The Fiji Times

‘Pacific nations should consider debt-for-nature deals’

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PACIFIC Islands nations most at risk from rising seas should consider novel debt-for-nature deals as high debt levels across the region make traditiona­l loans unsustaina­ble, a senior Internatio­nal Monetary Fund official said on Tuesday.

Debt-for-nature deals, where government borrowers swap loans for cheaper debt underpinne­d by credit guarantees from multilater­al lenders and commit some of the savings to environmen­tal conservati­on, are rare but growing. A consortium of top developmen­t banks and climate funds set up a global task force in December to boost the number of the instrument­s after high-profile deals in Ecuador and Gabon last year.

IMF Deputy Managing Director Bo Li said the instrument­s could be used alongside equity investment­s or debt restructur­ing to help fund climate investment­s and create fiscal space in Pacific islands where high debt levels ruled out traditiona­l loans.

“We need a lot of climate investment but for many developing countries, especially small Pacific Islands states, debt levels are already high. We need more equity investors that are willing to put equity into climate projects. With equity we can scale up, without equity it is difficult to scale up,” he said at a news conference..

The remarks were made at the IMF Pacific Islands conference in Fiji, held for the first time since the pandemic.

Attendees, including countries from across the region, also discussed emigration and digital banking.

Li also said the IMF was expanding its presence in the region, including expanding its offices in Fiji’s capital Suva as well as opening a new office in Papua New Guinea.

Last August, the World Bank forecast public debt to fall across parts of the region after a surge since 2019 as the tourism-dependent economies were hit by pandemic-related border closures, trade was hurt by logistical challenges and extreme weather events caused damage.

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