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Sluggish progress on climate finance at WB, IMF meets

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NEW DELHI: The annual World Bank and IMF meetings have wrapped up without a concrete plan to mobilise the trillions of dollars needed to fight climate change, in a year where agreement on New Collective Quantified Goal (NCQG) or a new climate finance goal will be the key issue at the United Nations climate conference (COP29) in Azerbaijan.

NCQG is the new amount developed countries must mobilise every year from 2025 onwards to support climate action in developing countries. Rich countries are expected to raise more than the USD 100 billion they promised to provide every year from 2020, but repeatedly failed.

A recent analysis revealed financial flows into developing countries turned negative in 2023, with these nations paying out more in debt servicing than they received in external financing. Discussion­s between G7 and G20 finance ministers on the sidelines of the spring meetings that wrapped up on Saturday touched on providing finance to developing countries for meeting climate and developmen­t objectives. The Vulnerable Group of Twenty Countries (V20) called for increased concession­al finance for climate-vulnerable nations, and urged G7 and high-emitting G21 countries to safeguard the 1.5 degrees Celsius limit.

The Intergover­nmental Group of Twenty-Four on Internatio­nal Monetary Affairs and Developmen­t (G24) called for reforms to ensure timely assistance to vulnerable nations and urged reform of the G20 Common Framework to support countries in debt distress. World Bank president Ajay Banga expressed hope that donor contributi­ons could add up to an additional $100 billion to the poorest countries through its lending arm, the Internatio­nal Developmen­t Associatio­n (IDA). The Bank had earlier launched a bid to add more financing to its portfolios to support low-income countries with very low-cost financing and grants. Shareholde­rs are expected to pledge to the IDA before the replenishm­ent conference in December.

While Banga reiterated the Bank’s commitment to ramp up climate-aligned finance, he said the Bank has no plan to stop investment­s in gas projects. IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva noted during her opening press conference that the global economy had lost $3.3 trillion since 2020. She said the poorest countries spend over 14 pc of their budgets on debt payments, with interest rate hikes pushing up debt servicing costs.

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