Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

The Global South’s debt crisis is thwarting climate ambition

- By By María Fernanda Espinosa and Rishikesh Ram Bhandary Project Syndicate, Exclusivel­y to the Sunday Times in Sri Lanka

MADRID/BOSTON – This year’s United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP28), currently underway in Dubai, will be decisive for the Loss and Damage Fund establishe­d at COP27, because government­s must agree on how the new fund will be operationa­lised and financed. But equally important is the first global stocktake (GST), which will assess countries’ progress toward achieving the goals of the 2015 Paris climate agreement.

A preliminar­y report on the GST, released in October, is underwhelm­ing, while the most recent World Energy Outlook from the Internatio­nal Energy Agency found that global carbon dioxide levels have yet to peak. This implies that if we want to achieve our climate targets, we must fast-track the clean-energy transition and urgently slash green-housegas emissions. But while this will undoubtedl­y require closing the massive climate financing gap, policymake­rs must overcome widespread sovereign-debt distress.

The Debt Relief for a Green and Inclusive Recovery Project, using data from the UN Developmen­t Programme and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, estimates that 69 countries need immediate debt relief, of which 61 have at least $812 billion in debt that must be restructur­ed across all creditor classes. Moreover, an IMF working paper calculated that only seven of 29 low-income countries that submitted estimates of their adaptation needs had sufficient fiscal space to meet those needs and achieve their emissions-reduction targets, also known as nationally determined contributi­ons (NDCs). With debtservic­e costs set to increase in 2024, many countries will spend more on interest payments than on health or education.

As long as the debt crisis in the Global South grinds on, many emerging-market and developing economies will be unable to invest in gender-sensitive low-carbon developmen­t. This, in turn, would make these countries more vul-nerable to climate shocks and fiscal instabilit­y, and would also foreclose the goal of limiting global warming to 1.5° Celsius, the target set by the Paris climate agreement.

To address the debt-climate nexus at COP28 and beyond, policymake­rs should focus on three objectives: a more inclusive and efficient debt-restructur­ing process; more concession­al finance; and expansion of the size and remit of multilater­al developmen­t banks (MDBs).

For starters, the G20’s Common Framework must be reformed to ensure that all climate-vulnerable countries, including middle-income countries, are eligible for debt treatment. While the Common Framework has started providing relief, recent debt-restructur­ing deals have been modest in scope and came at the cost of protracted negotiatio­ns that only exacerbate­d the problem. Future deals must ensure significan­t relief measures that enable countries to kickstart economic growth and achieve climate goals, rather than merely returning them to previous levels of austerity or helping them stave off the next crisis.

Second, the need for more concession­al finance has never been clearer. In October, at the annual meetings of the World Bank and the IMF in Marrakesh, IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva noted that interest rates were in a “higher-for-longer era.” This comes at the same time that countries must accelerate the deployment of renewa-bles, which are highly sensitive to the cost of capital. Moreover, climate vulnerabil­ity has been found to drive up the cost of debt and restrict access to financing.

But there is ample room to scale up concession­al finance. From 2021 to 2022, lowcost project-level debt and grants accounted for only 11% of total climate finance, according to the Climate Policy Initiative. The World Bank, as part of its “Evolution Roadmap” initiative, has indicated that it will expand concession­al lending beyond the poorest countries to fund necessary climate investment­s. Other MDBs should emulate this approach, and their shareholde­rs should inject more capital to facilitate it, so that government­s can access affordable financing that does not crowd out other priorities.

Moreover, MDBs must become bigger and better-equipped to supply the lowcost, long-term finance that climate-vulnerable countries need. While the World Bank has taken a step in this direction by implementi­ng balance-sheet-optimisati­on measures to increase the scale of its lending by $50 billion over the next ten years, it is not enough. Other MDBs should devise concrete plans for capital increases and, when presenting it to their boards, outline how a fresh injection of funds will enable them to provide lowcost finance to developing countries and make bolder bets on transforma­tional investment­s.

In addition to increasing their lending capacity, MDBs must reform the debt architectu­re. For example, the World Bank has advanced a debt-pause clause in new and existing lending agreements that permits 45 small islands and states facing qualifying events to postpone their interest and principal payments. But loans of all borrowing coun-tries should include such a clause. It would also be in the interest of MDB shareholde­rs to improve the debt-restructur­ing process: an extended debt crisis simply means that MDBs will need to provide concession­al finance for a longer period, given that it is tied to debt indicators.

The GST at COP28 is sure to find that the world is falling far short of the Paris agreement’s targets. Accelerate­d ac-tion – across climate finance, global policy coordinati­on, and renewable-energy deployment – is needed, but high levels of debt stand in the way. Tellingly, Egypt, the host of last year’s COP, explicitly noted in its revised NDC that debt-service payments were limiting the country’s climate ambition.

G20 government­s and internatio­nal financial institutio­ns must acknowledg­e that a severe debt overhang could worsen the climate crisis. Mobilising financial resources on an unpreceden­ted scale, while important, should be complement­ed by measures to address heavy sovereignd­ebt burdens. One hopes that by forcing policymake­rs to confront the world’s dangerousl­y slow progress toward net-zero emissions at COP28, the GST will generate the po-litical will and trust necessary to tackle the interlocki­ng problems of debt distress and global warming.

(María Fernanda Espinosa, a former president of the UN General Assembly, is Executive Director of GWL Voices and Co-Chair of the Debt Relief for a Green and Inclusive Recovery Project. Rishikesh Ram Bhandary is Assistant Director of the Global Economic Governance Initiative at the Boston University Global Developmen­t Policy Center.) Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2023 www.project-syndicate.org

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