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IDB will increase climate finance support to at least $11 billion

Inter-American Development Bank President, said that the bank aims to attract at least $11billion in new climate finance by launching a series initiatives to assist countries with global warming impacts and to attract private funding.

Multilateral lenders, such as IDB, are being encouraged to squeeze even more out of what they already have.

Ilan Goldfajn, speaking on the sidelines of 4th International Conference on Financing for Development said that the IDB's series of actions would help to attract more private funding - which was a major goal of the conference.

He said: "We are not merely announcing new ideas, we're launching the things that private sector has been asking for, such as credible tools, scalable platform, and real investment opportunities with impact and confidence."

Investors have been deterred by currency fluctuations for years because it is difficult to predict returns.

The plan is to expand the project to at least two new countries in the next three-year period, and to double the amount of money raised.

The initiative, called FX Edge, will offer a credit line that kicks in when a currency drops sharply. This will help projects with local currency revenue meet their obligations to pay overseas.

The platform will also seek to increase the use of derivatives and other long-term currency hedge instruments, such as those offered by local banks and financial institutes. These instruments are backed up by IDB's rating.

The IDB, in collaboration with the World Bank plans to also issue up to 1 billion dollars in Amazonia Bonds. These bonds were launched as a test last year, to help reduce deforestation and support the communities of the largest rainforest on earth.

Brazil, Colombia Peru, Bolivia, and Ecuador are expected to embrace the Amazonia framework, which is supported by Amazonia, as they work to protect a region that is more than 6,000,000 square kilometres in size (2.3 million square mile) and contains more than 10% of known plants and animals on Earth.

Goldfajn stated that the IDB will also increase the number countries who can access a newly enlarged emergency relief fund of $5 billion called the Contingent Credit Facility for Natural Disasters.

Together with other multilateral development institutions, it will expand its Climate Resilient debt clauses. These give countries the choice to suspend their loan payments up to two-years in case of disasters. The IDB is expected to provide $4.2 billion of total coverage by 2026.

Goldfajn added that the bank also created the Regional Disaster Risk Transfer Program which allows countries to transfer risks associated with extreme weather events onto insurance and capital markets.

IDB Invest's separate Business Resilience Program would, meanwhile introduce new debt clauses in contracts with private companies, to cushion them against climate risks.

Goldfajn stated that "each of these are important in their own right, but when taken together they demonstrate how development banks can move the needle through tailoring risk to investors." (Reporting from Simon Jessop in London, Marc Jones in Seville and Matthew Lewis in the editing)

(source: Reuters)