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Indonesia joins top rank of climate action leadership (By: Ursula
Schaefer-Preuss and Katherine Sierra)
Tuesday, 23 March 2010
The Jakarta Post
One of the first international meetings to focus on climate finance
since the Copenhagen summit last December ended here in Manila this week
with plans to allocate some US$1.1 billion from the new multilateral
Climate Investment Funds (CIF) for country-led, low-carbon growth in the
Asia and Pacific region.
Indonesia features prominently in these plans.
Some $400 million in support from the Clean Technology Fund (CTF),
approved in Manila on Monday, will help mobilize some $2.7 billion in
public and private sector financing to help Indonesia nearly double its
geothermal capacity and transform the country’s use of renewable energy,
ultimately supporting the government’s objective of meeting its goal of
reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 26% by 2020.
In further support to achieving this target, Indonesia is also among the
countries named this week that will receive funding for pilot programs
to reduce emissions from deforestation under the Forest Investment
Program (FIP).
Both programs for Indonesia were approved in advance of the CIF
Partnership Forum. It is fitting that this meeting was held in Asia, for
this is the region where more people — especially women and the poor —
are vulnerable to climate change impacts
than in any other part of the world.
On top of that, Asia’s energy demand is projected to almost double by
2030, which means that unless development and consumption patterns shift
the region will soon become the largest source of new greenhouse gas
emissions.
The CTF plan for Indonesia is designed to transform the country’s
development pattern while supporting its continued economic growth.
It will help unlock geothermal power resources to expand people’s energy
access while avoiding greenhouse gas emissions, to green urban areas,
and to make it financially attractive to tap into the sun’s power.
Indonesia has the world’s largest geothermal power potential, and the
plan allocates extensive co-financing to expand large-scale geothermal
electricity generation.
It will also accelerate initiatives to promote energy efficiency and use
of renewable energy sources by creating risk-sharing facilities and
addressing financing barriers to small- and medium-scale investments.
The low-carbon growth investments in Indonesia are an example of similar
programs now approved to receive CTF financing in Kazakhstan, the
Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam.
Taken together, these programs will demonstrate how future energy
demands can be satisfied in ways that will not generate excessive levels
of greenhouse gases.
From our vantage point as multilateral development bank partners in
helping countries implement these CTF-funded plans, this bold action on
the part of Indonesia and other Asian nations is a harbinger of a
fundamental shift in climate action around the globe.
And the same sorts of actions are moving forward in developing countries
in every region of the world.
While developing countries have not been the primary source of
climate-altering greenhouse gas emissions from the past burning of
fossil fuels, they are taking positive actions to help achieve a global
solution to the common challenge posed by climate change.
As they continue on a path to improved economic prosperity for their
citizens, they are making a wise choice to do so in a climate-friendly
way that will also help ensure their energy security and improve their
quality life.
This climate-smart approach
offers lessons which all, including those in developed countries, can
look to emulate in coming years.
The CTF is founded on partnerships between policymakers, indigenous
peoples, private sector entities, civil society and others.
Its unique governance structure provides equal voice to contributor and
recipient countries and it also ensures that the programs it supports
are embedded in national development plans.
The CIF’s were created in response to the Bali Action Plan, which
resulted from the 2007 climate change talks in Indonesia, and called for
commitment of new and additional financial resources from developed
countries for developing countries to help address the climate change
challenge.
A group of developed nations then pledged over $6 billion to the CIFs —
a powerful signal of their serious support for developing countries, in
helping them to respond to climate change.
Without measures to build resilience to climate change impacts, we know
that the 60% of the working population in Asia and the Pacific who rely
on agriculture for their livelihoods will suffer tremendously.
Fresh-water availability will fall, irrigation will become more
difficult, and millions more children will go home hungry.
The CIFs expect to pilot measures that will support better water and
forest management and agricultural adaptation measures that can ensure
food security for Asia and the world.
The potential to replicate
alternative approaches to energy and food production can transform
development, placing us all on a more stable and sustainable footing.
As developing countries pick up the climate reins, we must all stand
together to ensure their commitment to climate action is supported at
the global level.
The need is enormous, and so is the funding and knowledge gap.
Developed countries must continue to provide financing for investments
and knowledge, and a new regime for climate action must emerge. Without
such actions, the progress achieved so far cannot be sustained.
Together, the global community must test and apply effective ways to
combine reducing poverty, providing economic growth, and building a
climate-smart greener future.
The meetings in Manila, buoyed by Indonesia’s climate action, offer an
important and welcome glimpse into such a future.
At the Asian Development Bank and World Bank, along with our fellow
development banks with whom we have joined in a first-time alliance on
this issue, we pledge our support to make this future areality.
Ursula Schaefer-Preuss is vice president for knowledge management and
sustainable development at the Asian Development Bank. Katherine Sierra
is vice president for sustainable development at the World Bank. (The
Jakarta Post)
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