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Internacional

Rich Nations Top Climate Finance Goal for Third Straight Year

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Rich countries finally cleared their climate cash target again in 2023 and 2024, marking three straight years above the 100 billion dollar annual mark according to the OECD. After delivering 115.9 billion dollars in 2022, contributions climbed to 132.8 billion in 2023 and 136.7 billion in 2024. The original pledge from the 2009 Copenhagen COP was meant for 2020 but showed up two years late, like a friend finally returning borrowed cash.

These funds help developing nations, carrying far less historical responsibility for global warming, invest in clean energy and cope with climate damage. Public financing fell 2.6 percent to 101.6 billion dollars in 2024, yet private contributions rose by 30.5 billion to offset the gap. OECD analyst Raphaël Jachnik linked the bilateral public dip to normal levels after a 2023 surge.

Donald Trump’s return to the White House in 2025, given his climate skepticism, could bring a decline in numbers. The EU, the top contributor, juggles tight budgets while carving room for higher military outlays. A fresh goal of 300 billion dollars yearly by 2035 emerged from COP29 in Azerbaijan, though developing countries deem it inadequate. They also target 1.3 trillion dollars combined from public and private sources.

More than two thirds of public climate money arrives as loans, which Mohamed Adow of Power Shift Africa says merely adds to the debt load of vulnerable nations. Western powers keep pushing to expand contributors to include China and Saudi Arabia, still classified as developing under 1990s lists. Between 2016 and 2024, Asia received 39 percent of funds, Africa 29 percent, the Americas 18 percent, Europe 5 percent and Oceania just 0.8 percent.