Implementation of the work programme on long-term finance. Wrap-up session. 3 October, 2012 Cape Town

Similar documents
Relationship with UNFCCC and External Bodies

Goal 13. Target number: 13.a

Summary and Recommendations by the Standing Committee on Finance on the 2016 Biennial Assessment and Overview of Climate Finance Flows

Decision 3/CP.17. Launching the Green Climate Fund

47. This section presents the core budget for the biennium as proposed by the Executive Secretary:

Round-table discussion on the process to identify information to be provided under Article 9, paragraph 5, of the Paris Agreement

Potential and exemplar financial. Makoto Kato

The work of the Least Developed Countries Expert Group (LEG)

Guidance from the twentysecond session of the Conference of the Parties: Co-Chairs proposal

PMR Governance Framework*

Outcomes of COP17 and CMP7

GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORK FOR THE CLEAN TECHNOLOGY FUND

Initial Modalities for the Operation of the Fund s Mitigation and Adaptation Windows and its Private Sector Facility

Fourth Report of the Green Climate Fund to the Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change

The NAPA and NAP processes, and their linkages with Article 6.

ETS International Cooperation and MRV

GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORK FOR

Update on the work of the Standing Committee. on Finance related to the Fifth Review of the. Financial Mechanism of the Convention

Governance and Financial Mechanism - Oversight of Climate Financing. Farrukh Khan Pakistan

Programme Budget. UNFCCC secretariat

GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORK FOR THE CLEAN TECHNOLOGY FUND. November, 2008

Green Climate Fund & Role of National Designated Authority (NDA)

Organisation strategy for Sweden s cooperation with the Green Climate Fund for

BRAZIL MRP IMPLEMENTATION STATUS REPORT (ISR)

MODALITY FOR FUNDING ADDITIONAL ACTIVITIES UNDER THE PMR: DRAFT PROPOSAL FOR DISCUSSION. PMR Note PA

3. The paper draws on existing work and analysis. 4. To ensure that this analysis is beneficial to the

Synthesis report on the progress made in the implementation of the remaining elements of the least developed countries work programme

Views and information on elements to be included in the work programme on loss and damage AWG-LCA 14

6 March, Bonn, Germany. UNFCCC secretariat Marshall Room, Haus Carstanjen Martin Luther King Strasse 8 UNFCCC Secretariat.

SUBMISSION BY DENMARK AND THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION ON BEHALF OF THE EUROPEAN UNION AND ITS MEMBER STATES

PARTNERSHIP FOR MARKET READINESS (PMR) Eighth Partnership Assembly Meeting Mexico City, March 3-5, Resolution No. PA8/2014-3

Workstream Zero nominal growth Proposed budget Core Supplementary Core Supplementary Nairobi work programme

Annex III. Zero nominal growth scenario

Enabling Policy Environments for Climate Finance: Scaling-up national systems to meet the climate finance gap

G20 STUDY GROUP ON CLIMATE FINANCE PROGRESS REPORT. (November )

Report on the activities of the Co-Chairs

UNEP Fit for the Funds Webinar: Measuring the Effectiveness of National Climate Finance Delivery With ODI and Frankfurt School 22 May 2013

Private sector observer reflections

Ethiopia s Climate Resilient Green Economy (CRGE) Facility Terms of Reference

LISTENING ENGAGING IMPROVING IDB External Feedback System

Goal 13. Target 13.2: Integrate climate change measures into national policies, strategies and planning

Loss and Damage at the UNFCCC

THE WORLD BANK TERMS OF REFERENCE Impact of carbon pricing instruments on national economy and contribution to NDC

Work of the LDC Expert Group in supporting the LDCs on adaptation

FCCC/CP/2016/10/Add.1

Long-term Finance: Enabling environments and policy frameworks related to climate finance

Decisions of the Board Eighth Meeting of the Board, October 2014

Standing Committee on Finance

Initial Structure and Staffing of the Secretariat

IDFC Position Paper Aligning with the Paris Agreement December 2018

regulation approach incentive approach

The Addis Ababa Action Agenda of the Third. United Nations Capacity Development Programme on International Tax Cooperation

The Conference of Parties. Recalling Article 4, paragraphs 3, 4 and 5 of the Convention,

