The details of the projects come a day after the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) announced the amount of funding raised by the national climate finance initiative.
The amount was the first to be commercially secured under the Financing Asia’s Transition Partnership (FAST-P).
The aim of FAST-P – a blended finance initiative by MAS – is to bring together public, private, and philanthropic capital to help finance Asia’s decarbonisation, with the aim of eventually raising up to US$5 billion.
“US$510 million is a lot of money but trivial compared with the scale of financing needed for Asia’s transition,” said Mr Menon, who noted that Asia faces a shortfall of at least US$800 billion annually in climate financing.
There are three funding pillars under FAST-P, with the green investments pillar being the first to close, securing US$510 million from a range of financiers including Temasek, HSBC, and the Australian and European governments.
As a start, US$1 billion will be raised for each pillar, with the remaining US$2 billion kept in reserve.
The second pillar is on energy transition, which will help countries phase out coal plants and replace them with renewables, battery storage, and grid infrastructure.
The third pillar focuses on helping emissions-intensive sectors, such as cement and steel production, to decarbonise while supporting technologies like carbon removal.
The FAST-P initiative typically starts with capital from public or philanthropic sources as a catalyst. This will then spur the private sector – which holds most of the world’s wealth but is risk-averse – to invest in sustainable projects.
Revealing more details on how the US$510 million was raised, Mr Menon said it started with US$51 million committed by the Singapore Government.
This amount was later doubled to US$102 million through contributions from other governments, philanthropies, and commercial players.
The initiative also drew US$408 million in commercial capital, bringing the total to half a billion US dollars.
“With US$51 million, the Singapore Government has crowded in a pool of capital 10 times larger to facilitate Asia’s green transition,” said the former MAS chief at the Pan Pacific Singapore.
The US$51 million comes from the US$500 million that the Singapore Government pledged to FAST-P. This will be in the form of concessional funding, such as grants and loans provided at more favourable terms and below market rates.