Chile's Ministry of Finance published the 2025 annual review of the Public-Private Green Finance Roundtable, describing how the forum has consolidated as a permanent coordination and technical working space between public authorities, financial supervisors, industry associations and regulated firms to support the gradual integration of climate-related risks and opportunities into financial decision-making in Chile. The review reports participation by more than 150 people from more than 50 institutions during the year. Work in 2025 was organised through five technical working groups, with 11 sessions on implementing the Sustainable Taxonomy (T-MAS), eight each on disclosure and compliance, green financial products and risk management, and six on decarbonisation. The roundtable also ran a participatory training programme supported by external institutions including UNEP FI, Implementa Sur, Governart, IFRS, Manuia and Comov, and held two in-person workshops on General Rule No. 519 focused on core requirements and implementation challenges; technical outputs included a financed emissions proposals report, an inventory of green financial products, and a risk management case study covering assessment models and tools such as ARClim. For 2026, planned steps include a proposal to optimise how the working groups operate, subject to validation by roundtable members, and further work on biodiversity and nature valuation. The roundtable also aims to improve Green Agreement results by increasing by 15% the proportion of commitments fully implemented, while adding new participating entities and promoting the use of new technological developments to accelerate sustainable finance implementation.
Ministry of Finance (Chile) 2026-01-27
Chile's Ministry of Finance publishes the 2025 annual balance of the Public-Private Green Finance Roundtable and sets a 2026 target to lift fully implemented Green Agreement commitments by 15%
Chile's Ministry of Finance released the 2025 review of the Public-Private Green Finance Roundtable, highlighting its role as a coordination platform for integrating climate-related risks into financial decision-making. The review details extensive participation and outlines future plans for 2026, including optimizing working group operations, enhancing biodiversity valuation, and improving Green Agreement outcomes.