UBC researchers provide recommendations for $100 billion in annual climate change aid

Nov 17, 2011

University of British Columbia researchers are providing recommendations for managing a $100 billion annual commitment made by the international community at last year's United Nations climate conference to help the developing world respond to climate change – a funding promise almost equal to all existing official development aid from major donor countries today.

In today's issue of Science, three UBC professors - Simon Donner, Milind Kandlikar and Hisham Zerriffi - argue that the aid commitment made by developed nations is unprecedented and that the world must learn from the troubled history of international development to ensure that countries meet the commitment and provide real actions on the ground.

" is expected to have a much greater impact on people in the , even though they are least responsible for the problem," says Donner, an assistant professor in the Department of Geography and faculty associate in the Liu Institute for Global Issues at UBC. "This funding is critically important. We need to make sure the money is provided and supports real action."

The international community's pledge to mobilize $100 billion in "new" and "additional" funding annually by 2020 was an agreement made at last year's climate meeting, the 2010 Cancun Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. The international community will review proposals for the management and operation of this program at a meeting in Durban, South Africa, beginning on November 28.

"The Cancun aid commitment represents a large influx of money into an international aid system already fraught with problems," says Zerriffi, an assistant professor and the Ivan Head South/North Research Chair at Liu Institute for Global Issues. "To be effective, mechanisms must be established to ensure that the funding is administered wisely so that it can be sustained through political changes and economic constraints."

Donner, Kandlikar and Zerriffi provide specific recommendations for ensuring that countries meet the funding commitment, that waste and misappropriation are minimized and that money is directed to the most effective programs. These guidelines include instituting an "adaptive" regulatory system to close funding loopholes, employing a decentralized network of third-party auditors and adopting a scientific approach to evaluating program effectiveness.

"Randomized control trials – a form of scientific experiment – are being increasingly used to improve outcomes in a wide range of development initiatives, from local governance to child education and infectious disease prevention," says Kandlikar, an associate professor at the Liu Institute for Global Issues and the Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability at UBC. "The use of such trials could be very beneficial in improving climate change outcomes."

The climate change funding, which amounts to more than twice the annual lending by the World Bank, is expected to flow through various channels, including a new Green Climate Fund (GCF) being discussed at the upcoming Durban climate summit. The UBC researchers say that careful stewardship of the initial "fast-track" to the GCF is critical.

"We can't afford to make mistakes in the next few years," says Donner. "That will sap the public and political will to support this incredibly important long-term initiative."

Explore further: Chinese, Indian airlines face EU pollution fines

Related Stories

UN: Climate funds shouldn't divert poverty aid

Sep 02, 2010

(AP) -- The U.N.'s climate chief says poor countries are right to expect that any funding they receive to combat global warming be kept separate from development aid or poverty relief.

Climate talks inch ahead on aid despite discord

Oct 08, 2011

Climate negotiators said they made progress on laying out ways to help poor countries but deep differences remained on core issues ahead of a make-or-break talks in South Africa.

Activists call for renewable energy at UN meeting

Apr 03, 2011

(AP) -- Citing the nuclear disaster in Fukushima, environmental activists at a U.N. meeting Sunday urged bolder steps to tap renewable energy so the world doesn't have to choose between the dangers of nuclear power and the ...

US panel votes to bar climate funding

Jul 21, 2011

A panel of the US Congress on Thursday moved to bar foreign assistance related to climate change, defying President Barack Obama's calls to contribute as part of an international accord.

Delegates told to ID achievable goals on climate

Oct 04, 2010

(AP) -- The U.N. climate chief urged countries Monday to search faster for common ground on battling climate change so that a year-end meeting in Mexico can produce results in that fight.

Recommended for you

Bold action, big money needed to curb Asia floods

2 hours ago

Asia's flood-prone megacities should fund major drainage, water recycling and waste reduction projects to stem deluges and secure clean supply for their booming populations, experts said Sunday.

Heat-related deaths in Manhattan projected to rise

3 hours ago

Residents of Manhattan will not just sweat harder from rising temperatures in the future, says a new study; many may die. Researchers say deaths linked to warming climate may rise some 20 percent by the 2020s, ...

