From Dare Akogun, Egypt

The Sharm El-Sheikh Climate Implementation Summit concluded with more than 100 heads of state committing to support the world’s vulnerable communities.

Over the two days of the Summit, a series of six roundtables addressed the most pertinent climate challenges including food, water, and energy security, as well as innovative finance mechanisms for climate and development.

The six roundtables over two days covered Food Security, Innovative Finance, Just Transition, Investing in the Future of Energy: Green Hydrogen, Climate Change and the Sustainability of Vulnerable Communities and Water Security.

Food Security

During the roundtable on “Food security,” co-chaired by President of Kenya William Ruto, and Prime Minister of Sweden Ulf Kristersson, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation pledged to invest $1.4 billion over four years to support smallholder farmers, particularly women, with innovative digital technologies.

The IFC also announced the launch of their $6 billion global food security platform ($3B IFC, $2B from private investors, $1B as blended finance).

A number of key players from the private sector also made net zero pledges during the high-level segment, including JBL – the largest meat processing company in the world – and UPL – a key player in the agrochemicals industry to achieve carbon neutrality.

Reinforced a leadership imperative and commitments by many countries to do more and increase adaptation in agriculture action and support, particularly in Africa.

Several international organizations have recognized the role of COP27 Food and Agriculture for Sustainable Transformation “FAST” global flagship initiative in responding to the urgency of implementation, as a multi-stakeholder partnership delivering triple wins: for people, for climate and for nature.

Bold announcements to harness the enabling environment of green hydrogen fertilizers by African countries were also made.

Innovative Finance

The ‘innovative finance’ roundtable co-chaired by Emmanuel Macron, President of France and the Prime Minister of Barbados Mia Mottley, saw an agreement on the role of Special Drawing Rights (SDRs), with joint calls to increase allocations from 20% to 30%, a target that can be implemented in cooperation with the IMF.

Speakers noted the role of IMF’s Resilience and Sustainability Trust is an instrumental starting point but called for additional work in this regard.

A joint call for concessional finance to be based on a climate vulnerability basis rather than an income capacity basis, with representatives of developing countries highlighting that access to finance remains an obstacle to many especially towards efforts to implement their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs).

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The need for MDB’s reform was highlighted among the key priorities before Spring meetings to allow for more climate centric projects funding, while participants jointly agreed that the way forward would be through private sector investments namely in agriculture and energy.

Participants also reiterated the need for debt restructuring and liquidity access especially in the developing and least developed countries in light of the current food and energy crisis.

WEF expressed its interest to launch a coalition of companies willing to commit to investing in renewable energy in emerging and developing countries.

Just Transition

Discussions within the roundtable, was co-chaired by the President of the European Council Charles Michel, and South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, emphasized the need for strategies, policies, mobilization of appropriate finance at scale, technology, capacity building and major investment to ensure a just transition for the affected communities.

The massive scale of the challenges requires major efforts exerted by not just by governments and the energy sector but also from international financial institutions and donors, as well as multilateral development banks and other non-state actors.

Participants underscored that transition must be just and inclusive, leaving no one behind, adding that the affected communities must be brought along, own the transition processes and being part of the solution.

They also discussed opportunities for job creation arising from new economic activities that require establishing mechanisms that would allow for forms of training, capacity building, forms of reallocations of resources, including creating social protection systems that support transition.

During the discussion, participants also discussed the role of digital transformation in the transition towards a low-carbon economy and the need to take that into account while designing climate and social policies in support of the transition.

Several solutions were demonstrated to deliver on finance and committing to pledges through different approaches such as partnerships (e.g., Just Energy Transition Partnership) or by leveraging existing partnerships, provisions of grants, provisions of concessional loans, or debt reliefs, in particular, for developing and middle-income countries.

These means can also be used to assist those who are impacted adversely by the transition or to lower the capital costs and unlock private finance to achieve a just transition.

Investing in the Future of Energy: Green Hydrogen

At the “Investing in the Future of Energy: Green Hydrogen” co-chaired by the President of Arab Republic of Egypt HE Abdel Fattah El-Sisi and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, major announcements were made in respect of green hydrogen with the Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi, and Belgium Prime Minister, Mr. Alexander De Croo, announcing the launch of the “Global Renewable Hydrogen Forum”.

The Forum constitutes a multi-stakeholder public-private platform designed to facilitate large-scale deployment of renewable hydrogen to foster decarbonization of local industries, accelerate just transition and unlock the environmental and socio-economic benefits of the global hydrogen economy, as well as to identify the best instruments enabling the cross-border trade of renewable hydrogen between renewables-rich developing countries the developed countries.

President Sisi also announced the Egyptian-Norwegian green hydrogen project, which provides a practical model of investment partnership that stimulates sustainable economic development with a focus on the role of the national and foreign private sector besides the government’s role, working side by side in the sector.

The President and the Norwegian Prime Minister thereafter jointly launched the first phase of the project to establish a major green hydrogen plant in Ain Sokhna, Egypt. 

Climate Change and the Sustainability of Vulnerable Communities

Discussions at the roundtable, “Climate Change and the Sustainability of Vulnerable Communities”, co-chaired by the Prime Minister of Norway Jonas Gahr Støre, and Shehbaz Sharif, Prime Minister of Pakistan; reiterated how from a strictly financial perspective, investing in adaptation has proven profitable.

Climate Change and the Sustainability of Vulnerable Communities”, co-chaired by the Prime Minister of Norway Jonas Gahr Støre, and Shehbaz Sharif, Prime Minister of Pakistan.

With relief, rescue, rehabilitation, and reconstruction due to climate-induced floods having proved costly and avoidable.

With the recent floods in Pakistan and other climate-induced devastations in the Horn of Africa and the Sahel region the urgent need to build resilience and advance adaptation to climate change and capitalize funds in a way that is equitable took centre stage.

A call from the private sector asked for governments to provide guarantees as an enabler to adaptation efforts.

Accessibility to finance for small businesses was also raised as a contributor to incentivizing decarbonization, while the need to enable more projects to be bankable so that investment in adaptation can be made to protect the most vulnerable in developing countries was also raised.

Water Security

The roundtable on water security, co-chaired by Prime Minister of Greece Kyriakos Mitsotakis, and Macky Sall, President of Senegal discussed the basic human need for sustainable access to adequate quantities of and acceptable quality water for sustaining livelihoods, human well-being, and socio-economic development.

Several interventions addressed the need to ensure universal access to safe water and sanitation in order to achieve SDG6, and adopt climate-resilient policies for sustainable water management, including rainwater harvesting, sustainable withdrawal of renewable ground water, and increasing non-conventional water reuse.

They alluded to the importance of adhering to the principles of inclusive cooperation, constructive engagement and mutual support among states sharing water resources in implementing water-related adaptation projects in transboundary water basins.

Success stories on water management were showcased, while UN organizations representatives reflected on ways to scale these techniques to other water-stressed countries and identify tangible actions to accelerate the implementation of key water security projects worldwide.

Interventions emphasized the importance of Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM) as a cross‐sectoral approach at the core of SDG6, designed to promote the coordinated development and management of water, land, and related resources to maximize economic and social welfare equitably, without compromising the sustainability of ecosystems and the environment.

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