The United States contributes funding to various international financial institutions to assist developing countries to address global climate change and other environmental concerns. Congress is responsible for several activities in this regard, including (1) authorizing periodic appropriations for U.S. financial contributions to the institutions, and (2) overseeing U.S. involvement in the programs. Issues of congressional interest include the overall development assistance strategy of the United States, U.S. leadership in global environmental and economic affairs, and U.S. commercial interests in trade and investment. This report provides an overview of one of the oldest international financial institutions for the environment—the Global Environment Facility (GEF)—and analyzes its structure, funding, and objectives in light of the many challenges within the contemporary landscape of global environmental finance.
GEF is an independent and international financial organization that provides grants, promotes cooperation, and fosters actions in developing countries to protect the global environment. Established in 1991, it unites 182 member governments and partners with international institutions, nongovernmental organizations, and the private sector to assist developing countries with environmental projects related to six areas: biodiversity, climate change, international waters, the ozone layer, land degradation, and persistent organic pollutants. GEF receives funding from multiple donor countries—including the United States—and provides grants to cover the additional or "incremental" costs associated with transforming a project with national benefits into one with global environmental benefits. In this way, GEF funding is structured to "supplement" base project funding and provide for the environmental components in national development agendas. GEF partners with several international agencies, including the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the United Nations Development Program (UNDP), and the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP), among others, and is the primary fund administrator for four Rio (Earth Summit) Conventions, including the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs), and the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD). GEF also establishes operational guidance for international waters and ozone activities, the latter consistent with the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer and its amendments. Since its inception, GEF has allocated $11.5 billion—supplemented by more than $57 billion in co-financing—for more than 3,200 projects in over 165 countries.
GEF is one mechanism in a larger network of international programs designed to address the global environment. Accordingly, its effectiveness depends on how the fund addresses programmatic issues, builds upon national investment plans, reacts to recent developments in the financial landscape, and responds to emerging opportunities. Critics contend that the existing system has had limited impact in addressing major environmental concerns—specifically climate change and tropical deforestation—and has been unsuccessful in delivering global transformational change. A desire to achieve more immediate impacts has led to a restructuring of the Multilateral Development Banks' (MDBs') role in environmental finance and the introduction of many new bilateral and multilateral funding initiatives. The future of GEF remains in the hands of the donor countries, including the United States, which can choose to broaden the mandate and/or strengthen its institutional arrangements or reduce and replace it by other bilateral or multilateral funding mechanisms.
Many governments acknowledge that environmental degradation and climate change pose international and trans-boundary risks to human populations, economies, and ecosystems that could result in a worsening of poverty, social tensions, and political stability. To confront these global challenges, countries have negotiated various international agreements to protect the environment, reduce pollution, conserve natural resources, and promote sustainable growth. While some observers have called upon developed countries to take the lead in addressing these issues, efforts are unlikely to be sufficient without similar measures being implemented in developing countries. Developing countries, however, focused on poverty reduction and economic growth, may not have the financial resources, technological know-how, or institutional capacity to deploy such measures. Therefore, international support for these areas has remained the principal method for governments to assist developing country action on global environmental problems.1
The United States and other industrialized countries have committed to financial assistance for environmental initiatives through several multilateral agreements (e.g., the Montreal Protocol (1987), the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (1992), United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (1994), and the Copenhagen Accord (2009)). International financial assistance takes many forms, from fiscal transfers to market transactions, and includes foreign direct investment (FDI), bilateral overseas development assistance (ODA), and contributions to multilateral development banks (MDBs)2 and other international financial institutions (IFIs), as well as the offering of export credits, loan guarantees, and insurance products.
