Product walkthrough, trial, POCs, enterprise offering, support and more. Speak with one of our specialists.
Climate changes
Did you know that only around 8% of total global climate finance flows to developing countries, even though these regions bear the greatest impact of the climate crisis? According to the Climate Policy Initiative (2023), more than USD 4.3 trillion is needed each year to reach global net-zero targets, but actual funding has only reached about a quarter of that amount (source).
This gap is not just about money but also about data transparency and the effectiveness of fund distribution. This is where digitalization plays a key role, creating systems that connect funding sources, environmental data, and real actions on the ground in a transparent and measurable way.
Climate change has become the greatest global challenge of this century. To address it, countries and sectors are allocating financial resources to support mitigation and adaptation efforts. This is what is called climate financing, funding aimed at supporting sustainable activities such as tree planting, clean energy management, and ecosystem conservation.
In Indonesia, climate finance comes from various sources: the government, international donor institutions, and private companies committed to ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) principles. These funds are the main drivers of a just and sustainable transition toward a green economy.
The impacts of climate change are increasingly visible. According to the World Bank, global temperatures have risen by more than 1°C since the pre-industrial era, causing floods, droughts, and significant economic losses. Meanwhile, the global climate finance need is estimated to exceed USD 4 trillion per year to reach net-zero targets by 2050.
However, in practice, the management of these funds still faces major challenges: data fragmentation, manual reporting, and lack of transparency. Many funding reports remain stored in spreadsheets or physical documents that are difficult to track. As a result, it becomes challenging to measure the true effectiveness and impact of every dollar invested.
For many years, the reporting and tracking of climate finance were done manually. Now, with digitalization, all stakeholders from governments and donors to CSR actors can monitor fund flows and impacts in real time.
Technologies such as blockchain, data-driven dashboards, and digital verification enable a level of transparency and accountability never seen before.
For example, Jejakin has developed a system capable of measuring how funding contributes to the number of trees planted, the amount of carbon absorbed, and the social benefits created for local communities.
Digital transformation is not only about reporting efficiency but also about connecting data, funding, and tangible outcomes. With the support of Internet of Things (IoT), AI-based monitoring, and satellite analytics, every tree planting or conservation action can now be tracked over time.
This approach shifts the paradigm from passive reporting to an active, data-driven system. Investors and partners can access information such as green cover growth, carbon absorption, and community participation directly through digital dashboards. The result is faster, more accurate, and evidence-based decision-making.
Amid the global push toward transparent funding systems, Jejakin serves as a bridge between financing and on-the-ground actions. Through digital verification technology and data-based assessment, Jejakin helps corporations, donors, and governments see tangible outcomes from every sustainability investment.
This approach not only enhances trust and accountability but also improves efficiency in ESG reporting. Each contribution becomes part of a connected, verifiable data ecosystem that supports cross-sector transparency.
The future of climate finance depends on digital integration and cross-sector collaboration. Connected data will help identify the most urgent areas of need, while automated systems can channel funds to projects with the greatest impact potential.
When technology, policy, and public participation move together, climate financing will no longer remain a commitment on paper but become a true instrument of change for the planet.
Every step toward digitalizing climate finance is a step toward a greener future. Jejakin invites you to take part in building a system that connects data, funding, and real impact.
Visit event.jejakin.app to calculate your carbon footprint and join a digitally verified tree planting activity. Together, we can make climate finance more transparent, measurable, and sustainable.
Jejakin’s green programs combine high-tech monitoring, biodiversity restoration, and community-led initiatives to deliver powerful, sustainable change across ecosystems.