Bangladesh
warns of rising
climate change costs as
donations plummet
UN
envoy says Bangladesh needs billions of dollars to adapt to climate
change as donors fail to match pledges with money
John
Vidal
10
March, 2014
Bangladesh
needs $5bn (£3bn) over the next five years to adapt to current
climate changes, and the cost is rising each year, according to a
lead negotiator for developing countries in the UN climate talks,
which resume in Bonn on Monday.
It,
and other developing countries, may have been promised $30bn as
"fast-start finance" before $100bn a year is theoretically
mobilised for developing countries in 2020, but the global recession
and reluctance by rich countries to match their pledges with money
have meant that most of them receive far less than they expected and
has led to a loss of trust in the talks.
"So
far Bangladesh has received $200m from the fast-start finance, half
of which has come from Britain. We had hoped for much more,"
said Quamrul Choudhury, who is also Bangladesh's climate envoy to the
UN.
"Britain,
like us, has not been immune to extreme floods and storms," he
said. "You have built defences costing billions of pounds. If we
could only build the 700km of coastal defences that we need, it would
protect at least 50 million people. It would cost us not much more
than $15bn. Our costs are much lower than yours."
The
injustice of the poorest countries having to spend heavily to adapt
to climate change, which they historically barely contributed
towards, is a deep wound in the long-running talks, the next stage of
which will finish in Peru with a head-of-state-level meeting with the
UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon in September. It has led to a
breakdown of trust between countries.
But
Choudhury is hopeful that countries will negotiate a legally binding
global treaty in Paris next year. "I am optimistic. China is in
a positive mood. The UK, France, Germany, Denmark and Sweden are
pushing the EU to raise their ambition. Obama is more positive; I
think he will take a leadership role. There is much more awareness
now in the talks."
There
have been other changes over the years, he says. "Everyone
thought in 2008-09 that it would be expensive to reduce emissions.
Now we know for certain it doesn't cost much. It's not a herculean
task. Countries like the UK know it is possible to go for a 65% cut
without losing jobs or hurting growth.
"We
know now that [cutting emissions] can create jobs. But to get an
agreement means rich countries, especially, must try to rebuild
confidence and that means committing money and being prepared to
compromise and make sacrifices. The more rich countries give now, the
more likely the least developed countries are likely to sign up in
Paris."
But
he warns that the cost of adaptation is high – and mounting. "The
$100bn a year will not be enough. On top of that we will want a legal
mechanism to compensate for 'loss and damage', [compensation for
extreme climate change events]. There should definitely be some space
in the [final] treaty for that," Choudhury said.
The
shame, he says, is that delays are costing countries dear. "Five
years will have been lost following the diplomatic debacle in
Copenhagen, when developing countries refused to be railroaded into
an unsatisfactory agreement.
"If
we had succeeded then, we could be implementing a treaty now. Instead
we have moved the target to beyond 2020 at the cost of the teeming
millions in the least developed countries."
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