What’s the Problem?
Currently, finance for climate and development is being treated as two separate streams:
- Development: funding for education, healthcare, poverty reduction.
- Climate: funding for emission reduction, disaster adaptation, and resilience.
This division causes:
- Limited resources: Developing countries are forced to choose—protect people from floods and heatwaves, or build hospitals and schools.
- Broken promises: Rich countries pledged “new and additional” funding for climate, but often redirect funds from existing development aid budgets instead of adding new resources.
Why Seville Matters
FfD4 is the only UN platform tasked with shaping global development finance. It is a critical opportunity to:
- Fix how funding for climate and development is structured.
- Align efforts to address both social needs and environmental risks—at the same time.
Germanwatch emphasizes: Without integrating both goals, we risk failing at both.
What Should Be Done?
Germanwatch offers four clear recommendations:
- Uphold the promise: Climate finance must be truly new and not repurposed from development aid.
- Integrate planning: Countries must build shared strategies that include both development and climate priorities.
- Improve transparency: Distinguish and track climate finance separately from development aid.
- Reform the global finance system: Use tax reforms, debt relief, and fossil fuel subsidy cuts to redirect resources into sustainable investments.
A Unified Message
Climate and development challenges are not separate. People in vulnerable countries cannot be asked to choose between safety from climate disasters and access to health or education.
Source: Germanwatch