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Institutionalising climate adaptation finance under the UNFCCC and beyond: Could an adaptation ‘market’ emerge?

Description

A new institutional architecture is emerging for climate change adaptation finance, with the UNFCCC Adaptation Fund now operational and dialogue underway on post-2012 arrangements. Some donor countries have also begun to channel official development assistance (ODA) through designated adaptation funds. This paper examines how adaptation finance is being institutionalised, and explores whether an adaptation market could emerge, akin to the development of carbon markets, with adaptation projects traded as commodities. The key question is whether such a multifaceted, locally contextualised phenomenon as adaptation can be converted into a uniform and standardised product, with measurable outcomes and benefits that ‘buyers’ can take credit for. The paper explores two ways to commodify adaptation: focusing on adaptation benefits – the most obvious parallel to carbon markets – or trading in credits for spending adaptation funds. There is also a need for more research on potential new motivations for providing adaptation finance, such as indirect economic, political, strategic or security benefits. Finally, it is important to study the distribution of adaptation finance across countries, sectors and communities to see whether there are sources of bias in institutions and in the merging professional industry.

Reference information

Source:
Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI)

Published in Climate-ADAPT Jun 07 2016   -   Last Modified in Climate-ADAPT Dec 12 2023

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