Earth Carers

Climate finance tracking and accountability platforms

Problem areaFinance

The money is flowing in the wrong direction

10/13

The global financial system is fundamentally misaligned with climate goals. Trillions of dollars continue flowing toward fossil fuel projects and unsustainable practices, while clean energy and climate solutions struggle to access the capital they desperately need.

This isn't just about having enough money — it's about redirecting existing capital flows. Pension funds, banks, and investors manage over $400 trillion globally, but most of this wealth still supports the old economy. Meanwhile, developing countries face impossible borrowing costs for solar farms, and promising carbon removal technologies can't scale without patient capital.

The consequences compound daily. Every coal plant that gets financed instead of a wind farm, every loan that ignores flood risk, every greenwashed investment that crowds out genuine climate action — these financial decisions shape our physical future.

Problem

Climate finance isn't reaching the countries and communities that need it most

5/5

Developing countries face the worst climate impacts but receive a tiny fraction of climate finance. Small island states need seawalls, African farmers need drought-resistant crops, but most climate investment flows to wealthy countries with established financial systems.

This isn't just unfair — it's strategically foolish. Climate change is global, and solutions that don't include the most vulnerable countries will fail for everyone.

Solution approach

Climate finance tracking and accountability platforms

4/5

Monitoring platforms that track whether promised climate finance actually reaches developing countries and delivers intended outcomes, providing transparency on fund flows and helping ensure accountability for international climate commitments.

Companies