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20 May 2026 - This paper examines why climate finance is not scaling in Kenya despite strong ambition, advanced financial inclusion and progressive policy frameworks, and what will be required to close the gap between climate finance ambition and delivery. 

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This paper from the University of Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership (CISL) explores the structural and institutional barriers preventing climate finance from reaching priority sectors and climate-vulnerable communities in Kenya at scale. Rather than focusing on headline financing gaps, it interrogates why climate finance has struggled to translate into commercially viable, inclusive and resilient investment outcomes. 

Drawing on extensive engagement with Kenyan financial institutions, including commercial banks, SACCOs and insurers, the paper challenges several widely held assumptions underpinning current climate finance approaches. It examines misconceptions around risk, innovation, disclosure-led regulation, concessional capital and carbon revenues, and highlights how misaligned incentives and distorted risk pricing continue to constrain lending, particularly for adaptation and resilience. 

The paper advances a practical pathway forward centred on transformational leadership and the establishment of a nationally anchored country investment platform. Such a platform is positioned as a mechanism to align policy, incentives, risk management and capital mobilisation, enabling climate finance to become commercially viable, institutionally coherent and grounded in Kenya’s market realities. 

Key insights 

  • Climate finance in Kenya is constrained less by capital scarcity than by misaligned incentives, distorted risk pricing and institutional fragmentation. 
  • Digital financial innovation and disclosure-led regulation alone are insufficient to unlock climate finance at scale. 
  • Domestic financial institutions are central to scaling climate finance but remain under-incentivised and under-equipped to finance adaptation and resilience. 
  • A nationally led country investment platform can provide the coordination, credibility and leadership required to translate ambition into investable, scalable outcomes. 

This work contributes to CISL Africa’s mission to strengthen sustainable finance leadership for green development, while supporting wider efforts to improve the conditions for long-term, productive climate and transition investment across the continent. 

Citing this report 

University of Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership (CISL). (2026). Beyond the illusion of innovative climate finance at scale in Africa: A market-informed blueprint for Kenya’s just and resilient climate transition. Cambridge, UK: University of Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership. 

Explore CISL Africa’s work on sustainable finance leadership, transition finance and country investment platforms across Africa, including engagement through the Sustainability Leadership Forum (SLF) in Nairobi. 

Published: May 2026

Authors and acknowledgements

Author 
Dr Yvonne Maingey-Muriuki, CISL Senior Associate 

Acknowledgements 
The author thanks CISL’s Corporate Leaders Group Africa, particularly the Sustainability Leadership Forum in Kenya, for their engagement and insights; Stefan Raubenheimer for contributions on country investment platforms; and the CISL Africa team, particularly Professor Richard Calland, Susan Njoroge and Dr Sibusiso Nkomo. The author also appreciates the reviews provided by Trisha Mani and Michael Sheren. 

Disclaimer

The opinions expressed here are those of the authors and do not represent an official position of CISL, the University of Cambridge, or any of its individual business partners or clients

Copyright

Copyright © 2026 University of Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership (CISL). Some rights reserved. The material featured in this publication (excluding photograhic images) is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International Licence (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0).

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