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Green Infrastructure Investment: Mobilising Private-Sector Participation in Climate-Friendly Projects

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2025-05

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Investing in sustainable infrastructure is crucial for effective climate change mitigation and adaptation. However, relying solely on current public investment plans may not be enough to finance climate-friendly infrastructure, as private sector involvement is limited. Creating an enabling regulatory environment can attract long-term investors like insurers who offer life insurance and annuity products. These investors can match the steady revenue streams from infrastructure projects with their long-term liabilities. However, many insurance solvency regimes do not adequately treat infrastructure as a distinct asset class. The credit risk of infrastructure debt – based on a global sample of project loans originated over nearly four decades – suggests that current capital requirements could be lowered, especially for projects that would meet the use-of-proceeds eligibility criteria for green bonds. Such “green” infrastructure projects have lower default rates than “non-green” projects, particularly in developed economies. Therefore, insurance solvency regimes that are tailored to the specific and unique features of infrastructure could lower regulatory capital cost for long-term regulated investors. Acknowledging the diminishing downgrade risk of infrastructure debt over time could release capital to support more climate-friendly infrastructure projects and enable the transition to more sustainable economies.

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Jobst, Andreas. "Green Infrastructure Investment: Mobilising Private-Sector Participation in Climate-Friendly Projects." Cambridge Journal of Climate Research, vol. 2, no. 1, pp. 26-52. https://doi.org/10.60866/CAM.234

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