October 15, 2024
06:20
06:20 - 07:20
Registration and coffee
07:20
07:20 - 07:50
Forum opening: Welcome remarks and keynotes
MathiasCormann (OECD)HelenaViñes Fiestas (Commissioner, Spanish Financial Markets Authority (CNMV))HughWheelan
07:50 - 09:00
High-Level Plenary: Reimagining a financial system fit for the 21st century
Meeting the Paris goals requires a major, transformational shift in global finance flows. Though efforts to this end are underway, and have accelerated in recent years, too much finance is still flowing towards business-as-usual, and not enough towards climate action. Existing efforts of international collaboration to date have been fragmented, and limited to a relatively small number of issues and tools that will not shift the dial. This imbalance can only be redressed through accelerated, sustained, systematic action by governments. This session will explore how policymakers can close this gap, including by developing an overarching vision for a climate-aligned global financial system. It will discuss the fundamental blockages to climate-aligned finance, and the frontier fiscal, regulatory, monetary, and other policy levers that can be deployed to accelerate the shift in finance.
JunMa (Institute of Finance and Sustainability)MathildeMesnard (OECD)JulieSegal (Environmental Defence Canada)HelenaViñes Fiestas (Commissioner, Spanish Financial Markets Authority (CNMV))SteveWaygood (Aviva Investors)SimonZadek (NatureFinance)
09:00
09:00 - 09:20
Coffee break
09:20 - 09:30
Keynote speech: Mobilising Private Finance for Climate Action in Emerging Markets and Developing Economies
Jo Tyndall (OECD)
09:30 - 10:40
High-Level Plenary: Mobilising institutional investment towards emerging economies for climate action: The role of investment funds in channelling green capital flows
There is no shortage of globally available capital. OECD and G20 institutional investors alone have at least USD 64 trillion of assets under management (OECD, 2020). Yet these institutional investors hold only USD 1.04 trillion in infrastructure assets, of which only USD 314 billion are green infrastructure assets, mostly in OECD countries. Cross-border private investment into green sectors will be essential to achieve net-zero objectives, as fiscal constraints from COVID-19 and other current geopolitical shifts necessitate increased mobilisation of private finance. The trillion-dollar question is how to mobilise private capital, especially from OECD institutional investors, in support of climate action, in emerging markets and developing economies. Despite the sustainable finance boom, there is evidence that little funding is currently flowing from investment funds to green assets in emerging markets. The session will discuss the drivers of green investment allocation and what is hindering further allocation towards green assets by private investment funds. It will also discuss other out-standing barriers to institutional investment flowing in EMDEs in support of climate action, especially in clean energy.
GeraldineAng (OECD)LucieBernatkova (Allianz Global Investors)AnnamariaDe Crescenzio (OECD)ElrikaHamdi (Secretariat of the Just Energy Transition Partnership (JETP) of Indonesia)DharshanWignarajah (Climate Policy Initiative)
10:40
10:40 - 12:00
Lunch
12:00
12:00 - 13:10
Green public finance and the net-zero transition
Public fiscal, budgeting and expenditure policies can be a major lever to prevent or address environmental challenges, be it through taxation, cash transfers, or supporting public and public-private investment. Fiscal frameworks should be designed to incentivise businesses to meet environment and net-zero objectives. It is equally important that these objectives are included into medium-term public budget management and into the design and implementation of specific public expenditure and investment programmes. Ensuring that public environmental expenditure programmes are well-managed is an essential element of effective and efficient economic policies. This session will discuss good practices and remaining challenges in designing fiscal incentives for environmental and climate actions and managing public environmental finance transparently and effectively, including through budget planning, public procurement and prudent expenditure management.
