Our mission

Building permanent market structures for African climate finance

CGA's mission is to move climate capital beyond isolated pilots and into bank-led systems that can finance SMEs, strengthen value chains and scale across African markets.

Africa's climate finance challenge will not be solved by one-off projects. It requires permanent market structures, commercial banks with the products, capital, pipelines, reporting systems and partnerships needed to finance the businesses driving adaptation, productivity and jobs.

Catalytic capital Bank platform Value chains SMEs Jobs · resilience · growth

Our mission

To make climate finance deployable through African banking systems

Climate Gateway Africa's mission is to build the permanent market infrastructure that allows catalytic capital, commercial bank lending and value-chain demand to work together, turning climate finance into bankable SME portfolios.

Our focus is not only on mobilising capital. It is on building the systems that allow capital to move repeatedly, responsibly and commercially.

From pilots to markets

The future of climate finance is not another pilot. It is a repeatable market structure.

Africa's climate and SME finance gap cannot be closed through fragmented projects. To reach scale, climate finance must become part of the operating infrastructure of domestic financial systems.

01

Banks become the deployment layer

Commercial banks host the platforms, own the customer relationships and deploy finance through existing credit and SME systems.

02

Capital becomes structured for the real economy

Grants, guarantees, concessional capital and TA are organised around specific market constraints, not disconnected activities.

03

Value chains become finance channels

Agriculture, blue economy, logistics, water, energy and adaptation-linked sectors become structured pipelines for lending.

04

SMEs become Africa's agents of change

SMEs and value-chain actors are positioned as the businesses that drive jobs, resilience, local production and inclusive growth.

The scale of the challenge

The gap is large. The opportunity is larger.

CGA's mission is grounded in a simple reality: Africa does not only need more capital. It needs stronger deployment architecture.

$2.8T

Africa's climate finance need by 2030.

$331B

SME financing shortfall across Sub-Saharan Africa.

$42B

Credit gap facing women-owned enterprises.

These figures point to a structural opportunity: build the banking, value-chain and reporting systems that allow climate and SME finance to move at scale.

Near-term build targets

What we aim to build first

By the end of phase 1, CGA aims to prove the model through a focused set of bank-led facilities and value-chain finance opportunities in East Africa.

2026 target

5

Partner banks onboarded

Work with a focused group of commercial banks ready to design, host and scale climate finance facilities.

2026 target

$100M

Catalytic / DFI capital pathways

Structure capital pathways across grants, TA, guarantees, concessional funding and bank-led lending facilities.

2026 target

1–2

Flagship facilities live or committed

Move priority facilities from concept into committed, pilot-ready or implementation-ready status.

2026 target

3+

Priority value chains structured

Build facility logic around sectors such as coffee, agriculture, blue economy, logistics, water, energy or adaptation-linked SME finance.

2026 target

500+

SMEs mapped or pipeline-qualified

Identify, segment and prepare SME and value-chain actors for potential financing through bank-led facilities.

2026 target

10–20x

Catalytic capital leverage ambition

Design facilities where catalytic capital can mobilise larger volumes of private and bank-led deployment over time.

2030 ambition

A new deployment architecture for African climate finance

The long-term goal is to shift climate finance from fragmented pilots into permanent market structures owned and operated by African financial institutions.

2030 target

$1B+

Climate & SME finance mobilised

Support the mobilisation of catalytic, concessional and commercial capital into bank-led facilities.

2030 target

20+

Bank-led facilities designed

Help structure a portfolio of facilities across priority African markets, banks and sectors.

2030 target

10+

Priority value chains financed

Support facility development where climate resilience, productivity, jobs and commercial opportunity intersect.

2030 target

10K+

Climate-aligned SMEs reached

Enable finance to reach SMEs and value-chain actors driving adaptation, local production and inclusive growth.

2030 target

50K+

Jobs supported or enabled

Support employment and livelihood outcomes through finance reaching productive enterprises and ecosystems.

2030 target

5+

African markets activated

Build a model that can be adapted across countries, banks, sectors and capital providers.

2030 target

10–20x

Leverage model demonstrated

Demonstrate how catalytic capital can unlock larger volumes of commercial and bank-led deployment when structured correctly.

North star

By 2030

A new deployment architecture for African climate finance — owned and operated by African banks.

Value-chain priorities

Where permanent market structures can unlock real economic value

CGA focuses on value chains where climate finance, SME productivity, jobs, resilience and commercial bank opportunity intersect.

Sector

Coffee & export agriculture

Financing for producers, aggregators, processors, traceability systems, storage, logistics and export-linked SMEs.

