1、Guidebook on Facilitating Climate FDIW H I T E P A P E RJ U LY 2 0 2 3In collaboration with fDi StrategiesContentsImages:Midjourney,Getty Images,Unsplash 2023 World Economic Forum.All rights reserved.No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means,including p
2、hotocopying and recording,or by any information storage and retrieval system.Disclaimer This document is published by the World Economic Forum as a contribution to a project,insight area or interaction.The findings,interpretations and conclusions expressed herein are a result of a collaborative proc
3、ess facilitated and endorsed by the World Economic Forum but whose results do not necessarily represent the views of the World Economic Forum,nor the entirety of its Members,Partners or other stakeholders.ForewordExecutive summaryIntroductionMeasure 1 Incentives and de-riskingMeasure 2 Databases and
4、 supplier programmesMeasure 3 Matchmaking MNEs with investment projectsMeasure 4 Legal provisions for FDI facilitationConclusionContributorsEndnotes3467142128333436Guidebook on Facilitating Climate FDI2ForewordDeveloping countries,while particularly vulnerable to the negative environmental and econo
5、mic shocks of climate change,face an enormous climate finance gap.Climate-positive foreign direct investment or climate FDI can help narrow this gap.However,growing climate FDI will require concerted collaboration between public and private actors,a strong strategic vision within host countries and
6、focused investment facilitation efforts by investment authorities.Investment promotion agencies(IPAs)can act as powerful enablers of developing countries net-zero transition by adopting targeted facilitation measures that promote and nurture climate FDI.Furthermore,by encouraging sustainable,climate