Press Release

GGGI and ICC highlight sustainable infrastructure and investment policies at UN climate talks

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The Global Green Growth Institute and the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) actively promoted enabling conditions to shift and scale-up investments in green infrastructure, and raised awareness of risk mitigation instruments during the 20th session of the Conference of the Parties (COP) to the UN Framework convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in Lima, Peru.

Investing in green infrastructure projects is often challenging. Under the theme “From Green Growth Plans to Green Infrastructure Investments”, leading private and public actors discussed solutions to institutional and financial barriers to attract “green” investments. Gathering around 100 participants, the event co-organized by GGGI and ICC, focused on cooperation opportunities in decarbonizing the energy matrix and building sustainable infrastructure. This included the role of public-private partnerships, standardization of project design, de-risking options, and mobilization of domestic and international institutional investors. Panellists also looked at project pipeline generation as well as at ways to address non-project risks and to achieve financial closure.

Moroccan environment minister Hakima El Haite provided introductory remarks on the long-term political signals that accompany a green growth strategy, followed by James Bacchus, ICC Chair of the Trade and Investment Policy Group, member of the High Level Advisory Panel to the President of the COP to the UNFCCC, who outlined enabling framework conditions for green infrastructure investments.

“We put green growth at the heart of economic planning in emerging countries, so we see how infrastructure investments – in renewable energy technology, low-carbon infrastructure – can be limited by incomplete regulations and more generally by inadequate risk/reward profiles. Institutional investors shy away from investing directly in such projects in the absence of adequate vehicles which could rebalance risk and returns and provide the necessary scale and diversification,” said Nikolaus Schultze, GGGI’s Assistant Director-General for Public-Private Cooperation.

Participating companies, banks and international organizations included ICC, GGGI, Alstom, Odebrecht, Bancolombia Group, International Finance Corporation (IFC), Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) as well as Climate Policy Initiative (CPI).