Subject guides / Climate Finance
Climate Finance
Also appears in programme titles as: Carbon Finance · Climate Investment
What a climate finance degree actually is
The climate transition is, at bottom, a financing problem: trillions must move from high-carbon to low-carbon assets, and someone has to price the risk, structure the instruments and police the greenwash. Climate finance is the field that trains those people — it sits where financial economics meets climate science, and it has moved in a decade from boutique elective to a hiring line at every major bank, asset manager and central bank.
The degrees split into two product families. Business-school MScs — Imperial's Climate Change, Management & Finance, Edinburgh's Climate Change Finance and Investment, Strathclyde's Sustainable Finance, EDHEC's Climate Change & Sustainable Finance — teach finance first and climate as the application. Oxford's MSc in Sustainability, Enterprise and the Environment inverts that: a sustainability degree at the Smith School in which finance is one core lever among several. Which family you pick determines which desk you can credibly sit at afterwards.
What you study — and the quantitative bar
The business-school family runs a finance core — asset pricing, corporate finance, risk — then layers on carbon markets, climate-risk measurement, ESG analysis and transition-finance instruments. Imperial adds management practice; Edinburgh's programme, one of the field's oldest, is investment-focused; EDHEC pairs its finance faculty with the engineers of Mines Paris – PSL for a double diploma that takes the physics of transition seriously. Oxford's SEE teaches economics, finance and law as connected levers, with sustainable finance as a mandatory core module.
Expect a moderate-to-high quantitative bar in the business-school family — comfort with statistics and financial mathematics is assumed, though none demand engineering-level maths. Oxford SEE reads applications more holistically but is, by application numbers per place, the most competitive programme in this map.
Where it leads
Sustainable-finance and climate-risk teams at banks and asset managers, central banks' climate stress-testing units, development finance institutions and multilateral climate funds, carbon-market firms, ESG ratings and data providers, and the climate practices of the big consultancies. Public-sector demand is rising just as fast: finance ministries and regulators building green-taxonomy and disclosure regimes need staff who speak both balance sheet and carbon budget — a profile scholarship schemes are actively hunting for.
Who it suits — and who it does not
A good fit if you are…
- Finance professionals pivoting to climate-risk, ESG or transition-finance desks — the degree formalises the move
- Economics and quantitative graduates who want the fastest-growing specialisation in finance
- Public-sector applicants building national green-finance frameworks — a scholarship narrative that matches funder priorities almost word for word
Probably not the right degree if…
- Applicants allergic to financial mathematics — this is finance with climate content, not environmental studies with a finance elective
- Those who want to do climate science or conservation: see the environmental policy and climate governance guides instead
- Anyone expecting moral clarity — the field's daily reality includes greenwash, contested metrics and uncomfortable compromises, and the degree teaches you to navigate them, not escape them
Where to study it: the programme map
Five verified programmes: four business-school MScs (Imperial, Edinburgh, Strathclyde, EDHEC) and one sustainability-school degree (Oxford Smith School). Tuition shown only where verified on the official page; EDHEC's duration is deliberately blank until officially confirmed.
| University | Official programme title | Length | Tuition (intl) | Experience |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EDHEC Business SchoolFrance | MSc in Climate Change & Sustainable Finance | — | — | — |
| Imperial College LondonUnited Kingdom | MSc Climate Change, Management & Finance | 12 mo | GBP 45,500 | — |
| University of EdinburghUnited Kingdom | MSc Climate Change Finance and Investment | 12 mo | — | — |
| University of OxfordUnited Kingdom | MSc in Sustainability, Enterprise and the Environment | 12 mo | — | — |
| University of StrathclydeUnited Kingdom | MSc Sustainable Finance | 12 mo | GBP 32,800 | — |
Every row verified against the official programme page; oldest verification 15 Jul 2026. Nothing here is a paid placement.
Application strategy and funding routes
Imperial and Edinburgh are the established UK names — Imperial for the management-plus-finance blend and London market access, Edinburgh for the longest track record in climate investment specifically. Oxford SEE is the prestige pick if your interest is the whole transition rather than the trading desk. Strathclyde is the value pick: a triple-accredited business school whose verified international fee (£32,800) undercuts the London programmes substantially. EDHEC's double diploma with Mines Paris – PSL is the continental option and the strongest engineering-finance bridge.
All four UK programmes are one-year degrees inside Chevening's rule, and Commonwealth Shared Scholarship candidates should note the Scottish rows. France sits outside Chevening — EDHEC runs its own scholarship pool, and Eiffel Excellence covers French masters for international students. If your pitch is public-sector green finance, lead with the framework you would build at home; funders currently see far more "I want an ESG job" essays than credible capacity-building ones.
Which scholarship funds which programme
Computed from each scheme's published rules (destination, level, course length) — not a guarantee; list-based schemes still require checking the official list.
- EDHEC Business School — study destination outside the scheme
- Imperial College London
- University of Edinburgh
- University of Oxford
- University of Strathclyde
- EDHEC Business School — study destination outside the scheme
- Imperial College London — depends on the official participating list
- University of Edinburgh — depends on the official participating list
- University of Oxford — depends on the official participating list
- University of Strathclyde — depends on the official participating list
Frequently asked questions
Do I need a finance background to get in?
Not formally — strong quantitative or economics degrees are the usual base, and career switchers with analytical backgrounds are common. What the business-school programmes will test is quantitative readiness. If your first degree is non-quantitative, Oxford SEE's holistic read or Strathclyde's conversion-friendly structure are the softer entries.
Climate finance vs sustainable finance — is there a difference?
Sustainable finance is the broader umbrella (all ESG themes); climate finance is its largest and most technical sub-field, focused on transition capital, carbon markets and climate risk. Programme titles use the terms loosely — Strathclyde's "Sustainable Finance" and Edinburgh's "Climate Change Finance" overlap heavily. Read module lists, not titles.
Which of these fits Chevening?
Imperial, Edinburgh, Oxford SEE and Strathclyde are all one-year UK masters inside the rule. EDHEC (France) is not Chevening territory — look at Eiffel Excellence or EDHEC's own scholarships there. A public-sector green-finance narrative is among the strongest Chevening pitches available right now.
Is the CFA a substitute for this degree?
Different instruments: the CFA certifies investment analysis broadly and is studied alongside a job; these degrees buy a year of specialised climate-finance training, a cohort and a career pivot. For desk-switchers already inside finance, CFA plus internal moves may suffice; for sector-switchers and scholarship applicants, the degree is the mechanism.
Related fields
Sources
Official programme pages (linked per row above) · official scholarship rules and participating-programme lists · university admission regulations. Every data row records its source URL and verification date; stale rows are re-checked or removed.
Global Study Prep is independent and not affiliated with any university or scholarship programme. Programme details change — always confirm on the official page before applying.