The end of COP27 closed with a historic agreement to provide “loss and damage” funding for vulnerable countries that shoulder the heavy burden of climate change. But, after launching the fund on day one, many of the other decisions at COP28 made that agreement look more like a symbolic concession than real action.
Latest Post
- Ten new insights in climate science
- Three ways countries are financing resilience as climate shocks intensify
- What Can We Learn From How Countries Include Education, Children and Youth in Their NAP Processes?
- Education in 2026: How skills, industry, and technology are redefining Indian universities
- From scores to skills: Reimagining education for the future
- Adapting education for climate change: The potential of national adaptation plans
- Global Mutirão: Why education is key to climate action at COP30
- COP30: five reasons the UN climate conference failed to deliver on its ‘people’s summit’ promise
- How to Get Finance Flowing to Climate Adaptation COP30
- COP30 in Brazil: What is at stake for global collaboration on climate and nature?