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AIIB Energy Investment Infographics

 

Where is the AIIB investing in energy — and what does it mean for climate, communities, and accountability?

Our latest infographic series breaks down the AIIB’s energy financing by region, revealing trends in fossil fuel support, gaps in transparency, and implications for a just transition.

Explore snapshots for:

  • General Overview

  • South Asia

  • Southeast Asia

  • Central Asia & the Caucasus

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AIIB Observer Vol. 3 is Out Now!

AIIB Observer Volume 3 is now available! Launched during the 2024 AIIB Annual Meeting, this latest edition features critical stories from civil society and communities impacted by AIIB-financed projects. It covers the controversial waste-to-energy project in Dhaka, the tourism mega-project in Mandalika, Indonesia, and raises urgent questions about AIIB’s growing presence in Latin America. It also highlights concerns of greenwashing in Sri Lanka. As the bank expands its global footprint, these stories shed light on the risks and realities on the ground, and the ongoing call for transparency, accountability, and climate justice.

Two decades in ADB’s ACEF: a race away from 1.5°c

 

NGO Forum on ADB Statement on the ADB Asia Clean Energy Forum 2025 

 

Recent reports have confirmed a stark and alarming reality: April 2025 marked the 12th consecutive month where global surface air temperatures breached 1.58°C above pre-industrial levels. This unprecedented climate record is not just a data point—it is a blaring alarm for Asia, one of the most climate-vulnerable regions in the world.

In recent months, the region endured its hottest and driest season on record, with the Climate Shift Index indicating that 10 out of 51 Asian countries suffered from extreme heat directly linked to anthropogenic climate change. Among the most affected were Brunei Darussalam, Maldives, the Philippines, Indonesia, and Sri Lanka—each experiencing over 74 days of dangerously high temperatures. These are not isolated anomalies; they are a clear and intensifying climate emergency. It is a foreshadowing of far worse to come if world leaders and development financial institutions like the Asian Development Bank continue to sideline climate science in favor of business-as-usual development models.

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