Opening concert of Annual Meeting 2025 in Davos-Klosters to address glacier melt in Antractica
The opening concert of the Annual Meeting 2025 in Davos-Klosters will address the pressing issues ...
The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) will allocated over 50 percent of its annual investments to the green economy by 2025.
This falls within the framework of the bank’s ambitious plan to scale up even further its climate and environmental finance and its work supporting a green, low-carbon and resilient future.
In addition to the aim of making more than 50 percent of its financing green, the plan would target specific emission reductions over the next five years and set a date for a decision on when all the EBRD’s projects are aligned to the Paris Climate Agreement.
The plan to become a majority green bank by 2025 builds on success in the past five years, during which the average green finance ratio rose to 40 from 25 percent.
The EBRD launched its Green Economy Transition (GET) approach in 2015 in the run-up to the Paris climate talks at the end of that year.
The scaled-up GET approach defines clear action areas to support a green economic recovery in its regions of operations taking account of the impact of the coronavirus pandemic.
Under GET, the EBRD would also step up policy work to ensure its 38 emerging economies can effectively achieve climate and environmental goals.
It would scale up investment by innovating across a set of specific environmental and climate mitigation and adaptation thematic areas such as greening the financial sector and energy systems, industrial decarbonization, sustainable cities, food systems and connectivity, and natural capital preservation. In developing these thematic areas, particular attention would be given to just transition, gender considerations, circular economy opportunities, green digital solutions and the role of energy efficiency.
And, as climate change mitigation is a key GET objective, the Bank would seek to achieve cumulative greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions reduction of 25 to 40 million tons per year by 2025.
The EBRD would screen all investments for alignment with the Paris Agreement and national climate-related action plans, taking into consideration the priorities set in country and sector strategies. It would also increase its capacity to support countries, regions and sectors to develop low carbon and climate resilience strategies and scale up its efforts to mobilize climate finance.
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