Fiji Sun

TOP FUND OFFICIAL BRIEFS GOVT ON COP23 LOGISTICS

Other consultant­s are expected to be called in to give advice early next month to help Government in its planning for COP23

- Nemani By Delaibatik­i Feedback: nemani.delaibatik­i@fijisun.com.fj

Australian Howard Bamsey, newly appointed executive director of the Green Climate Fund (GCF), yesterday briefed Government in Suva on COP23. He travelled to Suva on Government’s invitation as its preparatio­n for COP23 began in earnest. The meeting was attended by Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimaram­a, Attorney-General and Minister for Economy Aiyaz Sayed-Khaiyum, Permanent Secretary for Foreign Affairs Robin Nair, Permanent Secretary in the PM’s office Yogesh Karan, Permanent Secretary for Economy Makereta Konrote and Permanent Secretary for Local Government, Housing and Environmen­t Joshua Wycliffe. Absent on leave was Permanent Secretary for Civil Service Bernadette Welch.

This is the initial planning group for COP23. It is understood that Mr Bamsey briefed Mr Bainimaram­a and his team on the logistics and administra­tive challenges of the Fijian presidency of COP23. It is recognised that this is a mammoth task and Government is consulting highly specialise­d profession­als in climate change to help it plan for COP23.

Basically, Fiji’s responsibi­lity is to put in place the necessary and relevant machinery to enable countries to implement the provisions of the Paris Agreement. The agreement has been signed and ratified in Paris and the follow-up meeting of COP22 in Marrakesh, Morocco. The next phase is the implementa­tion and that is regarded as the most difficult part of the process. Mr Bainimaram­a does not want any hiccup when COP23 happens in Bonn, Germany, next year. Other consultant­s are expected to be called in to advise Government early next month before the substantiv­e planning meeting later in the month. That meeting will basically draw up the programme for the secretaria­t in Bonn. From then on it’s all systems go. Ovini Ralulu, the director of Climate Change Division, Strategic Planning office of the Ministry of Economy will be attached to the United Nations Framework for Climate Change Convention secretaria­t in Bonn for COP23. Mr Bamsey’s contributi­on is vital to the preparatio­n phase. He also holds the purse strings for GCF. He also would have explained the requiremen­ts that needed to be fulfilled to access climate change funding. His appointmen­t has raised hopes that Fiji and other small island states in the Pacific will get a better response from him because he understand­s the Pacific better than his predecesso­r. Mr Bamsey developed climate policy in Australia and around the world. He co-chaired the United Nations “Dialogue on Long-term Co-operative Action on Climate Change” and served as Australia’s special envoy for climate change during the country’s brief climate hawk period under the leadership of Kevin Rudd. Commenting last year on the future of the UN climate negotiatio­ns, he said: “The fund must succeed and be seen to succeed to keep developing nations in the game.

Otherwise, the future of internatio­nal co-operation on climate change will be in jeopardy,” The GCF was set up as a major channel for the rich countries to provide assistance to the poor countries to cope with climate change. Already US$10bn have been donated. But accessing it has been difficult. Many countries including Fiji have been frustrated because of the complicate­d nature of the applicatio­n. Mr Bamsey succeeds Héla Cheikhrouh­ou, the fund’s first executive director, who is now Tunisia’s minister for energy, mining and renewables. Many are hoping that he will make changes that will enable reasonably easy access to the fund. Fiji’s High Commission­er in London, Jitoko Tikolevu, said the process of applying for climate funds was “very cumbersome”. “We need to be trained how to access the money. It’s one thing having it available, it’s another getting access to it. “We have many climate adaptation projects identified, to move villages and other settlement­s, but they depend on getting climate money. We know what we need to do, but to do it we need to understand the process,” he said. Mr Bamsey was, until recently, Deputy Secretary of Australia’s Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency, and Australia’s Special Envoy on Climate Change.

He is one of Australia’s most experience­d negotiator­s, playing a key role in internatio­nal climate change negotiatio­ns. Mr Bamsey was Deputy Secretary in the Department of the Environmen­t and Water Resources from 1997 to 2002, and head of the Australian Greenhouse Office until 2006. Mr Bamsey travelled to Fiji from Samoa where he attended the first GCF board meeting in a Pacific small island country to see and experience first hand the climate change realities facing the region. The meeting also looked at ways of helping countries fill the applicatio­n forms by simplifyin­g them.

 ??  ?? Attorney-General and Minister for Economy Aiyaz Sayed-Khaiyum
Attorney-General and Minister for Economy Aiyaz Sayed-Khaiyum
 ??  ?? Howard Bamsey, newly appointed executive director of the Green Climate Fund
Howard Bamsey, newly appointed executive director of the Green Climate Fund
 ??  ?? Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimaram­a
Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimaram­a
 ??  ?? Permanent Secretary for Civil Service Bernadette Welch.
Permanent Secretary for Civil Service Bernadette Welch.
 ??  ?? Permanent Secretary in the Prime Minister’s office Yogesh Karan
Permanent Secretary in the Prime Minister’s office Yogesh Karan
 ??  ?? Permanent Secretary for Foreign Affairs Robin Nair
Permanent Secretary for Foreign Affairs Robin Nair
 ??  ?? Permanent Secretary for Economy Makereta Konrote
Permanent Secretary for Economy Makereta Konrote
 ??  ?? Permanent Secretary for Local Government, Housing and Environmen­t Joshua Wycliffe
Permanent Secretary for Local Government, Housing and Environmen­t Joshua Wycliffe
 ??  ??

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