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Catalyst Fund announces a $2 million investment in ten African startups promoting climate resilience
Catalyst Fund recently announced its first investments in ten African startups that are leading the way in areas like agtech, insurtech, waste management, disaster response, and carbon finance. The goal is to help communities adapt to the effects of climate change and build their resilience.
This is the first group of entrepreneurs to get help from its new $30 million pre-seed venture capital fund and accelerator. Its first partner, FSD Africa, is the fund’s leader, and the fund’s goal is to support high-impact entrepreneurs who are working to help underserved, climate-vulnerable communities in Africa become more resilient.
Catalyst Fund’s goal is to help entrepreneurs who use new ideas in technology, finance, and data to solve the biggest problems and take advantage of the biggest opportunities of our time. To do this, it has expanded its mission to include investing in businesses that tackle climate change, which is the biggest problem we all face.
Catalyst Fund already has 61 companies in emerging markets in its portfolio. These new startups will join them and get money, expert-led help building their businesses, and access to a network of investors, corporate innovators, and talented people who can help them grow.
Today pre-seed venture capital (VC) fund and accelerator Catalyst Fund announced a $2 million investment into 10 startups building solutions to improve the resilience of climate-vulnerable communities in Africa.
This is the first group of companies to get money from Catalyst Fund’s new $30 million venture capital fund, which is led by the financial sector development agency FSD Africa. The goal of the fund is to help early-stage founders create technology that will make Africa more resistant to the effects of climate change.
Each of the ten firms will receive $100,000 in equity investments as well as $100,000 in hands-on venture-building assistance.
These companies will join Catalyst Fund’s existing portfolio of 61 startups in emerging markets. They will get funding, specialized and expert-led help building their businesses, and direct connections to investors, corporate innovators, and talent networks that can help them grow.
Catalyst Fund’s Managing Partner, Maelis Carraro, said, “We are thrilled to be able to work with ten innovative African startups to build a more resilient and sustainable future.”
Our goal is to help mission-driven founders who share our vision of a world where everyone has the tools and opportunities they need to thrive. From agtech to insurtech, waste management to disaster response, and carbon finance to carbon finance, these startups show finance, tech, and business model innovations that will help communities better adapt to climate change and become more resilient.
Here are the top ten startups.
Agro Supply (Uganda)
A mobile layaway system that helps farmers save money slowly using their cell phones and cash out to buy farm inputs like hybrid (drought-resistant) seeds, from maize to sorghum, sunflower, and soybean, during planting season.
Assaraf (Senegal)
A digital insurtech platform that gives end users accesses to a variety of insurance products from more than 20 insurance companies, such as insurance for agriculture, cars, health, homes, and natural disasters. It also has a fully integrated claims management system.
Bekia (Egypt)
A technologically advanced waste management solution that enables businesses and households to trade in their waste (including plastic, paper, electronics, metals, and cooking oil) for cash rewards paid to a digital wallet.
Eight Medical (Nigeria)
A cloud-based platform for Emergency Medical Services (EMS) that lets people get urgent care when and where they need it.
This “911 for Africa” puts emergency medical workers on motorcycles in touch with people in trouble in 10 minutes or less, even if the problem is caused by the weather.
Farm to Feed (Kenya)
Afirm n the food supply chain that offers a digitally enabled solution to food loss/waste. Their environmentally friendly strategy focuses on giving farmers a market for their surplus and imperfect produce, improving food security, and lowering greenhouse gas emissions.
Farmz2U (Nigeria + Kenya)
An agtech company promoting sustainable agriculture. Farmers can obtain individualized farming guidance (particularly on regenerative farming practices), reasonable loans, quality and traceable inputs, and direct customers for their harvest through Farmz2U.
Octavia Carbon (Kenya)
Global South’s first Direct Air Capture (DAC) firm is constructing the world’s most affordable DAC hub.
