The Office of Climate Change (OCC), which falls under the purview of the Ministry of the Presidency, yesterday, opened a three-day workshop at the Herdmanston Lodge, which focuses on building the capacity of community leaders and private and public sector stakeholders to apply and access funding from the Green Climate Fund (GCF) for projects which promote low emission and climate resilience development, according to a government release.
The Green Climate Fund was set up in 2010 at the 16th Conference of Parties in Cancun, Mexico and is now the world’s largest dedicated climate fund, which is intended to be the centerpiece of the global efforts to mobilise $100 billion per year in climate finance by 2020. As of March 2017, the GCF has raised the equivalent of US $10.3 billion in pledges. It has as its main goal, support to developing countries in achieving a paradigm shift towards a low emission and climate resilient development pathway by funding transformative projects and programmes on adaptation and mitigation to climate change.
According to the Ministry of the Presidency, Head of the OCC, Ms. Janelle Christian, in her remarks, said that for Guyana, the Ministry of the Presidency has been appointed to act as the GCF’s National Designated Authority (NDA). The NDA plays a crucial role in facilitating, supporting and creating an enabling environment for GCF processes within the country.
She also noted that various barriers currently hinder Guyana’s NDA at effectively undertaking its fund-related responsibilities, including low levels of awareness and understanding among NDA personnel of the GCF operational policies and their respective roles and responsibilities in relation to Guyana’s engagement with the GCF.
“It is against this background that the Government of Guyana and the Caribbean Community Climate Change Centre (CCCCC) has received funding from the GCF and has commissioned to implement the project ‘GCF Readiness Preparation Support Project for the Enhancement of Guyana’s capacity to access and deliver international climate finance through targeted institutional strengthening’,” she said.
Ms. Christian said that the GCF will specifically support countries to implement their programmes as articulated in the National Determined Contributions, the National Adaptation Plans, the Technology Needs Assessment and all National Strategies and Plans that would have been elaborated by those countries for addressing their climate resilience and addressing the adaptation and mitigation priorities.
The workshop includes participants from the National Toshaos Council (NTC), the Guyana Forestry Commission, the Guyanese Organisation of Indigenous People’s, the Guyana Lands and Surveys Commission, the Project Management Office, the Private Sector Commission (PSC), the Guyana Geology and Mines Commission, among other agencies and organisations.
Participants have welcomed the workshop, noting that as Guyana continues to forge ahead in pursuit of a ‘green’ economy, training sessions such as these would be helpful for citizens and organisations to make their own contributions, the MotP reported.