BANGKOK, (Reuters) – Poor nations demanding a slice of rich countries’ GDP to fight climate change is a waste of time, and the fairest method would be a global fund to which all major emitting nations would contribute, Mexico said yesterday.
Mexico has proposed the creation of a green fund based on nations’ historical and current greenhouse gas emissions, GDP and population as a way to unlock potentially hundreds of billions of dollars in annual spending.
Developing countries could receive financing to help cut emissions through clean-energy investment in programmes that could be measured and verified.
Climate finance is a make-or-break issue in talks to try to agree on a broader framework by a U.N. deadline in December, when environment ministers from around the world meet in Copenhagen. “Realistically, you can either sit and ask for ‘X percent’ GDP of developed countries and get nothing or you can ask for a donor-driven scheme,” Fernando Tudela, the head of Mexico’s delegation at U.N. climate talks in Bangkok, told Reuters in an interview.
The fund is one of several proposals delegates from about 180 nations are discussing in U.N. climate talks in Bangkok aimed at narrowing differences over how to share the responsibility in a global fight against climate change.
The G77 bloc of developing countries wants rich nations to cut emissions between 42-45 percent below 1990 levels by 2020 as part of a broader climate pact to replace the Kyoto Protocol and to contribute up to 1.5 percent of their GDP to climate funds.