Error! Reference source not found. outlines recent U.S. financial support for multilateral environmental initiatives. Congress is responsible for several activities in this regard, including (1) authorizing periodic appropriations for U.S. financial contributions to the institutions, and (2) overseeing U.S. involvement in the programs. Issues of congressional interest include the overall development assistance strategy of the United States, U.S. leadership in global environmental and economic affairs, and U.S. commercial interests in trade and investment.3 As Congress considers potential authorizations and/or appropriations for initiatives administered through the Department of State, the Department of the Treasury, and other agencies with international programs, it may have questions concerning the direction, efficiency, and effectiveness of current bilateral and multilateral programs. This report provides an overview of one of the oldest, largest, and most comprehensive multilateral programs to date—the Global Environment Facility (GEF)—and analyzes its structure, funding, and objectives in light of the many challenges within the contemporary landscape of global environmental finance.
Table 1. Recent U.S. Budget Authority for Multilateral Climate and Environment Funds
In nominal US$ million
Agency/Program |
2010 Enacted |
2011 Enacted |
2012 Enacted |
2013 Enacteda |
2014 Request |
Department of State |
|||||
Least Developed Country Fund |
30.0 |
25.0 |
25.0 |
TBD |
TBD |
Special Climate Change Fund |
20.0 |
10.0 |
10.0 |
TBD |
TBD |
World Bank Forest Carbon Partnership |
10.0 |
8.0 |
TBD |
TBD |
TBD |
Department of Treasury |
|||||
Tropical Forests Conservation Act |
26.0 |
16.4 |
12.0 |
12.0 |
0.0 |
Global Environment Facility |
86.5 |
89.8 |
119.8b |
129.4c |
143.8 |
Climate Investment Fund: Clean Technology Fund |
300.0 |
184.6 |
229.6d |
175.3 |
215.7 |
Climate Investment Fund: Strategic Climate Fund - Pilot Program for Climate Resilience |
55.0 |
10.0 |
18.7e |
25.0f |
34.0g |
Climate Investment Fund: Strategic Climate Fund - Forest Investment Program |
20.0 |
30.0 |
37.5e |
12.5f |
17.0g |
Climate Investment Fund: Strategic Climate Fund - Scaling-Up Renewable Energy |
0.0 |
10.0 |
18.7e |
12.5f |
17.0g |
Source: Office of Management and Budget, The Budget of the United States Government, 2011, 2012, 2013, and 2014; CRS correspondence with Department of State and Department of the Treasury.
Notes: TBD, "to be determined": Appropriated funds for some programs/activities are drawn from larger line item categories in agency budget authorities, occasionally with "shall"-language implementing spending ceilings. Allocations for these programs are left at the discretion of the agency and have yet to be determined and/or fully reported.
a. Except where noted, FY2013 Enacted amount is as continuing resolution in the Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act, 2013 (P.L. 113-6). Figures do not include sequestration reduction.
b. FY2012 Enacted amount for GEF includes the transfer of $30 million from the Economic Support Fund as provided in the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2012 (P.L. 112-74).
c. FY2013 Enacted amount for the GEF is as provided in the Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act, 2013 (P.L. 113-6).
d. FY2012 Enacted amount for CTF includes the transfer of $45 million from the Economic Support Fund as provided in the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2012 (P.L. 112-74).
e. FY2012 Enacted amount for SCF includes the transfer of $25 million from the Economic Support Fund as provided in the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2012 (P.L. 112-74).
f. FY2013 Enacted amount for SCF is $47.3 million for all three programs. The figures in the table reflect Treasury's internal proposal for contribution among the PPCR, FIP, and SREP.
g. FY2014 Request amount for SCF is $68.0 million for all three programs. The figures above are estimates of contributions to each program. Treasury will finalize contributions among the PPCR, FIP, and SREP in spring 2014.
The Global Environment Facility (GEF) is an independent and international financial organization that provides grants, promotes cooperation, and fosters actions in developing countries to protect the global environment. Established in 1991, it unites 182 member governments and partners with international institutions, nongovernmental organizations, and the private sector to assist developing countries with environmental projects related to six areas: biodiversity, climate change, international waters, the ozone layer, land degradation, and persistent organic pollutants (POPs). GEF receives funding from multiple donor countries4—including the United States—and provides grants to cover the additional or "incremental" costs associated with transforming a project with national benefits into one with global environmental benefits (e.g., choosing solar energy technology over coal technology meets the same national development goal of power generation but is more costly, excluding long-term environmental externalities; GEF grants aim to cover the difference or "increment" between a less costly, more polluting option and a costlier, more environmentally sound option). In this way, GEF funding is structured to "supplement" base project funding and provide for the environmental components in national development agendas. Since its inception, GEF has allocated $11.5 billion—supplemented by more than $57 billion in co-financing—for more than 3,200 projects in over 165 countries.5
The idea for a Global Environment Facility was proposed in a September 1989 meeting of the joint International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (the World Bank)—International Monetary Fund Development Committee after recommendation by a World Resources Institute report commissioned by the United Nations.6 The fund was established in 1991 as a pilot program within the World Bank, and many observers saw it as the beginning of an important shift in multilateral policy toward incorporating environmental concerns into development assistance. GEF, however, quickly ran into some operational challenges. These included (1) problems with communication among the implementing agencies (i.e., among the World Bank economists, the United Nations Development Program engineers, and the United Nations Environment Program environmentalists), (2) problems with differing agendas among the donor countries (i.e., between environmental idealism in Europe and economic pragmatism in the United States and United Kingdom), and (3) problems with differing perspectives among developing countries (i.e., between an emphasis on economic growth or environmental initiatives).
Initially, GEF had been opposed by developing countries who believed that a program established and controlled by higher-income donor countries under the framework of the Multilateral Development Banks was not in their best interest. They remained committed to a governing structure and a cooperative partnership founded on a U.N.-style majority-based decision. After three years of debate, GEF was restructured in 1994 to address many of its institutional challenges. GEF moved out of the World Bank to become a separate and permanent institution with enhanced involvement from developing countries in decision making and implementation. A new governing structure was instituted, the first operating procedures ("the Instrument for the GEF")7 were documented, and the funding cycle ("the GEF Replenishment") commenced. The World Bank took on the provision of the Trust Fund. The United Nations Development Program, the United Nations Environment Program, and other international organizations contributed to project development, management, and delivery.
International Agencies: GEF currently partners with 10 international agencies: the World Bank; the United Nations Development Program (UNDP); the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP); the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization; the United Nations Industrial Development Organization; the African Development Bank; the Asian Development Bank; the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development; the Inter-American Development Bank; and the International Fund for Agricultural Development. Procedurally, the World Bank administers funding, UNDP oversees project development, and UNEP serves as the scientific and technical advisor. The remaining agencies contribute to the management and delivery of projects.
International Conventions: GEF is the primary fund administrator for four Rio (Earth Summit)8 Conventions, including the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs), and the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD). GEF also establishes operational guidance for international waters and ozone activities, the latter consistent with the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer and its amendments.
Internal Organization: GEF's main decision-making body is the GEF Council, which is an independent board of governors responsible for developing, adopting, and evaluating operational policies and programs. The Council is composed of 32 appointed members—16 from developing countries, 14 from developed countries, and 2 from among the countries of Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. The balance between donor and recipient countries was negotiated and agreed to by Member countries after the pilot phase of the program. The Council meets approximately every six months and allows non-governmental organizations and private individuals to attend most sessions. Formal voting goes before the GEF Assembly, which is composed of representatives from all Member countries and meets every four years. During these times, the Assembly reviews general policy for operations, membership, funding, and amendments. The GEF Secretariat, based in Washington, DC, services and reports to the Council and the Assembly and formulates the work program, oversees implementation, and ensures that operational policies are followed.
Voting: The Assembly and the Council make decisions and adopt regulations through the process of consensus. GEF defines consensus as an agreement reached by all participants which includes the resolution or mitigation of all minority objections. If, in the case of the Council, all practicable efforts have been made and no consensus appears, Members may request a formal vote. The GEF formal vote is a double weighted majority; that is, an affirmative vote that includes both a 60% majority of the total number of Participants and a 60% majority of the total amount of contributions.9 This format arose through a coordinated agreement between developed and developing countries in an effort to give facility to both donors and recipients in the decision-making process. A formal vote has never been taken at Council.
Replenishments: GEF is funded by donor countries, which pledge money every four years through a process known as GEF Replenishment. The process of Replenishment was designed to allow for program flexibility, strategic planning, and periodic performance evaluations. The original GEF pilot program of $1 billion has been replenished five times with $2.01 billion in 1994, $2.67 billion in 1998, $2.93 billion in 2002, $3.13 billion in 2006, and $4.34 billion in 2010.10 Financial commitments by donor country to the GEF pilot program and the five GEF replenishments can be found in Figure A-1 of the Appendix.
U.S. Commitments: The United States supported the establishment of GEF in 1991. While the United States did not provide direct funding to the pilot phase of the program (1991-1993),11 it has made commitments and contributions to all five GEF replenishments. U.S. commitments to the various four-year Replenishment cycles have been $430 million in 1994, $430 million in 1998, $430 million in 2002, $320 million in 2006, and $575 million in 2010, for a total of $2.185 billion. U.S. commitments correspond to 13.9% of total contributions for GEF during the history of the program, or, more specifically, 21.3% of total contributions for GEF-1, 16.1% for GEF-2, 14.7% for GEF-3, 10.2% for GEF-4, and 13.2% for GEF-5.12
U.S. Contributions: Payments made by the U.S. Treasury to the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (the World Bank) as trustee for GEF have varied widely over the years due mainly to budget trends. Recent contributions include the following:
Arrears: As of September 2012, direct payments to the trustee of GEF have totaled close to $1.8 billion over the past two decades. Further, in July 2011, the United States had cleared a portion of its GEF-3 arrears in the amount of $11.9 million through a retroactive early encashment of its GEF-4 contributions.14 With these payments, the United States is currently $258.9 million in arrears of its pledged commitments. As of the latest "Trustee Report" furnished to GEF in November 2012, the United States is joined in arrears status by three other countries: Egypt ($0.8 million), Nigeria ($1.0 million), and Spain ($3.1 million).15
A summary of U.S. commitments and contributions to GEF is shown in Table 2. The financial status of the GEF Trust Fund and the summary of arrears by country can be found in Figure A-2 of the Appendix.
Fiscal Year |
$ Committed to GEF |
$ Contributed to GEF |
||
1994 |
$0 |
$30.0 |
||
1995 |
$107.5 |
$90.0 |
||
1996 |
$107.5 |
$35.0 |
||
1997 |
$107.5 |
$35.0 |
||
1998 |
$107.5 |
$47.5 |
||
1999 |
$107.5 |
$167.5 |
||
2000 |
$107.5 |
$35.8 |
||
2001 |
$107.5 |
$107.8 |
||
2002 |
$107.5 |
$100.5 |
||
2003 |
$107.5 |
$146.8 |
||
2004 |
$107.5 |
$138.4 |
||
2005 |
$107.5 |
$106.7 |
||
2006 |
$107.5 |
$79.2 |
||
2007 |
$80.0 |
$79.2 |
||
2008 |
$80.0 |
$81.1 |
||
2009 |
$80.0 |
$80.0 |
||
2010 |
$80.0 |
$86.5 |
||
2011a |
$143.8 |
$89.8 |
||
2012 |
$143.8 |
$119.8 |
||
2013b |
$143.8 |
$129.4 |
||
2014 |
$143.8 |
TBD |
||
Total |
$2,185.2 |
$1,786.0 |
Source: CRS correspondence with U.S. Department of the Treasury.
a. The enacted FY2011 figure includes the 0.2% rescission across all non-defense accounts, in accordance with Section 1119(a) of P.L. 112-10.
b. The enacted FY2013 figure does not include sequestration reductions.
Congressional Jurisdiction: All U.S. funding is subject to annual congressional approval. Authorizing legislation is managed by the House Financial Services Committee and Senate Foreign Relations Committee. The House and Senate Appropriations Subcommittees on State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs have jurisdiction over appropriations.
GEF funding is provided to recipient countries for projects and programs in six areas: biodiversity, climate change, international waters, ozone layer depletion, land degradation, and persistent organic pollutants. For examples of the types of projects funded by GEF, see the text box below.
Biodiversity: GEF is the financial mechanism of the 1992 United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity. The goal of GEF's program is the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity, the maintenance of the ecosystem goods and services that biodiversity provides to society, and the fair and equitable sharing of the benefits arising out of the use of genetic resources. To achieve this goal, the program has several objectives including sustainability initiatives in protected areas, conservation measures in production sectors, capacity building to implement the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety (CPB), and capacity building to support the implementation of the Bonn Guidelines on Access to Genetic Resources. Biodiversity projects constitute the largest percentage of GEF's portfolio, making up 36% of total grants.
Climate Change: As the financial mechanism of the 1992 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, GEF allocates and disburses funding for projects in climate change mitigation (i.e., reducing or avoiding greenhouse gas emissions in the areas of renewable energy, energy efficiency, and sustainable transport), and climate change adaptation (i.e., increasing resilience to the adverse impacts of climate change of vulnerable countries, sectors, and communities). GEF projects in climate change help developing countries contribute to the overall objective of the UNFCCC to achieve a "stabilization of greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system." Moreover, GEF manages two special funds under the UNFCCC—the Least Developed Countries Fund, to assist in adaptation strategies for the most vulnerable countries; and the Special Climate Change Fund, to assist in mitigation and adaptation programs for countries that are heavily reliant of fossil-fuel technologies.
International Waters: GEF's international waters focal area does not serve as a financial mechanism for a specific convention. Through an association with regional agreements, it targets trans-boundary water systems, such as river basins with water flowing from one country to another, groundwater resources shared by several countries, and marine ecosystems bounded by more than one nation. GEF grants help countries collaborate with their neighbors to modify human activities that place stress on trans-boundary water systems and interfere with downstream uses of those resources. Some of the issues addressed include trans-boundary water pollution, over-extraction of groundwater resources, unsustainable exploitation of fisheries, control of invasive species, and balancing the competing uses of water resources.
Ozone Layer Depletion: GEF, in partnership with the 1985 Vienna Convention for the Protection of the Ozone Layer and the 1987 Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer, has aimed to safeguard the earth's protective ozone layer after the discovery that certain compounds were found to deplete it, posing substantial risks to human health and the environment. GEF has allocated funds to assist in phasing out ozone-depleting substances (ODS) and curbing the rising production and use of hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs). GEF's aim is to protect human health and the environment by assisting countries in phasing out consumption and production of ODS while enabling alternative technologies and practices, according to countries' commitments under the Montreal Protocol. The long-term goal of GEF interventions is to contribute to the return of the ozone layer to pre-1980 levels.
1. Rural Electrification and Renewable Energy Development in Bangladesh (GEF ID 1209) GEF Grant: $8,540,000 Description: The project promoted solar energy in rural areas by (1) increasing awareness of Solar Heating Systems (SHS) among consumers and providers; (2) building technical and management capacity; (3) implementing and evaluating SHS programs; (4) providing technical and business development support to institutions; (5) introducing standards and programs for testing and certification; (6) financing grants to buy-down capital costs to increase affordability of SHS; (7) promoting electricity as a means for income generation and social wellness; and (8) identifying mechanisms to promote sustainability. Multiple approaches to SHS delivery were enacted, including a "fee-for-service" program through rural electricity cooperatives, purchase supported by micro-credit through NGOs and microfinance lenders, and hire-purchase/direct sale programs by private dealers and NGOs. Over 40,000 systems were installed supplying energy to rural dispersed communities. 2. Biodiversity Conservation in Cacao Agro-Forestry in Costa Rica (GEF ID 979) GEF Grant: $750,000 Description: The project improved management of cacao-based indigenous small-farms according to both ecological and organic productive principles so as to ensure conservation and sustainable use of plant and animal diversity and provide a sustainable source of family income. The project promoted and maintained on-farm biodiversity while improving livelihoods of organic cacao producers (including indigenous, Latin-mestizos, and Afro-Caribbean groups) in the Talamanca-Caribbean corridor in Costa Rica. 3. Prevention and Management of Marine Pollution in the East Asian Seas in Indonesia (GEF ID 396) GEF Grant: $8,025,000 Description: The project developed policies and plans to control marine pollution from land and sea-based sources, upgraded national and regional infrastructures and technical skills, and established financing instruments to project sustainability. Project included selection of demonstration sites, establishment of regional monitoring and information networks, and involvement of regional association of marine legal experts to improve capacity to implement relevant conventions. Source: GEF Project database at http://www.thegef.org/gef/gef_projects_funding (accessed November 30, 2011). Notes: As of May 24, 2013, there were 3,404 projects listed in the GEF database, of which 2,783 were approved national projects and 621 were approved regional and global projects. |
Land Degradation: In 2002, the GEF Assembly expanded GEF's mandate by adding land degradation to the portfolio and designating it the financial mechanism of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification. GEF focuses on sustainable agricultural practices (e.g., crop diversification, crop rotation, water harvesting, and small-scale irrigation schemes), sustainable rangeland management, and the preservation of viable indigenous forests and woodlands. GEF projects aim to integrate sustainable land management into national development priorities, and to strengthen human, technical, and institutional capacities.
Persistent Organic Pollutants: GEF is the interim financial mechanism of the 2001 Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants, a global and legally binding agreement to reduce and eliminate pollutants including pesticides (e.g., DDT and mirex) and industrial chemicals (e.g., PCBs) as well as unintentionally produced POPs (e.g., dioxins and furans). GEF's involvement in tackling the threats posed by POPs dates back to 1995, with the introduction of the International Waters Operational Strategy and its contaminant-based component. In this framework, GEF began to develop a portfolio of strategically designed projects including regional assessments and pilot demonstrations that addressed a number of pressing POPs-related issues.
Each year, billions of dollars in environmental aid flow from developed country governments—including the United States—to developing ones. GEF is one mechanism in the larger network of international programs designed to address environmental issues. While the efficiency and the effectiveness of these programs are of concern to donor country governments, a full analysis of the purposes, intents, results, and consequences behind these financial flows has yet to be conducted.16 International relations, comparative politics, and developmental economics can often collide with environmental agendas. Critics contend that the existing system has had limited impact in addressing major environmental concerns—specifically climate change and tropical deforestation—and has been unsuccessful in delivering global transformational change. A desire to achieve more immediate impacts has led to a restructuring of the Multilateral Development Banks' role in environmental finance and the introduction of many new bilateral and multilateral funding initiatives.
The effectiveness of GEF depends on how the fund addresses its programmatic issues, reacts to recent developments in the financial landscape, and responds to emerging opportunities. The future of GEF remains in the hands of the donor countries that can choose to broaden the mandate and strengthen its institutional arrangements or to reduce and replace it by other bilateral or multilateral funding mechanisms. The following section investigates some of the current strengths and challenges facing GEF and summarizes some of the responses initiated by the program.
