
Suggested citation: Ghosh, Arunabha and Jhalak Aggarwal. 2025. South Asia Granary of Climate Solutions: A Regional Public Good to Accelerate Action. New Delhi: Council on Energy, Environment and Water.
A critical shift is unfolding in global climate governance as the world moves from negotiation to implementation. COP30 of the UNFCCC convenes at a moment when the science is unequivocal, yet the collective will to act is faltering. With record temperatures, geopolitical tensions, and fiscal pressures crowding out climate priorities, the future of international cooperation hangs in the balance. Framed by the Brazilian Presidency as the ‘Implementation COP’, COP30 calls for restoring trust and credibility through tangible delivery. The South Asia Granary of Climate Solutions responds to this call—serving as a regional public good that translates proven local initiatives into scalable pathways for global climate action.
Drawing on evidence from six South Asian countries—Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, and Sri Lanka—the study compiles replicable and scalable practices that combine resilience, growth, and equity. Across the countries, the Granary distils 17 initiatives through a six-pillar assessment of transformative scale, local ownership, catalytic innovation, stakeholder convergence, long-term viability, and adaptive progress.
The report demonstrates that South Asia—home to one-fourth of humanity—can not only endure the climate crisis but redefine what a cooperative, inclusive, and innovation-driven response looks like for the Global South and the world. At a time when international climate cooperation is shifting towards implementation, the Granary demonstrates how regional learning can strengthen both national policy frameworks and collective credibility in global processes.
The report identifies five pathways central to advancing regional and global climate action:
Together, these five pathways emphasise that regional cooperation, inclusive governance, and innovation must converge to drive sustainable transformation.
A critical shift is imminent in global climate governance: moving from negotiations to accelerating implementation. The 30th Conference of the Parties (COP30) of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) is unfolding in a difficult context. Last year was the hottest in recorded history. This year is on track to be warmer. And yet, climate is slipping down the ladder of political priorities. The world is navigating complex times, with geopolitical uncertainties, trade frictions, energy security, and fiscal strains crowding out the urgency of climate action. This is the paradox: science has never been clearer; never have the impacts been more immediate, and yet never has the collective action and will appeared so fragile. Today, the future of international climate architecture is under threat. COP30 stands at a critical juncture to galvanise trust, ambition, and credible action.
The Brazilian Presidency has famously billed COP30 as the ‘Implementation COP’, placing emphasis on moving forward from pledges to delivery. COP30 aims to accelerate action through three pillars: (i) implement the Paris Agreement and the Global Stocktake, (ii) mobilise momentum through the Circle of Presidencies, and (iii) establish the Granary of Solutions acting as a repository of practical and scalable solutions. Building on the final pillar, we have developed a South Asia Granary of Climate Solutions that aims to serve as a ‘regional public good’, synthesising replicable and actionable lessons to accelerate climate action.
South Asia represents a diverse region with vastly different energy trajectories, developmental challenges, needs, and priorities. Home to two billion people, it stands on the frontline of climate impacts. Between 1970 and 2022, the Asia Pacific region endured over half of global disaster deaths and nearly half the economic losses, amounting to USD 2.7 trillion (ESCAP 2023).
The economic toll of climate change is expected to reach an average of USD 160 billion annually by 2030 (World Bank, n.d.). South Asia holds what the world needs: natural capital, political will, and economic opportunities. This combination of economic dynamism and strategic leverage puts the region in a relatively strong position to develop and grow on its own terms, seize new economic opportunities, and serve as crucial ‘swing players’ in a fractured world order.
The compendium meticulously collates emerging good practices from six1 South Asian countries—Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, and Sri Lanka—to mainstream effective climate solutions. The three solutions per country have been identified by the respective governmental and non-governmental country representatives. We developed the framework around six core components that are critical to assessing the effectiveness of policies and programmes. These are: transformative scale, active local ownership, disruptive innovation, deepened stakeholder convergence, conducive environment for long-term (financial, technical, and institutional) viability, and ensuring adaptive progress. The impact of the initiatives was mapped across this framework. Each country’s content has been reviewed by either official ministries or civil society representatives. This compilation is suggestive, not exhaustive, highlighting top programmes and their potential for replication, and broader impact based on the many consultations conducted with governmental and non-governmental representatives regionally
The case studies exhibit similarity in the challenges, and there is vast potential to learn from cross-country experiences. We identify five pathways central to climate action for the region, the Global South and the world: smart regionalism, internal structural transformation, communitycentred action, affordable and accessible financing, and leveraging the digital revolution.
