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PRESS RELEASE

Multilateral Development Banks Provided $28 billion in Climate Finance in 2014

June 16, 2015



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WASHINGTON, June 16, 2015—The world’s six large multilateral development banks (MDBs) delivered over US$28 billion in financing last year to help developing countries and emerging economies mitigate and adapt to the challenges of climate change. The latest figures bring total collective commitments of the past four years to more than US$100 billion. 

In 2014, the six banks together provided over US$23 billion dedicated to mitigation efforts and US$5 billion for adaptation work, according to the fourth joint report on MDB climate finance.

The report reveals the important part the MDBs play in delivering development finance in a world shaped by climate change.  It was prepared by the African Development Bank (AfDB), the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), the European Investment Bank (EIB), the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and the World Bank Group (WBG). 

Last week, the G7 leaders made clear their commitment to decarbonizing the global economy.” said Rachel Kyte, World Bank Group Vice President and Special Envoy for Climate Change.  “In so doing they recognized the important role that multilateral development banks play in helping our country and private sector clients to manage an orderly transition to low carbon growth and resilient economies.  Our role in channeling and leveraging finance for climate action was also recognized as they asked us to stretch our balance sheets and crowd in more capital.

This joint report on climate finance shows our track record of mobilization of both public and private finance for energy efficiency, renewable energy, clean transport, water management and landscape management. We plan to do more,” Kyte continued. “In particular, as the major channel of funding for adaptation we are concerned to increase investment in resilience where support is urgently needed now to support those who are most vulnerable.

Of the total commitments in 2014, 91 percent came from MDBs’ own resources, while the remaining 9 percent, or US$2.6 billion, came from external resources including bilateral or multilateral donors, the Global Environment Facility, and the Climate Investment Funds. 

Among the regions, South Asia received the largest share of total funding, at 21 percent. Latin America and the Caribbean, non-EU Europe and Central Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, and East Asia and the Pacific received 17 percent, 16 percent, 15 percent and 10 percent respectively.

About one-third (36 percent) of the total in adaptation funding went into agriculture and ecological resource projects, and 40 percent went into projects involving infrastructure (including flood protection), energy, and the built environment.   Renewable energy was the most common mitigation project, drawing 35 percent of the funding.  Energy efficiency accounted for 22 percent.  The banks also invested heavily in sustainable transport, at 27 percent of the total.

The 2014 report is based on a joint MDB approach for climate finance tracking and reporting that counts only the project components directly providing mitigation or adaptation co-benefits.

Knowing where the money is flowing is critical for reaching areas of opportunity and need, because what gets measured gets managed. The MDBs have harmonized their principles for tracking climate mitigation finance with members of the International Development Finance Club, and have started a similar process for adaptation finance.

The MDBs, together with other public development finance institutions— play a strategic role in smartly deploying scarce government resources and leveraging much larger, and longer-term, private investments. 

It is increasingly clear that the finance required for a successful, orderly transformation to a low-carbon and resilient global economy is counted in the trillions and not billions.  The immediate challenge of climate finance, while we build the policy framework that will drive investment of the trillions, is to meet the promise made by developed countries to mobilize US$100 billion a year by 2020. 

With their ability to catalyze public and private funds, the report shows how the MDBs have successfully attracted and deployed climate financing to support low-carbon resilient growth in developing countries and emerging economies.  

The report provides key data on climate finance flows and is expected to inform discussions at the Third International Conference on Financing for Development in Addis Ababa next month, and the UN climate change negotiations (COP21) in Paris at the end of the year.

 

For more information, please visit www.worldbank.org/climate

 


Media Contacts
In Washington
Robert Bisset
Tel : +1 202-415-9646
rbisset@worldbank.org
In Broadcast
Mehreen Sheikh
Tel : +1 202-458-7336
msheikh1@worldbankgroup.org


PRESS RELEASE NO:
2015/502/GCC

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