1 / 53

What is Climate Finance ?

What is Climate Finance ?. Facilitator Name, Group Date in collaboration with the Institute for Policy Studies and the Heinrich Boell Foundation. Objectives. Understand the variety of definitions of climate finance and their implications

fox
Télécharger la présentation

What is Climate Finance ?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. What is Climate Finance ? Facilitator Name, Group Date in collaboration with the Institute for Policy Studies and the Heinrich Boell Foundation

  2. Objectives • Understand the variety of definitions of climate finance and their implications • Develop individual/organizational definition of climate finance • Understand the basic flows and architecture of international climate finance institutions • Understand the main proposals for raising climate finance, develop criteria to evaluate fairness and effectiveness of proposals

  3. Introductions • Name • Country/region • Affiliation (movement, organization, etc.) • What are the climate-related fights, projects, policies or institutions that you work on? • Additional objectives for today?

  4. Guiding questions • What is climate finance? What are the main frameworks and definitions? • What do we think are the important principles that should guide climate finance? • How do these principles influence what we think should ‘count’ as climate finance in a political, ethical and/or legal sense? • What are existing climate finance flows and institutions, and how do they measure up to our principles? • Who can – and should be able to – access climate finance and how?

  5. What does climate change look like locally? • How is climate change impacting your community? • How are people in your community dealing with climate change?

  6. What does climate finance pay for?

  7. What is climate finance?La Mata & La Ventosa Wind Park • A flagship climate finance project in Oaxaca, Mexico • The project received $140 million in loans from development finance institutions • Its 27 wind turbines will generate up to generate 67.5MW of electricity per year, all of which will go to Walmart

  8. La Mata & La Ventosa Wind Park

  9. La Mata & La Ventosa Wind Park Implications of financial flows • Misleading “leveraging” claims to give World Bank’s Clean Technology Fund and leverage model credibility • Non-additionality of Clean Development Mechanism credits means more total emissions

  10. La Mata & La Ventosa Wind Park “With the pretext of advancing renewable energy, big corporations are occupying our land with windmills. Agriculture, particularly corn plantations, is the essence of our region, and will be completely displaced by the wind farm projects” - Bettina Cruz Velázquez

  11. Climate Finance PURPOSE “Adaptation” Dealing with the impacts and effects of climate change “Mitigation” Shifting to sustainable (and equitable and democratic) development pathways

  12. The Need: How much will climate change cost in developing countries? Billions USD$ $15

  13. Framework climate finance obligations What is climate debt?

  14. Climate Debt The basic idea…

  15. Emissions Debt • Assuming all peoples have equal right to access the atmosphere, developed countries have polluted more than their fair share with GHGs Compensation: • reduce emissions and lower existing concentrations of greenhouse gases • ensure atmospheric space for development in poorer countries

  16. Development Debt • Developing countries entitled to opportunities for development, providing basic services, and economic independence • Need access to technologies and funding for R&D and implementation -according to their worldview- to achieve development within restricted atmospheric space

  17. Adaptation Debt • Impacts have real-world economic and  development impacts • Responsibility to compensate all damages • Full compensation for the negative impacts and opportunity costs • Investment (with funding and technology) in the prevention of major impacts

  18. Migration debt • People forced to migrate because of physical and economic dislocation cause by climate change Compensation: • Drop restrictive migration policies, receiving climate migrants with dignity • Recognize human and cultural rights of migrants

  19. Climate debt = Compensation Compensation for climate debt should be done in multiple, complementary ways: • Reduce and reabsorb GHG emissions • Transfer of technology and knowledge • Changing immigration laws to offer new homes for climate migrants • Financing – not aid or charity model

  20. Framework for Climate Finance ObligationsUNFCCC – Article IV “Developed country parties shall provide such financial resources, including for the transfer of technology, needed by the developing country Parties to meet the agreed full incremental costs of…” • implementing measures to reduce emissions • management and conservation of sinks • preparing for adaptation • integrating climate change into other national policies • promote cooperative research, exchange of information and education and awareness-raising • developing inventories and reporting on emissions and sinks

