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  • 00:03 [Upbeat Music]
  • 00:12 [Spring Meetings 2022]
  • 00:16 [Climate Change]
  • 00:18 [Green Recovery]
  • 00:20 [Energy Transition]
  • 00:23 [Climate Action]
  • 00:25 [Adaptation]
  • 00:28 [TRANSITIONING ECONOMIES & TRANSFORMING CLIMATE: FINANCING CLIMATE ACTION]
  • 00:38 Hello and welcome, everyone.
  • 00:40 [Meriem Gray] I'm Meriem Gray, and I'm joining you live
  • 00:42 at the World Bank Group headquarters here in Washington, DC.
  • 00:46 The focus of the Spring Meetings this year
  • 00:49 is investing in resilience and managing uncertainty.
  • 00:52 [Meriem Gray, Communications Lead, Sustainable Development, World BANK]
  • 00:53 Topics of critical relevance today as the war in Ukraine,
  • 00:56 COVID and climate change are generating unprecedented challenges.
  • 01:01 While all countries will be affected, the effect on developing countries
  • 01:05 will be much worse, whether through higher food and energy prices,
  • 01:09 weakening economic prospects, or increasing climate impacts.
  • 01:14 Leaders from around the world are meeting here
  • 01:16 to discuss these impacts and to shape solutions
  • 01:19 that can build stronger, safer and more prosperous communities.
  • 01:24 Today, we will be looking at what it will take to advance climate action,
  • 01:28 especially at the time of tightening fiscal constraints.
  • 01:31 What are the financing needs for climate smart future?
  • 01:35 How can resources be effectively leveraged?
  • 01:38 What kinds of capital can support specific low carbon resilient investments?
  • 01:44 And most importantly,
  • 01:45 how the climate and development agendas are connected so that working on one front
  • 01:50 also advances outcomes for the other and they really deliver
  • 01:54 for people and human well-being?
  • 01:57 [LIVE.WORLDBANK.ORG] A reminder, we are streaming this event
  • 02:00 in English, Spanish, Arabic at live.worldbank.org.
  • 02:04 Let's take a look at what's coming up over the next hour.
  • 02:10 [COMING UP]
  • 02:16 [FINANCING THE LOW-CARBON TRANSITION]
  • 02:18 [Sri Mulyani Indrawati, Finance Minister, Indonesia]
  • 02:21 [David Malpass, President, World Bank Group]
  • 02:24 [UNLOCKING PRIVATE FINANCE FOR CLIMATE ACTION]
  • 02:26 [Rania Al-Mashat, Minister of International Cooperation, Egypt]
  • 02:29 [Yves Perrier, Chairman of the Board, Amundi]
  • 02:34 [Rhian-Mari Thomas, CEO, Green Finance Institute]
  • 02:37 [Makhtar Diop, Managing Director, IFC]
  • 02:43 [THE WAY FORWARD FOR CLIMATE FINANCE]
  • 02:44 [Lord Stern, IG Patel Professor of Economics and Government, London School of Economics]
  • 02:46 [Mari Pangestu, Managing Director of Development Policy and Partnerships, World Bank]
  • 02:51 [Meriem Gray] We have many interesting discussions coming up and to start,
  • 02:54 the President of the World Bank Group, David Malpass, invited
  • 02:58 Her Excellency Sri Mulyani Indrawati, Minister of Finance of Indonesia,
  • 03:02 to discuss issues around climate action,
  • 03:04 a topic they have frequently discussed together.
  • 03:09 [David Malpass] Thank you very much, Meriem.
  • 03:11 I want to welcome everybody to today's discussion.
  • 03:15 It's a pleasure to be here with her Excellency Sri Mulyani Indrawati.
  • 03:21 She's the finance Minister of Indonesia,
  • 03:23 and she's also so a senior host within the G20 process this year.
  • 03:28 We're going to be discussing climate change and also the big challenge
  • 03:33 of development along with global public goods.
  • 03:37 So with that, thank you very much, Sri Mulyani, for joining us.
  • 03:42 We spoke together last year,
  • 03:44 a year ago on this topic and also at Glasgow at COP26.
  • 03:48 Since then, I'll give you a brief update,
  • 03:51 the World Bank has been implementing the Climate Change Action plan
  • 03:56 which is based on integrating climate and development
  • 04:00 and directly recognizing the value of global public goods.
  • 04:04 We have much higher spending targets for the World Bank Group,
  • 04:08 and we're also looking to have those spending and engagements
  • 04:13 with countries be as effective as possible.
  • 04:16 We're doing that through reports
  • 04:18 for countries around the world, CCDRs that we think will be
  • 04:23 a powerful instrument to help countries
  • 04:26 think about their own engagement with both development
  • 04:30 and integrating it with climate.
  • 04:32 Around the world, we're working to lower greenhouse gas emissions.
  • 04:36 This is a challenging task and also carry out adaptation,
  • 04:41 help countries with their preparations for climate changes.
  • 04:45 We're working in other areas of global public goods,
  • 04:48 such as marine plastic and conservation,
  • 04:51 all of which take money from the world community
  • 04:55 and apply it to specific global public goods
  • 04:59 that are goals of the whole world community.
  • 05:02 We now are faced with the war in Ukraine.
  • 05:05 It's having a compounding effect on the cash flow,
  • 05:10 on human tragedy going on in Ukraine itself,
  • 05:14 higher food and fertilizer, and energy prices around the world,
  • 05:19 which puts strain on budgets such as the Indonesian fiscal budget.
  • 05:26 It's causing stress on top of the pandemic.
  • 05:29 We see that Europe is changing,
  • 05:32 its thinking about some aspects of global public goods,
  • 05:36 including its stand toward natural gas,
  • 05:40 which is an important source of energy, and nuclear power also,
  • 05:44 and a very important source of base load for electricity production.
  • 05:49 So those are some of the challenges that the world faces as a whole.
  • 05:54 As we get specific, I'm going to ask
  • 05:59 Finance Minister Sri Mulyani how she thinks about the connection
  • 06:05 between financing of projects, which is a challenge in itself,
  • 06:10 and something that the World Bank is very well-positioned to help with.
  • 06:14 But it's expensive and for the whole world community
  • 06:17 to be participating in the financing.
  • 06:20 Welcome, Minister Sri Mulyani.
  • 06:23 [WASHINGTON, DC, USA] [JAKARTA, INDONESIA] I'll launch right in.
  • 06:26 I want to ask about the coal transition in Indonesia.
  • 06:31 How can it be financed?
  • 06:32 What are some of the problems you've encountered?
  • 06:35 What are some of the steps that the world needs to go through in order to help
  • 06:40 in the effort toward reducing greenhouse gas emissions in Indonesia?
  • 06:45 Thanks for joining today.
  • 06:48 [Sri Mulyani] Thank you, President Malpass.
  • 06:50 It's really good to see you also and I would like to congratulate you.
  • 06:53 Under your leadership, the World Bank Group has been very good in responding
  • 06:58 to many of the membership challenges,
  • 07:00 especially related to the global public goods issues.
  • 07:04 First, the pandemic which you responded very well and quickly
  • 07:07 to help many of the countries in the world
  • 07:10 and then also now related to the climate change.
  • 07:13 On climate change, Indonesia is one country but it's not a unique case.
  • 07:19 We have already commit what we call
  • 07:23 our National Determined Contribution to reduce our CO2,
  • 07:27 29% of the CO2 reduction with our own effort
  • 07:32 or 41% if we are going to get the support internationally.
  • 07:37 The question now is how we are going to implement this commitment.
  • 07:42 The biggest contributor of course for Indonesia, two very important ones:
  • 07:48 the forestry as well as the energy sector.
  • 07:51 In the energy sector, Indonesia has a rich natural resource,
  • 07:56 we also rely very much on coal.
  • 07:59 So currently, coal is actually the dominant energy mix
  • 08:04 under the Indonesia energy fuel mix.
  • 08:08 It is around more than 60%.
  • 08:10 If we are going to reduce the CO2 which is coming from the energy,
  • 08:15 definitely we require to address this issue at the coal,
  • 08:19 and at the same time when the demand for energy continues to increase,
  • 08:24 then we have to be able to build the replacement for coal
  • 08:28 as well as satisfying the new demand.
  • 08:33 On the coal which is related to how we are going to address the issue of coal,
  • 08:38 we are designing what we call the energy transition mechanism.
  • 08:42 But Indonesia, just like many other countries in the world
  • 08:46 when we hit hard by the coffee [inaudible],
  • 08:49 actually the demand for electricity declined.
  • 08:53 At this very moment, when Indonesia already has around
  • 08:57 270 gigawatts of energy capacity,
  • 09:04 the demand is actually much lower than that,
  • 09:07 around 20 gigawatts excess supply.
  • 09:11 While the decision for us to build additional capacity in the past five years
  • 09:16 has already created additional 13 gigawatts.
  • 09:20 Now if we are going to produce coal, that means we have to decide
  • 09:26 how we are going to retire the coal which is already contracted.
  • 09:31 In Indonesia, we have what we call
  • 09:35 the individual power purchase by the private sector.
  • 09:38 Some of the power generator owned by PLN,
  • 09:42 our electricity company which is state owned.
  • 09:45 There are also power generators which are owned by the private sector
  • 09:49 and they are contracting the energy to the PLN.
  • 09:55 This contract is usually a long-term contract, 20 to 30 years.
  • 10:01 If you want to retire coal that means we have to reduce the length of the contract.
  • 10:08 Currently we've already identified five gigawatts of the core power energy
  • 10:14 that is power generator with the qualification of their own
  • 10:19 and that's why the efficiency is low and they are more polluting.
  • 10:24 So among all those power generators sectors
  • 10:29 which is actually coming from coal, we've already identified.
  • 10:33 Now, to retire the coal
  • 10:36 if it is owned by our own PLN, that is the electricity company
  • 10:41 you don't have to renegotiate the contract.
  • 10:44 This is just about retiring this old power generator
  • 10:48 and then you have to replace it with a renewable one.
  • 10:51 Still in this case, we have to make sure
  • 10:55 that the renewable energy is going to be efficient technology
  • 10:59 as well as in terms of financing, it needs to be secure.
  • 11:03 That's why you need investment for the renewable energy.
  • 11:07 For the retirement of the old coal power plants,
  • 11:12 which belong to the private sector,
  • 11:15 then you have to renegotiate contracts because there is a contract already,
  • 11:21 this is take or pay usually.
