Beyond the Sum of its Parts : Combining Financial Instruments for Impact and Efficiency
The Global Environment Facility (GEF), carbon finance, and the Clean Technology Fund (CTF) constitute the bulk of dedicated funding for low-carbon development. To achieve the largest possible impact, practitioners must learn to combine these resour...
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2014
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2010/06/12471377/beyond-sum-parts-combining-financial-instruments-impact-efficiency http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18519 |
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okr-10986-185192021-04-23T14:03:45Z Beyond the Sum of its Parts : Combining Financial Instruments for Impact and Efficiency Hosier, Richard Kulichenko, Nataliya Maheshwari, Aditi Toba, Natsuko Wang, Xiaodong AIR AIR CONDITIONERS AIR CONDITIONING AIR POLLUTION AIR QUALITY AIR-CONDITIONER ALLOCATION ALTERNATIVE ENERGY APPROVAL PROCEDURES APPROVAL PROCESS ATMOSPHERE BANK FINANCING BANK LENDING BANK LOAN BANK MANAGEMENT BIOMASS BOTTLENECKS BUS BUS CORRIDOR BUSES CAPACITY BUILDING CARBON FINANCE CARBON FOOTPRINT CARBON MARKET CARBON MARKETS CARBON OFFSETS CARBON TECHNOLOGIES CARS CASH FLOWS CFC CLEAN TECHNOLOGY CLIMATE CLIMATE CHANGE CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION CO COMMODITY PRICE COMPACT FLUORESCENT LAMPS CONDITIONERS COUNTRY RISK CREDITS DEBT DEBT BURDEN DEMAND FOR TRANSPORT DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPMENT BANKS DEVELOPMENT FINANCE DOMESTIC FINANCIAL MARKETS DONOR FUNDS ELECTRICITY ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION ELECTRICITY DEMAND EMISSION EMISSION REDUCTION EMISSION REDUCTIONS EMISSION SAVINGS EMISSIONS EMISSIONS FROM DEFORESTATION EMISSIONS GROWTH ENABLING ENVIRONMENT ENERGY CONSUMPTION ENERGY EFFICIENCY ENERGY EFFICIENCY PROGRAMS ENERGY PORTFOLIO ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS EQUIPMENT FINANCIAL CAPITAL FINANCIAL INSTRUMENT FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS FINANCIAL INTERMEDIARY FINANCIAL MARKETS FINANCIAL SUPPORT FINANCIAL TOOLS FINANCIAL VIABILITY FINANCING COSTS FOREST FOREST CARBON FOREST CARBON STOCKS FOREST INVESTMENT FORESTS FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE FUEL GHG GLOBAL EMISSIONS GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT FACILITY GRANT ALLOCATION GREENHOUSE GREENHOUSE GAS GUARANTEE AGENCY HIGHWAYS HOUSEHOLD ENERGY INCOME INCOME HOUSEHOLDS INFORMATION DISSEMINATION INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY INTANGIBLE INTERNAL RATE OF RETURN INTERNATIONAL BANK INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT INVESTMENT CAPITAL INVESTMENT FINANCE INVESTMENT FUNDS INVESTMENT LOAN INVESTMENT POLICIES ISSUANCES LENDERS LIQUIDITY LLC LOAN LONG-TERM FUNDING LOW-CARBON LOW-INCOME CONSUMERS MARKET DEVELOPMENT MARKET LEVEL MARKET PRICES MARKET VALUES MASS TRANSIT MATURITY MERCURY MOTOR VEHICLES PARTIAL RISK PASSENGER TRIPS PRESENT VALUE PRIVATE INVESTORS PROFITABILITY PUBLIC TRANSIT PUBLIC TRANSPORT RAPID TRANSIT RAPID TRANSIT SYSTEMS RATE OF RETURN REGULATORY FRAMEWORK RENEWABLE ENERGY RESOURCE ALLOCATIONS RING ROADS RISK MITIGATION RNA ROADS SOFT LOAN SUSTAINABLE FOREST SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TRANSACTION TRANSACTION COSTS TRANSACTIONS COSTS TRANSIT CORRIDORS TRANSIT SYSTEMS TRANSPORT TRANSPORT CORRIDORS TRANSPORT INVESTMENT TRANSPORT POLICY TRANSPORT SECTOR TRANSPORTATION TRUST FUND TRUST FUNDS UNCERTAINTIES URBAN AREAS URBAN TRANSPORT VOUCHERS WIND WIND FARMS The Global Environment Facility (GEF), carbon finance, and the Clean Technology Fund (CTF) constitute the bulk of dedicated funding for low-carbon development. To achieve the largest possible impact, practitioners must learn to combine these resources in the same project or program in order to both reduce transaction costs and maximize synergies. This issues brief considers six projects that are using resources from one or all of these sources in combination with development finance to advance low-carbon development. It lays out a conceptual basis for how GEF, carbon finance, and CTF resources can be fit together to make a wider range of mitigation projects financially and economically attractive. 2014-06-05T19:13:05Z 2014-06-05T19:13:05Z 2010-06 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2010/06/12471377/beyond-sum-parts-combining-financial-instruments-impact-efficiency http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18519 English en_US Development, climate, and finance issues brief;no. 3 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Policy Note Economic & Sector Work |
