Richard K. Lattanzio
Analyst in Environmental Policy
Over
the past several decades, the United States has delivered financial and
technical assistance for climate change activities in the developing world
through a variety of bilateral and multilateral programs. The United
States and other industrialized countries committed to such assistance
through the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC, Treaty
Number: 102-38, 1992), the Copenhagen Accord (2009), and the UNFCCC Cancun Agreements
(2010), wherein the higher-income countries pledged jointly up to $30 billion
of “fast start” climate financing for lower-income countries for the
period 2010-2012, and a goal of mobilizing jointly $100 billion annually
by 2020. The Cancun Agreements also proposed that the pledged funds are to
be new, additional to previous flows, adequate, predictable, and sustained, and
are to come from a wide variety of sources, both public and private, bilateral
and multilateral, including alternative sources of finance.
One potential mechanism for mobilizing a share of the proposed international
climate financing is the UNFCCC Green Climate Fund (GCF), proposed in the
Cancun Agreements and accepted by Parties during the December 2011
conference in Durban, South Africa. The fund aims to assist developing
countries in their efforts to combat climate change through the provision of
grants and other concessional financing for mitigation and adaptation
projects, programs, policies, and activities. The GCF is to be capitalized
by contributions from donor countries and other sources, including both
innovative mechanisms and the private sector. Currently, the GCF complements many
of the existing multilateral climate change funds (e.g., the Global Environment
Facility, the Climate Investment Funds, and the Adaptation Fund); however,
as the official financial mechanism of the UNFCCC, some Parties believe
that it may eventually replace or subsume the other funds. While many
Parties expect capitalization and operation of the GCF to begin shortly after
the November 2013 conference in Warsaw, Poland, many issues remain to be
clarified, and some involve long-standing and contentious debate. They
include what role the CGF would play in providing sustained finance at
scale, how it would fit into the existing development assistance and
climate financing architecture, how it would be capitalized, and how it would
allocate and deliver assistance efficiently and effectively to developing
countries.
The U.S. Congress—through its role in authorizations, appropriations, and
oversight—would have significant input on U.S. participation in the GCF.
Congress regularly determines and gives guidance to the allocation of
foreign aid between bilateral and multilateral assistance as well as among
the variety of multilateral mechanisms. In the past, Congress has raised
concerns regarding the cost, purpose, direction, efficiency, and
effectiveness of the UNFCCC and existing international institutions of
climate financing. Potential authorizations and appropriations for the GCF
would rest with several committees, including the U.S. House of Representatives Committees
on Foreign Affairs (various subcommittees); Financial Services (Subcommittee on International
Monetary Policy and Trade); and Appropriations (Subcommittee on State, Foreign Operations,
and Related Programs); and the U.S. Senate Committees on Foreign Relations (Subcommittee
on International Development and Foreign Assistance, Economic Affairs, and International
Environmental Protection); and Appropriations (Subcommittee on State, Foreign Operations,
and Related Programs). As of April 2013, the U.S. Administration—through its
State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs 150 account—has made no
specific budget request for appropriated funds to be contributed to the
GCF.
Date of Report: April 16, 2013
Number of Pages: 16
Order Number: R41889
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