Dire outlook despite global warming 'pause': study

3 hours ago

A global warming "pause" over the past decade may invalidate the harshest climate change predictions for the next 50 to 100 years, a study said Sunday—though levels remain in the danger zone.

Chinese, Indian airlines face EU pollution fines

May 18, 2013

Eight Chinese and two Indian airlines face fines of up to several million euros for not paying for their greenhouse gas emissions during flights within the bloc, the European Commission said on Friday.

User comments : 4

Adjust slider to filter visible comments by rank

Display comments: newest first

omatumr
1.6 / 5 (8) Nov 17, 2011
a $100 billion annual commitment made by the international community at last year's United Nations climate conference


Wow! That is probably enough funds to attract a whole army of scientists to seek evidence in support of the AGW propaganda promoted by world leaders, the UN, Al Gore et al.

Exactly who is giving away public funds for this purpose?

Were US funds approved by elected official with responsibility to the public for the budget? Did Greece, Italy and France pledge large amounts before going bankrupt?

The strategy used in 1974-75 would be cheaper:

Time magazine ran the story as a news item in 1974.

http://www.time.c...,00.html

Newswweek published it as news in 1975:

http://www.denisd...orld.htm

The "scientific evidence" of Global Cooling was as reliable as that of Global warming, and a lot cheaper to promote.

Oliver K. Manuel
Former NASA Principal
investigator for Apollo
http://www.omatumr.com/
omatumr
1.7 / 5 (6) Nov 18, 2011
The climate change funding, which amounts to more than twice the annual lending by the World Bank, is expected to flow through various channels, including a new Green Climate Fund (GCF) being discussed at the upcoming Durban climate summit. The UBC researchers say that careful stewardship of the initial "fast-track" funding to the GCF is critical.


From where do the UN and the World Bank get all those funds, while individual nations are going bankrupt?

Is this money being created "out of thin air"?

Is this part of a plan to promote national debt so that UN and the World Bank take total control of formerly independent nations?

http://barnabyisr...elanoma/
omatumr
1 / 5 (4) Nov 18, 2011
a.) Science is the Foundation of Real Political Power;
b.) Political Power is the Foundation of False Science

Members of (a) question the experimental evidence of AGW (human-induced global climate change).

Members of (b) do not challenge evidence the Sun causes climate change. They use labels like "denier" to describe members of (a).

That seems to be the root of the current global climate debate.
jsdarkdestruction
1 / 5 (1) Nov 20, 2011
Oliver Manuel's recent efforts to plaster Physorg.com and other public news sites with his theories and personal URLs are a bit puzzling, as scientists have a variety of publications available to communicate directly to each other in. My best guess is that he is desperately trying to prop up his legacy in light of his arrest in his university office on 7 charges of rape and sodomy based on allegations by 4 of his own children. The charges have been reduced to one count of felony attempted sodomy, not necessarily because of his innocence, but because of the statute of limitations. One can only guess how the recent charges and decades of family strife have affected his ability to reason rationally and to remain objective while defending his unpopular theories.

http://mominer.ms...hildren/

http://www.mshp.d...mp;first

More news stories

Mice, gerbils perish in Russia space flight

A number of mice and eight gerbils sent into space in a Russian capsule destined to find out how well organisms can withstand extended flights perished during their journey, scientists said Sunday as the ...

Bold action, big money needed to curb Asia floods

Asia's flood-prone megacities should fund major drainage, water recycling and waste reduction projects to stem deluges and secure clean supply for their booming populations, experts said Sunday.

Honeybees trained in Croatia to find land mines

(AP)—Mirjana Filipovic is still haunted by the land mine blast that killed her boyfriend and blew off her left leg while on a fishing trip nearly a decade ago. It happened in a field that was supposedly ...

Heat-related deaths in Manhattan projected to rise

Residents of Manhattan will not just sweat harder from rising temperatures in the future, says a new study; many may die. Researchers say deaths linked to warming climate may rise some 20 percent by the 2020s, ...