On Sunday, U.N. Secretary General António Guterres kicked off a two-day “Summit for the Future” focused on climate issues, coinciding with the U.N. General Assembly (UNGA).
National leaders addressed the group after adopting a “Pact for the Future” aimed at ensuring and increasing cooperation between nations, with many calling for urgent access to more climate finance.
Increasing Challenges
“International challenges are moving faster than our ability to solve them,” Guterres told leaders at the summit. “Crises are interacting and feeding off each other – for example, as digital technologies spread climate disinformation, that deepens distrust and fuels polarization.”
Prime Minister Mia Mottley of Barbados echoed Guterres’ warning and urged a “reset” in how global institutions are governed so they can better respond to crises and serve those most in need.
The U.N. climate summit continues on Monday with speeches from China, India, and the United States.
Elsewhere during the week, U.S. President Joe Biden is expected to deliver a speech at an event also attended by actress and climate activist Jane Fonda and World Bank President Ajay Banga, among others. Another event hosted by the Clinton Foundation features speeches by Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, and actor and water activist Matt Damon.
The Climate Group, which is coordinating Climate Week, counted some 900 climate-related events planned across the city this week, hosted by multinational corporations, international non-profits, governments and activists.
Big Agenda
Climate summits and events like Climate Week, held alongside the UNGA, have taken on a more urgent tone in recent years as rising temperatures fuel increasingly extreme disasters like heatwaves and storms.
Some observers to climate negotiations regretted that the global pact adopted Sunday morning by the General Assembly did not go further than last year’s COP28 summit in Dubai in affirming a commitment to transition away from fossil fuel use.
Countries are showing “collective amnesia” about the need to tackle these polluting fuels, said Alden Meyer, a senior associate at the climate think tank E3G.
Urgent Need For Climate Finance
Leaders have also been grappling with a more urgent challenge on the climate agenda. There are just two months left until the U.N.’s COP29 climate summit in Baku, Azerbaijan, leaving little time for agreeing on a new global finance target to replace the annual $100 billion pledge that expires in 2025.
With some U.N. agencies estimating the annual financing need in the trillions, leaders are looking beyond their own budgets for ways to boost climate cash.
The World Bank and other multilateral development banks are undergoing reform processes this year, which could see them making more funding available or taking on more climate-related risk.
Under an initiative led by Barbados, France and Kenya, countries also continue to discuss imposing new global taxes to help pay for climate finance, such as a financial transaction tax or a shipping tax.
Commonwealth Secretary General Patricia Scotland noted that some of the world’s poorest countries were now facing climate-fueled disasters along with an increased debt burden.
“We have to do more to understand the fundamental unfairness of the debt crisis that most of our developing countries are going through,” Scotland told Reuters. “The development banks and the World Bank have to step up to that reality.”
(With input from Reuters)