Currently in D.C. — October 18, 2023: Perfectly cool and sunny

Plus, wealthy nations still not paying up ahead of COP28

The weather, currently.

Mostly sunny with a few clouds

We have a perfect day for strolling! Sunshine in the morning with temperatures in the 50s that peak at 67°F around three in the afternoon. As the day progresses we’ll start seeing some clouds, but not enough to block the sunrays. At night, the temperature will drop to 57°F and lower. These types of days make me get a bit reflexive and grateful about life. How about you?

Katrina And The Waves gives us the perfect soundtrack for today: “I'm walking on sunshine, wooah, I'm walking on sunshine, woooah, I'm walking on sunshine, woooah, And don't it feel good!! And don't it feel good!”

What you need to know, currently.

The UN Climate Change Conference, COP28, is about a month and a half away. However, after last year's conference — which emphasized Climate Finances — wealthy nations are still falling far behind on financial commitments.

The majority of these promises are already overdue. In 2009 wealthy nations promised to pay $100 billion per year in climate finance to the Global South by 2020.

Earlier this month the UN's main fund created to support these goals — the Green Climate Fund — announced that it had raised $9.3 billion, falling short of a $10 billion target. This comes nowhere near the $200-$250 billion the UN estimates developing nations will actually need each year by 2030.

The US and China, the globe's two largest polluters, failed to contribute to the fund at all.

At least years COP, held in Egypt, countries also agreed to create a “Loss and Damage Fund.” A fund where wealthy nations would contribute funds to assist developing nations as they recover from inevitable climate disasters, i.e. loss and damages.

Almost a year later, there is no clear path forward for the creation or execution of this fund.

What you can do, currently.

Currently Sponsorships are short messages we co-write with you to plug your org, event, or climate-friendly business with Currently subscribers. It’s a chance to boost your visibility with Currently — one of the world’s largest daily climate newsletters — and support independent climate journalism, all at the same time. Starting at just $105.

One of my favorite organizations, Mutual Aid Disaster Relief, serves as a hub of mutual aid efforts focused on climate action in emergencies — like Hurricane season. Find mutual aid network near you and join, or donate to support networks in Florida: