Ban Ki-moon summit set to decide fate of Green Climate Fund

Latest meeting of Fund’s board ends with no deadline for contributions, meaning September 2014 likely date for pledges

Ban has invited all world leaders to a climate summit in September 2014 that will run parallel to the General Assembly (Pic: UN)

By Ed King

The viability of the UN’s Green Climate Fund could be sealed at Ban Ki-moon’s climate leader summit next September, when its sources of funding are expected to be revealed.

A meeting of the GCF’s board in Paris this week ended without setting a date for raising new funds, after the USA and Australia blocked any specific timeline.

In a statement the Board said fundraising will start “within three months of the adoption of a set of key policies and procedures that enable the fund to receive, manage and disburse funds.”

These are set to be discussed at meetings scheduled for February and May 2014, leaving four months before world leaders gather in New York for the Secretary General’s planned summit.

“I would hope heads of government heading to the Ban Ki Moon summit would be prepared to make pledges,” said Amal-Lee Amin from consultancy E3G, who has been participating in the talks.

Earlier contributions are unlikely. Speaking from Paris, ActionAid’s Brandon Wu said many diplomats from rich nations are wary of any type of deadline: “there is no legally binding language requiring countries to contribute, and the timeline is not explicit and could very easily be delayed”.

There is intense interest in the fund’s future around the world, particularly in developing countries. It is expected to channel a significant proportion of the $100 billion rich countries promised to provide by 2020 to help develop low carbon infrastructure and cut global emissions.

Speaking after the meeting concluded, Executive Director Hela Cheikhrouhou said: “We are getting ready to open for business”.

Other observers are not so optimistic. Also speaking from Paris, veteran climate finance analyst Karen Orenstein said the lack of urgency to get funds agreed was causing increased levels of tension between delegates.

“One board member from Africa suggested the next meeting be held in a developing country already experiencing the devastating impacts of climate change, so the board could get a reality check,” she said.

Trust deficit

Finance remains one of the most contentious issues at the UN climate talks, lying at the heart of many grievances between the Global North and South.

Some countries are expected to make further voluntary pledges at the UN climate summit in Warsaw next month, although these are unlikely to come close to what the GCF needs to get started.

“Everyone knows finance has to come for the UNFCCC process to go anywhere,” Wu said.

There have been signs that China may become a GCF donor, although it is coming under pressure from countries like Saudi Arabia not to set a precedent, meaning other developing nations may have to contribute.

“If money from developed countries does not materialize for the GCF, then I think that already fragile trust between developed and developing countries will be further eroded,” said Orenstein.

“The lack of anything concrete on resource mobilization could lead to funding for the GCF becoming a bargaining chip at the 2015 COP in Paris. This would be wrong and should be avoided.”

Donors debate

But clarifying what sources of finance – aside from public funds – can be drawn on for the GCF is apparently proving challenging.

Various alternative sources including using money from aviation’s inclusion in the EU emissions trading scheme, a tax on OPEC oil exports and using funds for fossil fuel subsidies have been suggested.

Observers in Paris noted “a lot of unpleasant politics” at stages, with Saudi Arabia in particular blamed for opposing innovative sources, perhaps fearing it will hit the country’s oil revenues.

Strong support from the USA and Australia for a private sector facility also created tensions with some developing nations.

Another contentious issue surrounds social and environmental ‘safeguards’ to ensure funds are not misused and local communities are consulted on potential projects.

Wu argues this is “absolutely key for the GCF’s credibility”, warning that talks in Paris on this subject “haven’t been promising”.

Fund access

Despite the lack of headline success, progress appears to have been made on building the GCF’s capacity to absorb and distribute funds when it starts work next year.

Orenstein welcomes a decision on readiness and preparatory support. The agreement says it will “allow all eligible countries to programme, access and use Fund resources in a transformational manner, in accordance with the objectives of the Fund.”

Yesterday’s announcement added that the fund will “start supporting developing countries in prioritizing their efforts to get ready to access financing by the Fund”.

Amin says “there are enough signals” for countries to start preparing themselves to apply for support when the GCF opens for business at the end of 2014.

And while there is still considerable unease about the slothlike negotiations and architecture of the fund, she says it has the potential to play a “catalytic role” in accelerating low carbon investment in the next year.

“There are some elements of the fund that will continue to evolve, and I think it’s clear the fund will develop in a phased approach and evolve over time.

“We don’t have to do everything now but have enough in place to ensure the fund can be operational next year, and that’s pretty significant, because in the past that has not always been the case.”

Read more on: Climate politics | Green Climate Fund |