World Bank to mobilize $10 toward climate action for every $1 received in grant money

Makhtar Diop, managing director of the International Finance Corporation, said that the world doesn’t have a problem of resources but a problem of managing those resources. (Twitter: @DXBMediaOffice)
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Updated 13 February 2023
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World Bank to mobilize $10 toward climate action for every $1 received in grant money

  • $1tn per year will be needed to exert energy transition in several countries, says International Finance Corporation managing director

DUBAI: For every $1 in grant money that the World Bank receives, it will mobilize $10 of its capital to invest in climate action, Makhtar Diop, managing director of the International Finance Corporation, told the World Government Summit on Monday.

“If we manage to have a bit more of investment of grant money, then we will be able to multiply investment significantly,” Diop told CNN’s Becky Anderson in a session titled “Investing in a sustainable future: the role of climate finance.”

Anderson said the climate crisis is one of the most pressing issues of our time.

“Mobilizing private capital alongside private policy is absolutely critical to transforming the world economy and putting us on a path to net zero by 2050. To reach that goal… as much as $9 trillion in investment is needed, every year. That’s one estimate. If you are more conservative, you might say it’s $6 or $7 (trillion), but that’s an awful lot of money, and 60 percent of those investment needs are in emerging markets. These markets are frankly starved of capital,” she said.

When asked about the funding gap for emerging markets and what should be done about it, Diop said: “The world doesn’t have a problem of resources but a problem of managing those resources to make sure we are using renewable energy…We also have a problem of managing the existing liquidity in the world and directing it to productive investment.”

Diop said it is estimated that $1 trillion per year will be needed to exert energy transition in many countries. What is missing, he explained, is a bankable project and liability for the private sector to assess the risk properly.

There are many factors, such as natural disasters and wars, that are rendering it difficult for investors to make decisions.

Diop said there is a need to de-risk those investments, which is what the IFC is trying to do by implementing a mechanism whereby bankable projects are brought together under one platform to simplify procedures.

Diop revealed that he is signing with the Abu Dhabi Development Fund an agreement to create a platform of $1.5 billion where both parties will co-invest in emerging countries around energy transition.

“Today, when we talk about green hydrogen, which is a new source of energy, it is mainly located in developing countries where you have the sun and hydro (power) in quantity,” said Diop.

These countries, he explained, “could become (exporters) of energy and (contribute) to the global public goods solution.”

Diop revealed that the World Bank Group is discussing an “evolution roadmap” to determine what more can be done to support energy transition and help countries fight climate change.

“This is a conversation that will require mobilizing more money because part of the resources of the WB Group are raised on the capital market and…not grant money,” he said.

What is needed, he explained, is certain technology that is currently expensive or the ability to invest in areas that are considered riskier in order to obtain more grant money.


Katz orders West Bank raid after deadly attack in Israel

Israeli soldiers walk during a raid in the occupied-West Bank city of Qabatiya, north of Jenin, on February 23, 2025. (AFP)
Updated 26 December 2025
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Katz orders West Bank raid after deadly attack in Israel

  • Friday’s stabbing and car-ramming attack in northern Israel triggered the minister’s action

JERUSALEM: Israel’s Defense Minister Israel Katz on Friday ordered the military to launch an operation in the village of Qabatiya in the occupied West Bank after it emerged that a Palestinian who killed two people came from there.
The minister instructed the Israeli forces to “act forcefully and immediately against the village of Qabatiya, from which the murderous terrorist emerged, in order to locate and thwart every terrorist and strike the village’s terror infrastructure,” Katz’s office said in a statement.
“Anyone who aids terrorism or sponsors and backs it will pay the full price,” it added.

BACKGROUND

Friday’s attack comes just days after Israeli soldiers shot dead a Palestinian teenager in the Qabatiya area.

The military said in a separate statement that it was preparing to begin an operation in Qabatiya in the northern West Bank, which has seen repeated violent incidents.
Friday’s stabbing and car-ramming attack in northern Israel triggered the minister’s action.
The assault came a day after an Israeli military reservist dressed in civilian clothes rammed his vehicle into a Palestinian man in the West Bank, where violence has surged since the war in Gaza began.
“Preliminary investigation indicates this was a rolling terror attack that began in the city of Beit Shean, where a pedestrian was run over,” Israeli police said in a statement about Friday’s attack, adding that the victim was a 68-year-old man.
“Later, a young woman was stabbed near Road 71, and the suspect was ultimately engaged with gunfire near Maonot Junction in Afula following intervention by a civilian bystander,” it said, adding that the attacker was taken to hospital.
Both victims succumbed to the injuries, Israel’s Magen David Adom emergency services said in a statement.
MDA also reported that a 16-year-old was slightly injured when “hit by a vehicle.
The Israeli military said the attacker had “infiltrated into Israeli territory several days ago.”
President Isaac Herzog condemned the attack.
Friday’s attack comes just days after Israeli soldiers shot dead a Palestinian teenager in the Qabatiya area.
The military has launched an investigation into the incident after footage emerged showing the teenager not posing any threat or throwing anything at soldiers who shot him.
The attack on Friday also came a day after an Israeli military reservist dressed in civilian clothes rammed his vehicle into a Palestinian man in the 
West Bank.
In videos on social media purporting to show that incident, the victim is seen praying by the roadside when the soldier rams him with his vehicle.