Manila Bulletin

World Bank group ups funds to tackle ‘existentia­l threat’ of climate change

- By MEGAN ROWLING

KATOWICE, Poland (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – The World Bank will give equal weight to curbing emissions and helping poor countries deal with the "disastrous effects" of a warming world as it steps up investment­s to tackle climate change in the first half of the 2020s, it said.

The bank and its two sister organizati­ons plan to double their investment­s in climate action to about $200 billion from 2021-2025, with a boost in support for efforts to adapt to higher temperatur­es, wilder weather and rising seas.

The latest figures on internatio­nal climate funding for developing nations show barely a quarter has been going to adaptation, with the bulk backing clean energy adoption and more efficient energy use, aimed at cutting planet-warming emissions.

"We live in a new normal in which disasters are more severe and more frequent," World Bank CEO Kristalina Georgieva told the Thomson Reuters Foundation at UN climate talks in Poland.

"We have to prioritize adaptation everywhere, but especially in the most vulnerable parts of the world," she said, pointing to the Horn of Africa and the Sahel, coastal regions and small island states.

Of the $100 billion the World Bank plans to make available in the five years from mid-2020, half would go to adaptation measures, it said.

Those include building more robust homes, schools and infrastruc­ture, preparing farmers for climate shifts, managing water wisely and protecting people's incomes through social safety nets, Georgieva added.

The World Bank said the money would also improve weather forecasts, and provide early warning and climate informatio­n services for 250 million people in 30 developing countries.

"Climate change is an existentia­l threat to the world’s poorest and most vulnerable. These new targets demonstrat­e how seriously we are taking this issue," World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim said in a statement.

From 2014-2018, the World Bank spent nearly $21 billion on adaptation, which accounted for just over 40 percent of the climate benefits generated by the institutio­n's funding overall.

Former UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said the bank's pledge to use half its climate finance to find solutions to deal with changing weather patterns was "important".

"Climate change is already having a disastrous impact on people right around the world and we are nearing the point of no return," said Ban. "So we must take bold action to adapt to the reality of the threat facing us all."

A recently launched Global Commission on Adaptation, which Ban chairs with Georgieva and Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, aims to put political muscle behind efforts to keep people safer in a hotter world.

The remaining $100 billion in promised World Bank Group funding will come from the Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n (IFC), which works with the private sector, and the Multilater­al Investment Guarantee Agency, as well as private capital the group raises.

"There are literally trillions of dollars of opportunit­ies for the private sector to invest in projects that will help save the planet," said IFC chief Philippe Le Houérou.

The IFC will identify opportunit­ies, use tools to make investment­s less risky, and attract private-sector cash in areas including renewable energy, green buildings, clean transport in cities and urban waste management, he added.

Marshall Islands President Hilda Heine said her low-lying Pacific island state was struggling with fiercer storms and increasing seawater flooding that is contaminat­ing fresh water with salt.

The new World Bank funds would "help to build resilience, make us safer, and improve lives", she said.

"Global action needs to accelerate before it is too late," she added.

The "Big Shift Global" coalition of aid agencies and climate justice campaigner­s said the World Bank Group's new commitment signalled that developing countries should receive far more support to tackle climate change.

But it overlooked "the desperate need to radically scale up financing for off-grid renewable energy" to help the poorest gain access to electricit­y, they added.

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