Female rural workers in a field Photo by Wim Opmeer, 2016 CGAP Photo Contest

Climate Change

 

We cannot tackle climate change effectively without inclusive financial services

diagramPoor and vulnerable people in developing countries, especially women, suffer disproportionate effects of climate change on their health and livelihoods. Although financial services are only part of the solution, they are vital for empowering vulnerable populations to build resilience to climate change and to benefit from a just green transition. Savings, insurance, credit, remittances, and social protection payments all have major roles to play in helping people prepare for and adapt to climate change.

CGAP has issued a call to action for stakeholders working to address climate change and those working to improve inclusive finance to work together and leverage inclusive finance to scale grassroots climate action.

CGAP research shows that most financial service providers don’t yet see climate adaptation as a top priority. Their efforts tend to focus on understanding their own climate risk, reducing their carbon footprint, or lending for renewable energy. These efforts are vital, but cannot substitute for bolstering the adaptation and resilience of climate-exposed clients. Similarly, few climate practitioners realize that inclusive financial services can be a powerful tool for increasing grass roots climate action.

Climate change is also increasingly threatening progress on financial inclusion, by making poor clients riskier and more expensive to serve. As the consequences of climate change grow rapidly, the financial inclusion community must learn to help both clients and providers better manage their climate risk to keep financial systems inclusive.

Considering compounding inequities and their major role in household resilience, women’s needs must take center stage. CGAP’s first dedicated publication on gender and climate, Bolstering Women’s Climate Resilience and Adaptation through Financial Services, provides illustrative examples of gendered impact when women face climate shocks and stresses that affect health, agricultural livelihoods, and women-owned businesses.

CGAP sees an increasingly urgent agenda for research and action at the crossroads of climate change and financial inclusion, and is working to find and test solutions that can help poor people manage and adapt to the changing world.

 

CGAP VII Green Development

 

Featured Publications

Featured Podcast & Videos

Latest Research

Reading Deck

Inclusive Business in Action: Case Studies from ABERA Cohort 1 Financial and Agricultural Service Providers

This reading deck shares initial analyses conducted with five companies in the first cohort of ABERA (Accelerating Business to Empower Rural women in Agriculture). It offers a high-level view of the opportunities and innovations from financial and agricultural service providers and how tailored financial services add value for both rural women and for the service providers.
Publication

Building Rural Women’s Climate Resilience: Seven Business Drivers Delivering Commercial Value

As climate pressures rise, strengthening rural women’s resilience is critical for their livelihoods and for the long-term viability of the rural businesses that serve them. Through ABERA (Accelerating Business to Empower Rural Women in Agriculture), a CGAP and IDH collaboration, this paper identifies seven practical business drivers that simultaneously strengthen rural women’s climate resilience and business performance.
Publication

From Safety Net to Springboard

As climate risks intensify, there is an urgent need to better support low-income communities to adapt and build resilience. This paper highlights an untapped opportunity hiding in plain sight - integrating financial services into social protection programs – and outlines five priorities for funders, policymakers, and social protection professionals to unlock its potential.

Latest Blogs

Blog

Why DFIs Could Be the Secret Weapon in Scaling Adaptation Finance

Despite a surge in climate finance, adaptation and resilience (CAR) finance remains neglected. Development Finance Institutions (DFIs) are uniquely positioned to bridge this gap by leveraging their influence and expertise to strengthen financial systems.
Blog

Banking on Carbon: Inclusive Finance in Colombia

In Colombia, CGAP, Karbon-X, and Bancamía are exploring how inclusive financial services can support forest conservation and community impact. Learn how savings, loans, and digital payments can help households to build resilience without relying on deforestation.
Blog

In Sierra Leone, Inclusive Finance is Key to Protecting Coastlines

CGAP and West Africa Blue are linking financial inclusion with mangrove conservation in Sierra Leone, using VSLAs to strengthen livelihoods, reduce pressure on ecosystems, and support sustainable, community-led climate solutions.