East Africa Urged to Scale Up Climate Finance

By Andrew Victor Naimanye | Thursday, February 19, 2026
East Africa Urged to Scale Up Climate Finance
Senior finance officials and climate experts at the 7th East Africa Climate Finance Directors’ Meeting in Kigali called for stronger financing mechanisms to turn climate commitments under NDC 3.0 into tangible action.

 

The Seventh East Africa Climate Finance Directors’ Level Meeting (EACFDLM) convened in Kigali under the theme, “From Frameworks to Action: Scaling Up Climate Finance to Advance NDC 3.0 Ambitions,” bringing together senior finance officials, development partners, and climate experts to accelerate the region’s transition from policy commitments to tangible results.

Keep Reading

Rwanda’s Minister of State for Resource Mobilization and Public Investment, Mutesi Rusagara, officially opened the meeting, highlighting the macroeconomic implications of climate change.

“Climate change is no longer a distant threat but a macroeconomic reality. For finance ministries, climate is not a sectoral issue. It affects fiscal stability, debt sustainability, and the resilience of our growth model,” Rusagara said.

Topics You Might Like

rwanda east africa kigali sustainable development Climate Finance Green Investment Climate Policy NDC 3.0 East Africa Urged to Scale Up Climate Finance Climate Change

Delegates noted that East African countries face shrinking fiscal space, driven by declining concessional finance and increasing climate shocks.

This has intensified the need for innovative financing solutions to support the region’s updated Nationally Determined Contributions (NDC 3.0) under the Paris Agreement.

Minister Rusagara emphasized that public finance alone cannot meet the scale of climate investment needs. She called for greater use of blended finance instruments, development of credible carbon markets, and stronger private sector participation to unlock new capital streams.

Dr. Pablo Martinez, Country Representative of the Global Green Growth Institute for Uganda, Zambia, and Angola, stressed pairing policy ambition with bankable financing strategies.

“Moving from frameworks to action requires not only technical solutions but also coordinated regional commitment. We must align ambition with credible financing pathways,” Martinez said.

While East Africa has recorded early successes in pilot initiatives for electric mobility and green innovation, the challenge remains scaling these projects into programmatic investments attractive to institutional and commercial capital.

Discussions in Kigali focused on strengthening climate finance governance, improving institutional coordination, and accelerating access to climate finance mechanisms.

Delegates highlighted the need for robust project preparation facilities, transparent monitoring frameworks, and closer collaboration between finance ministries, environmental agencies, and private investors.

What’s your take on this story?

Get breaking news first — follow us

Get Ahead of the News.
Stay in the know with real-time breaking news alerts, exclusive reports, and updates that matter to you.

Tap ‘Yes, Keep Me Updated’ and never miss what’s happening in Uganda and beyond—first and fast from NilePost.