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Seite 1 11/02/2016
The International Climate Initiative (IKI)
Jan Peter Schemmel, Director of the Programme Office
of the International Climate Initiative
Seite 2
Germany’s Climate and Biodiversity Financing
11/02/2016
Seite 3
Germany’s International Climate Finance
2005-2013 (in EUR millions)*
11/02/2016
* Calculations based on disbursements for the Energy and Climate Fund (EKF) and
multilateral projects; all bilateral projects calculated according to budgetary
commitments. Source: BMUB / BMZ
471 515
648
881
1062
1431
1563 1664
1975
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Seite 4
Germany’s International Biodiversity Finance
2006-2013 (in EUR millions)*
11/02/2016
* Annual bilateral commitments and multilateral finance for biodiversity and
forestry projects, which focus on supporting at least one of the three objectives of
the CBD. Source: BMUB / BMZ
75
125
219 250
300
499
533 552
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Seite 5 11.02.2016
IKI’s Funding Volume and Approach
~ 500 IKI Projects 1.6 bn €
Bilateral Projects
Global Projects
Regional Projects
Federal Budget • Studies / Conceptual Development • Financial Instruments • Policy Advice • Capacity Building • Implementation of Policies, Strategies and Programmes • Technology Co-operation • Communication & Dissemination
Input into international UNFCCC and CBD Negotiations
Support implemen-tation of Climate
Policies & Partner Country Development
Transformation towards a climate
compatible development
Promote comprehensive and
legally binding political agreements
Seite 6
The International Climate Initiative (IKI)
From its Establishment… Until Today…
11/02/2016
Seite 7
From its Establishment…
Until Today…
11/02/2016
2008
IKI is launched
Global Climate Partnership Fund (GCPF) and MRV
Partnership
2010
2011
Focus on biological diversity
Creation of the NAMA
Facility
2012
2013
GCF readiness programme
Forest
conservation at
the top of the
agenda
2014
On the Path
to Paris
Seite 8
The International Climate Initiative (IKI)
Selection Process and Requirements
11/02/2016
Seite 9
Selection Process*
11.02.2016
Call for Proposals
Submission of project outlines
Evaluation, pre-selection and call for
formal application
Submission of project
applications Approval
Imple-mentation
Year 1 Year 2
* 2008-2015
Seite 10
Selection Criteria and Requirements
11/02/2016
ODA
qualification
Innovation
Transfor-
mation &
Ambition
Link to Int.
Negotiations
Sustainability
Replicability Ownership
Seite 11
The International Climate Initiative (IKI)
Monitoring and Evaluation
11.02.2016
Seite 12
Impact
Outcome
Activities
OECD
Intervention Logic
Output II Output I
Activities
Project Specific
Indicators
Monitoring
Seite 13
Six Standard Indicators
Action Indicators
Mitigation, Adaptation, Ecosystems
• measurable in tonnes, number of
people reached, hectares, etc.
• oriented on direct outcomes and
impacts
• homogenous category, easy to
aggregate
Capacity Indicators
Policies, Institutions, Methods
• combine complexe
circumstances
• make Capacity Building concrete
and countable
• Focus on more indirect and long
term effects
Overarching Standard Indicators (introduced in 2015) summarise the
central impacts of the IKI funding programme.
