Fund for responding to Loss and Damage
Summary
The Fund for responding to Loss and Damage (FRLD), operationalised by a decision of the 28th Conference of the Parties (COP28) of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), is part of the UNFCCC’s financial mechanism and serves in the same function for the Paris Agreement. It is set-up, initially for four years, as a financial intermediary fund (FIF) with a World Bank-hosted secretariat. In 2028, COP33 will decide if this set-up is to be made permanent or whether the FRLD will become a fully independent fund similar to the Green Climate Fund (GCF).
The FRLD’s purpose is to assist developing countries that are particularly vulnerable to the adverse effects of climate change in responding to economic and non-economic loss and damage, including extreme weather events and slow onset events, especially in the context of ongoing and ex-post action that includes rehabilitation, recovery and reconstruction.
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Basic Description
Name of the Fund | Fund for responding to Loss and Damage (FRLD) | ||
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Official Fund Website | New website of the independent Secretariat (under development): https://www.frld.org/ Website of the interim Secretariat: https://unfccc.int/loss-and-damage-fund-joint-interim-secretariat | ||
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Proposed Life of Fund | The FRLD is supposed to have periodic replenishments every four years. The termination of the Fund is not set but would be required to be approved by the COP based on a recommendation of the Board. | ||
Objectives | The FRLD is to serve as a new channel for multilateral finance to assist developing countries for addressing a variety of challenges associated with the adverse effects of climate change, such as climate-related emergencies, sea-level rise, displacement, relocation, migration, insufficient climate information and data, and the need for climate-resilient reconstruction and recovery. It is to assist developing countries that are particularly vulnerable to the adverse effects of climate change in mobilising external finance to strengthen their efforts through the promotion of national response systems to respond to loss and damage while supporting both the achievements of international goals on sustainable development and the eradication of poverty. With a focus on priority gaps within the current landscape of institutions that are funding activities related to responding to loss and damage, it is tasked to provide complementary and additional support and improve the speed and adequacy of access to finance for responding to loss and damage in a manner that promotes coherence and complementarity with new and existing funding arrangements across the international financial, climate, humanitarian, disaster risk reduction and development architectures. |
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Financial inputs and fund size | The FRLD is able to receive contributions from a wide variety of sources of funding, including grants and concessional loans from public, private and innovative sources. As of April 2025, the FRLD has received pledges of USD 786 million from 27 contributors (25 countries, the European Union, and the Belgian region of Wallonia). Detailed information about the pledges received is available at: https://unfccc.int/topics/climate-finance/funds-entities-bodies/fund-for-responding-to-loss-and-damage/pledges-to-the-fund-for-responding-to-loss-and-damage Up-to-date information about the conversion of pledged commitments into signed contribution agreements and funding received is provided at: https://fiftrustee.worldbank.org/en/about/unit/dfi/fiftrustee/fund-detail/frld#1 The contributions are eligible to be classified as official development assistance (ODA). |
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Activities Supported | The Fund will provide finance for addressing a variety of challenges associated with the adverse effects of climate change, such as climate-related emergencies, sea level rise, displacement, relocation, migration, insufficient climate information and data, and the need for climate-resilient reconstruction and recovery. The Fund will provide support for responding to economic and non-economic loss and damage associated with the adverse effects of climate change. This support may include funding that is complementary to humanitarian actions taken immediately after an extreme weather event; funding for intermediate or long-term recovery, reconstruction or rehabilitation; and funding for actions that address slow onset events. The support provided by the Fund may include developing national response plans; addressing insufficient climate information and data; and promoting equitable, safe and dignified human mobility in the form of displacement, relocation and migration in cases of temporary and permanent loss and damage. |
Administrating Organization
Secretariat or Administrative Unit | The FRLD was initially served by an interim Secretariat during the beginning of its operations in 2024 with seconded staff from the UNFCCC, the Green Climate Fund (GCF) and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). After the selection of its inaugural Executive Director in October 2024, the Fund in 2025 is transitioning from the interim Secretariat to a new, dedicated and independent Secretariat accountable to the Board. The independent Secretariat is housed at the World Bank in Washington, DC following the set-up of the FRLD as a FIF with a World Bank-hosted Secretariat as an interim measure for four years as approved by COP29, with COP33 in 2028 to decide if this arrangement will be permanent or if alternatively the FRLD will be set up as a fully independent organisation. |
