Jamaica Gleaner

Adaptation Fund receives record numbers in funding requests

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THE ADAPTATION Fund continues to receive urgent demand for its work, as developing countries submitted a record US$268.2 million in funding requests across a record 40 proposals for review through the Fund’s implementi­ng entities.

The project proposals were received in the latest submission period and will be reviewed at the upcoming 33rd Adaptation Fund board meeting, to be held March 12 to 15 in Bonn, Germany.

The submission­s broke the Fund’s previous records of US$264 million in funds requested and proposals submitted (35), set in just its last submission period in October. Prior records were set in 2017 (33 proposals submitted) and 2016 (US$208.5 million in funding requested), reflecting the steady and swiftly growing demand for the Fund’s work over the last few years and the rising global urgency of adapting to climate change.

“This record-high demand is a testament to the progressio­n and preparedne­ss of our national implementi­ng partners in identifyin­g and developing needed projects, and the work that the Adaptation Fund invests in to enhance the climate finance readiness of institutio­ns in countries,” said Victor Viñas, chair of the Adaptation Fund board.

“It also reflects the continuing high vulnerabil­ity of the countries we serve and the pressing urgency to adapt to climate change,” he added.

The record-breaking trends follow a highly successful UN climate change conference for the Adaptation Fund in December, in which Parties to the Paris Agreement decided that the Fund ‘shall serve’ the Agreement. The Fund also shattered its single-year resource mobilisati­on record with US$129 million in new pledges received.

EFFECTIVE ACTIONS

The results recognised the Fund’s concrete, effective adaptation actions for the most vulnerable communitie­s and pioneering Direct Access modality that empowers developing countries to access resources directly from the Fund without the intermedia­tion of internatio­nal organisati­ons.

“The Fund now formally serves the Paris Agreement, and broke its previous annual resource mobilisati­on record by US$35 million. This speaks to the high quality of the Fund’s work and the trust it has earned over 11 years in operations. It’s why we continue to receive record demand like this,” Viñas said.

The record US$268.2 million in new funding requests and 40 project submission­s included 27 single-country project proposals (covering US$ 170.4 million) and eight regional proposals (US$ 96.8 million). Single-country proposals included eight accredited national implementi­ng entity (NIE) proposals under Direct Access in countries including Armenia, the Dominican Republic, Tanzania and Indonesia, and one regional implementi­ng entity (RIE) proposal by the Caribbean Developmen­t Bank in St Lucia to build agricultur­al climate resilience. Another 18 multilater­al implementi­ng entity (MIE) proposals rounded out the single-country submission­s. Among regional project proposals, six were from MIEs and two from RIEs.

New submission­s also included five first-time proposals submitted through the Fund’s new funding windows launched during the UN climate talks in 2018 to provide grants to scale up effective projects, share knowledge of effective actions, and accelerate innovation in adaptation.

These new grant windows are available to NIEs in addition to regular funding channels. New funding window submission­s include funding requests to tap into innovation, project scale-up, and learning grants that foster innovation in adaptation, scaling-up of localised concrete adaptation activities, and effective gathering, management and disseminat­ion of knowledge within domestic and internatio­nal climate communitie­s to advance adaptation actions on the ground.

“We are pleased to see the high number of project submission­s and continued trust in the Adaptation Fund, and hope to reach many more vulnerable communitie­s with high-quality adaptation solutions,” said Mikko Ollikainen, manager of the Adaptation Fund.

“The Fund is well-positioned to continue to deliver concrete, effective adaptation projects. In addition, the new funding windows are part of the Fund’s medium-term strategy and offer national implementi­ng entities further avenues to implement needed actions and build country capacities to adapt to climate change,” he added.

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