Zimbabwe: Activists Demand Trillions in Climate Finance, Urging Developed Nations to Repay ‘Climate Debt’ to the Global South

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Global climate activists intensified their demands at COP29 in Baku, calling for developed countries to take accountability for climate change impacts that continue to devastate communities across the Global South.

During an eye-catching demonstration held ahead of the Finance Day, climate activists displayed a massive “invoice” listing the mounting costs of climate destruction, highlighting the urgent need for financial redress.

“The time for excuses is up. Developed countries simply need to own up for the harm they have caused. It is absurd that people in the Global South who have done little to cause the crisis have been forced to bear the costs of climate destruction unleashed by richer countries.

“The giant invoice that we displayed today clearly itemizes the costs of loss and damage, adaptation, and mitigation already being borne by developing countries. If developing countries want to avert runaway climate breakdown, they need to repay the debt owed to the Global South.” Said Teresa Anderson, the Global Lead on Climate Justice at ActionAid International

The action brought into sharp focus the inequities faced by vulnerable communities, particularly women and girls, whose lives have been disrupted by climate change.

Sylvia Kijangwa, a youth climate activist from Tanzania, related the daily challenges women and girls face in her homeland due to prolonged droughts, water scarcity, and food insecurity.

“In my country, women and young girls are increasingly forced to walk long distances in search of water, putting them at risk of attacks by wildlife and abuse at water wells. This Finance Day, we demand justice for these women who come from countries that have contributed the least to the climate crisis. Our children are suffering from malnutrition due to the food crisis as empty promises become the norm. COP29 is the right time to provide finance for the costs of climate impacts that we are still paying.” Kijangwa said