Sources of financing and funding for infrastructure development, such as grants, guarantees, and debt and equity instruments, including those offered by project preparation facilities.
Under the Development Cooperation Charter, Japan is also committed to addressing the challenges facing the international community, especially development and humanitarian issues. JICA supports developing countries under this principle.
NDC Invest, a one-stop shop for countries to access resources for transforming their national commitments into achievable investments plans.
Pacific Infrastructure Advisory Center (PIAC) to analyze, plan, and implement PRIF-funded interventions. The PIAC is an interim mechanism pending the design and full mobilization of the PRIF itself, although it is expected that the PIAC will be absorbed within the broader PRIF.
The European Investment Bank (EIB) and the Development Bank of Southern Africa (DBSA) have set up a joint technical assistance Program to improve the preparation and implementation of infrastructure projects.
InfraCo Africa seeks to alleviate poverty by mobilising investment into sub-Saharan infrastructure projects.
IFC InfraVentures is a $150 million global infrastructure project development fund that has been created as part of World Bank Group’s efforts to increase the pipeline of bankable projects in developing countries.
The World Bank Group and the Government of Japan established the Quality Infrastructure Investment (QII) Partnership with the objective of raising awareness and scaling-up attention to the quality dimensions of infrastructure in developing countries.
PPSSF will enable the Government of Viet Nam (Government) to better startup, prepare and implement projects to improve effectiveness of Asian Development Bank (ADB) financed projects in Viet Nam.
The Green Climate Fund (GCF) is a new global fund created to support the efforts of developing countries to respond to the challenge of climate change.
CDIA is an ADB-managed Trust Fund that works closely with medium-sized cities in Asia and the Pacific to address gaps in infrastructure development and financing.
TAF plays a central role in enabling PIDG to initiate multi-company programmes and centrally-driven initiatives that are not specific to a particular company and that align with PIDG strategic objectives.
The WFPF mobilizes additional financial and knowledge resources from various development partners to support the Water Financing Program (WFP) implementation.
Created in late 2014 and operational in 2015 with EUR 40 million from the EBRD's internal net resources, the IPPF is designed to improve the efficiency and replicability of infrastructure projects.
GIF-supported projects may be implemented by privately-operated entities (as under a PPP modality), or by public sector entities operating on a commercial basis.
The Asia Pacific Project Preparation Facility is a multi-donor umbrella facility that will encourage private sector participation in infrastructure by adopting a more consistent and higher-quality approach to public–private partnership (PPP) project preparation development and transaction advice across the region.
The Fund finances non-reimbursable technical cooperation operations to support IADB borrowing member countries to manage risks related to natural hazards.
The National Infrastructure Fund (Fonadin) is the coordination vehicle of the Government of Mexico to support the planning, design, construction and more.
PPIAF is a catalyst for increasing private sector participation in emerging markets.