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GeneralInternational

Industries fuelling climate crisis are draining public funds in the Global South – ActionAid report reveals

Starrfm.com.gh By Starrfm.com.gh Published September 19, 2024
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A new ActionAid report reveals that climate-wrecking fossil fuel and industrial agriculture sectors are draining climate-hit countries of over US$600 billion in public subsidies every year. ActionAid’s latest report on the corporate capture of public finance finds that climate-destructive sectors benefit from subsidies amounting to an average of US$677 billion in the Global South annually—money that could cover schooling for all sub-Saharan African children 3.5 times over.

Climate finance grants from the Global North for climate-hit countries remain grossly insufficient to support climate action and necessary transitions. These grants amount to just 1/20th of the Global South public finance going to fossil fuels and industrial agriculture.

As a result, Global South renewable energy is receiving 40 times less public finance than the fossil fuel sector.

While trillions of dollars in climate finance from the Global North to the Global South are necessary to address the climate and development crises adequately, Global South governments must allocate their limited resources in ways that truly serve their peoples’ needs through climate solutions for food and energy.

In its report, ActionAid finds that across Global South countries, the fossil fuel sector has been receiving an average of US$438.6 billion a year in publicly financed subsidies, between 2016 (when the Paris Agreement was signed) and 2023. The industrial agriculture sector has benefited from publicly financed subsidies worth a staggering US$238 billion a year on average, between 2016 and 2021 (the last year of available data).

“How the Finance Flows: Corporate Capture of Public Finance Fuelling the Climate Crisis in the Global South” examines the use of public funds in the Global South and finds that the same industries causing the climate crisis and harming communities are also successfully squeezing Global South governments for the lion’s share of public finance. Multinationals benefiting from these subsidies include fossil fuel corporation Shell and agribusiness giant Bayer (the parent company of Monsanto).”

Meanwhile, the failure of Global North countries to provide adequate climate finance for climate transitions means that Global South countries are locked into harmful development pathways that destroy ecosystems, grab land, and compound the injustice of climate change.

These numbers illustrate a deeply worrying pattern about the state of the planet’s finance flows and how corporate capture of public finance is actively undermining the needs of climate-vulnerable countries, as well as global climate commitments.

Arthur Larok, Secretary General of ActionAid International, says: “This report exposes wealthy corporations’ parasitic behaviour. They are draining the life out of the Global South by siphoning public funds and fueling the climate crisis.”

“Sadly, the promises of climate finance by the Global North are as hollow as the empty rhetoric they have been uttering for decades. It is time for this circus to end; we need genuine commitments to ending the climate crisis.”

Teresa Anderson, Global Lead on Climate Justice at ActionAid International and one of the report’s authors, says, “It seems that money is the root of all climate upheaval. Climate-destructive industries are bleeding the Global South of the public funds they should be using to deal with the climate crisis.”

“The lack of public and climate finance for solutions means that in climate-vulnerable countries, renewable energy is receiving 40 times less public finance than the fossil fuel sector. It’s time for the Global South to stand up to the industries that are draining their finances and wrecking the climate. We need to fix the finance flows that are fueling the climate crisis.”

The report also debunks the false narrative that fossil fuel and industrial agriculture expansion in the Global South is necessary to address food insecurity and energy poverty and to provide livelihoods and public revenue in the Global South.

Jonah Gbembre, an activist from Iriwekan in Nigeria’s Delta State, where Shell’s fossil fuel extraction has had devastating local impacts, adds, “Communities in the Niger Delta have witnessed first-hand the irreparable damage caused by oil drilling. Rivers that support livelihoods are polluted. People are struggling to get drinking and irrigation water, and fishing is no longer possible as all the fish have died. The flaring has caused health problems for our children. We have lost our way of life, and there is no end in sight to our suffering.

“We can’t continue to live like this. Our cry is that our taxes should not be supporting oil companies like Shell that extract our resources and destroy our communities and way of life. Instead, the government should be financing alternative forms of energy such as solar and wind that will not harm us.”

The report calls for:

  • Public finance to be redirected to support just transitions from climate-destructive fossil fuels and industrial agriculture, towards people-led climate solutions that safeguard people’s rights to food, energy, and livelihoods.
  • Scaling up of decentralized renewable energy systems to provide energy access, and gender-responsive agricultural extension services that offer training in agroecology and adaptation.
  • Wealthy countries to provide trillions of dollars in grant-based climate finance each year to Global South countries on the front lines of the climate crisis, including by agreeing to an ambitious new climate finance goal at COP29 that reflects this scale.
  • Regulation of the banking and finance sectors to end destructive financing, with regulations that set minimum standards for human rights, social and environmental frameworks, and transformation of the international financial institutions that are pushing climate-vulnerable countries into spiralling debt.
  • Source: Ghana/Starrfm.com.gh/Joshua Kodjo Mensah

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