2018
DOI: 10.1080/14693062.2018.1450724
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Financing loss and damage: reviewing options under the Warsaw International Mechanism

Abstract: After decades of pressure from vulnerable developing countries, the Warsaw International Mechanism on Loss and Damage (the WIM) was established at the nineteenth Conference of the Parties (COP 19) in 2013 to address costly damages from climate change. However, little progress has been made towards establishing a mechanism to fund loss and damage. The WIM's Executive Committee issued its first two-year workplan the following year at COP 20 which offered, among other things, a range of approaches to financing l… Show more

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Cited by 41 publications
(30 citation statements)
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“…The Copenhagen and Cancun texts as well as the Paris Agreement promise "predictable" funds, which is essential for developing countries to establish their own budgets and to plan for adaptation responsibly, but predictability did not increase in this period. Some quite developed proposals were put forward to levy international air passengers a small flat fee or to finally tax bunker fuels used in international shipping, instituting a tiny international transaction tax, or a tax on carbon, or even a tax on arms trade (see Gewirtzman et al 2018; Richards and Boom 2014). However, none of these proposals were advanced and climate finance remained voluntary, depending most apparently on political expediency in the wealthy countries (Khan 2015).…”
Section: Provision Of Adaptation Financementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Copenhagen and Cancun texts as well as the Paris Agreement promise "predictable" funds, which is essential for developing countries to establish their own budgets and to plan for adaptation responsibly, but predictability did not increase in this period. Some quite developed proposals were put forward to levy international air passengers a small flat fee or to finally tax bunker fuels used in international shipping, instituting a tiny international transaction tax, or a tax on carbon, or even a tax on arms trade (see Gewirtzman et al 2018; Richards and Boom 2014). However, none of these proposals were advanced and climate finance remained voluntary, depending most apparently on political expediency in the wealthy countries (Khan 2015).…”
Section: Provision Of Adaptation Financementioning
confidence: 99%
“…All of this suggests that the current approach to L&D in the climate change governance architecture remains ambiguous ( Calliari, 2016a , Vanhala and Hestbaek, 2016 ) and concerns about the financial implications of addressing L&D persist, given the slow nature of progress on this topic and the focus on market-based and private sector instruments within WIM discussions ( WIM Excom, 2016 ). As a result, fostering action and support for L&D remains challenging: it is hard to agree on what the scope of L&D programmes should be, and how and by whom they should be financed ( Gewirtzman et al, 2018 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The same applies for relocation programs for communities displaced by the most severe impacts of climate change (McNamara, Bronen, Fernando, & Klepp, 2018). The risk management approach puts great faith in markets and financial tools, such as “catastrophe bonds” or insurance schemes (see Gewirtzman et al, 2018 for an overview), as well as in better warning and information systems (Roberts & Pelling, 2018; Warner et al, 2012). But in spite of the differences (normative, epistemological, institutional), these approaches share a similar modernist horizon.…”
Section: A “Digital Gap” In Landd Debates?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Insurances are a key mechanism through which the implementation and funding of L&D has been envisioned (Gewirtzman et al, 2018; Mace & Verheyen, 2016; O'Hare, White, & Connelly, 2016), particularly within the risk management framing (see Section 2). The approaches the WIM Executive Committee has proposed (for a review, see Gewirtzman et al, 2018) boil down to insurance schemes subsidized with voluntary contributions, such as catastrophe risk insurance, contingency finance, climate‐themed bonds, and catastrophe bonds. Such instruments are becoming increasingly popular in the whole field of disaster risk financing, and they have been heralded as the most promising solutions to the impasse of climate finance.…”
Section: Seeds Of Digitalized Landd?mentioning
confidence: 99%
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