
It’s the usual hype such as ‘people will die’, attacks on supposed fossil fuel subsidies and so on. Despite the cuts the notion of ‘tackling climate change’ is still in government heads.
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The UK said it will cut its overseas aid budget in a new blow to vulnerable nations, says Climate Home News.
The move will make it more difficult for the government to deliver on a promise to increase climate finance to developing countries, analysts have warned.
On Tuesday, Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced plans to slash the UK aid budget from 0.5% to 0.3% of national income in order to increase defence spending to 2.5% of GDP by 2027.
The UK’s climate finance commitment comes from its aid budget, which was already reduced from 0.7% to 0.5% of national income a year before the country hosted the COP26 climate talks in 2021.
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The decision came as a shock to the international development community, which is still reeling from Trump’s decision to freeze USAID spending and from a string of cuts to overseas development aid by European governments. Germany, Sweden, France, Belgium and the Netherlands have all announced significant cuts to their aid budgets recently.
“Catastrophic blow”
International charities and aid organisations have responded in dismay, slamming the move as “a betrayal”, “short-sighted” and “a truly catastrophic blow” that will cause more people to die and lose their livelihoods in the world’s most vulnerable nations.
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Prime Minister Starmer told UK members of parliament the decision had required some “extremely difficult and painful choices” and that this was not one “that I wanted to take or that I am happy to take”.
“We will do everything we can to return to a world where that is not the case and to rebuild a capability on development,” he said, insisting the UK will “continue to play a key humanitarian role” in Sudan, Ukraine and Gaza, as well as tackling climate change.
Full article here.
via Tallbloke’s Talkshop
February 28, 2025 at 05:56AM
