Title: State of Finance for Adaptation and UNDP
1State of Finance for Adaptation andUNDPs
Strategy for Supporting countries in the Arab
States
Elie Kodsi Drylands Development Centre UNDP
Environment and Energy Group Damascus, 15-16
September 2010
2Costs of Mitigation and Adaptation in Developing
Countries
Copenhagen Accord
per year by 2020
3- Diversity of schemes
- Some operate at the international level
- Others only available to domestic investors.
- Four main categories (i) public funds providing
either grant or loan assistance - (ii) Private funds providing either grant or loan
assistance - (iii) market-based instruments
- (iv) innovative financing instruments.
Source SEFI, New Energy Finance in Glemarec et
al (2010)
4Global Climate Finance Negotiations
- UNFCCC negotiations continue to discuss reform of
financial mechanism - A possible new fund Copenhagen Green Climate
Fund (CGCF) to manage a significant portion of
future climate finance in addition to GEF and AF - Creation of a new oversight system (possibly a
Finance Board) under the Convention that may be
involved in fund allocation and approval (for
CGCF, GEF and AF projects) - Use of Low-emission, climate-resilient
development strategies as the foundation for
accessing and allocating finance - Increased provisions for direct access under all
funds - Status of Discussions as of mid-2010
- Negotiations moving slowly--full deal in Cancun
ruled out - Still much to be clarified over the CGCF and
respective roles of GEF AF - However, fast start finance (30bn per year
2010-12) is flowing (65 along bilateral lines
some as part of GEF V and AF pledges)
5COP
Financial Mechanism
Registry/Mitigation
BILATERAL
CC Adaptation
BOARD ?
Forestry REDD
Technology
Matching
Coordination
Oversight
MRV
Capacity Buliding
Adaptation Fund
Copenhagen Green Climate Fund ?
GEF
Countries Receiving Climate Finance
6GEF and the Kyoto Adaptation Fund
GEF Assistance to Address Adaptation
Secretariat services for the AFB provided by GEF
on an interim basis.
GEF Trust Fund
UNFCCC climate change funds
The Adaptation Fund
Adaptation Fund (AF) Adaptation in developing
country parties to KP NO GLOBAL BENEFITS
Least Developed Country Fund (LDCF) (implementatio
n of NAPAs) NO GLOBAL BENEFITS
Special Climate Change Fund (SCCF) Top priority
to Adaptation NO GLOBAL BENEFITS
GEF Trust Fund Strategic Priority on Adaptation
(SPA) adaptation action WITH GLOBAL BENEFITS
7Modalities for Accessing The Kyoto Adaptation Fund
Source Accessing Resources from the Adaptation
Fund, 2010
8Status of Funding
GEF/LDCF Pledges 221m Funding Approvals
135m (Only for LDC) Source of Funding
Replenished Voluntarily Donor Contributions 2010-
2014 Expectation 500m Governance GEF LDCF/SCCF
Council
Kyoto/AF CER Sales 156m Funding Approvals
0 (For all Parties to Kyoto non annex 1 to
UNFCCC) Source of Funding CER
Sales 2010-2014 Expectation 317-434m Governan
ce AF Board (Parties)
GEF/SCCF Pledges 148m Funding Approvals
109m (For all non-annex 1 Parties) Source of
Funding Replenished Voluntarily Donor
Contributions 2010-2014 Expectation 500. Govern
ance GEF LDCF/SCCF Council
9Current UNDP Support to Countries in the Arab
States
10UNDPs Adaptation Portfolio
- Where do we stand in the region?
