Transcript Document
Busan Partnership
for Climate Finance
and
Development Effectiveness
Maria Theresa Nera-Lauron
CSO Partnership for Development Effectiveness (CPDE)
December 2-3, 2013
Seoul, Korea
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Global Partnership for Effective
Development Cooperation (GPEDC)
Main Principles of Busan Partnership
Democratic Ownership (§11a, 22)
Focus on Results for the people (§11b, 18b);
Inclusive Development Partnerships (§11c);
Transparency and Accountability (§11d, 23)
Human Rights Based Approach Implementation (§22)
Gender Equality (§20)
Global Partnership in Effective
Development Cooperation (GPEDC)
.
Areas of work:
2013 High Level Meeting
Global monitoring – 10 indicators
Building Blocks
Country work
Busan Partnership Document
Paragraph 34
Global climate change finance is expected to increase substantially
in the medium term. Recognising that this resource flow brings
with it new opportunities and challenges, we will endeavour to
promote coherence, transparency and predictability
across our approaches for effective climate finance and broader
development co-operation, including to:
Busan Partnership Document
Paragraph 34
a) Continue to support national climate change policy and
planning as an integral part of developing countries’ overall
national development plans, and ensure that –where
appropriate – these measures are financed, delivered and monitored
through developing countries’ systems in a transparent manner.
b) Continue to share lessons learned in development
effectiveness with those entities engaged in climate activities and
ensure that broader development co-operation is also informed by
innovations in climate finance.
Busan Partnership for Action on Climate Change
Finance and Development Effectiveness
• strengthen linkages between climate finance and countries’
planning, budgeting and public financial management systems.
• support regional platforms that promote lesson-learning across
countries and policy areas.
• share lessons across diverse international policy processes, and
pursue coherent approaches to the effective delivery of international
finance based on common principles.
Principles of the Partnership
a. Coalition of the willing
b. Global light, country focused
c. Building on existing
Outputs of the Partnership
• Country Level: Developing country supporters have stronger
country-level capacities to effectively manage climate finance
in a strategic manner
• Regional Level: Supporters share best practices and lessons of
managing climate finance in and outside the regions through
regional platforms
• Global Level: A coherent approach to the effective climate
finance delivery is promoted through knowledge sharing
between climate and development effectiveness policy
communities
Countries and Institutions
supporting the Partnership
27
Initiall supporters of the Partnership:
Asia Pacific:
Bangladesh
Fiji
Indonesia
Samoa
Vietnam
Africa:
Cameroon
Kenya
Lesotho
Tanzania
Uganda
Zambia
Latin America & Caribbean:
Mexico
Bolivia
Honduras
Peru
Donors, International Organizations and Civil Societies
Australia
Norway
Belgium
Switzerland
Denmark
Better Aid
European Commission
Pacific Island Secretariat
Korea
OECD
New Zealand
UNDP
Countries and Institutions
supporting the Partnership
Additional countries that support the Partnership.
Asia Pacific
Afghanistan
Cambodia
Kiribati
Kyrgyz Republic
Lao PDR
Nauru
Nepal
Papua New Guinea
Philippines
Sri Lanka
Thailand
Timor-Leste
Africa
Ethiopia
Mozambique
Madagascar
Latin America
Columbia
El Ssalvador
Activities
• Asia Pacific Dialogue on Climate Public Expenditure and
Institutional Reviews, September 2012
• Asia-Pacific Dialogue on Implications of Local Governance and
decentralisation for the effective delivery of finance in response to
Climate Change at local level, October 2012
• Promoting the Busan Building Block on Climate Finance and
Development Effectiveness - side event at the UNFCCC 18th
Conference of the Parties, December 2012
Activities
Africa
• in 2010, OECD and the African Development Bank
commissioned country case studies on climate change finance
management in six African countries (Cameroon,
Ghana, Kenya, Morocco, Tanzania, South Africa)
• These reports provided input to a regional dialogue in Nairobi,
that concluded in the ‘Nairobi Call for Action on Climate
Change Finance and Development Effectiveness: An African
Approach to accountable and effective climate finance.’
Activities
Latin America and Caribbean
• Regional dialogue led by the Government
of Honduras, in Tela in May 2012
• 2nd Regional dialogue led by the
Government of El Salvador in 2013
• 3rd Regional dialogue to be led by Argentina in
2014