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🗓️ 12 November 2024
⏱️ 27 minutes
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The role of development banks in climate finance
The COP29 climate talks in Baku, Azerbaijan, have climate finance at the top of the agenda. As global leaders and experts gather to deliberate on pathways to a sustainable future, the focus is on how funding from richer nations might facilitate decarbonization and resilience in poorer and middle-income countries. These discussions are not just about altruism, but recognize the economic interdependence and shared benefits of global climate action. Put simply, poorer countries need financial help to commit to ambitious goals for curbing greenhouse gas emissions.
Development banks have emerged as pivotal actors in the climate finance landscape. Defined by their mandate to lend money for social and economic development on a not-for-profit basis, these banks are uniquely positioned to leverage limited resources for maximum impact. For example, with every dollar invested, a development bank can secure an additional seven to nine dollars from capital markets, a feat not readily achievable by direct government funding.
Harry Boyd-Carpenter, Managing Director for Climate Strategy and Delivery at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, and Avinash Persaud, Special Advisor on Climate Change at the Inter-American Development Bank, join our host, Ed Crooks to highlight that development banks are central to the current climate finance discourse. Their ability to mobilize large sums of money and finance long-term, low-cost projects makes them indispensable to the climate goals set at COP 29.
Champa Patel, Director for Governments and Policy at the Climate Group, also joins the discussion. She points out that although there is much at stake, the multitude of unresolved issues makes optimism challenging. Even so, the potential benefits of achieving a robust and effective climate finance mechanism justify the effort and dedication of all involved.
The goals are ambitious, but the path ahead is fraught with challenges. Key issues include defining what constitutes climate finance, setting a quantitative goal, determining who can access these funds, and on what terms. The lack of consensus on these crucial aspects makes the discussions at COP 29 particularly intricate.
Listen to our first in a series of episodes recorded live from COP29 in Baku for all of the key developments, insights and commentary from this important global event.
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0:51.7 | I'm Ed Crooks, and I'm bringing you today the first in a series of special |
0:55.7 | episodes from the COP29 climate talks in Baku, Azerbaijan. The item at the top of the agenda |
1:02.1 | for these talks is climate finance. That's money that's intended to flow from richer countries |
1:08.3 | to poorer and middle income countries to finance their investment |
1:13.0 | in decarbonisation, emissions reduction, and also to help them adapt to the impacts of climate |
1:19.1 | change. I'm going to be talking to my guests about that in just a moment. But first, of course, |
1:24.2 | the immediate context for these talks is the results of the US elections last |
1:28.7 | week, President Donald Trump securing a second term in office. |
1:33.7 | That is very much casting a shadow over the talks, and it's been very interesting hearing |
1:41.1 | people at the meetings address that already on this first morning. |
1:47.0 | We had Simon Steele, who's the Executive Secretary of UN Climate Change, |
1:51.0 | giving a speech this morning in the opening ceremony, |
1:55.0 | and he talked about hard times. |
1:57.0 | He addressed head-on the challenges to the global effort on climate change. |
2:02.3 | He talked about the energy transition in economic terms. |
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