The Fiji Times

World Bank revises policy

- REUTERS

WASHINGTON/BRUSSELS A revised World Bank policy on climate change commits to making financing decisions in line with efforts to limit global warming, but stops short of promising to halt funding of fossil fuels, according to a draft bank presentati­on seen by Reuters.

The World Bank, the biggest provider of climate finance to developing countries, is finalising a new five-year climate action plan amid growing political momentum in Britain, the United States and other countries for ending public financing of high-emission fossil fuel projects.

In a sharp reversal from the former Trump administra­tion, the United States, the bank’s largest shareholde­r, is drafting plans under the new

Biden administra­tion to end US financing for internatio­nal fossil fuel projects.

An internal presentati­on outlining the World Bank’s new climate plan, seen by Reuters and due to be discussed by the bank’s board on Thursday, commits to “align its financing flows with the objectives of the Paris Agreement” by July 2023.

The plan is not final and must still be approved by the bank’s board.

The World Bank declined to comment on the presentati­on.

The Paris Agreement, adopted in 2015 by nearly 200 countries, pledges to stop global average temperatur­es from rising more than 2 degrees Celsius above preindustr­ial levels, and aims to cap warming at 1.5 degrees. Scientists

say meeting the 1.5 degree goal, which would prevent the most catastroph­ic climate impacts, would require the world’s net greenhouse emissions to drop to zero by 2050.

The bank’s sister organisati­ons, the Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n and Multilater­al Investment Guarantee Agency, will align 85 per cent of their direct financing with the Paris Agreement by July 2023 and 100 per cent by July 2025, the presentati­on said.

Meeting the goals of the Paris pact will require trillions of dollars of investment­s to shift quickly away from burning fossil fuels for energy, and expand renewable electricit­y along with low-carbon transport and manufactur­ing technology.

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 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? Father Simon Khoury looks out as he opens the door of a room under renovation at his church in Kafr Kana, in northern Israel.
Picture: REUTERS Father Simon Khoury looks out as he opens the door of a room under renovation at his church in Kafr Kana, in northern Israel.

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