The climate crisis is becoming the defining story of our age—inescapable, intersectional, and irreversible. Climate change has become both an environmental emergency and an economic risk. Given the rising intensity and frequency of climate disasters, a sustainable and inclusive transition is critical. However, context-sensitive, locally led, and scalable solutions are imperative to accelerate this transition. The Global South is where the future is being built. As the world shifts to a multipolar order, the Global South is seizing its moment. In particular, South Asia will account for a massive share of global growth well into the future, defining the next wave of economic opportunity.
More than 750 million South Asians—approximately one-fourth of the total population of the region—has been affected by at least one natural disaster in the past two decades (World Bank, n.d.). It is projected that by 2050, 40 million people across South Asia will have migrated internally due to climate impacts (World Bank 2021). Economic losses were found to amount to equivalent of 1.8 per cent of annual GDP by 2050, increasing to 8.8 per cent by 2100. (Campagnolo, et al. 2025).
The region spans diverse climates and geographies, from arid zones prone to severe disasters, to Nepal and Bhutan’s glacier-fed mountains, the Maldives’ existential threats from sea-level rise and coastal erosion, and India and Bangladesh’s tropical zones’ exposure to frequent extreme weather events. Despite these challenges, countries are embedding resilience into development through policy reforms, competitive markets, and targeted finance. Practical leadership examples abound: India’s rapid renewable scale-up and manufacturing push, Bhutan’s conservation-led development, Nepal’s community stewardship and localised planning, Bangladesh’s off-grid solar revolution, and Sri Lanka’s drive to attract renewables finance—all delivering measurable economic and climate returns.
The South Asia Granary of Climate Solutions meticulously maps exemplary initiatives, highlighting interventions that simultaneously advance climate resilience, economic growth, and social equity. It synthesises replicable, actionable, and impactful lessons for governments, development partners, and civil society actors. The emergent good practices span six critical pillars: transformative scale, active local ownership, disruptive innovation, deepened stakeholder convergence, conducive environment for long-term (financial, technical, and institutional) viability, and adaptive progress. Scaling initiatives can have a wide-ranging systemic impact. Community led interventions ensure ownership, foster leadership, and embed sustainability within local institutions. Policy coherence, long-term vision, and innovation between national and subnational actors is critical. As is introducing breakthrough solutions that challenge conventional approaches and accelerate progress. Long-term models leverage a diversity of technical expertise and funds, reducing investment risk and unlocking broader capacity. Finally, a monitoring and evaluation system is critical to evolve challenges and opportunities, and catalyse systemic change and socio-economic co-benefits.
By distilling these lessons, the Granary serves as a regional public good: a compilation of strategic, scalable, and context-specific solutions. It empowers South Asian countries to strengthen resilience, accelerate climate action, and contribute meaningfully to global sustainability goals. Above all, it demonstrates a fundamental truth: climate action is most effective when knowledge is shared, communities are empowered, and innovation is harnessed for the common good.
OBJECTIVE
The Government of Bangladesh decided to establish the Bangladesh Climate Change Trust Fund (BCCTF) based on revenue from the national budget, with a legal mandate under the Climate Change Trust Act passed by the Parliament in 2010, as a response to the uncertainties and inadequacies of international adaptation finance from both multilateral and bilateral sources.
DIRECT IMPACT
IMPLEMENTERS AND ENABLERS
CO-BENEFITS
DESCRIPTION
The BCCTF is a first-of-its-kind legislative framework that aims to establish an immediate, domestic response to climate change adaptation activities, which are planned through the BCCSAP. This is resourced entirely from the government’s own budget (with USD 100 million each in 2009, 2010, and 2011) (Khan, Saleemul and Shamsuddoha 2018, 3). It stipulates 66 per cent of its budget to be prioritised on the implementation of projects in the BCCSAP (Khan, Saleemul and Shamsuddoha 2018, 5). The remaining 34 per cent is maintained as a deposit for emergencies (Khan, Saleemul and Shamsuddoha 2018, 5). The Funds from the BCCTF can be used to finance public sector and non-governmental projects, and it is not mandatory to spend the total grant within a given financial year.
