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GEF Council meeting
Context:
The 67th Global Environment Facility (GEF) Council Meeting is set to convene from June 17 to June 21, 2024, in Washington, D.C., USA.
More on News:
- In a four-day meeting, the GEF will consider projects that protect biodiversity, counter climate change and pollution, and support land and ocean health.
- The 67th meeting of the Global Environment Facility Council gathered at the mid-point of its current replenishment (GEF-8).
- GEF-8 funding cycle running from July 2022 to June 2026.
- In June 2022, 29 donor governments pledged $5.33 billion to GEF in support of international efforts to meet nature and climate targets.
More on the 67th GEF Council meeting:
- An amount of $736.4 million will be allocated towards environmental protection at the Global Environment Facility (GEF) council meeting.
- The Council will consider funding for projects and programs focused on land health, chemicals, and sustainable cities, including:
- USD 495.6 million for 25 projects and programs through the GEF Trust Fund.
- USD 37.8 million for the Global Biodiversity Framework Fund (GBFF’s) first three projects in Brazil (two) and Mexico (one).
- USD 203 million for 14 climate adaptation initiatives through the Least Developed Countries Fund (LDCF)—the largest work program in its history.
- The Council will consider funding for projects and programs focused on land health, chemicals, and sustainable cities, including:
- The proposed GEF Trust Fund financing package includes 25 initiatives and programs for:
- land restoration through the Great Green Wall Initiative, along with the LDCF;
- industrial chemicals in Brazil and Bolivia;
- sustainable cities globally; and
- a “coral bond” to be issued by the World Bank that builds on the “rhino bond” issued in 2022.
- Supporting the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants and the Minamata Convention on Mercury.
- The GBFF will fund:
- Mex30x30, a project to conserve Mexican biodiversity through communities and their protected areas;
- the Caatinga Protected Areas Program in Brazil; and
- Biodiversity Conservation in Indigenous Lands in Brazil
- The LDCF will support 12 national projects and two multi-country programs addressing urgent climate change adaptation priorities in 17 least-developed countries.
- The LDCF work program will support projects related to climate resilience and adaptation in Angola, Cambodia, Chad, the Comoros, the Gambia, Guinea, Lao PDR, Sao Tome and Principe, Sierra Leone, Somalia, and Tanzania.
- Many of these projects also contribute to global biodiversity targets set under the Convention on Biological Diversity’s Biodiversity Plan.
- These include the work on 28 million hectares of land and marine areas in the Sahel region and Yemen. Improved management and conservation of wetlands in Yemen’s Socotra archipelago and Aden wetlands.
- Initiative to conserve terrestrial and marine biodiversity in vulnerable sites in Somalia.