A group of feminists, who gathered at a recent
forum under the aegis of the Women’s Environment & Development
Organization (WEDO), has said that its vision for the Green Climate Fund
(GCF) is for the facility to be one that responds swiftly to the climate
finance needs of those who are at the frontlines of climate change and bearing
the heaviest burdens of its impacts.
A member of the Women and Gender Constituency (WGC), Ms. Titi
Akosa, who is Executive Director, Centre for 21st Century Issues, made the
submission in a presentation titled “Vision for the GCF” on April 27, 2023,
when WEDO hosted a special webinar session on the GCF replenishment for the
WGC.
The webinar, designed for WGC network members to better
understand, appreciate, and support an ambitious second replenishment of the
GCF, explored the fundamental question of why feminist civil society should
care about the GCF replenishment, recognizing interlinkages with an overarching
feminist climate and climate finance demands. It was themed: “GCF
Replenishment: Why feminist civil society should engage.”
According to Akosa, the GCF should likewise be a fund that
ensures a rights-based approach for delivering climate finance for locally held
adaptation actions.
Akosa, who spoke alongside two other alternate CSO Active
Observers to the GCF, Liane Schalatek and Tara Daniel, stressed that the GCF
should enable processes that present opportunities for feminists to engage and realize their vision.
“Also, the GCF should display robust gender
policy and gender action plans, stakeholder consultation, country ownership and
direct access,” she stated, adding: “We as feminists should continue to engage
the process up to the local level.”
The GCF CSO observer network had earlier called
for an ambitious second replenishment that more than doubles the resources
committed under GCF-1, in line with ongoing efforts to set a New Collective
Quantified Goal on Climate Finance that is needs-based and drastically more
than the current US $100 billion goal.
They urged developed country Parties to contribute their fair share to the GCF replenishment, especially those countries that have not contributed, only contributed in the initial resource mobilization
, or not fulfilled their pledges in the past, and to deliver 100% of their commitments in the form of grants.
“While voluntary contributions from other Parties are welcome, we urge developed country Parties to be the primary contributors for GCF-2, in line with the Paris Agreement and their obligations under the UNFCCC and international law. A successful GCF replenishment serves as a clear sign of Parties’ commitment to the implementation of the Paris Agreement.
Credit: EnviroNewsNG

No comments:
Post a Comment