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Zimbabwe
short on climate change funds
IRIN News
May 07, 2013
http://www.irinnews.org/Report/97994/Zimbabwe-short-on-climate-change-funds
Inadequate funding
and limited resources are frustrating Zimbabwe’s efforts to
develop plans to deal with the impact of climate change, says a
government progress report.
Zimbabwe has
been facing political and financial turmoil for more than a decade,
derailing the government’s ability to function and respond
to crises.
Sparse and erratic
rains have already caused the water table to drop, affecting the
country’s ability to produce food and contributing to the
spread of water-borne diseases. In 2008, the country experienced
one of the worst
cholera outbreaks recorded anywhere in recent years; the outbreak
killed at least 4,000 people and infected 100,000 others.
The government
report, Strengthening the National Capacity for Climate Change,
says Zimbabwe lacks the funds needed to hold a workshop to identify
a National Implementing Entity, an accredited body able to receive
direct financial transfers from the Adaptation Fund in Zimbabwe.
The Adaptation Fund, set up under the UN Framework Convention on
Climate Change (UNFCCC), is the most important source of funds to
help developing countries adapt to climate change.
The government
also lacks sufficient funds to devise a national strategy, review
the work of its technical team on climate change or conduct advocacy
work to raise awareness of climate change, the report says.
Funds
short
In 2012, the
UN Development Programme (UNDP) commissioned a three-year, US$8.3
million project with the government, aiming to incorporate climate
change issues into the country’s national development plans
and to leverage funds from the global finance mechanisms.
Veronica Gundu,
a principal environment officer in the Ministry of Environment and
Natural Resources Management, told IRIN that when the idea to craft
a national climate change response strategy was proposed, UNDP agreed
to provide funds, but “as we went on to develop the strategy,
the funds were not enough, so we sourced additional funding from
COMESA [Common Markets for East and Southern Africa]”.
COMESA is said
to have agreed to complement the UNDP funding with $170,000, which
is meant to go towards the projected $400,000 needed for the national
response strategy. COMESA has yet to release the funds.
Additionally,
Gundu said the government had, for the first time last year, released
funds for climate change; she did not disclose the figures.
Sara Feresu,
director of the Institute of Environmental Studies at the University
of Zimbabwe, the institution leading the climate change strategy-formulation
process, told a workshop in early April that still more funds were
needed.
The government
has put together a draft national response strategy with the money
that was available, conducting consultations in select urban centres.
But the draft strategy needs feedback from provinces and districts.
Consultations with civil society, most of whom have yet to see the
draft, are also needed.
In spite of
the funding gaps, Gundu is optimistic that by the end of the year
the first draft, which the government says is in circulation, will
be ready for adoption.
Short
on development aid
Climate change
pundits say fundraising for climate change adaptation has proved
difficult due to the global economic crisis, which has seen donors
minimizing funding to NGOs and governments. Advocates insist on
more government involvement in fundraising efforts.
Leonard Unganayi,
who manages a climate change project administered jointly by the
government-owned Environmental Management Agency (EMA), the Global
Environment Facility (GEF) and UNDP, says there can never be enough
funding for such a mammoth task.
He says that
even at the global level there are major outcries for funding and
resources.
The development
agency Oxfam said an analysis of new figures of Official Development
Assistance by the members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development’s (OECD) Development Assistance Committee
shows a staggering 40 percent drop in funding focused on climate
change adaptation.
Shepherd Zvigadza,
chairperson of the Climate Change Working Group, a coalition of
NGOs, said most NGOs were making efforts to fundraise for adaptation,
but that most of the money coming in is just for pilot projects
that do not have the desired impact.
“Zimbabwe
has been under sanctions, and so many donors have been shying away
from supporting us, both as government and NGOs... Besides sanctions,
the country has not been able to tap into the global funding windows
because emphasis is on supporting least developed countries, and
Zimbabwe is not classified as one,” he said.
After flawed
elections in 2002, European governments placed targeted sanctions
on the leadership of Zanu-PF, which was the ruling party at the
time, and on development aid to the government. In 2012, the European
Union suspended some of the sanctions on assistance to Zimbabwe,
but it has yet to reinstate development aid to the government.
To overcome
the funding issues, Gundu says government is working towards the
establishment of a National Climate Change Fund, which will be administered
under the Green Climate Fund, also set up under the UNFCCC. But
the fund has yet to become operational.
Unganayi says
Zimbabwe should try to identify innovative ways to raise money locally.
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