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Press Release: Poor Countries Demand US$2 Billion From Rich

Issue 376
Front Page
News Headlines

KULMIYE Statement On The Current Political Situation In Somaliland

Education Workshop

Somaliland: Presidential Decree Sets Election Date

Hundreds Flee Inter-Clan Clashes In Somaliland

Local and Regional Affairs
US To Increase Military Presence Off Somalia
Protestors Dispersed With Gunfire In Somaliland
French Commandos Storm Yacht, US Navy Surrounds Pirate Gang
Congressional Report: 5 Groups Conduct Most Piracy
Somalia-Kenya Sign Mou For Maritime 'Area Under Dispute': Exclusive
Ethiopia Launches Multi Million Mobile Telephone Network
Ethiopia Has Disciplined, Responsible Military Force: Senator Inhofe
Canadian Arrested In Somalia Allegedly Member Of Islamist Militia
Editorial

Hostages Of Somalia

Features & Commentry

SA Can Learn From Vietnam And Singapore Policy Overlaps

Capture Pirates, On Land And Sea

Why The Pirates Are Immune From Attack

Helping Hand To The Homeland

International News

 

Obama Returns From First Official Trip To Europe

Press Release: Poor Countries Demand US$2 Billion From Rich

Opinion

Time To Reinvent The Wheel!‏
Puntland: The Shame On Somali Identity
Somaliland Foe Jubilant Over Its Political Crossroad

Somaliland Will Prove Wrong The ‘Cynics’ By Peacefully Overcoming The Current Political Crisis!

Good News For English Readers

Somaliland Needs Reconciliation And Sensible/New Date of Presidential Elections

Regulation And Social Responsibility A Must If Somaliland Is To Have A Stable Economy

I Have A Dream That Someday Somaliland Will Emerge Strongly In Africa

Nearly 50 of the world’s least developed countries have called on rich nations to meet an eight-year old promise and pay US$2 billion to help them adapt to climate change.

The demand was made at the UN climate change negotiations that are currently underway in Bonn, Germany.

Rich countries promised the Least Developed Countries (LDCs) support for "immediate and urgent" actions on adaptation to climate change eight years ago at the seventh conference of parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in Marrakech, Morocco in 2001.

The UNFCCC then created the LDC Fund with voluntary contributions from the rich countries and gave each LDC US$200,000 to carry out a National Adaptation Programme of Action (NAPA) to identify the most urgent adaptation actions needed.

So far 39 of the NAPAs have been completed. The costs of implementing all the urgent and immediate adaptation actions identified in them would exceed US$1.6 billion, but the LDC Fund has less than US$200 million and only a handful of the identified projects have been funded.

 “The LDCs are demanding that the rich countries pledge up to US$2 billion over the next five years in order to fulfil the promise they made eight years ago,” says Saleemul Huq, senior fellow in the Climate Change Group at the International Institute for Environment and Development.

 “The poorest and most vulnerable countries have contributed least to climate change and will suffer most from its impacts,” says Huq. “The rich countries can and must live up to their words and massively increase their funding to compensate the least developed countries.”

Last month IIED published a four-page briefing paper on funding for adaptation to climate change. To download the pdf, visit: http://www.iied.org/pubs/pdfs/17054IIED.pdf

Mike Shanahan

Press officer

International Institute for Environment and Development

3 Endsleigh Street

London WC1H 0DD

Tel: 44 (0) 207 388 2117

Fax: 44 (0) 207 388 2826

Email: mike.shanahan@iied.org

www.iied.org


 














 


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