Navigate Climate Finance Reform with Strategic Clarity

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A Framework for Coordinated Climate Finance Action

CPI has developed the Brazil Climate Finance Reform Compass to build consensus and coordinate action among government, private sector, and civil society actors on the reforms needed to strengthen Brazil’s climate finance ecosystem. Based on the principles of the COP28 UAE Global Climate Finance Framework, the Brazil Compass tracks 24 reform topics across 8 themes aligned with the country’s climate and development priorities.

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Compass Themes

These themes are used to organize and promote consistency across the individual reform topics included in the Compass.

Commitments and Ambitions

To ensure an equitable global climate transition, developed countries need to deliver on their goal of mobilizing $100bn in climate finance for emerging markets and developing economies. In addition to increasing mitigation finance, this includes doubling adaptation finance and operationalization of arrangements for responding to loss and damage.

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Fiscal Space

Fiscal authorities around the world must prepare for more frequent and severe climate-related shocks, as well as for large financing needs. Reform topics in this theme are intended make sovereign balance sheets more resilient and robust to achieve climate goals.

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Concessional Finance

Establishing the foundations of climate-smart growth in some areas and sectors may not consistently generate the returns required by private investors. Concessional finance, including guarantees and other de-risking mechanisms, as well as emissions pricing and taxation, can help bridge this gap.

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Just Transition

While the global climate transition presents significant opportunities for resilient economic growth, we must take care to ensure that vulnerable populations are not left behind. In developing countries, this may include transferring knowledge, skills, and technology at scale, and will depend on strong policy frameworks and adaptation strategies.

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Country-led Initiatives

Country-owned investment platforms are an essential starting point for aligning stakeholders and building investment pipelines across sectors. To establish such platforms, countries must commit to ambitious but achievable transition pathways that are in line with their circumstances.

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Domestic Mobilization

A significant portion of total climate finance needs will come from domestic savings, including in emerging markets and developing economies. Key steps necessary to build and mobilize domestic savings include strong macroeconomic policies and financial-sector development.

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Private Finance

The majority of financing for the climate transition will come from the private sector, but in many cases, private actors will need guidance, de-risking, and appropriate incentives from the global public sector to deliver at the necessary speed and scale. In particular, catalytic financial and policy mechanisms can help reduce the cost of capital where it is currently too high to achieve climate results.

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Carbon Markets

Carbon markets remain an essential component of the climate finance architecture, but unlocking their potential requires transparency and high-integrity standards across the value chain. At the domestic and international levels, policies to achieve real emissions reductions, in line with country circumstances, can help build supply and demand for carbon credits.

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MDB Reform

MDBs are central actors in the international financial architecture and have begun work on a reform agenda to respond to the scale of the climate challenge. MDBs need to work as a cohesive system to support country-led climate strategies, including by streamlining access and scaling innovative risk-sharing mechanisms.

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Upcoming Events

These events are identified as points where global climate priorities will be established and, are mapped to our key milestones.

Washington DC, US

WBG/IMF Spring Meetings

Bonn

UN meetings

Hamburg Germany

Hamburg Sustainability conference

Washington, DC

WBG/IMF Annual Meetings

Key Milestones

Keep track of key climate milestones based on our Compass themes, mapped to global meetings and events.

Loss & Damage

Commitments and Ambitions

Discuss how international financial institutions can complement the Loss and Damage architecture by providing predictable, grant-based support for slow-onset events and climate-related mobility, while avoiding additional debt burdens

New NDCs

Commitments and Ambitions

Discussions should shift from NDC ambition to implementation at scale, focusing on how international financial institutions can help close the financing gap facing developing countries through country platforms, policy-based finance, and risk-sharing instruments

Vertical Climate and Environmental Funds (VCEFs)

Commitments and Ambitions

Discussions should focus on how vertical climate and environment funds can better align with country-led NDC implementation and national investment plans, while reducing fragmentation and transaction costs.

New Collective Quantified Goal (NCQG)

Commitments and Ambitions

Discussions should focus on how the NCQG can be underpinned by credible delivery pathways, including the roles of MDB reform, balance-sheet optimization, and the use of concessional finance to mobilize private capital.