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    Sri Lanka: Climate Finance Strategy Launched to Accelerate Resilience and Net-Zero Transition

    EnvironmentClimate changeSri Lanka: Climate Finance Strategy Launched to Accelerate Resilience...
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    Sri Lanka: Climate Finance Strategy Launched to Accelerate Resilience and Net-Zero Transition

    The strategy outlines 12 financial tools to mobilize resources and engage private sector participation, including disaster risk insurance, green bonds, PPPs, green loans, natural capital accounting, and sustainable tourism fees.

    In a landmark move to bolster climate action and finance mobilisation, the Sri Lanka government formally launched its National Climate Finance Strategy (2025-2030) on Friday, aiming to stitch together domestic and international investments to support adaptation, mitigation and a just transition to net-zero emissions.

    The strategy — developed by the Ministry of Finance’s External Resources Department in coordination with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and backed by the United Kingdom Government through its Climate Finance Network — sets out a roadmap for channeling climate funds into key sectors such as agriculture, tourism, energy, water and nature-based solutions.

    Why Now? Rising Climate Losses and Fiscal Pressure

    Sri Lanka is highly vulnerable to climate-related hazards. The UNDP notes that climate-related damages in the country exceed LKR 50 billion annually. Analysts estimate that annual investment needs for climate-resilient infrastructure alone could be around US$ 500 million (roughly 0.5 % of GDP), a scale that exceeds what the government budget can sustain.

    Treasury Secretary Dr Harshana Suriyapperuma described the strategy as “a critical enabler for Sri Lanka’s climate ambitions… providing the financial architecture needed to operationalise climate policies and plans.”

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    What the Strategy Covers: 12 Key Financial Instruments

    The strategy identifies a menu of 12 financial tools to mobilise resources and crowd in private sector participation. These instruments include: disaster risk insurance, green/blue/sustainability-linked bonds, public-private partnerships (PPPs) for climate action, green loans, natural capital accounting, a green revolving fund, carbon markets, ESG swaps, increased official development assistance and sustainable tourism entrance fees.

    High Commissioner of the UK to Sri Lanka, Andrew Patrick, emphasised that “without a climate finance strategy of this kind, it is much harder for the government to access those funds.” He also pointed to Sri Lanka’s untapped offshore wind potential and stressed the risks to biodiversity and agriculture.

    Mobilising Over US$ 10 Billion

    According to EconomyNext, the strategy aims to support a financing envelope in excess of US$ 10 billion, by tapping both official donors as well as private sector funds. This matches earlier estimates of Sri Lanka’s climate commitments under its Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) for 2021-30, previously estimated at US$ 10.85 billion.

    Strategic Significance: Aligning Development with Climate Goals
    UNDP Resident Representative in Sri Lanka, Azusa Kubota, said that “financing climate action is not just about managing risks – it’s about unlocking opportunities. This strategy will help Sri Lanka attract smart investments, foster innovation and build a climate-resilient economy that benefits all.”

    Dr. Suriyapperuma highlighted that Sri Lanka’s economy remains heavily tied to agriculture, fisheries and tourism — sectors especially exposed to climate shocks. “The cost of climate inaction is unimaginable,” he said. The strategy therefore seeks to integrate climate-risk management with development planning.

    Implementation and Oversight

    The first formal review of the strategy is scheduled for 2027. The Cabinet of Ministers has approved the document, and the treasury has invited investors to participate under the planned governance framework.

    Challenges Ahead: Financing Capacity, Institutional Readiness

    While the strategy lays out an ambitious blueprint, experts flag what comes next as the tougher task: mobilising funds at scale, building institutional capacity to absorb and deploy them, and ensuring private-sector engagement. Sri Lanka’s tight fiscal space and legacy of climate-vulnerable infrastructure raise questions about how quickly the roadmap can be translated into action.

    Moreover, community-level vulnerability remains high: many rural and coastal populations, reliant on climate-sensitive livelihoods, face limited adaptive capacity. The strategy will need to ensure that finance flows not only to big-ticket infrastructure but also to ground-level adaptation and equitable transitions.

    Why This Matters Beyond Sri Lanka

    As donor countries under the COP 28 framework pledged to mobilise US$ 300 billion annually for developing countries by 2035, having a clear national finance strategy becomes a prerequisite for access. UNDP emphasises that countries without such frameworks risk missing out. For Sri Lanka, the move signals readiness to step into the global climate finance arena and align its development trajectory with the Paris Agreement and the Sustainable Development Goals.

    The National Climate Finance Strategy (2025-2030) puts Sri Lanka on a more structured footing to bridge development, adaptation and mitigation finance. If successfully executed, it could unlock investment flows and build a more resilient, low-carbon future. However, the scale of ambition presents as much challenge as opportunity — the coming years will test the country’s ability to turn the strategy into concrete action and climate-proof its economy and communities.

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