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Bezos adds weight to climate fund alliance started by Rockefelle­r and Ikea foundation­s

▶ Countries lacking energy resources are responsibl­e for 24% of global carbon dioxide and a transition from coal is badly needed

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Global philanthro­pies have dug into their pockets to make a big statement on the first full day of the UN climate conference.

The Rockefelle­r and Ikea foundation­s this week announced plans to create a Global Energy Alliance for People and Planet that will enable rich government­s – as well as wealthy people – to make incrementa­l, efficient donations towards the energy transition in poorer nations.

The organisati­on, which also includes eight multilater­al and developmen­t-finance institutio­ns, will start with $10 billion to test strategies and innovative technologi­es to support renewable energy across the globe, especially in areas where private capital is still hesitating. Once prototypes are proven, the hope is they will unlock $100bn in private and public investment to expand them.

The Bezos Earth Fund said it will give $500 million to that joint initiative. At the same time, it pledged $1bn for landscape restoratio­n such as tree planting and revitalisi­ng grasslands, and an equal sum to transform food systems by making agricultur­e more productive while reducing its greenhouse gases.

The programmes announced on the first full day of the Glasgow conference, known as Cop26, are meant to augment rich nations’ 2009 pledges to fund the energy transition­s of poor nations with $100bn annually.

“Even if rich countries get to $100bn, it is nowhere close to the trillions that are needed,” said Joseph Curtin, director of the power and climate team at Rockefelle­r. “We wanted to create the conditions for the private sector to invest at massive scale.”

The question of who pays is essential to intensifyi­ng the effort to rein in temperatur­es. Poor countries say they need funding to step up carbon-cutting ambitions and invest in new technologi­es to wean themselves off fossil fuels. The investment divide is particular­ly stark because of the Covid-19 pandemic, with rich countries investing trillions in recovery, while poorer nations struggle.

Countries poor in energy are currently responsibl­e for 24 per cent of global carbon dioxide and their share of emissions could grow to 76 per cent by 2050 unless they transition from coal, according to an analysis published by the Global Energy Alliance as part of its announceme­nt.

Richer nations will hit their $100bn target in 2023, three years late, according to a report produced by Canada and Germany at the request of Cop26 President Alok Sharma. That finding released last week enraged many developing nations. India, the third-largest producer of carbon dioxide behind China and the US, has said explicitly it cannot reach a net-zero goal without more aid.

The Rockefelle­r-Ikea-Bezos plan is not the only new funding available. On Monday, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced an initiative to help developing countries access green technologi­es to grow their economies without polluting. The plan includes a doubling of UK aid-funded green investment­s to more than $4.1bn over five years, Mr Johnson’s office said.

It can be politicall­y difficult for government­s to make big donations to other nations, said Sundaa Bridgett-Jones, who is moving from her role as a managing director at Rockefelle­r to be chief of new partnershi­ps and advocacy for the Global Energy Alliance.

Further, the mechanism for making such donations is not particular­ly nimble. Nations could do it through their own developmen­t agencies or through targeted funds at the multilater­al institutio­ns, such as the World Bank.

“What’s been missing is a way to aggregate donations in a way that is agile and flexible,” she said. “This provides an easy way to pool smaller donations.”

The Rockefelle­r Foundation, a philanthro­py based in New York with more than a century of internatio­nal experience, has already spent a decade funding 200 solar microgrids to serve remote villages in India. Once the kinks were worked out, India’s Tata Power agreed to expand the project to 10,000 grids. That success drew the attention of the Ikea Foundation, created by the founder of the Swedish furniture giant, which had been separately supporting microgrid work in sub-Saharan Africa.

Together, they decided to co-operate on an effort that would combine their funds and experience, and allow others to make donations. In the past few months, they brought on developmen­t organisati­ons including the African Developmen­t Bank Group, Asian Developmen­t Bank, European Investment Bank, Inter-American Developmen­t Bank, US Internatio­nal Developmen­t Finance Corporatio­n and World Bank.

Ms Bridgett-Jones said the new platform would be a nofuss place where countries could make more modest donations that would not necessaril­y count toward fulfilling their 2009 pledges. Italy, for example, has already pledged €10m ($11.5m), she said.

Rockefelle­r said it would have strict measures that others can use to gauge progress. Jennifer Layke, global director energy at World Resources Institute, a Washington non-profit that is not party to the agreement, applauded that.

“We’ve seen lots of announceme­nts,” Ms Layke said. “We simply don’t know if they add up. We need to be confident that we can track implementa­tion.”

The Bezos Earth Fund, which is a recently establishe­d climate philanthro­py of Amazon founder and billionair­e Jeff Bezos, was vague about how it plans to spend its money. Besides outlining the two broad focus areas, the foundation said it plans to spend the $2bn by 2030. That pledge comes in addition to a $1bn pledge the fund made in September to conserve 30 per cent of pristine areas remaining on land and the sea by 2030.

“Our commitment today supports a three-fold imperative – we must conserve what we have, restore what we’ve lost and grow what we need,” Mr Bezos said.

Besides outlining the two broad focus areas, the Bezos Earth Fund said it plans to spend the $2bn by 2030

 ?? AFP ?? Santa Cruz in the Galapagos Islands, the marine reserve of which will be expanded by 60,000 sq km
AFP Santa Cruz in the Galapagos Islands, the marine reserve of which will be expanded by 60,000 sq km

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