Regional Dialogues on External Financing and Climate-Resilient Development
Teaser
Guided by an enhanced framework, UNCTAD led data collection field missions, identifying their current and potential external financial options, blockages and impediments to the uptake of innovative financial instruments, as well as the regulatory, institutional, and market-related changes required to encourage these innovations. These efforts culminated in the delivery of climate adaptation and mitigation reports for each country, assessing direct and indirect climate risks and proposing strategies to address these risks and achieve SDGs 17.4 and 13.b and will contribute to the regional discussion.
Event information

Date
Event type
Participation
Background
Small Island Developing States (SIDS) face unique development challenges arising from their geographic isolation, small economies, environmental vulnerability, and high exposure to climate-related risks. These constraints have been further exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, which strained fiscal resources and intensified debt vulnerabilities.
In response, the UN Trade and Development (UNCTAD), in collaboration with the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA) and the United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), launched the project “Mobilizing External Financial Resources Beyond COVID-19 for Greener, More Equal, and Sustainable Development in Selected Vulnerable SIDS in Africa and Latin America and the Caribbean”. The project seeks to build capacities in four beneficiary SIDS – Belize and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines in Latin America and the Caribbean, and Cabo Verde and the Union of Comoros in Africa – to identify climate investment needs, align development priorities with external financing options, and design and implement innovative financing instruments that promote sustainable and climate-resilient development.
As part of Outcome 1 of the project, UNECA and UNCTAD have supported the governments of Belize, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Cabo Verde and the Union of Comoros in enhancing their understanding of how to diagnose climate funding gaps and reconcile them with external and public sector financial sustainability in the post-COVID-19 setting to achieve greener and more equitable societies. To operationalize this effort, an adapted, extended, and enhanced UNCTAD Sustainable Development Finance Assessment (SDFA) framework was adopted to estimate the impact of meeting the 2030 Agenda on developing country external financial sustainability related to climate action (specifically SDGs 17.4 and 13.b).
Guided by an enhanced framework, UNCTAD led data collection field missions, identifying their current and potential external financial options, blockages and impediments to the uptake of innovative financial instruments, as well as the regulatory, institutional, and market-related changes required to encourage these innovations. These efforts culminated in the delivery of climate adaptation and mitigation reports for each country, assessing direct and indirect climate risks and proposing strategies to address these risks and achieve SDGs 17.4 and 13.b and will contribute to the regional discussion.
The upcoming regional dialogue will serve as a platform to present the two primary outputs of Outcome 1 for the beneficiary countries, Cabo Verde and the Union of Comoros: (i) a country study on the regulatory, institutional, and market-related challenges to mobilize climate external financing, including through innovative financial instruments, and how to address them; (ii) a SDFA Report on the climate financial requirements for achieving greener, more equal and sustainable development and more equitable societies while achieving external and public sector financial sustainability.
The regional dialogue will bring together stakeholders from beneficiary and non-beneficiary countries and aims to foster peer learning and strengthen regional solidarity by sharing lessons and exploring scalable practices across similar contexts. Therefore, it will be essential to developing tailored national financial strategies and roadmaps to mobilize climate external financing, the two primary outputs of Outcome 2: Enhancing the capability in beneficiary SIDS to design policies that would enable mobilization of affordable external financial resources for a greener, more equal, and sustainable development without jeopardizing external financial sustainability. These roadmaps will provide a structured plan for mobilizing external finance through innovative mechanisms—such as green bonds, climate funds, blended finance, debt swaps and diaspora instruments—to implement climate-sensitive development goals while maintaining external and public sector financial sustainability.
Objectives
- Present the country studies and SDFA reports for Belize and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.
- Engage stakeholders in assessing the feasibility, coherence, and implementation pathways of the proposed changes to address the challenges identified in the country studies.
- Facilitate cross-country learning among the Caribbean community, allowing non-beneficiary countries to gain insights from the experiences of Belize and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines and vice-versa.
- Strengthen regional dialogue on climate finance and external resource mobilization for sustainable development.
- Gather practical feedback to develop the national financial strategies and roadmaps, ensuring national ownership and alignment with ongoing initiatives.
Expected Outcomes
- Enhanced awareness and understanding among stakeholders of challenges to adopt innovative finance strategies tailored to SIDS contexts.
- Recommendations to the Financial Strategy and Roadmaps for Mobilizing External Resources in Belize and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines with external and public sector financial sustainability
- Increased regional knowledge-sharing and networking among Caribbean SIDS on sustainable finance practices.
- Strengthened collaboration between UN ECLAC, beneficiary governments, regional peers and the Resident Coordinator Offices.
Schedule
Day 1: Thursday, 10 July 2025
Focus: Presentation and Discussion of the Challenges – Belize
09:00–09:30 - Opening Session: Welcome Remarks and Opening Statements (UN ECLAC, UNCTAD, Government of Belize, Government of Antigua and Barbuda)
09:30–10:30 - Presentation of the Belize regulatory, institutional, and market-related challenges to mobilize climate external financing and how to address them
10:30–11:00 - Coffee Break
11:00–12:30 - Ministerial dialogue with reflections and feedback from regional peers
12:30–14:00 - Lunch Break
14:00–15:00 - Presentation of the UNCTAD Sustainable Development Financing Assessment Framework (SDFA) country study
15:00-16:30 - Discussion Session with reflections and feedback from Regional Peers
16:30–17:00 - Closing Remarks: Wrap-up and Key Messages from Day 1 (UN ECLAC + UNCTAD)
Day 2: Friday, 11 July 2025
Focus: Presentation and Discussion of the Challenges in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
09:15–10:15 - Presentation of Saint Vincent and the Grenadine’s regulatory, institutional, and market-related challenges to mobilize climate external financing and how to address them
10:15–10:45 - Coffee Break
10:45–12:15 - Discussion Session with reflections and feedback from Regional Peers
12:15–14:00 - Lunch Break
14:00–14:30 - Presentation of the SDFA country study
14:30-15:30 - Discussion Session with reflections and feedback from Regional Peers
15:30–16:15 - Roundtable: Practical Steps to address the challenges and Regional Cooperation
16:15–16:45 - Synthesis of Outcomes and Recommendations to the National Financial Strategies and Roadmaps for Mobilizing External Resources in Belize and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines with external and public sector financial sustainability
16:45–17:00 - Closing Session (UN ECLAC + UNCTAD)
Practical information
Format and Structure
The event will be held in hybrid format, hosted at the Hilton Trinidad and Conference Centre, with in-person attendance from national stakeholders, regional experts, UN ECLAC, UNCTAD and UN system partners, and virtual participation from other stakeholders and non-beneficiary Caribbean SIDS.
Participants
- UN ECLAC, UNCTAD and UN system partners (e.g., UNDP, UN Resident Coordinators)
- Government representatives from Belize, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines and other Caribbean countries
- Private sector, academia, and civil society organizations
- Regional consultants and national think tanks
Organizers
Lead: United Nations Economic Commission for Latin American (UN ECLAC) and the Caribbean
With Support From: UNCTAD and RCOs and national governments of Belize and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.
Attachment(s)
Related link(s)
Organizing institution
ECLAC Subregional Headquarters for the Caribbean
- http://www.cepal.org/en/headquarters-and-offices/eclac-caribbean
- (868)224-8000
Conferencia de las Naciones Unidas sobre Comercio y Desarrollo (UNCTAD)
- http://unctad.org
- Teléfono Central: + 56 2 2654 1000