The Manila Times

Money talks at One Planet Summit in Paris

- ‘Green financial flows’ AgenceFran­çaisedeDév­eloppement IPS

PARIS: As funding to combat climate change has lagged behind lofty words, the One Planet Summit in France earlier this month invited government­s and business leaders to put money on the table.

- ber of internatio­nal pledges—both for investment in green energy and divestment from fossil fuels—as various sectors responded to the call from French President Emmanuel Macron for urgent action.

“We’re not going fast enough,” Macron said at the December 12 summit, which he co-convened with the United Nations and the World Bank. “Some countries present will see their territorie­s disappear. We all have to move forward… The time is now.”

French multinatio­nal insurance company AXA announced that it plans to have 12 billion euros in green investment­s by 2020 and that it would divest 2.4 billion euros from certain coal-company activities.

World Bank funding projects

Meanwhile, the World Bank Group ( WBG) highlighte­d its funding of projects in India for street lighting; in West Africa to tackle “coastal erosion, flooding and climate change adaptation”; in Indonesia regarding geothermal­power developmen­t; and with the Global Covenant of Mayors in a new “Cities Resilience Program” (CRP).

“Over the next three years, the CRP will leverage $4.5 billion in World Bank loans to catalyze billions in public and private capital for techni and credit enhancemen­t,” said World Bank Group president Jim Yong Kim.

He said that the program would essentiall­y “act as an investment banker for cities to structure programs to address their vulnerabil­ities to climate change.”

Kim also announced that the upstream oil and gas after 2019, but that in “exceptiona­l circumstan­ces,” considerat­ion would be given to such of “energy access for the poor.”

The bank said it was on track to meet its target of 28 percent of its lending going to climate action by 2020.

Public relations exercise?

With these and other announceme­nts, the One Planet Summit, held two years after the signing of the landmark Paris Agreement, aimed to add momentum to the push adaptation and mitigation, said some observers, while others termed it a public-relations exercise.

The summit brought together heads of state, local government representa­tives, non-government­al organizati­ons – and schoolchil­dren. Journalist­s were out in force, alongside United Nations delegation­s, at the Seine Musicale venue, an imposing new arts center on an island in the river Seine, just outside Paris

Government leaders arrived by boat with UN Secretary-General António Guterres, Macron and Kim, the co-convenors, for a packed afternoon of panel discussion­s and speeches, following morning events.

“Technologi­cal progress has already revealed the falsehood that responding to climate change is bad for the economy,” said Guterres. “Finance could be, should be, and will be a decisive factor.”

Some of the drive at the summit came from small island states, which have been battered by recent hurricanes and other disasters.

Caribbean representa­tives announced the launch of a $8-billion investment plan to create the world’s involved include the Inter-American Developmen­t Bank, the World Bank, the Caribbean Developmen­t Bank and private groups, forming a “Caribbean Climate-Smart Coalition.”

through the systemic obstacles that stop finance flowing to climatesma­rt investment­s,” the Caribbean Developmen­t Bank said.

a participan­t at the summit, spoke of the vulnerabil­ity of the region, emphasizin­g that all the islands are suffering from the impacts of climate change. He said that Haiti was in a “very fragile zone.”

American actor Sean Penn, also present, said he had got involved in helping Haiti to rebuild after the 2010 earthquake that devastated the country, and he said more

“I call on all those gathered to stand with Haiti,” he urged.

Meanwhile, Canada and the World Bank Group said they would support small island developing states to expand their renewable-energy infrastruc­ture to achieve greater access to energy and to decrease pollution. In side events around the summit, groups such as the Internatio­nal Developmen­t Finance Club (which groups 23 internatio­nal, national and regional developmen­t banks from across the world), highlighte­d

The group said that in 2016, IDFC members made new commitment­s an increase of $30 billion from 2015.

The eve of the summit, Dec. 11, was titled Climate Finance Day, and it was also the 20th anniversar­y of the Kyoto Protocol. Patricia Espinosa, the executive secretary of UN Climate Change (UNFCCC), told journalist­s that the long years of negotiatio­ns had provided a framework in which all sectors of society could take action, as government­s “cannot do it alone.”

She said there was a growing sense of urgency, especially after recent extreme weather events that had seen some communitie­s “losing everything they have built throughout their lives.” More support was needed for adapta

At the summit, the

– an IDFC member — signed accords with Mauritius, Niger, Tunisia and the Comorosas part of the agency’s Adapt’Action Facility.

With financing of 30 million euros over four years, Adapt’Action seeks to “accompany 15 developing countries that are particular­ly vulnerable to climate change impacts, in the implementa­tion of the Paris Agreement regarding adaptation,” the agency stated.

- pellingly of problems that included cited as an example of France not doing enough for its former colonies, and political analysts question whether that will change under Macron.

The European Union meanwhile said that its External Investment Plan (EIP) is set to mobilize some 44 billion euros to “partner countries in Africa and the EU Neighborho­od” by 2020.

Among its goals, the EIP aims to “contribute to the UN’s sustainabl­e developmen­t goals while tackling some of the root causes of migration,” according to the EU.

US absence

at the summit said action by countries in the region were “encouragin­g.” Heads of state included the prime ministers of Bangladesh and Fiji, who spoke of their climate initiative­s. Fiji’s Prime Minister Frank Bainimaram­a emerging states to offer a green bond.

The internatio­nal nature of the summit made the US absence even more noticeable. As US President Donald Trump had announced earlier this year that the country would withdraw from the Paris Agreement, he

Other American climate figures were present, however, such as businessma­n and former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, former California governor and actor Arnold Schwarzene­gger, Microsoft founder Bill Gates and former Secretary of State John Kerry.

Bloomberg said that around the world, businesses were taking “responsibl­e” action because investors want to put their money in environmen­tally friendly companies.

Still, for some NGOs, not enough is being done, and the summit was more of what they had heard before.

“If government­s and business are sincere in their commitment to the goals of the Paris Agreement, they and harmful energy projects around the world and would instead accept their responsibi­lity for providing change instead of letting business dictate the agenda,” said Meena Raman of Third World Network.

 ??  ?? Patricia Espinosa, executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, at the One Planet Summit in Paris.
Patricia Espinosa, executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, at the One Planet Summit in Paris.

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