Climate Change

Oral Answers to Questions — International Development – in the House of Commons at 11:30 am on 8 June 2011.

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Photo of Luciana Berger Luciana Berger Shadow Minister (Energy and Climate Change) 11:30, 8 June 2011

By what means he plans to assess value for money in his Department’s funding for climate change prevention in developing countries.

Photo of Alan Duncan Alan Duncan The Minister of State, Department for International Development

We rigorously assess costs against benefits in all our programmes. To measure the value for money of our climate programmes, we will look at metrics including the number of poor people protected from extreme weather events, the number of hectares of forest protected, and the number of people with access to energy.

Photo of Luciana Berger Luciana Berger Shadow Minister (Energy and Climate Change)

The Minister will be aware of the decision at the last climate change summit to establish a green climate fund, and that the UK has a representative on the transnational committee that is designing the fund. Will he update the House on the progress made to date by the transnational committee and on what concrete outcomes the UK Government hope to see by the next summit in Durban later this year?

Photo of Alan Duncan Alan Duncan The Minister of State, Department for International Development

The hon. Lady is absolutely right that the fund is not yet up and running. We are on the design committee for the fund and are playing our full part in it. We want to ensure that the fund delivers results for poor people in the best possible way.

Photo of Martin Horwood Martin Horwood Liberal Democrat, Cheltenham

The clearest message from the poorest countries at the world climate change talks in Cancun was that they face immediate impacts from climate change. Will the British Government commit to set an example to other countries by putting a high proportion of our climate finance into adaptation, as well as into climate change mitigation?

Photo of Alan Duncan Alan Duncan The Minister of State, Department for International Development

Climate change will hit the poor hardest and first. DFID will support poor people to protect their lives and possessions from the impacts of climate change, for example by raising homes on to plinths to protect poor people from flooding in Bangladesh, supporting drought-resistant crops in Malawi, and preventing coastal erosion in Vietnam. We aim to spend 50% of our climate change finance on adaptation. That will be kept under full review.

Photo of Mark Lazarowicz Mark Lazarowicz Shadow Minister (International Development)

The Minister will know that if we are to meet the commitments we made at the Copenhagen climate change conference, the UK will have to allocate by next year a further £1 billion in fast-start finance to help developing countries tackle climate change. Will he confirm that the Government still intend to allocate that funding by next year?

Photo of Alan Duncan Alan Duncan The Minister of State, Department for International Development

The Government are keeping their commitment to spend 0.7% of gross national income on official development assistance from 2013. Climate finance is being met out of that rising ODA budget.