Public International Funding of Nature-Based Solutions for Adaptation: A Landscape Assessment

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Endnotes

  1. 1This assessment of official development assistance (ODA) and climate finance funding flowing for nature-based solutions for adaptation (NbSA) tracks funds committed in 2018. It does not assess domestic public financing or private investment as these data are difficult to obtain and, where available, are widely inconsistent. It may not capture all ODA that supports adaptation investments or investments that have adaptation cobenefits but are tagged as “mitigation” investments. Donors and funding channels listed are not exhaustive but represent the more significant contributors as identified for the relevant year.
  2. 2This assessment focuses specifically on the use of NbSA outcomes, including ecosystem-based adaptation (EbA) along with EbA disaster risk reduction (DRR). Together, these cover the use of biodiversity and ecosystem services as part of an overall strategy to help people adapt to climate change as well as the sustainable management, conservation, and restoration of ecosystems to reduce disaster risk. Collectively, this paper labels these activities as NbSA.
  3. 3NbSA was estimated to account for 5.8–13.5 percent of total public climate finance flows to developing countries in 2018 (which totaled $64.3 billion) (OECD 2020a).
  4. 4Includes both adaptation-specific flows and flows that have dual adaptation and mitigation benefits (Buchner et al. 2019).
  5. 5Reliable estimates for total financing needs for NbSA (specifically) are not available.
  6. 6Such as environmental policy, laws, regulations, and economic instruments; site preservation; and environmental research.
  7. 7Forty-two percent refer to ecosystem-based adaptation actions, 20 percent to traditional conservation.
  8. 8Since 2012, CPI has tracked overall climate finance flows, including those for mitigation and adaptation. Although CPI tracks overall adaptation flows as well as flows for “agriculture, forestry, land-use and natural resource management,” neither provides a clear picture of funding flowing for NbSA. CPI data shows that approximately 3 percent of overall climate finance flows are in the agriculture, forestry, land-use, and natural resource management category, but this also includes mitigation-focused investments. In both CPI’s tracking and in this assessment, the lack of explicit definitions and tags in the ODA databases, inconsistencies in definitions, and reporting challenges may result in underestimated figures.
  9. 9Referring to both adaptation-specific flows and flows that have dual adaptation and mitigation benefits in the CPI’s Global Landscape of Climate Finance 2019 (Buchner et al. 2019).
  10. 10The scale of GEF investment in NbSA, and NbS writ large, over the past 30 years is substantial, and there are also relevant funds coming through the Adaptation Fund and the Pilot Program for Climate Resilience. Some multilateral delivery channels may not be reporting consistently within the OECD databases (and/or may not report to the OECD at all); thus, this data may not fully capture their contributions to NbSA.
  11. 11For details and descriptions of the sectors, please see Table A.1 in Appendix A.
  12. 12Because this paper focuses on public international donor sources of funding for NbSA and the channels for those funds, the barriers covered in this section relate most closely to the building blocks on “knowledge,” “awareness,” and “financing.” Although other building blocks are also important, the recommended actions have focused on “policy/regulatory” and “technical capacity” because donors fund actions related to those building blocks.
  13. 13Such as guarantees to attract more risk-averse investment capital.
  14. 14For example, the International Union for Conservation of Nature has been leading the development of a global standard for NbS writ large, and Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) supported the development of a framework for defining criteria and standards for NbSA in 2018 (see FEBA 2017).
  15. -1This paper primarily focuses on making ODA and public sources of capital for NbSA more effective and efficient. Innovative approaches for mobilizing private capital are illustrated in Appendix B.
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