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  • Monday, 04 December 2023

The Minister of International Cooperation, H.E. Dr. Rania A. Al-Mashat, Reviews the Success Factors of the NWFE Program as a Practical Model for National Platforms Accelerating Climate Action during a Discussion Session within the Activities of COP28, with the Participation of the IRENA, EBRD and AIIB Presidents

● Al-Mashat: The country’s commitment to supporting climate action, clarity and credibility are essential factors in the success of the NWFE program.

● Throughout the year 2023, we implemented intensive efforts with all development partners and national entities to begin implementing the pledges of the NWFE program and mobilize equitable financing for the water, food, and energy pillars.

● Launching the first follow-up progress report for the NWFE program, confirming commitment to the rules of governance and transparency to monitor the progress achieved over the course of a year of joint work.

● Heads of international financial institutions applaud the program and consider it a model of what national platforms stimulating climate action should be.

The Minister of International Cooperation, H.E. Dr. Rania A. Al-Mashat, participated in a high-level discussion session on laying the foundations for expanding the scope of climate action and accelerating its pace, which was organized in partnership between the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), and the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA), and was held in The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change pavilion during COP28 in the United Arab Emirates.

Participating in the discussion session alongside Al-Mashat were Fatih Birol, Head of IEA, Odile Renaud-Basso, President of the EBRD, Jin Liqun, President of theAIIB, Mohamed Jamil Al Ramahi, CEO of the UAE company Masdar, and Kaya Shukova, Minister of Environment and Urban Planning of North Macedonia, and the session was moderated by Josué Tanaka, Professor at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics.

The session discussed the role of country platform methodologies in accelerating the pace of climate action, reducing carbon emissions, and enhancing adaptation and resilience to climate change, as well as the role of multilateral development banks and other relevant parties in supporting this through measures, policies, investments, financing, and capacity building.

In her speech, Al-Mashat reviewed the NWFE program as a model for national platforms aiming to accelerate the pace of climate action, and touched on the efforts that have been made over the course of a year since the launch of the program during Egypt’s presidency of COP27 in Sharm El-Sheikh, in coordination with the relevant authorities, development partners, multilateral development banks, and international coalitions in the field of climate, in order to transform pledges into implementation, making available concessional development financing, technical support, debt swaps, and mixed financing stimulating the private sector, to implement program projects.

Al-Mashat indicated that the country platforms were among the recommendations of the G20 for years to provide development financing and meet the great demand that no one denies at the level of climate financing to implement the energy transition in different countries, but they were not put into practice, explaining that Egypt took It is responsible for launching a national platform based on state ownership and leadership of development efforts.

H.E. added that the Ministry of International Cooperation, during Egypt’s presidency of COP27, launched the Sharm El-Sheikh Guidebook for Just Financing which worked, through close cooperation between more than 100 development partners and relevant parties, to develop a clear definition of fair finance and set 12 principles in a way that enhances the role of these country platforms in mobilizing the development financing required for climate action.

H.E. further stressed that the pillars and methodologies of the NWFE program apply the principles of the Sharm El-Sheikh Guidebook for Just Financing, which enhances its ability to mobilize funds and investments from development partners and the private sector, noting that the program includes 3 interconnected pillars in the fields of water, food, and energy. In addition to the NWFE+ program in the sustainable transport pillar.

Al-Mashat pointed out that the results achieved by the NWFE program over the course of a year, and the close cooperation between the government as a policy and initiative maker, multilateral and bilateral development partners, and international institutions, would not have happened had it not been for the program being characterized by three main factors; commitment, clarity, and credibility, by The Egyptian state was and remains determined to move forward to enhance climate action and implement the Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) and Egypt’s Climate Change Strategy 2050.

Al-Mashat also stated that in an event that served as a prelude to COP28 in Egypt last November, the Ministry of International Cooperation launched the first follow-up progress report for the NWFE program, in order to reinforce the importance of governance and transparency, which included a presentation of all aspects of work and progress within the program over the course of a year in its various pillars. This reflected the success of the efforts made to begin implementing pledges with multilateral and bilateral development partners.

This event also witnessed the issuance of a joint final statement made in coordination with 20 development partners, international financing institutions and international coalitions in the field of climate action, which includes applause from these institutions for the intensive efforts that The Government of Egypt carried out to fulfill its pledges in the climate agenda, especially updating the nationally determined contributions, which contributed to implementing the goals of the national platform of the NWFE program.

Al-Mashat thanked Renaud Basso, President of EBRD, the main development partner in the energy pillar, and other development partners represented by the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), the main development partner in the food pillar, the African Development Bank (AfDB), the main development partner in the water pillar, the European Investment Bank (EIB) in the sustainable transport pillar, and all shareholders, for their efforts during the past period, and their continued emphasis on continuing to move forward with the government in order to fulfill all of the program’s pledges in a way that stimulates the country’s development vision and its efforts to support climate action.

H.E. explained that in integration with the efforts of the NWFE program and opening investment horizons for the private sector and international institutions, the program stimulates the transition to renewable energy through wind and solar energy projects, and also integrates with green hydrogen and energy storage projects, pointing to the agreement that Egypt signed with the SCATEC company within theBattery Energy Storage Systems Alliance (BESS) during the current edition of the climate conference.

The session witnessed praise from IRENA, EBRD and AIIB Presidents on the NWFE program as a model of what country platforms aimed at stimulating climate action should be. The Minister of the Environment from North Macedonia also expressed her country’s intention to launch a similar platform in light of its efforts to stimulate climate investments.

To watch the full discussion session:


To download the follow-up report for the NWFE program:

https://moic.gov.eg/ar/news/1218

Link to the joint final statement of 20 development partners on the NWFE program:

https://moic.gov.eg/ar/news/1221