This presentation was made by Andrew Blazey, OECD Secretariat, at the 14th OECD-Asian Senior Budget Officials Meeting held in Bangkok, Thailand, on 13-14 December 2018
Green budgeting - Andrew Blazey, OECD Secretariat,
1. THE PARIS COLLABORATIVE
ON GREEN BUDGETING
14th OECD-Asian Senior Budget Officials Meeting
13-14 December 2018
Bangkok, Thailand
Andrew Blazey, Deputy Head of Division
Juliane Jansen, Policy Analyst
Budgeting and Public Expenditures Division
Public Governance Directorate, OECD
2. – Biodiversity, water quality, air pollution,
climate mitigation and adaptation
– International agreements:
• Paris Agreement
• Aichi Biodiversity Targets
• related Sustainable Development Goals
• …
2
Domestic and international commitments on
climate and environment
Action is needed to comply with our commitments -
nationally and collectively
3. 3
Why do we need Green Budgeting?
Figure 1.2. Revenues from environmentally
related taxes
The way governments
choose to raise and spend
their money will be decisive
4. Range of actions in many areas, including
expenditure tracking for climate and biodiversity,
targets for renewable energy, carbon taxes …
Systematic and co-ordinated approach to the
range of existing policies needed to:
– aid monitoring process
– mainstream an environmentally informed approach
across all policy domains
– highlight linkages between budget, fiscal and
environmental issues, interdependencies,
externalities and co-benefits
4
Implementing our sustainable
development agenda
5. ….using the tools and processes of
budgetary policy-making
- by evaluating and improving the
environmental impact of budgetary
policies
- assessing their coherence with
national and international
commitments
help achieve environmental goals
5
“Green Budgeting”
6. 6
OECD work for Green Budgeting
• Budgeting for inclusive and
sustainable growth
• Climate and biodiversity
alignment of public spending
• Environmental cost-benefit
analysis
• Reform of potentially harmful
tax expenditures and other
budgetary support
• Environmental fiscal reform and
carbon pricing
• Long-term fiscal sustainability
8. 8
Comprehensive climate analysis
and reporting in France
• Comprehensive reporting structure for climate
economic analysis:
Ways and Means Report
Landscape of Climate Finance
Transversal policy document on the fight against climate
specific reports on financing the energy transition and the
financial contribution for the protection of nature and
environment
Inventory of tax-expenditures favourable to the
environment
Plan streamline and enrich existing documentation
to align and improve the overall impact of public
finance measures to support the ecological transition
9. 9
Expenditure Tracking in the
European Union
integrate climate action into the whole EU budget
target of 20% of EU expenditure contributing to
climate objectives in 2014-2020
target of 25% for 2021-2027
EU climate markers, which adapted from the
OECD ‘Rio markers
• weighting to activities based on their
contribution towards climate objectives:
significant (100%), moderate (40%) or
insignificant (0%)
Biodiversity tagging (no target assigned)
10. 10
Climate assessments in
Norway
Long history of incorporating sustainable development elements
into budget proposal documents.
Climate ambitions in the budget proposal
• summarises the Government’s overall climate and environment
efforts
• impacts of selected expenditures on the environment
Measuring climate impacts of state budget measures
• plans to calculate the climate effects of state budgets by an
independent “calculation committee”
• in 2014, a Green Tax Commission evaluated the impact and
efficiency of climate and environmental taxes
Fiscal risk of the climate transition
• Future work on potential revenue losses, in particular from the
electrification of the transport sector
11. 11
Carbon assessment of the
Scottish draft budget
From 2010, constitutional requirement to publish
estimates of the Green House Gas emissions associated
with the planned government spending
applied to budget expenditure as a whole
identifying direct emissions and those from supply-
side inputs
Carbon Assessment in the Draft Budget is applied to
detailed spending lines and some income lines (such
as EU income)
For example, the Carbon Assessment of the 2018-19 Draft
Budget estimates that total emissions amount to 7.4
million tonnes CO2-equivalent (MtCO2e)
12. 12
Mexico’s new environmental strategy
In 2013, Mexico introduced a cross-cutting budget on
climate change with a focus on mitigation and adaptation.
In 2018, alignment of the budget to SDGs as part of the
programming and budgeting process
Planned new environment strategy to introduce a holistic
view :
• climate, biodiversity, air and water quality
• based on Mexico’s budget programme structure
• identify activities and budget allocations individual sectors to
one or more of the key environmental goals
• group budget allocations and fiscal instruments according to its
objectives
• Assessment of positive and negative impacts for each
commitment
13. The Paris Collaborative on Green Budgeting
Launched at One Planet Summit, 12 Dec 2017
in Paris as one of the twelve commitments
An open research platform to:
- work in close partnership with governments, OECD
working groups and experts
- advance the analytical and methodological
groundwork
- propose, develop and test potential tools needed to
support green budgeting
- support peer learning and exchange good practices
- targeted assistance for developing a Green Budget
strategy
14. Launch at One
Planet Summit,
12 Dec 2017
in Paris
May/June
OECD Senior
Expert
Workshops
16 July
HLPF side
event
26 Sept
One Planet
Summit follow-
up meeting
14
Milestones of the Paris Collaborative
Upcoming
OECD Senior
Expert
Workshop
Achievements:
• Technical advancement in preparation of Green Budget definitions,
identification of underlying methods and of good practice
examples of greening public finance
• Active engagement on expert level with senior experts meetings from
Ministries of Finance and Ministries of Environment
• Increased political support on ministerial level and growing
recognition of the inter-relationships between budget, fiscal and
environmental policies
15. Core analytical and research work
• Refinement of definitions and methods
• Sharing of existing good practice and country cases
• Indicator development
Optional work programmes to engage
• Designing and applying a “Green Budget Statement”
• Designing and applying a “Green Budget Baseline Analysis”
• Guidance to adopt environmental cost-benefit analysis in
support of green budgeting
• Investigating the tax revenue effects of environmentally-oriented
tax policy and of environment-related structural economic change,
including decarbonisation
15
Working towards a framework on Green
Budgeting
16. • Where do you see the key challenges to tackle the
environmental impacts of budgetary policy in a more coherent
and holistic manner?
• What notable examples of good practice exist in your country?
• Are there national initiatives that can be advanced under the
PCGB umbrella?
• Upcoming Expert Workshop on Green Budgeting (April tbc)
16
Questions?