Extract from ABC News
The loss and damage fund would be paid for by richer nations, such as Australia, the United States and Japan to poorer nations, such as those in the Pacific.
Discussions on the exact amount and the models for delivering the funds remain contentious, and negotiations, co-chaired by Australia's Climate Change Minister Chris Bowen, are continuing this week.
But some experts say the fund needs commitments of more than $US1 trillion a year by 2030.
"I think that one trillion reflects the need," Professor Paul Dargish, the director of the Pacific Action for Climate Transitions, said.
"It is certainly what the region is expressing in terms of what the requirement is. So it's up to the donors now as to how they do that.
"And also I think the critical thing is how pledges convert to actual contributions, [historically] pledges have not smoothly converted across the board into actual money.
"But the loss and damage fund is set to be a very significant activity in the region."
Everything turned upside down
As the meetings continue in Azerbaijan this week, thousands of kilometres away, in central Suva, Fiji, Adi Sivo Yabakitolu was part of a different meeting.
Adi Sivo's village of Vunidogoloa is one of the first communities in the world to be forced into a government-planned relocation because of climate change. And the meeting was with 16 other village leaders across Fiji whose villages are either flagged for relocation or in the process of it.
"It is painful because we leave our ancestors there, our dad, our mum," she said.
"They were buried there, and we were born there.
"It's really hard for us to leave our old village, to move to the other to the new place, because it's like our bodies are in our new side, but our heart is in the old side."
She said the meeting was for other communities to learn from each other through the difficult process.
"One big lesson for us in Vunidogoloa is that we have to work together like in a solesolevaki (a group fundraising activity) where we work together and we have resources with us that we can do our relocation process."
For the time being, Sela Vosikata, Frances Dobui and the greater Buretu community are staying put. But they realise if nothing changes, relocation might not be far away.
"We have already discussed it as a village," Ms Dobui said.
"Climate change has really turned everything upside down.
"And for anyone [questioning it] I would like to tell them: 'it's real'. If they come down here and experience what we are experiencing, then they will understand what is climate change.
"Other than that, they will never understand."
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