Money, money, money: Financing plans for the climate transition

8 February 2024 - Climate Report - By : Sébastien POSTIC, Phd

France should publish mid-year its first multi-annual strategy for financing the ecological transition. This is a long way from the first 2015 climate strategy, which barely touched funding aspects. And it is good news. We at I4CE believe that such plans are essential tools to support the transition to low-emission, climate-resilient economies. Credible, multi-year public spending targets help to embark the private sector and the funders of public action (debt holders, international donors) in the transition, and redirect financial flows as demanded by the Paris Agreement. Comprehensive financing plans also avoid simplistic approaches based on case-by-case project appraisal on the basis of limited cost-benefit considerations, which can ultimately result in significant additional costs.

 

We believe this is the right time to discuss such plans.

 

Beyond France, international climate discussions have taken a resolute turn towards the financing aspects of the transition. UN’s Simon Stiell reminded us last week that USD 2, 400 billion are needed every year, starting now, to finance climate action in the global South (excluding China). The reform of the global financial architecture, initiated in 2022, is underway. So is the re-negotiation of the target for climate finance flows from developed to developing countries, currently standing at USD 100 billion per year. To come up with meaningful solutions, these two processes will need to rely on tangible information on the needs and priorities of recipient countries. Brazil, which is hosting this year’s G20 and next year’s COP30, has made climate finance one of its priorities. At the EU level, ambitious commitments such as the freshly out “90% emissions reduction by 2040” still lack predictable financial support over the next 5 to 10 years. The NextGenerationEU recovery plan, which will phase out by 2026, leaves a void in the EU climate finance policy, and the fund-by-fund approach lacks the overall consistency which is needed to provide a real answer to the United States’ Inflation Reduction Act.

 

Within France, the subnational context is ripe for working on medium-term climate-sensitive financing plans at the local government level. We now have a figure for subnational public climate investment needs: around €12 billion annually. Roughly a third of France’s overall climate investment gap, and a doubling of the current investment pace. That is, leaving adaptation out. The national discussion on ecological planning is now being taken to the local level through regional COPs, under the Prime Minister’s authority. France is once again opening up the debate on decentralization and the roles, responsibilities and resources of its local authorities. Ecological planning at the local level is one of the unavoidable topics of such a discussion.

 

In 2024 and 2025, I4CE will keep supporting the emergence of multi-annual strategies for funding the transition at the international, European, national and subnational levels. This note summarizes why we strongly believe such strategies matter, presents our work so far in supporting their shaping and making, and more importantly, what is coming up next.

To learn more
  • 07/02/2025 Foreword of the week
    Bridging the gap: high-level climate & development finance commitments and the reality on the ground

    The 4th International Conference on Financing for Development (FFD4) in Seville represents a milestone for delivering on development (including climate action) goals, a decade after the adoption of the Sustainable Development Goals and the Paris Agreement. The “Seville Commitment” was adopted on June 30th, albeit in the absence of the United States – demonstrating that widespread support remains for a comprehensive package to finance development. However, the outcome also embodies the growing chasm between high-level commitments and the reality of financing for development and climate action on the ground. Recent research by I4CE attempts to bridge this gap on two crucial issues. 

  • 07/02/2025
    From headline trillions to actual millions: climate financing needs estimates in the age of implementation

    As climate finance debates evolve from pledges to implementation, this report critically reviews the methodologies and narratives behind existing climate financing needs estimates to examine how they might be used to guide practical efforts in the years to come, and where the most urgent improvements are needed. From headline trillions to actual millions, the challenge ahead is not just about determining how much is missing – the focus should be on closing this gap in practice.

  • 06/13/2025 Foreword of the week
    The unlocked potential of carbon revenues to help fill the climate finance gap

    Climate negotiations are taking place next week in Bonn, with finance once again high on the agenda. COP 29 ended last year with a New Collective Quantified Goal (NCQG) –revised climate finance target to replace the USD 100 billion goal. The NCQG decision put forward a commitment by developed countries to lead in providing USD 300 billion per year by 2035 for developing countries, as well as a proposal to work on a roadmap to scale up climate finance for developing countries to reach a level closer to the estimated needs –the ‘Baku to Belem Roadmap to 1.3T’ (USD 1.3 trillion). The latter must be delivered at the end of the year at COP 30, and strong efforts are being put in the task by the Brazilian Presidency.

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