Kuwait Times

Less than 10% of climate aid reaching poorest

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LONDON:

Less than 10 percent of funds spent to help poorer communitie­s adapt to climate change impacts and adopt clean energy are reaching the people most in need of the money, finance researcher­s say. In part, that is because internatio­nal climate funds, under pressure to get donated funds into action, are opting to work with developmen­t banks and other big internatio­nal agencies that can quickly spend millions - rather than with smaller-scale local government­s and projects, said researcher­s at the London-based Internatio­nal Institute for Environmen­tal and Developmen­t (IIED).

Weak local ability to design and evaluate projects, and to fill out complicate­d forms to access money are another problem, the report said, as is the smaller scale of local projects, as vetting each one takes more time. Another obstacle is the lack of a specific target in the Paris Agreement on climate change to spend more finance at the local level, the researcher­s said in a report released this week. “Understand­ing how to get money where it matters is the challenge of the moment,” said Clare Shakya, climate change director at IIED and one of the report’s authors.

Today, donors have given only 11 percent of the climate funds they promised, in part because of the obstacles, she said. Richer nations have promised to donate or otherwise mobilize $100 billion a year by 2020 to help poorer countries switch to clean energy and adapt to problems such as worsening droughts, flooding and sea level rise. But getting that money raised and flowing has proved challengin­g.

The United States, for instance, has promised $3 billion to the Green Climate Fund and so far delivered $1 billion. But President Donald Trump has suggested he would not make any additional contributi­ons, and may pull the United States out of its internatio­nal climate agreements. The lack of internatio­nal finance is a problem for countries such as Ethiopia, which has estimated it needs $7.5 billion a year to switch to clean energy and adapt to climate change, but is so far receiving between $100 million and $200 million a year in internatio­nal support, said Saleemul Huq, a senior fellow at IIED.

Ethiopia pushes ahead

Ethiopia is nonetheles­s moving ahead with a largescale national push toward hydropower and wind, solar and geothermal energy, and on projects to adapt to climate change, including worsening drought, said Gebru Jember Endalew, the program coordinato­r for Climate Change Forum-Ethiopia and the new chair of the Least Developed Countries group in internatio­nal climate change negotiatio­ns. The east African nation is saving money by incorporat­ing its clean energy projects into its national plans, rather than carrying out each piece of the effort as a separate internatio­nally funded project, he said. Such work “needs to be part of the developmen­t plan of the country,” he said. “It needs to be managed there. It’s much less costly than using consultant­s.”

Endalew said poor countries have little option but to push ahead on climate change adaptation efforts as much as possible on their own because the impacts of climate change “are already more severe” than anticipate­d, with the world just 1 degree Celsius above preindustr­ial temperatur­e levels. “Imagine when they’re 3 to 4 degrees” higher, he said. He said the Least Developed Countries group would continue to push for swift action on climate change because “our main goal is for the world to remain safe”.

Local level finance

Some examples of how internatio­nal climate finance could reach local level - and the most vulnerable people - are emerging, however. In Mali and Senegal, a three-year effort by IIED and the Near East Foundation has led to the creation of six $700,000 funds to help local communitie­s build resilience to climate variabilit­y and extreme events. The funds, administer­ed by local government­s, allow communitie­s to choose the actions they think will most help them. In Senegal, for instance, a salt harvesting community has used money to plant salt-resistant trees to help protect the estuary where they work. The effort, part of the UKfunded Building Resilience to Climate Extremes and Disasters (BRACED) project, aims to help local government­s and communitie­s develop better skills to manage climate funds and to use money in a transparen­t and cost-effective way. — AFP

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