  21. Framework for Climate Finance ObligationsUNFCCC – Article IV The extent to which developing country Parties will effectively implement their commitments under the Convention will depend on the effective implementation by developed country Parties of their commitments under the Convention related to financial resources (with economic and social development and poverty eradication as priorities)

  22. Framework for Climate Finance ObligationsUNFCCC Enhanced action on the provision of financial resources and investment means: • Adequate, predictable and sustainable financial resources and support • New and additional resources • Official and concessional funding • Incentives for implementation of national mitigation strategies and adaptation action • Innovative funding (especially for adaptation) • Mobilization of public and private sector funding and investment • Financial and technical support for capacity-building in the assessment of the costs and financial needs Bali Action Plan (2007)

  23. Defining “climate finance” Given the need, frameworks and obligations, how should we – from a climate justice movement perspective – define climate finance in our demands and advocacy?

  24. Defining “climate finance” No agreed definition but is commonly understood as covering the financial resources used to mitigate climate change and support adaptation to climate change impacts in developing countries. Contentious issues: • Geographical scope • Types of sources and instruments • Scope of activities • Incremental cost vs. investment capital • Gross vs. net flows • Additionality A useful distinction? climate-specific vs. climate-relevant finance

  25. Defining “climate finance” • Transfer of public resources from North to South to cover the costs of dealing with the long-term impacts of climate change. - IPS Glossary Climate Finance Terms • Article 4.3 commits “annex II” countries to provide “new and additional financial resources” for the “full incremental costs” of addressing climate change. – UNFCCC • Covers additional costs and is a catalyst to leverage private and public resources, open economic opportunities, and enhance development policy and finance. – World Bank

  26. Defining “climate finance” • ‘Climate-specific finance’: capital flows that target low-carbon or climate resilient development, both international public or private financing flows, also domestic; ‘Climate-relevant finance’: broader set of capital flows (public or private) that will influence (positively or negatively) emissions and/or vulnerability to climate change in developing countries. – Climate Policy Initiative • Describes funding that can be used to support climate change mitigation and adaptation activities. – German Ministry of Economic Cooperation & Development

  27. Defining “climate finance” • Funds that will be transferred to developing countries to cover their investments in mitigation and adaptation. – Global Economic and Governance Program, Oxford University • An effort to support developing countries by providing funding from the developed world to assist these countries in mitigation and adaptation, and to embark on green development paths, specifically those monies under discussion in the UNFCCC. – Conservation International • Born of the ‘polluter pays principle,’ the idea that industrialized countries have contributed the most to global warming and should therefore compensate developing nations for the costs they face as a result of climate change. – Transparency International

  28. Defining “climate finance” • How would you/r organization define ‘climate finance’? • What are some principles that climate finance should follow? • Given the obligations and principles, what do you think should (and shouldn’t) ‘count’ as climate finance?

  29. Climate justice principles • Obligatory, automatic, predictable public funding • New and additional resources • No loans or debt-creating instruments • No conditionalities or ‘tied aid’ • Obligatory – recognizes historical responsibility according to “Polluter Pays Principle” • Transparent and accountable • Uphold the right of peoples and countries of the South to determine the allocation and use of climate funds • Equity and non-discrimination of allocation across and within countries • Peoples participation and right to information

  30. Climate finance flows

  31. Challenges to tracking climate finance • Complex, lack of common definitions • Lack of common framework for measuring, reporting and verifying climate finance • Gaps in data and limited coordination in data gathering • Different goals of tracking efforts

  32. Climate Finance FLOWS PRIVATE MULTILATERAL World Bank, ADB etc BILATERAL as part of ODA within the context of UNFCCC DOMESTIC ALLOCATIONS South Countries DEVELOPING COUNTRIES

  33. Climate finance flows $97bn – but not to be confused with the $100bn of the Copenhagen Accord • Not all additional • includes some developing countries and domestic money • includes public and private sources • includes incremental costs and capital investment Source: Climate Policy Initiative

  34. Climate finance flows • Private funding: $55bn direct, $20bn ‘leveraged’ ($75bn) • Public finance: from national budgets ($21bn) • Voluntary carbon markets, philanthropic contributions: < $3bn Source: Climate Policy Initiative

