Sec. 5. Global Climate Change Resilience Strategy
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Section 117 of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 ( 22 U.S.C. 2151p ) is amended— in subsection (b)— by inserting
(1)after
(b); and by adding at the end the following: The President is authorized to furnish assistance to programs and initiatives, including multilateral initiatives and funds that— promote resilience among communities facing harmful impacts from climate change; reduce the vulnerability of persons affected by climate change; address permanent loss and damage faced by affected marginalized communities; provide support for community recovery, reconstruction, and rehabilitation after climate-related environmental disasters; promote sustainable peace through cooperation on efforts to protect the earth against environmental threats and to address and minimize climate change; and support climate-resilient programming that promotes peacebuilding to avert conflict due to scarcity of resources caused by climate change, including scarcity of water, food, and grazing areas. There shall be, in the Department of State, a Coordinator of Climate Change Resilience, who shall coordinate the assistance authorized under subparagraph (A). ; and by adding at the end the following: The Secretary of State, in coordination with the Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development (referred to in this subsection as USAID ) and the Special Presidential Envoy for Climate, shall establish a 10-year, comprehensive, integrated strategy, which shall be known as the Global Climate Change Resilience Strategy , to mitigate the impacts of climate change on displacement and humanitarian emergencies. The Global Climate Change Resilience Strategy shall— focus on addressing slow-onset and rapid-onset effects of climate change; consider the effects of climate change; describe the key features of successful strategies to prevent such conditions; include specific objectives and multisectoral approaches to the effects of climate change; describe approaches that ensure national leadership, as appropriate, and substantively engage with civil society, local partners, and the affected communities, including marginalized populations and underserved populations, in the design, implementation, and monitoring of climate change programs to best safeguard the future of those subject to displacement; assign roles for relevant Federal agencies to avoid duplication of efforts, while ensuring that— the Department of State is responsible for— leading the Global Climate Change Resilience Strategy; establishing United States foreign policy with respect to such strategy; advancing diplomatic and political efforts with respect to such strategy; guiding security assistance and related civilian security efforts to mitigate climate change threats; and providing overseas humanitarian assistance— to respond to international displacement caused by climate change; and to coordinate the pursuit of protection and durable solutions for climate-displaced persons, including resettlement into the United States; USAID is— responsible for overseeing programs to prevent the effects of climate change; and the lead implementing agency for— providing overseas humanitarian assistance to respond to internal displacement and food insecurity caused by climate change; and developing a related non-security program policy related to building resilience and achieving recovery; and other Federal agencies support the activities of the Department of State and USAID, as appropriate, with the concurrence of the Secretary of State and the USAID Administrator; describe programs that Federal agencies will undertake to achieve the stated objectives, including descriptions of existing programs and funding by fiscal year and account; identify mechanisms to improve coordination between the United States, foreign governments, and international organizations, including the World Bank, the United Nations, regional organizations, and private sector organizations; address efforts to expand public-private partnerships and leverage private sector resources; describe the criteria, metrics, and mechanisms for monitoring and evaluating the programs and objectives in the Global Climate Change Resilience Strategy; describe how the Global Climate Change Resilience Strategy will ensure that programs are conflict-sensitive, country-led and context-specific; and describe how the Global Climate Change Resilience Strategy is a means for peacebuilding, and is incorporated into peacebuilding, and post-conflict plans and programs. Not later than 270 days after the date of the enactment of the Climate Displaced Persons Act , and annually thereafter, the President shall submit a report to the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate and the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives , based in part on the information collected pursuant to this section, that details the Global Climate Change Resilience Strategy. The report shall be submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex, if necessary. Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of the Climate Displaced Persons Act , the Secretary of State and the Coordinator of Global Climate Change Resilience shall brief the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate and the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives on the progress made towards implementing the Global Climate Change Resilience Strategy. Not later than 270 days after the date of the enactment of the Climate Displaced Persons Act , and annually thereafter, the Comptroller General of the United States, in cooperation and consultation with the Secretary of State, shall publish a report evaluating the progress that the Federal Government has made toward incorporating climate change into policies of the Department of State and USAID and describing the resources that have been allocated for such purpose. The report required under subparagraph
(A)shall assess— the degree to which the Department of State and USAID are— developing climate change risk assessments; and providing guidance to missions on how to include climate change risks in their integrated country strategies; whether the Department of State and USAID have sufficient resources to fulfill the requirements described in paragraph (2); and any areas in which the Department of State and USAID may lack sufficient resources to fulfill the requirements described in paragraph (2). .
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Sec. 5
Global Climate Change Resilience Strategy
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