Climate finance is entering its execution phase. This week in Melbourne, the real question isn’t who has ambition — it’s who has projects ready to absorb capital at scale.
MELBOURNE becomes a focal point for climate finance on February 17-18 as the Climate Investor Forum convenes investors, policymakers and solution providers for two days of deal-focused discussion at CENTREPIECE.
Now in its fourth year, the Forum has positioned itself as a commercial meeting ground rather than a talkfest, designed to connect institutional capital with climate solutions that are already operating, piloting or preparing to scale across the Asia–Pacific.
The timing is important with COP31 approaching later this year and regional governments moving at uneven speeds on climate policy. The event’s conversations are expected to centre less on ambition and more on execution: where capital is flowing, what’s blocking deployment, and which sectors are becoming investable at scale.
From commitments to capital deployment
The gathering brings together fund managers, super funds, venture capital, corporates and government finance agencies, alongside climate tech, energy, agriculture and nature-based solution providers.
Organisers describe the Forum’s core purpose simply: accelerating capital into projects that can demonstrate commercial viability alongside emissions reduction or adaptation outcomes.
That shift is reflected in the agenda, which prioritises investor roundtables, curated one-to-one meetings and sector-specific sessions over keynote-heavy programming — indications of a maturing market focused on transaction pathways rather than theory.
Who’s in the room
This year’s speaker lineup includes senior leaders from global finance, public institutions and climate analytics, among them:
- BlackRock
- KKR
- Clean Energy Finance Corporation
- Climate Change Authority
- Climate Bonds Initiative
- BloombergNEF
- Macquarie Asset Management
Their presence points to where institutional attention is currently focused: transition finance, carbon markets, climate data infrastructure, sustainable agriculture and clean energy deployment.
For Australian founders and project developers, this is important. These are the groups shaping capital allocation frameworks and, increasingly, the criteria for what qualifies as “investment ready”.

Climate solutions on show
Presenting companies span renewable energy, EV infrastructure, satellite monitoring, regenerative agriculture and industrial decarbonisation.
Rather than a single dominant theme, the solution mix reflects a broader pattern now emerging across APAC: climate investment is fragmenting into multiple verticals, from blue economy projects to digital measurement platforms — each competing for increasingly selective capital.
That diversification signals both opportunity and pressure. Capital is available, but expectations around scalability, governance and data transparency are rising fast.
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Networking designed for outcomes
Unlike traditional conferences, the Forum places heavy emphasis on structured deal engagement, including a dedicated networking platform, exhibition floor, private meeting rooms and invitation-only investor sessions.
Organisers say participating investors collectively oversee more than US$1 trillion in assets under management, underscoring Melbourne’s growing role as a regional convening point for climate finance.
Whether that translates into near-term transactions or longer-cycle partnerships will become clearer in the weeks following the event.
What FNGN will be watching
Beyond the panels, several signals are important:
- Are nature-based and carbon projects attracting serious institutional backing — or remaining largely venture-scale?
- Which climate tech verticals are moving from pilot to procurement?
- How aligned are Australian policy settings with investor expectations, particularly compared to faster-moving Asian markets?
- And critically: what barriers to deployment are being raised privately, not just publicly?
As climate finance shifts from narrative to numbers, this Forum offers a snapshot of where capital is truly heading — and how ready Australia is to compete.
Quick facts
Event: Climate Investor Forum
Dates: 17–18 February
Location: Melbourne
Focus: Connecting institutional capital with scalable climate solutions across Asia–Pacific
VISIT THE CLIMATE INVESTOR FORUM
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