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Enhancing India’s Readiness to Climate Finance

India has taken several steps to improve its national response to climate change. India’s climate finance requirements, however, are very high, and will need to be met through a combination of public, private and international climate finance. See more at: http://shaktifoundation.in/

India has taken several steps to improve its national response to climate change. India’s climate finance requirements, however, are very high, and will need to be met through a combination of public, private and international climate finance. See more at: http://shaktifoundation.in/

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Funding priorities:<br />

<strong>Enhancing</strong> <strong>India’s</strong> readiness <strong>to</strong> access and deliver international climate finance<br />

The GCF will fund both mitigation and adaptation activities. In February 2014, the Board adopted an<br />

allocation framework that will aim for a 50:50 balance between mitigation and adaptation, with a floor<br />

of 50% of the adaptation allocation being earmarked for particularly vulnerable countries – including<br />

least developed countries, Small Island Developing States and African States. There will be no caps<br />

on the amount of funding that individual countries can access. At the outset, the GCF will offer both<br />

grants and loans (of higher and lower concession). Over time, it is expected that a wider range of<br />

instruments that can address bespoke risks (particularly for the private sec<strong>to</strong>r) may be adopted.<br />

Role of the private sec<strong>to</strong>r:<br />

One of the main innovative features of the GCF will be the Private Sec<strong>to</strong>r Facility (PSF), whose<br />

design features are <strong>to</strong> be elaborated over the coming year in consultation with a newly constituted<br />

Private Sec<strong>to</strong>r Advisory Group. While the amount of funding <strong>to</strong> be spent and the types of instruments<br />

<strong>to</strong> be used through the PSF have not yet been elaborated in the GCF Allocation Framework, there is<br />

strong interest from many contribu<strong>to</strong>rs in a prominent role for the Facility. It is likely that the PSF will<br />

be the chief vehicle used <strong>to</strong> blend public climate finance with private sec<strong>to</strong>r investment – using the<br />

public finance as a signalling <strong>to</strong>ol <strong>to</strong> ‘leverage’ increased private sec<strong>to</strong>r contributions.<br />

Capitalisation of the GCF:<br />

Prior <strong>to</strong> 2014, pledges <strong>to</strong> the GCF were limited <strong>to</strong> covering administrative costs and launching basic<br />

readiness activities in developing countries. However following the decisions made at the GCF<br />

Board’s 7 th meeting in May, the GCF launched its initial contribution process on July 1 st 2014 in Oslo,<br />

Norway 21 . This dialogue paves the way <strong>to</strong>wards the UN <strong>Climate</strong> Change Summit in September 2014<br />

and a special GCF pledging meeting in November 2014 which are expected <strong>to</strong> raise the funds for the<br />

initial capitalisation of the GCF. In the immediate term, likely capitalisation will range from $500 million<br />

at the most conservative estimate, up <strong>to</strong> $15 billion at the most liberal estimate. Several<br />

commenta<strong>to</strong>rs have suggested that for the GCF <strong>to</strong> make a material impact on the global climate<br />

finance architecture it will need <strong>to</strong> have a capitalisation that is at least equivalent <strong>to</strong> that of the <strong>Climate</strong><br />

Investment Funds (the largest multilateral fund for climate change <strong>to</strong>day). Put in perspective, the CIF<br />

was launched with pledges of $5 billion and now <strong>to</strong>tals $8 billion.<br />

2.3.2 The NAMA Facility<br />

Unlike the GCF, which has a broad mandate for funding adaptation and mitigation activities in<br />

developing countries, the Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Action Facility is a specialised funding<br />

stream targeted specifically at raising the ambition and scope of NAMAs in developing countries.<br />

The NAMA Facility is a new source of international climate finance that was launched as a pilot<br />

programme in 2012, financed by grants from Germany and the United Kingdom that amounted <strong>to</strong><br />

$156 million by early 2014. The Board of the NAMA Facility is made up of representation from the<br />

UK’s Department of Energy and <strong>Climate</strong> Change and the German Ministry of Environment. It is<br />

supported by a technical secretariat staffed by the German development bank KfW and the German<br />

Technical Assistance agency GIZ. The NAMA Facility supports developing countries <strong>to</strong> implement<br />

nationally appropriate mitigation actions that have the potential <strong>to</strong> catalyse transformational change<br />

<strong>to</strong>wards low-carbon development. According <strong>to</strong> the NAMA Facility’s governance documents, the<br />

NAMA Facility has no regional or sec<strong>to</strong>ral focus and is open <strong>to</strong> NAMAs across a range of countries<br />

and sec<strong>to</strong>rs. The NAMA Facility’s operational procedure is <strong>to</strong> hold an open competitive call for<br />

NAMAs seeking support, where the most ambitious NAMAs are selected. Thus far, the NAMA Facility<br />

has funded projects in the Mexican housing sec<strong>to</strong>r, the Chilean energy sec<strong>to</strong>r, the Colombian and<br />

Indonesian transport sec<strong>to</strong>rs, and the Costa Rican coffee sec<strong>to</strong>r. India has not yet sought access <strong>to</strong><br />

funds from the NAMA Facility. 22 Projects generally receive $9-20 million in grant finance.<br />

21 www.gcfund.org/fileadmin/00_cus<strong>to</strong>mer/documents/Press/GCF_Press_Release_Nr._06_-<br />

_1_July_2014.pdf<br />

22 NAMA Facility website: http://www.nama-facility.org/news.html<br />

Ref: Ricardo-AEA/R/ED59216/Final Report<br />

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