  • 11:23 We call it TOP, tax or pay,
  • 11:25 and that's why we have to make sure that they are willing to then retire
  • 11:30 in terms of the length of the contract, the rest of the contract that will be reduced.
  • 11:35 Then compensated in the way
  • 11:38 that it cannot be seen as violating the contract.
  • 11:42 If you violate a contract, Indonesia has a very bad experience
  • 11:45 in which we were in an international tribunal and we lost the case.
  • 11:49 That's not really good, not financially but also reputation wise.
  • 11:54 For us to do the energy transition mechanism
  • 11:58 there are many issues that need to be addressed.
  • 12:01 First, how you are going to renegotiate the contract
  • 12:04 with the independent power producer
  • 12:08 in, what we call it, an amicable way
  • 12:11 that is going to be accepted through the good practice.
  • 12:17 Then the second one, how you are going to compensate this contract
  • 12:21 that will be reduced in terms of the length of their service
  • 12:26 and where the money is coming from to compensate that deduction?
  • 12:33 At what price? Is it going to be like the secure price?
  • 12:37 Don't forget that sometimes coal can be not really efficient in the past.
  • 12:43 The contract cannot really be seen as in the best interest for our PLN.
  • 12:49 Sometimes it's just too costly, 12 cents kilowatt hour or 10 cents.
  • 12:55 Sometimes, the price can be actually much lower than that.
  • 13:01 That kind of situation on a technical level needs to be addressed.
  • 13:08 Then the second one is where the money comes from to retire this coal.
  • 13:13 Here we work with the Multilateral Development Bank.
  • 13:17 I appreciate it.
  • 13:18 With the World Bank, with the ADB we are talking about
  • 13:21 what kind of structure is durable in this case.
  • 13:25 Not to mention, in this case, the social and environmental consequences
  • 13:29 of this power plant that will be retired.
  • 13:32 Are they going to just like to become a sound capital?
  • 13:36 An abandoned capital?
  • 13:37 We also need to be thinking about that.
  • 13:41 Then to replace with renewables,
  • 13:43 we also need another capital spending to build the renewable energy.
  • 13:48 For us the question is about the location
  • 13:51 as well as the transmission and distribution.
  • 13:54 Indonesia is an island country, David,
  • 13:59 so the demand is mostly in Java,
  • 14:03 but you also need to build for the outer Java Island
  • 14:07 which is now growing very fast, like Sumatra and Kalimantan.
  • 14:10 These all have their own source of renewable energy.
  • 14:15 [David Malpass] Thank you for going through that.
  • 14:17 I think it's relevant because so many countries face similar problems,
  • 14:22 whether that's Vietnam, Turkey or South Africa,
  • 14:25 dependence on coal, on either coal imports or coal itself,
  • 14:33 and the high value of it, it's gone up in value even now
  • 14:38 because of the rising energy costs around the world for other commodities.
  • 14:43 You used a...
  • 14:46 In Glasgow, you used a large number for the cost or the inflow of money
  • 14:53 that would be needed for this effort.
  • 14:55 One thing World Bank Group,
  • 14:59 IFC and the World Bank have been looking at is
  • 15:03 how to create a facility that would allow the coming together
  • 15:06 of funding sources from around the world
  • 15:09 and then focus it on a specific greenhouse gas emission reduction project.
  • 15:16 We're at the point where we have to be concrete in
  • 15:18 how to close a coal fired power plant in South Africa or in Indonesia.
  • 15:25 Those proved to be really difficult challenges
  • 15:27 because of the large cost and the long lifespan of the project.
  • 15:32 It takes years and years to wind down the dependence on coal.
  • 15:38 Do you want to share your thinking on the cost you used in Glasgow?
  • 15:46 [Sri Mulyani] In this case, we identified the total cost for the reduction
  • 15:50 based on the updated before the COP26 in Glasgow.
  • 15:56 It's around 286 billion US dollars.
  • 16:00 Mostly, it's actually for the energy.
  • 16:01 We actually can have it much cheaper through the forestry.
  • 16:05 That's why we're also supporting us on the mine groove refracting.
  • 16:09 I think this also has a lot of potential for Indonesia,
  • 16:13 but energy definitely is the highest in this case,
  • 16:15 which is around 60% of the cost for that.
  • 16:19 The question regarding how we are going to structure this.
  • 16:24 First, you're right.
  • 16:26 At this very moment, the coal price has even increased,
  • 16:30 at some point, even reaching more than 400%.
  • 16:34 I think it's extremely high in this case.
  • 16:40 Now it's already going down again.
  • 16:42 This is also for Indonesia.
  • 16:44 Although we are among the biggest producers of coal in the world,
  • 16:50 we have actually committed this coal for many of the exports.
  • 16:54 That's why if we are going to compete with our own use for our own electricity,
  • 16:59 Indonesia impose what we call domestic markup obligations.
  • 17:04 So for the coal producer,
  • 17:06 they have to provide our own coal needs for our electricity
  • 17:12 before you can actually spend or sell it to the foreign or international market.
  • 17:18 When the coal price is very high at some point,
  • 17:21 actually, we were a little bit caught by surprise because suddenly
  • 17:26 because suddenly the stock of coal domestically was shrinking very fast.
  • 17:32 So we then turned around and made sure
  • 17:34 that there will be really monitoring of the export of coal in Indonesia.
  • 17:40 [David Malpass] These are big challenges.
  • 17:42 There's going to be a full discussion today in other panels of some of these issues.
  • 17:48 But the thing that strikes me is the large costs,
  • 17:53 the complexity of the projects themselves, their long duration.
  • 17:58 World Bank can help in structuring or thinking about
  • 18:02 how to have commitments that last for years and years
  • 18:05 between governments and their coal sector, for example.
  • 18:09 But this core problem that you're mentioning right now
  • 18:12 that the coal is either used in Indonesia
  • 18:15 or it's exported and burned somewhere else,
  • 18:18 that poses itself a giant global public goods problem for the world
  • 18:25 of how do you lock in and how do you avoid
  • 18:29 the ultimate use of those carbon holding products.
  • 18:34 This is one that I think has to be tackled directly
  • 18:37 in terms of global public goods and the financing for it.
  • 18:41 [Sri Mulyani] Yeah. Thank you so much, David.
  • 18:43 It is really a very important and challenging task for our country
  • 18:47 because when we talk about a global public good like climate change,
  • 18:51 this is not only about the idea or the intention,
  • 18:54 but most importantly translating it into a very workable,
  • 19:00 both investment decision and commitment.
  • 19:04 In this case, what we call affordable transition
  • 19:07 means that the access of capital needs to be cheap enough
  • 19:11 to compensate this very costly capital commitment
  • 19:16 and then also affordable in terms of availability of this financing.
  • 19:21 The World Bank is in a very good place
  • 19:24 for you to become both catalytic but also financing side
  • 19:28 to be able to use the World Bank Group, IFC, MIGA,
  • 19:32 as well as IBRD or IDA.
  • 19:35 I think this is going to be one of the most important World Bank roles
  • 19:39 in order to help many of the member countries
  • 19:42 to be able to design a good and sound, and credible transition on energy.
  • 19:47 Thank you so much.
  • 19:49 [David Malpass] Thank you very much. Back to you, Meriem.
  • 19:54 [KINGSTON, JAMAICA]
  • 19:55 [Charmaine] I'm Charmaine from Kingston, Jamaica,
  • 19:57 and you're watching the World Bank Group-IMF Spring Meetings.
  • 20:04 [Meriem Gray] Thank you, David and Sri Mulyani for those insights
  • 20:06 and a really interesting update on what has specifically changed
  • 20:11 since they connected last year on these issues.
  • 20:14 Please do share your thoughts on that discussion and those to come.
  • 20:17 [#FINANCE4CLIMATE]
  • 20:18 You can post your comments using the #Finance4Climate
  • 20:22 and follow us on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and LinkedIn.
  • 20:26 You can also post comments and questions at live.worldbank.org.
  • 20:31 That's where we have our experts standing by
  • 20:34 to answer your questions in English, Spanish, French and Arabic.
  • 20:37 Let's take a look at some of them.
  • 20:39 They are already busy at work.
  • 20:42 We will be putting some of the most popular questions
  • 20:45 to two World Bank experts at the end of today's event.
  • 20:48 We are also inviting you to take part in our quiz challenge.
  • 20:52 The question we are asking today is,
  • 20:55 how much investment is needed each year to limit global warming, put resilience,
  • 21:01 and support a global transition to net zero emissions?
  • 21:06 Is it A? About $10 billion dollars a year.
  • 21:10 B, about $100 billion dollars a year?
  • 21:14 Is it even more than that?
  • 21:15 C is about $1 trillion dollars a year,
  • 21:19 and the last option is D, more than $2 trillion dollars a year.
  • 21:24 You can cast your vote right now at live.worldbank.org,
  • 21:28 and we'll bring you the results at the end of this event.
  • 21:32 Before we go to our next discussion,
  • 21:34 we ask one of our experts to help explain exactly how climate finance works.
  • 21:40 Let's take a look.
  • 21:41 [PUTTING THE PIECES TOGETHER]
  • 21:44 [HOW TO FINANCE THE CLIMATE TRANSITION]
  • 21:46 [Valerie Hickey] Each country is different.
  • 21:48 All need to address the climate crisis.
  • 21:51 How can we help piece together the right investments
  • 21:54 that can help countries meet both climate and development objectives?
  • 22:00 Climate finance is increasing, but not fast enough.
  • 22:04 Over the next decade, we need to mobilize trillions of dollars
  • 22:07 to give people access to resilient and reliable water,
  • 22:10 food, clean energy, mobility, health and education,
  • 22:14 and protection from disasters.
  • 22:17 [WHAT WILL IT TAKE?]
  • 22:18 First, spend smartly.
  • 22:21 Rethink inefficient subsidies and price carbon.
  • 22:24 Enforce construction standards, green supply chains
  • 22:28 and improve procurement,
  • 22:30 and systematically screen for climate risk so that infrastructure is more resilient
  • 22:34 and cheaper to build and maintain.
  • 22:38 Next, get private capital flowing.
  • 22:41 Better data and national plans can help investors invest with confidence
  • 22:45 and ensure public and private resources complement each other.
  • 22:49 In some sectors, like clean energy or electric vehicles,
  • 22:52 the solutions are already here and largely competitive.
