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Innovative financing is needed to mobilise clean energy capital in developing countries. What could it look like?
Less than 1% of clean energy investments goes to developing countries. Guarantees and partnerships could increase this.
David Banmiller
Head of Americas Sales and host of The Interchange Recharged
David Banmiller
Head of Americas Sales and host of The Interchange Recharged
David manages the Global Strategic Banking team and hosts The Interchange Recharged
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Innovative financing is needed to mobilise clean energy capital in developing countries. What could it look like?
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The global energy transition effort is all about ‘the new’. New technology, new financing models, new ways of looking at energy systems. The need for ‘the new’ is greatest in developing countries. For many of them, the challenge isn’t just transitioning to clean energy, it’s providing energy access in the first place. By 2030, we could see nearly a billion people left without access to energy, never mind clean energy. So how can we get the investment flowing to where it’s desperately needed?
Damilola Ogunbiyi is CEO of the organisation Sustainability For All. SE4All works with public and private sector to provide access to reliable, affordable, sustainable and new energy for all by 2030. David sits down with Damilola to discuss her holistic view of the energy transition, the innovative financing models needed to mobilise capital, carbon markets, and how the industry should address the challenge of improving energy access while transitioning to clean sources.
Energy access is directly linked to quality of life. This is especially true as the climate crisis worsens. Both public and private sectors need to work together to mobilise capital for the energy transition. So how can we do it?
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