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Still no progress on finance text

Progress on COP29’s headline outcome – the new post-2025 climate finance goal – continues to be incredibly slow.

After pre-COP talks had whittled down the text, negotiators came to Baku with a nine-page text. On Tuesday, they asked the co-chairs to put all the options back in.

The co-chairs went away and came back on Wednesday morning with a 34-page text. Negotiators asked them to go the other way and streamline it but late on Wednesday they sent negotiators a new version with just one page removed.

They will consolidate some more today, focussing on more technical issues like transparency and reporting. Iskander Erzini Vernoit, who follows the talks for Moroccan think-tank IMAL, said the text needs to be “shorter” but include developing countries’ common points.

Government ministers, who are more empowered to make compromises and therefore delete options, will arrive in Baku on Monday. The text needs to be “workable” by then, said Vernoit. COP29 negotiator Yalchin Rafiyev claimed this morning at a press conference that it is already “workable”.

Aside from streamlining, negotiators will discuss some substantial issues behind closed doors today – like human rights, how recipients can directly access funds and issues which stop climate finance flowing.

This morning in Baku, top economists released a well-timed new UN-commissioned report on climate finance. 

Nicholas Stern, Vera Songwe and Amar Bhattacharya say that finance talks should focus on mobilising $1 trillion a year by 2030 to developing countries other than China and this should rise to $1.3 trillion by 2035. 

To demonstrate their commitment to this, the authors  write, “advanced economies” need to triple their existing $100 billion climate finance commitment  to $300bn. The rest should come primarily from the private sector and multilateral development banks.

Stern, Songwe and Bhattarcharya add that cooperation between developing countries “is already making a significant contribution and there is great scope for enhanced support and financing from leading developing countries”. 

Developing countries have resisted developed nations attempts to widen the contributor base to the finance goal to include countries like China and the Gulf states.

Negotiators speak to UNFCCC head Simon Stiell (UNFCCC/Kamran Guliyev)

The post COP29 Bulletin Day 4: Still no finance progress, as economists call for $1 trillion+ appeared first on Climate Home News.

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Georgia Hasn’t Had a Consumer Advocate for Electric Ratepayers for 18 Years

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A bill to restore the state’s consumer utilities counsel failed to move forward, meaning Georgia will remain one of only a handful of states without a statutory advocate representing ratepayers.

Eighteen years after Georgia eliminated its consumer utility advocate, the fight to bring the office back recently resurfaced at a Senate hearing.

Georgia Hasn’t Had a Consumer Advocate for Electric Ratepayers for 18 Years

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Wondering How to Talk About Climate Change? Take a Lesson from Bad Bunny

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Discussing climate change can make a difference. Focusing on the impacts in everyday life is a good place to start, experts say.

When Bad Bunny climbed onto broken power lines during his Super Bowl halftime show, millions of viewers saw a spectacle. Climate communicators saw a lesson in how to talk about climate change.

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Greenpeace response to escalating attacks on gas fields in Middle East

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Sydney, Thursday 19 March 2026 — In response to escalating attacks on gas fields in the Middle East, including Israeli strikes on Iran’s giant South Pars gas field and Iranian retaliations on gas fields in Qatar and Saudi Arabia, the following lines can be attributed to Solaye Snider, Campaigner at Greenpeace Australia Pacific:

The targeting of gas fields across the Middle East is a perilous escalation that reinforces just how vulnerable our fossil-fuelled world really is.

Oil and gas have long been used as tools of power and coercion by authoritarian regimes. They cause climate chaos and environmental pollution and they drive conflict and war. The energy security of every nation still hooked on gas, including Australia, is under direct threat.

For countries that are reliant on gas imports, like Sri Lanka, Pakistan and South Korea, this crisis is just getting started. It can take months to restart a gas export facility once it is shut down, meaning the shockwaves of these strikes will be felt for a long time to come.

It is a gross and tragic injustice that while civilians are killed and lose their homes to this escalating violence, and families struggle with a tightening cost-of-living, gas giants like Woodside and Santos have seen their share prices surge on the prospect of windfall war profits. 

We must break this cycle. Transitioning to local renewable energy is the way to protect Australian households from the inherent volatility of fossil fuels like gas.

-ENDS-

Images available for download via the Greenpeace Media Library

Media contact: Lucy Keller on 0491 135 308 or lkeller@greenpeace.org

Greenpeace response to escalating attacks on gas fields in Middle East

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