That sinking feeling: Poor nations struggle with U.N. climate fund

Residents on a rescue boat are evacuated from their flooded houses following Typhoon Vamco, in Rizal Province, Philippines, November 12, 2020. REUTERS/Lisa Marie David/File Photo

Residents on a rescue boat are evacuated from their flooded houses following Typhoon Vamco, in Rizal Province, Philippines, November 12, 2020. (REUTERS / File Photo)

JOHANNESBURG  – The Philippines has sought financing for seven projects from a U.N. environmental fund to tackle the catastrophic impact of climate change. Yet only one has secured backing since 2016, and it’s not because the $17.3 billion fund lacks cash.

Bureaucracy and a blizzard of information requests have stalled applications to the U.N. Green Climate Fund (GCF) over projects to cope with climate change in a country that faces typhoons, droughts and rising sea levels, said Mark Joven, undersecretary at the Philippines finance department.

It can take as many as four years for projects to get going – too long for urgent needs, such as flood defences. “By then the city applying for a flood facility would already have sunk under the flood it wanted to solve,” Joven said.

GCF, created to help developing nations cut carbon emissions and adapt to a warmer world, said it had helped the Philippines build know-how but its work faced challenges over permits and Manila’s moves to change which entity dealt with the fund.

Yet the Philippines is not alone in raising complaints. Government and development officials from seven countries told Reuters their GCF applications faced bottlenecks, with several asking not to be named to avoid harming relations with the fund.

Meanwhile, efforts to adjust GCF policies to ease access to funding have been hindered by wrangling on the board between rich and poor nations over how it should approach climate finance, a board member and a German climate finance official said.

“We allowed it to become too political,” said board member Victor Vinas, saying national rivalries on the board unrelated to climate politics also sometimes hindered these efforts.

A GCF spokesperson did not comment on board issues or complaints over bureaucracy but said the fund was accelerating its work.

Helping developing nations secure funds to cope with climate change is a central issue at the U.N. COP26 conference in Glasgow this month, but funds offered so far have not come near the $1.3 trillion some developing states say they need each year by 2030.

APPLICATIONS SWELL

The GCF, the largest intergovernmental fund to address climate change, is part of that financing infrastructure. Governments have pledged $17.3 billion to the fund since its launch in 2014, of which the fund has received $11.5 billion.

Applications to the fund swelled to $22.4 billion by October, a GCF document showed. The GCF says no project approval has faced any delay so far because of a lack of funds.

The fund has committed $10 billion to 190 projects, yet only $2.1 billion has been paid out so far, the GCF website says.

The GCF spokesperson said disbursement lagged as funds were paid over a project’s lifetime and many were at an early stage. The pandemic had also slowed progress, the spokesperson added.

But some blame other factors for slow approvals. Pierre Daniel-Telep, a former GCF official and now a climate finance consultant, said the fund’s conditions and milestones attached to payouts were often unrealistic or too difficult for poorly-resourced governments to meet.

The fund also aims to draw in private cash, but a report by the GCF’s independent evaluation unit said in February the fund attracted just 18 cents in private cash for each dollar it invested on projects focused on adapting to climate change, citing “insufficiently predictable” decision-making.

The GCF said its portfolio of approved projects had grown by 40% since that February report and that it attracted about $2.70 for every $1 dollar invested on average across its portfolio.

FACING HURDLES

GCF Executive Director Yannick Glemarec told Reuters that processing project proposals had often taken a long time in the past but the fund had now built up its operational capacity and improved governance to speed up.

He said the GCF approved projects worth $2.5 billion every year and had cut the time between proposal review and first pay out to an average of 12-17 months, from 26-28 months in 2018. He also said the fund was hiring five people a month to manage its portfolio.

Some projects have moved fast. A solar plant in Mongolia was operating just over a year after GCF approval, the fund said.

But Glemarec said progress was at risk, with the possibility approvals could be delayed next year due to insufficient funds.

Joe Thwaites, a climate finance expert at U.S.-based think tank the World Resources Institute, said the GCF was operating in line with or slightly behind other climate finance institutions in the first four years of their lives.

He said two other U.N.-backed funds, the Adaptation Fund and the Global Environment Facility, had more streamlined processes because they had been around longer, starting around 2007 and 1992, respectively.

But he said the GCF needed to rethink some demands it put on developing countries. As an example, he cited GCF requests in some cases for 30 years of weather data from countries where this didn’t exist because of conflict.

“That’s a good example of where very, very well-meaning requirements … can put up hurdles particularly for smaller entities,” Thwaites said.

The GCF spokesperson said it had a flexible approach about data and was working to ease challenges around data requests.

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