Climate Justice

Most vulnerable nations form climate action coalition

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‘Vulnerable 20’ communique: “Climate change is the defining challenge of our time. Overcoming it is a matter of survival for people on all continents and vulnerable communities everywhere.”

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‘Vulnerable 20’ communique: “Climate change is the defining challenge of our time. Overcoming it is a matter of survival for people on all continents and vulnerable communities everywhere.”


V20 inaugural meeting
FOUNDING COMMUNIQUE:
VULNERABLE TWENTY GROUP OF MINISTERS OF FINANCE

8 October 2015 | Lima, Peru

Introduction

1. We, the Finance Ministers of the Vulnerable Twenty (V20) Group, in our inaugural meeting this 8th day of October 2015 in Lima, Peru, chaired by the Philippines’ Finance Secretary, Cesar Purisima, hereby set forth our common and collective challenges, aspirations, and proposed actions in this Communiqué.

Inception

2. As called for by the Climate Vulnerable Forum (CVF) in its 2013-15 Costa Rica Action Plan, we agreed to form the V20 and discussed the role, objectives and activities of the group moving forward, and agreed to the creation of this new mechanism as a platform for leaders and countries highly vulnerable to climate change around the globe to highlight shared interests and contribute substantively to discussions on finance and other means of implementation, particularly to foster a significant increase in investment in climate resiliency and low emissions development.

3. On this day, we established the V20 to serve as a new high-level mechanism for dialogue and action to concentrate attention on economic and financial responses to climate change through the dedicated cooperative efforts of economies systemically vulnerable to this global phenomenon.

4. We believe urgent and ambitious global climate action is now a fundamental human right. Everyone, especially those living in the most vulnerable areas of the planet, has a right to breathe clean air, to drink clean water, and to live in prosperity on a secure and sustainable planet. Ineffective action on climate change deprives us of such rights.

5. Climate change is the defining challenge of our time. Overcoming it is a matter of survival for people on all continents and vulnerable communities everywhere. Standing on those frontiers most fragile to decades of inadequately checked human-induced climate change, we call out with a plea for humanity to unite. Together, we fight for a new hope.

Who We Are

6. Representing a significant number of nations most vulnerable to climate change, we are low-and middle-income, least developed, arid, isthmus, landlocked, mountainous, and small island-developing countries from Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, Latin America, and the Pacific. Home to close to 700 million people–or approximately one in ten alive today–our twenty nations are hugely diverse in ecology, biodiversity, culture, geography, language, population and territorial extent.

7. We are united in our shared vulnerability and exposure to a changing climate. Likewise, we share the commonality of an equally marginal contribution to warming–at less than 2% of current greenhouse gas emissions–and means to directly address the monumental challenges of global climate change, recalling that nearly half our people live in extreme forms of poverty, which the international community has pledged to eliminate by 2030 with the global Sustainable Development Goals.

8. Climate shocks already exceed our regional/national capabilities at approximately half our target level of global warming of not more than 1.5°C above pre-industrial temperatures. In light of insufficient measures to arrest dangers, the V20 already face:

  • an average of more than 50,000 deaths per year since 2010, a number expected to increase exponentially by 2030;
  • escalating annual losses of at least 2.5% of our GDP potential per year, estimated at US$45 billion since 2010, a number expected to increase to close to US$400 billion in the next 20 years;
  • more than half the economic impact of climate change by 2030 and over 80% of its health impact for V20 and other low-emitting developing countries;
  • doubling in the number of extremely hot days and hot nights in the last 50 years as the planet warmed appreciably;
  • countless extreme events which include typhoons with wind speeds that are around 10% stronger than they were in the 1970s translating into more than a 30% increase in destructiveness;
  • sea level rise that will partially or completely submerge the island nations of Kiribati, Maldives, and Tuvalu, displacing at least 500,000 people;
  • the displacement of up to 40 million people due to the inundation of low elevation land resulting from climate change driven sea-level rise ;
  • the threat of increasingly devastating and more frequent disasters, such as storms, flooding and drought.

9. We note the progress already made by V20 countries in promoting and undertaking climate action that serves as a foundation for future V20 work but draw attention to significant human, technological, institutional, risk-based and other special constraints facing vulnerable developing countries.

Our Call to Action

10. In this critical year, the minimum deliverable for the UN Climate Change Conference at Paris (UNFCCC COP21) is an agreement entirely consistent with the non-negotiable survival of our kind. Given this and the extent to which climate change has set back the lives of our people, denied human rights, and devastated our homes and entire nations, we recognize climate action as a foremost humanitarian priority for the international community.

11. To concretize our own support for this international priority, we, the V20, commit to act collectively and decisively to promote the mobilization of public and private climate finance from wide-ranging sources, including international, regional and domestic mobilization; share and exchange best practices on economic and financial aspects of climate action; develop and implement new, improved and innovative approaches; and engage in advocacy and other joint actions.