  • 22:55 Private investors can speed up their adoption
  • 22:58 so that scarce resources go to research and development
  • 23:00 in less mature areas, like improving battery storage
  • 23:03 and supporting more vulnerable communities.
  • 23:06 In sectors like adaptation,
  • 23:08 [Valerie Hickey, Climate Change, World Bank] private investment is lagging,
  • 23:10 so we need new instruments and business models
  • 23:13 to mobilize private capital to go where it's needed
  • 23:16 and reduce risks for investors.
  • 23:18 [CATALYZE]
  • 23:19 Multilateral development banks like the World Bank Group
  • 23:22 have a key role to play.
  • 23:24 We act as a bridge between governments and private investors,
  • 23:27 using public finance to catalyze private capital.
  • 23:30 This is vital for developing countries
  • 23:32 where investment needs and climate risks are highest.
  • 23:37 Climate finance can also help carbon markets
  • 23:39 to monetize emissions reductions,
  • 23:41 as well as more dedicated climate finance,
  • 23:44 including the 100 billion pledged
  • 23:46 under the Paris Agreement and concessional finance.
  • 23:50 Piece by piece,
  • 23:52 we can build the green, inclusive and resilient economies of the future.
  • 23:57 [WORLD BANK GROUP] [Climate Change]
  • 24:02 [PHNOM PENH, CAMBODIA] [Phyram] Hello, I'm Phyram in Phnom Penh, Cambodia,
  • 24:05 and you're watching the World Bank Group-IMF Spring Meetings.
  • 24:12 [Meriem Gray] As you just saw,
  • 24:13 financing climate action is about investing trillions of dollars.
  • 24:17 Let's find out a bit more about
  • 24:20 how the private sector is going to play a key role in driving this forward.
  • 24:25 Makhtar Diop is the Managing Director of the International Finance Corporation,
  • 24:29 that is the private sector arm of the World Bank Group.
  • 24:32 He's going to lead our next discussion
  • 24:35 on the role of private capital in supporting client action.
  • 24:39 His first guest is Rania Al-Mashat, Egypt's Minister for International Cooperation.
  • 24:45 Egypt will be hosting COP27 later this year,
  • 24:48 and climate finance will be a critical issue.
  • 24:52 He will then drill down into
  • 24:53 how to mobilize private capital and accelerate financing
  • 24:57 with Rhian-Mari Thomas, Chief Executive of the Green Finance Institute,
  • 25:03 and Yves Perrier, Chairman of the Board of Amundi,
  • 25:07 one of the world's leading asset management companies.
  • 25:12 [Makhtar Diop] Thank you, Meriem.
  • 25:13 It's great to be able today to discuss about climate change.
  • 25:17 We know that there are many solutions to help really in fighting climate change.
  • 25:24 The money is not what is missing.
  • 25:26 Actually, I was recently talking to some people
  • 25:29 and I was explaining how much money
  • 25:31 there was in the capital market for that effort.
  • 25:33 We need to mobilize that money to find solutions, to find projects
  • 25:37 which are very useful for our private sector to invest
  • 25:40 both in adaptation and mitigation.
  • 25:42 We will hear all that from our panelists.
  • 25:45 I'm here to start first with Rania Al-Mashat,
  • 25:49 Minister of International Cooperation of Egypt.
  • 25:53 Madame Minister Rania, it's a pleasure to have you today
  • 25:56 and thank you for joining us.
  • 25:58 We know that COP27 will be held in Africa, right in Egypt.
  • 26:04 You have a very big ambition for this COP27.
  • 26:07 Can you tell us quickly what you have in mind?
  • 26:10 [Rania Al-Mashat] Thank you. A timely conversation on climate.
  • 26:15 Egypt's presidency is focusing on three main messages.
  • 26:20 First, our impartiality, even though we are an African nation,
  • 26:23 but this is a COP for the world, so we're trying to maintain that.
  • 26:27 Second, as you correctly mentioned, adaptability, adaptation, and resilience
  • 26:32 are extremely important for many developing countries.
  • 26:35 The latest crisis we're seeing in Ukraine,
  • 26:38 Russia has brought to the forefront again
  • 26:40 the importance of food security and everything that is related to that.
  • 26:44 And then third, it's going to be what we hope is an implementation COP.
  • 26:49 So how can we move from the pledges to implementation and to action?
  • 26:52 Those are the three key messages out of Egypt
  • 26:56 and hopefully to be materialized next November in Sharm el-Sheikh.
  • 27:02 Madame Minister, as you said, there were a lot of pledges in COP26.
  • 27:06 Now we want to see execution.
  • 27:09 I know that energy transition is very high on our agenda.
  • 27:13 Water security is another important part of your agenda,
  • 27:17 but also everything related to adaptation,
  • 27:19 which is sometimes a bit overlooked in the conversation.
  • 27:23 Tell us a little bit what the private sector can do to support all these priorities.
  • 27:28 [WASHINGTON, DC, USA] [CAIRO, EGYPT]
  • 27:29 [Rania Al-Mashat] Let me first acknowledge
  • 27:31 IFC's important role in mobilizing private sector
  • 27:35 and pushing private sector investments in countries.
  • 27:38 COP aside, the work that is being done
  • 27:42 to actually engage private sector is important.
  • 27:46 In our case, the energy transition started several years ago.
  • 27:51 When we take a look at the integrated sustainable energy strategy
  • 27:57 that had clear KPIs for renewable energy in the country,
  • 28:02 the government did structural reforms which were very important
  • 28:06 to be able to crowd in private sector investments.
  • 28:09 That is when the IFC and many other institutions
  • 28:12 were able to bring in their investments to support the energy transition.
  • 28:18 This has brought together a successful project, the Benban project,
  • 28:22 one of the biggest solar plants in the region.
  • 28:25 These are examples that can be replicated in other countries, as well.
  • 28:30 They show how different stakeholders can come together.
  • 28:34 Governments have a role to play in terms of regulatory and legislative reforms,
  • 28:38 the private sector's willingness, but also the IFIs,
  • 28:42 whether in terms of financing or technical capacity.
  • 28:46 These are examples that can be replicated.
  • 28:50 In our case, Egypt has finished its 2050 climate strategy,
  • 28:56 and as you correctly point out,
  • 28:58 it includes the plans to move to our NDCs by 2050,
  • 29:06 across different sectors, with agriculture, transportation,
  • 29:10 and many others.
  • 29:11 The idea of the 2050 climate strategy
  • 29:17 is that it is not divorced from development.
  • 29:19 That's why also with the World Bank Group,
  • 29:21 we are one of the pilot countries with the CCDR,
  • 29:25 the Country Climate Development Report,
  • 29:28 because we cannot think about climate
  • 29:31 as separate from the development process of the country.
  • 29:35 That's why there's a lot of integration
  • 29:38 between the different sectors and the different targets.
  • 29:41 Maybe let me just conclude by saying that
  • 29:43 given that official development assistance is extremely important for different countries,
  • 29:48 in our case, the portfolio is quite sizable.
  • 29:51 We're talking about $26 billion dollars.
  • 29:54 Given the importance of SDGs in the country's agenda,
  • 29:58 we mapped the official development assistance to the SDGs.
  • 30:02 If we look at the SDG number 13 related to climate action,
  • 30:05 we find that there's 12 billion dollars dedicated to that,
  • 30:08 2.8 to adaptation, 7.8 to mitigation.
  • 30:12 You can see the imbalance, and I think in the period ahead
  • 30:16 what we want to do is to try and push further the adaptation agenda.
  • 30:21 [Mahktar Diop] That is great.
  • 30:24 You talked about regulation.
  • 30:25 You talked about things that need to be done.
  • 30:28 One of the things that we're hearing from the private sector
  • 30:32 is the green taxonomy.
  • 30:33 People want to know when they invest to support a fight against climate change
  • 30:39 that is really targeted to activities which are related to that.
  • 30:43 What is your view about green taxonomy?
  • 30:47 [Rania Al-Mashat] I think it's absolutely correct.
  • 30:50 The climate conversation is a multi-stakeholder conversation.
  • 30:55 It includes governments, private sector citizens,
  • 30:58 as well as the international community.
  • 31:00 That's why it's very important from the government side
  • 31:04 to have a clear vision to communicate it.
  • 31:06 If there are any legislative impediments
  • 31:09 for private sector engagement, try and address those.
  • 31:12 Also very important are the innovative types of financing.
  • 31:17 One of the achievements of Glasgow was that
  • 31:21 the private sector's engagement was very high on the agenda.
  • 31:24 We saw lots of commitments from private sector entities.
  • 31:29 The point is now, how can we take these pledges into implementation?
  • 31:33 That requires all of us working together
  • 31:36 to be able to create derisking opportunities for the private sector
  • 31:40 through innovative tools, blended tools, and so forth.
  • 31:44 There is a wealth of experience at the IFC, at the EBRD,
  • 31:47 other institutions that have actually showcased projects,
  • 31:52 whether mitigation or adaptation,
  • 31:54 in emerging markets and middle-income countries.
  • 31:56 These are examples that we want to be able also to showcase and replicate.
  • 32:02 It also addresses the green taxonomy that you just mentioned
  • 32:06 because it gives comfort or confidence that
  • 32:11 whatever target set by the government and the private sector is able to come in,
  • 32:15 that is also achievable.
  • 32:19 [Makhtar Diop] Now, thank you very much.
  • 32:21 If I can summarize a little bit of the conversation,
  • 32:24 tell me if I get it right.
  • 32:26 You said that you need a clear regulation.
  • 32:28 We need taxonomy.
  • 32:30 We need to have projects which are bankable.
  • 32:33 We need to create an environment where people are investing
  • 32:36 in adaptation as much as they invested in mitigation.
  • 32:39 I hope that the IFC will be your preferred partner
  • 32:44 in making it happen during the COP27.
  • 32:47 Do I get it right?
  • 32:48 [Rania Al-Mashat] Yes, I think, Makhtar, you summarize it very nicely.
  • 32:52 I would just conclude by saying that
  • 32:54 all stakeholders have a role to play, and there is complementarity.
  • 32:58 The government needs to be clear and needs to be committed
  • 33:01 through taking very important reforms in its own right.
  • 33:07 The private sector needs to also show its commitment
  • 33:12 and then the international community or the multilateral development banks,
  • 33:15 and of course, IFC being a key partner
  • 33:18 on private sector engagement also play a role.
  • 33:21 I think it's complementarity among all stakeholders.
  • 33:26 I believe that all of us are very much committed
  • 33:29 and climate is very high on everybody's agenda.
