More than money

The quality, quantity, and purpose of climate finance

An important aspect of climate change is climate finance which entails supporting developing countries as they grapple with the impacts of extreme climate events, such as floods, droughts, desertification, and so on.

What is currently happening in the climate finance ecosystem can be best described by the following analogy. Imagine your neighbours polluting your garden with toxic waste, killing all your plants and contaminating your water source. Instead of helping to clean it up, they offer to sell you expensive bottled water and costly, special seeds that can grow in poor soil. Now, not only are you paying to survive in the environment they ruined, but you’re also contributing to their profits as you buy more and more of what they sell to make up for the damage they caused.

About half of the climate finance comes from multilateral institutions and governments such as the Green Climate Fund. The other 50 percent comes from private enterprises like Alterra launched by the United Arab Emirates. Three traits describe climate finance: quantity, purpose, and quality. At present, the amount of climate finance directed towards developing countries is not what these countries require. According to the Climate Policy Institute, climate financing flows need to be scaled up sixfold to reach $8.5 trillion between now and 2030 to meet the Paris agreement goal of keeping global warming to 1.5°C

Two broad purposes under climate finance have been historically touched: mitigation and adaptation. Historically, most of the climate finance has been directed towards climate mitigation, targeting sectors such as transport and energy, which are essential to decarbonize to cut down on greenhouse gas emissions. Secondly, energy, over the years, is becoming cost-effective so mitigation activities have increased.

International Energy Agency Executive Director said at an event in 2024 that most of the mitigation investments are not necessarily propelled by the concern for climate change rather than a nexus of economics, energy security, and industrial policy.

However, looking from the perspective of developing countries, adaptation is extremely necessary to fund.  With rising sea levels, increasing droughts, glacial lake outburst floods, sporadic intense precipitation, developing countries face a double crisis. As countries that are already politically and economically fragmented, developing countries face a myriad of challenges from alleviating poverty to providing their citizens the basic necessities of life. As climate disaster strikes, these countries are forced to rebuild schools, houses, and hospitals. As a result, funds that might otherwise have been allocated to enhancing human capital or technology introduction in the country are diverted to helping the communities overcome climate induced challenges. Moreover, the cost of adaptation is also challenging to estimate, if both economic and non-economic losses are considered. A UN report in 2023 mentioned that the adaptation cost in developing countries is around $ 215 billion per year but some private banking institutions have predicted close to $2 trillion a year by 2026.

The New Collective Quantified Goal on Climate Finance presents a pivotal opportunity to recalibrate priorities, ensure accountability, and balance the scales between mitigation and adaptation funding. As the world gathers for COP29, it is imperative for nations to agree on equitable responsibility-sharing mechanisms and innovative funding strategies. Only through collective action and meaningful commitments can the climate finance ecosystem evolve to support the resilience of vulnerable nations and ensure the shared goal of a sustainable future.

For developing countries, the main feature in climate finance is also the quality. Most of the climate finance is provided in the form of loans rather than grants. With developing countries stuck in the climate debt trap, they already face high borrowing costs under the current multilateral banking system and with the climate risk, the borrowing rates go further up. Not to mention that several developing countries in the global south also lack the financial infrastructure to direct the foreign investments into productive projects, which thus increases the risk for investors.

While these problems exist from the side of developing countries, there is also a lack of robust accountability mechanisms when it comes to climate finance. At times, wealthier nations have reported inflated climate investments. This also sets bad examples for the private sector that can facilitate greenwashing. On the other hand, blended finance has been on the rise in recent years which is basically a combination of public concessional finance and private or public finance. A report by Canada-based blended finance network convergence found that climate blended finance deals increased two times to a high of  $18.3 billion in 2023. However, even within this record high, the climate adaptation is severely underfunded. For instance, between 2021 and 2023, a total of 32 adaptation blended finance transactions amounting to $3.5 billion occurred which are less than one-fourth of the 132 deals on climate mitigation in the same period.

With the above issues in climate finance, the New Collective Quantified Goal on Climate Finance offers a sliver of hope. The NCQGF seeks to bring changes to the quality, quantity, and purpose of climate finance.  While the previous goal of $100 billion per year was an arbitrary number put forward, developing countries are now demanding a more concrete number where the priorities and needs are properly understood.

Developing country groups have put forward some numbers, with Pakistan having put the largest number at a minimum of $2 trillion. Developing countries, for this new goal, are stressing more on public funds whereas developed countries have proposed a much larger sources of funding. For instance, the USA has mentioned that the NCQGF needs to be realistic and that just the public international finance alone is not enough to touch trillions of dollars of funding into climate finance. There is still some ambiguity as to how to determine which countries should be responsible to pay.

How to determine the right indicator to classify countries as Annex II, whether cumulative per capita emissions or per capita emissions or absolute capita emissions or average emissions. Based on these indicators, the placement of the countries would change. For instance, Qatar, in 2023, has had the highest Carbon Dioxide emissions per capita (t) but is not considered an Annex II country. Some assessments have highlighted how China should be considered a candidate for contributions as well since China can contribute close to seven percent of climate finance.  Most importantly, developing countries are also pressing to add loss and damage as a third pillar to be funded under the New Collective Quantified Goal on Climate Finance.

The New Collective Quantified Goal on Climate Finance presents a pivotal opportunity to recalibrate priorities, ensure accountability, and balance the scales between mitigation and adaptation funding. As the world gathers for COP29, it is imperative for nations to agree on equitable responsibility-sharing mechanisms and innovative funding strategies. Only through collective action and meaningful commitments can the climate finance ecosystem evolve to support the resilience of vulnerable nations and ensure the shared goal of a sustainable future.

Umaima Ahmed
Umaima Ahmed
The writer is a research assistant at the center for evidence action research at Sustainable Development Policy Institute, and focuses on the intersection of climate action and women's financial inclusion.

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