Monitoring Climate Finance and ODA
The first major part of this paper focuses on tracking, monitoring, and reporting various types of flows, primarily from ODA (Official Development Assistance) and other public sources but also from private sources. It briefly reviews available info...
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Format: | Policy Note |
Language: | English en_US |
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Washington, DC
2014
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2010/01/12536636/monitoring-climate-finance-oda http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18423 |
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Digital Repository |
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Foreign Institution |
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World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
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World Bank |
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English en_US |
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ACCOUNTING ADAPTATION FINANCING ALLOCATION ATMOSPHERE CAPACITY BUILDING CAPITAL FLOW CAPITAL FORMATION CAPITAL MARKETS CAPITAL MARKETS DEVELOPMENT CARBON FINANCE CARBON MARKET CARBON MARKETS CARBON TECHNOLOGIES CERTIFIED EMISSION REDUCTIONS CERTIFIED EMISSIONS REDUCTIONS CLEAN DEVELOPMENT MECHANISM CLEAN ENERGY CLEAN ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES CLEAN TECHNOLOGIES CLEAN TECHNOLOGY CLIMATE CLIMATE ACTION CLIMATE CHANGE CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION INITIATIVE CLIMATE CHANGE CHALLENGE CLIMATE CHANGE FUND CLIMATE CHANGE FUNDS CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION CLIMATE CHANGE PROGRAM CLIMATE FORECASTING CLIMATE INITIATIVE CLIMATE INVESTMENT CLIMATE RESILIENCE CLIMATE RISK CLIMATE RISK MANAGEMENT CLIMATE STABILIZATION CLIMATE VARIABILITY CLIMATE-CHANGE CO COLORS COMPETITIVE MARKET COST ESTIMATES CREDITOR CROWDING OUT CURRENCY DEBT DEGREE OF TRANSPARENCY DESERTIFICATION DEVELOPED COUNTRIES DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPING COUNTRY DEVELOPMENT FINANCE DISCOUNT RATE DOMESTIC SOURCES DURABLE ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC EVALUATION OF CLIMATE CHANGE ECONOMIC GROWTH EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENTS EMERGING ECONOMIES EMISSION EMISSION REDUCTION EMISSION TRAJECTORIES EMISSIONS EMISSIONS FROM DEFORESTATION ENABLING ENVIRONMENTS ENERGY EFFICIENCY ENERGY EFFICIENCY PROGRAMS ENERGY INFRASTRUCTURE ENERGY SECURITY ENERGY SUBSIDIES ENVIRONMENTAL ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS ENVIRONMENTAL INTEGRITY ENVIRONMENTS EXPENDITURE FINANCES FINANCIAL CONTRIBUTIONS FINANCIAL FLOWS FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS FINANCIAL MECHANISM FINANCIAL RESOURCES FINANCIAL SUPPORT FIXED CAPITAL FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREST FOREST INVESTMENT FORESTRY FOSSIL FUELS FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE GHG GHGS GLOBAL CLIMATE GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT FACILITY GLOBAL RECESSION GOVERNMENT BUDGETS GREENHOUSE GREENHOUSE GAS GREENHOUSE GAS CONCENTRATIONS GROSS NATIONAL INCOME HOST COUNTRIES IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE INCOME INFORMATION ON CLIMATE INFORMATION ON CLIMATE CHANGE INFORMATION TECHNOLOGIES INSTRUMENT INSURANCE INSURANCE SCHEMES INTERNATIONAL BANK INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL MARKETS INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT INTERNATIONAL FOREST CARBON INVESTMENT DECISIONS INVESTMENT FINANCE INVESTMENT FLOWS INVESTMENT FUNDS ISSUANCE LACK OF TRANSPARENCY LEVIES LEVY LLC LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LOW-CARBON MITIGATION OF CLIMATE CHANGE NATURAL DISASTER NATURAL RESOURCES NEGATIVE IMPACT PARTIAL RISK PAYMENT FLOWS PLEDGES PORTFOLIO PORTFOLIOS PRIMARY MARKET PRIVATE DEBT PUBLIC GOOD PUBLIC GOODS REGULATORY FRAMEWORKS REMITTANCES RENEWABLE ENERGY SOVEREIGN ENTITY SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT TAX TRANSACTION TRANSPARENCY TREATY TRUST FUND TRUST FUNDS TRUSTEE UNEP VULNERABILITY TO CLIMATE CHANGE WASTE MANAGEMENT WIND WIND FARMS |
