
There is a reality today that has long been evident on the ground: without private actors, neither the Sustainable Development Goals nor durable solutions to the global debt crisis will be achievable. Deeper collaboration among governments, civil society, and — more than ever — the private sector is critical.
The recent adoption of the Seville Commitment last summer marks a decisive moment in the evolution of global development finance. Far from being just another milestone in the lineage of Monterrey, Doha, and Addis Ababa, Seville represents a profound shift in how the world understands sustainability, debt architecture, and the actors capable of driving real impact.
The Seville Conference arrives amid a complex geopolitical climate marked by systemic crisis, stagnation in SDG progress, and the most severe global debt distress in over two decades. Low- and middle-income countries currently spend around 12% of their revenues on debt servicing, the highest level since the year 2000. In this context, Seville becomes a catalyst for rethinking both how development is financed and who participates in shaping its future.
Seville also underscores the need for a more inclusive financial architecture, giving greater voice to the Global South and acknowledging that Europe must adapt to a multipolar environment by ceding space, embracing new partnerships, and rethinking its influence.
This is where the private sector becomes indispensable. Innovative instruments require execution capacity. Financial tools alone do not change lives; projects do.
In my role as Managing Director for DT Global Europe, I also represent Consulted, the association representing the Spanish private sector specialized in international development. Consulted brings together companies that are not merely financiers but creators of sustainable solutions, innovation, and employment across partner countries. This is precisely the capacity the Seville Commitment seeks to mobilize.
There is a general European commitment to supporting debt sustainability through coordinated, large-scale financial initiatives, including an announcement from Spain that it will create an annual EUR 60 million mechanism for debt relief. The next challenge is to sustain this leadership with long‑term resources, technical capacity, and political continuity.
Doing so requires positioning companies as strategic partners in areas such as debt‑for‑development projects, climate action, human development, and sustainable infrastructure.
The Seville Commitment brings the private sector from the periphery to the center. It recognizes that transformative development solutions depend on the capabilities that our sector provides: technical expertise, efficiency, innovation, risk reduction, and on‑the‑ground presence.
Our role in Consulted is to act as a bridge between the strategic vision of policymakers and the operational realities of implementation. By connecting financial resources to actionable solutions, we help ensure that ambitions become results.
The Seville Commitment challenges the international community to embrace a new ambition. The task ahead is not only to mobilize more resources, but to redefine collaboration. Europe and the world as a whole face considerable obstacles but also a historic opportunity to shape the future of development finance and put the SDGs back on track.
In that transformation, the private sector is not a secondary partner; it is a protagonist. At Consulted, we assume this role with technical rigor, responsibility, and a firm commitment to impact.
Without the private sector, the ambition of Seville will remain aspirational. With it, we can translate this ambition into real improvements for millions of people.