OPEC Fund Quarterly - 2023 Q3

EVENT: UN SDG Summit

STANDING STRONG FOR THE SDGs

OPEC Fund promises action as delegation attends UN Summit on Sustainable Development Goals delivery at half-time T he assessment was bleak and the warnings were dire. When the world came together in New York in mid- of the countries at an earlier stage of development. Countries with su ffi cient capacity are expected to make individual

Sheikha Shamma bint Sultan bin Khalifa Al Nahyan, President & CEO, UAE Independent Climate Change Accelerators (third right)

gap. With that in mind, the OPEC Fund Director-General proposed a “uniform and transparent fund allocation.” Considering the enormous amounts needed he added: “Three sources of finance are available and need to be tapped: sovereign funds, private capital and grants. While sovereign funds are essential to kick-start the process, private capital engagement is imperative. Therefore adequate de-risking provisions should be made available.” Progress on the Loss and Damage Fund is universally seen as a, if not the, key deliverable at COP28 in December in the OPEC Fund member country the United Arab Emirates. The COP Presidency launched the first Global Stocktake in 2023, the results of which were presented by the UNFCCC in early September. Three key takeaways were: 1. Despite some progress, much more action is now needed on all fronts.

September to take stock of the delivery of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) the message was loud and clear: “Only 15 percent of the targets are on track,” said UN Secretary- General António Guterres. “Many are going in reverse. Instead of leaving no one behind, we risk leaving the SDGs behind.” In response, the leaders of over 100 countries adopted a political declaration highlighting their collective commitment to build a sustainable, inclusive and prosperous world by 2030. With a focus on implementation, and in particular, on financing for development, the declaration states that the SDGs will not be met without a quantum leap across the board in just and equitable investments. Additionally, the declaration urges immediate action to deliver the SDG Stimulus proposed by the UN Secretary-

pledges to push the SDGs combined with broader means of support such as fulfilling ODA commitments, suspending debt payments and agreeing on innovative finance mechanisms. Addressing the needs of the Least Developed Countries and supporting progress of partner countries across the world also sits atop of the OPEC Fund’s agenda. “The international community must act decisively and urgently to support the countries that are most exposed to climate change, food insecurity, economic imbalances and other destabilizing factors,” said Director-General Abdulhamid Alkhalifa, who was accompanied to New York by Senior Director Strategic Planning & Economic Services Shaimaa Al-Sheiby. Speaking at a roundtable of heads of Multilateral Development Banks (MDBs) on the implementation of the Paris Climate Agreement, the Director- General set out his vision on the Loss and Damage Fund agreed at last year’s UN climate change conference COP27 in Egypt. The discussion now centers on how to jump-start the agreement and make the fund operational. The OPEC Fund head urged that “a starting point should be to devise a standard framework for tracking climate-related loss and damage.” Based on this, an analysis of available budgetary and non-budgetary financial resources for eligible countries would be required to estimate the funding

General, which calls for a massive increase in financing of US$500

billion each year. Countries agreed to present national commitments to SDG Transformation that include priority transitions and areas for investment, setting national benchmarks for reducing poverty and inequalities by 2027 and strengthening institutional frameworks to support progress. The summit expressed strong support for a reform of the international financial architecture to better reflect today’s global economy and address the needs

2. Governments must support systems transformations that mainstream climate resilience and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. 3. To raise climate action ambitions, the international community must focus on inclusion and equity.

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