Tag: Renewable Energy Pakistan

  • Climate Capital: Who Gets to Finance Pakistan’s Green Future?

    Climate Capital: Who Gets to Finance Pakistan’s Green Future?

    Climate Finance Series · Post #2

    Climate capital is not charity. It is investment with a climate purpose. Understanding how it moves – and why it keeps bypassing Pakistan — is one of the most consequential questions of our time.

    $340B Pakistan’s climate finance need by 2030 <1% Pakistan’s share of global emissions 5th Most climate-vulnerable country on earth
    We did not cause the climate crisis. We are paying for it anyway – in floods, heatwaves, and destroyed livelihoods. The question is: who pays for the recovery?

    01 – What is climate capital?

    Capital is money put to work to earn a return. Climate capital is the same idea, pointed at the climate crisis.

    Traditional finance
    • Profit first, consequences secondary
    • Coal plant = good if it earns
    • Climate damage stays off the balance sheet
    Climate capital
    • Return + risk + environmental impact
    • Coal plant = long-term financial liability
    • Climate risk is now a money risk

    02 – Public money vs private money

    Two very different streams. Mixing them up explains most of the confusion in Pakistani news coverage.

    Public finance
    GCF · ADB · World Bank
    Low rates · Grants possible
    Seeds the project
    De-risks · Builds trust
    Private capital
    Pension funds · Bonds
    Fast when conditions fit
    Scales the project
    Billions, not millions
    Reality check: Much of what is officially counted as “climate finance” to Pakistan is ordinary development lending relabelled green after the fact. The real concessional climate money arriving here is a fraction of what the headlines suggest.

    03 – Where the $340 billion gap actually shows up

    Not hypothetical future problems. Happening right now, in specific places, to specific people.

    Urban flood drainage (Karachi, Hyderabad)
    8% funded
    Agricultural adaptation (60%+ of the workforce)
    15% funded
    Coastal protection (Thatta, Badin, Lasbela)
    5% funded
    Grid upgrades for renewable scale-up
    22% funded
    Utility-scale renewable energy
    38% funded
    Renewable energy is the one sector where meaningful investment has arrived – mainly through CPEC and independent power producers. Everything else is severely underfunded.

    04 – Three financial tools Pakistan is barely using

    Carbon markets Ten Billion Trees and clean cooking projects could earn carbon credits internationally. But Pakistan has no regulatory framework yet, and Article 6 rules under the Paris Agreement remain unclear. Green sukuk Pakistan has one of the world’s biggest Islamic banking markets. A sovereign green sukuk linked to flood protection or renewables would tap billions from Islamic institutional investors globally. ESG investment Global funds managing trillions use ESG filters. Pakistan’s governance and policy scores keep it out of many portfolios before a single project is even reviewed.

    05 – Four reasons investors walk away

    1. Policy keeps changing. Feed-in tariffs altered retroactively. Net metering rules shift without warning. Investors who built models on one set of rules found contracts renegotiated mid-project.
    2. Currency mismatch. Projects earn in rupees, carry debt in dollars. The rupee has fallen dramatically for a decade. Without hedging tools, investors carry a structural loss risk from day one.
    3. Political unpredictability. Frequent government changes make long-horizon decisions very difficult. Countries with comparable returns but less volatility win the capital first.
    4. Nowhere to put the money. Pakistan’s pipeline of investment-ready, well-structured climate projects is thin. International capital often wants to come in but cannot find a credible project to fund.
    Who attracts climate capital
    • Stable, predictable policy
    • Strong ESG track records
    • Deep domestic capital markets
    • Ready, bankable project pipelines
    Who gets left behind
    • High-vulnerability, high-risk nations
    • Unstable regulatory environments
    • Thin institutional capacity
    • Limited currency hedging options

    06 – The roadmap: six steps that would actually change things

    1. Resolve circular debt — now. Honour existing power contracts. Stop retroactive tariff changes. No other step works if investors cannot trust government commitments.
    2. Make the green finance taxonomy the talk of the town.
      Published. Now comes the harder part. Pakistan has officially defined what counts as a “green” investment. A framework sitting in a government document that no bank, fund manager, or business has heard of achieves nothing. The priority now is making this taxonomy the most-cited, most-demanded document in every boardroom, banking hall, and regulatory meeting in the country. Industry associations, the State Bank, SECP, and civil society all have a role in turning a published policy into a living standard.
    3. Build a project pipeline facility. A dedicated unit — with ADB or World Bank technical support — to develop bankable climate projects. International money often wants to come in but cannot find a credible project to fund.
    4. Issue Pakistan’s first green sukuk. Even a small first issuance, transparently structured and independently verified, signals seriousness to the Islamic sustainable finance market worldwide.
    5. Create provincial green investment funds. Each province needs its own climate investment mechanism. Federal-to-district pipelines are too slow and too leaky for Pakistan’s governance reality.
    6. Make green banking pay for banks. Mandatory climate risk disclosure. State Bank refinancing tied explicitly to green lending targets. Real incentives — not voluntary guidelines nobody enforces.
    Climate capital does not flow toward need.
    It flows toward credibility, predictability, and return.

    Pakistan has the need. The next decade is about building everything else.

    Post #2 · Climate Finance Series · Based on Climate Finance: Taking a Position on Climate Futures by Gareth Bryant & Sophie Webber
    Next: Climate Risk — When Finance Meets the Physics of a Warming Planet

    Post 1: Money Meets the Weather: Welcome to the World of Climate Finance