The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Developing countries bemoan climate funding bottleneck­s

- Innocent Ruwende in BONN, Germany

THE United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP 23) opened here yesterday with developing nations and China bemoaning increasing difficulti­es and conditiona­lities faced by several developing countries in accessing financial resources from the Global Environmen­t Facility.

The Global Environmen­t Facility (GEF) was set up in October 1991 with a view to provide new and additional grants and concession­al funding to cover additional costs associated with transformi­ng a project with national benefits to one with global environmen­tal benefits.

Speaking at the opening plenary of the 47th Session of the Subsidiary Body For Science and Technologi­cal Advice (Sbsta 47) and the Subsidiary Body of Implementa­tion Group of 77 (G77), chairper- son Carola Iniguez, who is also Minister of Foreign Affairs for Ecuador, said the criteria were not compatible with guidance from the COP and were a clear departure from the letter and spirit of the Convention and the Paris Agreement.

“On the provision on financial and technical support, the Group regrets to bring to your attention the increasing difficulti­es and conditiona­lities faced by several developing countries in accessing financial resources from the GEF, including through the establishm­ent of programme priorities and eligibilit­y criteria that have not been agreed at the intergover­nmental level,” she said.

“The Group is deeply concerned about the no response from GEF to continued communicat­ion of these parties.”

The Group said it was concerned that some developed countries were unilateral­ly applying into the decision-making processes eligibilit­y criteria, which is not agreed to limiting the access of funding to developing countries.

Head of Zimbabwe technical delegation to the climate talks Mr Washington Zhakata said some developed countries were now pushing for the funds to be provided in terms of grants only for the least developed countries, and loans for the rest of the developing countries.

“This is contrary to the provisions of Article 4 of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), which calls for developed countries to provide finance to the developing world for adaptation,” he said.

“These are some of the issues which must be clearly addressed in the negotiatio­ns, especially with respect to the shifting of goalposts by developed country parties from their UNFCCC obligation­s of unconditio­nal support for climate change adaptation in developing countries.”

He said there was need for urgent mobilisati­on of financial resources for implementa­tion of the Nationally Determined Contributi­ons so that developing countries can prepare for the first global stock take to review the NDCs implementa­tion processes.

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