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Enhancing India’s Readiness to Climate Finance

India has taken several steps to improve its national response to climate change. India’s climate finance requirements, however, are very high, and will need to be met through a combination of public, private and international climate finance. See more at: http://shaktifoundation.in/

India has taken several steps to improve its national response to climate change. India’s climate finance requirements, however, are very high, and will need to be met through a combination of public, private and international climate finance. See more at: http://shaktifoundation.in/

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<strong>Enhancing</strong> <strong>India’s</strong> readiness <strong>to</strong> access and deliver international climate finance<br />

2. Investment in low carbon & climate resilient initiatives – Is there a strong<br />

investment climate for low carbon and climate resilient initiatives, for both the public and<br />

private sec<strong>to</strong>rs?<br />

1.3<br />

<br />

<br />

There has been increased investment in renewable energy in India (mostly wind and<br />

solar), but there is a need for further investment in other forms of RE, energy efficiency<br />

(EE) and sustainable transport. Installed capacity and annual investment in RE has been<br />

steadily increasing in India. Between 2008 and 2013 the share of RE in the country’s <strong>to</strong>tal<br />

energy mix rose from 8% <strong>to</strong> 12%. India has large potential for RE and EE technology<br />

deployment: the <strong>to</strong>tal RE potential is estimated <strong>to</strong> be more than 3000 GW, while estimates for<br />

EE range from 124 <strong>to</strong> 255 billion kWh. Biofuel, more efficient biomass use, electrical vehicles,<br />

fuel efficiency standards, efficient transport systems, and sustainable cities are other evolving<br />

areas which show strong room for growth. As these are evolving areas, funding has so far<br />

been limited in these sec<strong>to</strong>rs (from both public and private sources).<br />

Efforts <strong>to</strong> identify bankable projects have been initiated, but significant scale-up of<br />

capacity and removal of barriers are still required <strong>to</strong> create a strong pipeline of<br />

investible projects. A number of bankable projects have been developed and are<br />

increasingly being developed in the RE sec<strong>to</strong>r – facilitated by the size of the market<br />

(increasing cost competitiveness of RE technology), ease of doing business, favourable<br />

foreign investment policy, investment incentives and lack of red tape. However developing a<br />

pipeline of bankable projects in the EE sec<strong>to</strong>r remains a challenge, due <strong>to</strong> high transaction<br />

costs, small project sizes, lack of EE understanding amongst financial institutions, etc.<br />

3. Institutional management of climate finance – Does the country have a strong<br />

institutional structure <strong>to</strong> manage domestic & international climate finance?<br />

1.7<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

Indian institutions have clear structures in place <strong>to</strong> access and manage international<br />

climate finance. Bi-lateral and multilateral access is very streamlined and consultative.<br />

Priority areas for funding are jointly decided by DEA and line ministries, which means there is<br />

clear alignment of donor plans and GOI priorities and targets. Depending on the sec<strong>to</strong>r/theme<br />

a specific institution (e.g. NABARD for AF, MoEFCC for GEF & CTF) is given the responsibility<br />

<strong>to</strong> engage with the fund and coordinate climate finance access. The presence of the NAPCC<br />

has increased donor confidence and it is expected that new SAPCCs will further streamline<br />

climate finance delivery.<br />

There has been limited use of innovative financing mechanisms and blending of finance<br />

instruments for low carbon projects in India. The majority of international climate finance <strong>to</strong><br />

date has come in the form of grants and concessionary loans, which means there has been<br />

limited experience in blending various sources and instruments for project implementation.<br />

There is a need <strong>to</strong> build capacity within Indian DFIs <strong>to</strong> blend finance from a variety of funding<br />

sources for a variety of project types, sec<strong>to</strong>rs, and sizes – as matching risk profiles with<br />

appropriate financing instruments will result in more effective financing.<br />

The climate-related management experience of Indian DFIs is limited <strong>to</strong> small and<br />

medium size projects. Some medium size projects get project management support for<br />

execution from multilateral institutions such as the World Bank or UNDP. Such project<br />

management support may include capacity building; setting up a Project Management Unit for<br />

project planning, coordination & moni<strong>to</strong>ring; and stakeholder engagement.<br />

4. Institutional delivery of climate finance – Does the country have a strong institutional<br />

structure <strong>to</strong> deliver climate finance through institutions that can provide NIE-type<br />

functions?<br />

1<br />

<br />

DFIs have experience accessing climate finance, but need <strong>to</strong> scale-up existing<br />

programmes and broadening their sec<strong>to</strong>ral and geographic coverage. Financial<br />

Ref: Ricardo-AEA/R/ED59216/Final Report<br />

34

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