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The $100bn Fundraiser

Vulnerable nations were promised $100bn to help adapt to climate change - where is it?

One of the few achievements of the UN climate negotiations in Copenhagen two years ago was the announcement of the Green Climate Fund - a pledge to raise $100bn a year to help the most vulnerable countries adapt to climate change.

And as this year's conference in Durban comes to a close with the prospect of a binding treaty on emissions reduction seeming ever further out of reach, details on the Green Climate Fund will be one of the few signs of progress from the summit.

But ever since Copenhagen, arguments over terms and conditions have dogged efforts to get the fund off the ground.

There's been fierce debate over how the money should be raised, and how its proceeds are distributed - and whether it's enough to make a difference.

In the second of two programmes from the UN climate conference in Durban, One Planet investigates at the Green Climate Fund.

We speak to the World Bank's climate enjoy Andrew Steer, the UN's Achim Steiner and to the campaigners who say that the fund is simply reparations for the damage vulnerable countries will suffer through climate change. Is funding for climate change adaptation simply a question of climate justice?

As ever, tune in and then get in touch to let us know your views.

You can email the team at oneplanet@bbc.com, or join us on Facebook - the link's below.

Available now

18 minutes

Last on

Mon 12 Dec 2011 12:32GMT

Broadcasts

  • Fri 9 Dec 2011 19:32GMT
  • Sat 10 Dec 2011 04:32GMT
  • Sat 10 Dec 2011 18:32GMT
  • Sun 11 Dec 2011 00:32GMT
  • Sun 11 Dec 2011 06:32GMT
  • Mon 12 Dec 2011 12:32GMT

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