  35. Climate finance flows $93bn out of $97bn is used for mitigation measures; only a very small share goes to adaptation efforts • Adaptation: public funds ($4.1bn) • Mitigation: private sector ($57bn), public funds ($25bn) Source: Climate Policy Initiative

  36. Climate Finance FLOWS PRIVATE MULTILATERAL World Bank, ADB etc BILATERAL as part of ODA within the context of UNFCCC DOMESTIC ALLOCATIONS South Countries DEVELOPING COUNTRIES

  37. within the context of the UNFCCCUN Framework Convention on Climate Change Green Climate Fund GCF Global Environment Facility (GEF) Adaptation Fund (AF) Special Climate Change Fund (SCCF) LDC Fund “Fast Start Finance” South Countries DEVELOPING COUNTRIES

  38. Copenhagen Accord (2009)Climate Finance Commitments Developed countries pledge • New and additional resources up to $30 billion 2010–2012 (Fast Start Financing) • Jointly mobilize $100 billion per year by 2020 (variety of public, private, bilateral, multilateral, and ‘alternative’ sources) Green Climate Fund – channel significant share of new multilateral funding for adaptation

  39. within the context of the UNFCCCUN Framework Convention on Climate Change Green Climate Fund GCF Global Environment Facility (GEF) Adaptation Fund (AF) Special Climate Change Fund (SCCF) LDC Fund “Fast Start Finance” South Countries DEVELOPING COUNTRIES

  40. Fast Start Finance

  41. Fast Start Finance Fast Start Finance commitment - $30bn “new and additional” finance between 2009-2012, balanced between support for adaptation and mitigation activities. • $28.22 billion pledged, $23.6 billion committed • Requested and/or budgeted = $16.23 billion • Delivered and implemented = not clear • Only 20% allocated for adaptation • Oxfam estimates <5% additional • Not prioritized for the most vulnerable developing countries • Mainly bilateral, not through international institutions • <50% in form of grants

  42. Fast Start Finance How do these examples of Fast Start Finance measure up when compared to our definition and principles of climate finance? What other information would you need in order to assess these projects or programs?

  43. within the context of the UNFCCCUN Framework Convention on Climate Change Green Climate Fund GCF Global Environment Facility (GEF) Adaptation Fund (AF) Special Climate Change Fund (SCCF) LDC Fund “Fast Start Finance” South Countries DEVELOPING COUNTRIES

  44. Green Climate Fund Established at 2010 UN climate summit in Cancun, Mexico under the guidance and accountable to the UNFCCC to deliver finance for low-emissions, climate-resilient sustainable development in developing countries. Host country: South Korea Board: 24 members of the GCF board, half developed/developing countries, accd to country groups Sub-funds: Windows for mitigation and adaptation, Private Sector Facility

  45. Green Climate Fund Trustee: World Bank interim, competitive bidding process for permanent Access: direct access for through national implementation entities working with National Designated Authorities; private sector also granted direct access Active Observers: 2 active observers from CSOs and private sector organizations (South & North) Sources: Fund does not have a fundraising role, and therefore will be ineffective without sufficient levels of financial flow, which have not yet been identified.

  46. Green Climate FundPressing Issues • Purpose - meet the needs of impacted communities, maximize profit/PS involvement, or maximize GHG reductions • Channel for CPH $100bn? Civil society says all public, additional contributions to the Fund, no loans or investments with expected returns • Business model – overemphasis on private/financial sector, governance structures, who benefits, will investments expect returns • World Bank role - interim trustee, technical asst, capacity building • Relationship with the UNFCCC

  47. Green Climate FundPressing Issues • Equitable and non-discriminatory allocation and disbursement of funds across countries • Relationship to national structures - respect for sovereignty and self-determination of countries and peoples • Civil society participation (esp impacted peoples) at all levels • Compliance with international principles and standards on human rights, environment, rights of indigenous peoples, women and others

  48. Sources of climate finance

  49. Criteria for fair & effective climate finance sources

  50. Sources of climate finance Financial transaction tax Carbon tax Fossil fuel subsidy reallocation Aviation fuel levy Maritime bunker fuel levy Assigned amount unit auctions Climate special drawing rights

More Related