Difference between revisions of "Reducing the Cost of Capital: Strategies to Unlock Clean Energy Investment in Emerging and Developing Economies"

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{{Pub Database
 
{{Pub Database
|Pub Title=Bringing Down the Cost of Capital is Key to Unlocking Clean Energy Growth in Emerging Economies
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|Pub Title=Reducing the Cost of Capital: Strategies to Unlock Clean Energy Investment in Emerging and Developing Economies
 
|Pub Organization=IEA
 
|Pub Organization=IEA
 
|Pub Author=IEA
 
|Pub Author=IEA
 
|Pub Month=February
 
|Pub Month=February
 
|Pub Year=2024
 
|Pub Year=2024
|Pub Abstract=Clean energy investment in emerging and developing economies outside China needs to rise more than sixfold in next 10 years, but securing affordable financing is a major hurdle.
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|Pub Abstract=Investment in emerging and developing economies (EMDEs outside China) needs to increase more than sixfold by the early 2030s to get on track to limit global temperature rise to 1.5°C. A high cost of capital in these countries makes it much more difficult to attract investment. With growing international attention to this issue, the International Energy Agency (IEA) was tasked by the Paris Summit on a New Global Financing Pact in June 2023 to make recommendations on how to bring down the cost of capital for clean energy investment in EMDEs.
  
Many emerging and developing economies are missing out on the wave of global clean energy investment as the high cost of capital for new projects is deterring developers and stifling opportunities in the new energy economy, particularly for some of the world’s poorest countries, a new IEA report finds.
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This report builds on previous IEA analysis and on new survey data collected for the IEA’s Cost of Capital Observatory project. The cost of capital is particularly important for clean energy projects which typically have high upfront costs during development. In EMDEs, the cost of capital is far higher relative to advanced economies and China due to real and perceived risks. Country-related risks such as currency fluctuations or the rule of law, and sector- and project-related risks including revenue flows, regulatory uncertainty and access to the grids are among the main concerns for investors. Reducing these risks will be key to lowering the cost of capital and in turn unlocking clean energy investment in the parts of the world that most need it.
|Pub Download=https://www.iea.org/news/bringing-down-the-cost-of-capital-is-key-to-unlocking-clean-energy-growth-in-emerging-economies
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This special report provides detailed insights into the risk factors that affect financing costs across different clean energy sectors in EMDEs and provides recommendations of what can be done to address them.
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|Pub Download=https://www.iea.org/reports/reducing-the-cost-of-capital
 
|Pub Newsletter=No
 
|Pub Newsletter=No
 
|GBE filter=No
 
|GBE filter=No

Latest revision as of 15:58, 14 February 2024

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Title
Reducing the Cost of Capital: Strategies to Unlock Clean Energy Investment in Emerging and Developing Economies
Publisher
IEA
Author
IEA
Published in
February 2024
Abstract
Investment in emerging and developing economies (EMDEs outside China) needs to increase more than sixfold by the early 2030s to get on track to limit global temperature rise to 1.5°C. A high cost of capital in these countries makes it much more difficult to attract investment. With growing international attention to this issue, the International Energy Agency (IEA) was tasked by the Paris Summit on a New Global Financing Pact in June 2023 to make recommendations on how to bring down the cost of capital for clean energy investment in EMDEs.

This report builds on previous IEA analysis and on new survey data collected for the IEA’s Cost of Capital Observatory project. The cost of capital is particularly important for clean energy projects which typically have high upfront costs during development. In EMDEs, the cost of capital is far higher relative to advanced economies and China due to real and perceived risks. Country-related risks such as currency fluctuations or the rule of law, and sector- and project-related risks including revenue flows, regulatory uncertainty and access to the grids are among the main concerns for investors. Reducing these risks will be key to lowering the cost of capital and in turn unlocking clean energy investment in the parts of the world that most need it.

This special report provides detailed insights into the risk factors that affect financing costs across different clean energy sectors in EMDEs and provides recommendations of what can be done to address them.
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