The problem that the United Nations' annual climate conference was meant to solve this year was, in one way, straightforward. To have any hope of meeting their commitments to holding global warming at bay, developing countries need at least $1 trillion a year in outside funding, according to economists' assessments. Failure to meet those commitments will result in more chaotic climate outcomes globally. Everyone agrees on this. And yet, after two weeks of grueling, demoralizing negotiations, the assembled 198 parties agreed to a deal that was, in the most generous terms, weak. The agreement committed to $300 billion a year, by 2035, in funding for climate action in developing countries'triple the current target but less than a third of that trillion-plus goal. These negotiations have operated on the presumption that a significant chunk of this money would come from wealthy countries, because where else would it come from' A limited number of places'the U.S., Canada, Australia, New...
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