Development and Climate Change [electronic resource] : A Strategic Framework for the World Bank Group.

By: World BankContributor(s): International Finance Corporation | Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency | World BankMaterial type: TextTextSeries: Development Policy Review | World Bank e-LibraryPublication details: Washington, D.C. : The World Bank, 2008Subject(s): Afforestation | Capital Markets | Carbon Credits | Carbon Dioxide | Carbon Finance | Clean Energy | Climate | Climate Change | Climate Change and Environment | Coal | Coastal Areas | Credit | Decision Making | Deforestation | Developed Countries | Economic Development | Economics | Ecosystems | Electricity | Emissions | Energy | Energy and Environment | Energy Efficiency | Energy Production and Transportation | Energy Security | Energy Supply | Environment | Environment and Energy Efficiency | Environmental Economics & Policies | Equity | Food Production | Forests | Fossil Fuels | Gdp | Geothermal Energy | Hydropower | Incentives | Insurance | Intergovernmental Panel On Climate Change | International Energy Agency | Knowledge | Kyoto Protocol | Land | Malaria | Natural Resources | Nuclear Power | Population Growth | Poverty | Power Sector | Productivity | Rainfall | Renewable Energy | Risk | Risk Management | Savings | Securities | Streams | Temperature | Trade | Vehicles | Waste | Water | Water Use | WetlandsOnline resources: Click here to access online Abstract: This strategic framework serves to guide and support the operational response of the World Bank Group (WBG) to new development challenges posed by global climate change. Unabated, climate change threatens to reverse hard-earned development gains. The poorest countries and communities will suffer the earliest and the most. Yet they depend on actions by other nations, developed and developing. While climate change is an added cost and risk to development, a well-designed and implemented global climate policy can also bring new economic opportunities to developing countries. Climate change demands unprecedented global cooperation involving a concerted action by countries at different development stages supported by "measurable, reportable, and verifiable" transfer of finance and technology to developing countries. Trust of developing countries in equity and fairness of a global climate policy and neutrality of the supporting institutions is critical for such cooperation to succeed. Difficulties with mobilizing resources for achieving the millennium development goals and with agreeing on global agricultural trade underscore the political challenges. The framework will help the WBG maintain the effectiveness of its core mission of supporting growth and poverty reduction. While recognizing added costs and risks of climate change and an evolving global climate policy. The WBG top priority will be to build collaborative relations with developing country partners and provide them customized demand-driven support through its various instruments from financing to technical assistance to constructive advocacy. It will give considerable attention to strengthening resilience of economies and communities to increasing climate risks and adaptation. The operational focus will be on improving knowledge and capacity, including learning by doing. The framework will guide operational programs of WBG entities to support actions whose benefits to developing countries are robust under significant uncertainties about future climate policies and impacts-actions that have "no regrets."
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This strategic framework serves to guide and support the operational response of the World Bank Group (WBG) to new development challenges posed by global climate change. Unabated, climate change threatens to reverse hard-earned development gains. The poorest countries and communities will suffer the earliest and the most. Yet they depend on actions by other nations, developed and developing. While climate change is an added cost and risk to development, a well-designed and implemented global climate policy can also bring new economic opportunities to developing countries. Climate change demands unprecedented global cooperation involving a concerted action by countries at different development stages supported by "measurable, reportable, and verifiable" transfer of finance and technology to developing countries. Trust of developing countries in equity and fairness of a global climate policy and neutrality of the supporting institutions is critical for such cooperation to succeed. Difficulties with mobilizing resources for achieving the millennium development goals and with agreeing on global agricultural trade underscore the political challenges. The framework will help the WBG maintain the effectiveness of its core mission of supporting growth and poverty reduction. While recognizing added costs and risks of climate change and an evolving global climate policy. The WBG top priority will be to build collaborative relations with developing country partners and provide them customized demand-driven support through its various instruments from financing to technical assistance to constructive advocacy. It will give considerable attention to strengthening resilience of economies and communities to increasing climate risks and adaptation. The operational focus will be on improving knowledge and capacity, including learning by doing. The framework will guide operational programs of WBG entities to support actions whose benefits to developing countries are robust under significant uncertainties about future climate policies and impacts-actions that have "no regrets."

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