Climate Change and Green Finance in International Development

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Climate Change and Green Finance in International Development
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F2665

Barcelona (Spain)

03 Aug 2026 -07 Aug 2026

5830

Overview

Introduction:

Climate change and green finance form a critical intersection shaping the future of international development policy, investment flows, and institutional sustainability agendas. Climate related risks increasingly influence development priorities, financing mechanisms, and long term economic resilience, particularly in emerging and vulnerable economies. This training program presents structured analytical frameworks, financing architectures, and institutional models that link climate change considerations with green finance systems in international development contexts. It offers a comprehensive perspective on how climate governance and sustainable finance support development planning, risk management, and global cooperation.

Program Objectives:

By the end of this program, participants will be able to:

  • Analyze the relationship between climate change dynamics and international development priorities.

  • Classify green finance principles, instruments, and institutional standards.

  • Evaluate international frameworks and organizations shaping climate finance governance.

  • Assess development project structures through climate and sustainability lenses.

  • Examine capacity building and accountability models supporting green finance systems.

Target Audience:

  • Development professionals in international organizations and NGOs.

  • Government officials responsible for environmental and development policy oversight.

  • Financial managers and analysts in international development institutions.

  • Private sector professionals engaged in sustainability and green finance initiatives.

Program Outline:

Unit 1:

Climate Change and International Development Contexts

  • Scientific foundations of climate change and systemic risk patterns.

  • Socioeconomic impacts of climate change on development outcomes.

  • Vulnerability frameworks for communities, sectors, and regions.

  • Alignment between climate action and sustainable development objectives.

  • Institutional approaches to climate risk identification in development planning.

Unit 2:

Green Finance Concepts and Financial Architectures:

  • Conceptual foundations and objectives of green finance systems.

  • Global principles, taxonomies, and classification standards.

  • Structural overview of green bonds and sustainability linked instruments.

  • Climate related financial risk categorization frameworks.

  • Carbon markets and emissions pricing mechanisms within development finance.

Unit 3:

International Climate Finance Frameworks and Institutions:

  • Global climate agreements influencing development finance strategies.

  • Roles of multilateral development banks in climate finance mobilization.

  • Institutional mandates of international climate finance initiatives.

  • Funding channels supporting climate action in developing economies.

  • Coordination mechanisms between donors, governments, and financial institutions.

Unit 4:

Climate Integration in Development Programs and Investments:

  • Climate mainstreaming models in development planning structures.

  • Governance frameworks for climate responsive infrastructure financing.

  • Sustainable procurement and supply chain accountability systems.

  • Institutional arrangements for climate adaptation and mitigation initiatives.

  • Monitoring and evaluation architectures for climate related development programs.

Unit 5:

Capacity Development and Green Finance Accountability:

  • Organizational capability frameworks for climate finance governance.

  • Knowledge management and information sharing systems.

  • Institutional approaches to sustainability oriented financial literacy.

  • Measurement, reporting, and verification structures for green finance outcomes.

  • Transparency and long term credibility in green finance.