SINGAPORE, December 7, 2025 – As countries race to operationalise their climate commitments, a new report by CDP, From Plans to Capital: Unlocking Credible Transition Finance at Scale, outlines a critical truth: transition finance can only scale when companies produce credible, detailed, and decision-useful transition plans. These plans — when done well — are becoming the essential bridge between disclosure and capital mobilisation.
CDP is a global non-profit that runs the world’s only independent environmental disclosure system. According to the report, strong transition planning is not just a corporate exercise but a system-level requirement for achieving Paris-aligned pathways. Governments, regulators, financial institutions and companies are increasingly relying on transition plan data to direct capital, manage risk, and track progress across entire economies.
Transition Plans Provide the Missing Intelligence for Capital Allocation
The report shows that 544 financial institutions representing US$145 trillion in assets disclosed to CDP in 2024, signalling widespread engagement with transition planning. Notably, 50% of these institutions already have transition plans in place, underscoring how mainstream the practice has become.
Transition plan assessments now directly influence:
- Capital allocation & product development (e.g., sustainability-linked loans, transition bonds)
- Risk management & portfolio monitoring
- Client engagement, stewardship and advisory
- Sustainable finance tracking & target setting
These use cases reflect that credible transition plans are fast becoming a prerequisite for financing.
Financial institutions are increasingly using transition plan data to measure alignment, screen for transition risk, and price capital efficiently. As the report notes:
Transition plan assessments “enable financial institutions to identify and structure transition finance opportunities across asset classes — from sustainability-linked loans to dedicated investment products.”
For Companies, Transition Plans Are Now Strategic Assets — Not Compliance Documents
The report outlines clear criteria used by investors to judge credibility. A major Southeast Asian investor, for example, evaluates companies based on:
- Targets: Are emissions targets meaningful and backed by interim milestones?
- Governance: Are management and board roles clearly defined with accountability structures?
- Business alignment: Are decarbonisation goals integrated into capital investment and operating models?
- Reporting: Does the company provide transparent updates on progress?
This level of scrutiny is becoming standard practice — and companies without transition plans risk losing investor confidence, market access, and financing opportunities.
SMEs Are Critical — But Underserved
The report highlights the significant role of SMEs as part of global supply chains. However, SMEs face:
- resource constraints
- limited technical capacity
- lack of reporting experience
A case study featuring Cathay United Bank demonstrates how financial institutions can act as “disclosure multipliers.” Through the CDP Corporate Banking Programme:
- 22,000 SMEs became first-time climate disclosure participants
- 121 companies set climate-related targets
- 30 companies implemented emissions reduction actions
- 19 tCO₂e were reduced in the process
This model showcases how targeted capacity-building and incentives can rapidly accelerate SME climate-readiness.
National Transition Planning Must Link Disclosure to Policy
One of the report’s strongest insights is the need for national transition planning — a government-led process that links corporate disclosures, sector pathways, and country-level strategies.
Governments can use transition-plan data “to refine policy instruments, target incentives, and channel public finance to unlock viable transition pathways.”
This policy-feedback loop ensures:
- better-designed incentives
- coherent regulatory environments
- alignment between public and private capital flows
- more transparent national progress monitoring
The report underscores that transition finance and national transition planning are inseparable, particularly as countries prepare for 2030 milestones.
The Bottom Line
With global climate timelines tightening, From Plans to Capital makes a compelling case:
transition plans are becoming the backbone of the low-carbon economy, enabling countries, financial institutions, and companies to direct capital where it matters most.
For Asia — with its rising climate ambition and massive investment needs — scaling transition-finance frameworks built on credible plans will determine whether the region can successfully decarbonise while continuing to grow.