The World Bank NDC Support Facility: Impacts and Lessons Learned Supporting NDC Implementation

Source
The World Bank
Climate Objective
Cross-cutting
Planning and Implementation Activity
Developing Strategies and Plans
Financing Implementation
Reviewing and Enhancing Ambition
Long-Term Strategies
Nationally Determined Contributions
Sectors and Themes
Energy
Transport
Agriculture
Cities
Rural Development
Water
Language
English
Region
East Asia and Pacific
Latin America and the Caribbean
Sub-Saharan Africa
Country Grouping
Least Developed Countries (LDCs)
Case Summary

Climate change and its impacts are accelerating, making it more urgent than ever to transition to low-carbon and resilient economies, as envisioned in the Paris Agreement. Achieving this will require meeting the commitments made by countries in their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs),significantly increasing ambition as governments update their NDCs in 2020/2021 and beyond.

One of the many ways in which the World Bank Group (WBG) is supporting climate action in its client countries is through the NDC Support Facility (NDC-SF). Launched in 2016, the NDC-SF works with developing countries that are members of the NDC Partnership, a global coalition of countries and institutions working to reduce emissions and build resilience by channeling financial and technical resources and promoting cross-sectoral collaboration and the engagement of diverse stakeholders.

This paper provides an overview of the NDC-SF’s work over the past three years, identifies key impacts and lessons learned, and describes its way forward.

Further Information

Case study author(s)

This paper was prepared by Shibani Pandey under the guidance of Marius Kaiser, Ana Bucher and Tom Witt in the Climate Change Group’s Advisory and Operations (SCCAO) team, in coordination and with inputs from other members of the NDC Support Facility team, including Stefan Wolf on cover design, layout and graphics. Marion Davis helped edit the paper. Furthermore, the NDC Support Facility team is grateful for the comments from Genevieve Connors and Luis Tineo.

Year Published
2021