Trust collateral: The missing variable in climate finance mobilization

Stakeholders gathered for the Global Climate Finance Centre’s Abu Dhabi High-Level Roundtable on Climate Investment in December 2025 — a private sector gathering of investors and project developers from Brazil and the United Arab Emirates — to discuss how to scale investable projects and national platforms. Photo by: GCFC

This essay is the first of seven that Devex will be producing in partnership with the Children's Investment Fund Foundation as part of The next frontier: Reimagining financing for development and growth — a series convening diverse global voices to redefine collaboration and unlock capital for future growth.

Development finance in 2026 is operating under a joint constraint that has become structural: a tighter funding environment and soaring need. Official development assistance, or ODA, fell by 9% in 2024 and continued to tighten through 2025, even as the demand for funding intensifies.

This juxtaposition is especially pronounced in climate finance. To meet global net-zero targets, necessary investment hovers in the trillions, far exceeding the current capacity of public balance sheets. Furthermore, the financing burden sits heavily on emerging markets and low- and middle-income countries, which face the highest costs of capital and are simultaneously the most exposed to the systemic shocks of a warming planet.

In this environment, mobilizing the capital to address climate change will depend on conversion: translating catalytic intent into transactions that investors can underwrite, regulators can defend, and delivery agencies can execute. The scale of this mobilization over the coming decade will be determined by institutions that can produce “trust collateral” — the bundle of governance arrangements, data integrity, verification pathways, decision protocols, and delivery discipline that allows private balance sheets to commit to green projects across jurisdictions and delivery chains with confidence.

By lowering the “cost of deciding,” trust collateral aims to streamline the interface between global investors and emerging market projects, creating the “decision-ready” conditions required for speed and scale.

Explore the essay to discover the five pillars of trust collateral and how they are being used to turn climate ambition into investable deal-flow.

This content is produced in partnership with CIFF as part of The next frontier: Reimagining financing for development and growth — a series convening diverse global voices to redefine collaboration and unlock capital for future growth.