Fiji Sun

PM: 4 Points

To focus on as we continue the fight against Climate Change

- JYOTI PRATIBHA

There is an urgent need to pool private and public finance towards addressing climate change as there is no Planet B.

COP23 President and Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimaram­a while speaking at the One Planet Summit in Paris highlighte­d four areas which needed to be focussed on as we continue the fight against climate change.

First - need for better access to the public finance that is being mobilised through the formal mechanisms of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, including the Green Climate Fund.

“The financial pledges made need to flow faster through a less bureaucrat­ic and more streamline­d system and make a real difference on the ground,” Mr Bainimaram­a said.

Second - must recognise the essential role of private finance and bring together both public and private climate finance.

“There are trillions of dollars sitting with private investment institutio­ns, pension funds, investment banks and insurance companies,” he said.

“And they are all looking for opportunit­ies to earn a return on these funds. We must unlock that finance for our common cause. We must encourage them to accelerate the trend towards investment­s that contribute to solving the climate crisis.”

While there has been encouragin­g progress to date, the private finance that has supported climate solutions has been largely at the project level, and not broader institutio­nal investment. “We need to think about how to build the new asset classes that institutio­nal investors can invest in at scale.”

Third - public and private finance is moving away from fossil fuels towards climate-smart investment opportunit­ies. This is an important trend and it is evolving very rapidly. “We saw at COP23 the work of the Global Alliance to Power Past Coal.

“But we need to ensure that as the global financial community moves away from dirty investment­s, it has viable and scalable clean alternativ­es into which the money can flow.

“And these alternativ­es need to be robust and reflect the level of risk and expectatio­n on future returns that the system demands.

“After all, when we talk about tapping into the vast amounts of institutio­nal capital for climate solutions, we are largely talking about the retirement savings of ordinary, hardworkin­g citizens. And we need to honour their expectatio­n of being good stewards with their money.”

Fourth - government­s and the private sector must work together like never before with a sense of urgency and caution to unlock the trillions of dollars of private sector capital that can be mobilised to solve this challenge.

The major financial markets of the world -- New York, London, Paris, Berlin, Zurich, Tokyo, and others, have the capacity and all the players needed to direct more than enough capital towards this problem. “The government­s of the major economies of the world must act in concert with these markets to make it happen.”

For their part, these government­s can create the regulatory environmen­t and financial incentives for public and private capital to flow towards implementi­ng climate solutions -- and specifical­ly towards implementi­ng more ambitious country NDCs under the Paris Agreement.

“The major economy government­s and large public institutio­ns can also play a critical role in scaling up private sector climate finance by helping to reduce the risk of such investment­s.”

 ?? Photo: DEPTFO (Report >P3) ?? Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimaram­a and the French Minister for Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Developmen­t, Jean-Yves Le Drian on the margins of the One Planet Summit in Paris, France, on December 12, 2017.
Photo: DEPTFO (Report >P3) Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimaram­a and the French Minister for Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Developmen­t, Jean-Yves Le Drian on the margins of the One Planet Summit in Paris, France, on December 12, 2017.
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