COP29 U.N. climate summit: Developing nations slam 'paltry' $300 bn climate deal
The Hindu
After contentious climate finance pact, developing nations criticize $300 billion pledge as inadequate in global climate deal.
The world approved a bitterly negotiated climate deal Sunday (November 24, 2024) but poorer nations most at the mercy of worsening disasters dismissed a $300 billion a year pledge from wealthy historic polluters as insultingly low.
After two exhausting weeks of chaotic bargaining and sleepless nights, nearly 200 nations banged through the contentious finance pact in the early hours in a sports stadium in Azerbaijan.
But the applause had barely subsided when India delivered a full-throated rejection of the "abysmally poor" dollar-figure just agreed.
"It's a paltry sum," thundered India's delegate Chandni Raina.
"This document is little more than an optical illusion. This, in our opinion, will not address the enormity of the challenge we all face."
Sierra Leone's climate minister Jiwoh Abdulai, whose country is among the world's poorest, said it showed a "lack of goodwill" by developed nations, whose ranks include the United States, Japan and members of the European Union.
"We are extremely disappointed in the outcome," he said.