
By Patrick Bigger and Sophie Webber
Cities across the world are facing a double-barreled existential problem: how to adapt to climate change and how to pay for it. Over the next thirty years, more than聽聽owing to sea level rise and more intense storms, while as many as聽. Other looming crises include soaring urban temperatures, the urgent need to transition away from fossil-fueled energy and transport systems, and plummeting rates of local biodiversity.
Responding to these problems will, international bodies project,, from hardened municipal water and sewage systems, to urban afforestation, to renewable energy systems. This massive infrastructural program coincides with global economic conditions marked by the lingering ideological stranglehold of austerity, unprecedented levels of capital concentration, and now, myriad uncertainties produced by COVID-19. Cities across the world are facing a double-barreled existential problem: how to adapt to climate change and how to pay for it. Over the next thirty years, more than owing to sea level rise and more intense storms, while as many as . Other looming crises include soaring urban temperatures, the urgent need to transition away from fossil-fueled energy and transport systems, and plummeting rates of local biodiversity.
In response to the twin problems of resilient infrastructure needs and public fiscal constraints, the World Bank and an array of partner institutions from the to USAID have been ramping up programs to facilitate private investment in urban resilience. From a baseline of $10 billion across 77 cities in 2016, the World Bank aims to 鈥榗atalyze鈥 investment of more than $500 billion into urban resilience projects across 500 cities by 2025.听
But the vast majority of this money is not being distributed in the form of grants, as would befit a just adaptation regime respecting the loss and damage that will be borne by people least responsible for climate change. Nor is it 鈥榲anilla鈥 , where states borrow from the World Bank for approved projects while receiving 鈥榗apacity building鈥 for administering the project. Instead, this resilience funding is targeted at reformatting municipal governments to enable them to execute urban resilience projects through private-sector oriented pathways. These initiatives are focused on cultivating cities that can plan investor-friendly infrastructure projects, then access global debt markets to finance infrastructure that is meant to achieve resilience.听
We call the process through which vulnerable cities of the Global South are being rendered investable in response to climate change .
We use the term Green Structural Adjustment to signal connections between 20th Century and contemporary World Bank urban-climate programming. Structural Adjustment formally ended in 2002, after the Bank, along with the International Monetary Fund, administered more than in almost 100 countries in the 1980s and 1990s. While the language of structural adjustment was phased out in favor of the more gentle sounding 鈥榙evelopment policy lending鈥 in 2004, the underlying faith in the power of markets to create desirable change, a commitment to technocracy, and mistrust in Southern states to pursue the 鈥榬ight鈥 objectives through the 鈥榬ight鈥 governance mechanisms, persists. But there are important twists from the 20th Century formula: the unit of policy intervention is the city, rather than the nation-state; the aim is to create access to debt, rather than fixing sovereign balance of payments crises and overwhelming debt; and, the primary objective is climate resilience to secure development, a departure, at least rhetorically, from .
While 20th Century Structural Adjustment Plans were often violently imposed- and still are- the violence of Green Structural Adjustment is less direct. The Bank is , bearing the message that if city governments are not reformed in investment-friendly ways, those cities will continue to be cut off from more than swirling on global capital markets. This is a modern, environmentally-inflected version of ; as , 鈥減ublic investment alone, even when combined with [official development aid] is inadequate鈥 to remake cities that can protect residents from environmental change; only financiers have the power to pay for resilient infrastructure at the scale necessary. So the criteria of investors, such as balanced municipal budgets, a regional or internationally recognized credit rating, and a pipeline of investable projects planned with accepted forms of environmental data must be achieved if cities are to gain access to these vast pools of capital.听听
The second connection between the Structural Adjustment Plans and the Green Structural Adjustment is causal; Structural Adjustment contributed to many of the problems that Green Structural Adjustment aims to counter. For example, Structural Adjustment Plans-induced agricultural 鈥榬ationalization鈥 contributed to , driving urban growth, rates of informality, and associated vulnerability to environmental change. Trade liberalization facilitated hydrocarbon and raw material extraction and export, turbocharging rich world consumption and associated greenhouse gas emissions and degrading local environmental conditions. Meanwhile, spectacular levels of global inequality has led to .
It is precisely this concentrated wealth that Green Structural Adjustment aims to channel into urban resilience, in line with the broader World Bank project of 鈥鈥. Green Structural Adjustment offers a path to climate-proofed infrastructure provision operationalized in line with the 鈥Wall Street Consensus鈥, an austerity-drenched logic of, and set of tools for, using . In turn, these investments are to be channeled into familiar financial mechanisms, including public-private partnerships, municipal borrowing through labeled green bonds, or land-value capture, but using the World Bank balance sheet and expertise 鈥鈥.听
Our paper looks at examples from ), , and , but these processes are playing out in cities in virtually every corner of the Global South. And the scope of these interventions is growing: if Bank spending gets close to the $25 billion per year it aims to leverage by 2025, Green Structural Adjustment-aligned investments would .听听
While Green Structural Adjustment operates at the interface of global institutions and the city, its practices have structural ramifications. Overaccumulated northern capital has been desperately seeking profitable investment in a high liquidity, low yield world. Green Structural Adjustment, through its technical assistance and derisking activities, aims to produce a pipeline of investable frontiers. As more cities gain access to debt markets and their needs for adaptation grow, Green Structural Adjustment offers a multi-sited : physically fixing Northern capital in Southern infrastructure and staving off crises of overaccumulation, producing new geographies of accumulation and the ability to absorb the ravages of a changing climate.
聽It remains to be seen how much private investment in public infrastructure Green Structural Adjustment ultimately will generate; to this point, Green Structural Adjustment is still much more about beginning to restructure city governance than tracking trillions in Global North investment into Southern built environments and the . As a World Bank staffer told us, 鈥渞ight now less than 2% [of investable private capital] gets invested in urban infrastructure. So, these are pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, mutual funds, and they鈥檙e out there, they鈥檙e looking for reasonable returns, in a very low return market right now. So, we think there鈥檚 an opportunity to tap some of that鈥. This sums up Green Structural Adjustment as it empowers technocrats and financiers to shape what kinds of infrastructure are realized and how it is financed, producing cities and infrastructure as investable enclaves while rents flow to investors.听
Ultimately, we reject the reframing of 鈥榗limate debts鈥 enabled by Green Structural Adjustment that produce uneven climate risks into a technocratic syntax that heaps financial debt onto vulnerable cities in the Global South. There is much scope for (geographical) political economists to envision other modes for producing future-ready infrastructure, and the institutions to facilitate those futures. The move toward are welcome, but insufficient. Instead, our next steps are to figure out how the highly concentrated finance that the Green Structural Adjustment mobilizes .听听
Patrick Bigger is a Lecturer in Economic Geography in the Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University, UK. His research spans an array of environmental, financial, and political entanglements across world regions, currently focused on infrastructure and adaptation. He tweets at .
is a Lecturer in the School of Geosciences at the University of Sydney. Sophie is an economic geographer studying the political economies of climate change adaptation and resilience, with a focus on Southeast Asia and Pacific regions. She tweets at .
This post was originally published on .听
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