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CNEPS Initiative: Developing Climate and Nature Economic Policy Scenarios
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Project start date
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2025Status
Ongoing
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Project end date
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2028
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Country and region
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Partners
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Research program
The Climate and Nature Economic Policy Scenarios (CNEPS) initiative develops forward-looking economic scenarios that integrate climate change, biodiversity loss and transition dynamics into macroeconomic policy analysis for Ministries of Finance and Public Development Banks (PDBs).
Co-designed with Ministries of Finance and PDBs, CNEPS aims at connecting global, regional and country-level perspectives to explore how geoeconomic, financial, technological and environmental transformations could reshape national economies, fiscal frameworks and development pathways and how countries could coordinate economic policy mixes and financing strategies in response.
Context
Ten years after the signing of the Paris Agreement, and five years into the Kunming-Montreal Agreement, he global economy is entering a period of profound structural change, often called “mid-transition”. Climate change, biodiversity loss, energy system transitions and shifting geopolitical dynamics are increasingly shaping economic development, financial stability and public finances. Climate shocks are already affecting fiscal balances and investment needs, while ecosystem degradation threatens key economic sectors such as agriculture, water and natural resources. At the same time, the transition toward low-carbon economies is transforming supply chains, trade relations and industrial strategies.
For Ministries of Finance, these dynamics are emerging as core macroeconomic risks while fostering new opportunities. Yet existing policy frameworks often struggle to integrate climate and nature fat-tailed risks (explication ou lien) into a systemic framework. Developing forward-looking economic scenarios that capture these interactions is therefore essential to support resilient fiscal planning and long-term development strategies.
It is in this context that AFD has launched the Climate and Nature Economic Policy Scenarios (CNEPS) initiative, a multilateral platform for the development of forward-looking economic scenarios to help policymakers anticipate these transformations and inform economic policy choices. It joins forces with an ecosystem of institutional, regional and academic partners to foster a shared language on plausible futures and related resilient economic policies.
Objective
The Climate and Nature Economic Policy Scenarios (CNEPS) initiative aims to develop forward-looking economic scenarios that help integrate climate change, biodiversity loss and transition dynamics into macroeconomic policy analysis. The project focuses on three main objectives:
- Technical integration: integrate climate and nature fat-tailed risks within macroeconomic policy frameworks, exploring nonlinear shocks, tipping points and geopolitical regime shifts, while building on existing structured country collaborations of AFD as well as regional and institutional partners.
- Policy interface: translate joint global scenarios into implications for fiscal policy, debt sustainability, industrial strategies and investment planning, while supporting champion countries in developing resilient national financing strategies.
- Coalition building: mobilise Ministries of Finance, Public Development Banks and academic partners, and connect existing finance-minister and public development banking platforms to scale impact and strengthen policy dialogue.
Method
The approach brings together global analytical work and country-level collaboration to explore how climate and nature risks, transition dynamics and geopolitical shifts could affect national economies and public finances.
The initiative builds on partnerships between research institutions, development finance actors and Ministries of Finance in participating countries. Academic partners contribute modelling expertise and scenario design, while Ministries of Finance and Public Development Banks provide policy perspectives and help identify the most relevant economic questions and applications.
The project mobilises an international knowledge network and works with partner countries to ensure that the scenarios developed respond to concrete policy needs and strengthen local analytical capacity.
Partners include :
- Academic partners: Makerere University, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro.
- Regional partners: CEPAL, UNECA, CAREC.
- Institutional partners: Coalition of Finance Ministers for Climate Action, Country Platform Hub, IDFC, FiCS, Pan African Forum of Finance Ministers for Climate Action.
Expected results
The CNEPS initiative will deliver a first generation of forward-looking economic scenarios exploring how climate change, biodiversity loss and global transition dynamics could affect national economies and public finances.
Key outputs will include a first mid-transition analytical report presenting emerging global trends and systemic risks, as well as a first set of global scenarios developed with champion countries and regional partners. These scenarios will be translated into country-level assessments exploring implications for resilient fiscal policy, debt sustainability and investment strategies.
The project will also support participating countries in developing a first series of national CNEPS strategies aimed at informing resilient financing pathways and long-term economic planning.
Beyond analytical outputs, the initiative will contribute to policy dialogue and capacity strengthening through workshops, regional exchanges and engagement with international platforms bringing together Ministries of Finance and Public Development Banks.
Events
Several events were organized as part of the CNEPS Initiative :
This workshop convened over 240 participants, including representatives from Ministries of Finance, central banks, financial supervisors, public development banks, ministries of environment and development co-operation, research institutes, and academia. The event comprised a technical workshop in the morning and high-level sessions in the afternoon, both held under the Chatham House rule.
In an increasingly fragmented geopolitical landscape, this one-day conference co-organized by AFD and the Energy Institute of University of Texas (Austin) in Paris convenes leading academics, policymakers and philanthropies to address a critical blind spot in global climate policy debates: the interactions between the transformation of energy systems and geopolitical shifts.
Across four sessions, the conference will explore why existing economic frameworks—often built on assumptions of global cooperation, free trade, and exogenous growth unrelated to energy use—fail to account for rising tensions and the non-linear risks associated with stranded assets and energy costs:
- Session 1: Understanding the role of energy in economic transitions: lessons from the 1970s to today
- Session 2: The geoeconomic turn of the energy transition: energy security, energy affordability and energy imperialism.
- Session 3: The macrofinancial turn of the energy transition: stranded assets, cost of capital and balance of payment instabilities
- Session 4: Building scenarios for the mid-transition period: what can the models tell us?
Contacts
- Etienne Espagne, Senior Economist, AFD
- Jean-François Mercure, Professor of Climate Policy, Exeter University
- Sam Mugume Koojo, Deputy Co-Chair CFMCA, Country Platform Hub, PAFCA
- Laura Sabogal Reyes, FiCS