PERFORMANCE PRINCIPLES
OBJECTIVE
Achieve a safe, climate-resilient, and prosperous delta with a mission to ensure long-term water and food security, economic growth, and environmental sustainability, effectively reducing vulnerability to natural disasters and building resilience to climate change.
DIRECT IMPACT
IMPLEMENTERS AND ENABLERS
CO-BENEFITS
DESCRIPTION
The Government of Bangladesh has formulated the Bangladesh Delta Plan 2100 (BDP 2100) focusing on economic growth, environmental conservation, and enhanced climate resilience. The plan lays out holistic and cross-sectoral action needed to improve productivity and minimise disaster risks. It seeks to integrate the medium- to long-term aspirations of Bangladesh to achieve UMIC status and eliminate extreme poverty by 2030, and be a prosperous country beyond 2041, with the longer-term challenge of sustainable management of water, ecology, environment and land resources in the context of their interaction with natural disasters and climate change. The BDP 2100 looks primarily at the delta agenda up to 2050, but also recognises that the decisions taken today have implications up to 2050 and beyond. In this regard, it sets up a long-term vision, but defines short- and medium-term goals as steps to reach that vision.
PERFORMANCE PRINCIPLES
OBJECTIVE
To manage growing emissions without compromising the required development, and to allow Bangladesh to play its role in global efforts to limit temperature rise to 2 degrees, or preferably, no more than 1.5 degrees above pre-industrial levels (MoEFCC 2018, 3).
DIRECT IMPACT
IMPLEMENTERS AND ENABLERS
CO-BENEFITS
DESCRIPTION
Bangladesh’s NDC Roadmap and Sectoral Action Plan represents a nationally tailored climate strategy that integrates both mitigation and adaptation across all sectors. The plan features sectorspecific measures, strong institutional structures, and active community involvement to promote inclusive and transformative outcomes. An advanced monitoring, reporting and verification (MRV) system supports adaptive learning, while stakeholder collaboration and cross-sectoral innovation foster systemic change. This comprehensive approach establishes Bangladesh as a leader in scalable, coherent, and locally driven climate action. In fact, following the Paris Agreement, Bangladesh is one of the first countries to put in place a process for developing plans focused on joint implementation of NDC and NAP.
PERFORMANCE PRINCIPLES
OBJECTIVE
It aims to preserve and enhance natural heritage, and ensure a robust network of protected areas and biological corridors (representing more than 51 per cent of the country) that contributes to human well-being and biodiversity conservation, and increases Bhutan’s resilience to the effects of climate change. (Bhutan For Life n.d.)
DIRECT IMPACT
As of 2024, the initiative has delivered the following results (Bhutan For Life n.d.)
IMPLEMENTERS AND ENABLERS
CO-BENEFITS
DESCRIPTION
The initiative supports the following thematic areas
PERFORMANCE PRINCIPLES
OBJECTIVE
Aims to establish a vibrant, sustainable, conscious, and spiritually grounded economic hub, offering a conducive business environment and compelling incentives. The city seeks to reduce youth unemployment, curb urban migration, and position Bhutan as a global model for mindful living and ecological harmony.
DIRECT IMPACT
IMPLEMENTERS AND ENABLERS
CO-BENEFITS
DESCRIPTION
Gelephu Mindfulness City stands as a pioneering initiative, blending Bhutan’s rich cultural heritage with forward-thinking urban development strategies. Operating under a ‘One Country, Two Systems’ framework, GMC blends Bhutanese values of mindfulness, spirituality, environmental sustainability, and community with global best practices in governance, technology, and commerce. It aims to drive administrative reform, economic growth, and innovation over the next two decades across eight core industries and sectors. With modern infrastructure, renewable energy, and access to India’s market, it offers a politically stable, investor-friendly ecosystem for advanced manufacturing, sustainable tourism, and digital innovation, and a global hub for Vajrayana Buddhism. The full development of the city is projected to take 21 years, with phased construction of essential infrastructure (Shuvo 2025).
PERFORMANCE PRINCIPLES
OBJECTIVE
This initiative aims to mobilise at least 1 billion people and global citizens and make ~80 per cent of Indian villages/urban local bodies environment-friendly between 2022 and 2028 to adopt mindful, climate-positive lifestyles (Pro Planet People model), to reduce consumption-related emissions (NITI Aayog 2022, 10).
