Thinking about the implications: How countries plan to finance their climate transition

5 December 2024 - Climate Report - By : Gracia RAHI / Sébastien POSTIC, Phd / Diana CÁRDENAS MONAR / Claire ESCHALIER / Sarah BENDAHOU

The urgency of climate action is becoming ever more apparent, yet we remain far from securing the level of financing required for meaningful progress. The first Global Stocktake underscored a widening gap between the needs of developing countries and the support they receive, while advanced economies also struggle to finance their own ambitious climate targets.

 

Countries need detailed, nationally-driven financing plans to enable an efficient, locally-owned transition and to better coordinate—and scale up—scarce international resources. These plans are crucial for aligning public and private efforts, financing national priorities, preventing stranded assets, and embedding climate considerations within broader development strategies. They are guided by four key questions: How much to spend, where, and when? Who will invest, and who will finance these investments? What is needed for these payments to happen? And finally, what are the macroeconomic impacts of the transition?

 

This study reviews existing practices in 10 geographically and economically diverse countries to support the development of such financing plans, identifying good practices and areas for inspiration and improvement. It uses 45 progress indicators, structured around the questions above, to understand where countries are today in the process of developing such financing plans.

 

This first assessment shows that many milestones have already been reached on the way to ambitious financing plans: on average, 60% of our indicators are filled in the surveyed countries. However, significant gaps remain, with key elements still absent or underdeveloped.

 

Country level estimates of financing needs remain generally inadequate. Even in countries where such estimates are provided, the sectoral/temporal detail is often too limited to serve as a basis for a real financing plan. Moreover, the closer the time horizon, the less information is provided on indicators related to transition planning, indicating a disconnect between more mature long-term visions and short-term actions that are comparatively more like flying blind.

 

The question of how the effort will be shared is still poorly addressed. Details of who will pay and through what channel are rarely provided, making it difficult to reflect on the public policies that should trigger these investments. Most countries lack clear frameworks or incentives to mobilize sufficient private finance, and financing options for public action are also underexplored, especially on the domestic resource mobilization side.

 

Finance will take center stage in the next two years of international negotiations. The partial success of COP29 negotiations shifts maximum pressure to the year leading up to COP30, which is set to formalize increased international ambition and adopt the next generation of NDCs in November 2025. In this context, our preliminary findings highlight the need to:

 

  • Advancing country-owned, bottom-up, and detailed identification of investment and financing needs, tailored to national circumstances and targets, and broken down over time.
  • Pairing this with a systematic review of available financing options, including domestic, international, public, and private sources.
  • Applying these insights not only to long-term strategies but also incorporating them into short-term planning frameworks that guide national authorities’ actions.

 

To learn more
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    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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