Ahead of
the 4th International Conference on SIDS (SIDS4), held in Antigua and Barbuda
on May 27-30th, a new policy brief by the UN Development Programme
(UNDP) highlights a pressing need to
massively invest in climate change adaptation in Small Island Developing States
(SIDS) to break costly cycles of disaster and recovery. The paper also
calls for a more equitable and effective global financial system to support
climate-vulnerable economies.
The
problem of ‘disaster-response’ cycles, in which countries are continuously
playing fiscal and financial catch-up to recover from new climate
change-related crises, is particularly acute in SIDS because of their extreme
vulnerability to floods, sea level rise, hurricanes and other climate
emergencies. SIDS face the critical task of breaking these cycles by ramping up
investment in climate change adaptation, which provide long term resilience to
the effects of global warming.
However,
securing the necessary funds for
projects such as seawalls and climate-resilient agriculture is challenging due
to high costs and significant debt vulnerabilities. SIDS require an
estimated US$4.7-US$7.3 billion annually for adaptation, yet many struggle with
high debt, complicating efforts to finance these essential measures.
“Most
SIDS are unable to mobilize the upfront funding they need to adapt to the
climate crisis and are forced to divert a growing share of public funding to
rebuild after disasters. On average, the annual economic toll on SIDS from such
disasters is estimated at 2% of GDP, a figure that is quadruple the losses experienced
by larger nations, and with some countries at risk of losing more than 10%
annually. SIDS exemplify the challenge for the international financial
architecture to become more responsive to and supportive of developing country
needs in addressing the climate crisis,” noted Achim Steiner, UNDP
Administrator.
In its
policy brief “Breaking
through the disaster-response cycle in SIDS: aligning financing to
urgent climate action”, UNDP presents some of
the key changes needed to address these challenges effectively. These include
better access to effective and climate-sensitive debt treatments for countries
in need, deployment and improvement of innovative financial instruments, and
access to more long-term affordable funding from the official development
sector.
The brief supports a greater
integration of climate considerations into debt sustainability assessments and argues that innovative debt
instruments, such as state-contingent bonds, thematic bonds and
debt-for-development swaps, when designed and applied appropriately, can help
countries cope better with the impacts of climate change by providing liquidity
in times of need and by enabling long-term investments in resilience.
Additionally, the policy brief argues that the official development sector must
significantly scale up its lending capacity to deliver long-term and affordable
financing for the climate transition, including adaptation investments that are
harder to fund via private capital.
“For Small Island Developing States (SIDS),
which are mostly middle-income countries with minimal contributions to global
emissions, adaptation investment at scale is a vital issue. They require
greater access to affordable finance on affordable terms, improved liquidity
support during climate-related shocks, and more straightforward pathways to
debt relief,” said George Gray Molina, UNDP chief economist.
The
policy brief concludes that investing in adaptation pays off many times over
with cost-benefit ratios ranging between 1:2-1:10 depending on country and
resilience measure. Additionally, investing in adaptation will not only save on
costly recovery spending and reduce development tradeoffs, but will also help
keep borrowing costs down as financial markets are increasingly pricing in
countries’ climate-change exposure and preparedness.