Global, regional, national and sub-national level organisations involved in the development of infrastructure through the various stages of the project lifecycle. Use the filters to narrow down the below list of data resources.
KfW Development Bank administers Germany's official Financial Cooperation in more than 100 developing and transition countries in Africa, Asia, South and Central America, the Middle East and the Caucasus. Its priority areas of activity include poverty reduction and economic development, good governance, education and health care, and protection of the climate and the environment. In this way the bank helps the Federal Government achieve its developmental goals.
The BMZ develops the guidelines and the fundamental concepts on which German development policy is based. It devises long-term strategies for cooperation with the various players concerned and defines the rules for implementing that cooperation. These are the foundations for developing shared projects with partner countries and international development organisations. All efforts are informed by the United Nations' Millennium Development Goals, which ambitiously aim to halve poverty in the world by 2015
Subnational PPP Unit
Competition Regulator
Communications Regulator
National PPP Unit
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 for the benefit of the Bank's countries of operation and is a response to the need to build out a robust bankable project pipeline to enable an uplift in infrastructure investment.
Delivered by experienced PPP professionals, IPFA designs and organises intensive training programmes and workshops for governments, public sector bodies and private sector companies across the world.
The International Finance Corporation (IFC) is the largest global development institution focused exclusively on the private sector.
DFID leads the UK's work to end extreme poverty. Ending the need for aid by creating jobs, unlocking the potential of girls and women and helping to save lives when humanitarian emergencies hit.
The International Transport Forum at the OECD is an intergovernmental organisation with 57 member countries. It acts as a think tank for transport policy and organises the Annual Summit of transport ministers. ITF is the only global body that covers all transport modes.
The International Air Transport Association (IATA) is the global trade association for the airline industry
With funding from the World Bank through PPIAF, the Public Utility Research Center has created a resource for infrastructure professionals, analysts, policy-makers, and regulators: Body of Knowledge on Infrastructure Regulation.
The International Air Transport Association (IATA) is the trade association for the world’s airlines, representing some 265 airlines or 83% of total air traffic. We support many areas of aviation activity and help formulate industry policy on critical aviation issues.
IMO is the United Nations' specialized agency responsible for improving maritime safety and preventing pollution from ships.