Mobilizing private sector capital for low-emission investments : a risk allocation framework

DSpace/Manakin Repository

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.advisor Buchner, Barbara K. it_IT
dc.contributor.author Frisari, Giovanni Leo <1980> it_IT
dc.date.accessioned 2014-10-01 it_IT
dc.date.accessioned 2015-10-07T08:57:55Z
dc.date.available 2015-10-07T08:57:55Z
dc.date.issued 2015-01-28 it_IT
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10579/6543
dc.description.abstract Fighting climate change poses a scientific, political and financial challenge: containing greenhouse gases atmospheric concentration within the levels that science indicates as relatively safe demands a paramount shift of financial investment patterns on both geographical and sectorial terms. The capital stock in the global economy needed to fund required investments is already available today but neither the public nor the private sectors can meet this challenge independently: policymakers are called to set suitable regulatory frameworks and policies that can facilitate this investment shift, overcoming entrenched economic behaviors, removing knowledge gaps and barriers that make these investments perceived, often unduly, as high-risk. This work shows how understanding which sets of investors are willing to accept which types of risks and identifying where the market fails to provide the necessary mitigation tools is the necessary starting point to design effective policies aimed at increasing the share of private capital in the current climate finance landscape. A detailed financial analysis of several case studies proves that policymakers and public international finance can play a decisive role in controlling, alleviating and mitigating risks - through effective regulatory frameworks and dedicated financial instruments they can deliver cost-effective solutions that improve investments’ risk-return profile and, ultimately, decrease the public support needed to mobilize private capital. By focusing the research on the specific barriers that inhibit private capital and increase the cost of low-carbon investments, the aim is to offer actionable insights on the financial solutions that concrete policy initiatives, such as Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions and the Green Climate Fund – could implement to gather the financial resources required to the transition to a more sustainable economic growth-path. This work shows how understanding which sets of investors are willing to accept which types of risks and identifying where the market fails to provide the necessary mitigation tools is the necessary starting point to design effective policies aimed at increasing the share of private capital in the current climate finance landscape. A detailed financial analysis of several case studies proves that policymakers and public international finance can play a decisive role in controlling, alleviating and mitigating risks - through effective regulatory frameworks and dedicated financial instruments they can deliver cost-effective solutions that improve investments’ risk-return profile and, ultimately, decrease the public support needed to mobilize private capital. By focusing the research on the specific barriers that inhibit private capital and increase the cost of low-carbon investments, the aim is to offer actionable insights on the financial solutions that concrete policy initiatives, such as Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions (NAMAs) and the Green Climate Fund – could implement to gather the financial resources required to the transition to a more sustainable economic growth-path. it_IT
dc.language.iso en it_IT
dc.publisher Università Ca' Foscari Venezia it_IT
dc.rights © Giovanni Leo Frisari, 2015 it_IT
dc.title Mobilizing private sector capital for low-emission investments : a risk allocation framework it_IT
dc.title.alternative it_IT
dc.type Doctoral Thesis it_IT
dc.degree.name Scienza e gestione dei cambiamenti climatici it_IT
dc.degree.level Dottorato di ricerca it_IT
dc.degree.grantor Dipartimento di Scienze Ambientali, Informatica e Statistica it_IT
dc.description.academicyear 2013/2014, sessione 2013/2014 it_IT
dc.description.cycle 27 it_IT
dc.degree.coordinator Barbante, Carlo it_IT
dc.location.shelfmark D001503 it_IT
dc.location Venezia, Archivio Università Ca' Foscari, Tesi Dottorato it_IT
dc.rights.accessrights openAccess it_IT
dc.thesis.matricno 955939 it_IT
dc.format.pagenumber 157 p. : ill. it_IT
dc.subject.miur SECS-P/02 POLITICA ECONOMICA it_IT
dc.description.note it_IT
dc.degree.discipline it_IT
dc.contributor.co-advisor Heller, Thomas C. it_IT
dc.date.embargoend it_IT
dc.provenance.upload Giovanni Leo Frisari (955939@stud.unive.it), 2014-10-01 it_IT
dc.provenance.plagiarycheck Barbara Buchner, 2015-01-19 it_IT


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record