UN fund approves its first climate aid for poor nations

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Paris, Nov 6 The UN’s Green Climate Fund (GCF) said on Friday that it had approved its first financing of projects to help developing countries fight global warming, three weeks before a summit opens in Paris to ink a climate rescue pact.

Finance is a divisive issue as rich and developing nations negotiate a global agreement on curbing greenhouse gas emissions, and conference host France has said firm money commitments will be key to getting an agreement in December.

The GCF said in a statement its board had approved USD 168

million (155 million euros) for eight projects in countries including Peru, Malawi, Senegal, Bangladesh, Fiji and Maldives.

Developing nations are looking to rich countries to show how they intend to meet a promise made in 2009 to mobilise USD 100 billion (92 billion euros) per year in climate finance from 2020.

The money is to help them make the shift from cheap and abundant fossil fuels to renewable energy sources, and to shore up national defences against climate change-induced superstorms, drought, floods and sea-level rise.

Developing countries also want compensation for “loss and damage” suffered as a result of such events, for which they say rich nations are mainly to blame as they have polluted the atmosphere for longer.

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