Business Daily Media

The Times

.

GI Hub convenes global experts to advise on a G20 framework to boost investment in sustainable infrastructure

  • Written by: PR Newswire
GI Hub convenes global experts to advise on a G20 framework to boost investment in sustainable infrastructure

SYDNEY, May 19, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The Global Infrastructure Hub (GI Hub) has announced the formation of a Technical Working Group of global infrastructure, finance, and climate experts to provide strategic advice to the G20 and GI Hub on a forthcoming framework that will offer new recommendations for scaling up private sector investment in sustainable infrastructure.

Last week, the GI Hub's Chief Content Officer (COO) Henri Blas convened the Technical Working Group to review the draft framework, which is due to be published in the fourth quarter of 2022. The framework, which is being developed with support from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and Global Infrastructure Facility (GIF), supports the G20's infrastructure and sustainable finance priorities and aligns with a new report by the GI Hub on infrastructure transition pathways.  

Infrastructure leaders from the G20 Indonesian Presidency, G20 Ministries of Finance and central banks, long-term investor networks, multi-lateral development banks, GIF, and the OECD are involved in the group, and provide direct input into shaping the framework's recommendations.

Infrastructure continues to be a major barrier to achieving urgent climate targets, consuming 60%[1] of the world's materials and responsible for 79%[2] of global greenhouse gases. At the COP26 Climate Change Conference in Glasgow last November, countries agreed on several pledges that will drive sustainable infrastructure. The new framework will help decisionmakers translate such high-level commitments into tangible deliverables at global scale.

"Sustainable infrastructure now attracts half of all private sector investment in infrastructure, but the overall amount of private investment in infrastructure, USD100 billion in 2020[3], still isn't nearly enough to address the climate emergency," said GI Hub COO Henri Blas. "To help address this challenge, the GI Hub is aggregating solutions for scaling up private investment in sustainable infrastructure into a practical framework that facilitates immediate and practical action."

The framework will build on the GI Hub's Infrastructure Monitor[4] report on private investment in infrastructure, draw on the GI Hub's recent data analysis, Transformative Outcomes through Infrastructure[5], and advance the G20's infrastructure agenda.

Media contact: Media and Communications ManagerAngelique Dingle angelique.dingle@gihub.org[6] +61 428 897 936

Read more https://www.prnasia.com/story/archive/3761776_AE61776_0

Click Frenzy returns with a free EOFY sale event for retailers this month

New owners Gabby and Hezi Leibovich bring back Australia’s leading ecommerce sales event with Australia Post as Major Sponsor   Click Frenzy is ...

The 95 Per Cent Failure Rate Is Not An AI Problem

Most Australian SMEs I speak with are already having a go at AI. Some are running formal pilots, others have a team member quietly experimenting o...

New AR tech helping to solve field service skills crisis

AI-enabled augmented reality (AR) smart glasses are emerging as a new practical solution to fill a shortage of field service technicians maintaini...

For Midsize Companies, Global Payroll Systems Matter More to Business-Security Than You Think

When a midsize company expands across borders, its payroll operation becomes exponentially more complex. These organisations typically face a new ...

GEO and the AI search shift reshaping Australian and New Zealand business visibility

For years, one of the biggest digital marketing questions for businesses was ‘how do we get onto page one of Google?’ That question still matters, ...

Why self-service is reshaping fleet management for modern businesses

Fleet management today is constrained by fragmented systems and heavy administrative demands. A lot of the work still relies on booking vehicles and...