Earlier last week a United Nations panel  issued a report recommending ways to fight global warming. The group  suggested that taxing foreign-exchange transactions and auctioning pollution  permits could raise $65 billion.
The panel, which includes billionaire  investor George Soros and Larry Summers, director of President Barack  Obama’s National Economic Council, said selling carbon-emissions permits  would generate $38 billion and a financial transactions tax an additional  $27 billion, according to the report released today.
 
The findings are intended to guide  envoys at UN climate talks that start this month in Mexico as they seek  ways to pay for $100 billion in climate aid that was pledged by 2020  to poor nations at last year’s summit in Copenhagen. The report found  that the goal is “challenging but feasible” to achieve.
 
“Without agreement on finance,  we will not be able to reach agreement on other issues for climate change,”  Jens Stoltenberg, Norway’s prime minister and co-chairman of the advisory  group, said at a press conference in New York. “Now we need the political  will to take the decisions.”
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon  appointed the panel, called the High-Level Advisory Group on Climate  Change Financing, in February. It’s led by Stoltenberg and Ethiopian  Prime Minister Meles Zenawi. The 21-member group also includes Soros,  Summers and Deutsche Bank AG Vice Chairman Caio Koch- Weser.