Ahead of the 2023 World Bank Spring meetings, we have compiled the major multilateral development banks’ (MDBs) 2022 energy finance data for the first time. Our analysis shows that while their fossil fuel support has dropped and renewables have increased, these influential public banks are still not aligned with a safe, 1.5°C-aligned future. Worse, data on their likely-even-larger “indirect” forms of fossil support is still almost entirely unavailable.

With outgoing World Bank Group (WBG) President David Malpass under fire for climate denial and debates about their ability to channel climate finance money effectively, multilateral development banks (MDBs) are under more public scrutiny than ever. At COP27 last year, there were growing calls for reform to global financial architecture, with Barbadian Prime Minister Mia Mottley calling out the imperialistic nature of multilateral lending.

For more on what the WBG and its peers could be doing to meet this moment, read the Big Shift Coalition’s “Cheat Sheet” for the Spring Meetings.

Still Funding Fossils

The MDBs share a mandate for sustainable development and have made repeated joint commitments since 2016 to align their finance with the Paris Agreement. Yet between 2020 and 2022, the MDBs provided an annual average of USD 3.2 billion in direct fossil fuel finance. While this total has dropped significantly, from USD 9.7 billion between 2017 and 2019, the latest climate science is clear, that we cannot afford new fossil fuel expansion if we are to limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (ÂșC). Instead, we need a rapid phase-out of oil, gas, and coal, alongside a rapid scale-up of clean energy.

 Overall:

  • MDBs provided on average $3.2 billion a year to fossil fuel projects from 2020 to 2022, a significant decrease from their 2017 to 2019 average of $9.7 billion per year.
  • The World Bank Group (WBG) provided the most finance for fossil fuels at $1.2 billion a year on average. At least 68% of this was for fossil gas, which the Bank’s current Climate Change Action Plan says can continue to be supported if it fits still-undefined climate and development criteria.
  • In total, WBG has financed at least USD $17 billion in fossil fuels since the Paris Agreement, including 885 million in 2022.
  • The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) ranked as the second largest provider of fossil fuel support at $667 million a year.
  • MDB support for clean energy was $20.3 billion per year from 2020 to 2022, 3.3 times the support for fossil fuels. In 2022 the MDBs provided $26 billion for clean energy finance, the largest amount since we began tracking them in 2008.
  • There was no known MDB finance for coal between 2020-2022.
  • Much of the MDB’s indirect energy support is not covered here and there are troubling signs these flows are heavily weighed towards fossils. This includes finance delivered through financial intermediaries like other banks or private equity funds as well as most policy-based lending, which is non-earmarked budget supports for policy reforms for entire sectors or broad programs. Policy-based lending can account for as much as 40% of MDB total lending in a given year and currently has no restrictions on fossil fuel expenditures.

Figure 1: MDB support for fossil fuels, clean, and other energy, 2016-2022, in USD billions

      Source: Public Finance for Energy Database, energyfinance.org

Figure 2: Fossil fuel compared to clean energy support from MDBs, annual average 2020-2022, in USD billions. (Not including “Other,” which is included in the Table below)

  Source: Oil Change International Public Finance for Energy Database, energyfinance.org

Who is getting energy support?  

The main recipients of public support — whether fossil or clean —  continue to be wealthier countries while the world’s poorest countries get left behind. The largest share of all energy finance (clean, fossil and other) went to Central and Western Europe between 2020 and 2022. The region also received 58% of all clean energy finance. This is driven by the EIB as the largest supporter of clean energy because most of their finance is directed to flow within the EU.

As Figure 3 shows no low-income countries and only three low-middle-income countries were among the top 15 recipients of clean energy finance. This contrasts finance for fossils, (Figure 4) where two low-income countries and five low-middle-income countries were among the top 15 recipients of fossil fuel finance, the majority of which (68%) went to support gas projects. This trend is troubling, it risks locking countries into high emissions pathways, and economic instabilities associated with gas, further exacerbating climate change in countries with some of the fewest resources to manage the impacts despite contributing least to the problem. There are also well-documented human rights violations, displacement, and local health and environmental impacts from the fossil fuel industry wherever it extracts. And as recent projects in Indonesia, Pakistan, and Bangladesh show, MDBs often have a direct hand in making these impacts even worse.

