Choosing regional and global coordination (Strategy B) strengthens a country’s ability to access climate finance by uniting developing nations into a single negotiating front. This improves equity by giving vulnerable countries greater influence and ensuring funding priorities reflect real community needs. It enhances efficiency by reducing fragmented applications, improving coordination, and lowering administrative costs through shared systems and joint proposals. It also supports sustainability by building long-term cooperation, strengthening regional institutions, and enabling collective management of shared environmental challenges.
Compared to other options, bloc coordination is more stable and structured than short-term signaling (C), more inclusive than relying only on natural capital mechanisms like REDD+ (A), and broader than focusing solely on loss and damage advocacy (D). However, it may face challenges such as slow decision-making and internal power imbalances among member states. Overall, it offers stronger long-term leverage when combined with other strategies.


