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Climate pact hinges on finance, says French President Hollande

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Forging a global climate pact hinges on rich nations making firm finance commitments, French President Francois Hollande said Monday, warning of "risks of failure" for a year-end Paris conference.

"There will be no agreement... if there is no firm commitment on finance" for developing nations, he said as ministers and diplomats from 57 countries met elsewhere in the French capital to discuss exactly this issue.

The November 30-December 11 UN conference aims at sealing a universal climate deal, but without an accord on finance "countries will refuse, emerging economies... and they are right," the president told journalists.

Finance is a major stumbling block in the fraught, years-long UN effort to conclude a pact committing all the world's nations to climate-altering greenhouse gas emission curbs.

The overarching goal is to limit average global warming to two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) over pre-Industrial Revolution levels -- the threshold at which scientists say we can still avoid worst-case-scenario climate effects.

A blaze tears through the Conguillo National Park in Chile in March 2015 as hundreds of plant specie...
A blaze tears through the Conguillo National Park in Chile in March 2015 as hundreds of plant species were wiped out in the country's drought-stricken south
Str, AFP/File

Hollande addressed a press conference as foreign and environment ministers concluded two days of talks on finance -- money to help developing countries make the shift to greener energy, adapt to a climate-altered world, and deal with the losses and damages they will inevitably suffer from such impacts as sea level rise, droughts and storms.

Poor and developing nations, among the most threatened by global warming, are insisting their rich counterparts show how they intend to meet a promise made in 2009 of $100 billion (90 billion euros) in climate finance annually from 2020.

This issue topped the agenda for the huddle of foreign and environment ministers and senior officials closing in Paris on Monday.

Those talks are not part of official negotiations for the highly-anticipated agreement, but are meant to inject momentum into the troubled UN process.

- Everything turns on finance -

On Friday, a five-day round of official text-drafting negotiations closed in Bonn with diplomats expressing frustration at their own lagging progress.

They will meet in the former West German capital from October 19 to 23 to work on the unwieldy blueprint -- currently an 83-page laundry list of contradicting country options for dealing with the problem.

"Everything will turn on the question of finance," Hollande said Monday, and warned that the way things stand: "There are risks of failure."

French President Francois Hollande on September 7  2015 warned of
French President Francois Hollande on September 7, 2015 warned of "risks of failure" for a year-end Paris conference on climate change if rich nations did not make financial commitments
Alain Jocard, AFP

Janos Pasztor, assistant UN secretary general on climate, agreed at a conference elsewhere in Paris that: "Financing is absolutely key."

"$100 billion is not that much when we want to change the whole world into a no-carbon future," he said. "For that we need trillions" -- and the bulk will have to come from the private sector.

Observers are hopeful that a string of climate-themed meetings in the coming weeks and months will boost the process, bogged down in fights over procedure and ideology.

A meeting of the UN General Assembly later this month, said Hollande, would be a "major" step on the road to Paris, as would a joint International Monetary Fund-World Bank meeting in Lima in October.

And he announced he would travel to China in November, to "launch an appeal for the success of the climate conference" with President Xi Jinping.

"If we don't conclude an agreement... it's not hundreds of thousands of refugees that we'll have to deal with in the next 20 or 30 years, it's millions," Hollande said as Europe struggled to deal with an influx of migrants, mainly from war-torn Syria.

Forging a global climate pact hinges on rich nations making firm finance commitments, French President Francois Hollande said Monday, warning of “risks of failure” for a year-end Paris conference.

“There will be no agreement… if there is no firm commitment on finance” for developing nations, he said as ministers and diplomats from 57 countries met elsewhere in the French capital to discuss exactly this issue.

The November 30-December 11 UN conference aims at sealing a universal climate deal, but without an accord on finance “countries will refuse, emerging economies… and they are right,” the president told journalists.

Finance is a major stumbling block in the fraught, years-long UN effort to conclude a pact committing all the world’s nations to climate-altering greenhouse gas emission curbs.

The overarching goal is to limit average global warming to two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) over pre-Industrial Revolution levels — the threshold at which scientists say we can still avoid worst-case-scenario climate effects.

A blaze tears through the Conguillo National Park in Chile in March 2015 as hundreds of plant specie...

A blaze tears through the Conguillo National Park in Chile in March 2015 as hundreds of plant species were wiped out in the country's drought-stricken south
Str, AFP/File

Hollande addressed a press conference as foreign and environment ministers concluded two days of talks on finance — money to help developing countries make the shift to greener energy, adapt to a climate-altered world, and deal with the losses and damages they will inevitably suffer from such impacts as sea level rise, droughts and storms.

Poor and developing nations, among the most threatened by global warming, are insisting their rich counterparts show how they intend to meet a promise made in 2009 of $100 billion (90 billion euros) in climate finance annually from 2020.

This issue topped the agenda for the huddle of foreign and environment ministers and senior officials closing in Paris on Monday.

Those talks are not part of official negotiations for the highly-anticipated agreement, but are meant to inject momentum into the troubled UN process.

– Everything turns on finance –

On Friday, a five-day round of official text-drafting negotiations closed in Bonn with diplomats expressing frustration at their own lagging progress.

They will meet in the former West German capital from October 19 to 23 to work on the unwieldy blueprint — currently an 83-page laundry list of contradicting country options for dealing with the problem.

“Everything will turn on the question of finance,” Hollande said Monday, and warned that the way things stand: “There are risks of failure.”

French President Francois Hollande on September 7  2015 warned of

French President Francois Hollande on September 7, 2015 warned of “risks of failure” for a year-end Paris conference on climate change if rich nations did not make financial commitments
Alain Jocard, AFP

Janos Pasztor, assistant UN secretary general on climate, agreed at a conference elsewhere in Paris that: “Financing is absolutely key.”

“$100 billion is not that much when we want to change the whole world into a no-carbon future,” he said. “For that we need trillions” — and the bulk will have to come from the private sector.

Observers are hopeful that a string of climate-themed meetings in the coming weeks and months will boost the process, bogged down in fights over procedure and ideology.

A meeting of the UN General Assembly later this month, said Hollande, would be a “major” step on the road to Paris, as would a joint International Monetary Fund-World Bank meeting in Lima in October.

And he announced he would travel to China in November, to “launch an appeal for the success of the climate conference” with President Xi Jinping.

“If we don’t conclude an agreement… it’s not hundreds of thousands of refugees that we’ll have to deal with in the next 20 or 30 years, it’s millions,” Hollande said as Europe struggled to deal with an influx of migrants, mainly from war-torn Syria.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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