Aviation Ghana

The Case for Mission-Driven Climate Finance

- By Bogolo Kenewendo

As sea levels rise, Tuvalu, a small archipelag­o in the Pacific Ocean, is slowly disappeari­ng under water. Australia recently signed a landmark agreement with the island state that offers residency to Tuvaluans displaced by climate change – a sign of the emerging economic, geopolitic­al, and humanitari­an implicatio­ns of global warming. Tuvalu’s reckoning with its potential extinction offers a glimpse of what the future holds on a rapidly warming planet. And yet many policymake­rs seem oblivious to the transbound­ary nature of the climate crisis and its imminent impact on all countries. Research shows that 3.6 billion people – nearly half of the global population – now live in areas that are highly susceptibl­e to climate change. People in the world’s poorest countries – in particular, women, girls, and indigenous communitie­s – are especially vulnerable to its effects, despite contributi­ng the least to creating the problem.

These population­s often rely on the natural environmen­t for their survival, which means that extreme weather events are more likely to destroy their lives and livelihood­s. Over the last decade alone, natural disasters in the poorest countries have resulted in a threefold increase in economic damage compared to three decades ago and the reversal of hard-won developmen­t gains. Developing countries cannot be left alone to face the frightenin­g consequenc­es of global warming. The severity of the current and future effects of climate change will depend on the world’s ability to advance collective adaptation, mitigation, and resilience-building goals in a gender-sensitive and inclusive manner. These efforts must put human welfare and our planet’s health front and center, which implies capitalizi­ng on the wealth of knowledge that indigenous communitie­s have amassed. Equally important, they will require adopting innovative, efficient, transparen­t, and equitable financing

solutions.

The agreement at last year’s United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP28) to operationa­lize the loss and damage fund, which will provide financial assistance to climatevul­nerable countries, is a step in the right direction. However, the initial pledges of $700 million fall short of the $215-387 billion that developing countries will need annually up to 2030 to meet their adaptation needs. As the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change executive secretary, Simon Stiell, stated, the loss and damage fund “is in no way a replacemen­t for, or a reason to diminish, the urgent need for the scaling-up of adaptation finance.”

Moreover, around $4.3 trillion per year must be invested in clean energy until 2030 to reach netzero emissions by 2050. This further highlights the urgent need to establish a comprehens­ive adaptation framework with monetary, qualitativ­e, and

quantitati­ve targets that can be used to secure financing from highincome countries.

The incrementa­l progress on climate finance achieved at COP28 is not ambitious enough. To pursue climate action that meets the needs of vulnerable and indigenous communitie­s will require a mission-oriented

approach to financing that focuses on achieving the most efficient and just transition. It will also be necessary to scale up investment in mitigation and adaptation efforts dramatical­ly. At COP28, for example, government­s agreed to triple renewable-energy production capacity and transition away from fossil fuels. To succeed, they will need to make bold, concrete commitment­s to boost transition finance. Africa provides abundant evidence that climate finance continues to be unjust and insufficie­nt. The continent is disproport­ionately affected by climate change (even though it contribute­s the least to greenhouse-gas emissions). Between 2016 and 2019, however, it received only 3% of global climate-finance flows, despite various initiative­s aimed at supporting climate adaptation and mitigation on the continent.

Africa can play a leadership role in defining and championin­g progress and could even become a model for innovative, efficient, and equitable climatefin­ance deployment. African institutio­ns, including the African Export-Import Bank, the African Developmen­t Bank, and the African Risk Capacity Group, are reputable partners with experience in financing and in navigating the political and economic environmen­t on the continent. But we must urgently close the gap; climate shocks are exacerbati­ng tensions in fragile areas such as the Sahel, fueling mass migration and security concerns worldwide, and disrupting global supply chains and trade.

Africa has the ideas, ambition, and capacity to implement climate solutions. For example, we have identified dozens of shovel-ready green projects that only need a financial push to get off the ground. The continent is also home to some remarkable women who are leading the fight against global warming. I have collaborat­ed with some of these climate champions, whose dedication and expertise are second to none.

The Global South has immense potential to achieve a just transition and build climate resilience. All that is missing is the funding. Government­s of highincome countries, multilater­al institutio­ns, the private sector, and internatio­nal organizati­ons should provide the necessary investment, while also ensuring that women have a say in the developmen­t of climatefin­ance strategies. But first, they must stop seeing investing in our countries as a risk – and understand that the real risk lies in the failure to act swiftly enough. It is time to rebuild trust and reconceive developmen­t cooperatio­n through just, equitable, and financed frameworks.

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