spellingShingle |
ACCOUNTING ADAPTATION FINANCING ALLOCATION ATMOSPHERE CAPACITY BUILDING CAPITAL FLOW CAPITAL FORMATION CAPITAL MARKETS CAPITAL MARKETS DEVELOPMENT CARBON FINANCE CARBON MARKET CARBON MARKETS CARBON TECHNOLOGIES CERTIFIED EMISSION REDUCTIONS CERTIFIED EMISSIONS REDUCTIONS CLEAN DEVELOPMENT MECHANISM CLEAN ENERGY CLEAN ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES CLEAN TECHNOLOGIES CLEAN TECHNOLOGY CLIMATE CLIMATE ACTION CLIMATE CHANGE CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION INITIATIVE CLIMATE CHANGE CHALLENGE CLIMATE CHANGE FUND CLIMATE CHANGE FUNDS CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION CLIMATE CHANGE PROGRAM CLIMATE FORECASTING CLIMATE INITIATIVE CLIMATE INVESTMENT CLIMATE RESILIENCE CLIMATE RISK CLIMATE RISK MANAGEMENT CLIMATE STABILIZATION CLIMATE VARIABILITY CLIMATE-CHANGE CO COLORS COMPETITIVE MARKET COST ESTIMATES CREDITOR CROWDING OUT CURRENCY DEBT DEGREE OF TRANSPARENCY DESERTIFICATION DEVELOPED COUNTRIES DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPING COUNTRY DEVELOPMENT FINANCE DISCOUNT RATE DOMESTIC SOURCES DURABLE ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC EVALUATION OF CLIMATE CHANGE ECONOMIC GROWTH EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENTS EMERGING ECONOMIES EMISSION EMISSION REDUCTION EMISSION TRAJECTORIES EMISSIONS EMISSIONS FROM DEFORESTATION ENABLING ENVIRONMENTS ENERGY EFFICIENCY ENERGY EFFICIENCY PROGRAMS ENERGY INFRASTRUCTURE ENERGY SECURITY ENERGY SUBSIDIES ENVIRONMENTAL ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS ENVIRONMENTAL INTEGRITY ENVIRONMENTS EXPENDITURE FINANCES FINANCIAL CONTRIBUTIONS FINANCIAL FLOWS FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS FINANCIAL MECHANISM FINANCIAL RESOURCES FINANCIAL SUPPORT FIXED CAPITAL FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREST FOREST INVESTMENT FORESTRY FOSSIL FUELS FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE GHG GHGS GLOBAL CLIMATE GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT FACILITY GLOBAL RECESSION GOVERNMENT BUDGETS GREENHOUSE GREENHOUSE GAS GREENHOUSE GAS CONCENTRATIONS GROSS NATIONAL INCOME HOST COUNTRIES IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE INCOME INFORMATION ON CLIMATE INFORMATION ON CLIMATE CHANGE INFORMATION TECHNOLOGIES INSTRUMENT INSURANCE INSURANCE SCHEMES INTERNATIONAL BANK INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL MARKETS INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT INTERNATIONAL FOREST CARBON INVESTMENT DECISIONS INVESTMENT FINANCE INVESTMENT FLOWS INVESTMENT FUNDS ISSUANCE LACK OF TRANSPARENCY LEVIES LEVY LLC LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LOW-CARBON MITIGATION OF CLIMATE CHANGE NATURAL DISASTER NATURAL RESOURCES NEGATIVE IMPACT PARTIAL RISK PAYMENT FLOWS PLEDGES PORTFOLIO PORTFOLIOS PRIMARY MARKET PRIVATE DEBT PUBLIC GOOD PUBLIC GOODS REGULATORY FRAMEWORKS REMITTANCES RENEWABLE ENERGY SOVEREIGN ENTITY SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT TAX TRANSACTION TRANSPARENCY TREATY TRUST FUND TRUST FUNDS TRUSTEE UNEP VULNERABILITY TO CLIMATE CHANGE WASTE MANAGEMENT WIND WIND FARMS World Bank Monitoring Climate Finance and ODA |
