11/07/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 11/07/2024 00:35
The Tajikistan Country Climate and Development Report (CCDR) provides an analysis and recommendations on the country's ambitions to green its economy and ensure a resilient development path. The costs of inaction would be high, threatening lives and the country's economic growth prospects.
More frequent and severe droughts, floods, landslides, heat, and air pollution are just some of the impacts Tajikistan faces from climate change. These disasters underscore the need for urgent action to protect the country's people and economy from climate shocks. According to the Tajikistan Country and Climate Development Report, the cost of inaction would be high:
Climate action offers Tajikistan an opportunity to transform its economy and create jobs while protecting its people from the growing risks of extreme weather events induced and exacerbated by climate change. While the Government of Tajikistan has outlined an ambitious plan to green the country's economy, the World Bank Group's CCDR finds that it can go further to ensure a resilient development path.
The green and resilient transformation will require reforms to open markets and mobilize private investment and hinges on implementing a broad suite of structural reforms to lay the foundation for low-carbon development. In particular, Tajikistan should focus on opening up its economy to better attract private investment and improve public service delivery, including through better governance in state-owned enterprises. In addition, strengthening the education, healthcare, and social protection systems is vital for human capital development and equipping the workforce with the needed skills.
The Tajikistan CCDR sets out five policy packages to enhance the country's resilience to climate change, accelerate low-carbon development, and ensure an inclusive green transition:
Tajikistan stands to reap considerable benefits from advancing these policies to enhance resilience to climate change, accelerate low-carbon development, and ensure an inclusive green transition:
Adaptation and resilience measures can cut the economic impacts of climate change by half and the low-carbon growth model can boost GDP by 6% by 2050, with diversification, increased exports, and better jobs. Mobilizing private finance to complement limited public resources will be key to the success of the green transition to achieve water, food, and energy security; and protect the vulnerable through effective climate strategies.
Implementing this climate mitigation and adaptation agenda will require around $17 billion on top of the $79 billion in investments to meet the government's ambitious reform agenda for 2025-2050. A large share of these investments could come from the private sector, particularly in energy, industry and agriculture, but improvements to the business regulatory environment, opening up the economy and leveling the playing field for better competition will be key for unlocking private capital.
Transformational development will require taking full advantage of all sources of finance, internal and external, including foreign investments, particularly grants and concessional loans from international financial organizations, global climate funds, and other development partners.