- $20 bln Bali deal seen as local weather finance win
- Egypt says it has almost $10 bln in backing for initiatives
- Monetary system reform, higher mission planning seen key
Finance
Analysis: Drops of climate finance start to fill an ocean of need
SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt, Nov 22 (Reuters) – The most important deal thus far to forge the type of private-public sector low-carbon collaboration sought at U.N. local weather talks guarantees $20 billion to close down Indonesian coal-fired energy vegetation – and it is a drop within the ocean.
Estimates of how a lot exterior funding rising nations have to adapt to the ravages of local weather change are round $1 trillion a yr by 2030, one report launched in the course of the COP27 convention that ended on the weekend discovered.
A lot of the offers sealed on the sidelines had been comparatively small, although the Egyptian hosts, who retain oversight of the U.N. course of till COP28 within the United Arab Emirates subsequent yr, hope to have laid the foundations for extra.
“While you see the bulletins, it by no means feels important sufficient. And just about as quickly because the bulletins are made, there’s that feeling that … it is a drop within the ocean of what is required,” mentioned Rob Doepel, UK and Eire Managing Associate for Sustainability at consultants EY.
The Indonesian deal, introduced at G20 talks in Indonesia that overlapped with COP27, brings collectively private and non-private cash and is greater than double the $8.5 billion pledged for the same settlement with South Africa at local weather talks in 2021.
Each are badged as a Simply Vitality Transition Partnership (JET-P) – one of many many forms of financing which were engineered by these attempting to bridge the big local weather financing hole.
Getting the second JET-P finished throughout COP27 was seen to have injected vitality into the U.N. negotiations on serving to growing international locations finance their shift to low-carbon vitality.
At Sharm el-Sheikh, what many local weather campaigners noticed as an unambitious closing deal was redeemed by settlement on a “loss and injury” fund to assist growing international locations. It tempered the bitterness brought on by the wealthy world’s failure to fulfill a pledge to supply $100 billion a yr in local weather finance to rising markets.
In 2020 it paid solely round $83 billion, the Organisation for Financial Co-operation and Improvement’s most up-to-date estimate discovered.
The hope of the rich nations is that leveraging non-public sector cash will in the end show to be sufficient.
Governments are significantly eager for personal buyers to contribute to what they name “blended finance”, whereby states or growth companies type partnerships with the non-public sector to ship initiatives corresponding to solar energy or serving to farmers fighting drought to modify to much less water-intensive crops.
To this point, the largest cheques are nonetheless being written by governments.
“We have to get higher coordination between private and non-private transferring on the identical time,” EY’s Doepel mentioned.
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Creating international locations eager to safe non-public sector funding may but discover a solution in one other financing mannequin Egypt unveiled, which is supposed to construct on the JET-Ps.
Its plan, dubbed the Nexus of Water-Meals-Vitality, along with a second platform for transport and atmosphere initiatives, has up to now secured almost $10 billion value of pledges for local weather finance masking 9 initiatives.
A worldwide workforce of high-level local weather champions, designated by the United Nations to steer change, is attempting to contain funding banks and different non-public sector buyers, in addition to governments and support our bodies in additional than 100 initiatives throughout 4 continents.
“Instantly after the tip of this month, we’ll be pushing into realising these programmes,” Egypt’s local weather champion Mahmoud Mohieldin mentioned.
Whereas Egypt is in search of to steer and others corresponding to Mexico have laid out a transparent plan detailing how they might transfer to a low-emission economic system, most have but to take action, making it laborious for buyers to evaluate the dangers and alternatives.
“If a rustic has a transition plan, then … the non-public sector will know what it may finance,” mentioned Jon Williams, International Banking & Capital Markets ESG Chief and chair of the UK Sustainability & Local weather Change apply at consultants PwC.
Additional confidence may additionally come from the daring reforms many on the COP27 are urgent for to shake up the event banks and take away bottlenecks within the system that delay the discharge of funds.
Regardless of the relative lack of massive bulletins, smaller offers had been offered at COP27 ranged from car-makers promising to finish gasoline-powered autos to clothes retailers saying they may purchase extra local weather pleasant fibres.
Others targeted on eradicating coverage or market hurdles to funding.
Japan, Germany and the USA had been amongst international locations to say they might work collectively to make clear steps wanted to decarbonise high-emitting sectors corresponding to metal, energy and transport.
Mindy Lubber, chief govt of sustainability non-profit Ceres, mentioned these type of offers had been in their very own method as necessary because the headline-grabbing “grand commitments”.
“It’s concerning the plumbing, it’s concerning the particulars of transferring trillions of {dollars} into cleaner cement, into cleaner metal, and we noticed commitments on all of these fronts. So, collectively, they’re big.”
($1 = 4,984.2500 Colombian pesos)
Reporting by Simon Jessop and Aidan Lewis; Extra reporting by Virginia Furness; Enhancing by Katy Daigle and Barbara Lewis
Our Requirements: The Thomson Reuters Belief Rules.
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Finance
US SEC obtained record financial remedies in fiscal 2024, agency says
NEW YORK (Reuters) -The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission obtained $8.2 billion in financial remedies, the highest amount in its history, in fiscal 2024, the agency said in a statement on Friday.
The SEC filed 583 enforcement actions in the year that ended in September, down 26% from a year earlier, it said in a statement.
The $8.2 billion in financial remedies included $6.1 billion in disgorgement and prejudgment interest, a record, and $2.1 billion in civil penalties, the second-highest amount on record, according to the SEC’s statement.
