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Finance Ministers in Brazil offer plan to finance $1.3 trillion annually as Brazil prepares for COP30 climate negotiations

Finance Ministers in Brazil offer plan to finance $1.3 trillion annually as Brazil prepares for COP30 climate negotiations

A group of 35 Finance Ministers presented suggestions on Wednesday to increase climate finance from $1.3 trillion a yearly to $1.3 trillion a yearly. This is a major demand of developing nations in advance of the COP30 talks this year in Brazil.

The first report of its kind, led by Brazil, proposes financial changes in areas like credit ratings, insurance premiums, and lending priorities of the development banks.

The 111-page guide is intended to help governments and financial institutions increase the amount of money available to combat climate change.

In a joint statement, the ministers stated that "every year we delay climate action increases both the risk and investment required."

It's up each country to decide if - and how to - use it.

Tatiana Rosito said that the report, which was presented on the sidelines of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund meeting in Washington, highlighted the importance of the finance ministers' role in the discussion.

Rosito said that he wanted to integrate climate and macroeconomic policy into the development bank and international fund boards.

"Finances are usually seen as a hindrance." Rosito said that finance is the major bottleneck. "I believe we can provide solutions."

The report was released after the COP29 agreement last year in Baku. There are currently no plans to include it on the COP30 Agenda. The agreement, which committed wealthy nations to provide $300 billion annually in climate finance from 2035 onwards, was criticised by developing countries for being too low, given that U.N. studies suggest that they will require at least four-times that amount.

The report is part of a roadmap from Baku to Belem, which includes chapters on indigenous rights, the environment and efforts to reduce climate-warming carbon emission.

The document from the finance ministers was eagerly anticipated as nations struggled to assess the ambition of wealthy countries amid the U.S. retreat, and the EU's juggling concerns over energy security and Russian aggression.

The ministers suggested that countries improve their regulations to manage risk, and banks should set lending policies according to the risk profile of a project rather than a nation's.

The report proposes also that carbon markets should work together to synchronize their standards in order to achieve a global price for carbon.

The final report has weakened some of the recommendations made in an earlier draft, which was seen by us back in August. The final report dropped the earlier draft's requirement that "we must see external concessional Climate Finance flows grow significantly and reach $250 billion annually by 2020".

Rosito said that the ministers had spent months consulting governments and adapting the advice so it was relevant and practical for all.

There is still much more to be done

The release of the report in Washington, D.C., was timed to coincide with the pre-COP30 talks in Brasilia, where over 70 countries met to refine the agenda for November's summit.

The delegates decided to establish rules for evaluating progress towards past goals. This includes setting targets for "adaptation projects" aimed at preparing against weather extremes or other climate-related dangers.

They did not, however, agree that this year's COP30 would produce a final accord by all countries. They could instead focus on smaller agreements that don't require consensus.

Andre Correa do Lago, COP30 president, told reporters on Tuesday evening that "we have made progress toward consensus." There is much more work to be done.

Marina Silva, Brazil's Minister of the Environment, reminded countries about their commitment to move away from fossil-fuels. This sparked protests from regimes that rely on fossil fuels.

Silva rejected the objections, saying that the effort to reduce fossil fuel usage and emissions "cannot [be] selective." It is a series of decisions that must be treated equally. (Reporting from Washington, D.C., Lisandra paraguassu, Brasilia, Simon Jessop, London, and Patricia Reaney, editing)

(source: Reuters)