World Bank governors endorse 'liveable planet' vision - German minister
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1970-01-01 08:00
By Andrea Shalal MARRAKECH, Morocco World Bank shareholders on Thursday endorsed further reforms and a new vision statement

By Andrea Shalal

MARRAKECH, Morocco World Bank shareholders on Thursday endorsed further reforms and a new vision statement committing the multilateral development bank to work for "a world free of poverty on a liveable planet", German Development Minister Svenja Schulze said.

The 25-member Development Committee had agreed a package of "ambitious reforms" that would lead to more investments in climate action and sustainable development, Schulze said in a statement.

She said the changes, which she helped initiate last year with the U.S., meant the bank would be able to offer stronger financing incentives for projects that have global, rather than just country-specific, benefits.

These included incentives focused on climate, biodiversity and pandemic prevention, she said.

"With the reform, we will make the World Bank into a better bank that uses its funds in a more targeted way," she said. "The World Bank will be able to provide more funds for poverty reduction and climate action."

The changes include new vision and mission statements which ensure that protecting vital natural resources is now a fundamental task for the bank.

There are also changes to its business model aimed at incentivizing investments in climate action, peacekeeping and pandemic prevention.

Loans with longer tenures or better terms would make it more lucrative for countries to invest in projects that are not just for their own benefit, such as protecting rainforests or preventing pandemics, she said.

The changes also call for clauses in loan agreements that would allow a country hit by a natural disaster to temporarily suspend its debt repayments.

The World Bank would begin piloting this option for small states that are particularly affected by climate change, she said.

Shareholders also endorsed ways for the bank to increase its lending capacity, including through issuing hybrid capital - debt-like equity instruments that have a lower credit rating than more senior bonds.

Germany was the first country to provide 305 million euros ($322.6 million) of hybrid capital, which will allow the bank to mobilize an additional 2.4 billion euros over four years, she said.

Schulze said the bank's shareholders would push on to enact reforms and improvements at other development banks. "We want this reform to have a ripple effect," she said.

($1 = 0.9454 euros)

(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne and Jan Harvey)

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