investment in the world’s first child-focused climate risk financing solution
Dr. Jassim Taqui DG Al-Bab Institute for Strategic Studies
Islamabad,
18 November, UNICEF
is launching a new climate financing initiative to enhance countries’ climate
resilience and disaster preparedness for children and youth and bolster
protection for children from the impacts of future climate-related disasters.
The Today and
Tomorrow initiative is an integrated climate change finance solution
that, for the first time, combines funding for immediate climate
resilience and risk prevention programs for children today, with innovative use
of risk transfer finance provided by the insurance market for cyclone disasters
tomorrow. The combined financing platform is designed to help countries address
the current and growing impacts of the climate crisis while preparing for
future emergencies and rapidly responding to them when they occur.
“The risks of climate
change are no longer hypothetical. They are here. And even while we work to
build communities’ resilience against climate disasters, we have to become much
better in pre-empting risks for our children,” said Karin Hulshof, UNICEF
Deputy Executive Director for Partnerships. “We know more climate disasters are
in the making. We just do not know where or when they will hit.”
Children and youth
are a
critically vulnerable population group that is among the most affected by
disaster risk and climate change, including the effects of extreme weather events such as cyclones.
Last year, UNICEF’s Children’s Climate Risk Index estimated 400 million children (nearly 1 in 6
children globally) are currently highly exposed to cyclones.
In its initial
three-year pilot, UNICEF’s Today and Tomorrow will focus on
eight countries in four global cyclone basins - Bangladesh, Comoros, Haiti,
Fiji, Madagascar, Mozambique, Solomon Islands, and Vanuatu. To take this effort
forward, UNICEF is raising $30 million for the initiative and is calling for
additional private and public partners to take action and join UNICEF in
helping to close the intensifying humanitarian financing gap for disaster
protection for children and youth.
Climate harm in
childhood lasts for life and perpetuates and deepens inequality and poverty
across generations. However, the unique needs of children are not directly addressed
by existing Risk Transfer mechanisms. This leaves a global humanitarian
financing gap, or ”Child Protection Gap”, that encompasses hundreds of millions
of children and youth.
UNICEF’s Today
and Tomorrow is the first pre-arranged and
event-based climate disaster risk financing mechanism that specifically
targets this Child Protection Gap, with full support for the Tomorrow portion
of the risk transfer instrument, secured from the German and UK governments under
the newly launched G7-V20 Global Shield against Climate Risks.
“We are pleased to
support UNICEF in advancing the world’s first child-centered financial
protection tool for climate-related hazards and show the new G7/V20 Global
Shield Against Climate Risks at work,” said Heike Henn, a Director at the
German Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ). “We expect that
UNICEF’s Today and Tomorrow Initiative will deliver in three areas: first,
increased uptake of ex-ante risk financing solutions by governments through
knowledge sharing and increased familiarity with risk financing instruments;
second, improved institutional and operational shock resilience of development
institutions, and third and most importantly, closing the disaster risk
protection gap for the most vulnerable people, especially children and
mothers.”
"The UK is proud
to be a partner in the new Global Shield against climate and disaster risks,
and to co-fund the Global Shield Finance Facility," said Rt. Hon. Andrew
Mitchell, Minister of State in the UK's Foreign, Commonwealth & Development
Office. "We strongly support bringing pre-arranged and trigger-based
financing to the humanitarian sector, and I’m delighted that the Facility will
expand its work as part of the Shield, including this new grant to UNICEF to
enable them to protect up to 15 million children, young people and their
families across Africa, the Caribbean, Asia, and the Pacific and respond
rapidly if tropical cyclones hit."
Cyclones and the disasters they trigger, such as floods and landslides,
represent the fastest-growing category of climate-influenced disasters and are
a major cause of losses and damages worldwide. UNICEF’s research has
shown that investments that reduce exposure to and negative impacts from
cyclones and other hazards can considerably reduce overall climate risk for
millions of children.
“UNICEF is the first UN
institution, as well as one of the largest humanitarian organizations
worldwide, to take out a bespoke disaster risk coverage for the protection of
children, youth, and parents, especially mothers,” said Simon Young, a Senior
Director in the Climate and Resilience Hub at WTW, the advisory that designed
the insurance solution. “As such, UNICEF is pioneering proof of concept for
other organizations in the field. The decisive action by UNICEF can be a
catalyst for more efficient, reliable, and quicker humanitarian crisis
finance.”
As well as pressing
governments and big businesses
to rapidly reduce emissions, UNICEF urges leaders to take
immediate action to protect children from climate devastation by adapting the
critical social services they rely on. UNICEF also urges parties to find and fund
solutions to support those who will face climate losses and damages beyond the
limits to which communities can adapt.
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