  • 33:32 [Makhtar Diop] Thank you very much, Madam Minister.
  • 33:33 It was a pleasure talking to you.
  • 33:35 A lot of food for thought.
  • 33:37 You raised a lot of points.
  • 33:38 Adaptation, mitigation.
  • 33:40 The need to balance investment in all sectors.
  • 33:43 The need to bring some blended finance to their risk investment.
  • 33:46 Let's now turn to two people who are actively involved
  • 33:50 in mobilizing resources to fight climate change.
  • 33:53 We have Yves Perrier, the Chairman of Amundi,
  • 33:57 a large long-term partner of IFC,
  • 34:00 which is also the largest asset manager in Europe.
  • 34:05 I'm also joined by Rhian-Mari Thomas,
  • 34:08 who is the CEO of the Green Financing Institute,
  • 34:12 which is a think tank working on climate change related issues.
  • 34:16 Both of them will tell us a bit more about their experience
  • 34:20 in mobilizing resources to finance the fight against climate change.
  • 34:25 Yves, bonjour, because we are in Paris.
  • 34:28 Let's start and have that conversation.
  • 34:30 Amundi has a tremendous experience in mobilizing resources.
  • 34:35 We've been working with you at IFC for many years.
  • 34:38 Really, when you are looking at people very experienced in the market,
  • 34:42 we are looking at you.
  • 34:43 What can you share from your experience with people who are listening to us today?
  • 34:50 [Yves Perrier] Thank you, Makhtar.
  • 34:52 Let me start by thanking you for the stronger relationship
  • 34:58 that we built between Amundi and IFC.
  • 35:04 Especially we were very pleased
  • 35:09 and very committed to create together.
  • 35:14 The Amundi Planet EGO Fund,
  • 35:18 which brings together public sectors and private investors.
  • 35:24 This kind of initiative was part of a global policy.
  • 35:31 We had equivalent initiative in Asia
  • 35:36 with the Asian Investment Infrastructure Bank
  • 35:40 in Europe with the EIB, and also in France with Caisse des Dépôts.
  • 35:49 There are two main lessons
  • 35:53 we withdraw from this experience.
  • 35:57 The first is to be able to understand this objective
  • 36:02 of development financial institution as well as the public sectors
  • 36:10 and also the capacity to align them
  • 36:13 with the needs of individual investors in their investment guidelines.
  • 36:21 The second lesson is to share experience.
  • 36:25 With this partnership, we have built a unique experience and basis of knowledge.
  • 36:32 We made this knowledge public and available to everyone.
  • 36:38 [Makhtar Diop] Thank you so much, Yves.
  • 36:39 Rhian, it was a nice sharing a panel with you in Glasgow.
  • 36:44 We talked about a lot about capital mobilization
  • 36:48 and I just came from Colombia where we launched the first green taxonomy.
  • 36:52 I know that you're working on a lot of things which are of that nature
  • 36:56 to give more confidence in the private sector to invest.
  • 36:58 Tell us a little bit more about what you're doing.
  • 37:01 [Rhian-Mari Thomas] Sure. Greetings from London and thanks so much,
  • 37:04 Makhtar, for inviting me onto the panel today.
  • 37:07 One of the things that we discussed in Glasgow
  • 37:10 was this point about the right kind of capital
  • 37:12 into the right kind of climate investment opportunities
  • 37:15 and that should be the tagline for financing
  • 37:18 the whole of the zero-carbon transition.
  • 37:20 I think it really perfectly captures
  • 37:22 the task at hand which is about creating the opportunities for finance providers
  • 37:27 to fund the transition in a way that meets their risk adjusted returns hurdles,
  • 37:32 removing the barriers so that capital can flow.
  • 37:35 Those barriers can take many forms,
  • 37:38 but as we're talking about risk and rewards
  • 37:40 let's focus on possible solutions to removing financial barrier.
  • 37:44 You've kindly invited me to give an example
  • 37:46 of the work that we've been doing.
  • 37:48 I'd love to share an anecdote about the work that we've been doing
  • 37:51 in South Africa with the South African banks and the investors.
  • 37:55 The banks there are facing a specific barrier,
  • 37:57 which is the deep pools of pension capital in South Africa need to invest
  • 38:02 in investment grade securities, such as government bonds,
  • 38:06 and so that often exempts them from investing in much needed energy waste,
  • 38:10 and water infrastructure in response to climate change.
  • 38:13 By providing a derisking facility that would partially guarantee
  • 38:18 the debt needed to fund those transactions,
  • 38:21 the banks would be able to provide finance at competitive rates
  • 38:25 and tenors, confident that they could then syndicate that
  • 38:28 to local domestic pension and institutional funds.
  • 38:32 We've developed a novel Green Finance Guarantee Fund
  • 38:35 with partners in the UK and in South Africa that can provide that derisking.
  • 38:40 Also importantly, we structured that fund so that it would include
  • 38:44 government funding, development bank funding,
  • 38:47 and private capital, all deployed together so that each type of finance provider
  • 38:52 receives the returns they're seeking in line with their mandate.
  • 38:57 A key aspect of this anecdote that might surprise some of our viewers is that
  • 39:01 in the course of developing this fund, we uncovered over a billion pounds worth
  • 39:06 of climate smart infrastructure projects that the banks would consider funding
  • 39:10 if only they had the benefit of this guaranteed solution.
  • 39:14 Just finally, the reason I'm particularly excited about this project
  • 39:17 is whilst South Africa is the perfect jurisdiction
  • 39:20 for a proof of concept such as this,
  • 39:22 it's an entirely replicable solution in other countries.
  • 39:26 If we can identify the situations
  • 39:29 where with some derisking, we can crowd in private capital,
  • 39:33 we're not only leveraging scarce government balance sheets
  • 39:36 in those transactions, but also freeing up government development capital
  • 39:41 for those situations where it's more challenging
  • 39:43 to create a commercial case.
  • 39:45 For example, to fund certain adaptation measures.
  • 39:49 That's a whole other topic for us to discuss.
  • 39:52 [Makhtar Diop] Thank you very much, Rhian.
  • 39:55 It's very interesting when you come back to the emerging economies
  • 39:57 and the role they can play in mobilizing resources
  • 40:01 because most of the resources are so far mobilized from more advanced economies.
  • 40:07 Let me turn now to Perrier before coming back to you
  • 40:10 and ask a question about platforms.
  • 40:13 I know that people want to reduce the transaction costs
  • 40:16 so they don't want to repeat all the work done for a transaction.
  • 40:21 They just want to have a standard term sheet.
  • 40:24 Tell us a little bit what you think about innovative platforms
  • 40:28 and the role they can play in mobilizing more resources.
  • 40:32 [Yves Perrier] What is very positive is that in the recent period,
  • 40:39 in the last three or five years, there has been a commitment
  • 40:44 of the whole financing industry
  • 40:48 towards this question of climate.
  • 40:52 One very important point for this question is to consider that
  • 40:59 it's an industrial revolution at the level of the planet.
  • 41:04 We need to change the energy supply going from 80% fossil fuels,
  • 41:11 which is the situation, to nearly 0%,
  • 41:16 but also to change the product,
  • 41:18 to change the way we manufacture the products, the chain of value.
  • 41:23 To be successful, this revolution will need
  • 41:31 a strong alignment of public policy and private investors, and of corporate.
  • 41:43 It has to be done integrating
  • 41:47 the question of security of supply
  • 41:51 and the present context recalls this importance.
  • 41:56 Also the question of relative competitiveness
  • 42:00 and social impact, which will be very important.
  • 42:06 I think that should emphasize on the coherence on all the criteria,
  • 42:15 of course, the impact on climate, but also social impact.
  • 42:21 That's the reason why we are very happy to have been selected by IFC
  • 42:27 for the management and fundraising of the SEED Program.
  • 42:34 This is consistent with what has been always the policy of Amundi,
  • 42:40 which is to have a holistic view of this question of responsible investment
  • 42:49 since the creation of the company 10 years ago.
  • 42:52 [Makhtar Diop] Thank you very much and you raised a lot of points
  • 42:57 which are actually connected to the point that Rhian-Mari mentioned.
  • 43:03 You said something quite interesting earlier, Rhian.
  • 43:05 You insisted on what needs to be done in emerging economies.
  • 43:10 You gave an example, you talked about South Africa,
  • 43:14 I'm sure that you have some other countries in mind.
  • 43:17 What will it take today if we want to mobilize more resources
  • 43:20 from emerging economies?
  • 43:23 Especially, I think there will be a lot of sensitivity
  • 43:26 to what Yves has just said about social bonds,
  • 43:30 linking environment with social inclusion.
  • 43:34 Tell me, what do you think about that?
  • 43:36 [Rhian-Mari Thomas] I'd be happy to. I think as a broad comment,
  • 43:40 I'd say this is really a challenge of leadership and collaboration,
  • 43:45 and it's across all economies as Yves just said,
  • 43:47 not only emerging markets.
  • 43:49 Whilst I mentioned earlier, a financial mechanism that channels
  • 43:53 governments' capital efficiently alongside development and private capital
  • 43:58 in order to create lending and investment opportunities
  • 44:02 for local banks and investors.
  • 44:04 We can't solve for a one and a half degree aligned world
  • 44:07 purely through financial instruments.
  • 44:10 We clearly need that enabling policy and regulatory frameworks in country,
  • 44:15 as well as the mechanisms to improve credit worthiness,
  • 44:18 so that we can secure both local and international funds.
  • 44:22 As implied in your question that they need to be led in country
  • 44:27 by those who have a really detailed understanding of local conditions.
  • 44:31 That's where organizations like the IFC,
  • 44:33 you've got 16 years of experience financing opportunities
  • 44:36 in emerging markets and developing economies,
  • 44:39 you have such an important role in continuing to familiarize
  • 44:43 both local and international mainstream finance institutions
  • 44:47 with the opportunity for commercial investment
  • 44:50 and helping overcome perceptions of risk.
  • 44:53 For example, very practically pointing at your historic default rates.
  • 44:58 Our research has also identified green banks as highly efficient vehicles
  • 45:04 in country to channel domestic capital,
  • 45:07 both public and private capital, towards climate smart projects.
  • 45:11 I guess finally,
  • 45:13 there are no intellectually coherent high carbon pathways to prosperity.
  • 45:18 The science and the recent IPCC report have been very clear on this.
