
In reality, this offer took not just two weeks of talks to prepare, but nine years - since article 9 of the Paris agreement in 2015 made it clear that the rich industrialised world would be obliged to supply cash to developing countries to help them tackle the climate crisis.
When it finally arrived last Friday, the initial offer of $250bn a year by 2035 was widely derided as too low. Early the following morning, the countries upped the figure to $300bn, which ended up being accepted, albeit amid acrimony and cries of "betrayal".
Even in signing the deal, rich countries prevaricated - the money could come not just in the form of the grants and very low-interest loans that developing countries need, but some could also come from a "wide variety of sources, public and private, bilateral and multilateral and alternative sources". Money will be "mobilised" rather than provided - a nice distinction that allows for the inclusion of private sector coinvesting to be counted alongside public money from government budgets and development banks.
Plus, rich countries will only have to "lead" in supplying this - some of the cash could come from big emerging economies, such as China or South Korea, or even petrostates such as the United Arab Emirates. And the headline figure of $1.3tn a year for developing countries by 2035 relies on the $300bn being supplemented with a much higher amount of private sector investment, and "innovative" forms of finance such as new taxes on fossil fuels and frequent flyers, none of which are close to being in place.
This story is from the November 29, 2024 edition of The Guardian Weekly.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the November 29, 2024 edition of The Guardian Weekly.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In

Catharsis Journalist and novelist Omar El Akkad castigates complacent liberal responses and western hypocrisy over the war in Gaza
'Where's the Palestinian Martin Luther King?\" Journalist and novelist Omar El Akkad has heard this question a lot lately, \"the implicit accusation [being] that certain people are incapable of responding to their mistreatment with grace, with patience, with love, and that this incapacity, not any external injustice, is responsible for the misery inflicted upon them\".

The US's former friends need to realise the old global order is over
A resonant phrase during Donald Trump's first administration was the advice to take him \"seriously, but not literally\".

Healthcare workers are protected under international law yet hundreds were detained during the war. Here, some of Gaza's most senior doctors speak out 'No rules': tortured, beaten and humiliated in Israeli detention
Dr Issam Abu Ajwa was in the middle of an emergency procedure at al-Ahli Arab hospital in central Gaza when soldiers came for him.

'Why aren't there Oscars or Baftas for what we do?'
From Matilda to Dear England, choreographer Ellen Kane's work has lit up show after show. It's time this art received proper recognition, she says

Print, clone, repeat
How do you follow an Oscar winner like Parasite? In Bong Joon-ho's latest film, a screwball sci-fi, Robert Pattinson keeps dying and being 'reborn'

Star chamber Pharoah's tomb is find of the century
It was when British archaeologist Dr Piers Litherland saw that the ceiling of the burial chamber was painted blue with yellow stars that he realised he had just discovered the first tomb of an Egyptian pharaoh to be found in more than a century.

Can an extinct tree be brought to life?
Abotanical discovery gives hope for resurrecting Rapa Nui's toromiro tree with 'experimental saplings'

a In London, potent mix of religion and rightwingers
The splendours of the Parthenon, Colosseum and Great Pyramid of Giza were in stark contrast to the utilitarian conference centre in London's docklands, but they were there to make a point.

Inflection point Bolsonaro faces 40 years in jail but holds out for Trump lifeline
At the height of Jair Bolsonaro's haywire presidency, Brazilian activists projected their deepest desire on to the Tower of London, where Guy Fawkes once languished after plotting to blow up parliament and assassinate the king.

Shaking off inertia, civic opposition to Trump's cuts gathers pace
On a bright winter's day last week, a group of protesters fanned out along a palm-tree-lined thoroughfare in the picturesque city of Palm Desert to demand that their Republican congressman stand up to Donald Trump and Elon Musk's slash-and-burn effort to reshape the US government.