Poorest nations to push on compensation at climate talks | Inquirer ºÚÁÏÉç

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Poorest nations to push on compensation at climate talks

/ 12:52 PM September 18, 2022

Dakar Senegal

A volunteer collects waste along the coastline during the ‘World Clean Up Day’ in Bargny, east of Dakar, on September 17, 2022. AFP

DAKAR — The world’s poorest countries say they will insist that the UN’s upcoming climate talks push ahead with proposals for a fund to vulnerable nations for climate-inflicted damage.

Ministers and experts from the 46-nation Least Developed Countries (LDC) bloc, meeting in Dakar, said their countries were most exposed to climate impact but least to blame for the carbon emissions that cause it.

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In a statement issued late Wednesday ahead of the November climate talks, they said that setting up a funding mechanism for loss and damage was of “crucial importance.”

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They also reiterated a call for “all parties, particularly major emitters” to make swift and deep cuts in carbon emissions, and for rich economies to honor past pledges on climate aid.

COP27 — the 27th Conference of the Parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) — runs in the Egyptian resort of Sharm el-Sheikh from November 6-18.

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The annual parlays are dominated by often fierce debate on national pledges on emissions curbs and on funding.

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Wealthy countries have previously promised billions of dollars to help poorer nations avert carbon emissions and build resilience against climate change.

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The LDC bloc, gathering countries mainly from Africa and Asia, is campaigning in particular for compensation for vulnerable countries which suffer from climate-related damage such as floods and rising seas.

It wants the upcoming talks to establish a mechanism to provide funding.

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“Countries are being left to fend for themselves” in the face of climate damage, Senegalese Environment Minister Abdou Karim Sall told reporters.

“It is imperative for a fund to be set up which takes care of loss and damage, especially for least developed countries.”

The pre-COP meeting among LDC representatives in the Senegalese capital was to be followed by talks on Thursday among African environment ministers, attended by US climate envoy John Kerry.

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