DIRECT IMPACT
Mission LiFE’s actions could deliver one-fifth of the emissions reductions needed by 2030, and approximately USD 440 billion in savings (IEA 2023, 3).
IMPLEMENTERS AND ENABLERS
CO-BENEFITS
DESCRIPTION
Mission LiFE is an India-led global mass movement to nudge individual and community action to protect and preserve the environment (NITI Aayog 2022). At COP26, India shared the mantra of LiFE—Lifestyle for Environment—to combat climate change (PIB Delhi 2022). India is the first country to include LiFE in its Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs). It aims to translate the vision of LiFE into measurable impact, and nudge individuals and communities to practise a lifestyle that is synchronous with nature, and recognised as ‘Pro Planet People’.
PERFORMANCE PRINCIPLES
OBJECTIVE
Create a global partnership to promote disaster- and climate-resilient infrastructure, ensuring that both new and existing systems can withstand climate and disaster risks. Anchored in India, CDRI aims to make resilience a global public good, and support vulnerable countries, especially Small Island Developing States (SIDS).
DIRECT IMPACT
Strengthens national capacities to plan, design, finance, and maintain resilient infrastructure systems across energy, transport, water, and urban sectors. Supports countries in avoiding losses from disasters, in safeguarding investments, and achieving sustainable development.
IMPLEMENTERS AND ENABLERS
CO-BENEFITS
DESCRIPTION
Launched by India’s Prime Minister at the UN Climate Action Summit in 2019, CDRI is a unique international coalition headquartered in New Delhi. India committed an initial INR 480 crore (USD ~70 million) to establish and operationalise CDRI, complemented by contributions from member countries and partners (PIB 2022). Its flagship programmes and contributions include the Infrastructure for Resilient Island States (IRIS) launched at COP26 to support SIDS (Resilience Hub 2021); the Global Infrastructure Risk Model and Resilience Index (GIRI); the Infrastructure Resilience Accelerator Fund (IRAF); and the CDRI Fellowship Programme (launched in 2020 to build a cadre of global resilience leaders). The coalition’s governance is structured around a Governing Council, Executive Committee, and Secretariat, ensuring it is member-driven and globally representative.
PERFORMANCE PRINCIPLES
OBJECTIVE
Achieve 500 GW of installed non-fossil-fuel energy capacity by 2030, including renewable energy (solar, wind, hydro, biomass) and nuclear, as one of India’s five commitments (Panchamrit goals) made at COP26, as part of its net zero 2070 roadmap (Reuters 2025).
DIRECT IMPACT
It will significantly reduce power sector emissions and dependency on imported fossil fuels, thus improving energy security.
IMPLEMENTERS AND ENABLERS
CO-BENEFITS
DESCRIPTION
Achieving the 500 GW non-fossil target is at the heart of India’s clean energy transition and meeting the decarbonisation goals. As of August 2025, India is halfway there, with installed non-fossil capacity of 250 GW (The Economic Times 2025). This will also help India reduce its dependency on fossil fuels and its import bills, thus ensuring energy security. Scaling up of storage technologies and transmission corridors is also being planned to meet this target.
PERFORMANCE PRINCIPLES
OBJECTIVE
To address the dual challenge of growing waste generation and emissions by introducing wasteto-energy (WtE) plants in key regions, and establishing a climate-resilient solid waste management system.
DIRECT IMPACT
IMPLEMENTERS AND ENABLERS
| Greater Malé Waste-to-Energy Project (Thilafushi) | Addu City Waste-to-Energy Project | Vandhoo Waste-to-Energy Facility | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Enablers | Government of Maldives (Ministry of Tourism and Environment). | Government of Maldives (Ministry of Tourism and Environment). | Government of Maldives (Ministry of Tourism and Environment). |
| Implementers | DBO contractor consortium, Ramboll (design), development and local partners. | Local utilities and technical partners. | Local operators and technical partners. |
| Partners | Asian Development Bank (grant and loan), Islamic Development Bank, Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank. | Abu Dhabi Fund for Development (loan financing). | Supported by national waste management programmes. |
| Beneficiaries | Greater Malé region, and industrial operations at Thilafushi. | Residents of the four southern atolls, with improved waste management and energy access. | Northern atolls served by the Vandhoo regional waste management centre. |
CO-BENEFITS
DESCRIPTION
The initiative aims to convert solid waste into energy, delivering triple benefits: tackling waste management challenges, reducing landfill use and marine pollution, and generating electricity. In Greater Malé, the planned WtE facility will process ~500 tonnes of waste per day, producing 13 MW of grid-connected energy by 2027. In the south, the Addu project will add 1.5 MW by 2024, while in the north, the Vandhoo facility will contribute 0.5 MW from 2025. Collectively, these projects establish a more sustainable solid waste management system nationwide, complementing national strategies to advance a circular economy with improved waste segregation and institutional capacity.
