-
Senegal victims of 'most blatant scam' in football history: federation
-
Former badminton Olympic gold winner Marin retires due to injury
-
Olympic women's sport to be limited to biological females
-
Africa sets out stall for cotton at the WTO
-
Trump's Iran war tests MAGA 'America First' creed
-
What's happening with Iran-US 'talks'?
-
WTO mulls future of global trading under cloud of Mideast war
-
US flexes 'new order' trade policy as WTO meet kicks off
-
Germany unveils rescue plan for struggling chemical sector
-
UK PM 'very keen' to curb addictive social media after US ruling
-
South Africa disinvited from G7 in France after US pressure: Pretoria
-
EU moves closer to ban sexualised AI deepfakes
-
France bids farewell to ex-PM Jospin who 'modernised' nation
-
Belarus' Lukashenko gifts automatic rifle to North Korea's Kim
-
Germany bank on team spirit to end World Cup woes
-
Venezuela's Maduro back in US court after stunning capture
-
French court orders ex-bishop to pay over 1970s child sex abuse
-
PSG Ligue 1 game postponed in between two legs of Liverpool Champions League tie
-
Iran may believe it has the upper hand as Trump seeks talks
-
EU urged to broadly restrict 'forever chemicals'
-
Italy seizes millions 'embezzled' from Ursula Andress
-
Trump says Iran 'better get serious' in Mideast war talks
-
Global trading system hit by 'worst disruptions in the past 80 years': WTO chief
-
EU accuses four porn platforms of letting children access adult content
-
Cathay Pacific raises fuel surcharge on all flights by 34%
-
EU probes Snapchat over suspected child protection failings
-
EU parliament backs Trump tariff deal -- with conditions
-
'Return hubs' for migrants clear EU parliament hurdle
-
Meta watchdog says grassroots fact checks risk harm to users
-
G7 meets in France to mend transatlantic rupture on Iran
-
ByteDance quietly rolls out SeeDance 2.0 globally
-
Israel strikes Iran as Tehran rejects US talks overture
-
Mercedes teen ace Antonelli wants more of the same after maiden win
-
Singer Rosalia quits Milan concert with food poisoning
-
Oil climbs and equities sink amid mixed messages on 'talks'
-
'Get out': Verstappen bans reporter from Japan press conference
-
Leaked Nepal report into deadly uprising calls for prosecuting ex-PM
-
Verstappen says last-minute F1 rule tweak will help only 'a tiny bit'
-
Oil rises and equities mixed amid mixed messages on 'talks'
-
EU to vote on Trump tariff deal -- but eyes rest of world
-
Somalia football slowly becomes a women's game
-
Venezuela oil reserves both entice and repel energy giants
-
Hamilton says more committed to F1 than ever at 41
-
China bans runner after mid-marathon splits goes viral
-
Myanmar's rebuild stutters year after deadly quake
-
Murray's 53 points propel Nuggets over Mavs
-
Israel strikes Iran as Trump says Tehran wants deal to end war
-
Wilkinson calls for England to find consistency before World Cup
-
Norris talks up McLaren chances after double China disaster
-
Teen sprint star Gout Gout 'ready to rock and roll' in Melbourne
Climate finance can be hard sell, says aide to banks and PMs
Trillions of dollars are needed to make poorer nations more resilient to climate change, and studies have estimated that every $1 invested today will save at least $4 in future.
So why is it so hard to raise this money, and what are some of the innovative ways of going about it?
- Wind over walls -
Developing countries, excluding China, will need $1 trillion a year by 2030 in outside help to reduce their carbon footprint and adapt to a warming planet, according to UN-commissioned experts.
This money could come from foreign governments, big lending institutions like the World Bank, or the private sector.
But some projects attract money more easily than others, said Avinash Persaud, special climate adviser to the president of the Inter-American Development Bank, a lender for Latin American and Caribbean nations.
For example, the private sector likes building solar farms and wind turbines because there's a return on investment when people buy the electricity.
But investors are much less interested in building defensive sea walls that generate no revenue, said Persaud, who hails from Barbados, and once advised the Caribbean nation's Prime Minister Mia Mottley.
"Unfortunately, there's no magic in finance. And so that does require a lot of public money," he told AFP on the sidelines of the UN COP29 climate summit in Azerbaijan.
- Political jitters -
But governments are limited in the amount they can borrow, he said, and reluctant to dip into their budgets for climate adaptation in poorer nations.
In the European Union, which is the largest contributor to international climate finance, major donors face political and economic pressures at home.
Meanwhile, newly-elected Donald Trump has threatened to pull the US, the world's largest economy, out of global cooperation on climate action.
This has posed enormous challenges at COP29, where nations are no closer to striking a long-sought deal to raise more money for developing countries.
"You're seeing the political landscape -- governments are not getting elected to raise their aid budgets and send more money abroad," said Persaud.
- Close the gap -
A defensive sea wall, for example, might not pay off for decades, making it difficult for debt-strapped countries to borrow enough money at reasonable rates to build it in the first place.
Persaud said development banks could help bring down the cost of borrowing, while new taxes on polluting industries like global shipping and coal, oil and gas could raise new money.
Such "innovative" schemes already exist, he said: in the United States, $0.09 of every barrel of oil goes into a fund to cover the cost of cleaning up a spill.
"Well, we're seeing a spill in the atmosphere... and maybe if we spread these things, make them global across fossil fuels, we could raise the money we need."
This could help poorer nations recover from disaster -- known in UN parlance as "loss and damage" -- something few investors go near, he said.
"If we can raise these levees -- the solidarity levees -- here and there, for those things that can't be funded any other way, then we can close that gap," he said.
- 'Science into finance' -
Persaud conceded "none of this is easy".
"Raising the money is hard. Spending it well is hard. Getting it to the the people who need it most is hard," he said.
But $1 trillion was a realistic ask if underpinned by $300 billion in public finance -- three times the existing pledge, he said.
Without "translating the science into finance", developing countries could not take the action necessary to help curb rises in global temperatures.
"If we don't get one, we don't get the other," he said.
B.Finley--AMWN