• Mon. Dec 23rd, 2024

    Upcoming COP29 set to prioritize climate finance goal

    ByTrulyNews

    Aug 1, 2024
    Upcoming COP29 set to prioritize climate finance goal

    Azerbaijan, the host of the 29th session of the Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, more commonly known as COP29, has vowed to make every effort to ensure a fair and ambitious climate finance goal for developed nations.

    Upcoming COP29 set to prioritize climate finance goal
    Mukhtar Babayev

    The goal, according to COP29 President-designate Mukhtar Babayev, should fully take into account the needs and priorities of developing states.

    In an exclusive interview with China Daily, Babayev, who is also Azerbaijan’s minister of ecology and natural resources, expressed gratitude for China’s climate leadership and emphasized his country’s willingness to collaborate with China in addressing the concerns of developing nations during the November gathering, in which nearly 200 countries will participate.

    As an active supporter of the Belt and Road Initiative, Azerbaijan sees enormous potential for collaboration with China on climate action and green technology, Babayev said.

    “COP29 will be a litmus test for the Paris Agreement and global climate action and cooperation. We must address all the most fundamental and pressing issues, with climate finance as a centerpiece,” he said.

    COP29’s vision is to deliver on the outcomes of the Global Stocktake — a comprehensive assessment of the world’s progress on climate action which concluded at last year’s COP28 in the United Arab Emirates — to keep the global ambition of limiting the temperature increase to 1.5 C above preindustrial levels within reach, and to build on the progress so that the convention can address the urgency and scale of the climate crisis, he noted.

    The 2015 Paris Agreement aims to keep the global temperature rise this century well below 2 C and to pursue efforts to limit the increase even further to 1.5 C.

    “Our plan to deliver this vision is based on two parallel and mutually reinforcing pillars of enhancing ambition and enabling action, with climate finance as our top priority,” he added.

    Enabling action involves putting in place the means to implement climate change measures and provide support — financial, technological and capacity building — at the national, regional and global levels for all stakeholders, Babayev said.

    The COP29 presidency aims to facilitate an agreement among parties on a fair and ambitious New Collective Quantified Goal on climate finance, he said. The agreement should address the urgency and scale of the climate crisis, while also taking into account the specific needs and priorities of developing countries.

    “But this is not just our priority,” he said. “The COP29 presidency has heard the voices of so many parties and communities that are counting on all of us to take this step at COP29. We must all go the extra mile together to deliver this historic milestone.”

    In 2009, developed countries pledged to deliver $100 billion per year in international climate finance by 2020. The Paris treaty extended the target, requiring contributing nations to maintain the annual contribution through 2025.However, many developing nations say that the commitment was never fully honored.

    Babayev said it’s regrettable that the $100 billion goal was not met on schedule, but he cited his appreciation for the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development’s announcement that in 2022, developed countries jointly mobilized $115.9 billion for developing nations to address climate change.

    “We must address the fact that climate finance is currently flowing in at an insufficient scale and in unequal directions. To meet our climate ambitions, we need reform to make finance available, affordable and accessible,” Babayev noted.

    He said the work on climate finance should represent progression beyond previous efforts. Transparency and accessibility will also be key facilitating conditions that will require effort from multiple stakeholders.

    Babayev pledged all-out efforts from Azerbaijan to act as a bridge between developed and developing nations at COP29 to reach consensus.

    Noting a “deep relationship that spans centuries” between Azerbaijan and China, Babayev said his country will work closely with China to advance the climate finance issue at COP29.

    As an active supporter of the BRI, he said Azerbaijan sees the initiative as particularly relevant from a climate action perspective, as it “allows for and fosters international collaboration and exchanges on green innovations”.

    He highlighted COP29 as “another crucial stage in closer cooperation” between the two countries.

    The president-designate said he appreciated China’s support for Azerbaijan’s vision for COP29. He also expressed gratitude toward China for urging developed countries to accelerate the implementation of their climate finance commitments to developing nations at the G20 meetings this spring.

    “We will continue to work very closely with China as we move forward along these shared climate finance priorities,” Babayev said.

    China is already engaging with the international community in advance of COP29, and Azerbaijan is encouraged by positive international dialogues on climate change, including talks between the Chinese and United States climate envoys, he said.

    He also lauded China’s instrumental role at the G20 meetings in advocating for and advancing green finance, noting that the nation’s leadership “is crucial on the international stage”.

    “Any geopolitical tensions and uncertainty in the international environment must not distract us from the imperative to collaborate and address climate change as the greatest transnational challenge of the century — and China is demonstrating that,” he added.