  • 45:23 Building these collaborative initiatives and these institutions
  • 45:28 that involve policymakers, industry experts and financiers
  • 45:33 is absolutely key.
  • 45:35 [Makhtar Diop] It's very interesting to hear this
  • 45:39 coming from someone scientifically trained as you.
  • 45:42 A lot of people don't know it, but you are scientist by training.
  • 45:46 Saying that it's not an exact science,
  • 45:48 but you need to put together institutions so that people can work and create
  • 45:51 this social contract to mobilize everybody around the targets.
  • 45:56 You have also said something quite interesting.
  • 45:59 We need to derisk.
  • 46:02 We need to have partnership,
  • 46:04 public and private need to work together.
  • 46:06 There is something I haven't heard a lot about
  • 46:08 which seems to be coming more into conversation:
  • 46:11 maybe more investment in efficiency.
  • 46:14 You're talking about fighting climate change
  • 46:16 by reducing emissions.
  • 46:18 Hearing people going to COP27,
  • 46:22 I increasingly hear people talking about reducing the waste in networks,
  • 46:27 in electricity networks, reducing the leakages in water pipes,
  • 46:32 reducing all these inefficiencies that we have.
  • 46:36 What is your take on that, Rhian?
  • 46:38 [Rhian-Mari Thomas] I fully agree with you.
  • 46:39 Here at the Green Finance Institute, one of our flagship projects
  • 46:43 has been looking at the efficient energy efficiency of buildings,
  • 46:47 which here in the UK, our building stock accounts
  • 46:50 for about a quarter of our emissions.
  • 46:52 This is clearly a topic that really resonates with consumers,
  • 46:58 it resonates with the electorate,
  • 47:00 but finding ways of financing that upfront capital expenditure
  • 47:05 that then enables people to have lower energy bills.
  • 47:09 The same analogy in industry where you invest the CAPEX up front
  • 47:14 in order to have the lower operating expenditure ongoing.
  • 47:18 These are real challenges that again, needs financiers to be working closely
  • 47:24 with regulators, policy makers in order to actually accelerate all of this.
  • 47:30 I couldn't agree more with your emphasis on
  • 47:32 this is about both supply and demand,
  • 47:34 it's about efficiency,
  • 47:36 it's about using resources well and efficiently,
  • 47:40 as well as looking at our sources of demand
  • 47:42 and having more reliance on renewable energies
  • 47:46 and climate smart infra.
  • 47:49 [Makhtar Diop] Thank you so much.
  • 47:50 Yves, I know that in France, it is a government priority to reduce,
  • 47:56 to improve efficiency in households, in houses, in heating systems.
  • 48:01 Do you see a platform being built around that
  • 48:05 to be able to mobilize the resources to fight climate change?
  • 48:09 [Yves Perrier] Efficiency is the main challenge,
  • 48:14 and it's a main challenge because we have to be realistic.
  • 48:20 We need a lot of time to transform the economy, to change the energy.
  • 48:28 When I look at the ten years to come,
  • 48:32 I think that the way to reduce emission,
  • 48:37 the most efficient way, is through energy efficiency.
  • 48:42 It needs to align corporates
  • 48:50 and the financial sector to finance this.
  • 48:56 In Amundi, we have built a joint venture,
  • 48:59 for example, with EDF, a public energy utility of France,
  • 49:06 in order to finance this energy efficiency investment.
  • 49:15 We can imagine also to issue bonds
  • 49:21 with index about this where we share
  • 49:26 the value of the reduction
  • 49:31 of the consumption of electricity, of energy
  • 49:36 between the utility, the consumers and the investors.
  • 49:44 [Makhtar Diop] Sounds great.
  • 49:45 I look forward to seeing both of you face to face,
  • 49:48 I hope this time in Paris and London and pursue that conversation
  • 49:52 and I would love to be able to organize something during COP27
  • 49:58 where we can have that conversation and bring investors face to face
  • 50:02 with the capital market to be able to,
  • 50:05 to do more of what you're already doing.
  • 50:08 Thank you so very much for joining us.
  • 50:10 It was a pleasure having you in this panel.
  • 50:12 Thank you so much.
  • 50:14 - [Rhian-Mari Thomas] Thank you. - [Yves Pierrer] A pleasure. Thank you. Goodbye.
  • 50:19 [NEW DELHI, INDIA] [Shilpa] Namaste.
  • 50:20 I'm Shilpa in New Delhi and you're watching
  • 50:23 the World Bank Group-IMF Spring Meetings.
  • 50:30 [Meriem Gray] Thank you to Makhar Diop and his guests
  • 50:33 for this insightful conversation.
  • 50:35 Next, we will be joined by Mari Pangestu, Managing Director of Development Policy
  • 50:40 and Partnerships at the World Bank and her guest,
  • 50:43 Lord Nicholas Stern, IG Patel Professor of Economics and Government
  • 50:48 at London School of Economics.
  • 50:51 This forward-looking conversation will focus on
  • 50:54 how to make climate finance tangible and action oriented.
  • 51:00 [Mari Pangestu] We just heard a discussion about the challenges
  • 51:03 around climate and development
  • 51:05 from how we can integrate climate and development.
  • 51:07 In the case of just energy transition,
  • 51:10 how can we have just an affordable energy transition
  • 51:13 at the same time phase out coal
  • 51:15 and of course, the big challenge of financing the scale
  • 51:18 of transformative investments that's needed for developing countries.
  • 51:22 In this discussion, we want to take a little bit of a forward look.
  • 51:25 I'm joined by my good friend Lord Nick Stern,
  • 51:28 who is also serving with me and the IMF
  • 51:34 on the High-Level Advisory Group
  • 51:39 on Sustainable and Inclusive Recovery and Growth.
  • 51:42 And, of course, he is a well-known climate and development expert.
  • 51:45 So, Nick, if I can just start our discussion today
  • 51:48 by asking you a very big question which is around climate and development.
  • 51:54 We know the IPCC report has once again raised the urgency of the climate crisis,
  • 51:59 but developing countries are facing development challenges
  • 52:03 accentuated by COVID-19 and now with the Ukraine war.
  • 52:06 How can we really integrate climate and development
  • 52:09 and how can we really scale up the financing that's needed?
  • 52:13 [WASHINGTON, DC, USA] [WEST SUSSEX, UK]
  • 52:14 [Lord Nicholas Stern] Thank you, Mari, very much for your leadership.
  • 52:18 The IPCC report is clear and strong.
  • 52:21 Each one that comes through is more worrying than the one that came before
  • 52:25 as the evidence accumulates and accumulates.
  • 52:28 We're headed for something closer to three degrees than two degrees.
  • 52:32 We haven't been at three degrees for three million years.
  • 52:35 The sea levels would be 10 to 20 meters higher,
  • 52:39 threatening our coastal cities and habitations
  • 52:43 in a very deep and difficult way.
  • 52:46 We would risk extreme events which would, together with those long onset stories,
  • 52:53 would push hundreds of millions, perhaps billions to move.
  • 52:57 Let's be very clear about the scale of the risks
  • 52:59 and that we have to act very quickly and strongly
  • 53:02 starting now, in this decade,
  • 53:04 if we are to be able to handle those risks in a way that could be acceptable.
  • 53:10 Poor people, of course, are hit earliest and hardest.
  • 53:13 So what do we have to do?
  • 53:14 Well, we have to invest strongly in doing things differently.
  • 53:18 What things? Particularly the energy sector.
  • 53:21 We have to put in place a big transition, and we have to do it now.
  • 53:25 Of course, exiting coal, moving away from coal,
  • 53:29 absolutely core part of that, it's the lowest hanging fruit.
  • 53:33 That will involve a great deal of investment
  • 53:35 but we're going to have to adapt also as we do this,
  • 53:38 and we're going to have to invest in our natural capital as well.
  • 53:42 Fortunately, if we put all those things together,
  • 53:45 the investment in emissions reductions and the new energy story,
  • 53:49 if we adapt, if we invest in our natural capital,
  • 53:53 we have a new model of development much more attractive
  • 53:57 than the dirty, destructive one that went before.
  • 54:00 We have cities where we can move and breathe,
  • 54:03 much more efficient use of all our resources
  • 54:05 ecosystems which are robust and fruitful.
  • 54:07 It's a new model of development and it's in our hands,
  • 54:10 but we have to invest to get there.
  • 54:12 How much?
  • 54:13 Well, in emerging markets and developing economies,
  • 54:16 perhaps 1.5 to 2 trillion dollars a year extra by 2030,
  • 54:21 perfectly possible from the point of view of world macro
  • 54:24 and past historical rates of investment.
  • 54:28 But a major increase in investment,
  • 54:31 that 1.5 to 2 trillion dollars a year in 2030 or by 2030
  • 54:39 would have to be financed domestically and internationally,
  • 54:44 perhaps internationally,
  • 54:45 something close to a trillion dollars a year extra.
  • 54:49 Big majority private sector,
  • 54:51 but that will be enabled by public sector resources which come,
  • 54:56 or financial resources which come with it and combine together.
  • 55:00 We have to reduce, share, manage risk in a way that allows the private sector
  • 55:05 to come in and brings down the cost of capital.
  • 55:08 Clearly, the MDB's have a crucial role.
  • 55:11 So also the bilaterals with their concessional finance
  • 55:14 and of course, philanthropy, which although would be smaller in scale,
  • 55:18 can reach the parts that others can't reach.
  • 55:20 There the just transition and investing
  • 55:23 in people and places who were intensive in fossil fuels,
  • 55:26 that can play an important part as well as could voluntary carbon markets.
  • 55:32 [Mari Pangestu] Thanks for that very sobering but realistic picture,
  • 55:36 but also identifying the opportunities.
  • 55:38 Another realism that we are facing today is, of course, the Ukraine war,
  • 55:43 its impact on high energy prices
  • 55:46 and increased concerns around energy security.
  • 55:49 You identified energy transition
  • 55:52 as one of the really urgent areas that we have to discuss.
  • 55:56 When you see the drivers that are happening now,
  • 55:59 how do you see us moving forward
  • 56:02 if we want to still continue to accelerate energy transition?
  • 56:08 [Lord Nicholas Stern] Energy security is very important,
  • 56:11 and we've seen it in the past in the crises of the 1970s
  • 56:16 and the right thing to do is to move away faster and harder from fossil fuels
  • 56:21 and to increase strongly energy efficiency.
  • 56:25 Actually, now our options for moving harder and faster away from fossil fuels
  • 56:31 are much bigger than they were in the 1970s,
  • 56:34 because renewables and storage have proceeded so strongly.
