======Financing for climate change in Latin America and the Caribbean in 2014====== This report analyzes climate change financing in Latin America and the Caribbean in 2014, focusing on sources, amounts, and mechanisms, and highlighting the role of various financial institutions and potential future funding sources. \\ \\ (Generated with the help of GPT-4) \\ ^ Quick Facts ^^ |Report location: |[[https://repositorio.cepal.org/server/api/core/bitstreams/1839930e-c3b5-446e-b73c-77c746b6284d/content|source]] | |Language: |English | |Publisher: | * [[encyclopedia:economic_commission_for_latin_america|Economic Commission for Latin America]] | |Authors: | HeloĆ­sa Schneider, Joseluis Samaniego | |Geographic focus: |Latin America And The Caribbean | |Page count: |108| =====Methods===== The research method involved analyzing financial data and reports from various institutions, including national climate funds, multilateral development banks, and private banks. The data were categorized by source, amount, and purpose, with a focus on climate change mitigation and adaptation initiatives. \\ \\ (Generated with the help of GPT-4) \\ =====Key Insights===== The report details climate finance flows in Latin America and the Caribbean for 2014, including contributions from national funds, multilateral development banks, and private banks. It discusses the role of climate funds, the engagement of public development banks in climate strategies, and the emergence of green bonds as a financing mechanism. \\ \\ (Generated with the help of GPT-4) \\ =====Additional Viewpoints===== Categories: {{tag>English_publication_language}} | {{tag>Latin_America_And_The_Caribbean_geographic_scope}} | {{tag>climate_change_adaptation}} | {{tag>climate_change_mitigation}} | {{tag>climate_finance}} | {{tag>climate_funds}} | {{tag>financial_instruments}} | {{tag>green_bonds}} | {{tag>multilateral_development_banks}} | {{tag>national_funds}} | {{tag>private_banks}} | {{tag>public_development_banks}} ~~DISCUSSION~~