New Delhi: More than US$100 billion of debt in developing countries could be freed up to spend on restoring nature and adapting to climate change, according to a new analysis by IIED.
Debt for climate and nature swaps’ are an important but underused tool for addressing three major problems facing less-wealthy nations: crippling debt, the impacts of climate change, and biodiversity loss.
If a country and its creditors agree to a swap, a portion of that nation’s debt can be written off in exchange for achieving specific, measurable and traceable outcomes in climate or nature projects.
Ahead of the World Bank/International Monetary Fund (IMF) Spring Meetings which begin on 15 April, IIED is calling on international financial institutions and the G20 to promote debt swaps as an important tool for tackling the debt crisis in those countries most at risk from climate change.
Laura Kelly, the director of IIED’s Shaping Sustainable Markets research group, said, “Many of the countries most threatened by rising temperatures have huge debt burdens, and are forever paying interest to wealthier nations that have contributed much more to the climate crisis.
Money that could help restore damaged ecosystems and protect vulnerable communities from floods or drought is instead flowing to banks and polluters in the rich world.
“The IMF and World Bank should recognise that the current way of lending just doesn’t work for people or the planet. Our broken financial system must move on from colonialist, 20th-century thinking if it’s going to serve everyone fairly.”
IIED’s analysis focuses on the 49 countries most at risk of defaulting on their external debts for which data could be found.
According to IMF/World Bank figures for 2022 public external debt stocks, the most recent available they collectively owe $431 billion.
Using a methodology derived from previous international debt-reduction schemes, IIED estimates that $103.4 billion of that total could be freed up for swaps.
Twenty-nine of the nations included in IIED’s analysis are part of the Least Developed Countries Group, which negotiate as a bloc at United Nations climate talks.
The analysis found that debt-for-climate-and-nature swaps could free up $33.7 billion for these countries, dwarfing the $6.1 billion they received in climate finance in 2021.
Overall, the 49 countries IIED analysed received $13.8 billion in climate finance in 2021, according to OECD figures, which is significantly less than what they need.
The amount of money that could be freed up through swaps also vastly outweighs the roughly $700 million pledged to the COP28 ‘loss and damage’ fund so far.