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

where low levels of capacity within potential NIEs <strong>to</strong> meet the accreditation requirements of the GCF<br />

has the potential <strong>to</strong> limit <strong>India’s</strong> ability <strong>to</strong> access larger volumes of climate finance in the short-<strong>to</strong>medium<br />

term.<br />

Lessons & Options for India<br />

International experience shows that an important first step is for NIEs (e.g. DFIs or National<br />

<strong>Climate</strong> Funds) <strong>to</strong> build fiduciary standards <strong>to</strong> meet international requirements. Support <strong>to</strong><br />

develop capacity within NIEs can come from multilateral financial agencies.<br />

Brazil’s largest development finance institution, BNDES, is the fund manager for Brazil’s two largest<br />

public climate finance funds - the National Fund on <strong>Climate</strong> Change and the Amazon Fund. The<br />

Amazon Fund is the largest climate-related fund operating in a single country. It was capitalised with<br />

more than $1 billion in pledges from donors (particularly Norway), and has approved $308 million for<br />

project implementation as of 2014. BNDES performs a number of roles for the Fund – providing<br />

secretariat services, and supporting project selection, moni<strong>to</strong>ring, and evaluation activities. 50 BNDES<br />

has been instrumental in the Amazon Fund’s early success, providing financial management<br />

with strong fiduciary standards, low administration fees, and a transparent management<br />

process for the dispersal of funds Housing the Amazon Fund within BNDES enabled quick<br />

operationalisation of the Fund, as BNDES has a strong reputation in the banking community, a long<br />

his<strong>to</strong>ry of working with international financial institutions, a good credit rating, and established<br />

governance, operational and risk control systems.<br />

The experience of the Amazon Fund has also shown that even experienced NIE-type<br />

institutions face capacity constraints in meeting international standards. For example, the<br />

Amazon Fund has underperformed in publicising environmental and social safeguards, conducting<br />

project moni<strong>to</strong>ring and evaluation (M&E), ensuring access for small organisations that face high<br />

transaction costs, and developing bankable projects. Efforts are being made <strong>to</strong> simplify management<br />

processes and improve transparency, however these constraints show that even the most advanced<br />

DFIs need training and capacity building for certain processes and standards. 51<br />

Some countries have chosen <strong>to</strong> use National <strong>Climate</strong> Funds <strong>to</strong> deliver climate finance. In many<br />

of these cases, international agencies have supported the early development of fiduciary<br />

standards. For example, during the first phase of the Indonesia <strong>Climate</strong> Change Trust Fund, the<br />

UNDP was appointed as interim fund manager, in part <strong>to</strong> secure confidence that minimum fiduciary<br />

standards would be met. Currently, UNDP and Bank Mandiri are jointly serving the role of fund<br />

manager, in anticipation of a full transition <strong>to</strong> national management by Bank Mandiri in the next phase.<br />

A great deal of effort appears <strong>to</strong> have been invested in fiduciary management arrangements for the<br />

ICCTF that align with both UNDP and national financial management systems. As of December 2013,<br />

5% of disbursed funding had supported capacity building in the ICCTF Secretariat. 52<br />

Examples from Brazil and Indonesia show that countries need National Implementing Entities with<br />

strong financial management capacity <strong>to</strong> deliver climate finance <strong>to</strong> the ground. Further, these two<br />

examples show that countries with strong development banking sec<strong>to</strong>rs still need support in meeting<br />

international financial standards <strong>to</strong> successfully access and/or manage funds. <strong>India’s</strong> experience also<br />

supports this observation. In India, both NABARD and SIDBI have taken on NIE roles for various<br />

internationally-funded, climate-related projects. NABARD has recently been accredited as <strong>India’s</strong> first<br />

NIE <strong>to</strong> the Adaptation Fund, and has now submitted three funding concepts <strong>to</strong> the AF. However this<br />

process was onerous and <strong>to</strong>ok over one year <strong>to</strong> complete – requiring international capacity building<br />

support from GIZ, SDC, and AdaptAsia. The next step for India is <strong>to</strong> translate this accomplishment<br />

50 Vivid Economics (2012). <strong>Climate</strong> finance architecture in Brazil.<br />

51 Forstater, M., Nakhooda, S. & Watson, C (2013). The effectiveness of climate finance: a review of the<br />

Amazon Fund. ODI Working Papers 372.<br />

52 Grüning, C., Menzel, C, Shuford L.S., Sonntag-O’Brien, V. (2012) Case Study: The Indonesia <strong>Climate</strong><br />

Change Trust Fund.<br />

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

44

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