New Delhi:As world leaders huddle together in Egypts Sharm El-Sheikh to chalk out strategies to mitigate the impact of climate change by reducing emissions, financial support is needed to address these concerns. To reduce emissions, suitable infrastructure needs to be built to promote green energy. For this purpose, according to World Bank data, all the countries need to make investments to the tune of $90 trillion by 2030.
These investments, the World Bank found, can be recovered through transition towards green economy. This transition can create newer economic opportunities and jobs, it added. This concept is known as climate funding and it is one of the significant agenda items of the ongoing COP27 summit.
"The world leaders who are meeting in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt to discuss the global climate negotiation during COP27, must acknowledge that the climate crisis needs immediate systemic solutions rather than more announcements without any impactful action. They must deliver and align with the principle of loss and damage, mitigation and adaptation, and climate justice."
"All countries should contribute in a just and fair manner to phase out fossil fuels dependance and implement strict actions to halve emissions by 2030, on the way to phasing out emissions completely," said Avinash Kumar, Lead, climate and energy campaign at Greenpeace India.
Responding to the climate crisis requires collective action from all countries, cities, financial actors, businesses, and private citizens. Among these concerted efforts, developed countries had committed to jointly mobilise $100 billion per year by 2020, from a variety of sources, to address the pressing mitigation and adaptation needs of developing countries, the United Nations said.