Seite 14
The International Climate Initiative (IKI)
Overview of Portfolio and Priority Funding Areas
11/02/2016
Seite 15
Volume of funding according to support area
(2008-2015)*
11.02.2016
Mitigating Greenhouse Gas
Emissions
Adapting to the Impacts of
Climate Change
Conserving natural carbon
sinks/REDD+
Conserving Biological
Diversity
832 Mio € 52%
348 Mio € 21%
307 Mio € 19%
124 Mio € 8%
*Doha-Accounting
as of Dec. 2015
Seite 16
Funding Volumes by Regionen (2008-2015*)
11.02.2016
* Mio Euro, Doha-Accounting
as of Dec. 2015
321
149
68
146
261
666
Latinamerica &
Carribean
MENA
(Middle East &
Northern Africa)
Subsahara
Africa
Middle- & Eastern
Europe, Central Asia
& Turkey
South & Southeast
Asia & Pacific
Global
Seite 17 11/02/2016
Mitigating greenhouse gas emissions
(2008-2015)*
€283 million
€206 million
€40 million
€37 million
€124 million
€97 million
Measures to support
climate policy
Sustainable energy supply
Mobility
F-gases
Multilateral funds
Innovative financing
instruments
*Doha accounting
As of: Oct. 2015
Seite 18 11.02.2016
Adapting to the impacts of climate change
(2008-2015)*
€50 million
€16 million
€73 million
€21 million
€14 million
€7 million
€102 million
*Doha accounting
As of: Oct. 2015
Adaptation strategies/
National Adaptation Plan
Risk management/
insurance
Ecosystem-based adapation
Multilateral funds
Overarching and cross-
cutting issues
Negotiation support
Sustainable urban
development
Seite 19 11/02/2016
Conserving natural carbon sinks /
REDD+ (2008-2015)*
€73 million
€17 million
€38 million
€43 million
€14 million
€15 million
€58 million
€6 million
€35 million
Outcome-based
payments/
demonstration activities
for REDD+
REDD+ social and
environmental standards
Multilateral funds
REDD+ MRV
REDD+ business models
Overarching and cross-cutting issues
REDD+ policy/
governance/strategy/
management
*Doha accounting
As of: Oct. 2015
Conservation/sustainable
use/restoration of non-forest
carbon sinks
REDD+ forest and
landscape restoration
Seite 20 11/02/2016
Conserving biological diversity
(2008-2015)*
€13 million
€19 million
€6 million
€20 million €25 million
€26 million
€9 million
*Doha accounting
As of: Oct. 2015
Reducing the rate
of ecosystem loss,
degradation and
fragmentation
Acquiring knowledge
Sustainable use of ecosystems
Marine and coastal
protected areas
Ecosystem valuation
Mobilising finance
Terrestrial protected areas
Seite 21
NAMA Facility
Supporting the
Implementation of NAMAs
Seite 22
Purpose
Tailor-made support to countries that show leadership on
tackling climate change and that want to implement NAMAs.
NAMA Support Projects (NSPs) are highly ambitious parts of
broader, sector-wide NAMAs.
NAMA Facility shall demonstrate that climate finance can
effectively support transformational change in partner
countries.
Support combines full range of development cooperation
instruments (financial and technical)
Photos: 1. rooftop panel Chile, credits: GIZ Chile; 2. traffic in Jakarta, Indonesia, credits: Daniel Bongardt; 3.
coffee plantation Costa Rica, credits: Andreas Nieters / GIZ Costa Rica.
Seite 23 23
Seite 24
Project Cycle of the NAMA Facility
Seite 25
Selected NAMA Support Projects Country NAMA Support Project Funding volume
Mexiko Sustainable Housing NAMA* EUR 14 mio
Costa Rica NAMA – Low Carbon Coffee Costa Rica* EUR 7 mio
Indonesia SUTRI NAMA – Sustainable Urban Transport* EUR 14 mio
Chile Self-Supply Renewable Energy (SSRE)* EUR 15 mio
Colombia Transit Oriented Development (TOD) NAMA EUR 14.9 mio
Peru TRANSPerú – Sustainable Urban Transport NAMA Peru* EUR 9 mio
Tajikistan Forestry NAMA Support Project Tajikistan EUR 13 mio
Thailand Thailand Refrigeration and Air Conditioning NAMA (RAC
NAMA) EUR 14.7 mio
Burkina Faso Biomass Energy NAMA Burkina Faso EUR 13.5 mio
China Integrated Waste Management NAMA EUR 8 mio.
Colombia II NAMA for the domestic refrigeration sector EUR 9 mio.
Kenya Mass Rapid Transport System for Nairobi EUR 20 mio.
*= funding for implementation approved
Seite 26
Assessment Criteria
I Eligibility Criteria
II Ambition Criteria
III Feasibility Criteria
Seite 27
Transformational Change
11.02.2016
Projects are considered as conducive to transformational change if they:
contribute to enabling either a significant evolution in terms of scope
(e.g. scaling-up or replication), or enabling a faster and/or a
significant shift from one state to another
have a catalytic effect
ensure the sustainability of the impacts, local ownership and political
will, the involvement of the private sector and the use of innovative
technologies and approaches
allow for systematic learning processes
are based on a self-reinforcing process towards low-emission
development
Seite 28
Third call for projects
Selected projects:
China – Integrated Waste Management
Colombia – NAMA for the domestic refrigeration sector
Kenya – Mass Rapid Transport System for Nairobi
In total 42 Project Outlines were submitted.
Traffic congestion in Nairobi, Kenya*
*Photo Credits: Demosh, cc
license published on flickr.de.
Seite 29
Governance of the NAMA Facility
Seite 30
Final remarks
11.02.2016
Seite 31 11/02/2016
Thank you for your attention!
www.international-climate-initiative.com www.nama-facility.org
E-Mail:
programmbuero@programmbuero-klima.de
contact@nama-facility.org
@iki_bmub
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