Pakistani venture Sarmayacar says Green Climate Fund pledges $15 million

Community leader Sultan Ali, 70, walks over cracks that developed after a Glacial Lake Outburst Flooding (GLOF) swept away part of the land in Hassanabad village, Hunza valley, in the Karakoram mountain range in the Gilgit-Baltistan region of Pakistan, on October 9, 2023. (REUTERS/File)
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Updated 24 October 2024
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Pakistani venture Sarmayacar says Green Climate Fund pledges $15 million

  • GCF pledges $15 million to help startups tackle impacts of climate change in Pakistan 
  • Pakistan’s macroeconomic crisis means cash to address climate change is in short supply

KARACHI: The Green Climate Fund (GCF) has committed $15 million to Pakistani venture capital firm Sarmayacar, the venture fund said on Wednesday, so it can help startups tackle the impact of climate change in the country that has been at the forefront of extreme weather.

Flooding in Pakistan, which scientists said was aggravated by global warming, affected at least 33 million people and killed more than 1,700 from the beginning of the monsoon season in mid-June 2022 until mid-November that year.

At the same time, the country’s challenging macroeconomic and political situation means cash to address the problem is in short supply.

In particular, venture capital funding fell to $16 million during the first nine months of 2024, a 57 percent year-on-year drop from the $37 million recorded in the same period the previous year, according to data compiled by Data Darbar.

Set up more than a decade ago, the GCF is part of UN efforts to help the world’s poorer countries adapt to climate change.

The deployment of the $15 million hinges on Sarmayacar raising an extra $10 million, CEO and Founder Rabeel Warraich said, adding he expected the fund will be able to begin funding action by the first quarter of next year.

He said the GCF funding would have “an anchoring role” in the new fund that Sarmayacar has set up, which he said could have a maximum of $40 million in funding.

Its capital is earmarked for startups in areas including energy, electric mobility, water treatment, recycling, sustainable agriculture, and carbon accounting, Warraich said, and is investigating startups to invest in.

The GCF’s website said it had allocated $282.7 million in total to Pakistan across 10 projects.
The GCF was not immediately available for comment on the latest pledge.

The International Monetary Fund, which last month agreed a bailout for Pakistan, has also agreed to hold talks with the country on financing under the Fund’s Resilience and Sustainability Trust (RST) to generate financing for projects related to climate change. 


Pakistanis at remote border describe scramble to leave Iran

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Pakistanis at remote border describe scramble to leave Iran

  • Returning Pakistani nationals recount missile fire in Tehran, transport gridlock as people rush to exit Iran
  • PM Sharif condemns targeting of Iranian leader as embassies urge citizens to leave amid escalating strikes

TAFTANT, Pakistan: Pakistani nationals hauled suitcases across the border from neighboring Iran, describing missiles being launched and travel chaos as they scrambled to leave the country after the US and Israel launched strikes over the weekend.

AFP journalists saw a steady trickle of people passing through large metal gates at the remote border crossing between Iran’s Mirjaveh and Taftan in Pakistan’s western Balochistan province.

Powerful explosions have rocked Iran’s capital Tehran since Saturday, with embassies from countries around the world telling their citizens to leave.

“All our Pakistani brothers who were in Tehran and other cities had started to leave and were arriving at the terminal, which caused a lot of crowd pressure,” 38-year-old trader Ameer Muhammad told AFP on Monday.

“Due to the crowds, there were major transport problems.”

The isolated Taftan border lies around 500 kilometers (310 miles) from Balochistan’s capital and largest city, Quetta.

AFP journalists saw the Iranian flag flying at half-mast as soldiers stood guard.

Most people wheeled bulky luggage over the frontier’s foot crossing, while freight lorries formed a long line.

Irshad Ahmed, a 49-year-old pilgrim, told AFP he was staying at a hostel in Tehran when he saw missiles being fired nearby.

“There was an army base near the hostel, and we saw many missiles being fired,” he said.

“After that, we went to the Pakistani embassy so that they could evacuate us from there. They brought us here safely.”

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has said the killing of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was a “violation” of international law.

“It is an age old convention that the Heads of State/Government should not be targeted,” Sharif wrote on X.

The “people of Pakistan join the people of Iran in their hour of grief and sorrow and extend the most sincere condolences on the martyrdom” of Khamenei, he added.

A teacher at Tehran’s Pakistani embassy, who gave his name as Saqib, told AFP: “Before we left, the situation was normal. The situation was not that bad.”

The 38-year-old said the strikes on Tehran on Saturday “pushed us to leave the city.”

“The situation became bad on Saturday night, when attacks caused precious lives to be lost,” he said.