Negotiations at the United Nations climate summit ended with a deal that falls well short of what vulnerable nations fought for — $1.3 trillion in climate funding that economists estimate is needed to help less affluent countries adapt to disasters and deploy clean energy.
Justine Calma

Senior Science Reporter
Senior Science Reporter
More From Justine Calma


Justine Calma
Justine Calma
$300 billion is a drop in the burning climate bucket.
Justine Calma
Tech companies are laying low at the UN climate summit.
“We don’t have anything there this year,” Meta told the Financial Times.
The annual UN summit is arguably the biggest climate event of the year, and typically an opportunity for tech companies to grandstand. But Big Tech’s obsession with AI has led to growing greenhouse gas emissions, pushing companies further away from climate goals.
Justine Calma
Catch the 4th and last supermoon of 2024 tonight.
The “Beaver Moon” can be seen across the US tonight. It’s “super” because the full moon will be at its closest point to Earth in its elliptical orbit.


Justine Calma
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