12. In a major first step, we agree to study the creation of a sovereign V20 Climate Risk Pooling Mechanism to distribute economic and financial risks, to improve recovery after climate-induced extreme weather events and disasters, and to enhance security of jobs, livelihoods, businesses and investors. This trans-regional public-private mechanism modeled on similar pre-existing regional facilities, featuring index-based risk transferral and other innovative insurance tools, would specifically address acute and chronic hydro-meteorological hazards, as affected by climate change. It would also improve spatial and temporal risk distribution resulting in highly accessible, dependable and cost-efficient insurance while incentivizing, through risk-determined pricing, upscaled adaptation measures.

13. We support innovative revenue generating fiscal and financial measures to finance climate action. A possible example is financial transaction tax and how the same can generate additional resources sourced from capital markets, while serving as a stabilizing financial measure.

14. We also call for improved access to international climate change finance from all sources – public or private – towards adaptation and mitigation action. This can be done through streamlining processes, with special considerations to the capacities and realities of vulnerable developing countries, and supporting institutional readiness and administrative capabilities to access available climate finance.

15. We will strive to develop or improve financial accounting models and methodologies and cost-benefit analysis to enhance accounting of climate change costs and effects and improve valuation of climate risks and co-benefits of climate action, among others. This will build on public and private sector initiatives on environment and natural resource accounting and valuation.

16. We agree on the annexed V20 Action Plan focused on attaining a significant increase in climate investment in our countries through the voluntary country-owned, country-driven, and country-led design and application of financial innovations, in collaboration with our country partners, international financial institutions, and development banks while leveraging finance in all its forms, expertise, and technology from international resources.

17. In pursuit of our vision of the world economy as a driving force for a resolution to the climate crisis, we plan to act as one to help lead the world towards a climate resilient future by inspiring strengthened efforts by all. We acknowledge that expanding our inherently limited contributions could nevertheless help to lessen the gap between life and death, prosperity and suffering, existence and annihilation: Every action will count just as every life does.

18. We look for a new international partnership with development partners, business and public-private arrangements to support the realization of V20 ambitions. We invite international financial institutions, international development actors and other relevant international institutions, including the WBG, the IMF, regional development banks, the UN Secretariat, UNDP and others to work collaboratively in delivering enhanced capacity and other assistance, including capacity building and technical assistance, to facilitate the efforts of V20 members as we work to achieve these objectives and initiatives here outlined.

19. We strongly welcome the increased climate focus and momentum for action by international financial institutions, bilateral and multilateral institutions, international organizations, the G7 and G20, and business, civil society and faith groups, among others. This includes the G20 commitment to phasing out inefficient fossil fuel subsidies and the launch of the Green Climate Fund.

20. We expect the realization of internationally recognized commitments on climate change finance, in particular the US$100 billion per year from 2020 joint mobilization target of developed countries to support developing countries in responding to climate change in the context of meaningful mitigation actions and transparency on implementation. We urge a rapid acceleration of progress towards an equal [50:50] balance of resources for adaptation compared with mitigation [by 2020 at the latest]. In light of the scale of the challenges faced and the manifest inadequacy of current efforts to tackle climate change, we also seek further contributions in finance, capacity building, technology transfer and development, and fair share emission reductions, aimed at delivering climate justice for all humankind including robust climate security for those vulnerable groups so heavily exposed both now and tomorrow, especially our women and children, the poor and future generations.

21. We have established an assigned V20 Working Group to define milestones and commence implementation of our Action Plan ahead of COP21 in Paris based on national circumstances. In guiding the Working Group’s efforts, we recognize the primacy and urgency of building climate resilient countries and the importance of safeguarding workplace health and productivity in light of increasingly adverse thermal conditions brought about by climate change.

22. We will operate on a voluntary basis in cooperation and in partnership, as well as in recognition of common but differentiated responsibilities and of limits on our achievements in the absence of international support. We will promote learning, coordination and complementarities of efforts. We will meet biannually in the margins of the WBG/IMF Spring and Annual meetings and will monitor follow-up.


V20 Flags

V20 members are Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Barbados, Bhutan, Costa Rica, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Kiribati, Madagascar, Maldives, Nepal, Philippines, Rwanda, Saint Lucia, Tanzania, Timor-Leste, Tuvalu, Vanuatu and Vietnam.


VULNERABLE TWENTY GROUP OF MINISTERS OF FINANCE
ACTION PLAN

Background

The Vulnerable Twenty Group of Ministers of Finance (V20) was established at a Ministerial meeting on October 8, 2015 in Lima, Peru. The V20 spans twenty low- and middle-income, least developed-, landlocked- and small island countries from Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, Latin America, and the Pacific that are home to well over 500 million people and are highly vulnerable to climate change. Rising heat and sea levels, and projected changes in weather variability and extremes will have pronounced implications for agriculture, energy, fisheries, forestry, transport and tourism as well as the economies of V20 countries. An effective response to climate change will therefore require scaled up finance for necessary low-carbon, resilient investments.

