Plan to shield people from climate disasters unveiled at COP27

A man rides a boat past toll plaza amid flood water on main Indus highway, following rains and floods during the monsoon season in Sehwan, Pakistan September 15, 2022

A man rides a boat past toll plaza amid flood water on main Indus highway, following rains and floods during the monsoon season in Sehwan, Pakistan September 15, 2022. REUTERS/Akhtar Soomro

What’s the context?

New disaster protection measures lined up at COP27 in effort to stem soaring losses

  • 'Global Shield' aims to get quick cash to disaster-hit nations
  • Germany sees it as complement to proposed 'loss and damage' fund
  • Other rich nations may push insurance as substitute, groups say

SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt, Nov 14 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Months after torrential rain and fast-melting glaciers submerged a third of Pakistan, parts of the country's southern Sindh and Balochistan provinces still resemble an inland sea.

"There are places where, as far as the eye can see, you still see water," said Farah Naureen, Pakistan country director for aid agency Mercy Corps.

The disaster has left thousands of families camped out in tents on elevated roadsides, first battling scorching summer heat with little shade - and now needing protection to deal with the winter cold, she said.

But just a fifth of an $800-million U.N. aid appeal for the country has been covered so far.

Women and children displaced from the flooded village of Ibrahim Chandio, who are now living on the embankment of Main Nara Valley Drain, in Sindh province, Pakistan, October 14, 2022. Thomson Reuters Foundation/Zofeen Ebrahim
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Displaced people stand on flooded highway, following rains and floods during the monsoon season in Sehwan, Pakistan, September 16, 2022.
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With 25,000 schools and millions of homes, plus health facilities and farm fields, needing repairs - adding up to damage estimated at $30 billion - "recovery is going to be very challenging", Naureen said.

At the COP27 U.N. climate summit in Egypt, a range of new efforts to limit such "loss and damage" - and get disaster-hit countries back on their feet more quickly - are being proposed.

On Monday, Germany and other G7 countries, alongside Ghana and the V20 group of vulnerable countries, unveiled plans to launch a "Global Shield" against climate risks.

It brings together and expands initiatives - from subsidised insurance coverage to stronger social protection schemes and pre-approved disaster financing - aimed at ensuring international help arrives swiftly to support disaster-hit poorer countries' own contingency plans.

It builds in part on the InsuResilience Global Partnership, an insurance programme launched in 2017 that now operates in 108 countries, with flagship projects such as the Caribbean Catastrophe Risk Insurance Facility and African Risk Capacity pool.

The idea is to get money moving as countries negotiate on setting up a more comprehensive "loss and damage" funding facility, a major focus at COP27.

"We thought it was so urgent to get something up and running now, while we work globally" through the U.N. system, said Jennifer Morgan, state secretary and special envoy for international climate action in Germany's foreign ministry.

The "Global Shield" would complement a proposed "loss and damage" finance facility - not replace it, she said in an interview.

The shield aims to fill current gaps in protection to ensure money arrives within 24 to 48 hours after a disaster, and will be up and running from January 2023, said Morgan, a longtime climate policy expert and former head of Greenpeace.

But climate activists at COP27 said they believed some wealthier G7 countries are positioning the Global Shield as a substitute for a new loss and damage fund.

Indian climate activist Disha Ravi holds a placard as she takes part in the Fridays for Future strike during the COP27 climate summit, in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, November 11, 2022

Indian climate activist Disha Ravi holds a placard as she takes part in the Fridays for Future strike during the COP27 climate summit, in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, November 11, 2022. REUTERS/Emilie Madi

Indian climate activist Disha Ravi holds a placard as she takes part in the Fridays for Future strike during the COP27 climate summit, in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, November 11, 2022. REUTERS/Emilie Madi

Some wealthy-country diplomats have suggested at COP27 that a "mosaic" of protection and disaster response finance could be an alternative to a loss and damage facility, which is opposed by the United States and some other major polluters.

"It's a power game. They want to control the money," said Harjeet Singh, a loss and damage specialist with Climate Action Network International, which represents more than 1,900 non-governmental groups.