relation |
Development and climate change;no. 3 |
description |
The first major part of this paper
focuses on tracking, monitoring, and reporting various types
of flows, primarily from ODA (Official Development
Assistance) and other public sources but also from private
sources. It briefly reviews available information on various
current and upcoming financial and investment flows to
support climate action in developing countries as a first
step in assessing the challenges associated with monitoring
such flows. It considers both climate finance (the amount of
additional resources required to catalyze the shift of a
much larger volume of public and private development
investments to climate friendlier options) and underlying
finance (the almost 10 to 20 times larger amount of
financial and investment flows in developing countries that
must increasingly focus on climate action). The next part of
the paper focuses on possible ways of tracking additionality
in ODA flows, with the aim of stimulating a discussion
within the World Bank Group (WBG) and its partners on this
issue. It describes the various perceptions of different
groups of countries as well as possible baselines,
benchmarks, and tools for tracking progress. Increasingly
reliable, comprehensive, and transparent reporting is needed
to demonstrate that new climate finance instruments are not
introduced at the expense of those targeting other
objectives. The final section provides proposals for further
action by industrial and developing countries, the U.N.
system and multilateral development banks (MDBs). |
format |
Economic & Sector Work :: Policy Note |
author |
World Bank |
author_facet |
World Bank |
author_sort |
World Bank |
title |
Monitoring Climate Finance and ODA |
title_short |
Monitoring Climate Finance and ODA |
title_full |
Monitoring Climate Finance and ODA |
title_fullStr |
Monitoring Climate Finance and ODA |
title_full_unstemmed |
Monitoring Climate Finance and ODA |
title_sort |
monitoring climate finance and oda |
publisher |
Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2010/01/12536636/monitoring-climate-finance-oda http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18423 |
_version_ |
1764440783694331904 |
spelling |
okr-10986-184232021-04-23T14:03:45Z Monitoring Climate Finance and ODA World Bank ACCOUNTING ADAPTATION FINANCING ALLOCATION ATMOSPHERE CAPACITY BUILDING CAPITAL FLOW CAPITAL FORMATION CAPITAL MARKETS CAPITAL MARKETS DEVELOPMENT CARBON FINANCE CARBON MARKET CARBON MARKETS CARBON TECHNOLOGIES CERTIFIED EMISSION REDUCTIONS CERTIFIED EMISSIONS REDUCTIONS CLEAN DEVELOPMENT MECHANISM CLEAN ENERGY CLEAN ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES CLEAN TECHNOLOGIES CLEAN TECHNOLOGY CLIMATE CLIMATE ACTION CLIMATE CHANGE CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION INITIATIVE CLIMATE CHANGE CHALLENGE CLIMATE CHANGE FUND CLIMATE CHANGE FUNDS CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION CLIMATE CHANGE PROGRAM CLIMATE FORECASTING CLIMATE INITIATIVE CLIMATE INVESTMENT CLIMATE RESILIENCE CLIMATE RISK CLIMATE RISK MANAGEMENT CLIMATE STABILIZATION CLIMATE VARIABILITY CLIMATE-CHANGE CO COLORS COMPETITIVE MARKET COST ESTIMATES CREDITOR CROWDING OUT CURRENCY DEBT DEGREE OF TRANSPARENCY DESERTIFICATION DEVELOPED COUNTRIES DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPING COUNTRY DEVELOPMENT FINANCE DISCOUNT RATE DOMESTIC SOURCES DURABLE ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC EVALUATION OF CLIMATE CHANGE ECONOMIC GROWTH EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENTS EMERGING ECONOMIES EMISSION EMISSION REDUCTION EMISSION TRAJECTORIES