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World Bank abandons climate lending goal under pressure from largest shareholder – Trump’s US

AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File

The World Bank Group says it will “retire” its previous goal ‌to devote 45 per cent of its annual lending resources to projects with climate co-benefits, but extend its longstanding Climate Change Action Plan.

The development lender, which had been under pressure from the Trump administration to abandon the climate lending target adopted during the Biden administration in 2023, said in a statement on Monday it would complete a shift to focusing on lending outcomes rather than input goals.

World Bank President Ajay Banga, who was initially charged with squeezing more climate lending resources from the bank’s balance sheet, has ‌shifted his focus ‌to “smart development,” which aims ⁠to boost job opportunities while still providing climate-related benefits such as drought-resistant agriculture or storm-resistant ​infrastructure and renewable energy where appropriate.

The World Bank said that at the request of its executive board, the lender’s Independent Evaluation Group would perform a review of the Climate Change Action Plan, which was first adopted in rolling five-year plans in 2016.

The bank’s previous target of devoting 35 per cent of lending resources to climate-related projects also was dropped, but bank officials have said that demand for projects with climate co-benefits ⁠remains strong from client countries.

Executive directors including France and 18 ‌other shareholding countries ​had signed a letter in October endorsing the bank’s continued work on climate change, but the largest shareholder, the United States, declined ​to sign, along with ‌executive directors representing Russia, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, while India and Japan abstained.

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent in 2025 ​ordered the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund to return to their core missions of development and financial stability, arguing they had strayed too far into climate, gender and other areas opposed by the Trump administration. In April, ​he ​said the bank’s “myopic” focus on climate financing targets had ​to go.

French development minister Eleonore Caroit last week issued an eleventh-hour ‌plea for the World Bank to keep the climate finance target intact.

“Our framework has served its purpose well, embedding smart development in all we do in response to client needs and priorities. We will therefore extend the CCAP,” the World Bank said.

The bank said its management would continue to track its climate scorecard indicators on net global greenhouse gas emissions and on beneficiaries with enhanced resilience ​to climate risks under the CCAP. It will make such reports for all projects, as well as quarterly and annually ​for its lending portfolio.

“We will explore and ⁠discuss ways to better structure our engagement on adaptation, nature and pollution,” the bank ​said. 

Source: AAP

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