Svenja Schulze, Germany's federal minister for economic cooperation and development, representing the G7 nations, said the Global Shield was not "the one and only solution for loss and damage", and would not deal with things like non-economic losses of culture or slow-onset problems like sea level rise.

But she and others emphasised the need to "build on existing structures and bring them together so we can act faster" on worsening disasters.

Sara Ahmed, the V20's finance adviser, would not comment directly on whether a separate loss and damage fund should be established, noting only that "we cannot wait another two years" for help to be delivered.

The COP27 climate negotiations are tasked with finding a "concrete" way to deal with rising climate losses for the world's most vulnerable countries by 2024 at the latest.

Insurance outpaced?

The Global Shield has so far raised $200 million in new funding, largely from Germany, with backers planning to work with vulnerable countries to create tailored packages of help.

But Teresa Anderson, global lead on climate justice for ActionAid International, warned that insurance, in particular, cannot keep up with swiftly rising climate-related losses.

"An initiative that involves Northern countries subsidising Northern-owned insurance corporations should not be mistaken for loss and damage finance that supports communities on the frontlines of the climate crisis," she said.

A displaced man cools off to avoid heat on flooded highway, following rains and floods during the monsoon season in Sehwan, Pakistan, September 16, 2022

A displaced man cools off to avoid heat on flooded highway, following rains and floods during the monsoon season in Sehwan, Pakistan, September 16, 2022. REUTERS/Akhtar Soomro

A displaced man cools off to avoid heat on flooded highway, following rains and floods during the monsoon season in Sehwan, Pakistan, September 16, 2022. REUTERS/Akhtar Soomro

Sherry Rehman, Pakistan's climate change minister, said faster help for countries like hers is crucial in whatever form.

"We are not asking for reparations. We are not even asking for compensation," she said on the sidelines of the U.N. talks.

But crises "need to be responded to with speed, agility and scale", she added.

Warning saves lives

U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres called at COP27 for the whole world to be covered by early warning systems within five years.

Today, only a third of small island developing states and under half of least-developed countries have access to systems designed to give alerts about impending storms, floods, tsunamis and other threats, the United Nations says.

Mami Mizutori, head of the U.N. disaster risk reduction agency, said putting effective protection systems in place globally is "ambitious" but "we need to do it".

"Every day we fail to do it, more lives are lost," she said, noting that countries with good early warning systems have eight times lower mortality from disasters

Warnings delivered at least 24 hours before a disaster strikes can also cut economic losses by 30%, she said at COP27.

Such stepped-up protection measures are particularly important as international humanitarian funding runs short in the face of mounting global crises.

Gernot Laganda, director of climate and disaster risk reduction for the U.N. World Food Programme (WFP), said his agency had long put a share of its financing toward efforts to build resilience in communities and prevent losses rather than simply responding to them, which is much more costly.

That includes providing cash a few days ahead of an expected flood, to help families buy emergency food supplies and move their animals and possessions to higher ground, and advising drought-hit herders to bring animals to market early.

But as demand for immediate aid to feed crisis-hit families soars alongside droughts, floods and now the war in Ukraine, "the prevention agenda, the resilience agenda, is going to be left behind," Laganda warned in an interview.

"We need this radical (prevention) effort now to brace for impact" from fast-worsening climate disasters, he added.

Naureen, of Mercy Corps, said early warning systems had let Pakistanis know before the floods that monsoon rains would be heavier than usual, but "nothing could have prepared Pakistan for a disaster of this scale."

That situation makes the push to win a funding facility to help communities recover from now-inevitable loss and damage crucial, alongside prevention efforts like early warning and the Global Shield, she said.

"When there is no money for loss and damage, somebody is bearing that cost. The loss doesn’t go away, the need doesn’t go away. The people affected end up bearing the cost," she said.

"If we can’t support them in a timely way, we’re pushing them into further poverty and misery."

(Reporting by Laurie Goering; Editing by Megan Rowling)


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Tags

  • Extreme weather
  • Adaptation
  • Climate finance
  • Climate inequality
  • Loss and damage

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