VoteClimate: Draft African Development Fund (Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative) (Amendment) Order 2023 Draft Af... - 3rd July 2023

Draft African Development Fund (Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative) (Amendment) Order 2023 Draft Af... - 3rd July 2023

Here are the climate-related sections of speeches by MPs during the Commons debate Draft African Development Fund (Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative) (Amendment) Order 2023 Draft Af....

Full text: https://hansard.parliament.uk/Commons/2023-07-03/debates/95f46e62-60f4-43be-84fc-6dbf96495a50/DraftAfricanDevelopmentFund(MultilateralDebtReliefInitiative)(Amendment)Order2023DraftAfricanDevelopmentBank(SixteenthReplenishmentOfTheAfricanDevelop

18:08 Preet Gill (Labour)

I am grateful to the Minister for outlining the African Development Fund orders. We will not oppose them. I welcome the support they show for tackling poverty and food insecurity, creating new jobs and opportunities to meet the demands of Africa’s young and fast-growing population, and tackling the climate crisis.

Since 2019, Africa has been hammered by the converging crises of the pandemic, the climate crisis, debt, inflation and conflict. An estimated 55 million people on the continent have been pushed into extreme poverty since the onset of the pandemic. In 2021, nearly half a billion people in total were living on less than $1.90 a day. In that context, it is essential that we do what we can to prevent the current crisis from derailing long-term development gains.

They are breaking their promises on international climate finance, hoping to leave a tab for the next Government to pick up.

The African Development Bank estimates that the continent needs $7 billion to $15 billion a year in adaptation finance to meet this accelerating challenge, yet ICF, international engagement and domestic commitments were conspicuous in their absence in Government announcements at the Paris summit. Can the Minister explain whether the Government remain committed to delivering the £11.6 billion in international climate finance that they promised in 2019? How and when will that be delivered? Will the Minister explain why the Prime Minister was absent from the summit while more than 100 world leaders were in attendance at a time when, by his own admission, there is growing anger at the international community’s failure to help the most vulnerable countries adapt to a climate crisis that they did not create?

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18:17 Andrew Mitchell (Conservative)

The hon. Lady referred to the letter written last week by my former colleague in the Foreign Office, Lord Goldsmith. Of course, I will not be drawn on any of that, except to say that those of us who know the Prime Minister well know that he is incredibly interested in the science and activity around climate change, and is very committed to that agenda. The hon. Lady asked about the Prime Minister’s attendance at the summit. It is true that he was not able to attend; he sent me instead, and I hope the Committee will accept that. I could only be a very poor reflection of him, but I did my best at the summit, and Britain was able to lead on the climate-resilient debt clauses, which will make such a difference to countries caught up in tragedy or crisis. Say disaster or covid struck the Government of Ghana, and that they really needed liquidity in order to help their people, and then had to pay off the capital and interest of loans. The climate-resilience debt clauses mean that they would get a two-year break to help them cope with the crisis. That is added on to the end of the loan. That is being done now by UK Export Finance, and it was the big British contribution to the summit; I think it will be powerful.

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