Octavia is building DAC equipment to pull carbon out of the air and sell it to off-takers as either carbon dioxide or carbon credits.
Paddy Cover (Nigeria)
Works with established insurers and digital platforms to create and sell customized products through their platform. These products include health, life, and index-based crop insurance, which will be available in the future.
The services are built into the customer’s life in some way, either as a convenience or as a way to add value.
Sand to Green (Morocco)
Using agroforestry and a solar-powered desalination system, they turn deserts into land that can be used for farming. They also design climate-smart regenerative farms.
VAIS (Egypt)
A precision agtech startup dedicated to climate resilience and food security by giving farms data intelligence through their FarmGATE application, which is powered by proprietary artificial intelligence/machine learning (AI/ML)-based virtual field probing (VFP) technology. This helps farms make better use of water and other farm inputs to get better yields.
Catalyst Fund’s portfolio companies have raised more than US$640 million in follow-on funding so far, and they now serve more than 14 million individuals and MSMEs around the world.
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Financial Sector Deepening Africa (FSD Africa) will be quantifying changes in credit risk under different nature and climate scenarios for African central banks this year, the Kenya-based development agency’s director of risk, Kelvin Massingham, told Responsible Investor.
Massingham was speaking to RI after FSD Africa was selected to deliver the UK government’s Nature Positive Economy programme, alongside the UNDP’s Biodiversity Finance Initiative (BioFin).
Established in 2012, FSD Africa is a non-profit company funded by the UK’s Department for International Development, which aims to promote financial sector development across sub-Saharan Africa.
The aim of the £7.2m Nature Positive Economy initiative, which was announced at COP15 in Montreal last year, is to support the transition of developing countries to nature-positive economies.
Massingham explained that FSD Africa will collaborate with six unnamed central banks in some of Africa’s largest economies and hopes to build upon work already done by the Dutch and French central banks.
Last year, the non-profit used publicly available central bank data to do nature stress tests for Zambia, Ghana, Kenya, South Africa, Egypt and Mauritius.
FSD Africa will also collaborate with the World Bank and BioFin to create a working group focused on central bank stress testing regarding nature, Massingham said.
In particular, it will centre on sharing learnings across geographies, creating knowledge briefs, and feeding into the work of global coalitions such as the Network for Greening the Financial System (NGFS).
As the group has not yet launched, no banks have formally joined.
FSD Africa also works with other players in the financial sector. It is currently conducting pilots of the Taskforce on Nature Related Disclosures (TNFD) with six entities in the banking and insurance sectors, and will look to increase that to 20 this year.
Massingham said: “During initial piloting of TNFD, when the financial institutions did their assessment, although they of course found nature to be a material risk for their portfolios, they all identified it as a major opportunity.”
Specifically, some banks are apparently looking at the potential for biodiversity bonds.
FSD Africa is also working with financial regulators in Kenya, Nigeria, Ghana and Egypt on how they can signal to their markets that nature-related financial disclosures are coming, in line with the commitment made by signatory countries in Target 15 of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework.
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In Summary
- Each of the 10 startups will be offered $100K of equity investments as well as $100K of hands-on venture-building support.
- These ten companies will join Catalyst Fund’s portfolio of 61 startups across emerging markets and receive capital, bespoke and expert-led venture-building support.
The Catalyst Fund has announced a $2 million investment into 10 African startups building solutions to improve the resilience of climate-vulnerable communities in Africa.
The Catalyst Fund is a pre-seed venture capital (VC) fund and accelerator that backs high-impact startups that seek to improve the resilience of underserved, climate-vulnerable communities.
This is the inaugural cohort of the new $30 million VC fund of Catalyst Fund that is anchored by the financial sector development agency, FSD Africa.
It is aimed at supporting early-stage founders to develop technology that will make Africa more resilient to the impacts of climate change.
Catalyst Fund managing partner Maelis Carraro said that they are thrilled to have the opportunity to partner with ten African startups working to build a sustainable future.
