The keynote in New Delhi highlighted India’s USD 170 billion annual climate financing requirement and emphasised the role of adaptation, resilience and blended capital in building a future-ready climate economy.
Tag: sbi green portfolio target 2030
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Green growth momentum rises as Prem Prabhakar pushes for a new climate finance architecture at IVCA GreenReturns Summit 2025
New Delhi hosted a significant gathering of climate leaders, investors, policymakers and entrepreneurs as the second edition of the IVCA GreenReturns Summit 2025 began its sessions with a keynote address by Prem Prabhakar, Managing Director and CEO of SBI Ventures. His remarks focused on the emergence of what he described as a new climate economy, a phase where climate considerations are becoming inseparable from financial stability, national planning and industrial competitiveness. Speaking to an audience that included asset managers, global investment institutions and climate-tech founders, he outlined how climate change has moved from being a thematic concern to a structural influence on the way nations allocate resources, shape long-term development strategies and protect communities.
A key portion of the address focused on India’s climate capital requirement. Prabhakar referenced an estimated annual need of USD 170 billion for the country to meet its climate commitments, a figure that stands at nearly three times the current capital flow. The most significant financing gaps, he noted, are in sectors related to adaptation and resilience. These areas include water security, climate-smart agriculture, infrastructure capable of withstanding frequent climate shocks and systems that protect communities from extreme weather. According to Prabhakar, these categories demand greater attention from investors and institutions because they define the country’s ability to manage climate vulnerability while supporting economic stability.
The keynote also included a detailed view of SBI’s climate commitments. Prabhakar shared that the bank has set a target to achieve a 7.5 percent green portfolio in its domestic gross advances by 2030. In addition, SBI has outlined a parallel plan to achieve carbon neutrality across its internal operations by the same year. Through SBI Ventures, the bank continues to build an investment platform focused on climate solutions. He spoke about the progress of the Neev Funds which have shifted from climate infrastructure in their first fund to climate innovation and frontier technologies in the second. The Neev platform has attracted nearly seven times follow-on capital from Indian and international investors, demonstrating the viability and appeal of sustainability-led business models.
A forward-looking component of the keynote was the announcement that SBI Ventures will launch its third climate-focused fund early next year. This upcoming fund will focus on early-stage and growth-stage climate startups, especially those working on frontier climate technologies and AI-driven climate solutions. Prabhakar stated that the objective is to create new avenues for green growth and position India as an innovation centre for climate solutions that serve the Global South.
He closed by describing climate finance as a shared responsibility. Asset managers, funds, banks and policymakers must work together to mobilise capital that creates both economic resilience and climate-aligned outcomes. He added that financing climate action is not solely about supporting individual projects but about building systems that enable long-term solutions. When capital aligns with purpose, he said, the outcome is not only infrastructure or innovation but the creation of possibilities that strengthen national resilience.