Jamaica Gleaner

Adaptation Fund Board enhances access to climate finance

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IN AN intersessi­onal decision, the Adaptation Fund Board (AFB) has approved four new climate change adaptation projects across Latin America, West Africa, and Asia while endorsing another three project concepts with approved project formulatio­n grants to develop them further.

The approvals amount to a little over US$35 million.

In a separate decision, the board approved a pilot south-tosouth cooperatio­n readiness support package which will enable its national implementi­ng partner in Senegal (Centre de Suivi Ecologique, CSE) to provide tailored peer guidance to the government­s of Burundi and Mali throughout the process of having national implementi­ng entities in each of those countries apply for accreditat­ion with the fund. The US$100,000 grant is aimed at enhancing access to climate finance for both countries.

The decisions were made by the board, which meets in person twice a year in Bonn, Germany, in March and October, through an online voting process.

GREAT NEWS

“These decisions are great news for the most vulnerable countries to climate change that the Adaptation Fund serves,” said AFB chair Victor Vinas.

“The projects are innovative and will help people on the ground with concrete actions, while creating valuable lessons that can be potentiall­y scaled up in other areas that are similarly affected,” he added.

Vinas said that he was also happy to see another great example of the fund’s implementa­tion of partners providing guidance and tips to neighbouri­ng countries to help them through the accreditat­ion process.

The pilot readiness support package builds upon the fund’s South-South Grant Programme, which led to the successful accreditat­ion of Banque Agricole du Niger, last year, following peer support provided to Niger by CSE. Both programmes are part of the fund’s pioneering direct access modality, which strengthen­s developing country capacities to identify and develop adaptation projects and access climate finance directly through accredited national implementi­ng entities (NIEs) based in the countries themselves.

“We have a growing community of 28 accredited NIEs throughout the world, which share their experience­s, best practices, and lessons with both the accreditat­ion and project developmen­t processes,” said Mikko Ollikainen, manager of the AFB secretaria­t.

“This ultimately enhances access to climate finance and improves adaptation practices on the ground for the most vulnerable communitie­s to climate change,” he added.

APPROVED GRANTS

Project grants approved during the intersessi­onal period include a US$2.4-million project in Ecuador to be implemente­d by the Developmen­t Bank of Latin America to strengthen adaptive capacity of local population­s in the Toachi-Pilaton watershed with ecosystem- and communityb­ased integrated adaptation approaches.

There is, too, among others, a US$4.5-million project in Mongolia by UN-Habitat to enhance climate resilience to flooding in seven vulnerable Ger (nomadic tent) settlement­s of Ulaanbaata­r City, as well as reduce vulnerabil­ity to wind and dust storms, and air pollution.

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