CSOs and Indigenous Peoples call on the Fund for responding to Loss and Damage (FRLD) in a technical submission to support and enhance access to its funding for communities—and to ensure that it is part of its start-up financing phase in 2025 and 2026.
An urgent look at climate finance in 2025. Are current commitments enough to meet developing countries' needs? This examines funding gaps, adaptation shortfalls, and the path to scaling finance. Here are the 10 things you need to know, in visual form.
The FRLD's work and funding decisions must center impacted people's voices, priorities, and needs. Case studies from Kenya show how communities are already suffering severe climate impacts, highlighting urgent needs for support, inclusion, and rights protection.
Over 350 organizations call on the LDF Board to create a community access window for direct, simplified climate funds for frontline communities, Indigenous Peoples, and marginalized groups. Support climate justice and equitable access today!
The Climate Damages Tax: Making Big Oil pay for climate chaos, funding loss & damage and a just transition. Tax rises yearly as carbon budget shrinks, complementing other measures to power climate action worldwide.
We need an inclusive Loss & Damage Fund that puts vulnerable communities in the driver's seat. Policy & action must connect for fair access & community-led solutions. A blueprint for engaging stakeholders, governance, & operations to boost participation, justice & resilience.
A Loss and Damage Fund should become the central player in an emerging landscape of arrangements to help developing countries suffering from catastrophic climate change impacts. How can it best fulfill this role?
This discussion paper contributes to achieving the establishment and operationalization of a Loss and Damage Finance Facility (LDFF) that delivers on the needs of developing countries at speed and scale. It explains why the LDFF is necessary before turning to an analysis of the governing arrangements and core operational functions for the LDFF.
The world’s top-emitting companies should be made accountable for their role in global warming and pay for the loss and damage suffered in many developing countries according to a report by the Heinrich Böll Foundation and the Climate Justice Programme.