Abstract:
Climate finance has become one of the major global initiatives of assisting climate reduction and renewable energy transitions in the developing world. One of the countries that has been most susceptible to climate change is Pakistan that has been receiving growing amounts of climate related financial obligations in an attempt to facilitate the development of renewable energy. Although these have been the pledges, the rate of development of renewable energy in Pakistan has been quite low and this has cast doubt on the effectiveness of climate funding in generating practical energy transition outcomes. The paper is a critical analysis of how climate finance flows can help develop renewable energy in Pakistan, especially the institutional, governance, policy, and technical aspects that can influence the usage of climate finance. The study will use the interpretivist research philosophy as it follows a qualitative research design that relies solely on secondary data. NVivo-assisted thematic analysis was used to subjectively analyse official donor reports, government policy documents, regulatory publications, and peer-reviewed academic literature. It is found that six significant themes could be distinguished in the analysis, including patterns of climate finance flows, institutional and governance barriers, policy and regulatory alignment, technical and capacity constraints, renewable energy growth outcomes, and overall effectiveness of climate finance mechanisms. The results reveal that climate finance has been supportive in initiating and facilitating renewable energy projects in Pakistan, but its effectiveness is still limited by fragmented institutional structures, bureaucracies, irregularities in regulatory framework, limited technical capacity, and weak absorptive mechanisms. Moreover, the discrepancy between the priorities of donors and energy requirements of a country decreases the transformative capacity of climate finance. The paper concludes that climate finance in Pakistan is more of an enabling factor than a determining factor in the development of renewable energy. Strengthening institutional coordination, improving governance frameworks, enhancing technical capacity, upgrading grid infrastructure, and localising climate finance mechanisms are essential to improving outcomes. These findings contribute to the broader literature on climate finance effectiveness by offering context-specific qualitative insights and provide policy-relevant recommendations to support Pakistan’s renewable energy transition.