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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Donors pledge nearly $10 billion for UN climate fund
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Oct 25, 2019

Developed countries on Friday pledged nearly $10 billion for the UN's flagship climate change fund, offsetting the impact of US President Donald Trump's decision to quit the Paris Agreement against global warming.

"I am very happy to announce that we have closed this conference with an envelope of $9.8 billion," Odile Renaud-Basso, director of the French Treasury, told journalists after the latest financing round for the Green Climate Fund in Paris.

It exceeded the $9.3 billion pledged at the previous conference in 2014, of which only $7.2 billion has come through so far.

The United States had pledged $3 billion but Trump's decision to quit the 2015 Paris accord meant just $1 billion was actually paid.

Opening the conference, French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said the new pledges were "ambitious, despite the United States' withdrawal from the Paris Agreement."

Several of the 27 donor countries doubled their pledges, including France, Germany and Britain as well as smaller economies like Sweden, New Zealand and Poland.

Japan, which again pledged $1.5 billion, remains the largest single contributor with a total of $3 billion since the fund's creation in 2010.

"The coming years are critical as we empower our partners to innovate, accelerate and scale up climate investments that match the pace and urgency of the climate crisis," fund director Yannick Glemarec said in a statement.

The fund is the main financing tool for the Paris Agreement, which calls for capping the rise in global temperatures at "well below" two degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit), and 1.5 C if possible.

The treaty calls for billions of dollars annually for poor nations already coping with floods, heatwaves, rising seas and superstorms made worse by climate change.


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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Climate change threatens biodiversity inside Earth's conservation areas
Washington DC (UPI) Oct 22, 2019
Protected habitat across the globe serves as a refuge for many plants and animals, but new research suggests these safe havens could suffer a decline in biodiversity as a result of climate change. Scientists at the University of Bayreuth use ten different climate models to predict the effects of climate change on the planet's 245,844 protected areas currently registered. Detailed climate forecasts allowed researchers to make especially accurate predictions for biodiversity inside 137,432 terres ... read more

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