“Our goal is to back mission-driven founders that share our vision of a world where every individual has the tools and opportunities they need to thrive,” Carraro said.
“From agritech to insurtech, waste management, disaster response, and carbon finance, these startups display finance, tech, and business model innovations that will help communities better adapt to climate impacts and grow their resilience.”
Each of the 10 startups will be offered $100K of equity investments as well as $100K of hands-on venture-building support.
These ten companies will join Catalyst Fund’s portfolio of 61 startups across emerging markets and receive capital, bespoke and expert-led venture-building support.
They will also receive direct connections with investors, corporate innovators, and talent networks that can help them scale.
The Fund’s portfolio companies have raised more than US$640 million in follow-on funding to date, and currently serve more than 14 million individuals and MSMEs globally.
The ten companies joining this next cohort of Catalyst Fund are Agro Supply (Uganda), Assuraf (Senegal), Bekia (Egypt), Eight Medical (Nigeria), Farm to Feed (Kenya), Farmz2U ( Nigeria, Kenya), Octavia Carbon (Kenya), PaddyCover (Nigeria), Sand to Green Morocco and VAIS (Egypt).
FSD Africa Digital Economy director Juliet Munro said that these companies are strong examples of the innovation needed to enhance the resilience of vulnerable communities across the continent.
“At FSD Africa, we believe that by harnessing the power of tech, and specifically fintech innovation, we can help to spur the development of climate resilience solutions for Africa, thereby helping deliver on COP27’s core themes of adaptation and implementation,” Juliet said.
Catalyst Fund Partner Aaron Fu said that COP27 in Egypt called for more private sector financing to fill the $330B funding gap for adaptation and resilience by 2030.
Aaron also said that it called for more local innovations to support communities in building resilience to climate impacts.
“The Catalyst Fund’s new cohort exemplifies what these innovative climate solutions for the most vulnerable could look like,” he added.
He also said that they are also thrilled to be backing companies in Francophone Africa and Northern Africa for the first time.
Catalyst Fund intends to back many more startups like them across the African continent in the years to come.
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NAIROBI, Kenya, 10 January 2023 -/African Media Agency(AMA)/- Today pre-seed venture capital (VC) fund and accelerator Catalyst Fund announced a $2 million investment into 10 startups building solutions to improve the resilience of climate-vulnerable communities in Africa. This is the inaugural cohort of the new $30M VC fund of Catalyst Fund, anchored by financial sector development agency FSD Africa, aimed at supporting early-stage founders to develop technology that will make Africa more resilient to the impacts of climate change.
Each of the 10 startups will be offered $100K of equity investments as well as $100K of hands-on venture-building support.
These companies will join Catalyst Fund’s existing portfolio of 61 startups across emerging markets and receive capital, bespoke and expert-led venture-building support, and direct connections with investors, corporate innovators and talent networks that can help them scale. Catalyst Fund’s portfolio companies have raised over US$640 million in follow-on funding to date, and currently serve more than 14 million individuals and MSMEs globally.
“We are thrilled to have the opportunity to partner with ten groundbreaking African startups working to build a more resilient and sustainable future,” said Maelis Carraro, Managing Partner of Catalyst Fund. “Our goal is to back mission-driven founders that share our vision of a world where every individual has the tools and opportunities they need to thrive. From agtech to insurtech, waste management, disaster response, and carbon finance, these startups display finance, tech, and business model innovations that will help communities better adapt to climate impacts and grow their resilience.”
The ten companies joining this next cohort of Catalyst Fund are:
Agro Supply [Uganda]: a mobile layaway system that helps farmers save money gradually using their mobile phones and to cash out in order to purchase farm inputs such as hybrid (drought-resistant) seeds, from maize to sorghum, sunflower and soybean during the planting season.
Assuraf [Senegal]: a digital insurtech platform offering end-users access to a range of insurance products (e.g. agriculture, automotive, health, housing, natural disasters) from over 20+ insurance companies with a fully integrated claims management system.
