Overseas Development Institute
Overseas Development Institute
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The New Global Environmental Funds
Researchers
Neil Bird
Research Fellow
Leo Peskett
Research Officer
Key project resources
Final report on new environmental funds
Report by Gareth Porter, Neil Bird, Nanki Kaur and Leo Peskett
Related links
WWF
 

We have recently witnessed a proliferation of new funds and financial tools to address global environmental issues, notably climate change, deforestation (in the context of carbon mitigation) and biodiversity.

Though potentially of great positive impact, there are also quite a number of potential downsides to the current trend such as the creation of a mega-fund that lacks broad public oversight and accountability or the multiplication of small funds that work at cross purposes. Given that negotiations are taking place outside of any sanctioned international forum or multilateral framework, there is a risk that these funds may duplicate or contradict mechanisms that form the foundation of internationally-agreed multilateral agreements implemented under the aegis of the United Nations.

The purpose of this study is to obtain all pertinent information and to present an analysis of recent developments and trends in global environmental finance in order to inform a WWF network wide process to develop appropriate policies and advocacy approaches. This analysis, focusing on European-based initiatives, will complement a second piece of analysis to be conducted from Washington under the supervision of WWF-US.

Funded by: WWF
Dates: March 2008 - April 2008

Related projects
Budget Support, Aid Instruments and the Environment - The country context
Neil Bird and Cecilia Luttrell, together with ODI researchers Lidia Cabral and Andrew Lawson, will examine country experience of public expenditure on the environment and how this is influenced by development partners. Four country case studies, in Ghana, Mali, Mozambique and Tanzania, will be undertaken and a synthesis report prepared.
Neil Bird, Cecilia Luttrell, Lidia Cabral and Andrew Lawson July 2007 -February 2008
Public environmental expenditure within multi-year budgetary frameworks
This study, undertaken with the OECD Environment Directorate, examines how multi-year budgetary processes work in practice in both high income OECD countries ( Australia and the Netherlands) and in aid-receiving countries (Armenia, South Africa and Uganda). A main objective of the study is to identify the opportunities for, and limits to, financing environmental management through general budget support.
Neil Bird, Geoff Handley and Edward Hedger November 2007 – March 2008