The Vulnerability to Viability Compact, a collaboration with the Government of Barbados and the V20 Finance Ministers, serves as a cornerstone of the fund’s new policy. It is designed to secure affordable, long-term financing for nations most at risk from climate change, with initial efforts targeting water security, health, and education. Simultaneously, the newly unveiled Digital Transformation Action Plan establishes technology as a primary pillar of the institution’s mandate, sitting alongside its existing focus on climate action and food security.
Beyond these flagship programs, the forum facilitated over $2.8 billion in total financial activity. This includes a series of loans spanning Armenia, Mauritania, and Nicaragua, as well as the fund’s inaugural local currency transaction in Azerbaijan through Bank Respublika. OPEC Fund President Abdulhamid Alkhalifa emphasized that these measures are intended to allow developing countries to pursue growth goals on their own terms, noting that the institution has committed more than $32 billion to global projects since its inception in 1976.




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