Berliner Boersenzeitung - Paris summit to push for global debt and climate reform

EUR -
AED 4.045897
AFN 75.731357
ALL 98.643361
AMD 426.346405
ANG 1.98604
AOA 1007.897392
ARS 1070.138808
AUD 1.609773
AWG 1.985503
AZN 1.874771
BAM 1.951712
BBD 2.225039
BDT 131.684147
BGN 1.952204
BHD 0.415258
BIF 3196.903096
BMD 1.101528
BND 1.429206
BOB 7.615048
BRL 6.048104
BSD 1.101992
BTN 92.513502
BWP 14.576465
BYN 3.606345
BYR 21589.939186
BZD 2.221247
CAD 1.491237
CDF 3160.837863
CHF 0.939823
CLF 0.036556
CLP 1008.691099
CNY 7.76138
CNH 7.765835
COP 4617.691442
CRC 571.303228
CUC 1.101528
CUP 29.190479
CVE 110.034499
CZK 25.332324
DJF 196.238917
DKK 7.45971
DOP 66.261195
DZD 146.687143
EGP 53.261171
ERN 16.522913
ETB 133.174325
FJD 2.425783
FKP 0.838878
GBP 0.840218
GEL 3.012654
GGP 0.838878
GHS 17.455434
GIP 0.838878
GMD 77.106899
GNF 9514.069834
GTQ 8.524144
GYD 230.547048
HKD 8.556032
HNL 27.494404
HRK 7.489298
HTG 145.405403
HUF 401.142196
IDR 17076.099757
ILS 4.189803
IMP 0.838878
INR 92.549405
IQD 1443.575983
IRR 46374.307934
ISK 149.290239
JEP 0.838878
JMD 173.955596
JOD 0.780542
JPY 161.610058
KES 142.152008
KGS 93.034889
KHR 4472.63069
KMF 490.565418
KPW 991.374134
KRW 1471.635258
KWD 0.337042
KYD 0.918376
KZT 531.915738
LAK 24333.026939
LBP 98682.179611
LKR 323.871551
LRD 220.398307
LSL 19.268736
LTL 3.252524
LVL 0.666303
LYD 5.240023
MAD 10.764949
MDL 19.284602
MGA 5000.524852
MKD 61.481209
MMK 3577.718383
MNT 3742.990428
MOP 8.816032
MRU 43.533805
MUR 51.077984
MVR 16.908539
MWK 1910.797243
MXN 21.515052
MYR 4.6501
MZN 70.360113
NAD 19.268736
NGN 1825.583431
NIO 40.555045
NOK 11.699572
NPR 148.021922
NZD 1.771001
OMR 0.424105
PAB 1.101992
PEN 4.104901
PGK 4.38681
PHP 62.113481
PKR 305.964463
PLN 4.306056
PYG 8592.001392
QAR 4.016686
RON 4.976589
RSD 117.028446
RUB 104.79899
RWF 1493.072298
SAR 4.135608
SBD 9.134355
SCR 14.657243
SDG 662.569542
SEK 11.369851
SGD 1.429193
SHP 0.838878
SLE 25.166933
SLL 23098.475446
SOS 629.780729
SRD 33.93311
STD 22799.395471
SVC 9.6428
SYP 2767.620843
SZL 19.259655
THB 36.526468
TJS 11.725038
TMT 3.866362
TND 3.375429
TOP 2.579884
TRY 37.641393
TTD 7.474343
TWD 35.323561
TZS 2996.154666
UAH 45.385027
UGX 4036.544208
USD 1.101528
UYU 46.163297
UZS 14058.550013
VEF 3990341.271183
VES 40.61546
VND 27268.313497
VUV 130.775559
WST 3.081482
XAF 654.585767
XAG 0.034654
XAU 0.000415
XCD 2.976933
XDR 0.813296
XOF 654.585767
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.739844
ZAR 19.321955
ZMK 9915.076275
ZMW 29.065114
ZWL 354.691409
  • RBGPF

