Leveraging National Development Banks to Enhance Financing for Climate-Smart Urban Infrastructure

This knowledge product builds on the main conclusions from the Cities Climate Finance Leadership Alliance (the Alliance) policy brief on Enhancing the Role of National Development Banks in Supporting Climate-Smart Urban Infrastructure, commissioned by FELICITY and developed in partnership with the Alliance.

The policy brief sets the context to explore how National Development Banks (NDBs) can be leveraged to finance climate-smart urban infrastructure. It identifies the general barriers to financing climate-smart urban infrastructure such as weak incentives, high perceived risks, lack of bankable projects pipeline, timing mismatch, and lack of suitable investment instruments. It also specifies barriers for NDBs at the institutional and financial levels and presents some actionable opportunities for NDBs. The summary of barriers and opportunities for NDBs is included in Annex B.

Source: Cities Climate Finance Leadership Alliance

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2026 AADFI Annual General Assembly

The Association of African Development Finance Institutions (AADFI) is pleased to announce that its 2026 Annual General Assembly will take place from May 24 to 29, 2026, in Brazzaville, Republic of Congo, on the sidelines of the African Development Bank (AfDB) Annual Meetings.

The Annual General Assembly will be held on the theme “Augmenting Sovereign Finance in Africa: DFIs Unlocking Growth and Resilience through NAFA,” with a focus on the transformative role of African Development Finance Institutions (DFIs) in strengthening Africa’s financial sovereignty. The discussions will align with the AfDB-led New African Financial Architecture (NAFA), a system-level framework designed to mobilize long-term investment, reduce Africa’s cost of capital, and reinforce resilience through coordinated financial systems and deeper domestic capital markets.

The Annual General Assembly will convene leaders of African DFIs, government officials, regional institutions, and development partners to further explore how African DFIs can catalyze local investment, de-risk strategic projects, and strengthen economic autonomy to build resilience against global shocks and bridge the continent’s infrastructure funding gap.

Further details will be shared in the coming weeks.