COP28 tackles climate finance and recognises China’s crucial role in advancing the energy transition
- Ambassador Majid Al Suwaidi, the director general of COP28, emphasises mobilising finance at scale to meet the goal of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius
- He says China represents Asia as a regional green finance hub, helping to support emerging-market countries in counteracting climate change
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What is climate finance, and why is it crucial to the global energy transition?
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Ambassador Majid Al Suwaidi, director general of the 28th Conference of the Parties of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP28), has delivered a compelling call to action for developed countries to unite in mobilising capital to support emerging markets in their transition to clean energy.
Held from November 30 to December 12 in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), COP28 addressed the first Global Stocktake (GST) under the Paris Agreement, which evaluates progress towards climate goals and establishes an ambitious action plan. The COP28 Presidency aims to deliver a robust decision on the GST with a strong mitigation outcome, a comprehensive adaptation agreement, and groundbreaking solutions on climate finance that are more available, affordable and accessible.
Fixing climate finance is one of the key pillars of the COP28 Presidency, and in the first few days of the conference, it established a significant standard for achievement, generating momentum, traction, positivity and excitement. To date, the COP28 Presidency has operationalised the Loss and Damage Fund and capitalised it with US$790 million, launched the world’s largest private-market investment climate finance vehicle with US$30 billion, brought 50 national and international energy companies together around ambitious decarbonisation targets, seen 130 countries sign its renewable energy and efficiency pledge, and secured the largest-ever replenishment of the Green Climate Fund with US$12.8 billion. And this is before the conference has even concluded.
On December 4, major international financial institutions and countries made new commitments to offer climate-resilient debt clauses (CRDCs) in their lending. These clauses allow debt service to be paused in order to provide breathing space when countries are hit by climate catastrophes. The UAE has committed US$200 million to help low-income and vulnerable countries.
On top of that, parties have rallied around a number of pledges and declarations to get the world moving in the right direction. The COP28 Presidency is the first to actively call on parties to come forward with language on all fossil fuels for the negotiated text.