Wealthy countries sent climate funding to the developing world in recent years with interest rates or strings attached that benefited the lending nations, a Reuters data analysis found.

Japan, France, Germany, the United States and other wealthy nations are reaping billions of dollars in economic rewards from a global program meant to help the developing world grapple with the effects of climate change, a Reuters review of U.N. and Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development data shows.

The financial gains happen as part of developed nations’ pledge to send $100 billion a year to poorer countries to help them reduce emissions and cope with extreme weather. By channeling money from the program back into their own economies, wealthy countries contradict the widely embraced concept that they should compensate poorer ones for their long-term pollution that fueled climate change, more than a dozen climate finance analysts, activists, and former climate officials and negotiators told Reuters.

  • Bye@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    If the rich don’t benefit from a policy, the policy will not be enacted. Turns out this is true internationally as well as locally.

    • Allonzee@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      There’s really no hope then. Our species many great crises largely exist and are coming to a head catering to the whims of the wealth class.