PERFORMANCE PRINCIPLES
OBJECTIVE
Aims to increase renewable energy share in national electricity generation to 33 per cent by 2028, equivalent to delivering about 330 GWh from renewable sources (Shurau 2025). The Energy Roadmap is crucial to achieving the Maldives’ sustainable development goals, and guiding efforts in transforming its energy sector and expanding economic activities.
DIRECT IMPACT
IMPLEMENTERS AND ENABLERS
CO-BENEFITS
DESCRIPTION
The Energy Roadmap 2024–2033 sets a target to generate 33 per cent of the nation’s electricity from renewable sources by 2028. This target, alongside the Third Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC), signals a strategic shift in national energy planning, aimed at reducing the country’s heavy reliance on fossil fuels. The reliance on imported fossil fuels poses fiscal challenges and makes the economy vulnerable to price fluctuations. Fossil fuels remain the primary energy source, with imports accounting for about 13.5 per cent of the GDP in 2023.
PERFORMANCE PRINCIPLES
OBJECTIVE
To establish climate-resilient and cost-effective water supply systems by integrating groundwater, rainwater, and desalination, while enhancing community participation in allocation, monitoring, and sustainable use, under changing climatic conditions (UNDP n.d.).
DIRECT IMPACT
IMPLEMENTERS AND ENABLERS
CO-BENEFITS
DESCRIPTION
Maldives has limited access to freshwater and groundwater. The National Disaster Management Centre has transported potable water to many islands facing acute water shortages due to prolonged dry periods, costing over USD 2 million every year (UNDP n.d.). Given this, the initiative aims to increase the resilience of freshwater resources through an integrated management of ground and freshwater resources in the selected islands. Through a targeted mix of investments, the project will address the effects of variable rainfall, extreme weather events, salinisation, and pollution of aquifers.
PERFORMANCE PRINCIPLES
OBJECTIVE
To establish a permanent international forum in the form of biennial dialogue on climate change, with an aim to strengthen mountain ecosystems, and amplify the voices of vulnerable countries across the Hindu-Kush.
DIRECT IMPACT
IMPLEMENTERS AND ENABLERS
CO-BENEFITS
DESCRIPTION
Launched in 2019, Sagarmatha Sambaad is named after Mount Everest (Sagarmatha), symbolising Nepal’s vulnerability to and leadership on climate issues (Sagarmatha Sambaad n.d.). It is designed as a recurring, multi-stakeholder global dialogue, which brings together heads of state, policymakers, scientists, and civil society. Its inaugural theme—‘Climate Change, Mountains and the Future of Humanity’—underscored the urgency of addressing the cascading impacts of mountain ecosystem degradation on global climate stability. It is a flagship initiative for positioning Nepal as a global hub for dialogue on climate resilience and sustainability.
PERFORMANCE PRINCIPLES
OBJECTIVE
Prevent deforestation, improve livelihoods, alleviate poverty, and conserve and enhance forest management.
DIRECT IMPACT
IMPLEMENTERS AND ENABLERS
CO-BENEFITS
DESCRIPTION
Community forestry has been legislated in Nepal since 1993 (Luintel, Bluffstone and Scheller, 2018, 6). This system conditionally permits the use of forest resources within the CFUG to meet the basic needs of residents, instead of entrusting them with the restoration and conservation of national forests, which have degraded due to illegal logging or decrease in area, due to conversion from forest to agricultural land and other land-use systems. Nepal’s CFP is among the world’s most-cited examples of community based natural resource governance. Initiated in the 1970s–1980s and substantially scaled since the 1990s, it devolves management rights and responsibilities to CFUGs under formal management plans. The model is flexible and has been the subject of extensive evaluation, showing strong local stewardship outcomes alongside governance challenges that require ongoing reform.
