Tracking and Mobilizing Private Sector Climate Adaptation Finance

Sep 25, 2024 at 3:50 PM

Unlocking the Potential of Private Adaptation Finance: A Comprehensive Approach

The global landscape of climate finance has seen a significant shift in recent years, with adaptation finance reaching an all-time high of USD 63 billion annual average for 2021/22. However, this growth still falls far short of the estimated needs for adaptation, particularly in developing economies. While public actors have dominated the tracked adaptation finance, the private sector's role in addressing climate vulnerabilities remains largely untapped. This comprehensive report delves into the challenges and opportunities in tracking private adaptation finance, offering a groundbreaking taxonomy and data-driven approach to unlock the true potential of private capital in the fight against climate change.

Unleashing the Power of Private Adaptation Finance

Bridging the Adaptation Finance Gap

The global adaptation finance landscape has seen a remarkable surge, with tracked adaptation finance reaching an all-time high of USD 63 billion annual average for 2021/22. This represents a 28% growth from the annual average in 2019/20. However, this progress still falls short of the estimated needs for adaptation, which are projected to reach USD 212 billion per year by 2030 for developing economies alone. The dominance of public actors in the tracked adaptation finance, with private sector adaptation finance accounting for only approximately USD 1.5 billion in 2021/22 on annual average, highlights the untapped potential of private capital in addressing climate vulnerabilities.

Uncovering the Hidden Potential of Private Adaptation Finance

The lack of comprehensive data and reporting on private adaptation finance has created significant challenges in tracking the overall adaptation flows. Current tracking efforts have failed to capture the full scope of private sector investment, including adaptation-focused small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), private equity (PE) and venture capital (VC) funding for early-stage adaptation companies, insurance premiums that incentivize resilient construction, consumer spending on adaptation solutions and technologies, and corporate balance sheet finance for adaptation of corporate assets. This data gap has reinforced the common narrative on the scarcity of viable business models for adaptation, obscuring the tremendous potential of the private sector to mobilize the levels of capital required to meet global adaptation investment needs.

Developing a Comprehensive Taxonomy for Private Adaptation Finance

To address the limitations of existing taxonomies in tracking private adaptation finance, this report introduces a new, comprehensive taxonomy that classifies climate adaptation activities according to a set of seven themes. These themes are derived from the adaptation taxonomies developed by Tailwind and Climate Bonds Initiative (CBI), but have been modified to better suit the purpose of tracking financial flows from private actors.The taxonomy includes 165 activities, each tagged with a range of elements, such as the activity's purpose, adaptation likelihood, maladaptation or significant harm risk, relevance to cities and gender, mitigation co-benefits, and the climate hazards it addresses. Additionally, the taxonomy associates each activity with the private actors that are likely to significantly contribute to its investment, facilitating more efficient data collection and analysis.

Leveraging Data and Machine Learning to Expand Adaptation Finance Tracking

Guided by the newly developed taxonomy, the report outlines a five-step approach to creating a comprehensive dataset of private adaptation finance. This process involves data scoping, collection, tagging, classification model development, and data processing and analysis.By applying this methodological approach, the report has significantly expanded the scope of trackable private adaptation finance, increasing the annual average tracked from the previous finding of USD 1.0 billion to USD 4.7 billion for the period of 2019 to 2022. The most substantial improvements in tracking have come from data on asset managers, commercial financial institutions, individuals (consumers) and households, and corporations.

Unlocking the True Potential of Private Adaptation Finance

The report's findings challenge the common narrative that there are limited or no viable business models for adaptation. In fact, the analysis indicates that private finance will be critical to mobilize the levels of capital required to meet global adaptation investment needs.While much more can be done to improve the tracking and reporting of private adaptation finance, this report represents a significant advancement in methodology and execution. By developing a comprehensive taxonomy and leveraging data and machine learning, the report has paved the way for a deeper understanding of the private sector's role in addressing climate vulnerabilities.The insights and tools presented in this report can empower policymakers, capital allocators, and the broader financial community to better assess, track, and ultimately drive a material increase in private adaptation finance. By unlocking the true potential of private capital, we can collectively accelerate the global effort to build resilience and adapt to the unavoidable impacts of climate change.