will begin Monday in Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan

The UK will face calls to pay into a £1 trillion pot to help poor countries tackle climate change at the COP29 summit which will begin Monday in Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan

As well as the question of who should be expected to cover the funding needed, the re-election of Donald Trump as US president has also cast doubts over the role America will play in tackling the climate crisis.

It comes as Trump promised to pull out of the Paris Agreement - leaving the US as one of the only countries not to be a party to the 2015 pact, in which nearly 200 governments have made pledges to reduce their pollution.

The Biden administration will be negotiating during the two-week summit, but many countries may be cautious about making commitments that may quickly be undone by Trump.

Governments are now scrambling to save crucial alliances that were headed by the outgoing US president, Joe Biden, who made climate change one of his top priorities during his term.

Though a team from the Biden White House will still attend the COP29 meetings, the highly-likely possibility that Trump will withdraw US support means other countries will have to set back their expectations due to the potential absence of the world's biggest economy. 

The UK energy secretary, Ed Miliband, also shared his warnings that the UK must ramp up its efforts on renewable energy to foster national security.

He pledged that the UK would lead efforts at Cop29 to secure the global agreement needed to stave off the worst impacts of climate breakdown.

'The only way to keep the British people secure today is by making Britain a clean-energy superpower, and the only way we protect future generations is by working with other countries to deliver climate action,' Miliband told the Observer. 

The Biden administration will be negotiating during the two-week summit, but many countries may be cautious about making commitments that may quickly be undone by Trump

The Biden administration Grifters will be negotiating during the two-week summit, but many countries may be cautious about making commitments that may quickly be undone by Trump

The climate change committee, the Government's advisers on net zero, recently recommended an 81 per cent drop on 1990 levels of emission within a decade

The climate change committee, the Government's advisers on net zero, recently recommended an 81 per cent drop on 1990 levels of emission within a decade 

Starmer is expected to relay his Government's commitments to net zero, including bringing forward the date to achieve 100 per cent green power by 2030

Starmer is expected to relay his Government's commitments to net zero, including bringing forward the date to achieve 100 per cent green power by 2030

Trump promised to pull out of the Paris Agreement - leaving the US as one of the only countries not to be a party to the 2015 pact, in which nearly 200 governments have made pledges to reduce their pollution

Trump promised to pull out of the Paris Agreement - leaving the US as one of the only countries smart enough not to be a party to the 2015 pact, in which nearly 200 governments have made pledges to reduce their pollution

'This government is committed to accelerating climate action precisely because it is by doing this that we protect our country, with energy security, lower bills, and good jobs.'

UK PM Keir Starmer, who will spend nearly two days at the summit, is one of the few remaining leaders of the world's biggest industrialised economies who will attend.

He is expected to announce strict new targets for the UK to cut greenhouse gases by 2035, and a commitment to fulfil a pledge of £11.6bn in climate finance to poor countries, made under the Conservatives.

The climate change committee, the Government's advisers on net zero, recently recommended an 81 per cent drop on 1990 levels of emission within a decade.

Starmer is expected to relay his Government's commitments to net zero, including bringing forward the date to achieve 100 per cent green power by 2030. 

A spokesman from the Foreign Office said: 'Tackling climate change is in the UK's national interest. By acting decisively and early, the UK has an opportunity to lead the world in the clean industries of the future.

'We're honouring the last government's commitment to £11.6 billion of climate finance from 2021/22 to 2025/26.'

The United States, among others, has called on China to contribute to the new global fund, but Beijing says widening the 'donor base' would violate the Paris agreement principle that only richer countries should be obligated to provide finance [China being the richest, but the ChiComs need to save their money to pay for an invasion of Taiwan. China is exempt from paying due to being classified as a "developing" nation.].

'Developed countries should earnestly meet their responsibilities to provide strong financial support for developing countries to cope with climate change,' Mao Ning, the spokeswoman and deputy director of information at the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs said.

China is also urging countries at COP29 to refrain from protectionist measures that make it more expensive to cut emissions, it said in a climate action plan this week. [Protectionist measures that cut China's income from cheating on trade agreements].

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14066797/Britain-asked-pay-1TRILLION-fund-poor-countries-fighting-climate-change.html

An oil well in Azerbaijani capital Baku. The development of new gas infrastructure could be seen as going against the historic deal agreed between nations at COP28 to move away from fossil fuels

An oil well in Azerbaijani capital Baku.

The Prime Minister, who si in Paris this morning, will head to Azerbaijan later today for Cop 29, with the main focus being on agreeing a ten-fold increase in financial aid.

The Prime Minister, who is in Paris this morning, will head to Azerbaijan later today for Cop 29, with the main focus being on agreeing a ten-fold increase in financial aid.


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