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Digital Repository |
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Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
AIR AIR CONDITIONERS AIR CONDITIONING AIR POLLUTION AIR QUALITY AIR-CONDITIONER ALLOCATION ALTERNATIVE ENERGY APPROVAL PROCEDURES APPROVAL PROCESS ATMOSPHERE BANK FINANCING BANK LENDING BANK LOAN BANK MANAGEMENT BIOMASS BOTTLENECKS BUS BUS CORRIDOR BUSES CAPACITY BUILDING CARBON FINANCE CARBON FOOTPRINT CARBON MARKET CARBON MARKETS CARBON OFFSETS CARBON TECHNOLOGIES CARS CASH FLOWS CFC CLEAN TECHNOLOGY CLIMATE CLIMATE CHANGE CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION CO COMMODITY PRICE COMPACT FLUORESCENT LAMPS CONDITIONERS COUNTRY RISK CREDITS DEBT DEBT BURDEN DEMAND FOR TRANSPORT DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPMENT BANKS DEVELOPMENT FINANCE DOMESTIC FINANCIAL MARKETS DONOR FUNDS ELECTRICITY ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION ELECTRICITY DEMAND EMISSION EMISSION REDUCTION EMISSION REDUCTIONS EMISSION SAVINGS EMISSIONS EMISSIONS FROM DEFORESTATION EMISSIONS GROWTH ENABLING ENVIRONMENT ENERGY CONSUMPTION ENERGY EFFICIENCY ENERGY EFFICIENCY PROGRAMS ENERGY PORTFOLIO ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS EQUIPMENT FINANCIAL CAPITAL FINANCIAL INSTRUMENT FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS FINANCIAL INTERMEDIARY FINANCIAL MARKETS FINANCIAL SUPPORT FINANCIAL TOOLS FINANCIAL VIABILITY FINANCING COSTS FOREST FOREST CARBON FOREST CARBON STOCKS FOREST INVESTMENT FORESTS FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE FUEL GHG GLOBAL EMISSIONS GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT FACILITY GRANT ALLOCATION GREENHOUSE GREENHOUSE GAS GUARANTEE AGENCY HIGHWAYS HOUSEHOLD ENERGY INCOME INCOME HOUSEHOLDS INFORMATION DISSEMINATION INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY INTANGIBLE INTERNAL RATE OF RETURN INTERNATIONAL BANK INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT INVESTMENT CAPITAL INVESTMENT FINANCE INVESTMENT FUNDS INVESTMENT LOAN INVESTMENT POLICIES ISSUANCES LENDERS LIQUIDITY LLC LOAN LONG-TERM FUNDING LOW-CARBON LOW-INCOME CONSUMERS MARKET DEVELOPMENT MARKET LEVEL MARKET PRICES MARKET VALUES MASS TRANSIT MATURITY MERCURY MOTOR VEHICLES PARTIAL RISK PASSENGER TRIPS PRESENT VALUE PRIVATE INVESTORS PROFITABILITY PUBLIC TRANSIT PUBLIC TRANSPORT RAPID TRANSIT RAPID TRANSIT SYSTEMS RATE OF RETURN REGULATORY FRAMEWORK RENEWABLE ENERGY RESOURCE ALLOCATIONS RING ROADS RISK MITIGATION RNA ROADS SOFT LOAN SUSTAINABLE FOREST SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TRANSACTION TRANSACTION COSTS TRANSACTIONS COSTS TRANSIT CORRIDORS TRANSIT SYSTEMS TRANSPORT TRANSPORT CORRIDORS TRANSPORT INVESTMENT TRANSPORT POLICY TRANSPORT SECTOR TRANSPORTATION TRUST FUND TRUST FUNDS UNCERTAINTIES URBAN AREAS URBAN TRANSPORT VOUCHERS WIND WIND FARMS |
spellingShingle |
AIR AIR CONDITIONERS AIR CONDITIONING AIR POLLUTION AIR QUALITY AIR-CONDITIONER ALLOCATION ALTERNATIVE ENERGY APPROVAL PROCEDURES APPROVAL PROCESS ATMOSPHERE BANK FINANCING BANK LENDING BANK LOAN BANK MANAGEMENT BIOMASS BOTTLENECKS BUS BUS CORRIDOR BUSES CAPACITY BUILDING CARBON FINANCE CARBON FOOTPRINT CARBON MARKET CARBON MARKETS CARBON OFFSETS CARBON TECHNOLOGIES CARS CASH FLOWS CFC CLEAN TECHNOLOGY CLIMATE CLIMATE CHANGE CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION CO COMMODITY PRICE COMPACT FLUORESCENT LAMPS CONDITIONERS COUNTRY RISK CREDITS DEBT DEBT BURDEN DEMAND FOR TRANSPORT DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPMENT BANKS