
Image: Pranav Singh
The recent Warsaw Climate Change Conference ended with a couple of modest successes, the main one being that the conversation will continue between nations as to what to do about man-made impact on the climate.
An initiative to support efforts at slowing deforestation received funding to the tune of $280 million from three countries.
Developed countries couldn’t quite bring themselves to say more than they would be willing to ‘contribute’ to emission cuts, rather than ‘commit’ to them.
Mainly, the nations who use the most keep insisting that change will be slow, and expensive.
Developing countries requested the twenty developed nations which have contributed to and profited most from the fossil fuel economy to pledge funds to mitigate, adapt and readjust this economy and its effects.
Amounts requested were between $70 billion per year by 2016, or $100 billion by 2020.
Meanwhile, an editorial piece by former United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan in the New York Times today states that the developed countries currently subsidize the fossil fuel economy to the tune of $485 billion.
That’s $485 billion every single year.
Not all expensive habits are worth keeping.
So here’s hoping that even a drop in the bucket will create enough ripples to make a change.