MDPs Committed Climate Finance Worth $66 B in 2020: Joint Report By Soumya Duggal/ Updated On Fri, Jul 2nd, 2021 Highlights : 2020 Joint Report on Multilateral Development Banks’ Climate Finance shows that climate finance committed by major MDPs rose to $66 billion in 2020. Of this, $38 billion was committed to low- and middle-income economies. Investment in Solar Power to Exceed Investment in Oil in 2023: World Energy Report, IEA According to the recently published 2020 Joint Report on Multilateral Development Banks’ Climate Finance, climate finance committed by major multilateral development banks (MDBs) rose to a total of $66 billion last year from $61.6 billion in 2019, of which, 58%—or $38 billion—was committed to low- and middle-income economies. The total climate cofinance committed during 2020 alongside MDB resources was $85 billion. Together, MDB climate finance and climate cofinance totalled more than $151 billion. The amount of private direct mobilization stood at $5.9 billion. Accelerating the transition to low-carbon and climate-resilient economies through climate finance is a key element of the MDBs’ effort to align their activities with the objectives of the 2015 Paris Agreement to keep global warming well below 2°C, with efforts to limit it to 1.5°C, along climate-resilient development pathways. In the past 6 years, the MDBs have jointly committed a total of $257 billion in climate finance, of which $186 billion was directed at low- and middle-income economies. The annual report is a key indicator on the progress MDBs are making on accelerating the delivery of climate finance, for which demand is clearly going to grow over time. This year’s report marks the end of the reporting period tracking individual climate finance pledges since 2015; for most, 2021 will mark the start of a new increase in ambition. In 2019, at the UN Secretary-General’s Climate Action Summit, MDBs announced their expected joint annual climate action finance to 2025. These include at least $65 billion, with $50 billion of MDB climate finance for low-income and middle-income countries; an increase in adaptation finance to $18 billion; and private direct mobilization of $40 billion. “The MDBs will continue to improve their tracking and reporting of climate finance in the context of their commitments to ensure consistent financial flows to the countries’ long-term, low-carbon and climate-resilient development pathways, as established in…the Paris Agreement,” says the 2020 report, which is the 10th in the series. ADB Supports India’s Covid-19 Response Through Record Annual Lending Also Read Of the 2020 total of $66 billion, $63 billion came from the MDBs’ own accounts and almost $3 billion from external resources channelled through and managed by MDBs. These included the Climate Investment Funds, Green Climate Fund and climate-related funds under the Global Environment Facility, EU blending facilities and others. ADB to End Fossil Fuel Financing, No Timeline Committed Also Read The 2020 financing helped play a key role in supporting countries to embed green and climate-focused solutions as part of their recoveries from the impact of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19). While these programmes affected MDBs’ normal lending operations and thus the delivery of their climate finance targets, seeing the total commitments for low- and middle-income countries dip from 2019’s $41.5 billion, the 2020 report says interventions and support from the MDBs laid a solid foundation for “building back better” for a greener, more resilient, post-COVID-19 future. “Climate action has never been more urgent than now. Speed, scale, and financing are critical to enable transition into low-carbon and climate-resilient development pathways and achieving the universally agreed goals of the Paris Agreement,” said ADB’s Vice-President for Knowledge Management and Sustainable Development Bambang Susantono. “ADB remains steadfast in providing financing and technical assistance for our developing member countries to make a green, resilient, and inclusive recovery from COVID-19, while aligning our own operations with the goals of the Paris Agreement.” Nearly $50 billion (76%) of total MDB climate finance in 2020 was associated with climate change mitigation investments that aim to reduce harmful greenhouse gas emissions and slow down global warming. Of this, 50% went to low- and middle-income economies. More than $16 billion (24%) for climate change adaptation finance was invested in adaptation efforts to help countries build resilience to the mounting impacts of climate change, including worsening droughts and more extreme weather events, from flooding to rising sea levels. Of this, 83% was directed for low- and middle-income economies. The 2020 MDB report, coordinated by the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), combines data from the African Development Bank, ADB, the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), the EBRD, the European Investment Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank Group, the Islamic Development Bank and the World Bank Group. AIIB data is fully incorporated for the first time. As part of the MDBs’ ambition to extend and enhance climate finance reporting, the 2020 report also summarises information on climate finance tracking from the New Development Bank, presented separately from the joint figures and not yet included in the MDB climate finance total. Tags: 2015 Paris Agreement, 2020 Joint Report on Multilateral Development Banks’ Climate Finance, African Development Bank, Asian Development Bank, Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB, Climate Finance, European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), multilateral development banks (MDBs)