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Synopsis
Local actors, including local governments, communities, and Indigenous Peoples, play crucial roles in achieving global climate goals. However, they receive limited climate finance, exacerbating exclusion and inequality. ľ¹ÏÓ°Ôº's Locally Led Climate Action (LLCA) approach aims to strengthen the capacity of local actors; deliver inclusive climate investments through participatory and local decision-making with an emphasis on women, youth and other socially disadvantaged groups; and bolster national and local institutional capacity for effective climate action.
Fatou Kiridi Bangoura, Social Specialist, Agence Nationale de Financement des Collectivit¨¦s (ANAFIC):
¡°With the World Bank and the [Agence Fran?aise de D¨¦veloppement (AFD)], we helped create a new way to think about local development, where local communities make their own diagnoses of their climate situation. As a result, projects will be scientific and participatory, incorporate ¡®climate memory¡¯ ¡ª e.g., to tell us about changes in forest resources over time. All of this goes to concrete financing: it¡¯²õ not just on paper, it is taken directly into the communities."
Challenge
Achieving global climate goals¡ªand ensuring a livable future¡ªrelies on the actions of local actors, including local governments, communities, and Indigenous Peoples. Despite being on the frontline of climate impacts and their potential to bring leadership and expertise to mitigation and adaptation processes, local actors continue to receive limited resources for climate action. As of 2023, of global climate finance is allocated for building local resilience. Indigenous Peoples receive only of funding for environmental protection.
This exacerbates dynamics of exclusion and inequality and perpetuates the risk of maladaptive options that increase communities¡¯ exposure to hazards (e.g., through increased flood risk or water scarcity), or create new risks or harms for vulnerable groups (e.g., new forms of pollution, displacement, or economic loss).
Recent years have seen a growing emphasis on locally led efforts for climate action, which has become a key priority for many governments and donors, as well as for communities living on the frontline of climate change. At the highest level, the interest in adaptation and local leadership on climate culminated in the established by the Global Commission on Adaptation in 2021. Though these , implementation has been .
Approach
Over the last few years, the World Bank has been stepping up efforts to integrate the LLA principles into its operations. The project, launched in 2021, was the first World Bank national-scale model of Devolved Climate Finance to support the government of Kenya to translate its ambitious climate agenda into scaled-up action on the ground. To scale up similar efforts, the World Bank developed , an operational approach for designing locally led efforts for climate adaptation and mitigation at a national scale and to address the local needs of the most vulnerable.
LLCA emphasizes country partnerships and national-scale programs that increase the share of finance managed by local actors; devolve responsibility for climate planning to the lowest appropriate level; strengthen inclusive and participatory decision-making; integrate local knowledge with climate data; and build the capacity, accountability, and transparency of institutions for climate action. Through targeted interventions countries will address the fundamental challenges of bottom-up approaches (insufficient capacities, coordination, and resources across all sectors and scales) while also leveraging their advantages (promoting local and gender leadership, greater sustainability of investments, increased local ownership) for and . LLCA offers the innovative climate change programming that the World Bank needs to achieve its agenda on adaptation, mitigation, and resilience and to implement its ambitious .