COP 29 scored a series of victories, but meaningful action remains elephant in the room

As always with COP meetings, deadlines come and go before final agreements are made, and COP29 in Baku proved no different.

Ultimately, the conference agreed to the Baku Finance Goal (BFG), a new commitment to channel US$1.3-trillion of climate finance to the developing world each year. The Goal contains a core target for developed countries to take the lead on mobilising at least US$300-billion per year for developing countries by 2035. This represents a $50-billion increase on the previous draft text. It pays special consideration to support the least-developed countries and small island developing states, with provisions on accessibility and transparency.

COP29 also ended the decade-long wait for the conclusion of Article 6 negotiations on high integrity carbon markets under the UN. Financial flows from compliant carbon markets could reach $1-trillion per year by 2050. They also have the potential to reduce the cost of implementing national climate plans by $250-billion per year.

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