Commercial logic

Export earnings, value addition, traceability and working capital demand.

Sector

Blue economy

Financing for coastal SMEs, fisheries, eco-tourism, marine services, restoration-linked enterprises and circular economy models.

Commercial logic

Livelihoods, natural capital, tourism, food systems and coastal resilience.

Sector

Water & adaptation

Financing for irrigation, water access, climate-smart farming, resilience infrastructure and adaptation-linked enterprises.

Commercial logic

Productivity, loss reduction, resilience and long-term asset finance.

Sector

Energy & productive use

Financing for distributed energy, productive-use assets, clean cooking, cold storage and energy-enabled SMEs.

Commercial logic

Asset finance, enterprise productivity and lower operating costs.

Sector

Logistics & green trade

Financing for cold chain, transport, storage, packaging, export systems and cleaner logistics infrastructure.

Commercial logic

Trade efficiency, reduced losses, export readiness and supply-chain resilience.

Sector

Light manufacturing & processing

Financing for local value addition, SME processors, packaging, clean production and equipment upgrades.

Commercial logic

Industrial productivity, import substitution, jobs and higher-margin value chains.

Commercial logic

The model must work for banks, capital providers and SMEs

Permanent market structures only last if they create commercial value. CGA designs facilities that align impact outcomes with bankable demand, risk-adjusted lending, credible reporting and repeatable capital mobilisation.

For banks

Banks gain a structured pathway to originate, deploy and report climate-aligned SME finance through existing systems.

Metric focus

New SME lending portfolios, improved risk-sharing, stronger DFI readiness, climate finance capability.

For capital providers

DFIs, donors and foundations gain credible bank-led channels for moving catalytic capital into the real economy.

Metric focus

Higher deployment confidence, stronger leverage, clearer impact reporting.

For SMEs

SMEs gain a pathway from fragmented demand to bankable participation in structured value chains.

Metric focus

Improved access to finance, longer tenors, better-fit products, stronger investment readiness.

For markets

Markets gain infrastructure that can support multiple facilities, sectors and capital providers over time.

Metric focus

Repeatable platforms, better data, stronger pipelines, lower transaction costs.

Impact logic

What we will measure as the model scales

CGA's impact logic is built around what permanent market structures make possible: more finance reaching productive SMEs, stronger value chains, better bank systems, and measurable climate and development outcomes.

01

Capital mobilisation

Total capital mobilisedCatalytic capital committedBank capital leveragedGuarantee / risk-sharing volumeTA & grant funding
02

Bank system change

Banks onboardedFacilities designedProducts adapted / launchedStaff trainedESG / MRV systems embedded
03

SME & value-chain reach

SMEs mappedPipeline-qualifiedSMEs financedWomen-led enterprises reachedValue chains structured
04

Commercial performance

Lending volumeAverage ticket sizePortfolio performanceRepeat borrowingPrivate capital leverage ratio
05

Climate & development outcomes

Jobs supportedAdaptation / resilience outcomesEmissions reductionProductivity improvementsExport / income uplift

Theory of change

From catalytic capital to permanent market structures

01

Inputs

Catalytic capital, DFI funding, donor grants, commercial bank balance sheets, TA and market data.

02

Activities

Facility design, bank readiness, capital structuring, value-chain mapping, SME pipeline, ESG/MRV, partner alignment.

03

Outputs

Bank-owned platforms, structured facilities, mapped pipelines, reporting systems, governance, deployment roadmaps.

04

Outcomes

Increased SME lending, stronger bank capacity, better data, lower transaction costs, improved risk-sharing, more private capital mobilised.

05

Impact

More resilient SMEs, stronger value chains, more jobs, higher productivity, improved adaptation and permanent climate finance infrastructure.

Success measures

Success means the market can keep moving after the first facility

  1. 01

    Banks can deploy repeatedly

    Climate finance is embedded into credit, risk, SME banking, treasury, sustainability and reporting systems.

  2. 02

    Capital providers have credible channels

    DFIs, donors and foundations can route capital through bank-led structures with clearer risk-sharing, reporting and implementation logic.

  3. 03

    SMEs become more finance-ready

    Africa's agents of change are better documented, aggregated, classified and prepared for lending.

  4. 04

    Value chains become investable

    Priority sectors move from fragmented opportunity to structured pipelines with bankable demand.

  5. 05

    Market infrastructure compounds

    Each facility strengthens the data, relationships, systems and confidence needed for the next one.

Help build permanent market structures for African climate finance.

If you are a bank, donor, DFI, foundation or value-chain partner seeking to move climate capital from ambition to deployment, CGA can help structure the pathway.