COP27: the importance of national financing strategies for the transition
This year again, expectations for the COP are high regarding developed countries’ commitments towards the funding of action against climate change and its impacts. The question of loss and damage, which pertains to questions of climate justice and of who should pay for the significant impacts of climate change endured by the poorest countries, has just been added to the official COP agenda. And climate finance will again be a hot topic: the pledge made back in 2009 by rich nations to channel US$100bn every year by 2020 to help less wealthy nations mitigate the rise in temperatures and adapt to climate change is still falling short of targets.
Let’s hope that we will soon see a substantial increase in the finance flows from rich and high-emitting countries to poorer ones. As these flows increase and as countries develop their national long-term decarbonization strategies, the question becomes of how to make the best use of international funds, national budgets and private sector funding for countries to deliver on climate and development targets. An essential first step is the development of financing strategies for the transition by Finance Ministries: these are critical to ensure that climate investments are unlocked by adequate policies, that enough government spending is safeguarded to support effective climate action and that the macroeconomic implications of the transition are anticipated and managed.
Much of the research undertaken at I4CE these past few years contributes to informing the question of how to finance the transition, and of the specific role of public finance. Climate finance landscapes help identify investment needs, while the development of green budgeting methodologies supports the consistency of governments’ budgets with climate targets. We are now completing this toolbox with the launch of a dashboard for Finance Ministers to support the implementation of long-term strategies. This dashboard template was developed in partnership with the 2050 Pathways Platform and contains economic indicators to assess, act on, and monitor the economic implications and opportunities ensuing from long-term strategies.
From tomorrow and next week, we will hold a series of side-events at Sharm-el-Sheikh on the topic of how to finance the transition. Please do not hesitate to join these discussions either in person or remotely – these side-events will be broadcasted online – and listen to experts from I4CE, government representatives, Finance Ministers, international organizations and civil society organizations.
Financing the transition towards low-carbon and climate-resilient economies in developping countries
Date: 14 November 2022, 13:15-14:15 (Egypt time)
Location: UNFCCC pavilion & online
Organisers: I4CE
Moderated by Benoît Leguet from I4CE and with a keynote speech by Laurence Tubiana from ECF.
Engaging key stakeholders in the implementation of long-term strategies
Date: 17 November 2022, 14:30-17:30 (Egypt time)
Location: IDFC pavilion & online
Organisers: I4CE, Iddri, ADEME
With the participation of Louise Kessler and Chloé Boutron from I4CE on engaging finance Ministries in long-term strategy implementation at country level.
Planning for the transition
Date: 11 November 2022, 10:00-11:00 (Egypt time)
Location: French pavilion & online
Organisers: ADEME, I4CE, Iddri
With the participation of Louise Kessler from I4CE.
Domestic climate finance mapping and planning: challenges and opportunities
Date: 17 November 2022, 11:00-12:00 (Egypt time)
Location: NDC pavilion & online
Organisers: CPI, UNDP and European Forest Institute
With the participation of Louise Kessler on the extent to which I4CE’s climate landscape has informed and influenced the financing of the energy transition in France.
Including developing countries in the low-carbon agenda
Date: 11 November 2022, 17:30-18:30 (Egypt time)
Location: IDFC pavilion & online
Organisers: AFD
With the participation of Joao Braga from I4CE.