Bekia [Egypt]: a tech-enabled waste collection solution enabling companies and households to exchange their waste (plastic, paper, electronics, metals, cooking oil) against a financial incentive paid on a digital wallet.
Eight Medical [Nigeria]: a cloud-native Emergency Medical Services (EMS) platform that provides on-demand urgent care when and where it is needed. This “911 for Africa” connects emergency medical responders on motorcycles to users in distress in 10 minutes or less, including for climate-induced crises.
Farm to Feed [Kenya]: a food supply chain company that is providing a digitally-enabled solution to food loss/waste. Their climate-smart solution focuses on providing a market for imperfect and surplus produce from farmers, contributing to food security and greenhouse gas emissions reduction.
Farmz2U [Nigeria, Kenya]: an agtech enterprise driving sustainable agriculture. Through Farmz2U, farmers can access personalized farming advice (especially on regenerative farming practices), affordable credit, quality and traceable inputs, and direct buyers for their harvest.
Octavia Carbon [Kenya]: the Global South’s first Direct Air Capture (DAC) company that is building the world’s lowest-cost DAC hub. Octavia is currently building DAC machinery to capture carbon from the air for resale as either carbon dioxide or carbon credits to off-takers.
PaddyCover [Nigeria]: works with established insurers and digital platforms to design and offer bespoke products via their platform that facilitates flexible insurance packages, including health, life and, in the future, index-based crop insurance. The offerings are built into the lifestyle touchpoints of the customer, either as a convenience or as complementary value-adds.
Sand to Green [Morocco]: transforms deserts into cultivable land using agroforestry methodology and a solar-powered desalination system to design climate-smart regenerative farms.
VAIS [Egypt]: a precision agtech startup committed to climate resilience and food security by providing data intelligence to farms via their FarmGATE application, which is powered by proprietary artificial intelligence/machine learning (AI/ML)-based virtual field probing (VFP) technology, to enable better use of water and other farm inputs to produce better yields.
“At FSD Africa, we believe that by harnessing the power of tech, and specifically fintech innovation, we can help to spur the development of climate resilience solutions for Africa, thereby helping deliver on COP27’s core themes of adaptation and implementation,” said Juliet Munro, Director of Digital Economy at FSD Africa. “These companies are strong examples of the innovation we need to enhance the resilience of vulnerable communities in across the continent.”
“COP27 in Egypt this year called for more private sector financing to fill the >$330B funding gap for adaptation and resilience by 2030. It also called for more local innovations to support communities in building resilience to climate impacts. The Catalyst Fund’s new cohort exemplifies what these innovative climate solutions for the most vulnerable could look like. We are also thrilled to be backing companies in Francophone Africa and Northern Africa for the first time. We intend to back many more startups like them across the African continent in the years to come,” said Aaron Fu, Partner at Catalyst Fund.
Distributed by African Media Agency (AMA) on behalf of Catalyst Fund
About the Catalyst Fund
The Catalyst Fund is a pre-seed VC fund and accelerator backing high-impact tech startups that seek to improve the resilience of underserved, climate-vulnerable communities. We partner with mission-driven founders that share our vision of a world where every individual has the tools and opportunities they need to thrive.
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Washington, DC, Dec. 14, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The Health Finance Coalition (HFC), powered by Malaria No More, and AfricInvest today announced pledged commitments of $50 million for the pan-African Transform Health Fund, to finance the scaling of proven, innovative models that improve access, affordability, resilience, and quality of healthcare in Africa. U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC), U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), Royal Philips, Merck & Co., Inc., known as MSD outside of the United States and Canada, FSD Africa Investments, Netri Foundation, Anesvad Foundation, Grand Challenges Canada (with funding from Global Affairs Canada), Chemonics International, and MCJ Amelior Foundation have all announced their commitments, subject to final due diligence before closing. IFC is in the advanced stage of approving its investment in the fund.