DEVELOPMENT FINANCE DOMESTIC FINANCIAL MARKETS DONOR FUNDS ELECTRICITY ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION ELECTRICITY DEMAND EMISSION EMISSION REDUCTION EMISSION REDUCTIONS EMISSION SAVINGS EMISSIONS EMISSIONS FROM DEFORESTATION EMISSIONS GROWTH ENABLING ENVIRONMENT ENERGY CONSUMPTION ENERGY EFFICIENCY ENERGY EFFICIENCY PROGRAMS ENERGY PORTFOLIO ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS EQUIPMENT FINANCIAL CAPITAL FINANCIAL INSTRUMENT FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS FINANCIAL INTERMEDIARY FINANCIAL MARKETS FINANCIAL SUPPORT FINANCIAL TOOLS FINANCIAL VIABILITY FINANCING COSTS FOREST FOREST CARBON FOREST CARBON STOCKS FOREST INVESTMENT FORESTS FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE FUEL GHG GLOBAL EMISSIONS GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT FACILITY GRANT ALLOCATION GREENHOUSE GREENHOUSE GAS GUARANTEE AGENCY HIGHWAYS HOUSEHOLD ENERGY INCOME INCOME HOUSEHOLDS INFORMATION DISSEMINATION INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY INTANGIBLE INTERNAL RATE OF RETURN INTERNATIONAL BANK INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT INVESTMENT CAPITAL INVESTMENT FINANCE INVESTMENT FUNDS INVESTMENT LOAN INVESTMENT POLICIES ISSUANCES LENDERS LIQUIDITY LLC LOAN LONG-TERM FUNDING LOW-CARBON LOW-INCOME CONSUMERS MARKET DEVELOPMENT MARKET LEVEL MARKET PRICES MARKET VALUES MASS TRANSIT MATURITY MERCURY MOTOR VEHICLES PARTIAL RISK PASSENGER TRIPS PRESENT VALUE PRIVATE INVESTORS PROFITABILITY PUBLIC TRANSIT PUBLIC TRANSPORT RAPID TRANSIT RAPID TRANSIT SYSTEMS RATE OF RETURN REGULATORY FRAMEWORK RENEWABLE ENERGY RESOURCE ALLOCATIONS RING ROADS RISK MITIGATION RNA ROADS SOFT LOAN SUSTAINABLE FOREST SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TRANSACTION TRANSACTION COSTS TRANSACTIONS COSTS TRANSIT CORRIDORS TRANSIT SYSTEMS TRANSPORT TRANSPORT CORRIDORS TRANSPORT INVESTMENT TRANSPORT POLICY TRANSPORT SECTOR TRANSPORTATION TRUST FUND TRUST FUNDS UNCERTAINTIES URBAN AREAS URBAN TRANSPORT VOUCHERS WIND WIND FARMS Hosier, Richard Kulichenko, Nataliya Maheshwari, Aditi Toba, Natsuko Wang, Xiaodong Beyond the Sum of its Parts : Combining Financial Instruments for Impact and Efficiency |
relation |
Development, climate, and finance issues
brief;no. 3 |
description |
The Global Environment Facility (GEF),
carbon finance, and the Clean Technology Fund (CTF)
constitute the bulk of dedicated funding for low-carbon
development. To achieve the largest possible impact,
practitioners must learn to combine these resources in the
same project or program in order to both reduce transaction
costs and maximize synergies. This issues brief considers
six projects that are using resources from one or all of
these sources in combination with development finance to
advance low-carbon development. It lays out a conceptual
basis for how GEF, carbon finance, and CTF resources can be
fit together to make a wider range of mitigation projects
financially and economically attractive. |
format |
Economic & Sector Work :: Policy Note |
author |
Hosier, Richard Kulichenko, Nataliya Maheshwari, Aditi Toba, Natsuko Wang, Xiaodong |
author_facet |
Hosier, Richard Kulichenko, Nataliya Maheshwari, Aditi Toba, Natsuko Wang, Xiaodong |
author_sort |
Hosier, Richard |
title |
Beyond the Sum of its Parts : Combining Financial Instruments for Impact and Efficiency |
title_short |
Beyond the Sum of its Parts : Combining Financial Instruments for Impact and Efficiency |
title_full |
Beyond the Sum of its Parts : Combining Financial Instruments for Impact and Efficiency |
title_fullStr |
Beyond the Sum of its Parts : Combining Financial Instruments for Impact and Efficiency |
title_full_unstemmed |
Beyond the Sum of its Parts : Combining Financial Instruments for Impact and Efficiency |
title_sort |
beyond the sum of its parts : combining financial instruments for impact and efficiency |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2010/06/12471377/beyond-sum-parts-combining-financial-instruments-impact-efficiency http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18519 |
_version_ |
1764440823443750912 |