The World Bank Group's Country Climate and Development Reports (CCDRs) integrate climatechange and development. They help countries identify and prioritize the most impactful investment and reform actions that can reduce greenhouse gas emissions and boost adaptation and resilience, while delivering on broader development goals. As of October 2024, the World Bank Group has published CCDRs for 60 countries and economies. This note identifies five key channels through which CCDRs have had an impact in countries. The diversity of operationalization modalities is driven by each country's unique needs and political context, and many countries combine multiple modalities. This tailored approach is crucial for an effective implementation of CCDR recommendations, especially in challenging contexts.
Authors
Related Organizations
- Disclosure Date
- 2024/11/01
- Disclosure Status
- Disclosed
- Doc Name
- From Knowledge to Action - Lessons from Early Operationalization of Country Climate and Development Reports
- Pages
- 18
- Product Line
- Advisory Services & Analytics
- Published in
- United States of America
- Rel Proj ID
- 1W-Global Support To Ccdrs -- P507074
- Unit Owning
- Planet-CCG Finance&Economics (SCCFE)
- Version Type
- Final
- Volume No
- 1
Table of Contents
- Summary 4
- 1. Introduction 7
- 2. Options for operationalizing CCDRs 8
- 2.1. Direct influence on government policies and action 9
- 2.2. National or sector development plans 11
- 2.3. Dedicated cooperation platforms or development partner instruments 12
- 2.4. Country Engagement Framework (CPF) and World Bank, IFC, and MIGA operations 13
- 2.5. Innovation, knowledge, modeling tools, and analytical evidence 16
- 3. Factors of success and key takeaways 17
- 3.1. Strong existing engagements on climate and development and appropriate timing 17
- 3.2. Close links with government and other stakeholders during preparation and explicit connection with country development priorities and climate objectives 17
- 3.3. Strong post-CCDR engagement 18
- 3.4. Availability of climate finance, synergies with other programs, especially the IMF’s RST 18
- 3.5. Integrated and innovative analyses delivering a whole-of-economy diagnostic 18