International Policies and Cooperation to Advance an Inclusive Green Economy

15889/10 PSJ/is 1 DG G

Major Economies Business Forum: Green Climate Fund and the Role of Business

Response to UNFCCC Secretariat request for proposals on: Information on strategies and approaches for mobilizing scaled-up climate finance (COP)

The Equity Reference Framework

page 1 Building capacity for LDCs to participate effectively in intergovernmental climate change processes

Report of the Standing Committee on Finance

Partnership for Market Readiness (PMR): Technical Work Program: Report on FY15 activities and Proposal for FY16

Views on elements to be taken into account in developing guidance to the Global Environment Facility

FCCC/CP/2013/5. United Nations

FORTY-FIRST SESSION OF THE IPCC Nairobi, Kenya, February 2015 MATTERS RELATED TO UNFCCC AND OTHER INTERNATIONAL BODIES

CARBON PRICING PRINCIPLES. Prepared by the ICC Commission on Environment and Energy

STRATEGIC ALIGNMENT OF THE LDCF PIPELINE

Fact sheet: Financing climate change action Investment and financial flows for a strengthened response to climate change

Economic and Social Council

KEY SECTOR ANALYSIS / NATIONAL ISSUES PAPERS GUIDELINE

Proposed programme budget for the biennium

Mapping of elements related to project or programme eligibility and selection criteria

TRAINING CATALOGUE ON IMPACT INSURANCE Building practitioner skills in providing valuable and viable insurance products

Designing public sector interventions to mobilize climate compatible investment UNFCCC Regional Workshop Mexico

Strategies and approaches for long-term climate finance

CONSIDERATION OF OPTIONS PAPER PREPARED BY THE TASK GROUP CO-CHAIRS

Additional Modalities that Further Enhance Direct Access: Terms of Reference for a Pilot Phase

Proposed programme budget for the biennium

February 2012 REDD+ FINANCING GAP

Discussion: Legal, political and implementation challenges of the Paris Agreement on Climate Change

Views on REDD+ Results Based Finance Architecture COLOMBIA

TERMS OF REFERENCE FOR JOINT PPCR MISSION

FCCC/CP/2017/8. United Nations

EAST AFRICAN COMMUNITY. CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES OF CLIMATE CHANGE: Post COP19 Perspective of East African Civil Society Organizations

Summary of the workshop

Summary and recommendations by the Standing Committee on Finance on the 2018 Biennial Assessment and Overview of Climate Finance Flows

NDC IMPLEMENTATION SUPPORT. Dr. Ana Bucher Sr. Climate Change Specialist Climate Analytics and Advisory Services

PMR PROJECT IMPLEMENTATION STATUS REPORT (ISR)

Work programme of the Secretariat for 2019 and administrative budget

Climate Financing by Luxembourg 1

ASSESSING THE COMPLIANCE BY ANNEX I PARTIES WITH THEIR COMMITMENTS UNDER THE UNFCCC AND ITS KYOTO PROTOCOL

GUIDE. CFAS Climate Finance Guide: COP 22 Marrakech

Preliminary material in preparation for the first iteration of the informal note on this agenda item

Workstream III: Operational Modalities Sub-workstream III.1: Finance Entry Points Scoping Paper

Statement on Climate Change

NATIONAL CLIMATE FINANCE INSTITUTIONS. Their challenges and how the Fit for the Funds Programme can respond to them

LOSS AND DAMAGE TO CLIMATE CHANGE IN BANGLADESH: WHITHER WOMEN MATTER?

CLIMATE-FRIENDLY ECONOMY: REDUCING EMISSIONS AND LIMITING CLIMATE CHANGE

MRV FRAMEWORK FOR NON-ANNEX I PARTIES UNDER THE UNFCCC

CTF-SCF/TFC.4/Inf.2 March 13, Joint Meeting of the CTF and SCF Trust Fund Committees Manila, Philippines March 16, 2010

Annex XIV LDCF Timeline: COP guidance and GEF responses

Transcription:

Implementation of the work programme on long-term finance Wrap-up session 3 October, 2012 Cape Town

Mandate COP17 decided to undertake a work programme on long-term finance in 2012, including workshops, to progress on long-term finance in the context of decision 1/CP.16, paragraphs 97-101. Work programme aims to contribute to the on-going efforts to scale up the mobilization of climate change finance after 2012. It will analyse options for the mobilization of resources from a wide variety of sources, public and private, bilateral and multilateral, including alternative sources and relevant analytical work on the climate-related financing needs of developing countries. It will draw its analysis from relevant reports including that of the High-level Advisory Group on Climate Financing and the report on mobilizing climate finance for the Group of Twenty and the assessment criteria in the reports, and will also take into account lessons learned from fast-start finance. Co-chairs to prepare a report on the workshops for consideration by the Conference of the Parties at its eighteenth session.

