It was always going to be hard landing an ambitious outcome from COP27, hosted by gas-rich Egypt against a backdrop of international political tensions and an energy price crisis driven by Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
On Saturday morning, the day after the U.N. climate summit was due to finish, the mood was sombre, U.S. climate envoy John Kerry had COVID and there was no food or water at the conference venue. There were fears the whole thing might collapse.
But given the severity of the climate-change impacts hitting poor communities around the world - from floods in Pakistan and Nigeria to a drought-driven hunger crisis in the Horn of Africa - it was also a now-or-never moment for global solidarity.
The good news? As 134 developing nations stayed united in their demand for a new fund to deal with growing "loss and damage" from climate change, long-time opponents including the EU and the United States finally caved in - with the caveat that the money will come from a variety of sources, from development banks to innovative taxes on things like fossil fuels and airlines.
Tough conversations about whether big-emitting emerging economies such as China should also pitch in with cash, as well as details of how the fund might operate, have been punted to next year.
Yet - as loss and damage champion Yeb Saño of the Philippines said - the decision at COP27 to create the fund marks "a new dawn for climate justice". Now countries must ensure it sees the light of day and delivers the finance so sorely needed by communities already struggling with extreme weather and rising seas.
Activists protest at the Sharm El-Sheikh
International Convention Centre, during the COP27 climate summit, in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, November 11, 2022. REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany