- Further £2 million for loss and damage in marginalised
communities.
First Minister has announced that C40 Cities
will receive £1 million from Scotland’s Climate Justice Fund to
focus efforts on tackling loss and damage in marginalised
communities.
The Scottish Government, in partnership with direct-funding
charity GiveDirectly, will also provide a further £1 million from
the fund to support communities in Malawi to deal with the
impacts of climate-induced loss and damage.
The First Minister was speaking at a COP28 panel discussion with
delegates from Bangladesh, Sierra Leone and France, and a youth
representative from Argentina, on Scotland’s contribution to
addressing loss and damage.
C40 Cities is a global network of nearly 100 mayors committed to
halving their fair share of emissions by 2030. The Scottish
Government will work with C40 Cities through their Inclusive
Climate Action programme to address urban loss and damage,
support sub-Saharan Africa’s first local Just Transition process
and address losses and damages faced by climate migrant
communities.
The latest funding allocations fulfil the commitment to treble
the Climate Justice Fund to £36 million over the course of this
Parliament.
First Minister said:
“Our world-first Climate Justice Fund will continue to focus on
communities most affected by climate change, and in order to
deliver for those who need it most we must ensure the views and
needs of those typically marginalised in such communities –
particularly urban voices from the Global South and youth
perspectives – are heard.
“This funding for the Inclusive Climate Action programme will
support cities in the Global South to deliver local inclusive
climate action, build resilience for residents, pilot city-led
approaches to loss and damage and build cities’ influence in
global policy debates.
“While of immense importance, we cannot just provide funding to
deal with the effects of climate-induced loss and damage alone.
“Devolved governments have a crucial and essential role to play
in addressing loss and damage and the global journey to net zero
– responsibility for over half of the emissions cuts needed at a
global level lie with devolved state and regional governments.
The C40 Cities programme aligns with our Climate Justice
principles, and will provide cities with support that builds
resilience and can be scaled up to meet community need.”
Mayor of Freetown and C40 Co-Chair Yvonne Aki-Sawyerr said:
“The climate crisis is a global issue which causes local pain and
consequences across generations. Loss and damage is fundamentally
an issue of climate justice, as those who have contributed the
least to climate breakdown are the ones who most bear the brunt
of its chaos. This is true between countries and regions, but
also between generations and gender, as well as within our
cities, where the most vulnerable are the most severely affected.
“I thank the Scottish Government for its leadership in climate
justice and support to C40. This funding will support cities in
the Global South to deliver for their residents through local
inclusive climate action, building resilience and piloting
innovative city-led approaches to loss and damage.”
Background
Climate Justice Fund -
International development - gov.scot (www.gov.scot)
The £1 million for C40 and £1 million for GiveDirectly come from
the existing £36 million Climate Justice Fund. The latest
allocations bring the total allocated funds from the Climate
Justice Fund to address loss and damage to £10 million from the
total £36 million Fund. The £10 million allocated funding
consists:
- £2 million pledged at COP26
- £5 million pledged at COP27
- £1 million pledged during Climate Week NYC 2023
- £2 million announced by First Minister at COP28
C40 Cities - A global network of
mayors taking urgent climate action
C40 Cities has launched a first-of-its-kind report
on urban loss and damage and city-led responses. Made
possible by the Climate Justice Fund, the report identifies key
areas where local governments can play a role, as well as
recommendations for national and international actors to better
support, involve and work with cities and mayors at the forefront
of these challenges.