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New World Bank Loss and Damage fund names first director

The selection of Diong marks a major milestone in the operationalization of the new World Bank-administered fund, whose creation in 2022 was a breakthrough for developing country negotiators at United Nations climate talks, overcoming years of resistance from wealthy nations.

Valerie Volcovici (Reuters)
Washington
Sun, September 22, 2024 Published on Sep. 21, 2024 Published on 2024-09-21T22:43:35+07:00

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New World Bank Loss and Damage fund names first director The World Bank Group headquarters building in Washington, DC, on April 9, 2023. (AFP/Daniel Slim)

T

he board of The Fund for responding to Loss and Damage to help countries ravaged by climate-driven disasters named Senegalese finance specialist Ibrahima Cheikh Diong as its first director, the World Bank announced on Saturday.

The selection of Diong, a dual United States citizen, marks a major milestone in the operationalization of the new World Bank-administered fund, whose creation in 2022 was a breakthrough for developing country negotiators at United Nations climate talks, overcoming years of resistance from wealthy nations.

"The Fund for responding to Loss and Damage will make a significant difference to those disproportionately affected, and I take this responsibility with humility and a full commitment to serve," said Diong in a statement.

Now with the Philippines recently selected as the home of the fund and Diong appointed as director, the fund can begin turning the US$800 million pledged to it at last year's COP28 climate summit in Dubai into "tangible funding ready for disbursement," according to the presidency of the next round of climate talks starting in November in Baku, Azerbaijan, known as COP29.

COP29's president will call on countries to contribute more money.

Loss and damage had long been a contentious issue in the U.N. climate talks, with less-developed countries calling for a new fund that specifically assists countries for the catastrophic losses they've incurred due to rising seas and turbo-charged storms.

Wealthier nations were concerned this could become a form of "compensation" for the impact of their share of greenhouse gas emissions.

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