The Prague Post - World Bank and IMF climate snub 'worrying', says COP29 presidency

EUR -
AED 4.272483
AFN 80.853073
ALL 97.665328
AMD 445.199497
ANG 2.082185
AOA 1066.812425
ARS 1581.61212
AUD 1.78504
AWG 2.094071
AZN 1.975687
BAM 1.955813
BBD 2.342866
BDT 141.500942
BGN 1.954687
BHD 0.438495
BIF 3429.041155
BMD 1.163373
BND 1.498842
BOB 8.038157
BRL 6.362025
BSD 1.163233
BTN 102.621683
BWP 15.681172
BYN 3.92421
BYR 22802.105732
BZD 2.339466
CAD 1.603878
CDF 3334.804697
CHF 0.936829
CLF 0.028874
CLP 1132.706449
CNY 8.305902
CNH 8.307087
COP 4659.482335
CRC 588.116552
CUC 1.163373
CUP 30.829378
CVE 110.461781
CZK 24.490109
DJF 206.754844
DKK 7.463182
DOP 73.525797
DZD 151.126655
EGP 56.445917
ERN 17.450591
ETB 165.95518
FJD 2.630334
FKP 0.859049
GBP 0.86958
GEL 3.135235
GGP 0.859049
GHS 13.670006
GIP 0.859049
GMD 83.762384
GNF 10074.808025
GTQ 8.916059
GYD 243.262664
HKD 9.082917
HNL 30.709629
HRK 7.534697
HTG 152.184283
HUF 395.651515
IDR 19139.633836
ILS 3.942729
IMP 0.859049
INR 102.375464
IQD 1524.018291
IRR 48919.823774
ISK 143.607129
JEP 0.859049
JMD 186.591242
JOD 0.824808
JPY 172.840543
KES 150.657511
KGS 101.657948
KHR 4659.308025
KMF 492.68993
KPW 1047.007807
KRW 1624.068646
KWD 0.355946
KYD 0.969311
KZT 628.19418
LAK 25230.652726
LBP 104188.750357
LKR 351.529893
LRD 235.059908
LSL 20.603155
LTL 3.435137
LVL 0.703712
LYD 6.293838
MAD 10.52276
MDL 19.332212
MGA 5206.092501
MKD 61.52827
MMK 2442.319185
MNT 4185.24298
MOP 9.352902
MRU 46.511241
MUR 53.340489
MVR 17.919176
MWK 2020.778395
MXN 21.792996
MYR 4.92165
MZN 74.351705
NAD 20.602969
NGN 1788.929793
NIO 42.813318
NOK 11.676266
NPR 164.195093
NZD 1.985127
OMR 0.447315
PAB 1.163233
PEN 4.116593
PGK 4.923974
PHP 66.70781
PKR 327.896619
PLN 4.263865
PYG 8402.05591
QAR 4.235609
RON 5.079748
RSD 117.181944
RUB 93.708437
RWF 1682.236984
SAR 4.365348
SBD 9.575246
SCR 16.503102
SDG 698.599579
SEK 11.010503
SGD 1.499756
SHP 0.914228
SLE 27.10726
SLL 24395.34234
SOS 664.867895
SRD 44.967851
STD 24079.466908
STN 24.867092
SVC 10.178068
SYP 15125.62995
SZL 20.602897
THB 37.603739
TJS 10.94572
TMT 4.071805
TND 3.354877
TOP 2.724733
TRY 47.895822
TTD 7.896222
TWD 35.784225
TZS 2905.339585
UAH 48.107607
UGX 4119.027409
USD 1.163373
UYU 46.54051
UZS 14454.906063
VES 173.669272
VND 30649.054873
VUV 138.914638
WST 3.096669
XAF 655.969823
XAG 0.028438
XAU 0.00033
XCD 3.144073
XCG 2.096459
XDR 0.810902
XOF 650.907152
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.384123
ZAR 20.600155
ZMK 10471.775646
ZMW 27.562776
ZWL 374.605548
  • RBGPF