  • 56:37 So that's the strategy.
  • 56:39 The implementation of the strategy means, of course, recasting energy supply.
  • 56:46 It means much bigger capacity for electricity
  • 56:51 because so much of this story is going to be around electricity
  • 56:55 in terms of, of course, power itself,
  • 56:57 in terms of transportation, in terms of heating homes and so on.
  • 57:02 We have to invest on the supply side and we have to encourage the demand side,
  • 57:07 so it moves towards electrification
  • 57:10 and, of course, much greater energy efficiency.
  • 57:13 That's the delivery challenge.
  • 57:15 How do we get that to move?
  • 57:17 The right kind of policies have to be put in place,
  • 57:20 including abolition of fossil fuel subsidies,
  • 57:22 the advancement of carbon pricing
  • 57:24 but clarity on time scales for decentralization of the grid,
  • 57:28 and on time scales for stopping the sale
  • 57:31 of the internal combustion engine vehicles and so on.
  • 57:35 Making sure that the sense of direction is clear in those ways,
  • 57:39 but also enabling, in a much more efficient way,
  • 57:43 the solution of problems and difficulties inevitably arise as we move into delivery.
  • 57:49 Of course, reforming domestic financial systems
  • 57:52 and getting the flows of finance right, as I described just now.
  • 57:56 That's the essence of what we call the country platform approach.
  • 58:00 And through its climate change development reviews,
  • 58:03 I do believe that the World Bank is moving in a positive way in that direction.
  • 58:10 [Mari Pangestu] Thanks, Nick.
  • 58:12 I think the reality is we may still see a little bit of a slowdown,
  • 58:16 but at the same time, we hope that accelerating energy transition
  • 58:21 is actually part of energy security, as you emphasize,
  • 58:25 really a complimentary part of energy security.
  • 58:28 Now let's take a more forward look.
  • 58:31 We are heading now into the COP27.
  • 58:35 It just happens the chair this year is Egypt, which is a developing country.
  • 58:40 It's really a really good opportunity
  • 58:42 to look at how can we really deliver on climate and development.
  • 58:47 As we heard from Minister Rania earlier, they are focusing on implementation
  • 58:52 as well as on adaptation and resilience.
  • 58:56 The big question out there, which is the financing.
  • 58:59 I was in Egypt recently and I was very encouraged to see
  • 59:04 the commitment of the Egyptian government on the climate agenda
  • 59:07 and their preparations for the COP27.
  • 59:10 If I can ask you to take a kind of a forward look and see
  • 59:14 what are some of the ideas that we can take forward to help
  • 59:17 think through the delivery on implementation and the actions
  • 59:22 that can really integrate the climate and development agenda
  • 59:27 and then deliver on it, especially the financing side.
  • 59:30 If you could say a little bit more about the role of the private sector
  • 59:35 that would really also be really helpful.
  • 59:38 [Lord Nicholas Stern] Thank you very much, Mari.
  • 59:41 We're looking forward very much to the leadership in COP27 of Egypt.
  • 59:46 They really are, as you know, from your visit, Mari,
  • 59:48 putting in place what's necessary, emphasizing that this is a delivery COP.
  • 59:53 COP26 was very good in setting a roadmap, setting the targets,
  • 59:57 the private sector involvement, the commitment to net zero,
  • 01:00:00 the rising place of adaptation, natural capital and so on.
  • 01:00:07 But COP27 is the delivery COP,
  • 01:00:09 and that is very clear with our Egyptian friends and in their leadership.
  • 01:00:13 And of course, it's an African COP.
  • 01:00:16 In the priorities that we see on that delivery,
  • 01:00:19 surely the energy transition is very clearly there
  • 01:00:23 as one of the key priorities.
  • 01:00:25 Adaptation and resilience,
  • 01:00:27 we've seen how devastating climate change can be already with us,
  • 01:00:31 and it's going to get more difficult.
  • 01:00:33 So adaptation and resilience would be a second important priority,
  • 01:00:38 integrating, adaptation, resilience with emissions reductions as we can,
  • 01:00:43 through decentralized solar, through public transport,
  • 01:00:46 through mangroves and so on.
  • 01:00:49 We can put mitigation adaptation development together and we must
  • 01:00:53 And of course, finance.
  • 01:00:55 I've already indicated the scale of finance that we need.
  • 01:00:58 It's going to be critical to advance of commitment, advance of ambition.
  • 01:01:04 In that finance story, the private finance is going to be at center stage.
  • 01:01:12 But it will require reduction of risk, sharing of risk, management of risk.
  • 01:01:18 And in that story then, the combination with the bilaterals
  • 01:01:24 and the concessional money they can bring, the MDB with the lower cost of capital
  • 01:01:28 and the skills they can bring in the management of risk
  • 01:01:30 are going to be enormously important,
  • 01:01:32 as will the philanthropy and the voluntary carbon markets.
  • 01:01:35 Second part of delivery is getting behind those countries which are already making
  • 01:01:41 strong moves and putting their country platforms in place.
  • 01:01:44 I think particularly of South Africa, which has worked so hard
  • 01:01:48 to get a clear plan for transforming the economy in place.
  • 01:01:52 But other countries too.
  • 01:01:53 Indonesia, India and Vietnam are all moving very strongly.
  • 01:01:58 So countries that are coming forward, those are just examples.
  • 01:02:00 Other countries that are coming forward,
  • 01:02:02 we have to get behind them in the delivery story
  • 01:02:05 to show in those specific cases
  • 01:02:07 that the world is ready to get behind their investments.
  • 01:02:11 That means a combination of public sector and private sector
  • 01:02:16 in the management sharing and a reduction of risk
  • 01:02:19 that will be critical to bringing down the cost of capital.
  • 01:02:25 [Mari Pangestu] Thanks, Nick.
  • 01:02:26 I think my two takeaways from that is getting behind countries
  • 01:02:31 and supporting them to come up with
  • 01:02:33 the enabling environment for funding to come in
  • 01:02:36 and the climate change and development reports that we are preparing.
  • 01:02:40 This is going to be part of the support we're giving.
  • 01:02:43 You heard Minister Rania mentioned that specifically in the case of Egypt.
  • 01:02:47 Then second, how do we have different sources of funding,
  • 01:02:52 public and most importantly private,
  • 01:02:54 because a large amount of funding is going to have to come from private sector.
  • 01:02:57 I think this is our collective homework.
  • 01:03:01 The international community as well as working with countries
  • 01:03:04 because it has to be country led and country owned
  • 01:03:07 to really put together the financing that's needed,
  • 01:03:11 whether it's the energy transition or the adaptation and resilience.
  • 01:03:15 So thanks again, Nick.
  • 01:03:18 The process is going to continue and we look forward
  • 01:03:21 to continued conversations with you and our work with the HLAG.
  • 01:03:26 Let me thank you, everybody.
  • 01:03:28 Also now give it back to Meriem.
  • 01:03:32 [Meriem Gray] People have been sharing their thoughts
  • 01:03:35 on this event online and on social media.
  • 01:03:38 I'm now joined by my friend and colleague Sri Sridhar,
  • 01:03:42 who has been following this conversation throughout.
  • 01:03:45 [Srimathi Sridhar, Communications Officer, World Bank Group]
  • 01:03:46 Sri, tell us what stood out for you.
  • 01:03:47 [Sri Sridhar] Thanks Meriem and great to see you.
  • 01:03:49 We have people joining us from all over the world today again,
  • 01:03:52 including India, Nigeria, Kenya, Venezuela, Spain,
  • 01:03:57 the United Kingdom, France, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, and also the United States.
  • 01:04:02 They're, of course,
  • 01:04:03 using the hashtag for today's event, which is #Finance4Climate.
  • 01:04:07 They're joining us on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, as well as Instagram.
  • 01:04:11 They're talking about the need for climate action
  • 01:04:14 and how the private sector and green investments are needed
  • 01:04:17 to make communities more resilient to climate change.
  • 01:04:20 Why don't we take a look at some comments
  • 01:04:22 that have been coming in on our social channels.
  • 01:04:24 First, on Twitter, we've got Wambi Peter from Uganda
  • 01:04:27 saying that "a sustainable future requires large scale,
  • 01:04:31 low-carbon investments that can help communities build long-lasting resilience."
  • 01:04:36 We next have a comment coming up
  • 01:04:38 on LinkedIn from Tomi, who says that "getting to net-zero
  • 01:04:42 will not be easy or without cost
  • 01:04:44 and will need to go hand in hand with other objectives,
  • 01:04:47 like economic development and increasing energy access."
  • 01:04:52 Finally, a comment coming in on our Facebook channel
  • 01:04:56 from Tamba in Sierra Leone, who says that "a huge amount of money
  • 01:04:59 can enable change but until we learn
  • 01:05:01 to control our activities to avoid environmental degradation,
  • 01:05:05 this issue can and will always call for more funds."
  • 01:05:09 It's really great to see this engagement coming in on our channels.
  • 01:05:12 [Meriem Gray] Great. Thank you.
  • 01:05:13 I think this is where the drum roll should come in.
  • 01:05:17 I understand you have the results of our quiz.
  • 01:05:21 [Sri Sridhar] Yes. We have a quiz today which asks
  • 01:05:24 how much investment is needed each year to limit global warming, boost resilience,
  • 01:05:29 and support global transition to net zero emissions?
  • 01:05:33 Our four options here are A, is it about 10 billion dollars a year,
  • 01:05:37 B, about 100 billion dollars a year,
  • 01:05:40 C, about a trillion dollars a year, or D, is it more than that?
  • 01:05:44 Is it more than 2 trillion a year?
  • 01:05:46 There is a right or wrong answer.
  • 01:05:48 Before we get to that, Meriem, what do you think the answer is?
  • 01:05:52 [Meriem Gray] I was going to go with C, about 1 trillion dollars a year.
  • 01:05:57 [Sri Sridhar] Okay. Well, shall we see what the results are?
  • 01:06:00 Just to know, we had nearly 2000 people take part in today's quiz.
  • 01:06:04 You'll see here, 11% think that it's about 10 billion dollars a year,
  • 01:06:08 29% think about 100 billion dollars a year,
  • 01:06:12 28% about a trillion dollars a year,
  • 01:06:15 and finally, most people think, with 32%,
  • 01:06:17 that it's D, more than 2 trillion dollars a year.
  • 01:06:20 And guess what, Meriem? They're right.
