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Climate finance from MDBs hit $162.5bn in 2025

  • Market: Emissions
  • 13/07/26

Multilateral development banks (MDBs) lifted their climate finance to a record high of $162.5bn in 2025, up by 19pc on the year, a group of 10 major MDBs said today.

The banks increased climate finance both to low and middle-income and high-income countries in 2025, the data show. Climate finance for low and middle-income countries reached $102.6bn in 2025, up by 21pc on the year. The majority of the finance was for mitigation — cutting emissions — at $68bn, up by 16pc on the year, according to the banks' report. The remainder, at $35bn, went towards adaptation, or adjusting to the effects of climate change where possible. Adaptation finance for low and middle-income countries was up by 31pc on the year in 2025. Of the total climate finance to low and middle-income countries, almost half was from the World Bank Group, at $49.9bn.

MDB climate finance in high-income countries "remained substantial" in 2025, the banks said. It met or exceeded "2030 projections five years in advance", they added. The climate finance from MDBs to high-income countries reached $59.9bn in 2025, up by 16pc on the year. The European Investment Bank (EIB) provided the vast majority of this, at $51.8bn. Of the finance, $53bn and $7bn went to mitigation and adaptation respectively.

Across all countries, the finance mostly took the form of loans, which made up $110bn of the total, the banks' report said. Grants reached $6bn, mostly to low and middle-income countries.

Countries agreed a new climate finance goal at the UN Cop 29 summit in 2024. Under the agreement, developed countries will "take the lead" in providing "at least" $300bn/yr in climate finance to developing nations by 2035 to decarbonisation and energy transitions.

Governments and organisations are putting pressure on MDBs to leverage more funding for climate action, as several key donors of international development aid have scaled back or announced cuts to funding in the past 18 months. This encompasses projects tackling climate change in developing nations.

Private sector finance for the energy transition and climate action has drawn increasing focus too. The UK plans to encourage MDBs to scale lending using existing capital and attract more private investment.

The MDBs reporting data are the African Development Bank, the Asian Development Bank, the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, the Council of Europe Development Bank, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the EIB, the Inter-American Development Bank Group, the Islamic Development Bank, the New Development Bank and the World Bank Group.


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