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Agriculture Sector Readiness for enhanced climate finance and implementation of Koronivia Joint Work on Agriculture priorities in Southeast Asia









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    Climate-smart agriculture investments and policy implementation in Southeast Asia - Workshop report
    Chiang Mai, Thailand, 21-24 January 2025
    2025
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    Agrifood systems in Southeast Asia require an urgent sustainable transformation to combat escalating climate change impacts. They also ensure food security as well as provide livelihoods for millions of small-scale farmers and fisherfolk. There is a pressing need to prioritize targeted climate investments in agrifood systems at the country and regional levels to address climate change mitigation and adaptation opportunities for the most vulnerable people and communities.This report from the "Climate-smart agriculture investments and policy implementation in Southeast Asia" workshop outlines strategic approaches to enhance access to climate finance and implement effective policies that align with countries' national climate plans, or Nationally Determined Contributions. The workshop report highlights six country climate foresight-driven project initiatives in Cambodia, the Lao People's Democratic Republic, Malaysia, the Philippines, Thailand, and Viet Nam that address key climate risks and opportunities for aquaculture and fisheries sectors, rice production, and climate-smart agriculture.The document presents outcomes from the ASEAN Climate Resilience Network's tenth anniversary celebration, which has provided an inclusive platform for regional cooperation on climate-smart agriculture. Special emphasis is placed on innovative financing instruments, including the Southeast Asia Agricultural Risk Finance Facility, which is being developed to strengthen smallholder farmers' resilience against climate shocks. These approaches demonstrate pathways toward a resilient and low-emission agrifood system transformation that balances environmental sustainability with economic growth and agricultural productivity across Southeast Asia.
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    Factsheet: Increasing direct access to the Green Climate Fund for agriculture in Southeast Asia
    A regional assessment of existing and potential Direct Access Entities
    2025
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    The Asia-Pacific, home to one quarter of the global population, has the highest proportion (70 percent of storms) of weather-related disaster displacements worldwide. These threats to agriculture and food security make adaptation a crucial priority. The Green Climate Fund (GCF) mitigates these potential dangers by providing funding to agricultural projects to promote climate-resilient agricultural practices. Direct Access Entities (DAEs) provide country ownership of these GCF projects and programmes. DAEs are also best positioned to blend international climate finance with domestic public budgets and private capital to create sustainable financing models, enhancing country ownership.
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    Book (stand-alone)
    Increasing direct access to the Green Climate Fund for agriculture in Southeast Asia
    A regional assessment of existing and potential Direct Access Entities
    2025
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    Direct Access Entities (DAEs) are essential for country ownership of Green Climate Fund (GCF) projects and programmes. National, sub-national and regional organizations accredited by GCF as DAEs directly access and implement the Fund’s resources, aligned with and advancing national strategies, priorities and plans. Significant challenges impede direct access, however, and limit the ability of national, sub-national and regional institutions to become accredited as DAEs. Because of these challenges, only four DAEs have been accredited in the six countries participating in the Agriculture Sector Readiness for enhanced climate finance and implementation of Koronivia Joint Work on Agriculture priorities in Southeast Asia project (ASEAN GCF Readiness project), despite the urgent need for more country-driven climate finance in these countries, particularly for the agriculture sector.In response to this need, the ASEAN GCF Readiness project conducted an assessment to identify potential DAEs in the agriculture sector, understand challenges faced by existing and potential DAEs related to accreditation, and assess opportunities for DAEs to mobilize GCF resources for climate adaptation and mitigation in the agriculture sector. The assessment found that there are at least 20 national and regional organizations across the six countries positioned for, interested in or pursuing accreditation as DAEs to mobilize GCF resources for agriculture. Additional findings address challenges faced by potential and existing DAEs to help increase direct access, enhance country ownership, and mobilize more GCF resources for climate-resilient and low-emission agriculture in Southeast Asia.

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