Chantal Line Carpentier
Head, Trade, Environment & Climate Change
International Trade and Commodities Division
Leva Baršauskaitė
IISD
Luz Maria de La Mora
Director, International Trade and Commodities, UNCTAD
Kudzai Sharon Kandemiri
Youth Negotiators, Zimbabwe
Abdourahamane Diallo
UN Resident Coordinator in the Republic of Congo
Noelia Garcia Nebra
Head of Sustainability and Partnerships, ISO
Ketakandriana Rafitoson
Executive Director, PWYP /Vice-Chair, Transparency International and Resource Justice
Technology transfer has been part of international treaties and UN outcome documents for decades, including in relation to climate mitigation and adaptation goals. Yet technologies that are vitally needed to accelerate climate action, do not flow to those that need them the most and uptake of such technologies is limited by a range of factors.
Trade has a key role to play as a transmission factor, enabling cheaper access to technologies for which the domestic production might be too costly or too complex, and trade cooperation will be vital to accelerate affordable access, but a broader focus will also be needed.
This session aims to focus attention on the range of factors key to boosting access to affordable technologies, including the cost of capital, skills, regulatory environment, investment, trade policies, as well as the role that the private, public, academic sectors can play in supporting win-win solutions such as co-development, production or partnerships on technology
How an ecosystem of actors needs to come together to ensure those that most need technologies and capacity building to implement climate solutions have affordable access to them, while ensuring co-benefits in regard to biodiversity and pollution priorities, and to achievement of the SDGs.
Moubarak Moukaila
Head of Financing Sustainable Development, West African Development Bank (BOAD)
Thibyan Ibrahim
Director, Climate Change Department
Peter Odhengo
Chair, Network of National Designated Authorities for Green Climate Finance in Africa (AFDAN)
Jerome Auchere
Senior Director, WGEO
Amjad Abdulla
Special Advisor to Director General WGEO
Wael Al Masri
Acting Director, Communications and External Relations, WGEO
Mohamed NBOU
Climate Advisor at the General Secretariat of UCLG-Africa
Edem Bakhshish
Lead-Program Development, WGEO
The Regional Green Economy Forum (RGEF) 2026 of the World Green Economy Organization (WGEO), will build on the momentum of COP30 outcomes and the growing global consensus on the need to move from commitments to implementation. While countries have made ambitious pledges under their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), translating these into tangible, bankable projects remains a key challenge. The financing gap for climate and green economy initiatives continues to widen, particularly for developing countries, Small Island Developing States (SIDS), and Least Developed Countries (LDCs).
The WGEO’s comparative advantage lies in its ability to bridge policy ambition with practical implementation. As an intergovernmental platform connecting over 90 member states, WGEO brings together governments, international organizations, financial institutions, and the private sector to translate climate and green economy commitments into bankable, scalable projects. The Regional Green Economy Forum (RGEF) 2026 will serve as a results-oriented platform to identify and unlock investment opportunities aligned with national priorities and NDCs targets. Through structured matchmaking, capacity building, and regional cooperation, RGEF 2026 will support member states, particularly Small Island Developing States (SIDS), Least Developed Countries (LDCs), and emerging economies in accessing climate finance, de-risking green investments, and accelerating tangible progress toward low-emission, climate-resilient development.
To address this challenge, the WGEO, in partnership with governments, international organizations, financial institutions, and the private sector, will convene the Regional Green Economy Forum 2026. The Forum will serve as a regional platform to connect policy ambition with practical investment opportunities, accelerating the flow of capital toward green, resilient, and inclusive growth.
The RGEF 2026 aligns with WGEO’s intergovernmental mandate to promote the global transition to a green economy through multi-stakeholder partnerships. It will also serve as a follow-up mechanism to advance the implementation of COP30 outcomes, Article 2.1(c) of the Paris Agreement, and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
Despite increasing political commitment to climate action, many countries continue to face challenges in translating NDCs into implementable investments. Barriers include limited 93 access to finance, weak project preparation capacity, insufficient enabling environments for private investment, and fragmented institutional coordination.
For SIDS and LDCs, these barriers are amplified by their small scale, geographic isolation, and vulnerability to external shocks. There is an urgent need for mechanisms that can bridge this gap, helping countries move from policy to pipeline and from dialogue to delivery. RGEF 2026 responds to this need by providing a regional platform that mobilizes political will, technical assistance, and financing partnerships to deliver measurable outcomes. It will also enhance regional cooperation and South–South collaboration, enabling countries to share lessons, access finance, and replicate successful models across regions.
Building on WGEO’s mandate to accelerate the global transition to a green and inclusive economy, RGEF 2026 aims to accelerate the transition’s commitments to capital by transforming national climate and green economy strategies into bankable, investable projects. It will focus on enabling countries to access finance, build institutional capacity, and attract private sector investment for sustainable economic transformation.
The key objectives are:
This session aims to boost the RGEF 2026 visibility, strengthen partnerships for green investments, identify potential collaborators and sponsors, and highlight WGEO’s leadership in driving practical green economy solutions. The session will aim to produce the following key outcomes:
1. Panelist 1 – Policy Maker/Government Representative:
2. Panelist 2 – Financial Institution/Bank Representative:
3. Panelist 3 – Private Sector/Investor Representative:
4. Panelist4 – WGEO Representative:
5. Common Question for All Panelists:
Agnes Vinblad
Policy Director & Head of Practice - Environment, Climate & Biodiversity, United States Council for International Business (USCIB)
Dr Satish Kumar
President & ED, Alliance for an Energy Efficient Economy (AEEE)
Felicity Spors
Director, Sustainable Business & Infrastructure, Climate Strategy & Delivery
Dana Barsky
Global Head of Sustainability Strategy and Net Zero
Wendy Miles
Vice Chair, Environment and Energy Commission, International Chamber of Commerce
Mobilizing trillions of dollars for climate action requires unlocking private capital at scale. While public finance remains essential, it is insufficient to meet the investment needs of the lowcarbon transition, particularly in developing countries. Blended finance – strategically combining concessional public or philanthropic capital with commercial investment – has emerged as a critical tool to de-risk climate projects, attract institutional investors, and expand access to affordable finance for vulnerable economies.