EMISSIONS EMISSIONS FROM DEFORESTATION ENABLING ENVIRONMENTS ENERGY EFFICIENCY ENERGY EFFICIENCY PROGRAMS ENERGY INFRASTRUCTURE ENERGY SECURITY ENERGY SUBSIDIES ENVIRONMENTAL ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS ENVIRONMENTAL INTEGRITY ENVIRONMENTS EXPENDITURE FINANCES FINANCIAL CONTRIBUTIONS FINANCIAL FLOWS FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS FINANCIAL MECHANISM FINANCIAL RESOURCES FINANCIAL SUPPORT FIXED CAPITAL FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREST FOREST INVESTMENT FORESTRY FOSSIL FUELS FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE GHG GHGS GLOBAL CLIMATE GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT FACILITY GLOBAL RECESSION GOVERNMENT BUDGETS GREENHOUSE GREENHOUSE GAS GREENHOUSE GAS CONCENTRATIONS GROSS NATIONAL INCOME HOST COUNTRIES IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE INCOME INFORMATION ON CLIMATE INFORMATION ON CLIMATE CHANGE INFORMATION TECHNOLOGIES INSTRUMENT INSURANCE INSURANCE SCHEMES INTERNATIONAL BANK INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL MARKETS INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT INTERNATIONAL FOREST CARBON INVESTMENT DECISIONS INVESTMENT FINANCE INVESTMENT FLOWS INVESTMENT FUNDS ISSUANCE LACK OF TRANSPARENCY LEVIES LEVY LLC LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LOW-CARBON MITIGATION OF CLIMATE CHANGE NATURAL DISASTER NATURAL RESOURCES NEGATIVE IMPACT PARTIAL RISK PAYMENT FLOWS PLEDGES PORTFOLIO PORTFOLIOS PRIMARY MARKET PRIVATE DEBT PUBLIC GOOD PUBLIC GOODS REGULATORY FRAMEWORKS REMITTANCES RENEWABLE ENERGY SOVEREIGN ENTITY SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT TAX TRANSACTION TRANSPARENCY TREATY TRUST FUND TRUST FUNDS TRUSTEE UNEP VULNERABILITY TO CLIMATE CHANGE WASTE MANAGEMENT WIND WIND FARMS The first major part of this paper focuses on tracking, monitoring, and reporting various types of flows, primarily from ODA (Official Development Assistance) and other public sources but also from private sources. It briefly reviews available information on various current and upcoming financial and investment flows to support climate action in developing countries as a first step in assessing the challenges associated with monitoring such flows. It considers both climate finance (the amount of additional resources required to catalyze the shift of a much larger volume of public and private development investments to climate friendlier options) and underlying finance (the almost 10 to 20 times larger amount of financial and investment flows in developing countries that must increasingly focus on climate action). The next part of the paper focuses on possible ways of tracking additionality in ODA flows, with the aim of stimulating a discussion within the World Bank Group (WBG) and its partners on this issue. It describes the various perceptions of different groups of countries as well as possible baselines, benchmarks, and tools for tracking progress. Increasingly reliable, comprehensive, and transparent reporting is needed to demonstrate that new climate finance instruments are not introduced at the expense of those targeting other objectives. The final section provides proposals for further action by industrial and developing countries, the U.N. system and multilateral development banks (MDBs). 2014-05-30T22:04:41Z 2014-05-30T22:04:41Z 2010-01 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2010/01/12536636/monitoring-climate-finance-oda http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18423 English en_US Development and climate change;no. 3 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Policy Note Economic & Sector Work |