Objectives

The V20 aims to strengthen and promote economic and financial cooperation and action to address climate change risks and opportunities, with the aim to facilitate the transition to a low-carbon, resilient global economy by working in three main areas:

  • Mobilizing public and private climate finance and other sources of climate finance, including developing improved and innovative approaches to deliver climate finance
  • Sharing and exchanging best practices on the economic and financial aspects of climate action
  • Engaging in advocacy on climate change, including finance and economics aspects

By doing so, the V20 Action Plan will aim to overcome climate finance access hurdles and boost readiness; increase the volume and quality of available international climate finance resources; maximize national resource mobilization opportunities.

Action Plan

Vulnerable countries face hurdles in accessing and mobilizing financial resources for climate action due to economic, human and institutional capacity constraints.

Internationally there has been steady progress towards the goal of mobilizing $100bn a year in public and private finance for climate action in developing countries, and the Green Climate Fund has been established with pledges of around $10 bn for its initial implementation period.  Historical climate finance flows however have been weighted towards mitigation actions (over 90%) highlighting a critical imbalance in the face of vulnerable countries’ exposure to large-scale climate shocks.

Nevertheless the V20, and other developing countries, are already taking pioneering action across a wide range of climate finance solutions. These include, among other things: green bonds, catastrophe bonds and other risk sharing and insurance mechanisms, concessional guarantees, debt swaps, nonfinancial de-risking programs, fiscal coding initiatives, and feed-in tariffs.

Going forward, V20 countries require tailored finance solutions that avoid further indebtedness, enhance national capacity and readiness, and help to remove barriers for delivering and mobilizing finance. This action plan aims to address these needs and unlock the full potential of vulnerable countries to pursue climate action, enhance security, maximize co-benefits and opportunities, and in doing so, inspire others around the world.

Pillar I: Mobilizing and delivering climate finance

By Spring meeting 2016/ Annual meeting 2016, the V20 working group will assess the needs and propose actions necessary for increasing the mobilization and delivery of investment for climate action in V20 countries – domestically and internationally. This will include:

  • An assessment of current domestic and international finance flows to V20 countries for mitigation and adaptation action that builds on country-owned and country-led development strategies
  • Analysis of financing needs and barriers to the mobilization and delivery of public and private climate finance for strategic investments in V20 countries
  • Set a specific, measurable and achievable investment goal for 2020 with identified policy actions and strategic investment plan to close the finance gap and de-risking priority investment needs. This will include engagement with key donors and international partners
  • Establish targeted action partnerships, with financial and technical partners at the global and regional level, to facilitate policy and financial innovation by V20 countries in national projects.

Pillar II: Boosting capacity through the exchange of best practices

By Spring meeting 2016 / Annual meeting 2016, the V20 working group will articulate a dialogue and knowledge sharing plan around key financing topics necessary to support Pillar I. This will include among other things:

  • Identifying priority topics for dialogue focused on knowledge gaps and activities that help address barriers to the delivery and mobilization of climate finance in V20 countries.
  • Placing emphasis on the exchange of best practices within the V20 and beyond.
  • Engaging government, business, regional and international financial and development partners, relevant experts and civil society in dialogue around solutions.
  • Building the capacity of V20 government institutions at the national level to overcome climate finance challenges and apply innovations. Complementing this with targeted technical assistance to complement longer term capacity building programs.
  • Establishing a platform for consolidating, packaging and disseminating the collective learning from national and international dialogue in a format that is accessible and practical for use by policy makers and the business community.

Pillar III: Outreach and advocacy

By Paris/ Spring meeting 2016/ Annual meeting 2016, develop an outreach plan for the V20 to:

  • Provide a platform for the V20 work jointly to advocate for climate action
  • Demonstrate leadership from V20 countries
  • Facilitate engagement with key financial, technical assistance and knowledge partners

Timeframe

The Action Plan will span 5 years and based on a consultative process. The plan will be reviewed at midterm and adjusted as needed and agreed with V20 Finance Ministers.

Governance

The V20 Ministers of Finance will meet twice a year to assess progress on the action plan milestones and deliverables in the Spring and Autumn sessions of the WBG/ IMF meetings.

A V20 Working Group, comprising designated focal points from V20 governments/ institutions, will monitor progress between meetings, convening virtually every two months.

Secretariat support for V20 activities, communications and other assistance is provided by the ad hoc secretariat of the Climate Vulnerability Forum hosted by UNDP.

The V20 operates on a voluntary basis together with, and in cooperation and partnership with, the international community, to promote learning, coordination and complimentary of efforts in support of climate action in V20 countries.

Partners

The Action Plan is centered on Ministries of Finance or equivalent and independent institutions, Central Banks, and other key financial stakeholders including business, relevant academic and civil society groups and other Government institutions.

The V20 aims to collaborate with donors, international financial institutions, particularly the World Bank Group (WBG) and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and international development partners including among others the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), regional development banks, business, academic and civil society groups. Support will also be sought from expert bodies with specialized technical knowledge.