During the 2006 Replenishment meetings, GEF worked to address many of its program deficiencies. The Council aimed to streamline costs and management fees, ensure project quality upon proposal, and reduce the length of the project pipeline. A Sustainability Compact was enacted that would oversee several issues, including (1) the shift away from a project-oriented approach to a strategic and programmatic one; (2) a concentration on financing pre-market innovation in an attempt to leverage private capital; (3) a heightened dedication to transparency, accessibility, and equitability; and (4) a renewed focus on country-driven ownership through the implementation of a Resource Allocation Framework (RAF) wherein funding is determined by a country's potential to generate global environmental benefits and its capacity to successfully implement GEF projects. Further, in 2007, GEF initiated a pilot public-private partnership (PPP) initiative called the "Earth Fund" to enhance engagement with the private sector. Internal assessment of these reforms has shown promise.22
Meetings leading up to the Fifth Replenishment of GEF in 2010 saw the development of policy recommendations along two lines:
Meetings for the Sixth Replenishment of GEF began on April 3, 2013, and continue on September 10, 2013. Policy recommendations are currently under development.
Figure A-1. Commitments to GEF Pilot Phase and Replenishments |
Source: Instrument for the Establishment of the Restructured Global Environment Facility - March 2008, at http://www.thegef.org/gef/node/2552. |
Source: CRS correspondence with GEF. |
Figure A-2. Financial Status of GEF Trust Fund: Summary of Arrears |
Source: GEF, "Global Environment Facility Trust Fund Financial Report," GEF/C.43/Inf.08, September 30, 2012. |
1. |
For a more detailed discussion on various sources and mechanisms of financial assistance for climate change activities, see CRS Report R41808, International Climate Change Financing: Needs, Sources, and Delivery Methods, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed]. |
2. |
The group of multilateral development banks referred to in this report includes the World Bank Group (WBG), African Development Bank (AfDB), Asian Development Bank (ADB), European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), and Inter-American Development Bank Group (IDB). |
3. |
For more substantive analysis of foreign aid and congressional roles, see CRS Report R40213, Foreign Aid: An Introduction to U.S. Programs and Policy, by [author name scrubbed] and Marian Leonardo Lawson; and CRS Report R41170, Multilateral Development Banks: Overview and Issues for Congress, by [author name scrubbed]. |
4. |
See Figure A-1 of the Appendix for a list of donor countries during each GEF funding, or "Replenishment," period. |
5. |
Information on GEF activities, organization, policies, and projects is available on its website, at http://www.thegef.org/gef/. |
6. |
A full overview and analysis of the history of GEF and environmental financing can be found in a number of source materials including book length studies by Inge Kaul and Pedro Conceição, The New Public Finance: Responding to Global Challenges, New York: Oxford University Press, 2006; Robert L. Hicks, Bradley C. Parks, J. Timmons Roberts, and Michael J. Tierney, Greening Aid?: Understanding the Environmental Impact of Development Assistance, New York: Oxford University Press, 2008; and several articles including Gareth Porter, Neil Bird, Nanki Kaur, and Leo Peskett, "New Finance for Climate Change and the Environment," WWF and the Heinrich Böll Foundation, 2008; Smita Nakhooda, Jon Sohn, and Kevin Baumert, "Mainstreaming Climate Change Considerations at the Multilateral Development Banks," World Resources Institute, 2005; and Smita Nakhooda, "Correcting the World's Greatest Market Failure: Climate Change and the Multilateral Development Banks," World Resources Institute, 2008. |
7. |
The "Instrument for the Establishment of the Restructured Global Environment Facility" is the officially adopted operating procedures of GEF. See documents at http://www.thegef.org/gef/node/2552. |
8. |
The United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED), also known as the Rio Summit, Rio Conference, Earth Summit, and Eco '92 was a United Nations conference held in Rio de Janeiro from June 3-14, 1992, in which 172 governments participated, with 108 sending their heads of state or government, and 2,400 representatives of non-governmental organizations (NGOs), with 17,000 people at the parallel NGO "Global Forum." |
