The 195-nation discussions took a procedural detour yesterday when developing countries accused rich ones of "apartheid" tactics, and claimed their core demands had been summarily excised from a blueprint.
France's Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, who will preside over the year-end Paris climate summit, urged negotiators today to advance.
"To have success in Paris, progress must be made in Bonn by Friday," he told journalists on the sidelines of the five-day technical huddle.
The revised draft, expanded from 20 pages to 34, managed to "correct imbalances", South African climate envoy Nozipho Mxakato-Diseko said on the group's behalf.
This paved the way for delegates to resume their core work of line-by-line text bartering.
"The majority of delegates seem happy with the agreed way forward," said Amjad Abdulla, chief negotiator for the Alliance of Small Island States at high risk of climate change-induced sea-level rise.
While nearly a day-and-a-half was lost to the initial standoff, Cuba's chief negotiator Pedro Luis Pedrosa said at least "people really started listening to each other".
"Now I have the impression that people, every delegation, is very much aware that now we don't have more time. Either we get it right, or we don't get it (an agreement)."
Added Alix Mazounie of the Climate Action Network NGO group: "The crisis we had yesterday was actually very important to refocus the attention of all parties on what this agreement needs to deliver to those most in need, especially on financial issues."
Poor nations are demanding funding commitments from the rich world for their transition to less carbon-polluting energy, and for shoring up defences against climate change-induced sea-level rise and storms.
Fabius arrived in Bonn today to meet negotiators and assess the progress made ahead of the November 30-December 11 UN conference.
The five-day meeting must craft a workable blueprint for a pact meant to crown more than two decades of fraught climate negotiations.
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