Mobilizing Green Finance for Nigeria's Energy Transition: The Role of Fintech and Capital Markets
ナイジェリアのエネルギー転換に向けたグリーンファイナンスの動員:フィンテックと資本市場の役割 (AI 翻訳)
Kolawole Fatai Hassan. Phd, Kamal Adekunle Adewunmi. Acib
🤖 gxceed AI 要約
日本語
本論文は、ナイジェリアのエネルギー転換計画(ETP)に必要な巨額の投資を賄うため、グリーンボンドやフィンテックを活用した資金動員の可能性と課題を分析。2025年のシリーズIIIグリーンボンドは183%の超過需要を示し、フィンテック経由の送金は年間20億ドルの動員が可能と推定。規制の断片化や為替変動が障害であると指摘し、ブレンデッドファイナンスと制度改革を提言。
English
This paper examines the mobilization of green finance for Nigeria's Energy Transition Plan using green bonds and fintech innovations. It finds strong investor demand (Series III oversubscribed by 183%) and potential for fintech-enabled remittances to raise USD 2 billion annually. Key barriers include regulatory fragmentation and forex volatility, suggesting blended finance and institutional reforms.
Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.
📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters
日本のGX文脈において
日本ではSSBJ開示やGX経済移行債などが進むが、本論文は新興国におけるグリーンファイナンスの実践的な資金調達手法(グリーンボンド、フィンテック、送金)を示しており、日本企業の海外投融資や国際協力の参考になる。
In the global GX context
This study contributes to global climate finance literature by demonstrating how developing countries can leverage green bonds and fintech to bridge the climate investment gap. It offers empirical evidence on oversubscription and remittance potential, relevant for international investors and multilateral institutions.
👥 読者別の含意
🔬研究者:Provides empirical evidence on green bond performance and fintech potential in an African context, with mixed-methods design.
🏢実務担当者:Highlights practical instruments (green bonds, fintech platforms) for corporate sustainability and green finance teams operating in emerging markets.
🏛政策担当者:Offers insights on regulatory reforms needed to integrate fintech with capital markets for climate finance mobilization.
📄 Abstract(原文)
Nigeria’s Energy Transition Plan (ETP), launched in 2022 and updated in 2025, commits the country to achieving net-zero emissions by 2060, universal energy access by 2030, and a 50% renewable energy share. Delivering this roadmap requires an estimated USD 410–500 billion in investments, yet Nigeria faces a persistent annual climate finance gap of about USD 27.2 billion, with actual flows remaining significantly low relative to need. This paper critically examines the mobilization of green finance through fintech innovations and capital market instruments in Nigeria. It addresses three research questions: the performance of green finance instruments, particularly sovereign and subnational green bonds; the potential of fintech platforms including mobile money, blockchain, crowd funding, and diaspora remittances to enhance capital mobilization and transparency; and the institutional reforms required to strengthen fintech capital market synergies. Using a convergent parallel mixed methods design, the study integrates quantitative analysis of climate finance flows, green bond issuances, and remittance trends (2017–2025) with qualitative case studies of Nigeria’s Sovereign Green Bonds (Series I–III) and fintech-driven diaspora models. Findings reveal strong investor appetite, with the 2025 Series III Green Bond oversubscribed by 183% and Lagos State’s green bond by 97.7%. Fintech-enabled remittance channels could mobilize up to USD 2 billion annually. However, regulatory fragmentation, foreign exchange volatility, and limited fintech–green integration remain key constraints. The study concludes that blended approaches can bridge the financing gap while promoting financial inclusion and a just energy transition, supported by targeted regulatory and institutional reforms.
🔗 Provenance — このレコードを発見したソース
- openalex https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19677319first seen 2026-05-05 08:12:40
gxceed は公開メタデータに基づく研究支援データセットです。要約・翻訳・解説は AI 支援で生成されています。 最終的な解釈・検証は利用者が原典資料に基づいて行うことを前提とします。