Categories: AdaptationEco-Global

GCF, EIB join hands to raise climate finance in Africa through green bond

New Delhi: With an aim to boost climate finance in Africa, the European Investment Bank (EIB) and the Green Climate Fund (GCF) have announced their collaboration in the Green and Resilience Debt Platform.

“The platform contributes to the European Union’s Global Green Bond Initiative, which relies on a governance structure defined by the European Commission and European development finance institutions” Green Climate Fund in a statement.

It will be implemented in partnership with the United Nations Development Programme and United Nations Capital Development Fund.

The situation is particularly grim in the least developed countries on the African continent. Africa accounted for only 0.077 per cent of the total bond issuances 2021.

In 2019-20, only 3 per cent of the total climate finance provided worldwide went to sub-Saharan Africa.

The announcement came in the margins of the First EIB Group Forum in Luxembourg last Monday, which gathered policymakers, financial institutions, and business leaders to discuss pressing issues.

“The new platform will focus on climate resilience and blue bonds in Africa” he said.

“It will provide technical assistance to partner countries, promote a climate-sensitive investment environment, create a pipeline of bankable green investments, and strengthen domestic and regional green debt ecosystems and financial institutions,” said the statement.

It will also provide access to anchor investments in green bond issuances.

GCF will provide financing through its Project Preparation Facility window to support the design and establishment of the Green and Resilience Debt Platform.

This support will initially focus on Cote d’Ivoire and Kenya with the potential for additional countries to be added.

GCF will examine the platform’s feasibility and impact in these countries, in playing a unique role to align large financial flows with each country’s Nationally Determined Contribution and National Adaptation Plan.

A green, inclusive, and resilient economic development worldwide requires an unprecedented scale of investment, particularly in high-quality infrastructure.

Green bonds are widely recognized as part of the solution. Global experience has shown they are key in mobilising capital from private investors for investments with environmental impact.

However, emerging and developing economies face specific barriers when it comes to green bonds. Their respective markets remain largely underdeveloped and continue to grow at a much slower pace than those of developed countries.

Environment

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