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What should a proof pack include?

A proof pack should include enough information to make the matter understandable without exposing unnecessary confidential, personal, customer, supervisory, underwriting, investment, lending, pricing, transaction, or procurement-sensitive information. 

A mature proof pack may include: 

problem statement; 

public-good rationale; 

country, regional, or sector context; 

hazards and systemic risks addressed; 

affected infrastructure, communities, sectors, or institutions; 

evidence sources; 

technical summaries; 

risk data or public-safe exposure summaries; 

resilience measures; 

governance structure; 

institutional roles; 

public authority boundaries; 

stakeholder categories; 

implementation assumptions; 

insurance-readiness questions; 

capital-readability questions; 

legal and regulatory questions requiring external review; 

environmental, social, community, and safeguard considerations where relevant; 

financial model status, if any, at a high-level and non-confidential level; 

Project SPV-readiness questions; 

National Nexus Consortium Company relevance; 

claims limitations; 

diligence gaps; 

correction history; 

requested routing. 

The proof pack should include dates, sources, limitations, and version information. It should distinguish verified facts from assumptions, early concepts, estimates, aspirations, and items requiring review. 

A proof pack is strongest when it is honest about what remains unresolved. 

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