Skip to main content

We can’t stop the climate crisis by spending less on climate finance than we spend on ice cream, says ActionAid

cop29

Speaking during a press briefing on the opening day of COP29, ActionAid’s spokespeople urged the rich polluting Global North countries to provide adequate climate financing for adaptation, mitigation and loss and damage.  

Teresa Anderson the Global Climate Justice Lead at ActionAid said: 

“COP29 is about the new climate finance goal to unlock climate action in the Global South. Without finance, talk about climate action will remain just that – talk. They say there is no such thing as a free lunch – well there’s no such thing as a free climate target either. If we’re serious about climate action, we have to pay for climate action. 

Sticking the Global South with an escalating climate bill is not only unfair, it’s a recipe for certain planetary breakdown. This is why climate-hit countries desperately need COP29 to agree a new climate finance goal that delivers real worth trillions of dollars in grants each year. 

And it needs to be the wealthy countries of the Global North, who have been polluting for a century or more, that finally pay up the real money for climate action. So far wealthy countries have been evading their responsibilities. In 2022, between them, developed countries only provided $28-35 billion in grants for climate action in the Global South. For context, the world spent twice as much on ice cream that year ($71 billion). 

 We can’t avert planetary meltdown by spending less on climate finance than we spend on ice cream.” 

Mosammat Dulali, a community member from Kalapara region in Southern Bangladesh, said: 

“In my childhood, I didn’t witness disasters as severe as those in recent years, especially from 2007 to 2024. Just this year alone, we’ve experienced four cyclones. My community is overwhelmed by various problems like houses collapsing, lands submerging, and loss of livelihoods, along with the deaths of livestock, women, and children. Every year, many people, including women and children, die due to drowning, falling trees, or various diseases.  

Tidal surges from cyclones and floods have increased the salinity of agricultural land reducing the ability of the land to produce enough food for the community.  In our region, we used to produce a good variety of winter crops, especially lentils and watermelons, and were self-sufficient, but now we can’t.   

 

Farmers now produce fewer crops than before. Nowadays, we face drought during the planting season, and sometimes heavy rains and floods destroy the crops. Every year, the fish population in rivers and the sea also decreases, resulting in a protein deficiency. 

We need the world to act now to address these climate disasters. If it continues like this, we may not have a community left to talk about.” 

Nura Ahmed Mohamed, the Country Program Manager with ActionAid Somaliland, said: 

“In Somaliland, climate change is more than an environmental crisis - it’s a humanitarian disaster with severe gendered impacts. Increasingly frequent droughts and flash floods threaten the lives and livelihoods of countless families, but the toll is particularly harsh on women and girls. Despite these challenges, women are often the first responders in their communities, taking on roles in caregiving, food production, and managing natural resources. These extreme weather events disrupt agriculture, leading to food shortages, loss of income, and forced displacement. Families in crisis often resort to harmful coping mechanisms, such as child marriage to survive; This has caused child marriage rates and cases to surge, while girls are pulled out of school at alarming rates.”  

Michelle Higelin, Executive Director of ActionAid Australia, said:  

“Australia often talks about supporting our Pacific neighbours to respond to the climate crisis – now is the time to put that solidarity into action. The new climate finance goal is the most important agreement since the Paris agreement and will decide the future of millions of women living on the frontlines of climate catastrophe across the Pacific and the world.   

“Minister Chris Bowen has a unique opportunity as co-chair of the negotiations, and he must not let this opportunity pass. As a wealthy, high polluting country, Australia has an obligation to ensure that the new climate finance goal delivers for women and their communities grappling with the devastating and daily impacts of the climate crisis.  

“Pacific Island countries have contributed almost nothing to a crisis that is now threatening their very survival. If Australia wants to show it is a committed member of the Pacific family, it must put real money on the table and ensure delivery of an annual USD 1 trillion climate finance goal.  

Wealthy countries must step up climate finance at this COP, rich polluting countries have a responsibility to provide climate finance, but they are failing on this obligation. We want them to commit to grant-based finance and not loans.”  

Spokespeople Available: 

  1. Teresa Anderson - AAI Climate Justice Lead (Head of Delegation)  
  2. Brandon Wu - Director of Policy and Campaigns AAUSA  
  3. Farah Kabir – ActionAid Bangladesh Country Director  
  4. Susan Otieno – ActionAid Kenya Country Director  
  5. Kelly Stone – Senior Policy Analyst at ActionAid USA  
  6. Flora Vano - ActionAid Vanuatu  
  7. Nura Ahmed Mohamed - Country Program Manager at ActionAid Somaliland  
  8. Agnes Schim van der Loeff - Policy Advisor Climate Justice at ActionAid Netherlands  
  9. Zahra Hdidou Senior Resilience and Climate Adviser (First week)  
  10. Hamdi Benslama - EU Advocacy Advisor  
  11. Sylvia Kijangwa - Youth Climate Activist from Tanzania (First Week)  

Contact the ActionAid Press Office on [email protected] or +263776665065