Ghana Positions to Unlock Climate Finance Following Endorsement of Revised Climate Prosperity Plan

Ghana has taken a major step toward scaling climate and development finance following the formal validation of its revised Climate Prosperity Plan (CPP) at a high-level national workshop in Accra.
The event, convened by the Ministry of Finance in partnership with the Climate Vulnerable Forum (CVF) Secretariat, brought together senior government officials, development partners, financial institutions, and private sector leaders to review and endorse an updated investment and financing framework designed to accelerate Ghana’s climate-resilient growth.
The revised CPP articulates a structured pathway for mobilising public, private, and catalytic capital at scale.
Key financing instruments under consideration include debt-for-climate and debt-for-nature swaps, carbon market transactions under Article 6 of the Paris Agreement, blended finance mechanisms, and strengthened engagement with multilateral development banks to crowd in private investment.
Addressing participants, Mohamed Nasheed, former President of the Maldives and Secretary-General of the CVF, commended Ghana for sustaining its leadership in advancing climate prosperity beyond its tenure as Chair of the CVF/V20.
Under Ghana’s chairmanship, membership of the Forum expanded from 56 to 68 countries, and important institutional initiatives, including the Central Bank Governance Working Group, were operationalised to strengthen financial system engagement on climate risk.
The updated CPP is anchored on six strategic pillars: sustainable industrialisation and value addition; accelerated renewable energy deployment and green transport systems; climate-resilient health and water infrastructure; strengthened financial and economic resilience; sustainable food systems; and nature-based solutions that enhance both ecological integrity and productive infrastructure.
Crucially, the CPP is closely aligned with Ghana’s core economic transformation agenda, including the 24-Hour Economy policy, the Accelerated Export Development Programme, and the Big Push infrastructure initiative.
Officials emphasised that this alignment ensures climate investment serves as a multiplier of national development priorities rather than as a stand-alone environmental programme.
Participants at the validation workshop also examined implementation modalities, including governance arrangements, institutional coordination, and monitoring and reporting systems designed to track capital mobilisation and development impact.
Stakeholder inputs were consolidated into an action matrix that will inform final refinements and guide operationalisation through the proposed delivery structure anchored in the Ministry of Finance.
With climate risks intensifying and fiscal space under pressure, the validated CPP provides Ghana with a coherent platform to engage international climate funds, development finance institutions, and private investors with a structured, investment-ready proposition.
Beyond mobilising resources, the framework positions Ghana to demonstrate how climate action can drive industrial competitiveness, job creation, capital accumulation, and long-term resilience.
As the Climate Vulnerable Forum now comprises 68 member states, Ghana’s updated CPP may serve as a practical model for other vulnerable economies seeking to transition from climate risk management toward climate-driven economic transformation.