The announcement was made as part of the U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit in Washington, D.C. hosted by President Biden. The Transform Health Fund is an innovative blended-finance fund focused on locally led health supply chain, care delivery, and digital solutions in Africa. The fund is a collaborative effort bringing together commercial, government, and donor investments under the leadership of AfricInvest, a leading pan-African investment platform active across private equity, venture capital and private debt, and the Health Finance Coalition, a group of leading global health funders hosted by Malaria No More, to finance enterprises that improve health system resilience and pandemic preparedness across the continent.
The Transform Health Fund will provide debt and mezzanine financing to scale high-impact health enterprises serving vulnerable communities, while offering risk adjusted returns. As a result, the Fund is expected to help bolster healthcare systems in Africa, which face a massive financing gap – a challenge made more difficult by COVID-19 – by working to achieve Universal Health Coverage (UHC).
The Challenge: Africa Faces a Massive Health Financing Gap
While Africa is home to 16 percent of the global population and 23 percent of global disease burden, just 1.6 percent of annual impact investments – now estimated at a market size of $1.16 trillion – target the healthcare sector in Sub-Saharan Africa. Small and medium enterprises (SMEs) are generally left out of this impact investment and the COVID-19 pandemic has made this gap even wider.
The Opportunity: Innovative Financing to Support African Healthcare
To respond to the critical healthcare financing gap in Africa while building a resilient ecosystem, the Transform Health Fund will target three critical areas serving low-income patients: supply chain transformation, innovative care delivery, and digital innovation. The Transform Health Fund investments will target countries across sub-Saharan Africa, with a focus on East, Southern, and Francophone West Africa.
“Three decades of expertise and insight allows AfricInvest to leverage a wide range of support throughout many regions of the continent,” said Ziad Oueslati, Founding Partner, AfricInvest. “We believe our team is well-positioned to continue financing African health-sector companies through innovative financing models such as the Transform Health Fund.”
“The Transform Health Fund will demonstrate that health enterprises serving the most vulnerable communities are investible,” said Martin Edlund, CEO, Malaria No More and Executive Director of the Health Finance Coalition. “To solve the health financing gap in Africa, we need to crowd in substantial private investment – this fund demonstrates a new model for achieving that while prioritizing transformative health impact.”
“Scaling proven solutions in Africa’s healthcare requires adequate investment and innovative financing,” said Noorin Mawani, Co-lead of the Transform Health Fund. “The Transform Health Fund seeks to apportion risk and return while delivering high impact-focused funding to healthcare businesses that need it most.”
“The Transform Health Fund demonstrates what’s possible when you combine a ‘capital stack’ approach to financing with a genuine commitment to transformational impact,” said Ray Chambers, WHO Ambassador for Global Strategy and Health Financing. “But to achieve the world’s ambitious global health goals, we need to urgently scale such efforts – especially as the world recovers from COVID-19 and faces serious macroeconomic headwinds.”
“Working together, we can build a stronger and more resilient healthcare system in Africa by strengthening regional supply chains, delivering care to underserved communities and leveraging the digital economy to provide innovative healthcare solutions,” said Makhtar Diop, Managing Director of IFC. “The rapid pace of innovation witnessed in the health sector provides an opportunity to leapfrog and we look forward to our collaboration with the Transform Health Fund to finance Africa’s health transformation.”
“Since our company’s founding, we have been committed to advancing global health and using the power of science to save and improve lives,” said Robert M. Davis, CEO and Chairman, Merck & Co., Inc. “Creative financing models like the Transform Health Fund can be effective tools to help enable greater access to health, and we welcome the opportunity to partner with like-minded organizations focused on strengthening health systems around the world.”