PERFORMANCE PRINCIPLES
OBJECTIVE
The Local Adaptation Plans for Action (LAPA) framework aims to integrate climate adaptation activities into local and national development planning. It facilitates context-specific, community-driven action plans that enhance the resilience and adaptive capacity of the most vulnerable populations, ensuring climateresilient development across sectors (GoN 2011, 8).
DIRECT IMPACT
IMPLEMENTERS AND ENABLERS
CO-BENEFITS
DESCRIPTION
The LAPA Framework is a community-driven, bottom-up adaptation framework pioneered in Nepal to facilitate climate-resilient development at local levels. It translates national climate priorities (from NAPA) into context-specific, actionable plans led by local bodies, integrating adaptation into sectoral and development planning. Its four guiding principles are bottom-up, inclusive, responsive, and flexible. The LAPA framework will support the following activities:
PERFORMANCE PRINCIPLES
OBJECTIVE
Accelerate the adoption and utilisation of small solar power plants to achieve energy security and improve efficiency. It is expected to add 1,000 MW of solar electricity to the national grid by 2025, and 1,500 MW by 2030, with the goal of moving towards 100 per cent renewable energy in the future (Sri Lanka Sustainable Energy Authority n.d.).
DIRECT IMPACT
IMPLEMENTERS AND ENABLERS
CO-BENEFITS
DESCRIPTION
The Sooriyabala Sangramaya Programme, or Battle for Solar Energy, is a government initiative to promote dependency and facilitate rooftop solar adoption across Sri Lanka. By targeting both residential and industrial sectors, the programme aims to advance energy sustainability, reduce dependence on traditional power sources, and support economic growth and environmental conservation through clean, renewable energy.
PERFORMANCE PRINCIPLES
OBJECTIVE
Aims to protect 30 per cent of the country’s land and marine areas by 2030, aligning conservation with sustainable development and livelihoods through sciencebased approaches and effective management.
DIRECT IMPACT
IMPLEMENTERS AND ENABLERS
CO-BENEFITS
DESCRIPTION
Sri Lanka’s 30×30 initiative aligns with the KunmingMontreal Global Biodiversity Framework, which was agreed upon by Sri Lanka and 195 other nations at the United Nations Biodiversity Conference (COP15) in 2022. Sri Lanka’s abundant natural resources provide significant opportunities for environmentally sustainable economic growth. By preserving its unique biodiversity and encouraging responsible use of resources, Sri Lanka intends to create a robust, future-focused economy that will serve generations to come. The government has identified nine key conservation priorities and aims to balance development with conservation through science-based approaches and effective management, aligning with the Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF), also known as the 30x30 targets of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD).
PERFORMANCE PRINCIPLES
OBJECTIVE
DIRECT IMPACT
IMPLEMENTERS AND ENABLERS
CO-BENEFITS
DESCRIPTION
The Life to Our Mangroves (LOM) project aims to restore degraded mangrove forests. The methodology includes mapping degraded mangroves, engaging local stakeholders, and combining ecological restoration with livelihood support. The initiative has some key components:
PERFORMANCE PRINCIPLES
It is a regional compendium of practical and replicable climate initiatives that documents how South Asian countries are addressing resilience, adaptation, and sustainable development in context-specific ways. Successful practices identified hold potential for guiding regional collaboration and international progress in climate change efforts.
The compendium applies a six-component analytical framework assessing transformative scale, local ownership, catalytic innovation, stakeholder convergence, long-term viability, and adaptive progress. Each country’s initiatives were reviewed and validated by government and civil society representatives.
The compendium is designed for policymakers, regional institutions, development practitioners, and research organisations seeking to operationalise context-specific and scalable climate actions. By providing comparative insights and analytical tools, it facilitates peer learning among countries, enhances regional coherence, and improves the design of collaborative mechanisms and financing strategies.
Unlike conventional assessments that catalogue challenges or commitments, the Granary focuses exclusively on implementation. It identifies verified initiatives from respective country sources that combine policy innovation, institutional reform, and local participation to achieve measurable outcomes. Each example is selected for its replicability, tested impact, and relevance to the broader Global South, making the Granary both a reference tool and a repository of evidence for action-oriented policy design
Roadmap of the methodology to assess the climate co-benefits of the SUP ban in Tamil Nadu
Unlocking finance for NbS in Indian Cities
Locally-led Climate Action in the Global South
Roadmap of the methodology to assess the climate co-benefits of the SUP ban in Maharashtra