WolfgangDiernhofer (Kommunalkredit Publich Consulting GmbH)KrzysztofMichalak (OECD)MałgorzataOchorok Jedynak (Supreme Audit Office)Patrickten Brinck (European Environmental Bureau)BellaTonkonogy (US Treasury)CamilaVammalle (OECD)
12:00 - 13:10
The state of play of corporate transition planning: From theory to implementation
To achieve the Paris Agreement goals, all sectors of the global economy, and in particular hard-to-abate industries, must rapidly decarbonise. Transition finance focuses on the decarbonisation pathways of all sectors of the economy, including high-emitting ones. The OECD Guidance on Transition Finance emphasises that, in order for transition finance to have environmental integrity, it must be backed by robust, credible corporate transition plans. While there is no single, universally endorsed standard, there has been significant convergence with respect to key elements of a credible corporate transition plan. Given the increasing focus on corporate transition plans, including in the G20, this session will consider the state of play of implementation efforts. To what extent are corporates developing transition plans, and to what extent are those plans credible? What further developments could lead to significant increases in the development and issuance of credible transition plans?
SeanKidney (Climate Bonds Initiative)SherryMadera (CDP)CarmenNuzzo (Transition Pathway Initiative (TPI) Centre)Tara Shirvani (International Finance Corporation (IFC))HidekiTakada (GX Acceleration Agency)RobertYoungman (OECD)
13:10
13:10 - 13:40
Coffee break
13:40 - 14:50
Aligning finance with climate policy goals: Is disclosure effective to inform robust assessments and drive decarbonisation?
Climate ambition has ramped up in the financial sector, but data and knowledge gaps remain to understand the extent to which such ambitions are turned into impactful actions. A range of complementary metrics are needed to assess the credibility of net-zero commitments and transition plans. At the same time, more data on real-economy decarbonisation impacts allow further analyses of effectiveness in aligning finance with climate goals. Against this backdrop, this session will bring together senior-level policy makers and market participants to discuss progress in regulatory and voluntary guidance on climate-related disclosure and assessments, the extent to which such efforts are generating the information needed to conduct robust assessments, and whether they result in actual GHG reductions. The session will then reflect on what combination of further policies and actions are needed to contribute to making finance consistent with climate policy goals.
RaphaëlJachnik (OECD)SarahMcPhail (South African Reserve Bank)JolienNoels (OECD)LuciePinson (Reclaim Finance)SilviaRuprecht (Swiss Federal Office for the Environment FOEN)FredericSamama (S1, S&P Global)JeromeTaraska (CDP)
13:40 - 14:50
Mobilising private capital for industry decarbonisation: The role of international co-operation and partnerships
Mobilising private capital will be essential to realise the massive scale-up needed in investments in decarbonisation of the manufacturing industry where emerging markets and developing economies (EMDEs) can play a leading role. To advance on this, Climate Club, with the OECD and the IEA being its secretariat, fulfils an important role to enhance multi- and bilateral cooperation with a focus on leveraging public and in particular private finance as well as the necessary complementary technical assistance to EMDEs. This session brings together speakers from international finance institutions, philanthropies, institutional investors, and international organisations to explore the necessary enabling conditions and financing mechanisms required for advancing on industry decarbonisation, and explores success stories from different countries, sectors, and technologies with a focus on EMDEs.
HernánAndrés Frigolett Córdova (Chile)KarenBazex (The World Bank)RiccardoSavigliano (United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO))CecileSeguineaud (OECD)PeterTaylor (Institutional Investors Group on Climate Change (IIGCC))Till Tibbe (BMWK)ChanYang (European Climate Foundation)
14:50
14:50 - 15:00
Break – Room Change
15:00
15:00 - 16:10
High-Level Plenary: Mobilising finance and investment for adaptation and resilience
There is both an urgent need and opportunity to increase finance and investment for adaptation and resilience. Harnessing private investment will be critical given the scale of the challenge, as a complement to necessary public investment. This session focuses on identifying scalable solutions for unlocking investment in adaptation, from the project level to the enabling environment. The session will showcase the OECD’s forth-coming Climate Adaptation Investment Framework.
Amal-LeeAmin (British International Investment)AnthonyHobley (Howden Broking Group)MichaelMullan (OECD)NoelleO'Brien (Asian Development Bank)NicolasPinaud (OECD)RupertSchlegelmilch (OECD)
16:10
16:10 - 16:20
Closing remarks Day 1
HelenMountford (ClimateWorks Foundation)
16:20 - 18:00
Cocktail