With COP31 set to convene in Antalya later this year, negotiations are intensifying over one of the most contentious issues in global climate diplomacy: climate finance. Developing nations are demanding stronger guarantees that adaptation and loss-and-damage funds will reach frontline communities already facing floods, droughts, and displacement.
Türkiye, the COP31 host, has signaled that it will push for a fairer finance framework that directs resources more efficiently to vulnerable regions rather than burdening nations least responsible for emissions. Meanwhile, small island states, led by countries such as Tuvalu, are using pre summit diplomacy to pressure major emitters for faster commitments on fossil fuel phaseout and measurable implementation targets. COP31 is increasingly being framed not as another pledging conference, but as a test of whether climate agreements can translate into real financial justice.


