1、The Potential for Scaling Climate Finance in ChinaFebruary 2021Copyright 2020 Climate Policy Initiative www.climatepolicyinitiative.orgAll rights reserved. CPI welcomes the use of its material for noncommercial purposes, such as policy discussions or educational activities, under a Creative Commons
2、Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. For commercial use, please contact adminsfcpiglobal.org.AUTHORSJune ChoiWeiting LiUnder the guidance of:Tom HellerACKNOWLEDGMENTSThe authors of this report would like to acknowledge the financial support received from the Hewlett Foundation
3、which made this work possible. We would also like to acknowledge the generous support from CPI colleagues Bella Tonkonogy, Donovan Escalante, Rob Macquarie, Chavi Meattle, Barbara Buchner, Rob Kahn, Elysha Davila, Julia Janicki, Josh Wheeling, Alice Moi, as well as Jie Pan for translation. We are al
4、so grateful for the following individuals who contributed their perspectives through interviews and consultations during the research process (in alphabetical order). Kevin Ao, Melissa Brown, Andrew Chang, Peiyuan Guo, Bondy Lau, Thomas Lapham, Mathias Lund Larsen, Robert Liu, Yujun Liu, Wen Ma, Joh
5、n Maclean, Alfonso Pating, Alex Shoer, Bob Tansey, Marilyn Waite, Phylicia Wu, Wenhong Xie, Hongfu Zhang, Ruoyao Zhang. Front cover photo by Flickr user jose|huerta.ABOUT CPICPI is an analysis and advisory organization with deep expertise in finance and policy. Our mission is to help governments, bu
6、sinesses, and financial institutions drive economic growth while addressing climate change. CPI has six offices around the world in Brazil, India, Indonesia, Kenya, the United Kingdom, and the United States.iiiThe Potential for Scaling Climate in ChinaSECTORClimate financeREGIONChinaKEYWORDSClimate