REPORT | Removing International Obstacles to Sustainable Industrial Policy

Across the world, governments are facing connected ecological, social, and economic crises. Climate change, biodiversity loss, widening inequality, debt distress, and unstable global supply chains are increasing pressure on countries to rebuild their productive systems in ways that are more resilient, more inclusive, and more aligned with long-term sustainability.

This report, Removing International Obstacles to Sustainable Industrial Policy, brings together leading global experts to explain why sustainable industrial policy is essential for meeting these challenges and why many countries still lack the policy space they need to transform their economies.

The report outlines how sustainable industrial policy is central to reshaping energy systems, expanding productive capabilities, creating decent work, and aligning economic development with environmental goals. It also highlights the reality that many of the tools required for this transformation, such as performance requirements, strategic procurement, technology transfer, patient finance, and strong public investment, are restricted by international trade, investment, and intellectual property rules.

What the report covers

1. The case for sustainable industrial policy
This section shows how today’s ecological and economic crises stem from production systems and explains why countries need the freedom to diversify, upgrade, and build climate resilient economies that support decent work and meet human needs.

2. How global rules constrain development pathways
The report describes how international regimes, including WTO rules, free trade agreements, ISDS mechanisms, and TRIPS-based intellectual property protections, limit national policy space and make it difficult for developing countries to move into higher value industries or participate fairly in the global green transition.

3. The finance challenge
High financing costs, biased risk ratings, unstable capital flows, and weak development finance continue to restrict investment in sustainable industrialisation. The report shows how these financial constraints deepen dependency, heighten vulnerability to shocks, and undermine climate goals.

4. Priorities for a reimagined multilateralism
The report proposes ways to reshape global governance so that it supports rather than restricts transformative development. The priorities include reforms to trade and investment rules, stronger technology sharing arrangements, greater access to long-term affordable finance, and cooperation platforms that help countries build productive capabilities on their own terms.

Together, these proposals aim to restore the policy space required for countries, especially in Africa and the wider Global South, to pursue sustainable, inclusive, and climate-aligned industrial strategies.