Current:Home > NewsA climate summit theme: How much should wealthy countries pay to help poorer ones? -Infinite Edge Learning
A climate summit theme: How much should wealthy countries pay to help poorer ones?
View
Date:2025-04-15 01:28:28
GLASGOW, Scotland — The U.N. climate summit in Glasgow is scheduled to wrap up on Friday.
Negotiators have released a draft agreement that calls on countries to speed up cuts in carbon emissions. Wealthy countries have historically contributed the most greenhouse gases to the atmosphere.
One of the biggest outstanding issues is how much wealthy countries should pay to help poorer ones work towards building lower-carbon economies and adapt to some of the damage they've already suffered from climate change. NPR sat down this week with Achim Steiner, head of the United Nations Development Programme, to talk through the problem.
This interview has been edited and condensed.
Many people from these countries are really looking for help from the developed world. What's the background?
One main issue really in Glasgow is: Are we able to frame a co-investment pact here? The richer countries have already for years promised $100 billion a year as contributions towards hundreds of billions of dollars developing countries will have to invest in their energy systems. Almost 11 years after the promise was first made in the Copenhagen climate conference, it still hasn't been met. So, for developing countries, there is a growing sense of not only frustration, but a lack of trust. We are constantly being asked as developing nations to make higher commitments, and yet we see only limited progress in developed countries.
Why is that?
I think because we underestimate, first of all, what an immense effort developing countries have to undertake. Secondly, it's always difficult to take money that you would spend on yourself and invest it in someone else.
How much of this comes down to domestic political decisions in these developed rich nations?
Well, ironically, virtually everything that is being negotiated here comes down to national political dynamics, and this is where political leadership is really called for. Because if we simply decide the future of the world in terms of what my price per gallon of fuel is or how much electricity I'm being charged for, you essentially have a recipe for paralysis and for disaster.
Give me a sense of what it's like inside the negotiating room. Do you have developing nations lobbying very hard? What are the developed nations saying?
This is the "nerdier" part of the work, which is negotiating the details. How do we hold each other accountable? How do we create transparency? What are the baselines against which you measure the commitments of a country and how it is actually fulfilling them? That is often, I think, for the public difficult to appreciate. But without that, we don't have the transparency that allows us to have confidence in one another.
In terms of funding from the developed world to the developing world, can't that be measured by actually how much finance comes in?
You'd think so.
If you told me you were going to give me 10 bucks and 10 bucks didn't come in, you didn't fulfill your pledge.
Yeah, but the question is, do the 10 bucks come from your government sending you a check? Does it come through your bank where you have to borrow, maybe at a lower interest rate? Is it a grant?
That sounds very messy.
That's why it has been a struggle.
If developing countries did not get what they consider at least sufficient for now, what would be the implications and the stakes of that?
Some countries would simply revert back to saying, "Well, never mind, we'll just do business as usual."
And we'll just keep polluting as much as we want.
Exactly, because we've given up and we don't have the means to do something about it.
NPR's London Producer Jessica Beck contributed to this report.
This story originally appeared on the Morning Edition live blog.
veryGood! (217)
Related
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- Amazon reports its first unprofitable year since 2014
- Arthur Burns: shorthand for Fed failure?
- Gunman who killed 11 people at Pittsburgh synagogue is found eligible for death penalty
- Average rate on 30
- To all the econ papers I've loved before
- Attention, Wildcats: High School Musical: The Musical: The Series Is Ending After Season 4
- AbbVie's blockbuster drug Humira finally loses its 20-year, $200 billion monopoly
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- These formerly conjoined twins spent 134 days in the hospital in Texas. Now they're finally home.
Ranking
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Miss a credit card payment? Federal regulators want to put new limits on late fees
- Warming Trends: Climate Clues Deep in the Ocean, Robotic Bee Hives and Greenland’s Big Melt
- Justice Department investigating Georgia jail where inmate was allegedly eaten alive by bedbugs
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- From a Raft in the Grand Canyon, the West’s Shifting Water Woes Come Into View
- Northern lights will be visible in fewer states than originally forecast. Will you still be able to see them?
- International Yoga Day: Shop 10 Practice Must-Haves for Finding Your Flow
Recommendation
Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
Miss a credit card payment? Federal regulators want to put new limits on late fees
Armie Hammer and Elizabeth Chambers Settle Divorce 3 Years After Breakup
Inside Clean Energy: The Racial Inequity in Clean Energy and How to Fight It
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Vitamix Flash Deal: Save 44% On a Blender That Functions as a 13-In-1 Machine
Justice Dept to appeal length of prison sentences for Stewart Rhodes, Oath Keepers for Jan. 6 attack
A New Program Like FDR’s Civilian Conservation Corps Could Help the Nation Fight Climate Change and Transition to Renewable Energy