UN Secretary-General told world leaders that the Loss and Damage Finance Facility should be regarded as a “moral imperative”
Tag: Climate Finance
Four ways we can keep Accelerating Climate Change Financing in the Pacific
There is a critical need to boost climate finance in the Pacific, as the window for taking transformative action is closing, writes ADB Pacific Senior Climate Change Specialist
Assessing Remittances Potential to Build Climate Resilience in the Pacific
Accessing predictable and adequate sources of climate finance that enable Pacific Islanders to build resilience against the impacts of climate change continues to be a challenge, write authors
Vanuatu releases a world leading NDC to the Climate Change Paris Agreement
Vanuatu expects to “further encourage countries to take ambitious climate actions that keep warming below 1.5 degrees Celsius” after launching revised and enhanced NDC
Australia should rejoin UN climate fund to prove commitment to Pacific neighbours, thinktank argues
Australia must do more than simply position itself as a first responder to natural disasters if it is to become “an effective climate ally with the Pacific”, according to a policy paper
Enhancing climate resilience financing in the Solomon Islands
A new climate finance roadmap to help the Solomon Islands access potential funding for adaptation and mitigation work
Pacific Islands voices dominate in Bonn
Pacific nations reminded the world’s climate negotiations body that a fair, engaged and transparent process is central to the work they do
SPREP advocates for new and innovative financing to address loss and damage in the Pacific
Pacific calls for new and innovative sources of finance to minimise Loss and Damage associated with the adverse impacts of climate change
Vulnerable nations demand funding for climate losses, fearing UN ‘talk shop’
Vulnerable Pacific nations demand funding for climate losses and fear “another UN talk shop on finance for addressing climate impacts”
Don’t saddle Pacific Islands with disaster debt
It would be immoral for high-emitting countries to put an extra burden of disaster debt on Pacific nations who are suffering more extreme weather events, writes Luke Fletcher