Global Landscape of Climate Finance Data Dashboard
This page is updated annually with the latest climate finance data. Last updated: 23 June 2025. Learn more about our data update timeline.
The Global Landscape of Climate Finance offers the most comprehensive overview of global climate finance flows, providing crucial insights into the resources dedicated to addressing climate change. The latest publication is accessible at the following link: Global Landscape of Climate Finance 2025.
This page shares interactive data tools to provide governments, businesses and financial institutions with the information they need to build a sustainable, resilient and inclusive global economy. See our methodology document for more detail on how we get these numbers.
Explore the dashboard below to draw out your own insights.
Data in numbers (2023)
data sources
projects
institutions covered
Latest global climate finance flows and needs
The total climate finance flows in 2023 amount to USD 1.9 trillion. Whilst this is an increase compared to previous years, the climate finance gap remains significant. An average of at least USD 6.3 trillion in annual climate finance will be needed from 2024 through to 2030 to avoid the worst impacts of climate change.

FAQ
Can CPI share country-level data?
When will new data be released?
CPI intends to release standardized historic data from 2018 to 2022, alongside the 2023 data, in early Q4 2025.
CPI intends to include this data in the interactive data tool above.
The production of climate finance data for 2024 depends on the release of several underlying datasets that contribute to the Global Landscape of Climate Finance. This information is most likely to become available by mid-2026.
What are the main data gaps in the Global Landscape of Climate Finance dataset?
The Global Landscape of Climate Finance offers the most comprehensive overview of climate finance flows. Yet, despite the adoption of best practices, there remains key data transparency and reporting barriers that hard to overcome without improvements to reporting.
Such gaps mean comprehensive tracking remains elusive in certain areas:
- Private finance for adaptation activities and for mitigation activities in AFOLU, waste, and water and sanitation sectors
- Public domestic climate finance reported by countries
- Disbursement data availability
- Information on South-South flows and cooperation.
Can CPI share institution-level data?
Contact
If you have any further questions about the data, please contact matthew.price@cpiglobal.org or pedro.fernandes@cpiglobal.org.