Across three continents, something remarkable is happening—not in high-profile summits or grand speeches, but in focused, collaborative “NDC Clinics” where countries gather to diagnose their climate investment challenges and craft practical solutions.
These clinics, organized by UN Climate Change and partners, became a rare space where ministers, financial experts, and policymakers rolled up their sleeves to confront a single question: How do we actually deliver on the promises we’ve made to the planet?
The answer, it turns out, is complex—but within these rooms, a clearer picture began to emerge.
The year’s first clinic in Panama—bringing together 135 participants from 20 Latin American and Caribbean nations—set the tone. It wasn’t just about sharing ideas; it was about honestly assessing what wasn’t working.
By the time the Clinics moved to Addis Ababa for Africa’s Anglophone, Lusophone, and Francophone sessions—and later to Bangkok for Asia-Pacific—one theme was unmistakable:
Countries are eager to shift from climate ambition to climate execution.
Across these gatherings, over 300 officials exchanged strategies for investment planning, project pipeline development, and private sector engagement. The format—two days of immersive discussions, case studies, and hands-on exercises—turned what is usually abstract climate jargon into something alive and immediately actionable.
The clinics revealed a common set of barriers confronting governments worldwide:
Ministries still operate in silos, mandates often overlap, and climate governance struggles without a single empowered anchor.
Many nations rely on short-term consultants for complex climate planning. Meanwhile, limited data slows down evidence-based investment decisions.
Non-operational climate funds, limited fiscal space, and regulatory barriers—especially for subnational governments—continue to choke progress.
Businesses need clearer incentives and stable policy signals before committing serious capital.
Yet, acknowledging these hurdles also opened a door: countries finally began charting realistic paths forward.
The clinics showcased a wide range of solutions taking shape across regions:
Morocco, Mali, Fiji, and others illustrated how presidential- or PM-level leadership accelerates coherence and investment.
Fiji’s NDC Investment Plan, Morocco’s Investment Charter, and Mali’s sectoral roadmaps showed how structured planning unlocks finance.
From Zambia’s green bond to South Africa’s sovereign climate bonds, to Thailand’s groundbreaking climate taxonomy—countries are experimenting boldly.
Uganda’s Project Development Unit and Botswana’s Innovation Fund demonstrated how to turn climate concepts into bankable projects.
Kenya’s pioneering Local Climate Finance model is now influencing countries across Africa and beyond—proof that good ideas travel.
Egypt’s “Green Village,” Mozambique’s Local Adaptation Plans, and rural electrification programs in Fiji highlight that climate solutions must reach the last mile.
From these exchanges, a clear, five-part implementation strategy emerged:
Presidential or PM-led coordination reduces fragmentation and aligns ministries behind a single climate vision.
Countries are shifting from scattered projects to coherent national and sectoral investment plans.
Green bonds, results-based financing, blended finance and climate tagging are now crucial tools—not future possibilities.
Long-term expertise within ministries will ultimately determine the sustainability of climate action.
Real climate resilience starts at the village and municipal level, supported by peer-to-peer learning across borders.
If the NDC Clinics are a barometer, one thing is clear:
Countries are preparing to walk into COP30 in Belém with more than promises—they’re preparing to deliver plans that can attract real money and create real change.
With new national climate action plans due, and expectations rising for clarity on finance pledges, the Clinics have laid essential groundwork for a more implementation-driven COP.