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Climate Finance

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April 24, 2021

Why in news?

Climate finance will be a central theme in recently held Leaders Summit on Climate.

How is the existing performance on climate finance?

  • In 2009, developed countries promised developing countries $100 billion by 2020 in climate finance.
  • OECD estimated that $78.9 billion of climate finance was provided in 2018.
  • But India called this as green washing of finance as the committed aid had been diverted from other purposes to climate activities.
  • The new and additional finance was only $2.2 billion which is far lower than the committed one.
  • Oxfam reports that in 2017-18, only $19-22.5 billion were paid, after discounting for loan repayments, interest and administration costs.
  • This stand in sharp contrast to other estimates that pegged global climate finance at more than $530 billion in 2017.
  • Thus, developing countries claim they are not receiving what was promised to them and the claims of developed countries are a fraction of total global climate investment.

What can be done to address this issue?

  • In dealing with climate finance four shifts are necessary- Scale, balance, risk and regulation.
  • First, capital commitment should be in far greater scale than what has been negotiated.
  • Developing countries need $3.5 trillion to implement climate pledges up to 2030 and according to RBI India alone needs $2.5 trillion.
  • The capital requirement could be two-three times this value for deep decarbonisation of the energy sector.
  • Secondly, there must be balance between public and private sources and public funds cannot sufficiently pay for a low-carbon transition.
  • OECD estimates showed public climate finance at $64.3 billion against only $14.6 billion of private capital mobilised.
  • The world’s largest sovereign wealth funds, pension funds shy away from developing countries considering them risky destinations and there is still very limited insurance against climate shocks.
  • According reinsurance giant Swiss Re, of $146 billion in damages from natural disasters in 2019, only $60 billion was insured.
  • So a rebalancing of climate finance is required- more blended capital, more insurance for climate-resilient infrastructure.
  • Thirdly, without de-risking instruments, capital requirements for transitions in clean energy, sustainable mobility would be impossible to meet.
  • Developing countries need three categories of blended finance:
  1. De-risking utility-scale renewables in emerging markets by targeting non-project risks (exchange rate fluctuations, policy);
  2. Reduce the finance cost for distributed energy solutions for small businesses to clean their energy mix ;
  3. Risk capital for R&D investment in disruptive technologies is required;
  • Fourthly, regulation in developing countries must create an ecosystem for green finance.
  • RBI has only taken tentative steps, giving priority sector lending status to small renewables in 2015 and a call for deep green bond markets.
  • SEBI has issued green bond guidelines in 2017 and ministry of finance’s Climate Change Finance Unit has mostly focused on representations in international forums.

What more can be done?

  • First, regulation must report on climate risk exposures and planned infrastructure must prioritise resilient projects and write down stranded assets.
  • Secondly, a green taxonomy would help in identifying genuine investments from green washed investments.
  • Green tagging increases visibility of assets and their climate impacts for potential investors.
  • Thirdly, tax incentives could encourage green bond issuances.
  • Fourthly, reducing information asymmetries (investment opportunities, risks, market developments) can create larger portfolios of investment for emerging markets.
  • Fifthly, public funds should create pipelines of securitised, low-risk green projects so that developed countries could reduce cost of capital in developing and emerging markets.
  • Finally, there must be greater coordination in regulatory forums-the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, Network for Greening the Financial System-to set standards & for capacity building.
  • Also developing countries must hold rich countries accountable for not honouring climate finance commitments.

 

Source: Financial Express

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