Decision-grade intelligence on the climate transition
The Climate Ledger publishes monthly, decision-grade intelligence for the people who decide where capital, policy, and operational resources go.
We write for the time-constrained professional who needs to understand what just moved and why it matters before the next investment committee, board paper, or policy brief. Every piece is built to inform a decision, not to fill a page.
The publication covers the climate transition with an Africa focus and a global lens. We track capital flows, policy moves, technology shifts, and the structural conditions that determine whether projects get built and by whom. We are particularly attentive to the African energy reality that most of the global press only visits during a crisis.
The publication the energy transition deserves
A market for climate intelligence that is honest about what is bankable, accountable for its own calls, and rooted in the realities of the regions where the transition is hardest to finance.
We are building a publication that is rigorous on the numbers, conditional in its verdicts, and unafraid to say when capital is mispriced or when a policy is performative. We do not write to be liked. We write to be useful.
Over time, The Climate Ledger aims to become the reference publication for institutional readers covering African energy and climate finance, operating alongside the global incumbents on equal analytical footing.
How we work
Every claim in The Climate Ledger is attributable. Every number is bolded. Every section ends with a forward-looking analytical conclusion, not a summary. The publication enforces a written editorial gate before any content is published.
- Source-first attribution. Every claim is traceable to an official publication, peer-reviewed paper, regulator filing, or named primary source. Indicative figures and off-the-record signals are excluded.
- Paraphrase rather than quote. We rewrite sources in our own words. Direct quotes are reserved for verbatim statements where the exact wording carries legal or analytical significance.
- Bold the numbers that matter. Every key statistic is rendered in bold. Readers should be able to scan a section and extract the data points without re-reading.
- Conditional verdicts. The transition is contested and contingent. We say what we believe, but we attach the conditions under which we would change our minds.
- No promotional vocabulary. The publication avoids hype language: words that imply rarity, transformation, or rupture without evidence to support the claim. Most things are not.
- Forward-looking conclusions. Every section ends with a bottom line that tells the reader what to watch next, not what was just summarised.
The structure of a monthly issue
The Climate Ledger is published monthly. Each issue follows a consistent structure so that returning readers know where to find what they need. Standalone Deep Dives and Signal Companies features are released alongside the monthly issue and live as permanent reference pages.
Editor's Brief
One-page editorial framing of the issue's central thesis and the three forces shaping it.
The Big Entry
The single market-moving development of the month, analysed for capital and policy implications.
Capital and Markets
Investment flows, public listings, M&A activity, and the structural moves shaping climate capital.
Systems and Technology
Technical breakthroughs, deployment milestones, and what the engineering data says about scaling.
Policy and Regulation
Regulatory shifts, sovereign commitments, and the legal architecture of the transition.
Storage and Grid Resilience
Battery deployment, grid queue dynamics, transmission build-out, and storage economics.
Electric Mobility
EV adoption, manufacturer trajectories, charging infrastructure, and the mobility transition.
Deep Dive
Standalone long-form analysis on a single thesis. One per issue. Permanent reference page.
Signal Companies
Monthly intelligence brief on a company building Africa's climate transition. Climate tech, energy, infrastructure, and emerging tech, at any stage.
Voice From the Field
An attributed quote from a practitioner, with editorial context on what it signals.
Nigeria Brief
Standalone monthly Nigeria page covering grid performance, policy, executors, and disruption impact.
Country Spotlight
One African market profiled per issue, with the data points that determine its transition trajectory.
Where to read The Climate Ledger
The publication is free to read on every channel. The website is the canonical reference; Substack handles delivery to inboxes; LinkedIn carries operational signals between issues; Instagram and X carry visual extracts.
For editorial, partnership, or feedback
The Climate Ledger welcomes correspondence from practitioners, researchers, sources, and readers. For editorial inquiries, partnership proposals, factual corrections, or general feedback:
Confidentiality. The Climate Ledger does not publish off-the-record material. If you are a practitioner with information you would like considered for editorial use, please indicate clearly whether the material is on the record, on background, or off the record. We will respect the designation.