  • 01:06:22 D is the right answer.
  • 01:06:24 [Meriem Gray] The numbers really do add up.
  • 01:06:27 Thank you so much, Sri. Thank you for joining us.
  • 01:06:32 [ST. GALLEN, SWITZERLAND] [David] Hi. I'm David in Switzerland
  • 01:06:34 and you're watching the World Bank Groups-IMF Spring Meetings.
  • 01:06:42 [Meriem Gray] Auguste Kouame, Country Director for the World Bank in Turkey,
  • 01:06:45 and Hania Dawood, Manager of the Climate Business Department at IFC,
  • 01:06:50 have joined me here in the World Bank atrium.
  • 01:06:53 In a moment, they will be answering some of the questions you've been asking.
  • 01:06:59 But first, let's recap the main points we've heard in the past hour
  • 01:07:03 on how we can finance effective climate action.
  • 01:07:07 We have heard that addressing climate change and development together
  • 01:07:12 is a complex exercise that needs to go
  • 01:07:14 from high level commitment to real, tangible action.
  • 01:07:19 For the low-carbon resilient transition, the world needs large-scale investments.
  • 01:07:25 Financing this transition will require continue to create enabling environments,
  • 01:07:30 leverage different pools of capital,
  • 01:07:31 and ensure that affected communities have a voice.
  • 01:07:35 Now let's hear from Auguste and Hania,
  • 01:07:39 welcome, and thank you for joining us live.
  • 01:07:41 My first question will be to both of you.
  • 01:07:45 This is probably one of the most voted questions from the audience.
  • 01:07:49 How can we institutionalize climate action?
  • 01:07:54 Let's go to Auguste first.
  • 01:07:55 [Auguste Kouame] Thank you, Meriem. Let me start by saying
  • 01:07:58 that climate action and development are intertwined.
  • 01:08:03 In fact, there is symbiosis and synergy between the two.
  • 01:08:06 It makes full sense to institutionalize climate change
  • 01:08:09 [Auguste Kouame, Turkey Country Director, World Bank]
  • 01:08:11 when we talk about development.
  • 01:08:13 We know that development without climate change action
  • 01:08:17 can push up to 132 million people into poverty,
  • 01:08:22 in addition to the several hundred millions of people
  • 01:08:26 who are already poor today.
  • 01:08:28 We also know that good climate action
  • 01:08:30 can actually create development growth and poverty reduction.
  • 01:08:35 At the country level, what does it mean to institutionalize?
  • 01:08:38 What we think is that when governments are planning
  • 01:08:42 their development and growth and the poverty reduction strategies,
  • 01:08:45 climate change should be at the heart of it.
  • 01:08:48 When they're planning actions across governments
  • 01:08:51 they can look at it from the climate change angle
  • 01:08:54 so that there is a whole of government approach.
  • 01:08:57 There is an economy wide approach to climate change.
  • 01:09:01 At the Bank level what we're trying to do is,
  • 01:09:04 as you have seen, the new climate change action plan
  • 01:09:09 put climate change at the heart of the Bank's work
  • 01:09:12 at the same level as poverty reduction, inclusion and equity.
  • 01:09:17 We're going beyond the project approach
  • 01:09:20 to looking at climate in the country strategy as a program approach.
  • 01:09:26 The Bank has also introduced the Country Climate Development Report,
  • 01:09:33 the CCDR, which is a core diagnostic
  • 01:09:37 that allows us to help to work with countries without us flying blind.
  • 01:09:42 It gives us an understanding of the countries' climate change
  • 01:09:47 and development issues in an integrated fashion.
  • 01:09:51 We can help countries
  • 01:09:53 not only implement good program, but also upgrade the NDCs.
  • 01:09:59 The Nationally Determined Contributions help them prepare long-term strategies
  • 01:10:04 to achieve net-zero, help countries boost their capacity
  • 01:10:08 to be more resilient to climate change, make their population and their economies
  • 01:10:14 more resilient, therefore support the adaptation agenda.
  • 01:10:18 What it also means at a global level
  • 01:10:21 is we know that no single country can address climate change alone.
  • 01:10:25 It is everybody's business, it is every country's business.
  • 01:10:28 There is also an opportunity here to institutionalize climate change
  • 01:10:33 in international cooperation, in international development.
  • 01:10:37 When countries are helping each other, when we are helping the world address
  • 01:10:43 [LIVE: YOUR QUESTIONS ANSWERED] big issues such as COVID-19
  • 01:10:46 or the impact of the war in Ukraine or high inflation today,
  • 01:10:50 we do that with climate change at the heart of the action
  • 01:10:54 so that we don't solve the problem
  • 01:10:57 whilst creating another one for the future generations.
  • 01:11:01 [Meriem Gray] Thank you, Auguste. Let me take it to Hania.
  • 01:11:03 Hania, what does the private sector have to offer
  • 01:11:07 and how can the private help to institutionalize climate action?
  • 01:11:12 [Hania Dawood] Thank you, Meriem.
  • 01:11:15 Climate change is a collective action problem on steroids
  • 01:11:19 [Hania Dawood, Manager, CBG, Climate Strategy and Business Development, IFC]
  • 01:11:21 and climate action is a global public good.
  • 01:11:23 As Auguste said, governments and nations need to come together.
  • 01:11:27 The private sector needs to act and we have a role as individuals to play.
  • 01:11:32 I agree with everything that Auguste said.
  • 01:11:35 I will add three more things.
  • 01:11:37 One, what gets measured gets done.
  • 01:11:41 Data about emissions is integral about the baseline of emissions
  • 01:11:45 and about the trajectory of emissions.
  • 01:11:48 This is important at the country level and at the company level.
  • 01:11:53 Why is that? If we know which sectors and which sub-sectors
  • 01:11:58 contribute most to climate change,
  • 01:12:00 if we know what part of a company's value chain
  • 01:12:04 is responsible for climate change, we can prioritize action
  • 01:12:08 and we can concretely identify areas and where we need to channel money.
  • 01:12:14 Secondly, commitments matter and what gets committed to, gets done.
  • 01:12:19 We're seeing countries commit to ambitious NDCs,
  • 01:12:23 the private sector at an unprecedented level
  • 01:12:26 is committing to net-zero targets, which is extremely exciting,
  • 01:12:31 and for us here at the World Bank,
  • 01:12:33 we increased our commitment to 35%
  • 01:12:36 of our entire commitment towards climate action,
  • 01:12:41 and to also align with the Paris Agreement.
  • 01:12:44 Now, commitments are great,
  • 01:12:46 but what really matters is to operationalize these commitments
  • 01:12:49 and to come up with concrete plans and move from rhetoric to action.
  • 01:12:54 My third point is our votes matter.
  • 01:12:58 It's really inspiring to see the youth engaged in this debate.
  • 01:13:03 This holds policymakers and the private sector accountable.
  • 01:13:08 Shareholders are also voting with their dollars
  • 01:13:11 and are demanding that companies
  • 01:13:13 and their investments do what's right for action.
  • 01:13:16 What's great is that much of this is already in play and in progress.
  • 01:13:21 What is really needed is to move from ambitious, from ambition to action
  • 01:13:26 and to really start to operationalize and make concrete plans.
  • 01:13:31 [Meriem Gray] Thank you. So our next question is from Eswatini.
  • 01:13:35 Temba Twala has actually sent us a video. Let's take a listen.
  • 01:13:40 [Temba Twala] Good day. My name is Temba Twala.
  • 01:13:43 I'm from the Kingdom of Eswatini.
  • 01:13:46 My question is, how can developing countries like Eswatini,
  • 01:13:51 formerly known as Swaziland,
  • 01:13:52 juggle between tackling immediate problems like abstract poverty and climate change?
  • 01:13:58 How do we ensure that our efforts are actually effective and efficient
  • 01:14:03 balancing between development and reducing climate change?
  • 01:14:14 [Meriem Gray] A great question from Temba Twala. Let me repeat it.
  • 01:14:19 How can countries balance climate action and development challenges?
  • 01:14:23 Let's go to August first.
  • 01:14:25 [Auguste Kouame] Thank you very much, Temba, for this question.
  • 01:14:28 It is very clear that the poorest countries
  • 01:14:31 are the most impacted by climate change,
  • 01:14:34 and unfortunately, they contributed the least
  • 01:14:37 to the causes of climate change today.
  • 01:14:39 They contributed the least to CO2 emissions,
  • 01:14:42 and within countries, the poorest are actually suffering the most.
  • 01:14:47 However, countries, regardless of their level of development today,
  • 01:14:52 do not have the option of addressing development
  • 01:14:58 in a high-carbon intensity way and postponing actions that will increase
  • 01:15:04 the adaptation or resilience to the impact of climate change.
  • 01:15:09 It has to be done jointly.
  • 01:15:12 The good news is that now the tension we used to see
  • 01:15:18 between development and climate change is disappearing.
  • 01:15:21 First, because the cost of adopting technologies
  • 01:15:26 that are greener has gone down
  • 01:15:29 and therefore, it is possible to actually find development solutions
  • 01:15:36 that are affordable whilst being totally consistent with climate change.
  • 01:15:42 Second, we have also learned that when countries take climate action
  • 01:15:47 to increase their adaptation and their resilience,
  • 01:15:49 this also creates growth, it creates poverty reduction.
  • 01:15:53 It is very inclusive since we know
  • 01:15:55 that the impact of lack of adaptation is worse for the poor.
  • 01:15:59 When you invest in adaptation,
  • 01:16:00 you're actually implementing inclusive and progressive policies
  • 01:16:05 that benefit the poorest the most.
  • 01:16:07 We also know that the international community
  • 01:16:09 is now committed more to climate change and developing countries
  • 01:16:13 receiving support financially from developed countries.
  • 01:16:17 This financing, if packaged well together, can actually reorient
  • 01:16:23 a lot of the development financing towards climate action.
  • 01:16:27 Let me give you an example of how a country can take
  • 01:16:31 one portion of development activity and transform it into a climate action,
  • 01:16:36 both for mitigation and adaptation.
  • 01:16:39 Take forestry in Turkey, the country where I work.
  • 01:16:43 Forestry, we know is a carbon sink.
  • 01:16:47 It helps the mitigation agenda, it helps absorb CO2 from the air.
  • 01:16:52 When you invest in forestry, you're actually investing in mitigation.
  • 01:16:55 You are also investing in adaptation
  • 01:16:57 because forestry can help reduce landslides,
  • 01:17:01 it can help retain soil, it can help make the poor less vulnerable.