Recent initiatives show that blended finance can catalyze private sector participation in renewable energy, sustainable agriculture, and resilience infrastructure by reducing perceived risks and enhancing returns. However, barriers persist, including limited project pipelines, high transaction costs, and uneven access across regions. For blended finance to deliver transformative impact, innovative structures are needed that go beyond traditional models, enabling greater participation of local financial institutions, sovereign wealth funds, and development banks.
This session will highlight cutting-edge blended finance models that de-risk climate investments while ensuring equitable distribution of benefits. Panelists will examine successful case studies where concessional finance mobilized large-scale private investment in mitigation and adaptation projects. The discussion will also explore how to design blended finance mechanisms that align with national development priorities and the Paris Agreement while maintaining transparency and accountability.
Special attention will be given to strategies that build trust among investors, governments, and communities – such as risk-sharing mechanisms, credit enhancements, and performancebased guarantees. Additionally, the session will analyze how blended finance can be structured to channel resources toward sectors and geographies that are currently underserved but critical for global climate goals.
1. How can blended finance structures be designed to effectively de-risk climate investments?
2. How can blended finance ensure equitable participation and alignment with national climate priorities?
3. What innovations are needed to scale blended finance for climate at the global level?
Helen Walter-Terrinon
Global Director of Policy and Advocacy, Trane Technologies
Bob Hinkle
President & CEO, Metrus Energy
Bhaskar Sarkar
Chief Business Officer, Adani Cooling Solutions Ltd., India
Dr Satish Kumar
President & ED, AEEE
Energy efficiency is the world’s first fuel – the fastest, cleanest, and cheapest route to achieving climate goals and economic resilience. It reduces energy demand, enhances energy security, and unlocks co-benefits for jobs, health, and competitiveness. The G20’s collective pledge to double the global rate of energy efficiency improvement by 2030 underscores its central role in a just and resilient energy transition.
This session will explore how energy efficiency can move from the margins to the mainstream of global climate action – shaping policy, finance, and technology pathways for an equitable, demand-led energy transition across the Global South.
1. Positioning Energy Efficiency at the Core of the Global Energy Transition
2. Mobilizing Finance and Policy for the Doubling Target
3. Translating Efficiency into Impact: Technology, Behavior, and Systems Change
Andrea Fión Góngora
Director of Climate Change, Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources of Guatemala – MARN
Dra. Laura Aguirre Téllez
General Director for Green Finance, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development of México – SADER (TBC)
Gabriela Marquéz González
Director of Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation, Vice Ministry of Climate Change and Sustainability of the Dominican Republic
Dr. Hugo Rosa da Conceição
Project Associate, OroVerde
Álvaro Rojas Ferreira
Associate Academic Officer for Climate Risk Analytics, UNU-EHS/MCII
Agricultural value chains are increasingly exposed to climate-related risks that threaten productivity, trade, and rural livelihoods. Mobilizing sustainable finance is critical to support adaptation and resilience through climate-smart investments, risk management tools, and biodiversity-friendly practices. Financial mechanisms can bridge the gap between climate goals and agricultural challenges.
Emerging experiences, such as those from Latin America, illustrate how partnerships among governments, financial institutions, and local actors can leverage finance to strengthen resilience, enhance inclusion, and promote long-term sustainability.
The session will explore how sustainable finance and supportive public policies can strengthen climate-resilient agricultural value chains by promoting regulatory and policy frameworks that incentivize investments in risk reduction, enhance the resilience of smallholder farmers, and ensure inclusive access to finance, particularly for women and vulnerable groups. It will also highlight the critical role of governments in creating enabling environments that align climate and biodiversity action with sustainable rural development.
1. How can sustainable finance catalyze climate-resilient transformation in agricultural value chains?
2. How can financial solutions ensure inclusion and equity in climate-resilient agriculture?
3. What enabling conditions are needed to expand sustainable finance for resilience?
Felicity Spors
Director, Sustainable Business & Infrastructure, Climate Strategy & Delivery, EBRD
Gry Langbakk
Special Director, COP Norwegian business delegation and pavilion & Special Advisor Green Growth & Transformation, Innovation Norway
Liv Watson
Co-Founder, Global Digital Single Market Data Alliance (DSMDA)
Catherine Atkin
Chair, Stanford CodeX CDPI
Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) are the economic backbone of low- and middleincome countries and critical drivers of the green transition. Yet without access to emissions accounting tools, standardized methodologies, and interoperable data systems, most SMEs remain excluded from sustainable finance, carbon markets, and global disclosure frameworks. Financial institutions and governments increasingly recognize that achieving climate goals and economic resilience depends on empowering SMEs to produce investor-grade sustainability data.
This session will explore how open data frameworks, digital trust infrastructures, and public– private partnerships can close the SME data and finance gap. It will highlight how automated data systems, harmonized standards, and collaborative innovation can unlock inclusive participation in carbon markets and green investment. The discussion will showcase global efforts – spanning policy, finance, and technology – to ensure that emerging data solutions strengthen SME competitiveness, transparency, and access to climate finance.
1. Closing the SME Data Gap
2. Financing and Market Access
3. Innovation and Infrastructure
4. Equity and Global Collaboration
© 2025 WGEO- World Green Economy Organization. All Rights Reserved.