Climate finance enables financial flows and instruments from public, private, and alternative sources to support climate mitigation (emissions reduction) and adaptation (resilience building). It underpins transformational investment across sectors such as clean energy, agriculture, infrastructure, and ecosystem restoration. Developed countries have pledged to mobilize new and additional support to developing nations to help them meet their climate goals, bridging the gap between ambition and implementation.
Despite being one of the most climate-vulnerable regions, Eastern Africa receives less than 5% of the global climate finance it requires. Innovative approaches are beginning to change this: Ethiopia’s Climate Resilient Green Economy (CRGE) strategy is leveraging donor support for resilience, while Rwanda and Kenya are piloting green bonds to mobilize private capital.
Blended finance, carbon levy reinvestments, and Article 6 revenues represent further untapped opportunities. The challenge and opportunity is to create financing structures that can move beyond pilot projects to large-scale impact. Climate finance is not charity; it is investment in resilience and growth. Eastern Africa can demonstrate leadership by blending public, private, and market-based finance to deliver measurable results for people and the planet.
Eastern Africa could turn climate finance into real impact through;