“DFC is proud to be one of the first supporters of Transform Health Fund whose mission is to invest to strengthen healthcare systems and supply chains across Africa,” said Lauren Cochran, Vice President of Equity and Investment Funds, U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC). “This commitment is an important example of DFC’s work to expand access to quality healthcare services, build the private sector, and empower local communities.”
“As part of our ambition to improve the lives of 2.5 billion people per year by 2030 and in particular the health and well-being of 400 million people in underserved communities, we recognize the important role businesses can and need to play in unlocking financing for Universal Healthcare in Africa,” said Marnix van Ginneken, Philips’ Chief ESG & Legal Officer. “The Fund’s innovative model positions private capital to co-invest and provide impact capital to innovative healthcare delivery models, including digital transformation which is essential to bridging the gap to underserved communities and increasing access to quality and affordable care.”
“We have seen from our work throughout Africa that transformative change happens when local leaders, innovators, and entrepreneurs have the resources, networks, and capital to bring their ideas and solutions to scale,” said Jamey Butcher, President and CEO, Chemonics International. “Chemonics is proud to support the Transform Health Fund, an investment vehicle that will do just that for healthcare in Africa.”
“We are delighted to partner with AfricInvest and The Health Finance Coalition in establishing an investment vehicle that has secured much needed private flows of finance for African healthcare,” said Anne Marie Chidzero, Chief Investment Officer, FSD Africa Investments. “The fund will back an emerging class of private health provision that will improve livelihoods for vulnerable populations. The future of health finance lies in bringing together different types of capital with a common purpose, something we are excited to back through our investment in the Transform Health Fund.”
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The Swiss Re Foundation has announced a US$500,000 grant to spur innovation of insurance products for the underserved communities in Africa in the wake of rising risks.
Report noted that the funding, which will be distributed through FSD Africa’s supported BimaLab insurance accelerator programme, will help promising insurtechs to introduce and scale up innovative products targeting low-income groups, currently left out by existing insurance products.
“We acknowledge the role of the insurance sector in spurring the growth and development of the African continent. Through programmes such as BimaLab, the most vulnerable and low-income people will gain from the innovative, affordable and efficient insurance products and services,” said Stefan Huber Fux, director of Swiss Re Foundation.
The programme will help turn validated insurance-focused ideas to market and investor-ready and provide innovators with enabling regulatory environment for developing their ideas, according to the brief by the Foundation.
The foundation, started by Swiss Re in October 2011 to, among other goals, support innovations that boost societal resilience, had issued grants in 44 countries by 2021 and made $86.6m commitments between 2012 and 2021.
The Swiss Re Foundation grant will help define a path for scaling the BimaLab from three to ten countries, thereby allowing a deeper dive and creating a mechanism for continued technical support and funding.
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Nigeria’s Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, said Africa’s share of the global carbon market can be scaled up massively to reach foreign direct investment (FDI) of between $120 to $200 billion annually.
The Vice President stated this during his keynote speech at the Rockefeller Foundation meeting in New York.
He identified a combination of capital flows, job creation, and the avoidance of long-term climate destruction as critical drivers of African leaders’ interest in supporting this effort.
According to him, Africa currently has only a small share of the carbon market. He explained the importance of this projected carbon finance stream, saying:
“For a continent that needs $240 billion annually in mitigation investment alone, this carbon finance stream could be the difference between transitioning and not (transitioning). As all of us in this room understand well, the priorities of the African continent are not just to act decisively on the climate crisis, but to also create significant growth opportunities for our young and growing population.”
“The investment required to advance the energy transition in Africa is huge. World Bank estimates suggest that Africa needs $6.5 trillion US dollars between now and 2050 for mitigation action alone to keep temperatures below 2 degrees of warming.”
VP Osinbajo also highlighted that the carbon market pipeline could create 30 million jobs in the next decade, with the potential to create more than 100 million jobs through climate-aligned projects by 2050.
