Press Release

Top business leaders launch new phase of collaboration with the UN to boost private investment in sustainable development

New York, 31 October 2023 – With about $4 trillion in new investment needed annually to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in developing countries, top business executives from the Global Investors for Sustainable Development (GISD) Alliance met today with UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed to propose transformative solutions for bridging the sustainable development financing gap.

At the midpoint of implementing the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the SDGs, and amidst compounding economic, political, and humanitarian crises, the mandate of the GISD Alliance is now more important than ever. Members at the meeting launched a new phase where they pledged to spearhead the private sector’s support to the UN Secretary-General’s reforms, as presented in the SDG Stimulus and the Policy Brief on Reforms to the International Financial Architecture.

“I’m delighted to extend the GISD Alliance for 2024-2025. For this new and recharged phase, GISD needs to raise the level of ambition and be the torchbearer for mobilizing finance for the SDGs,” said UN Secretary-General António Guterres.

Heads and senior executives from Citi, Standard Chartered, Bank of America, Johannesburg Stock Exchange, Sintesa Group, Agricultural Bank of China, and Investec were among the attendees at the annual UN meeting.

At the meeting, GISD Alliance members committed to continue to advance the development of innovative finance and investment solutions. To do so, the GISD Alliance will join forces with partners from both public and private sectors to contribute to closing the SDG financing gap. Key action areas of the Alliance’s new phase include:

  • Making blended finance work with impact.
  • Developing and sharing innovative instruments and platforms to mobilize and channel investment to countries and sectors most in need.
  • Addressing institutional and regulatory impediments to longer-term investment by the private sector in sustainable development.

The new phase of the GISD Alliance will run until 2025. The deliverables and recommendations arising from the Alliance’s work will feed into agreed actions among UN Member States at the 4th International Conference on Financing for Development proposed for 2025.

Leading the GISD Alliance’s new phase to create lasting impact are José Viñals, Group Chairman of Standard Chartered, and Shinta Kamdani, CEO of Sintesa Group. Ms. Kamdani replaces departing Co-Chair Leila Fourie, CEO of Johannesburg Stock Exchange.

“Collaboration between public and private sectors, across emerging and developed economies, is the cornerstone of sustainable progress. During my tenure as co-chair, I have witnessed how the GISD’s unique platform empowers emerging markets to connect with key role players across borders to identify and solve for the hurdles to large-scale financing of sustainable development,” said Fourie.

“Ongoing collaboration is critical if we are to meet the diverse funding needs of the SDGs. In making progress, the GISD Alliance will strive to deliver impact at scale and speed where the needs are greatest. The shared commitment of private and public funds, applied as blended finance, provides a powerful mechanism for delivery and deserves our continued focus,” stated Viñals.

“Closing the SDG gap requires both capital investment and a suitable business environment to roll out the investment. The role of advocacy and engagement will be imperative for the next phase of the GISD Alliance, especially in pipelining finance towards the real sectors. In that regard, collaboration will be the key to ensuring that our joint efforts are systemic and truly create significant change,” concluded Kamdani.

Launched by the UN Secretary-General in 2019, the GISD Alliance has broken ground on innovative solutions to scale up long-term finance and investment for sustainable development. Among its achievements so far are the GISD’s definition of Sustainable Development Investing (SDI), which has become the basis of the G20 Sustainable Finance Working Group principles to align investment with sustainable development; the sector-specific SDG-related metrics, which have enabled rigorous measurement of the private sector’s contribution to the SDGs in eight sectors; the updated edition of the model mandate, which serves to guide asset owners on incorporating stewardship and sustainability objectives in agreements and contracts with asset managers; and GISD’s paper on the private sector’s perspective on reforming multilateral development banks, which has advanced the global policy dialogue on private capital mobilization to achieve the SDGs.

About Global Investors for Sustainable Development (GISD) Alliance:

The United Nations Secretary-General convened the Global Investors for Sustainable Development Alliance in 2019 to deliver solutions to mobilize private finance and investment for the SDGs. The GISD Alliance members control assets worth up to US$16 trillion. The Alliance works with the United Nations and other partners to unlock finance and investment at scale by developing solutions, tools, and products to align the private sector with the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and accelerate investment in the SDGs.

Learn more about the Alliance here:
https://www.gisdalliance.org

Hashtags: #Fin4Dev, #FinancingOurFuture

Contacts:

UN Department of Global Communications

Sharon Birch, Email: birchs@un.org

UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs

Helen Rosengren, Email: rosengrenh@un.org

Li Zhang, Email: zhang82@un.org

GISD Alliance members

  1. Leila Fourie, Chief Executive Officer, Johannesburg Stock Exchange (departing Co-Chair)
  2. José Viñals, Group Chairman, Standard Chartered (Co-Chair)
  3. Shinta Widjaja Kamdani, Chief Executive Officer, Sintesa Group (incoming Co-Chair)
  4. Gu Shu, Chairman, Agricultural Bank of China
  5. Oliver Bäte, Chief Executive Officer, Allianz SE
  6. Valérie Baudson, Chief Executive Officer, Amundi
  7. Ronald Wuijster, Chief Executive Officer, APG Asset Management
  8. Amanda Blanc, Chief Executive Officer, Aviva
  9. Deanne Stewart, Chief Executive Officer, Aware Super
  10. Juan Carlos Mora Uribe, Chief Executive Officer, Bancolombia
  11. Ana Botín, Executive Chairman, Banco Santander
  12. Brian Moynihan, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Bank of America
  13. Charles Emond, President and Chief Executive Officer, Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec (CDPQ)
  14. Marcie Frost, Chief Executive Officer, CalPERS
  15. Abdul Rahman Ahmad, Group Chief Executive Officer and Executive Director, CIMB Group
  16. Jane Fraser, Chief Executive Officer, Citi
  17. Miriem Bensalah Chaqroun, Chief Executive Officer, Les Eaux Minérales d’Oulmès
  18. Habiba Al Mar’ashi Al Hashimi, Co-Founder and Chairperson, Emirates Environmental Group
  19. Flavio Cattaneo, Chief Executive Officer, Enel
  20. Salil Parekh, Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director, Infosys
  21. Fani Titi, Group Chief Executive Officer, Investec
  22. Shemara Wikramanayake, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, Macquarie Group
  23. Jose Minaya, Chief Executive Officer, Nuveen
  24. Sa’adu Jijji, Acting Managing Director, PAL Pensions
  25. Emmanuel Roman, Chief Executive Officer, PIMCO
  26. Peter Ndegwa, Chief Executive Officer, Safaricom
  27. Sim Tshabalala, Group Chief Executive Officer, Standard Bank Group
  28. Nils Bolmstrand, Chief Executive Officer, Nordea Asset Management (representing Swedish Investors for Sustainable Development)