Climate action needs cash. Where is it?

The conclusion of the Bonn Climate Conference has left developing countries confronting a familiar reality: Climate finance remains the most important issue in global climate negotiations, yet meaningful progress continues to lag behind growing needs. As attention now shifts toward COP31, the question is whether the international community is prepared to move from procedural discussions and political rhetoric to concrete financial commitments.

Bonn was widely seen as a stocktaking exercise ahead of COP31, highlighting that implementation is now the defining challenge of global climate action. While negotiators advanced technical work and institutional processes, developing countries stressed that progress on adaptation, mitigation, just transitions, and loss and damage depends on adequate and accessible finance. Yet, the conference offered little reassurance on the scale, predictability, or quality of support for vulnerable countries.

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Developed countries favour private capital, while developing countries seek public and concessional finance. For many vulnerable economies, adaptation and loss-and-damage responses cannot be financed through commercial investment alone.

The discussions in Bonn had highlighted this tension.........

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