First Workshop on Long-Term Finance Climate-related finance needs of developing countries Scale of mitigation and adaptation financing needs and methodologies underpinning their assessments Approaches applied to methodologies used in assessing mitigation and adaptation climate related financing needs of developing countries: - top-down and bottom-up approaches - precision in overall economic and social costs assessments of climate mitigation and adaption activities. Ways to enhance developing countries technical capacity to accurately assess climate related financing needs, including for facilitating increased information at sectoral level: - establishing analytical capacity and enhancing country capability to address their needs to attract international climate finance.

Potential sources of climate finance, including public, private, bilateral, multilateral and alternative sources Existing and potential future sources of climate finance, innovative sources of public finance and incentive frameworks to mobilize these sources How bundling various sources of climate finance can potentially contribute to scaleup climate finance Reinforcing complementarity of potential sources of finance and innovation to achieve scale Relationship between stable long-term frameworks and adoption of emission reduction targets (carbon price) and various potential sources complementarity of potential sources and innovation

Options for mobilizing climate finance Options for mobilizations of multiple sources of climate finance, viability of carbon markets as investment and revenue-generating mechanism Multiplicity of financial and extra-financial factors determining the direction, composition, and size of climate financial flows - scale of climate financial flows from various sources of finance - market, institutional, and policy factors and the associated risks Policies and instruments to mobilize private sector climate finance

Emerging early insight from lessons learned from fast-start finance Exploration of good practices in developed-developing country collaboration areas of improvement. Adaptation and mitigation. Examples of barriers to climate finance deployment in developing countries. Ownership and in-country capacity to accurately identify needs and formulate climate investment strategies. Tracking climate finance: measuring and reporting. MRV systems for international and country-level climate financial flows.

Web-based seminar on Long-Term Finance First Webinar Various approaches applied to assessment of climate related financing needs in developing countries in the longer term. A total of 177 participants: finance negotiators, experts from public and private finance institutions multilateral, bilateral, national civil society, think tanks, academia, and global consultancy firms. Presentations unpacking findings of the UNFCCC's NEEDS project and UNDP's work in the area of investment and financial flows. Insight and lessons learned from country experiences: Philippines and Costa Rica Accurate climate finance assessments to better inform the development climateresilient development strategies and low-carbon investment strategies

Second webinar The second webinar dealt with a range of important issues related to adaptation finance. - sources and options for adaptation finance - elements of design of multilateral funds that exhibit scalability and direct access features - the potential role of private sector in adaptation finance in developing countries, including insurance industry. A total of 103 participants from various stakeholder organizations within adaption finance

Second workshop on long-term finance Scaling up of climate finance and enhancing enabling conditions (policies and instruments & delivery and access). Interactive discussions involving climate finance experts from outside UNFCCC

Next steps It is good to have an end to journey toward, but it is the journey that matters in the end. by Ursula Leguin Co-chairs report: review, analyze and digest information generated from analytical and technical discussions and submission to COP 18. Achievements in the LTF work programme Success is a journey, not a destination. The doing is often more important than the outcome. by Arthur Ashe Contribution to the on-going efforts to scale up the mobilization of climate change finance after 2012 through: - Enhanced collective understanding of options for mobilizing climate finance and related work on financing needs: technical and analytical discussions; co-chairs report - Increased institutional knowledge on climate finance issues - Valuable knowledge-sharing experience and engagement with policy and climate finance expertise outside UNFCCC negotiations process for possible consideration in the future

Two paradoxes are better than one they may even suggest a solution. by Edward Teller Stop worrying about the potholes in the road and celebrate the journey! by Barbara Hoffman Success is a journey, not a destination. The doing is often more important than the outcome. by Arthur Ashe It is good to have an end to journey toward, but it is the journey that matters in the end. by Ursula Leguin Leadership is based on inspiration, not domination; on cooperation, not intimidation. by William Arthur Wood