Green Transition Board Inaugural Meeting
The recently formed Green Transition Board commenced its work with an inaugural meeting at the London School of Economics (LSE).
Objectives and Responsibilities
- Tasked with making recommendations on:
- Climate finance
- Reforms in multilateral development banks (MDBs)
- India's transition towards achieving 2,500 GW of clean energy by 2047
- Aiming for net-zero emissions by 2070
Context of the Meeting
- The meeting coincided with the London Climate Action Week 2026.
- Emphasized the shift from setting climate targets to mobilizing investment and ensuring implementation.
Key Insights from the Discussion
- N K Singh, the Board's Chair, highlighted the need to:
- Mobilize capital at speed and scale, particularly in emerging and developing economies.
- Focus on the upcoming wave of energy demand, urbanization, and infrastructure development.
- Discussion on the uneven distribution of global clean energy investment.
- Identified the next challenge as systems integration:
- Financing, transmitting, storing, and distributing clean power
- Strengthening grids, supply chains, and institutional frameworks
Board's Focus Areas
- Reforming MDBs
- Mobilizing private capital
- Enhancing climate finance mechanisms
- Addressing barriers to technology transfer
- Effective deployment of public resources to de-risk private investment and convert climate commitments into feasible projects
Prominent Panelists
- COP30 President André Corrêa do Lago
- President Emeritus of the Center for Global Development Masood Ahmed
- UK's Special Representative for Climate Rachel Kyte
- Lord Nicholas Stern of the Grantham Research Institute at LSE