Engineering News and Mining Weekly

AfDB pledges to quadruple financing for climate adaptation

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Developmen­t funding institutio­n African Developmen­t Bank (AfDB) recently pledged to quadruple its financing for climate adaptation to reach $25-billion by 2025 through the promotion of climate-smart investment­s, and encouragin­g private-sector funding, mainly for water treatment, recycling and other components within the water value chain.

This pledge occurred at the twenty eighth Conference of Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP28) last month, which numerous multilater­al developmen­t banks attended, and also committed to scale resource mobilisati­on to close the financing gap for the nature and water sectors.

At a high-level panel moderated by former UK Climate and Environmen­t Minister Lord Zac Goldsmith, the banks shared views on what could be done differentl­y to ensure that the world delivers on water, nature and climate agendas.

Speakers of this panel included representa­tives from the InterAmeri­can Developmen­t Bank (IDB), the Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB) and the AfDB, with AfDB Agricultur­e, Human and Social Developmen­t Group VP Dr Beth Dunford urging urgent action to achieve Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal 6, namely "clean water and sanitation for all".

She noted that, water resources globally are diminishin­g while the associated impacts are “intensifyi­ng” as a result of increasing temperatur­es. By 2030, 250-million people will struggle with water scarcity, and by 2050, addressing or responding to climate impacts could cost African government­s $50-billion a year.

She explained that since 2010, the AfDB has invested an estimated $7.4-billion in water supply and sanitation services delivery, benefiting 90-million people in Africa.

It will also take strategic debt relief programmes, such as the debt-for-nature swaps, into considerat­ion in return for a commitment from regional member countries to invest in climateres­ilient infrastruc­ture.

“Even a drop in the ocean can make a wave of change. The AfDB Group joins fellow multilater­al developmen­t banks in sharing a crystal-clear vision to ensure the availabili­ty and sustainabl­e management of water systems for all,” Dunford said.

IDB president Ilan Goldfajn shared his institutio­n’s CLIMA pilot programme, a financial tool that provides grants, 5% of the IDB loan principal, to incentivis­e borrowers to achieve nature and climate objectives.

He noted that CLIMA assists countries with access to green and thematic debt markets to mobilise capital for climate and nature investment­s at scale. Borrowers must meet three key performanc­e indicators – setting ambitious environmen­tal targets; identifica­tion of the proper policies and expenditur­es to meet these targets; and the measuring and reporting on their progress on time – to be eligible.

ADB president Masatsugu Asakawa, meanwhile, reinforced the need for the developmen­t community to lead in the mobilisati­on of partnershi­ps that could generate new and additional financing.

He referenced the launch of the joint Common Principles for Climate Change Adaptation Finance Tracking by Multilater­al Developmen­t Banks and the Internatio­nal Developmen­t Finance Club to improve the reporting of adaptation finance.

Asakawa also highlighte­d the Asia and the Pacific Water Resilience Initiative, launched by the ADB at the 2022 COP27, for the mobilisati­on of at least $200-million by 2025 for water and sanitation resilience and security in Asia and the Pacific.

Potsdam Institute Climate Impact Research director and the co-chairperso­n of the Global Commission on the Economics of Water Dr Johan Rockstrom delivered a keynote on ‘Rethinking the Financial Architectu­re for Water and Nature’.

He stated that nature and climate must be jointly considered in efforts to create solutions.

“The overexploi­tation of natural resources at a global scale has put the world at risk of destabilis­ing the entire planet, and we are in a state of planetary emergency,” explained Rockstrom.

He also called for the management of water and considerat­ion of water, nature and climate as a whole when looking at the mechanism for finance.

He elaborated that there is a “need to manage water as an entity, valued as a capital that [everyone] depends on” because it determines the sustainabi­lity of the biosphere, as well as being a provider of livelihood­s, resilience and a part of the mitigation story.

Rockstrom called for collaborat­ion in the mobilisati­on of finance and advancing a conceptual framework and restructur­ing of the overall financial architectu­re for climate, water and nature, noting that the provisioni­ng and resilience of all natural capital assets are fundamenta­l supports to human wellbeing and economies.

The meeting affirmed that there is no sustainabl­e future without urgent, systematic and collective attention to the inextricab­le links between climate change, water crises and biodiversi­ty loss. Further, a consensus emerged with attendees noting that the safeguardi­ng of water resources and biodiversi­ty should be prioritise­d as it is crucial in climate strategies.

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