Much of the total financial remedies came from a single action: a $4.5 billion settlement with the now-bankrupt crypto firm Terraform Labs, following a unanimous jury verdict against the firm and its founder Do Kwon. The SEC is expected to collect little of that settlement amount because it agreed to be paid only after Terraform satisfies crypto loss claims as part of its bankruptcy wind-down.
The SEC also obtained orders barring 124 individuals from serving as officers and directors of public companies, the second-highest number of such prohibitions in a decade. Holding individuals accountable for misconduct has been a priority of the agency under Chair Gary Gensler, who is stepping down in January.
“The Division of Enforcement is a steadfast cop on the beat, following the facts and the law wherever they lead to hold wrongdoers accountable,” Gensler said in a statement about the agency’s 2024 enforcement results.
(Reporting by Chris Prentice; Editing by Leslie Adler and Jonathan Oatis)
Finance
Cop29: $250bn climate finance offer from rich world an insult, critics say
Developing countries have reacted angrily to an offer of $250bn in finance from the rich world – considerably less than they are demanding – to help them tackle the climate crisis.
The offer was contained in the draft text of an agreement published on Friday afternoon at the Cop29 climate summit in Azerbaijan, where talks are likely to carry on past a 6pm deadline.
Juan Carlos Monterrey Gómez, Panama’s climate envoy, told the Guardian: “This is definitely not enough. What we need is at least $5tn a year, but what we have asked for is just $1.3tn. That is 1% of global GDP. That should not be too much when you’re talking about saving the planet we all live on.”
He said $250bn divided among all the developing countries in need amounted to very little. “It comes to nothing when you split it. We have bills in the billions to pay after droughts and flooding. What the heck will $250bn do? It won’t put us on a path to 1.5C. More like 3C.”
According to the new text of a deal, developing countries would receive a total of at least $1.3tn a year in climate finance by 2035, which is in line with the demands most submitted before this two-week conference. That would be made up of the $250bn from developed countries, plus other sources of finance including private investment.
Poor nations wanted much more of the headline finance to come directly from rich countries, preferably in the form of grants rather than loans.
Civil society groups criticised the offer, variously describing it as “a joke”, “an embarrassment”, “an insult”, and the global north “playing poker with people’s lives”.
Mohamed Adow, a co-founder of Power Shift Africa, a thinktank, said: “Our expectations were low, but this is a slap in the face. No developing country will fall for this. It’s not clear what kind of trick the presidency is trying to pull. They’ve already disappointed everyone, but they have now angered and offended the developing world.”
The $250bn figure is significantly lower than the $300bn-a-year offer that some developed countries were mulling at the talks, to the Guardian’s knowledge.
The offer from developed countries, funded from their national budgets and overseas aid, is supposed to form the inner core of a “layered” finance settlement, accompanied by a middle layer of new forms of finance such as new taxes on fossil fuels and high-carbon activities, carbon trading and “innovative” forms of finance; and an outermost layer of investment from the private sector, into projects such as solar and windfarms.
These layers would add up to $1.3tn a year, which is the amount that economists have calculated is needed in external finance for developing countries to tackle the climate crisis. Many activists have demanded more: figures of $5tn or $7tn a year have been put forward by some groups, based on the historical responsibilities of developed countries for causing the climate crisis.
This latest text is the second from an increasingly embattled Cop presidency. Azerbaijan was widely criticised for its first draft on Thursday.
There will now be further negotiations among countries and possibly a new or several new iterations of this draft text.
Avinash Persaud, a former adviser to the Barbados prime minister, Mia Mottley, and now an adviser to the president of the Inter-American Bank, said: “There is no deal to come out of Baku that will not leave a bad taste in everyone’s mouth, but we are within sight of a landing zone for the first time all year.”
Finance
US Treasury Selects BNY as Financial Agent for Direct Express Program | PYMNTS.com
The Bank of New York Mellon (BNY) will serve as the financial agent for the Direct Express program, which provides 3.4 million Americans with a prepaid debit card to receive monthly federal benefits.
The U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Bureau of the Fiscal Service said in a Thursday (Nov. 21) press release that it selected BNY for this role after evaluating proposals from multiple financial institutions and seeing the bank’s offering of features and customer service options.
The new agreement will begin Jan. 3 and will last five years, according to the release.
“Since 2008, the Direct Express program has paid federal beneficiaries seamlessly, inclusively and securely, while sparing taxpayers and customers the costs and risk associated with cashing paper checks,” Fiscal Service Commissioner Tim Gribben said in the release. “This new agreement will further our goals of delivering a modern customer experience and strengthening Treasury’s commitment to paying the right person, in the right amount, at the right time.”
With this agreement, BNY will add to the cardholder experience features like online/digital funds access, bill pay, cardless ATM access, omnichannel chat and text customer service, online dispute filing and in-person authentication options, the bank said in a Thursday press release.
“Drawing on our leading platform capabilities, we look forward to advancing the program’s goal of providing high-quality financial services to individuals and communities throughout the U.S.,” Jennifer Barker, global head of treasury services and depositary receipts at BNY, said in the release.
Seventy-seven percent of the recipients of disbursements opt for instant payments when given the option, according to the PYMNTS Intelligence and Ingo Payments collaboration, “Measuring Consumers’ Growing Interest in Instant Payouts.”
That’s because consumers looking for disbursements — paychecks, government payments, insurance settlements, investment earnings — want their money quickly, the report found.
In October, the Treasury Department credited the Office of Payment Integrity, within the Bureau of the Fiscal Service, with enhancing its fraud prevention capabilities and expanding offerings to new and existing customers.
The department said its “technology and data-driven” approach allowed it to prevent and recover more than $4 billion in fraud and improper payments, up from $652 million in 2023.
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