The finance-readiness intake form captures information about a resilience priority, project concept, portfolio, national pathway, infrastructure need, risk exposure, public-good initiative, or system challenge that may require financial-services interpretation.
It is not an investment application. It is not a loan application. It is not an insurance application. It is not a grant application. It is not a procurement submission. It is not an approval request.
The form may ask what problem is being addressed, where it is located, what hazards or systemic risks are relevant, what evidence exists, what technical inputs are available, what public-good purpose exists, what institutions are involved, what finance-readiness questions are unclear, what insurance gaps may exist, what public authority boundaries apply, and what diligence gaps remain.
For GRA, finance-readiness means making a matter more understandable for responsible review by competent financial, insurance, public finance, development finance, legal, technical, and institutional actors later. It does not mean that GRA approves financing, recommends investment, guarantees bankability, confirms insurability, or validates a transaction.
The finance-readiness intake form starts a readiness record. It does not create financial status.