COP28 'loss and damage' fund could threaten adaptation cash
Barbados' Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley attends a press conference at COP28 World Climate Summit, in Dubai United Arab Emirates, December 4, 2023. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya
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Money for climate adaptation could lose out to competition from the 'loss and damage' fund approved at COP28, officials warn
- Pledges for climate adaptation fund fall short at COP28
- Officials see competition with new 'loss and damage' fund
- Adaptation measures seen key to reducing climate losses
DUBAI - Government pledges for climate adaptation at the COP28 summit have fallen far short of the target, with officials warning that resources to build resilience to wilder weather and rising seas could be diverted into a new "loss and damage" fund instead.
At a meeting at the Dubai talks late on Monday, rich countries offered only $160 million in contributions to the Adaptation Fund - barely half of its $300-million goal this year for projects such as flood defences and early-warning systems.
In contrast, the loss and damage fund approved at the start of COP28 aims to help vulnerable countries or communities recover from climate impacts that cannot be avoided, such as repairing devastated property after a storm or relocating people threatened by rising seas and protecting cultural heritage.
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Several governments have mentioned the approval of that new fund among their reasons for offering less money for adaptation, said Mikko Ollikainen, head of the Adaptation Fund.
"The new loss and damage fund, there is so much political momentum around it ... that countries have really dug deep to find resources for that," he told Context at the U.N. climate conference in Dubai, calling that "very positive".
But he warned that without sufficient adaptation funding, the costs of damage from climate impacts will grow.
Developing nations are pushing for new adaptation finance targets to be included in how countries respond to the Global Stocktake - a U.N. assessment showing climate action is lagging far behind what is needed - but their efforts have been met with pushback by rich nations.
At the COP26 talks in Glasgow two years ago, the Adaptation Fund - established in 2001 and a leading global fund for such projects - raised a record $356 million in new pledges, more than double the amount raised so far at COP28.
At COP26, wealthy governments also committed to double adaptation finance to at least $40 billion a year by 2025, but have made little progress since.
Adaption gap
This year is set to be the warmest since records began in 1940, due to climate change as well as an El Nino weather pattern, according to the European Union's Copernicus Climate Change Service.
As a result, climate impacts including floods, droughts, wildfires and heatwaves have been felt across the world - and especially severely by developing nations, which have the least ability to withstand them.
Despite this, experts say funding for adaptation measures is far short of global needs, and has been plateauing as many rich nations have failed to give more amid multiple political and economic crisis including the Ukraine war and inflation.
A recent report by the U.N. Environment Programme (UNEP) said projected annual adaptation costs and needs were 10 to 18 times more than the actual finance available in 2021, and available funding fell by $4 billion between 2020 and 2021.
"We are in danger of allowing the narrative on loss and damage to crowd out the importance that is absolutely still necessary for adaptation," Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley told a press conference this week.
"What we want is to avert damage and avert loss before the event, which is why adaptation finance is critical," she said.
In the first week of COP28, governments have pledged more than $650 million to the loss and damage fund, led by the summit's host, the United Arab Emirates, and Germany, which pledged $100 million each.
But a major concern raised by officials and experts is whether the money promised is new cash and, if not, what other projects may lose their share of aid budgets - such as adaptation.
"We are all concerned," said Achim Steiner, head of the U.N. Development Programme (UNDP), which helps countries implement projects backed by the Adaptation Fund.
"I think it is now up to those who are pledging their contributions to the loss and damage fund to demonstrate that this is not ... deducting funds from either mitigation or adaptation," he said, adding that the UNDP is watching the situation carefully.
Governments must also pay more attention to the nature of these adaptation funds - such as whether they are loans or grants, said Ebony Holland, nature and climate policy lead at the International Institute for Environment and Development, a policy research body.
She said countries most vulnerable to climate impacts want donors to provide more grants than cheap credit, and ensure the money is informed by the priorities of local communities instead of "funders and governments in distant countries".
"An overemphasis on the volume of funding shadows the critical need to ensure the quality of this finance," Holland said.
(Reporting by Jack Graham and Megan Rowling in Dubai; Editing by Helen Popper.)
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