  • 01:17:05 By doing that, you're also doing development
  • 01:17:08 because you're creating jobs in the forest sector.
  • 01:17:11 You're creating opportunities for the rural sector.
  • 01:17:15 You're also investing in food.
  • 01:17:17 As we saw today, the impact of the war in Ukraine
  • 01:17:21 can put a lot of pressure on prices because of a reduced supply of food.
  • 01:17:27 So when you invest in forestry, you can also increase the potential
  • 01:17:31 of the agriculture sector to help address this kind of food scarcity.
  • 01:17:36 So just one example to show that poverty reduction,
  • 01:17:40 development and growth are not contradictory.
  • 01:17:44 It's not orthogonal to climate change.
  • 01:17:46 In fact, the two go together.
  • 01:17:48 Our advice is countries can think of climate action as development.
  • 01:17:56 Doing climate action is doing development.
  • 01:17:58 If you want to do poverty reduction, do it through climate action.
  • 01:18:01 [Meriem Gray] Great. Thank you. My next question is for Hania.
  • 01:18:06 How can private companies tackle both poverty and climate?
  • 01:18:12 [Hania Dawood] Such an important question. because, as Auguste said,
  • 01:18:19 the world's poorest countries are the most impacted by climate change
  • 01:18:24 by form of hurricanes, flooding, but they contribute least to it.
  • 01:18:30 At the same time, it's integral to integrate climate and development.
  • 01:18:38 We need to continue to invest in economies and their private sectors
  • 01:18:42 to continue to create jobs.
  • 01:18:46 What is the role of the private sector?
  • 01:18:48 It's to create jobs and it's to innovate.
  • 01:18:51 The IEA estimates that 30 million jobs can be created by 2030
  • 01:18:57 just as part of the energy transition.
  • 01:18:59 Innovation.
  • 01:19:00 The private sector needs to drive innovation.
  • 01:19:03 It needs to drive innovation in, for example, climate-smart solutions
  • 01:19:08 focusing on the agribusiness sectors that help farmers improve
  • 01:19:12 their fertilization, their irrigation techniques.
  • 01:19:17 The private sector can drive innovations and technologies that help
  • 01:19:21 with better weather patterning and satellite imaging
  • 01:19:26 so that information is disseminated quickly
  • 01:19:29 to the world's poorest so that they can act faster.
  • 01:19:33 Then lastly, the private sector can invest in natural capital,
  • 01:19:38 which form the basis of ecosystems that also are integral to the poor.
  • 01:19:45 [Meriem Grey] Thank you so much for joining us live today.
  • 01:19:50 If you have any comments from the Spring Meetings,
  • 01:19:53 you can share them using #ResilientFuture.
  • 01:19:57 [#RESILIENTFUTURE]
  • 01:19:58 Finally, as it is now a tradition at these events,
  • 01:20:01 we asked our Connect for Climate colleagues to share with us
  • 01:20:05 what young activists, students and champions
  • 01:20:08 want to see happen on this agenda.
  • 01:20:10 C4C was on the ground at MENA Climate Week
  • 01:20:14 and here is what they heard about
  • 01:20:16 what young people are looking to change on climate action at COP27 in November.
  • 01:20:23 [Rania Al-Mashat, Minister of International Cooperation, Egypt]
  • 01:20:25 We're very happy Egypt is going to be leading the COP27
  • 01:20:28 in Sharm El-Sheikh in November.
  • 01:20:30 [LOOKING AHEAD TO COP27]
  • 01:20:31 [Mari Pangestu, Managing Director of Development Policy and Partnerships, WBG]
  • 01:20:32 COP27 is the opportunity to go from declaration to implementation.
  • 01:20:37 [Federica Fricano, Director for International Climate Action, Ministry for Ecological Transition, Italy]
  • 01:20:38 COP27 is our chance to revisiting the ambition and filling the gap.
  • 01:20:43 [Neeshad Shafi, Co-founder, Arab Youth Climate Movement Qatar]
  • 01:20:44 COP27 is our chance or Middle East countries to enhance their climate action.
  • 01:20:47 [Deena Mariyam, Member, YOUNGO] To uplift the region that has been neglected.
  • 01:20:49 [Elizabeth Gulugulu, Global South Focal Point, UNFCCC Children and Youth Constituency]
  • 01:20:50 To show we are implementers of the Paris Agreement.
  • 01:20:52 [Princess Abze Djigma, Chair, H.R.H. Princess Abze Djigma Foundation]
  • 01:20:54 Now it's about mobilizing finance because we need trillions.
  • 01:20:57 It's not about billions.
  • 01:20:58 [Elizabeth Curmi, Director, Global Thematic Analyst, Citi]
  • 01:20:59 This year it's taking place in Egypt so we have to make sure
  • 01:21:01 that emerging markets are well represented.
  • 01:21:04 [Keith Tuffley, Vice Chairman, Global Co-Head, Sustainability & Corporate Transition, Citi]
  • 01:21:05 We cannot possibly solve global climate change
  • 01:21:07 without creating the right environments
  • 01:21:08 for capital to move towards the emerging markets.
  • 01:21:11 [Rania Al Mashat] For the trillions to make their way on the ground,
  • 01:21:15 we need to be able to decipher what we mean by derisking and blended instruments.
  • 01:21:21 So we look forward to working with all our partners to see
  • 01:21:24 how we can actually move from commitments to implementation.
  • 01:21:29 [Nigel Topping, UN High-Level Climate Action Champion]
  • 01:21:30 At COP27, we need to get much more granular about solutions
  • 01:21:34 to the needs of the most vulnerable communities.
  • 01:21:36 [Hatim Aznague, Youth4Climate Delegate, Morocco]
  • 01:21:37 We need accountability at COP27.
  • 01:21:39 [Hoor Ahli, Youth4Climate Delegate, UAE]
  • 01:21:40 We need to ensure collective action at COP27
  • 01:21:42 because this determines the life of my generation and future generations.
  • 01:21:46 [Amal Ridene, Tunisian Young Climate Change Negotiator]
  • 01:21:47 It is important that all the parties get to join the conversation.
  • 01:21:50 [Rania Al-Mashat] It includes not just the private sector
  • 01:21:51 and civil society and governments and multilateral development banks,
  • 01:21:56 but youth are extremely important in this equation.
  • 01:22:00 [Rand Alkhushman, Founder, Green for Jordan Initiative]
  • 01:22:01 In COP27, I really hope that young people will be more involved.
  • 01:22:05 [Disha Sasrkar, YOUNGO ACE Contact Point]
  • 01:22:06 Youth have to be at the center of this kind of implementation.
  • 01:22:08 [Mohamed Maray Mohamed Elshikhi, Co-founder, MENA Youth Network]
  • 01:22:09 The youth engagement, we have to take it to the next level.
  • 01:22:12 [Selma Bichbich, Member, YOUNGO]
  • 01:22:13 Trusting us does work and we want to prove that at COP27.
  • 01:22:15 [Reem Al Saffar, 2022 Max Thabiso Edkins Climate Ambassador]
  • 01:22:16 Because young people are our region's greatest resource.
  • 01:22:19 [Ferid Belhaj, Vice President for Middle East and North Africa, World Bank]
  • 01:22:20 On the road to COP27, we need the youth
  • 01:22:22 because whatever we do today for COP27 and COP28 will be for them.
  • 01:22:28 [Xan Northcott, Global North Focal Point, UNFCCC Children and Youth Constituency]
  • 01:22:29 We'll be working tirelessly to make sure
  • 01:22:30 that as many young people will be trained and prepared
  • 01:22:34 to meaningfully participate and collaborate
  • 01:22:36 with the parties and governments at COP.
  • 01:22:38 [Rania Al-Mashat] We look forward to welcoming all of you in Sharm El-Sheikh.
  • 01:22:41 [WORLD BANK GROUP] [CONNECT4CLIMATE]
  • 01:22:45 [Meriem Gray] Young climate activists demand action and inspire hope.
  • 01:22:49 Climate change impacts everyone, but the future belongs to young people
  • 01:22:53 and it is great to meet some of the young activists on the front lines.
  • 01:22:56 [COMING UP] [AVAILABLE FOR REPLAY]
  • 01:22:58 You can re watch this event as well as previous ones
  • 01:23:01 on the potential of the digital revolution
  • 01:23:04 and discussion between the leaders of the World Bank Group and IMF
  • 01:23:07 on responding to global shocks.
  • 01:23:10 Stay with us all week for more high-level discussions
  • 01:23:13 on the most pressing challenges in development today.
  • 01:23:16 Tomorrow we will be bringing you two more events.
  • 01:23:19 The first is about rising fragility
  • 01:23:22 and then we'll be focusing on how to preserve open trade.
  • 01:23:25 We will be wrapping up these meetings on Saturday
  • 01:23:28 by exploring how we can reverse the losses in human capital.
  • 01:23:33 You can watch all of that at live.worldbank.org.
  • 01:23:37 Thank you for being with us today. We hope you enjoyed this program.
  • 01:23:41 We really wanted to bring you different perspectives,
  • 01:23:44 tangible solutions that are helping us to finance climate action
  • 01:23:48 for a green, resilient and inclusive future.
  • 01:23:51 Goodbye for now.

Transitioning Economies, Transforming Climate: Financing Climate Action for a Green and Inclusive Future

- Watch in العربية | Français | Español -

Financing Climate Action lays out the complexities of tackling climate and development objectives together amid a geopolitical landscape characterized by conflict, rising prices, and intensifying climate impacts. Several pressing issues are addressed in a series of conversations, from the cost of phasing out coal and the scale of the climate risk we face, to the need to de-risk investments in low-carbon and energy efficiency projects in developing countries, and the expectations for COP27 in Egypt.  The event includes videos laying out the climate finance landscape as well as young people expressing their hopes for climate action at COP27.

Follow the event on Twitter #Finance4Climate

00:00 Welcome! WBG Spring Meetings 2022 | Financing Climate Action
03:09 Climate action, climate change, global public goods
21:32 How climate finance works?
25:14 Private capital in supporting climate action
51:00 How to make climate finance tangible and action-oriented
1:03:32 Social media conversation and poll results
1:06:42 Live Q&A: How we can finance effective climate action
1:19:59 COP27: What young people are looking to change on climate action
1:22:58 Closure | Thanks for watching the WBG Spring Meetings 2022


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