Eastern Eye (UK)

G7 climate fund to benefit south Asia

PAKISTAN AND BANGLADESH TO BE AMONG FIRST RECIPIENTS

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PAKISTAN, Ghana and Bangladesh will be among the first recipients of funding from a G7 ‘Global Shield’ initiative to provide funding to countries suffering climate disasters, the programme announced on Monday (14) at the COP27 summit in Egypt.

The Global Shield, coordinate­d by G7 president Germany, aims to provide rapid access for climate-vulnerable countries to insurance and disaster protection funding after floods or drought. It is being developed in collaborat­ion with the ‘V20’ group of 58 climate vulnerable economies.

A statement issued by Germany on Monday listed Bangladesh, Costa Rica, Fiji, Ghana, Pakistan, the Philippine­s and Senegal among the initial recipients of Global Shield packages. Those packages would be developed in the coming months, Germany said.

The programme comes as many of the most vulnerable nations are also demanding wider compensati­on for the “loss and damage” they have already suffered from a heating planet.

The initiative, backed by the G7 and launched with initial funding of more than $200 million (£168m), aims to provide “pre-arranged financial support designed to be quickly deployed in times of climate disasters”.

The Global Shield project “is long overdue”, said Ken Ofori-Atta, Ghana’s finance minister and chair of the V20 group of nations most vulnerable to the effects of climate change.

“It has never been a question of who pays for loss and damage, because we are paying for it,” he said in recorded remarks at the summit in the Egyptian resort of Sharm El-Sheikh.

“Our economies pay for it in lost growth prospects, our enterprise­s pay for it in business disruption, and our communitie­s pay for it in lives and livelihood­s lost.”

He said he hoped the project would help the most vulnerable communitie­s but also aid wider understand­ing of the challenges emerging economies face as they are being hammered by climate-induced floods, heatwaves or droughts.

A first group of nations that will benefit from the scheme includes Bangladesh, Costa Rica, Fiji, Ghana, Pakistan, the Philippine­s and Senegal.

Nations at the COP27 agreed this year for the first time to include the thorny topic of loss and damage on the formal agenda, after years of reluctance from richer polluters wary of creating open-ended liability.

Germany said the Global Shield scheme, largely in the form of insurance that pays out immediatel­y after – or even before – a climate disaster, would be part of a broader effort to respond to loss and damage.

Svenja Schulze, Germany’s minister of economic cooperatio­n and developmen­t, stressed that the scheme was not “a tactic” to sidestep calls for a specific loss and damage funding mechanism. “The Global Shield isn’t the one and only solution for loss and damage, certainly not,” she said, adding that more funding will be needed to cover more countries.

“Those most affected by climate impacts need practical action now.”

The Global Shield is designed to provide a range of financial, social and credit protection and insurance for loss of crops, livestock, property and other goods.

It also promises to support the swift delivery of funds for humanitari­an agencies responding to disasters.

A formal loss and damage funding stream would likely go further, also covering longer-onset climate impacts such as sea level rise and threats to cultural heritage.

Besides $170m from Germany, funding includes $20m from France, $10m from Ireland, $7m from Canada and $4.7m from Denmark.

France later said its total commitment would be $60m over three years.

The V20 bloc, made up of 58 developing nations, released research this year that estimated countries had lost some $525 billion to climate impacts since 2000.

Ninety-eight per cent of the nearly 1.5 billion people in V20 countries do not have financial protection, it said.

“We’re talking about people living under the poverty line, they’re not going to be buying insurance,” said Rachel Cleetus, lead economist at the Union of Concerned Scientists’ climate programme.

“Insurance can help you up to a point but climate change is now creating conditions in many parts of the world that are beyond the bounds of what’s insurable,” she told AFP, referring to sea level rise, desertific­ation and the mass displaceme­nt of population­s.

Teresa Anderson of ActionAid Internatio­nal said the scheme showed that the global community recognised the need to act on loss and damage, but said it was a “distractio­n” from negotiatio­ns on a dedicated funding mechanism for climate damages.

 ?? ?? DAMAGE CONTROL: The Global Shield project will seek to understand the challenges emerging economies face as they endure climate-induced floods, heatwaves or droughts
DAMAGE CONTROL: The Global Shield project will seek to understand the challenges emerging economies face as they endure climate-induced floods, heatwaves or droughts

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