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COP30: African Development Bank Group Backs Increased Access to Climate Finance for Electricity Grids and Energy Storage

COP 30

The African Development Bank Group and several other national and international institutions have endorsed a common framework to increase the access to climate finance for grid investments.

The decision emerged at a ministerial panel session held on 14 November 2025 at COP30 in Belém, Brazil. The session, titled: “Accelerating Action on Grids and Storage: Planning, Financing, Principles and Policy Solutions”, was organized by the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA), the Global Coalition for Energy Planning (GCEP), the Utilities for Net Zero Alliance (UNEZA), the Sustainable Business COP (SBCOP), and the Green Grids Initiative (GGI).

Joining the Bank Group to endorse the newly-developed set of six “climate finance principles for grids” were the Inter-American Development Bank, British International Investment, the East African Development Bank, Climate Bonds Initiative, the Institutional Investors Group on Climate Change, the Asia Investor Group on Climate Change, the Global Renewables Alliance, GridWorks, the Utilities for Net Zero Alliance, and the Government of the United Kingdom.

According to industry experts, power grids and storage systems are the pillars of clean-energy transition growth, determining its pace and reliability; and there is no transition without transmission. Yet, around the world, these systems are under severe strain, and the demand for grid capacity continues to rise faster than the expansion of infrastructure, amid the intensifying challenges of climate-related disruptions.

Also, the integration of renewable energy—combined with growing demand linked to electric vehicles, clean heating and cooling, data centers, and new industrial uses—adds pressure on electricity transmission and storage systems.