Rich countries coalesce around $100 billion figure
As the US, Ethiopia and European Union, including France, Germany and the UK coalesce around a climate finance package of $100bn, Jeremy Hobbs, Executive Director of Oxfam International said:
“It’s good news that discussions on climate cash have finally got moving after two long years of delay but this needs to be the start of the conversation – not the end. $100bn is half the amount poor countries need to reduce their emissions and adapt to a changing climate. The money must come from public sources - not be subject to the whims of the markets - and it must not be diverted from existing aid promises. Poor countries will still need to build schools and hospitals – as well as flood defences.”
Oxfam is calling for rich countries to provide at least $200bn a year in new money to help poor countries adapt to a changing climate and reduce their emissions.
Take action
Moment of crisis: Copenhagen talks are failing but rich country leaders can fix it
Read more
How can poor countries adapt to a changing climate?
Three facts about climate change and Africa
Three facts about climate change and women
Oxfam International Climate Change Blog
Notes to Editors
Oxfam’s Climate Advisors from around the globe are available to provide expert analysis on policy and politics of the talks. Our team of experts is liaising closely with government delegations and party to inside information on the talks.
Join Grow
Climate Change blog
-
#FF Oxfam Global Ambassadors @KristinDavis @GaelGarciaB @driverminnie @liviafirth @baabamaal @HelenLMirren @BoseOfficial18 hours 2 min ago
-
#FF Oxfam Global Ambassadors @AnnieLennox @djimonhounsou @angeliquekidjo @firthcom @coldplay @RahulBose1 http://t.co/rXOrgldjlt18 hours 5 min ago
-
Thanks for speaking up for women! @MarsGlobal #Mondelez & @Nestle have moved from words to action http://t.co/pMvtbhesPh #BehindTheBrands19 hours 54 min ago
-
#FF the Oxfams! @IntermonOxfam @OxfamIndia @OxfamJapan @oxfamnovib @OxfamQuebec @Oxfam_mcm @OxfamItalia @oxfam_sol @oxfamfrance21 hours 2 min ago
-
#FF the Oxfams! @OxfamIreland @oxfamcanada @OxfamAustralia @Oxfam_DE @OxfamAmerica @oxfamgb @oxfamnz @oxfamhongkong @oxfammexico21 hours 5 min ago
-
Dismal levels of investment in agriculture a primary reason 1 in 8 people in the world are hungry http://t.co/orbRUxuVQo #govspendwatch1 day 11 hours ago
-
'A Jungle of Humanity - and Disorder', an interactive feature from @nytimes http://t.co/DxmATtGICV #SyriaCrisis #Zaatari1 day 13 hours ago
-
RT @benphillips76 How to Start Development’s Gutenberg Revolution http://t.co/DbieZs9UBZ #govspendwatch1 day 13 hours ago
-
Social protection, #genderequality & #climatechange crucial to tackling inequality http://t.co/mKqSIBcceM via @guardian #govspendwatch1 day 16 hours ago
-
RT @louis_belanger Starting to see Syrian refugees all over #Beirut On promenade, on Hamra, outside grocery stores, in parking lots #Syria1 day 16 hours ago
-
Are governments meeting their #MDG spending targets? Read the blog http://t.co/3bF1lhH8AX #govspendwatch #MDGs1 day 16 hours ago
-
RT @kgeorgievaeu: We can't win war on #poverty unless we build #resilience of the most vulnerable @OxfamEU1 day 16 hours ago
-
Syria conflict: BBC shown 'signs of chemical attack' http://t.co/reuD3VP6sV #SyriaCrisis1 day 18 hours ago
-
Only 2 of 5 poor countries are spending what the WHO recommends on health http://t.co/orbRUxuVQo #govspendwatch #MDGs1 day 19 hours ago
-
RT @maxlawsontin: Poor countries endanger development by spending less than promised http://t.co/mKqSIBcceM via @guardian #govspendwatch1 day 20 hours ago

