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Show us the money: Developing world at COP27 seeks financing details

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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt, (Reuters) - Finance took centre stage at the COP27 climate talks yesterday, with U.N. experts publishing a list of projects worth $120 billion that investors could back to help poorer countries cut emissions and adapt to the impacts of global warming.

A $3 billion water transfer project between Lesotho and Botswana and a $10 million plan to improve the public water system in Mauritius were among dozens of projects listed, including 19 in Africa.

“We can now show that a meaningful pipeline of investible opportunit­ies does exist across the economies that need finance most,” Mahmoud Mohieldin, one of the U.N. appointed experts, known as U.N. Climate Change High-Level Champions, said in a statement to accompany the report.

In an effort to answer the argument by private sector financiers that it’s too risky to invest more in emerging markets, the experts, who help the COP host-government­s engage with business, pulled together a list of projects that could be funded more quickly.

After a year of meetings with stakeholde­rs around the world, they released the initial list so that banks and others can assess the projects.

“We now need a creative collaborat­ion between project developers and public, private and concession­ary finance, to unlock this investment potential and turn assets into flows,” said Mohieldin, HighLevel Champion for COP27.

However, another report released on Tuesday suggested that developing countries would need to secure $1 trillion in external financing every year by 2030, and then match that with their own funds, in order to meet the world’s goal of preventing runaway climate change.

By contrast, the world’s leading developmen­t banks lent $51 billion to poorer countries in 2021, with private investors contributi­ng just $13 billion, a recent report from the lenders said.

Among a clutch of separate deals announced on Wednesday, Egypt said it had signed partnershi­ps for its Nexus of Water-Food-Energy (NWFE) programme to support the implementa­tion of climate projects with investment­s worth $15 billion.

France and Germany also signed loan agreements to extend 300 million euros ($300.69 million) in concession­al financing to South Africa to support its shift away from coal-fired power.

Italy, Britain and Sweden were among donors to pledge more than $350 million to finance nature-based solutions to the climate crisis in countries including Egypt, Fiji, Kenya and Malawi.

A group of over 85 African insurers also pledged to provide $14 billion of cover to help the continent’s most vulnerable communitie­s deal with climate disaster risks such as floods and droughts.

U.S. climate envoy John Kerry announced creation of a carbon offset plan, dubbed the Energy Transition Accelerato­r, that aims to help developing countries raise cash to fund their transition away from fossil fuels.

Getting money to low- and middleinco­me countries so they can build infrastruc­ture such as renewable energy plants has long been a focus for the U.N. climate talks. But progress has been slow.

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