    -0.8100

    59.99

    -1.35%

  • CMSC

    0.0030

    24.783

    +0.01%

  • RIO

    -0.8500

    69.97

    -1.21%

  • BCC

    -1.8800

    137.65

    -1.37%

  • SCS

    -0.2000

    12.67

    -1.58%

  • GSK

    -1.0350

    38.415

    -2.69%

  • AZN

    -1.2700

    78.31

    -1.62%

  • CMSD

    0.0180

    24.948

    +0.07%

  • RELX

    -0.7950

    46.495

    -1.71%

  • NGG

    -1.6800

    67.1

    -2.5%

  • BTI

    -0.8800

    35.09

    -2.51%

  • RYCEF

    0.0800

    6.98

    +1.15%

  • BCE

    -0.4500

    33.99

    -1.32%

  • JRI

    -0.0380

    13.342

    -0.28%

  • BP

    0.0550

    32.425

    +0.17%

  • VOD

    -0.0650

    9.675

    -0.67%

Paris summit to push for global debt and climate reform
Paris summit to push for global debt and climate reform / Photo: Husnain ALI - AFP/File

Paris summit to push for global debt and climate reform

World leaders will gather in Paris this week with ambitions to reimagine global financing for a new era shaped by climate change, as a cascade of crises swamps debt-burdened countries.

Text size:

French President Emmanuel Macron has said the Summit for a New Global Financial Pact is aimed at building a "new consensus" to meet the interlinked global targets of tackling poverty, curbing planet-heating emissions and protecting nature.

Ideas on the table range from taxation on shipping, fossil fuels or financial transactions, to innovations in lending and a structural rethink of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank.

France says the two-day summit, which begins on Thursday and will bring together some 50 heads of state and government, was more of a platform for ideas sharing ahead of a cluster of major economic and climate meetings in the coming months.

In particular, the French Presidency said on Friday it wanted to give "political impetus" to the idea of an international tax on carbon emissions from shipping, with hopes of a breakthrough at a meeting of the International Maritime Organization later in June.

With trust in short supply over broken climate financing promises from richer countries, developing nations are looking for tangible progress.

The V20 group of countries on the climate frontlines, which now includes 58 member nations, has said restructuring the global financial system to align with climate targets must be completed by 2030.

"It's great we are talking about the international financial architecture, but we have to see timelines and we have not seen those timelines," Sarah Jane Ahmed, V20 global lead and finance adviser, told AFP.

"If we're starting to do this stuff in the 2030s, it's going to be so much more expensive and the trade-offs are going to be far steeper."

Leaders arriving in Paris to champion that message include Kenyan President William Ruto and Ghana's President Nana Akufo-Addo, as well as Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley, who has become a powerful advocate for reform and will speak at the summit opening on Thursday.

Other attendees include Chinese Premier Li Qiang, US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and European Commission head Ursula von der Leyen.

Ajay Banga is also expected in Paris, in his first international meeting since taking the helm of the World Bank, promising to embrace change.

With fewer leaders from wealthier countries attending, Friederike Roder of Global Citizen said the conference could fall short of hopes for a show of unity.

"We need everyone coming together," she told AFP, stressing that major economies are needed to agree reforms.

- 'Failed' -

Economies have been battered by successive shocks in recent years, including Covid-19, Russia's invasion of Ukraine, spiking inflation and the increasingly expensive impacts of weather disasters intensified by global warming.

United Nations chief Antonio Guterres has said the pandemic and its aftermath amounted to a "stress test" for a financial system that was set up nearly eight decades ago.

"It largely failed," he said earlier this month, adding that 52 developing countries are in, or near, debt distress.

The World Bank plans to increase its lending capacity by $50 billion over 10 years.

Last week it also called for drastic reform to rechannel trillions of dollars in harmful and unnecessary subsidies for fossil fuels, agriculture and fishing into action on climate and nature.

Currently the world is far off track in its aims to limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial temperatures, risking enormous costs for nature, human societies and the global economy.

Last year, a UN experts committee said developing countries other than China will need to spend more than $2 trillion a year by 2030 on development and to respond to the climate and biodiversity crises.

- Ambition 'gap' -

Roder said one key signal from the Paris summit would be for richer nations to show they can fulfil existing promises, like the still-unmet pledge of $100 billion annually by 2020 to help developing nations cut emissions and boost climate resilience.

Increasing the money available -- potentially using hundreds of billions of the IMF's liquidity-boosting "special drawing rights" -- is among the calls from emerging economies, as well as a new lending strategy.

One idea championed by Barbados is a disaster clause so loan repayments can be paused for two years in the wake of a climate disaster or pandemic.

Another key point of debate is the scale of existing debts.

That will also focus attention on China, which has become a significant lender to African countries, but has been reluctant to participate in the common framework for debt restructuring.

The Paris summit can bring a lot of issues "out of their niche", said Louis-Nicolas Jandeaux of Oxfam, noting, however, "a gap between the initial stated ambition of the summit and the reality".

(L.Kaufmann--BBZ)