Publication Author:
ANDREW SCOTT
 |
 
September
 
2015
| Publications

What happens to clean infrastructure finance when countries are big and fast-growing but have immature financial systems and a scarcity of long-term domestic investors? The Climate Policy Initiative (CPI) compares two different financing models from middle income countries: the highly centralized model of Brazil and the decentralized model from India. While evaluating the strengths and weaknesses of each model, the paper finds both countries end up with public financing dominating clean infrastructure projects with similar levels of leverage in both. 

Downloads

Title Size Action
Seizing the Global Opportunity: Partnerships for Better Growth and a Better Climate – Executive Summary

671.88 KB

NCE 2015 Resumen Ejecutivo

1.2 MB

Menangkap Peluang Global: Kemitraan Untuk Pertumbuhan Dan Iklim Yang Lebih Baik – Laporan Ekonomi Iklim Baru 2015

459.69 KB

Title Size Action
Seizing the Global Opportunity: Partnerships for Better Growth and a Better Climate.

5.38 MB

Menangkap Peluang Global: Kemitraan Untuk Pertumbuhan Dan Iklim Yang Lebih Baik – Laporan Ekonomi Iklim Baru 2015

6.21 MB

Title Size Action
Building Electricity Supplies in Africa for Growth and Universal Access

1.06 MB

Research Programme
|
Country
|
Publication Type

Related Content

Former President Felipe Calderon launched the New Climate Economy's "Better Growth, Better Climate Report" in Mexico, along with Helen Mountford, Director of the New Climate Economy and María Amparo Martínez Arroyo, General Director of the National Institute of Ecology and Climate Change.

"We welcome this announcement and the fact that Mexico is the first major emerging economy to declare its commitment to a low-carbon future. This is an example for other countries, including developed countries, to follow,” former President Felipe Calderón and Chair of the Global Commission on the Economy and Climate said.

A new paper, Implementing effective carbon pricing, from the New Climate Economy shows that carbon pricing works and doesn’t harm the economy. It urges developed and emerging economies, with the G20 in the lead, to commit to introducing carbon prices of roughly comparable levels by 2020.

Today, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon nominated Mexican Ambassador Patricia Espinosa as the next Executive Secretary of the UN Framework on Climate Change (UNFCCC). Former President of Mexico and Chair of the Global Commission on the Economy and Climate Felipe Calderón releases the following statement:

The New Climate Economy launched its China research at the 2014 Annual Review of Low Carbon Development in China, hosted by its research partner Tsinghua University. Professor He Jiankun, Director, Institute of Energy, Environment and Economics, was encouraged by the potential of the research and remarked “I believe the New Climate Economy will make breakthroughs.”

Helen Mountford, Programme Director of the New Climate Economy project welcomed the announcements by China and the United States on their plans to tackle carbon pollution. The targets set by the United States and China, the world’s two largest emitters of greenhouse gases, send a signal to the world about the scale and size of opportunities in global markets for low carbon goods and services.