Climate Finance
PRESS RELEASE: Governments, private sector and civil
society work towards developing common understanding of how
to scale up mobilization of long-term climate finance
(Bonn,
11 July 2012) – Meeting in Bonn this week, governments,
major financial institutions, private sector entities and
civil society moved closer towards developing a common
understanding of how to go about significantly scaling up
the mobilization of long-term finance which developing
countries need to help them limit greenhouse gas emissions
and adapt to climate change. The three-day event, which
ended today, was the first of two transparent, interactive
UNFCCC workshops on long-term climate change finance this
year. They were requested by governments as part of a work
programme on long-term climate finance agreed at the UN
Climate Change Conference in Durban at the end of 2011 (COP
17/ CMP 7). "It is clear that we cannot continue to tackle
climate change with old solutions, and that no one single
source is going to be appropriate or sufficient to mobilize
climate finance at a speed and scale that would allow people
in developing countries to build their own climate-resilient
futures. This event has allowed all stakeholders to think
outside the box, to explore options in highly creative ways,
and to pave the way for stronger climate action," said
UNFCCC Executive Secretary Christiana Figueres.
At the
workshop, the main issues discussed in detail included the
scale of finance-related needs of developing countries,
potential sources of climate finance in the longer-term,
innovations and options for mobilizing climate finance from
multiple sources and lessons learnt from
fast-start-finance. "The technical and analytical
discussions initiated here in Bonn paved the way for
identifying options to scale up finance for fighting climate
change. We are looking forward to presenting the Co-chairs'
report to COP 18 in Doha at the end of the year," said
long-term finance Co-Chair Zaheer Fakir. The event was
made accessible to all interested stakeholders with the help
of live webcast, social media and an online platform on the
UNFCCC website by which stakeholders could send in material
and put questions to the two Chairs. More than 1,000
messages, comments and questions relating to the workshop
were sent via Twitter using the #LTFchat hashtag or posted
on Facebook. "The role of all stakeholders in mobilizing
climate finance is absolutely crucial. Because of that, we
tried to make the workshop as transparent and inclusive as
possible. We achieved this objective and intend to
continuously draw in relevant stakeholders in an interactive
fashion throughout the year," said long-term finance
Co-Chair Georg Børsting. Furthermore, webinars and e-fora
will be organised between the two workshops, and
stakeholders can continue to put questions to the Chairs and
post comments via the UNFCCC online platform and social
media. A total of 140 government officials, public and
private finance sector representatives and members of civil
society and academia took part in the debates. The
discussions were based on extensive analytical work,
including the UN Secretary-General's High-level Advisory
Group on Climate Change Financing and the G20 report on
mobilizing climate finance. All of the workshop documents,
presentations and the on-demand webcast will be made
available at: UNFCCC's
Facebook event page on long-term climate finance: About
the UNFCCC With 195 Parties, the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) has near universal
membership and is the parent treaty of the 1997 Kyoto
Protocol. The Kyoto Protocol has been ratified by 193 of the
UNFCCC Parties. Under the Protocol, 37 States, consisting of
highly industrialized countries and countries undergoing the
process of transition to a market economy, have legally
binding emission limitation and reduction commitments. The
ultimate objective of both treaties is to stabilize
greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level
that will prevent dangerous human interference with the
climate system. ENDS
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