Africa’s carbon markets: During his speech, VP Osinbajo noted that the rapid progress recorded in Africa benefitted from the support of a very engaged Steering Committee with the United Nations, Global Energy Alliance for People and Planet (GEAPP), USAID, and a range of other public and private actors, which resulted in the successful launch of the African Carbon Markets initiative (ACMI) in Sharm-el-Sheikh, Egypt during the COP-27 event.
“The strong commitment and presence from fellow African leaders demonstrate the willingness and leadership of Africa. We already have 7 African countries (Burundi, Gabon, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Nigeria, and Togo) signed up to develop country carbon activation plans and over $200 million in advanced market commitments, which we must continue to further advance as this is going to be the critical driver of action on the continent.”
“I think it’s an auspicious moment for Africa to be participating more fully in the global carbon market conversation, especially in the light of the slowing pace of green investment flows into the continent. The work several of us have done together in the past few months makes it clear that while other sources of flows are slowing down globally, carbon markets are growing rapidly,” Osinbajo said.
Advancing carbon markets: VP Osinbajo also spoke about the essence of collaborations in developing carbon markets on the continent. He said collaboration is a key to unlocking opportunities in Africa’s carbon markets. He said:
“One of the strong points of ACMI and the way we must structure it going forward, in terms of governance, is the flexibility to smoothly work with other initiatives, and there will be many others. Two days before the opening of Cop 27, Senator John Kerry and I had a conversation about the proposed Energy Transition Accelerator and we both agreed that once the details were worked out, we would work out a collaborative framework with ACMI.
“Carbon markets will play a critical role in the implementation of this (Energy Transition) Plan – in mobilizing the capital required to move to our net-zero economy-wide trajectory. I want Nigeria to have the first Carbon Markets Activation Plan.”
In his contribution, the US Presidential Envoy on Climate Change, Senator John Kerry, commended VP Osinbajo for his leadership on the issue of energy transition. Kerry said:
“We are grateful for the leadership of the VP, grateful for the reception you gave me on my visit to Nigeria. I am honoured to share the platform with you on how to move the African Carbon Market Initiative (ACMI) forward.
“It is possible to create a high-integrity carbon market in a way to address Climate Change and African Development aspirations. We are all joined together looking forward to developing the financing.”
In case you missed it: The ACMI is a new initiative that was launched during the conference of parties (COP 27) event held in Egypt. The ACMI will be led by a fourteen-member steering committee of African leaders, CEOs, and carbon credit experts. The ACMI aims to dramatically expand Africa’s participation in voluntary carbon markets.
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A new report has pinned the overall value of nature markets at a huge $10tr – but will it cut through with decision makers at COP15?
The launch of the UN biodiversity talks in Montreal this week has prompted yet another report that attempts to put a financial value on the services nature provides to the global economy.
The, study published by the Taskforce on Nature Markets group this morning, pins the value of”nature markets” at almost $10tr a year, a figure which amounts to roughly 11 per cent of global GDP.
The report, produced with help from McKinsey sustainability analysis outfit Vivid Economics, identifies two dozen markets that are explicitly base on the valuing and trading of nature, ranging from emerging markets such as carbon and biodiversity credits and nature liability insurance to more established markets such as conservation, nature-related tourism, and soft commodities.
The findings were framed by NatureFinance, the group behind the task force, as proof of the need to enhance governance of these so-called nature markets through cross-jurisdictional governance and regulation. The group has warned that embedding rules and incentives in these markets that protect nature are in the interest of the global economy, noting they are likely to lead to improvements on the bottom line for both public and private sectors.
The findings add to a library of reports published recently that have sought to either put a price on nature’s services or highlight the economic benefits they bring and the risks associated with their destruction. NatureFinance analysis is notable, because it specifically explores the role nature plays in the trajectory of 24 specific markets, from agricultural and livestock to nature-based carbon credits.
Jason Eis, executive director of Vivid Economics, said the findings highlighted the need to ensure that governance of these markets benefits nature. “The key is market governance and market infrastructure including features like rules of trade, product and certification standards, taxes and subsidies which could potentially help drive incentives for companies to support nature in responsible ways,” he said.
