No big deal, but still a deal to work on
The COP29 climate finance deal, finalized in Baku, triples funding to developing nations to $300 billion annually by 2035. However, it relies heavily on loans rather than grants and shifts responsibility to multilateral development banks.

Yet, the deal is also perhaps the best possible outcome under the circumstances. Rich countries insisted high-income, high-emitting developing countries also contribute - a non-negotiable stance for the EU. The US, poised to exit the Paris Agreement with Trump waiting in the wings with a jerry can, required a deal they could return to. Sensing shifting dynamics, China backed a deal that recognised its role without imposing additional burdens. Gulf states prioritised a transition that wouldn't be onerous for their oil and gas economies. Developing countries failed to unite and advocate for the deal they truly needed - more grants - leaving individual groups to negotiate their own concessions.
India must move beyond being a conscientious objector. It can help shape the $1.3 tn promise into a reality that addresses developing countries' needs. With the Baku-to-Belem (host of COP30) roadmap for scaling up finances set for discussion over the next year, India must strategically engage to deliver for the 'global south'.
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