The African Group of Negotiators on Climate Change (AGN) has assured the African civil society of its commitment to protecting Africa’s interests in the newly operationalized Loss and Damage Fund.
AGN Chair, Ephraim Mwepya
Shitima, says the group, through its representatives in the Transitional
Committee on the Loss and Damage Fund, ensured that important safeguards were
put in place to avoid lengthy and unnecessary bureaucratic processes that would
hinder access.
He was briefing the civil
society groups at the on-going United Nations Climate summit (COP28) in Dubai,
UAE.
Shitima responded to concerns
by civil society groups that hosting the Fund at the World Bank would create
access and other bureaucratic barriers for countries from the global south.
“We reluctantly agreed to the
hosting arrangements to expedite its operationalization. If we insisted on the
creation of a standalone fund, it would have taken us another three years to
have it operationalized. But even as the case is, there are safeguards that
have been put in place. We have some clauses that would allow the fund to be
taken away from the World Bank if certain conditions as agreed are not met,” he
said.
In a historic moment, the draft
decision on the Loss and Damage Fund was adopted during the opening plenary of
COP28, effectively operationalizing the Fund.
The Loss and Damage Fund was
agreed on at COP27 held in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt. The modalities for the operationalization
were discussed and agreed by the Transitional Committee (TC) which was
constituted.
Loss and Damage is essential
even if the world meets climate mitigation goals because a “locked-in” level of
warming already impacts particularly vulnerable communities being hit by
extreme weather events, such as storms and floods, reduced agricultural
productivity, and rising sea levels among others.
However, African civil society
led by the Pan African Climate Justice Alliance (PACJA) is concerned that the Fund
will be hosted by the World Bank.
“Even as we welcome the operationalization
of the fund, we are concerned that it will be hosted by an institution with
historical access challenges for countries from the global south,” said Mithika
Mwenda, PACJA Executive Director.
“We hope it will not be another
of some existing funds that do not save the interest of the global south
counties especially those in Africa,” he added.
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