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Trustee | The World Bank is the interim trustee until a decision by COP33 in 2028. |
Fund Finance and Access Modalities
Conditions and Eligibility Requirements | Eligibility is not restricted to ODA eligible countries. All developing countries that are particularly vulnerable to the adverse effects of climate change and are parties to the UNFCCC and the Paris Agreement are eligible to receive resources from the Fund. | ||||||
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Accessing the Fund |
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Safeguards, Gender and Indigenous Peoples |
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Fund Governance
Decision Making Structure | The FRLD functions under the guidance of and is accountable to the UNFCCC Conference of the Parties (COP). The FRLD Board governs the Fund and ensures accountability by:
FRLD Board |
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Accountability Mechanisms | The FRLD Governing Instrument does not foresee for the Fund to have its own independent accountability mechanisms regarding integrity and complaints procedures. Instead the Governing Instrument stipulates that activities financed by the Fund will be subject to the implementing entity’s independent integrity unit or functional equivalent, which will work with the Secretariat to investigate allegations of fraud and corruption in coordination with relevant counterpart authorities and report to the Board on any such investigations. Likewise, activities financed by the Fund will use the implementing entity’s independent grievance redress mechanism to address complaints related to activities financed by the Fund, which will take appropriate action based on any agreements, findings and/or recommendations and report to the Board on any such action. The FRLD is committed to periodic independent evaluations of the performance of the Fund in order to provide an objective assessment of the results of the Fund, including of the activities financed by the Fund, and its effectiveness and efficiency. However, the Board will have to decide whether the independence of such evaluations will be assured through the set-up of an independent evaluation office, or just through third-party independent providers. |
Participation of Observers and Stakeholders | The FRLD Governing Instrument commits to the establishment of consultative forums to engage and communicate with stakeholders. They are defined as “representatives of civil society organisations, environmental and development non-governmental organisations, trade unions, Indigenous Peoples, youth, women, climate-induced migrants, industries and sectors impacted by climate change, community-based organisations, bilateral and multilateral development cooperation agencies, technical and research agencies, the private sector and governments“. The Fund is also supposed to develop further mechanisms to promote the input and participation of stakeholders, highlighting in particular the groups most vulnerable to the adverse effects of climate change, including women, youth and Indigenous Peoples, in the design, development and implementation of activities financed by the FRLD. This might also include the establishment of expert and technical panels. The Fund has yet to approve procedures for an observer accreditation process mandated by the Governing Instrument that will allow international organisations, private sector organisations and civil society organisations, as well as representatives from community groups or climate migrants/refugees to observe each Board meeting upon prior registration. Additionally, a set of active observers (at minimum representing environmental non-governmental organisations, women, youth and Indigenous Peoples, but potentially considering other groups) will be invited to participate in Board and speak on behalf of their constituencies, although they will not be able to vote. The exact number and composition is still to be determined, with an active observer policy in development. |
Transparency and Information Disclosure | Currently, it is not clear if the FRLD will have a separate information disclosure policy that governs the activities of the Secretariat. The transparency of and information disclosure related to Board proceedings is set via the Additional Rules of Procedure, which the FRLD Board approved in 2024. They outline that FRLD Board meetings are streamed live. Video recordings for recent Board meetings as well as most Board meeting documents are currently made available at: https://unfccc.int/loss-and-damage-fund-joint-interim-secretariat#Meetings-and-events The combined pledges and contributions made to the Fund are reported and frequently updated on the pledges subpage of the interim Secretariat, with funding availability reported on the FRLD trust fund website of the World Bank. |
Other Issues Raised | The FRLD, its operational procedures, processes, policies, and decisions are described in further detail in a dedicated briefing (CFF13) as part of the Climate Finance Fundamentals Series. |