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World Bank to invest $200bn to fight climate change

Increase in funding represents doubling of current plan

Monday 03 December 2018 13:03 EST
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Smokestacks of a coal burning power plant with pollution on a cloudy day.
Smokestacks of a coal burning power plant with pollution on a cloudy day. (Getty)

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The World Bank has announced it will be investing $200bn (£157bn) to help poor countries prepare for climate change over the coming years.

The increase in funding represents a doubling of the investment plan that was initially put in place after the Paris agreement in 2015.

Half of the money will come from the World Bank itself while the other half will be sourced from private capital and other institutions.

A total of $50bn (£39bn) has been earmarked for climate adaptation, a recognition that some adverse effects of global warming cannot be avoided anymore but require a change in practice.

This includes building homes that can withstand extreme weather conditions and finding new sources of freshwater as rising seas contaminate existing supplies.

The announcement comes as leaders are meeting in Poland for UN talks on tackling global warming.

The meeting, known as COP24, received a boost over the weekend when 19 major economies at the G20 summit affirmed their commitment to the Paris accord which binds countries to ensure global warming does not exceed 2C.

The only holdout was the United States, which announced under Donald Trump that it is withdrawing from the climate pact.

"Despite geopolitical instability, the climate consensus is proving highly resilient," Christiana Figueres, a former head of the UN climate office, said.

"It is sad that the federal administration of the United States, a country that is increasingly feeling the full force of climate impacts, continues to refuse to listen to the objective voice of science when it comes to climate change," Ms Figures said.

Agencies contributed to this report

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