13,3 million / 15 million in co-financing
- Addressing priority climate hazards and
adaptation needs
11Sources of LDCF, SCCF and AF Funds Mobilized
To-Date Arab Regions
- Egypt - 4m (SCCF)
- Sudan - 3.3m (LDCF)
- Morocco - 3m (GoJ)
- Tunisia - 3m (GoJ)
- Morocco - 300K (SPA) (part of a global community
based adaptation project) - Jordan 750K (SCCF) (part of a UNDP-GEF global
cc health adaptation project executed by WHO) - Others Number of Enabling Projects (Nat Coms,
CB2s etc)
12Funding to be Mobilized (2010 onwards)
- SCCF
- Jordan Treated waste water use 3.6 million
- Syria Innovative finance for adaptation in the
Badia steppe - 4.5 million - LDCF
- Requests from Sudan and Yemen
- AF
- Egypt mariculture as coastal defense and
livelihood diversification - 5.7 million - Requests from Lebanon, Sudan, Yemen and Djibouti
13Key Challenges in Attracting Financing
- Assuming that international public finance
commensurate with the Copenhagen Accord will be
mobilized there are 3 key questions - Finding ways to mobilize a variety of resources
at scale - How to attract, blend with, and catalyse, larger
sources of public and private finance - How to assist countries to move towards low
carbon climate resilient growth paths - How to deliver finance in a nationally defined
and directed way where it is most needed - Find ways to deliver finance at speed to where it
is needed most
14- Emerging UNDP Support to Countries
- in the Arab States to Pursue
- Low Emission Climate Resilient Development
15UNDP Approach For Assisting Countries Attract CC
Finance
- Raising finance and delivering finance go
hand-in-hand (i.e cannot be dealt with
separately) - A country-driven, multi-stakeholder framework to
scale up cc finance to strengthen and advance
national development priorities is required.
16A New Development Paradigm A country-driven,
Multi-Stakeholder Climate Finance Framework
Public and Private Sources of Funds (National
and International Sources)
This approach allows governments to put
development at the heart of climate planning
175 key steps to prepare a LCLRD Strategy
18Enhancing Climate Resilient Development
The project aims at improving MDG related service
delivery through an integrated community
development based approach. The key MDG areas
that will be addressed by the project target four
MDGoals related to poverty reduction,
education,health and environment. These
specifically include i) poverty reduction
through employment creation ii) access to and
quality of education iii) integrated health
services and IV) access to safe water and
improved sanitation.. This approach will be
conducted in 24 villages in the eastern region
which was hit by a severe drought, the worst of
the last fourty years. Six villages namely Khan
Toman, Jafer Mansour and Mgheirat Shibli in
Aleppo and Bsetien, Mueijil and Kabajeb in Deir
Ezzor1 will be targeted in the 1st phas
1 Refer to annex 4
- Drylands Development Centre
- Arab States Programme
19DDC-supported Intervention in Syria
- The North-eastern Region in Syria lagging behind
in terms of the MDGs and faces development
challenges lack of basic services and
infrastructure, little investment and limited job
opportunities, migration -
- It is home to 58.1 of the poor population
- it has 42 of Syrias cultivated area, is heavily
dependent on agriculture and, therefore, is very
sensitive to desertification and drought. - Moreover, the region has been more impoverished
in the last few years as a result of severe
drought. Two UN joint assessments conducted in
2008 and 2009 concluded that the drought is
severe, the worst of the last 40 years and
affected about one million people.
20DDC-supported Intervention in Syria
- The North-eastern Region in Syria has a major
existing climate adaptation challenge, which
climate change is likely to deepen. - (Impact from climate is not a future concern,
it is an immediate concern) - The Regions adaptation challenge is inextricably
linked with its development challenge if people
are well educated, have access to good basic
services and have robust/diversified livelihoods
they will be much less vulnerable to climate
change. - Adaptation is essentially about development in a
hostile climate or climate-resilient development
21DDC-supported Intervention in Syria
- National response Integrated Community
Development for scaling-up the MDGs in the
North-eastern Region - Joint project Ministry of planning and UN
agencies (UNDP, ILO, WFP, FAO, UNICEF, UNFPA) - Key MDGs targeted are related to poverty,
education, health and environment. - DDC support seeks to build community resilience
to drought through 1) developing vocational and
business skills among adults and youth for
livelihood enhancement/diversification and 2)
building the capacity of farmers to adopt
appropriate land and water management practices
22Syria - Lesson learned
- A window of opportunity today a chance to put in
place nationally-owned programs that boost
sustainable development and in doing so greatly
improve the levels of climate adaptation - The work piloted in Syria can
- Serve as a baseline for mobilizing additional
funding from international climate finance (this
is on-going) - Feed into the development of Low Emissions,
Climate Resilient Development Strategy (whether
at the national or sub-national level)
23(No Transcript)
24For further information on adaptation funding and
programming in the Arab States Region Keti
Chachibaia, Regional Technical Advisor-
Adaptation- Arab States keti.chachibaia_at_undp.org
Elie Kodsi, Regional Manager for Arab States,
UNDP Drylands Development Centre,
elie.kodsi_at_undp.org