Figure 3: Top 15 recipient countries of MDBs’ international public finance for fossil fuels. Annual average 2020-2022, in USD millions* low-income countries ** low middle-income countries Source: Oil Change International Public Finance for Energy Database, energyfinance.org

Figure 4: Top 15 recipient countries of MDBs’ international public finance for clean energy. Annual average 2020-2022, in USD billions

** low middle-income countries    Source: Oil Change International Public Finance for Energy Database, energyfinance.org

MDB Reform?

MDBs have high levels of concessional finance relative to other kinds of institutions, as well as influential policy and research tools. This means that their finance for fossil fuels generally acts as a more significant subsidy to the industry on a per-dollar basis compared to other kinds of public finance institutions like export credit agencies. It also means that MDBs could be powerful catalysts for a globally just energy transition if they take this goal seriously, and implement long-standing recommendations to overhaul their governance.

The good news is there is more pressure for global financial architecture reform now than there has been in more than 20 years. This has partially been borne out of the recognition that the current financial system, including the MDBs, is failing to provide the climate finance and debts that are owed to countries in the Global South that have contributed least to the climate crisis but are bearing the brunt of impacts. With this, there is growing recognition that existing MDB governance and structures as is are not conducive to delivering the climate finance that would support a globally just transition.

Beyond concerns that many MDBs have continued to support fossil fuel projects, there are concerns that with their track record of privatization of public services and human rights violations, they can not be effective conduits for renewable finance without major reforms. In the context of this growing pressure, several proposals for MDB reform have emerged. This includes the Bridgetown Agenda, which seeks to tackle the climbing debts of Global South Countries alongside climate and calls on the International Monetary Fund to inject at least $ 650 billion worth of reserve assets into struggling economies annually through Special Drawing Rights. In June 2023 French President Macron will co-host a summit for a new ‘Global Financial Pact.’ The World Bank Group has also developed an Evolution Roadmap to better address today’s global challenges. However civil society organizations quickly called out the serious lack of ambition of the proposed reforms, as a continuation of the status quo, and laid out the transformative reforms that are necessary to play a constructive role in a just energy transition to 100% clean energy.

There is more pressure for MDBs to change their ways now than there has been in decades, but we have also seen massive mobilization to change these institutions be stonewalled again and again. Counterproposals from civil society and progressive government shareholders will need to get a lot louder and more coordinated for us to see the needed changes on fossil funding, transformative climate solutions, democratic governance, and debt cancellation.

 

Multilateral Development Bank energy finance, USD Millions, Annual Average 2020-2022. Where possible, this includes indirect support but due to a lack of reporting most is direct project finance. 

Coal Oil & Gas Other Clean Grand Total
European Investment Bank 0 363 3,489 12,046 15,898
World Bank Group 0 1,236 4,089 3,825 9,150
European Bank for Reconstruction and Development 0 667 1,031 1,470 3,168
Asian Development Bank 0 161 1,851 791 2,803
Inter-American Development Bank 0 108 1,090 1,144 2,342
Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank 0 95 791 510 1,396
African Development Bank 0 0.3 489 243 732
Islamic Development Bank 0 455 161 17 633
New Development Bank 0 145 0 183 328
Grand Total 0 3,230 12,991 20,229 36,450

 

 

Note: This blog was updated in October 2023 to remove project financing for liquified petroleum gas (LPG) used for cooking, though are cognizant of concerns related to LPG, including its reliance on big fossil gas infrastructure which must be phased out, and the volatility of gas prices which can make this an inaccessible fuel for many people around the world. Between 2020-2022 the MDBs have provided approximately $111.6 million in support for LPG projects.