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Rebalancing climate finance: analysing multilateral development banks' allocation practices

Rebalancing climate finance: analysing multilateral development banks' allocation practices
Rebalancing climate finance: analysing multilateral development banks' allocation practices
This paper provides novel evidence on the climate financing practices of Multilateral Development Banks (MDBs) and their long-term social and climate consequences. We find that the majority of MDB climate finance is for mitigation projects, concentrated in a few relatively wealthy countries, and positively correlates with countries' greenhouse gas emissions but not with their vulnerability to climate risks. A transition towards a more equal allocation between mitigation and adaptation can substantially reduce global climate vulnerability for an additional 1.9 billion people without significant changes in the annualized growth rate of emissions. Our results contribute to the discussion on global equity in climate finance allocation and the societal impact of climate change.
Climate finance, Emissions, Multilateral development banks, Vulnerability
2214-6296
Xie, Lina
d2bfda5a-17fd-455b-948d-18589ca4c0dd
Scholtens, Bert
7375e364-d16b-4625-97b9-ce7e8786158b
Homroy, Swarnodeep
bf9526ca-76e9-4d1f-8b8e-0be867b684f1
Xie, Lina
d2bfda5a-17fd-455b-948d-18589ca4c0dd
Scholtens, Bert
7375e364-d16b-4625-97b9-ce7e8786158b
Homroy, Swarnodeep
bf9526ca-76e9-4d1f-8b8e-0be867b684f1

Xie, Lina, Scholtens, Bert and Homroy, Swarnodeep (2023) Rebalancing climate finance: analysing multilateral development banks' allocation practices. Energy Research and Social Science, 101, [103127]. (doi:10.1016/j.erss.2023.103127).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This paper provides novel evidence on the climate financing practices of Multilateral Development Banks (MDBs) and their long-term social and climate consequences. We find that the majority of MDB climate finance is for mitigation projects, concentrated in a few relatively wealthy countries, and positively correlates with countries' greenhouse gas emissions but not with their vulnerability to climate risks. A transition towards a more equal allocation between mitigation and adaptation can substantially reduce global climate vulnerability for an additional 1.9 billion people without significant changes in the annualized growth rate of emissions. Our results contribute to the discussion on global equity in climate finance allocation and the societal impact of climate change.

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Accepted/In Press date: 5 May 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 25 May 2023
Published date: 25 May 2023
Keywords: Climate finance, Emissions, Multilateral development banks, Vulnerability

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 499348
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/499348
ISSN: 2214-6296
PURE UUID: fa6aa59d-0739-4554-963e-03de3f61d1e1
ORCID for Swarnodeep Homroy: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1140-9114

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Date deposited: 18 Mar 2025 17:30
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:47

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Contributors

Author: Lina Xie
Author: Bert Scholtens
Author: Swarnodeep Homroy ORCID iD

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