The Green Climate Fund (GCF) and Meridiam convened a joint Investor Forum in Paris in early October to identify opportunities to mobilize and scale up capital for more ambitious climate action in developing countries. The first-ever event in France brought together private sector entities, business leaders, and potential co-investment partners from private financial institutions.
The landmark event represents a first step towards building a trusted network of financiers in France that will collaborate closely to expand climate investment opportunities in developing countries.
The Paris Forum is the second in GCF’s Investor Forum series, which aims to engage investors to explore co-investment and partnership climate opportunities. It follows a forum in New York held on the margins of Climate Week NYC and the 79th Session of the United Nations General Assembly, and a forum in London is scheduled next month. It is a critical component of GCF’s “50by30” vision to mobilize private capital at scale for transformative action in developing countries.
A common vision and ambition were shared during the event:
– Unlocking billions of dollars of private sector capital is a win-win situation for developing countries on the frontlines of the climate crisis and investors seeking growth opportunities.
– Close collaboration and partnerships to accelerate momentum to increase private sector investment in climate resilience is key to enabling developing countries to meet their climate mitigation and adaptation goals and open new markets and business opportunities in developing countries.
Thierry Déau, Founder and CEO of Meridiam, said: “By acting now and pooling our skills and investment capacity, we can help meet the urgent need for action on climate change in developing countries. We share a common vision with GCF and are determined to convince as many people as possible to join us investing in impactful projects.”
Ms Kavita Sinha, Director of GCF’s Private Sector Facility, said: “GCF holds a unique position in the climate finance landscape as the only multilateral climate fund that partners directly with the private sector. GCF take on higher risks for higher climate impact in exchange for lower returns to enable private investors make their target returns because, for us, the best return on investment is a climate safe future for everyone, not just the bottom line.
GCF has committed USD 15 billion to 270 climate projects worldwide, of which USD 5.5 billion is committed to 63 private sector projects. It intends to accelerate its climate investment and deploy approximately USD 1 billion annually until 2027, unlocking private capital for climate projects in developing countries. The Fund’s portfolio of projects addresses various areas, from energy supply transition to decarbonization of industry and supply chains, climate resilient infrastructure, nature-based solutions and climate start-ups, among others.