Untangling the Finance Goal

An Introduction to the New Collective Quantified Goal

Executive summary

Context

At COP15 (2009), developed country Parties committed to a goal of jointly mobilizing $100 billion per year by 2020 to address the needs of developing countries (UNFCCC 2009). As of September 2023, this $100 billion annual goal had not yet been met, though Germany and Canada provided assurances on behalf of the developed countries that it would be met in 2023 (Federal Foreign Office 2023). Financial flows mobilized to date are also far from what developing countries need to support their climate efforts. In 2020, public climate finance has been channeled mainly in the form of loans (71 percent), which has caused consternation among stakeholders who fear that this will exacerbate financial difficulties for countries already in or at risk of debt distress (OECD 2022).

At COP21 (2015), Parties decided to extend the $100 billion goal through 2025 and to set the NCQG prior to that time. They agreed that $100 billion per year would be a floor for the new goal, thus ensuring that the new goal will be an increase compared to the current commitment. Negotiators also underscored the importance of considering developing countries’ needs and priorities when setting the goal.

In 2021, the process elements for deliberating on the NCQG were adopted, including an ad hoc work program (AHWP) on the NCQG for 2022–24 (see Table 1). Parties must still agree upon many of the actual elements of the goal, including how big the goal should be and how reporting should take place to ensure transparency. The AHWP includes four annual TEDs, annual reports, and regular consultations. Further, when adopting the NCQG process elements, Parties also agreed on submissions from Parties and non-Party stakeholders, HLMDs, and stocktakes, which aim to assess the progress made in 2022 and 2023.

Negotiations on the NCQG are taking place at a moment when climate finance for climate action must increase dramatically to achieve the goals of the Paris Agreement. In all countries, the gap between climate finance in climate action and actual financial flows means that scaled-up efforts will be required to achieve the goals of the Paris Agreement. This is especially true in developing countries, where climate finance requirements remain significant. As of August 31, 2023, 91 developing countries had reported climate finance requirements in their latest round of nationally determined contributions (NDCs), for a total of around $4.5 trillion (Climate Watch n.d.).

About this working paper

This paper aims to provide an overview of the current NCQG discussions. Its purpose is to inform people interested in understanding the process for determining the NCQG and the elements being discussed. This paper does not intend to cover all relevant questions raised during the NCQG process; instead, it focuses on five core elements of the negotiations. It also does not intend to take a position on what the NCQG should include and be based upon. Rather, it seeks to help facilitate a clearer understanding of the NCQG deliberation process.

The analysis is based on a literature review and on inputs gathered from United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) convenings. The author analyzed all Party and non-Party stakeholder submissions to the UNFCCC pertaining to the NCQG. This analysis was complemented by information gathered through the TEDs, reflection notes released by the cochairs following each TED, reports and NCQG-related convenings organized by research organizations, and the HLMD summary prepared by the COP28 Presidency.

This paper does not delve into issues related to the political or economic situation of each country, an exhaustive assessment of all climate finance needs, or all the options within each element. Instead, its goal is to streamline and clarify the five key points of NCQG deliberations, based on the literature analysis:

  • What should the quantity of the NCQG be, and what role should the quality of finance play? To answer this question, we must understand what it means to take “into account the needs and priorities of developing countries” (UNFCCC 2016) and how these issues might impact the final number as well as the relationship with quality of climate finance.
  • What should the goal fund? This question seeks to address the thematic scope in terms of mitigation, adaptation, and loss and damage. Though some have also raised the issue of financing just transitions, this has not been addressed here pending discussions under the purview of the Work Program on Just Transitions Pathways.
  • What time frame should the goal cover? This includes determining if the goal should, like the $100 billion goal, be one set amount for a particular time frame or should consist of milestones that can be continuously updated on an agreed time frame based, for example, on developing countries’ needs and science data.
  • Who should contribute to the NCQG? This question seeks to address why certain countries have proposed expanding who can contribute to the new goal, based, for example, on their level of greenhouse gas emissions or wealth.
  • What type of transparency arrangements should accompany the goal? This question asks whether and how transparency arrangements can be implemented to adequately track and monitor the goal’s progress.
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