"NWFE" and the "Sharm El-Sheikh Guidebook" at the forefront of an International Roadmap to Scale Up Climate Investments.
16 November 2025
Independent High-Level Expert Group Report during the COP30 Climate Conference:
"NWFE" and the "Sharm El-Sheikh Guidebook" at the forefront of an International Roadmap to Scale Up Climate Investments.
The Report::The Platform is the first of its kind, relying on a multi-sectoral approach to mobilize investments in developing countries.
Country ownership is a prerequisite for the platform's success in achieving its goals, building trust, and ensuring the sustainability of efforts.
The "Sharm El-Sheikh Guidebook" establishes a just financing approach to boost climate investments.
Dr. Rania Al-Mashat:Egypt has placed a clear mark on the map of global efforts for climate action.
"NWFE" founded a new generation of integrated country platforms to transform climate ambition into realistic implementation plans.
Several countries, such as Türkiye, Brazil, and Bangladesh, have been inspired by the "NWFE" model to build their country platforms.
We are transferring national expertise to other countries wishing to replicate the experience to mobilize climate investments, in strengthening South-South cooperation.
The "Sharm El-Sheikh Guidebook" includes 12 key principles for achieving just financing for developing and emerging economies.
The Independent High-Level Expert Group on Climate Finance
(IHLEG) has included the country platform for the "NWFE" program and
the "Sharm El-Sheikh Guidebook for Just Financing" in its recently
issued report during the COP30 Climate Conference in Brazil. The report sets a
roadmap to increase climate investments in developing countries to reach $1.3
trillion annually by 2035.
The IHLEG issued a comprehensive report on the external
financing required by 2035 for developing countries to support climate
investment needs. This was done at the request of the COP29 and COP30 presidencies
to establish a roadmap for increasing climate finance through realistic
solutions that integrate external financing with public finance from various
countries.
The report emphasized that the "NWFE" country
platform for Water, Food, and Energy projects, launched by Egypt in 2022, is
the first explicitly multi-sectoral country platform linking investments across
overlapping vital sectors. It noted that the platform was among those issued by
other developing countries to align national strategies with international
climate action priorities, citing Türkiye, Brazil, and Bangladesh.
The report underscored several lessons learned from the
country platform for the "NWFE" program and the country platforms of
a number of developing countries. It highlighted that their most significant
feature is their multi-sectoral nature, along with national ownership, where
these platforms must align with the country's priorities, not the donors',
ensuring the sustainability of efforts and building trust.
In the same context, the report stressed the quality of
projects as a main pillar that enhances credibility and contributes to
attracting investments and accelerating implementation. It also mentioned that
starting with a focused platform and gradually expanding as the country's
capabilities grow helps in gaining experience over time.
H.E. Dr. Rania Al-Mashat, Minister of Planning, Economic
Development and International Cooperation, noted that despite three years
passing since the launch of the "NWFE" country platform, it has
become a model that international institutions advocate for replication in
developing countries after its success in creating real integration and close
coordination among the government, international institutions, and the private
sector. This success has stimulated a just transition in the energy sector, as
well as boosted climate action efforts in the water and food sectors. She
pointed out that Türkiye, Bangladesh, and Brazil were inspired by the Egyptian
model to build their national platforms, and the Ministry is working with other
countries to transfer its expertise to initiate their platforms.
Dr. Rania Al-Mashat added that the platform has so far
succeeded in mobilizing climate investments worth $4.5 billion to implement
renewable energy projects with a capacity of 5.2 GW, while projects for which
Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs) have been signed reached about 8.8 GW, out of
a total target of 10 GW. She mentioned that this funding has been made
available to the private sector, enabling the state to implement its Nationally
Determined Contribution (NDC) and enhance climate action. Furthermore, the
platform encouraged innovative and blended finance, such as grants, debt swaps,
private sector investments, and concessional financing.
The Sharm El-Sheikh Guidebook for Just Financing
In the same context, the report addressed practices and
principles for a just transition in developing countries, reaffirming that a
just transition is a cornerstone of climate and development strategies, plans,
and financing.
The "Sharm El-Sheikh Guidebook for Just Financing"
reinforces this approach by calling for the integration of equity in the design
and direction of climate finance.
It is noteworthy that the Sharm El-Sheikh Guidebook for Just
Financing set 12 principles to foster climate finance and support the efforts
of developing countries. This includes supporting the right of developing
countries to development and industrialization through just pathways within the
framework of the Paris Agreement, and ensuring consistency between global
climate action goals and national development goals in both mitigation and
adaptation.
The Sharm El-Sheikh Guidebook also underscored supporting
government efforts to create an enabling environment by providing finance,
raising technical and institutional efficiency and capacities. This comes in
line with achieving climate goals, ensuring the right of all countries to
achieve development under the principle of common but differentiated
responsibility, and including the concept of just financing in the structure of
international climate finance and ensuring an implementation mechanism.
The government launched the country platform for the
"NWFE" program—the nexus between Water, Food, and Energy
projects—during the Climate Conference in Sharm El-Sheikh in November 2022,
attended by a large gathering of development partners, international alliances
working in the climate field, and the private sector. It also launched the
"Sharm El-Sheikh Guidebook for Just Financing" with the participation
of think tanks, research centers, and international experts to reinforce
guiding principles for stimulating climate investments.
