By Yusuf Adua
Although the topic of climate change has become the primary focus of the international conversations with climate financing as the international community’s operating vehicle, these conversations are not yielding the desired attention to climate funding, or so it seems.
For the layman, climate financing is either national or transnational financing—drawn from public, private, or any alternative sources of financing—that seeks to support mitigation and adaptation actions that will address the effects of climate change.
The University College of London revealed in 2022 that climate financing is not reaching the countries that have the most need for it. That puts the existing trust between the affluent and poor nations at risk.
For sure, poor countries have greater need for climate finance than developed ones but sadly, they don’t get these funds as the developed countries do.
As a result of the rising energy consumption, which is necessary for emerging economies to attain greater economic development and improvements in quality of life, there will be a huge increase in the amount of emissions produced during the next few decades.
This is worissome in view of the fact that finance prioritises are given to particularly established economies in East Asia and the Pacific, Western Europe, and North America, to the detriment of the rest of the globe and less developed economies that are in desperate need of these resources.
In fact, just one-fourth of the funding is allocated to these countries. The entirety of Africa has only gotten 5% of the overall global finance for addressing climate change, according to the university’s study.
Nevertheless, according to sources, these countries do not receive sufficient financing because of the financial risks that are connected with doing business with those nations.
For instance, on the African continent, lower economic and financial development, poor regulatory quality, and low business confidence cause premiums to be around 18 percent in Zambia and Ghana, whereas in more conducive contexts such as South Africa and Morocco, these premiums could be as low as 4 percent. This is due to the fact that Zambia and Ghana have lower levels of economic and financial development.
In addition, developing nations lack key enablers that are able to broaden citizens’ access to energy sources in accordance with sustainable development goals. However, countries that have a significant rural population and are having difficulty achieving grid-based electricity are at a disadvantage when it comes to accessing private funding at this time. The climatic vulnerability of countries lowers their desirability as locations for low-carbon investments.
It is also a generally held belief that these nations, which are receiving the least help, do not possess the institutional ability and knowledge necessary to successfully manage and implement climate financing programmes.
That’s where everyone needs to wise up
Increasing a country’s capacity to withstand the effects of climate change is critical, regardless of whether or not the perception that these nations lack know-how is accurate.
Therefore, these nations absolutely have to get started on training the next generation of climate experts if they want to avoid having the rest of the globe cheat them out of what they should earn.
In 2022, there were only 154 organizations across the whole of Africa doing something on climate change. That is very meagre compared to the technical enhancement in other parts of the world.