The Global Biodiversity Framework (GDF) under discussion at COP15 sets out a number of measures around how global systems of governance and finance can be reformed to better protect nature and close a massive $700bn annual biodiversity financing gap by 2030. Target 14 calls for biodiversity values to be integrated into policies, regulations, planning, development processes, poverty reduction strategies, accounts, and assessments of environmental impacts at all levels of governance. This integration of nature into policymaking dovetails with the aim of Target 19 in the draft text, which calls for a rapid acceleration in both public and private finance towards nature conservation and remediation, in particular in the Global South.
Simon Zadek, co-lead of the Taskforce Secretariat and executive director of NatureFinance, said it was critical that funding for biodiversity was not limited to foreign aid. “By redesigning nature
markets to include nature positive instruments and policies in their governance, we can include a broader array of financial tools and move beyond Official Development Assistance (ODA) as the principal source of biodiversity funding,” he said. “We have a unique opportunity to reshape the core logic of these markets so that nature positive, net zero and equitable outcomes are built into the way they operate.”
The start of the COP15 Summit this week has also been accompanied by the launch of a number of new products designed to help companies and investors track and reduce their exposure to nature-related risks or quantify the benefits generated by nature-positive investments.
For example, a new ratings agency launched by the African Leadership University’s School of Wildlife Conservation (ALU’s SOWC), consultancy firm Dalberg, and FSD Africa Investments is aiming to help investors measure, rate, track and communicate the positive impacts their investments have on biodiversity.
The new Biodiversity Investment Rating Agency is set to advise investors on identifying the opportunities for impact investing in biodiversity-related projects, spotlighting relevant frameworks to measure biodiversity investment impacts. “Institutional investment in biodiversity as an asset class will be the key to unlocking the billions of private capital we need to address climate change and promote the business of conservation,” said Mike Musgrave from the SOWC.
Anne-Marie Chidzero, CIO at FSD Africa Investments, said the Biodiversity Investment Rating Agency would “help investors measure and track the impact of their capital on biodiversity conservation and restoration will play a central role in increasing investment in the sector”.
Meanwhile, British start-up NatureMetrics has this morning announced the launch of a new nature performing monitoring service for companies, designed to help them continually monitor their impact on nature.
“By launching the world’s most accurate nature performance monitoring system, companies across the globe will have one simple-to-deploy tool, enabling them to understand, track and improve their natural capital,” said Katie Critchlow, CEO of NatureMetrics. “Through cutting edge environmental DNA technology, we’ve devised a way of turning complex nature data into simple and meaningful metrics to inform board room level decisions for business and nature.”
Attempts to measure and price nature remain controversial in some quarters, and the surge of new products and reports that frame nature as an asset class or cluster of markets will be met by criticism from some green groups as the talks get underway in Montreal. Some campaigners have long argued that appealing to companies and countries’ financial self-interest panders to the root cause of the destruction of nature – the pursuit of economic growth. There is also a debate around whether the focus on environmental risk disclosures and measuring natural capital is inadvertently helping companies to defer actions that can deliver a more nature-positive world.
The counterargument, of course, is that quantifying nature’s services can drive change rapidly and at scale, because translating natural assets into financial terms will inevitably hit home with governments and in boardrooms. There is also strong sense among companies that the introduction of nature risk reporting into financial accounts is an important first step in their journey towards becoming nature-positive operations and giving investors insights they need to divert capital towards greener businesses. More than 300 companies have expressed their support for any deal reached at COP15 to include rules that would make nature risk reporting mandatory at large companies and financial institutions.
At any rate, NatureMetrics headline $10tr figure for the value of nature markets is clearly designed to shock governments and businesses assembled at COP15 into delivering a deal that can secure future economic growth by protecting nature. Delegates should take note.
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