9. |
For the purpose of voting power, total contributions consist of the actual cumulative contributions made to the GEF Trust Fund. |
10. |
Replenishment figures calculated in Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) from respective currencies at time of pledge. Figures are nominal. GEF's fiscal year runs from July 1 to June 30. |
11. |
During the GEF pilot phase, the United States had a separate co-financing arrangement administered by USAID. |
12. |
The percentage of total contributions and the percentage of new donor funding are computed from different totals. U.S. percentage of new donor funding, including supplemental contributions, is 21.3%, 21.7%, 19.5%, 14.0%, and 16.2%, respectively. See Appendix, Figure A-1, for a full breakdown of U.S. contributions in relation to other sources. |
13. |
Office of Management and Budget, The Budget of the United States Government, 2011. |
14. |
"Early encashment" is a payment mechanism used by GEF that allows donors to account for interest made on their contributions. |
15. |
See GEF, "Global Environment Facility Trust Fund Financial Report," GEF/C.43/Inf.08, September 30, 2012, at http://www.thegef.org/gef/council_document/gef-trust-fund-financial-report. |
16. |
See Hicks, et al., op. cit., for an initial foray into a quantified analytic and a discussion on the metrics involved. |
17. |
The development portfolios of most MDBs strongly emphasize a bias toward conventional fossil fuel power generation and infrastructure loans that often worked counter to environmental aims (e.g., the World Bank loaned more than $2.5 billion for conventional power projects in 2005 compared to $109 million for renewable energy or energy efficiency). See Gareth Porter, et al., op. cit., for further comments. |
18. |
See the Gleneagles Plan of Action at the 2005 G-8 Meeting in Gleneagles, Scotland. It should be noted that the portfolios of many MDBs still retain significant provisions for conventional power and infrastructure projects as compared to most bilateral environmental aid, albeit with a greater ratio of renewable and efficiency resources than in the past. See Hicks, et al., op. cit. |
19. |
For a full analysis of the rise of MDBs in environmental finance, see Smita Nakhooda, Correcting the World's Greatest Market Failure: Climate Change and the Multilateral Development Banks, World Resources Institute, 2008. |
20. |
Statistics confirm these perceptions: as a point of comparison, the success rate for multilaterally funded environmental projects often pales in comparison to education, health, or infrastructure projects. Only 25% of World Bank-financed environmental projects during the years 2001-2003 received a "satisfactory" project outcome rating, compared to 100% for education, 86% for health, and 87% for infrastructure. See Hicks, et al., op. cit., p.6. |
21. |
Recent initiatives include the Global Climate Change Alliance (GCCA) of the European Commission; the International Window of the Environmental Transformation Fund (ETF-IW) of the United Kingdom; the Spanish Millennium Development Goals (MDG) Fund; the Japanese Cool Earth Partnership; the German International Climate Initiative; the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (NORAD) Rainforest Initiative; the Australian Global Initiative on Forests and Climate (GIFC); the German Life Web Initiative; the World Bank Forest Carbon Partnership Fund (FCPF); the GEF Tropical Forest Account (TFA); the World Bank Clean Technology Fund (CTF); the GEF-IFC Earth Fund; the World Bank Strategic Climate Fund (SCF) and Pilot Program for Climate Resilience (PPCR); the Kyoto Protocol Adaptation Fund; and the Copenhagen Accord Green Fund. For an analysis and overview of these new programs, see Porter, et al., 2008, op. cit. |
22. |
See GEF's "Fourth Overall Performance Study" and "Policy Recommendations for the Fifth Replenishment of the GEF Trust Fund," February 12, 2010, p. 4, at http://www.thegef.org/gef/node/2483. |
23. |
These policy recommendations correspond to those highlighted in the U.S. Budget for Fiscal Year 2011 contributing to the U.S. pledge increase for the GEF-5 Replenishment, p. 862. |