Chopped by Benard Ogembo
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Kenya’s Climate Finance. More Resources Needed to Build Resilience.

SDG 13 SDG 15 SDG 17

Kenya is highly vulnerable to the impacts of climate change and is already feeling the effects with a notable increase in climate-related disasters, such as droughts and floods.

These events are estimated to create an economic liability of 2-2.8 percent of its gross domestic product every year.

A report from the National Treasury of Kenya and Climate Policy Initiative (CPI) and supported by International Climate Initiative (IKI) shows that climate-related investment in Kenya is disproportionally targeting certain sectors and activities that will only partially address climate issues.

Scholars’ suggest that financing the implementation of Kenya’s climate ambitions to build resilience against the impacts of climate change requires significant public and private finance mobilised both domestically and internationally at scale.

The analysis shows that significant efforts will be needed to align all sectors relevant to achieving Kenya’s Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) to make the country climate-resilient and reduce its greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 32 percent by 2030 relative to the business-as-usual scenario.
Almost 80 percent of climate finance in Kenya has so far been directed to the implementation of climate mitigation measures which is in stark contrast to the need given that Kenya has a focus on financing the adaptation to the impacts of climate change.

Only 11.7 percent of climate finance in Kenya was directed to adaptation, while a further 8.5 percent of investment had relevance for both adaptation and mitigation outcomes. The largest financing gap for meeting Kenya’s climate targets is in the water and blue economy sector.

There is also an urgent need to increase finance for the forestry and disaster-risk management sectors, as both will build Kenya’s resilience against drought and flooding.

Implementation of incentives and subsidies to create a more attractive enabling environment for private investment in the transport, forestry, water, land use, and waste sectors are therefore of critical importance.

According to Peter Odhengo, Climate Finance Expert, “A lot is going on, it’s not enough and we need awareness. People need to commit and also to ensure that those who destroy or pollute the environment must be held accountable and have to pay for those externality costs.”

The Kenyan government disbursed KES 76 billion (USD 752.4 million) in climate-related development expenditures in the fiscal year 2017/18, with 55 percent being external resources from international development partners channeled into the national budget.

Less than 60 percent of the tracked finance came from international public and private sources. Implementing Kenya’s climate policy requires that international partners will sustain at least 87 percent of the costs by 2030, a level not met in 2018.

Development partners in particular provided less than one third of all finance tracked.

There is an urgent need to increase finance for adapting to the impacts of climate change in Kenya, particularly in the water, disaster risk management, and forestry sectors.

Climate finance should be used more effectively to increase its impact. This will require improved coordination and reporting between the country actors at all levels.

Chopped by

Benard Ogembo

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