G20 makes little progress on climate financing

Britain, which was hosting a meeting of G20 finance  ministers in Scotland, was determined to push toward a $100  billion deal to cover the costs of climate change by 2020.

But talks got bogged down in a row with large developing  countries about who should foot the bill.

“There was a heated argument,” Russian Finance Minister  Alexei Kudrin said.

“I think we should be very careful in approaching the  possibility of piling big new commitments onto developing  countries as this can put a brake on the pursuing of other  crucial tasks such as the eradication of poverty.”

The climate change discussion had dragged on for hours and a  French official said the debate was so intense there was a risk  the final statement would not mention climate change at all.

In the end, they agreed on the need “to increase  significantly and urgently the scale and predictability of  finance to implement an ambitious international agreement”.

European Union leaders agreed in October that developing  countries would need 100 billion euros a year by 2020 to battle  climate change.

About 22-50 billion euros of the total will come from the  public purse in rich countries worldwide and the EU is expected  to provide between 20 and 30 percent of that.

“It’s a bit disappointing because we would have liked to  have done a little bit more work,” said French Economy Minister  Christine Lagarde, adding that Europe’s offer was “substantial.“

Stumbling block

China is often denounced by Western critics as the main  obstacle to agreement, because it argues developing countries  should not submit to binding international caps on emissions  while they grow out of poverty.

In turn, China and other emerging powers have said the rich  countries have done far too little in vowing to cut their own  greenhouse gas output, and in offering technology and money to  the Third World to help cope with global warming.

“We have not come as far as we had hoped even this morning,”  said German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble.

“We have not reached an agreement. There is still some work  to do. I hope everybody knows that Copenhagen must not be a  failure.”      A European source said there was also frustration in a sunny  St Andrews at the stance of the United States, who were sitting  on the fence over climate change financing.

A 175-nation UN meeting in Barcelona ended on Friday with  little progress towards a global deal on climate change but  narrowed options on helping the poor to adapt to climate change,  sharing technology and cutting emissions from deforestation.

The final UN preparatory meeting before Copenhangen  re-opened a rich-poor divide on sharing the burden of curbs on  greenhouse gas emissions and criticism of the United States for  not tabling a formal, carbon-cutting offer.

About 40 world leaders will go to Copenhagen next month to  improve the chances of clinching a climate deal, the United  Nations has said.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, addressing the G20  delegates, said climate change was a test of global cooperation  every bit as stern as the world financial crisis.