    -1.0000

    76

    -1.32%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    23.63

    +0.04%

  • CMSC

    -0.0810

    23.659

    -0.34%

  • GSK

    -0.7100

    38.96

    -1.82%

  • SCS

    0.0300

    16.77

    +0.18%

  • BCC

    -1.0000

    85.78

    -1.17%

  • AZN

    0.2900

    80.19

    +0.36%

  • RIO

    -0.8300

    61.89

    -1.34%

  • NGG

    -2.5900

    67.98

    -3.81%

  • BTI

    -1.6500

    55.24

    -2.99%

  • RELX

    -1.2300

    45.44

    -2.71%

  • BCE

    -0.5300

    24.43

    -2.17%

  • RYCEF

    0.0800

    14.35

    +0.56%

  • VOD

    -0.2400

    11.72

    -2.05%

  • JRI

    -0.0900

    13.51

    -0.67%

  • BP

    0.0000

    35.23

    0%

World Bank and IMF climate snub 'worrying', says COP29 presidency
World Bank and IMF climate snub 'worrying', says COP29 presidency / Photo: RODGER BOSCH - AFP/File

World Bank and IMF climate snub 'worrying', says COP29 presidency

The hosts of the most recent UN climate talks are worried international lenders are retreating from their commitments to help boost funding for developing countries' response to global warming.

Text size:

Major development banks have agreed to boost climate spending and are seen as crucial in the effort to dramatically increase finance to help poorer countries build resilience to impacts and invest in renewable energy.

But anxiety has grown as the Trump administration has slashed foreign aid and discouraged US-based development lenders such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund from focussing on climate finance.

Developing nations, excluding China, will need an estimated $1.3 trillion a year by 2035 in financial assistance to transition to renewable energy and climate-proof their economies from increasing weather extremes.

Nowhere near this amount has been committed.

At last year's UN COP29 summit in Azerbaijan, rich nations agreed to increase climate finance to $300 billion a year by 2035, an amount decried as woefully inadequate.

Azerbaijan and Brazil, which is hosting this year's COP30 conference, have launched an initiative to reduce the shortfall, with the expectation of "significant" contributions from international lenders.

But so far only two -- the African Development Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank -- have responded to a call to engage the initiative with ideas, said COP29 president Mukhtar Babayev.

"We call on their shareholders to urgently help us to address these concerns," he told climate negotiators at a high-level summit in the German city of Bonn this week.

"We fear that a complex and volatile global environment is distracting" many of those expected to play a big role in bridging the climate finance gap, he added.

- A 'worrisome trend' -

His team travelled to Washington in April for the IMF and World Bank's spring meetings hoping to find the same enthusiasm for climate lending they had encountered a year earlier.

But instead they found institutions "very much reluctant now to talk about climate at all", said Azerbaijan's top climate negotiator Yalchin Rafiyev.

This was a "worrisome trend", he said, given expectations these lenders would extend the finance needed in the absence of other sources.

"They're very much needed," he said.

The World Bank is directing 45 percent of its total lending to climate, as part of an action plan in place until June 2026, with the public portion of that spilt 50/50 between emissions reductions and building resilience.

The United States, the World Bank's biggest shareholder, has pushed in a different direction.

On the sidelines of the April spring meetings, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent urged the bank to focus on "dependable technologies" rather than "distortionary climate finance targets."

This could mean investing in gas and other fossil fuel-based energy production, he said.

Under the Paris Agreement, wealthy developed countries -- those most responsible for global warming to date -- are obliged to pay climate finance to poorer nations.

Other countries, most notably China, make voluntary contributions.

- Money matters -

Finance is a source of long-running tensions at UN climate negotiations.

Donors have consistently failed to deliver on past finance pledges, and have committed well below what experts agree developing nations need to cope with the climate crisis.

The issue flared up again this week in Bonn, with nations at odds over whether to debate financial commitments from rich countries during the formal meetings.

European nations have also pared back their foreign aid spending in recent months, raising fears that budgets for climate finance could also face a haircut.

At COP29, multilateral development banks (MDBs) led by the World Bank Group estimated they could provide $120 billion annually in climate financing to low and middle income countries, and mobilise another $65 billion from the private sector by 2030.

Their estimate for high income countries was $50 billion, with another $65 billion mobilised from the private sector.

Rob Moore, of policy think tank E3G, said these lenders are the largest providers of international public finance to developing countries.

"Whilst they are facing difficult political headwinds in some quarters, they would be doing both themselves and their clients a disservice by disengaging on climate change," he said.

The World Bank in particular has done "a huge amount of work" to align its lending with global climate goals.

"If they choose to step back this would be at their own detriment, and other banks like the regionally based MDBs would likely play a bigger role in shaping the economy of the future," he said.

The World Bank declined to comment on the record.

E.Cerny--TPP