The Government of Luxembourg adopted two new climate-related strategies in 2021 – one covering the actions of the Luxembourg Co-operation, and the other being specifically dedicated to Luxembourg’s ICF, which is under the attributions of the Ministry of the Environment, Climate and Sustainable Development (MECSD).
In 2021, a new Environment and Climate Change Strategy was drawn up for development co-operation, to strengthen mainstreaming and ensure alignment with Luxembourg's international commitments in this area (Paris Agreement, 2030 Agenda, etc.). This Environment and Climate Change Strategy of the Luxembourg Co-operation was officially presented in May 2021 as the new guiding principles for co‑operation. It was presented jointly with the new gender strategy, the two having been developed in parallel to ensure the transversal character of the themes in each of the documents. As these two topics are in fact closely linked and interdependent in several respects, they were also presented together to Parliament, and are systematically integrated into political dialogues, as well as in a reinforced manner in each of the new co-operation programmes and projects. Luxembourg thus wishes to mark its strong commitment to rapidly accelerate the integration of these issues into concrete co-operation actions.
Despite the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, it has also been ensured that the budget dedicated to ODA is maintained at 1% of Gross National Income (GNI). With its new Environment and Climate Change Strategy and in view of the geographical and sectoral concentration of Luxembourg's Development Co-operation mainly in Least Developed Countries (LDCs), especially in particularly fragile contexts and Small Island Developing States (SIDS), which are already affected by environmental degradation and the impacts of climate change, Luxembourg's Development Co‑operation intends to strengthen the integration of environmental and climate issues into all of its activities, using a dual approach, namely:
It is therefore also ensured that each new strategy or policy paper of Luxembourg Co‑operation systematically integrates issues relating to environment and climate change. This was already the case for the new Gender Strategy and the Inclusive and Innovative Finance Strategy developed in 2020-21, and for the Private Sector and Digital for Development (D4D) policy papers that are still in progress. The new Humanitarian Strategy currently being drawn up also provides for greater integration of these issues, and finally, communication work is planned on these issues.
The reinforcement of the systematic mainstreaming of these issues is also ensured at each stage of the indicative co-operation programmes and projects developed and/or supported by Luxembourg Co‑operation, or in the new partnership agreements at multinational level. For example, a working group specific to environment and climate change has been set up in Laos including donors, partners and experts, in order to ensure the integration of these issues from the identification phase of the next programme. New wordings are also included in partnership agreements with United Nations (UN) agencies.
Finally, it is planned to provide Luxembourg Co-operation with a "Green Plan", aimed at adapting its work at the organisational and logistical level and thus minimising any possible harmful impact on the environment.
Luxembourg has already marked its strong commitment in 2015 by introducing an ICF budget, which is new and additional to ODA, i.e. the 1% of GNI devoted to international development.
The strategy for the “allocation of funds for international climate change financing” was first published in May 2017 and updated in July 2021. The ICF Strategy responds to and builds on the amended Climate Law of 15 December 2020, the NECP 2021-2030 for Luxembourg, the Luxembourg Climate Adaptation Strategy and Action Plan for 2018-2023 and the Luxembourg Sustainable Finance Roadmap (2018) and Strategy (2021). It shares the goals and complements Luxembourg’s new Aid and Development Strategy (“The Road to 2030”) and the new Environment and Climate Change Strategy (2021). It seeks alignment where feasible, with the European Union’s Action Plan on Financing Sustainable Growth (2018), as well as the EU Taxonomy for Sustainable Activities for climate mitigation and adaptation (delegated act 2021), where feasible.
The new ICF Strategy covers the period 2021-25 for which the budget has been increased to EUR 200 million. It takes into account recent developments in climate change negotiations, in particular the Paris Rulebook. It aims for a balanced distribution between activities of adaptation to and mitigation of climate change and will promote integrated actions for climate and pollution reduction in developing countries. It foresees that projects will be organised around priority themes, such as natural capital and biodiversity, efficient management of resources, sustainable finance and resilience at the community level – it being understood that the sustainable finance theme has an overarching character and may be overlapping with other themes. The revised ICF Strategy also allocates more importance to gender and human rights themes, including climate-change-induced migration, in addressing the climate crisis. Moreover, the strategy puts a particular focus on countries with which Luxembourg has entered a climate action dialogue (“Climate Dialogue Partners”, including all development co-operation partner countries).