The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) has reaffirmed its commitment to scaling up green intermediated financing by approving additional headroom for the next phase of its successful large-scale partnership with the Green Climate Fund (GCF). An extension of the successful cooperation by US$497 million supports thousands of individual investments in technologies that reduce emissions and enhance resilience to climate change.
The GCF-EBRD Green Energy Financing Facilities (GEFF) programme, inaugurated in 2018, spans three regions and directs new climate finance flows to Armenia, Egypt, Georgia, Jordan, Republic of Moldova, Mongolia, Morocco, Serbia, Tajikistan and Tunisia. Sums lent to local partner financial institutions are on-lent to private sub-borrowers for investments in climate change mitigation and adaptation projects.
The new extension will help maintain momentum and continue scaling up gender-responsive green financing. It is estimated that the latest extension will avoid CO2 emissions of 800 000 tpy, which is equivalent to retiring 125 MW of coal-fired electricity generation capacity. The extension enhances women and men’s equal opportunity to access green finance and technologies with a view to reducing existing gender gaps.
The latest extension increases the framework headroom by up to US$497 million. Of this, US$373 million will come from the EBRD’s ordinary resources, with an equivalent of up to US$124 million of concessional financing provided by the GCF.
The US$1.4 billion programme benefits from GCF support amounting to US$378 million, out of which US$344 million is concessional co-funding and US$34 million is grants for technical assistance. Other donors supporting the programme include the GCF, the EU, the Republic of Korea, Austria, Luxembourg, Japan and Turkey.
As of the end of 2020, the GCF GEFF product had been launched in eight countries in partnership with 18 local financial institutions, and has already supported over 500 green investments.
The EBRD’s GEFF programme provides credit lines to open up new financing paths and new markets of sustainable development for people pursuing climate investments, and addressing the barriers women face. GEFF is a cornerstone of the EBRD’s ambitious aim to become a majority green investor by 2025.
The GCF was set in 2010 up by 194 countries, which are parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), to deliver equal amounts of funding to mitigation and adaptation initiatives in developing countries.
The GCF-EBRD’s partnership for transformation has seen the GCF support six EBRD programmes with US$830 million, catalysing more than US$3.6 billion in total project value. The GCF is one of the largest climate funds in the world, supporting the efforts of developing countries to respond to the challenge of climate change.