News & Insights
2025 GAIL Summit: how collaboration is advancing climate contracting across Latin America
At the 2025 Global Alliance of Impact Lawyers (GAIL) Summit in Mexico City, hundreds of practitioners gathered to explore how law can accelerate a just and sustainable transition. Held across three days and under the theme “From Ideas to Action,” panels showcased how legal innovation is driving positive change in areas such as finance, governance, biodiversity and corporate responsibility.
The Chancery Lane Project was present at the event where we launched 17 new Spanish-language climate clauses. Moreover, alongside colleagues from AgDevCo, TrustLaw and the Innovative Finance Initiative, we explored practical ways to turn climate ambition into legal reality by using contracts as tools for accountability and impact across Latin America.
Our message was simple: lawyers catalyse impact, one clause at a time. Whether advising on mergers, financing, or governance, every contractual decision can strengthen climate resilience and accelerate decarbonisation.
A milestone for Mexico and the region
The Summit marked a special milestone, the launch of 17 climate-aligned clauses transposed into Mexican law, created in collaboration with Nader, Hayaux & Goebel (NHG), and Hogan Lovells Mexico City office. These clauses adapt TCLP’s open-source models to the Mexican legal system, making them relevant and accessible to lawyers, companies and institutions across Latin America.
The transpositions cover areas such as finance, construction, corporate governance, and M&A, reflecting the growing recognition that climate risk is not peripheral but central to commercial practice. Each clause provides a practical template for lawyers seeking to embed climate considerations into their contracts and client advice.
Beyond their technical significance, these transpositions symbolise something larger: a community of legal professionals working together across languages, jurisdictions and legal cultures.
From clauses to playbooks
Our presentation also highlighted how TCLP’s resources are evolving, from individual clauses to practical “how-to” playbooks and training programmes. The Climate Contracting in Action CPD-accredited course, already tested in the UK, US and Mexico, helps lawyers move from theory to implementation by building confidence in applying climate clauses within real contracts.
Complementing this, our new Climate Risk Toolkits help practitioners identify and address climate-related risks across key sectors such as M&A, finance, energy and construction.
Both initiatives respond to a common challenge expressed by lawyers globally: “I want to act, but I don’t know how.” By connecting practical tools with professional competence, TCLP aims to make climate-conscious lawyering a normal part of everyday practice, not an optional specialism.
Building a community of practice
What stood out in Mexico was not just the content of the sessions but the tone of collaboration. Law firms, academics, NGOs and students all contributed ideas for how to adapt and scale TCLP’s approach in their own contexts.
That sense of shared ownership is what has always defined TCLP’s community: lawyers leading local projects, peer-reviewing resources, and co-creating new tools that reflect their legal systems and priorities.
In Latin America, this community is already expanding.
From Mexico to the world
As we return from Mexico City, the energy of the GAIL Summit stays with us, a reminder that collaboration across borders is not an aspiration but a daily practice.
Contracts underpin global economic activity. If lawyers shape contracts, they shape the flow of capital, resources and risk. By embedding climate considerations at that level, we can influence how trillions of dollars move through the economy and towards a more sustainable future.
We are grateful to our partners Nader, Hayaux & Goebel and Hogan Lovells, and to all those across the GAIL community who are shaping this movement with us.
Nota de Préstamo Convertible a Cero Neto
Jurisdiction: México
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Proyecto de artículo que contiene el objeto social de una sociedad compatible con el Acuerdo de París
Jurisdiction: México
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Normas ecológicas en diseño y construcción
Jurisdiction: México
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Eficiencia de Energía en contratos [EPC] y Obligaciones Ambientales
Jurisdiction: México
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Contrato de compraventa/contrato de inversión Revelación de los Planes de Cambio Climático
Jurisdiction: México
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Acta de Sesión del Consejo de Administración que incorporan consideración sobre factores del cambio climático
Jurisdiction: México
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Cuestionario para una debida diligencia (due diligence) sobre cambio climático
Jurisdiction: México
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Reducción de huella de carbono – Derecho de notificación mutua (Aviso de reducción de huella de carbono)
Jurisdiction: México
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Cuadro de indicadores de las emisiones en la cadena de suministro
Jurisdiction: México
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Cláusula de Rescisión Verde (forma abreviada)
Jurisdiction: México
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Terminación anticipada a un proveedor para contratar a un proveedor más ecológico
Jurisdiction: México
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Préstamos Vinculados a la Sostenibilidad
Jurisdiction: México
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Términos de una Operación Estándar Climática
Jurisdiction: México
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Obligaciones de Los Proveedores con Respecto a Los Umbrales Medioambientales
Jurisdiction: México
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