Millennium Post

Roadblocks to climate action

Green Climate Fund is not a donor-driven organisati­on but a vehicle for the delivery of finance from developed to developing countries

- TARUN GOPALKRISH­NAN

Yet another roadblock has surfaced in the way of implementi­ng the Paris Agreement. This time it’s the Green Climate Fund.

Discussion­s over raising new money from developed countries came to a head in July since there was no agreement and the fund’s director had also resigned. While it still has $2.8 billion left to disburse, which will now be stretched out until an agreement is reached, that amount pales in comparison to the amount of money developing countries need. Pending project applicatio­ns to the fund are worth $1 billion, and the long-term target is to make $100 billion available each year by 2020. That target was set in 2015. The amount committed to the fund in all its existence totals to $10.3 billion (not all of which has been given).

Under the numbers lies a fairly old morality play. After all, the original sin of the fund was to try and combine the financial acumen of institutio­ns like the World Bank with the equitable political participat­ion of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) process. The board of the GCF is required to have an equal number of members from developing and developed countries (12 each). So the fund is not a charity or—as the lexicon of multilater­al governance would prefer—a “donor-driven organisati­on”. It is a vehicle for the delivery of finance from developed to developing countries, an obligation that is grounded in the UNFCCC’S promise of common but differenti­ated responsibi­lity.

The prospect of delivering on that promise has never been an attractive one for certain developed countries, and the briefest history of climate finance will reveal the resulting litany of dodges and obfuscatio­ns. Between the green-washing of developmen­t assistance and the boundless optimism regarding the private sector’s role in climate finance, figuring out whether ‘donors’ are meeting their commitment­s is a task designed to confound the most creative accountant.

So it is a risible reflection of our times that the GCF process is being held up over concerns of accountabi­lity and transparen­cy in the way funds are being used. Developed countries insist on an external performanc­e review of disburseme­nts made so far, as well as the finalisati­on of a grabbag of internal fund policies, including on issues as diverse as gender, co-financing, and voting rules. Both these demands are explained as a desire for ‘impact’, which can be used to justify funding the board to taxpayers in developed countries.

On the face of it, this looks quite similar to comments by the last director of GCF (Hela Cheikhrouh­ou of Tunisia), who expressed concerns that, if the fund “became all things to all people, we would have very limited impact in the greater scheme of things”. Context, however, is everything. Cheikhrouh­ou was particular­ly concerned about GCF money being used for pre-existing renewable infrastruc­ture projects. That is a very different thing from, say, the US, Canada, Sweden and Japan opposing a project last year to drought-proof communitie­s in Ethiopia because it was not sufficient­ly different from developmen­t work. Further complicati­ng matters, other commentato­rs have been critical of the fund for considerin­g hydropower proposals and planning partnershi­ps with private entities heavily invested in fossil fuels.

In short, impact means different things to different parties. This is why review and evaluation is a separate ongoing question being considered by the board, as is the developmen­t of internal policies. Improving those processes is in the interest of all parties, but it is certainly not a discussion which benefits from the kind of armtwistin­g that is currently on display. What is the implicatio­n here? Is it that if previous funds have not been used “properly”, this somehow lessens the obvious and ever-increasing need for climate finance? This is a negotiatin­g tactic far removed from any notion of collective responsibi­lity.

But if these are the terms of negotiatio­n, then so be it. Accountabi­lity and transparen­cy should go both ways. In exchange for setting a timetable to reach consensus on internal policies and to conduct an external performanc­e review, developed countries can commit to a timetable to replenish the fund to comply with Paris target of $100 billion per year, exclusivel­y through public grants, starting this year. Making the GCF the primary vehicle for the Paris finance commitment will at least move us past the pathologic­al lack of transparen­cy in tracking climate finance.

If some actual multilater­al good faith is on display, impact will not be far behind. Meanwhile, there is no justificat­ion for putting all ambition on hold.

In exchange for setting a timetable to reach consensus on internal policies and conducting an external performanc­e review, developed countries can commit to a timetable to replenish the fund to comply with the Paris target of $100 billion per year

(The views expressed are strictly personal)

 ?? (Representa­tional Image) ?? Green Climate Fund’s effective functionin­g is necessary in the wake of ever-increasing environmen­tal concern
(Representa­tional Image) Green Climate Fund’s effective functionin­g is necessary in the wake of ever-increasing environmen­tal concern
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India