Country: Sudan

Finance Is Failing the World’s Best Defense Against Climate Change

Gabon is sometimes described as a “giant broccoli,” and from 3,500 feet up, it’s easy to see why. During a two-hour flight from the capital, Libreville, to a cattle ranch in the southernmost province of Nyanga, the land below is a nearly unbroken stretch of textured green carpet, one of the world’s largest intact rainforests.

These trees are Gabon’s superstars. They absorb and store millions of tons of earth-warming carbon dioxide each year, a critical function for the global fight against climate change. They also fuel the country’s timber industry, a major focus of economic development during the past decade.

In today’s financial markets, Gabon’s trees are worth more dead than alive. Despite the billions pledged worldwide to fight climate change, little has been distributed as compensation for the global benefit that trees provide. In 2021, Gabon received its first payment for reducing forest-related emissions—$17 million via the Central African Forest Initiative.

The timber industry, on the other hand, contributes about $1 billion to Gabon’s annual gross domestic product. It could be a great deal more. Unlike some of its neighbors, the country strictly limits logging, palm oil production and other activities that lead to forest destruction; it’s suffered less than 1% forest loss since 1990, compared with about 14% for continental Africa.

Now that oil production, the country’s primary source of revenue, is dwindling, leaders are reevaluating the money-making potential of the forests. Opening more land to timber companies is one option, but for now Gabon’s environmentally minded government is more interested in keeping the trees alive—if the international financial markets can make it worthwhile.

The best avenue for that, Gabon says, is the $2 billion-and-growing market for “carbon offsets.” That’s traditionally been limited to those who can document improvement on past environmental practices, not those who, like Gabon, never wrecked their forests in the first place. That’s because for a carbon offset to fulfill its function of compensating for its buyer’s emissions, it needs to have financed something that wouldn’t have happened otherwise. But in Gabon, forest protection has been happening anyway.

A boat transporting logs passes bay an oil rig in the Cape Lopez bay in Port-Gentil on October 14, 2022.
Men work on oil pipeline near Gamba on October 12, 2022.
Pipes near crude oil processing facilities in Gamba on October 12, 2022.
Unlike some of its neighbors, Gabon has put strict limits on logging. But with oil production—the country’s primary source of revenue—dwindling, leaders are reevaluating the money-making potential of the forests. Photographer: Guillem Sartorio/Bloomberg

Still, Gabon insists it should be compensated for the air-purifying service its trees provide. Otherwise, it hints, its commitment to forest preservation may take a backseat to more traditional economic development. In its recent national action plan under the Paris Agreement, the global climate pact, the country says it plans to remain a “net-carbon absorber”—if it gets access to international finance through a carbon market.

“There is no financial instrument to support Gabon to continue to offer this critical ecosystem service,” Akim Daouda, the chief executive officer of Gabon’s $1.9 billion sovereign wealth fund, said in an interview during a recent trip to London. “Can we monetize the forest and keep it for the rest of the planet? Or do we need to find a way to respond to the needs of our population?”

An excavator moves a log in a forest clearance concession managed by African Equatorial Hardwoods (AEH), a new forestry and timber processing company managing more than 420,000 hectares of forestry concessions, in Mayumba on October 11, 2022.
Forest clearance where logs are stored before transportation at a concession managed by African Equatorial Hardwoods (AEH), a new forestry and timber processing company managing more than 420,000 hectares of forestry concessions, in Mayumba on October 11, 2022.
A worker operates a machine at a timber processing plant managed by African Equatorial Hardwoods (AEH) in Port-Gentil on October 14, 2022.
Men work at a processing plant managed by African Equatorial Hardwoods (AEH) in Mayumba on October 11, 2022.
Men work at a processing plant managed by African Equatorial Hardwoods (AEH) in Mayumba on October 11, 2022.
Men work at a timber processing plant managed by African Equatorial Hardwoods (AEH) in Port-Gentil on October 14, 2022.
Gabon’s timber industry has been a major focus of economic development in the last decade, contributing as much as $1 billion to Gabon’s annual gross domestic product. Photographer: Guillem Sartorio/Bloomberg

Gabon’s per capita GDP is the highest on the continent, but there’s little evidence of wealth past or present in Nyanga. One of the few local health centers lacks running water, exposed wires poke out of the walls, and bare mattresses cover four, cast-iron bedframes.

The province is home to a 100,000 hectare (247,000 acre) cattle ranch, part of the Grande Mayumba project. A flagship of Gabon’s “sustainable development” efforts and backed by investments from the family offices of the WestonsFricks and Sarikhanis, Grande Mayumba’s plans include logging, cattle farming and eco-tourism, as well as an area 37 times the size of Manhattan set aside for conservation.

The ranch raises N’Dama, a small chestnut-colored breed of indigenous beef cattle that tolerate tsetse flies and the sleeping sickness they carry. The 4,000-strong herd will grow and eventually roam alongside wild buffalo and antelope. The free-range model will minimize harm to the savannah ecosystem, and careful grasslands management could boost the soil’s carbon stock, according to Africa Conservation Development Corp., Grande Mayumba’s parent company.

The ranch isn’t profitable yet. So far, only Grande Mayumba’s logging operation is fully operational. The rest has moved far more slowly. To raise the money needed to really get the project off the ground, ACDG will need to issue and sell carbon credits.

Men load cattle into a truck at Nyanga ranch, comprising 100,000 hectares of savannah together with 4,000 head of Ndama and other mixed breed cattle on October 10, 2022.
Cattle can be seen gathered in a facility at Nyanga ranch, comprising 100,000 hectares of savannah together with 4,000 head of Ndama and other mixed breed cattle on October 10, 2022.
The Nyanga ranch raises N’Dama, a small chestnut-colored breed of indigenous beef cattle that tolerate tsetse flies and the sleeping sickness they carry. Photographer: Guillem Sartorio/Bloomberg

The forest-based carbon offsets on the market today tend to be based on projects that seek to avoid emissions or increase carbon storage. Limiting deforestation usually qualifies; so could planting trees. Developers usually calculate how the forests fared under their control compared with a historical baseline, then sell the difference in units of extra tons of carbon removed or avoided as offsets.

But because Gabon already has stringent restrictions on logging and there’s little deforestation to speak of, ACDG has had to take a different approach. Based on trends in more than a dozen once-highly forested countries, it contends there’s an imminent threat to the trees in Nyanga. Pending government approval, ACDG will sell credits based on how Grande Mayumba’s activities avert that hypothetical future destruction.

“There will be development in the Grande Mayumba area over time,” said Rob Morley, science and environmental planning director at ACDG. “This will either be unsustainable, unplanned and that will lead to a large amount of forest loss, or it will be planned.”

Sunset at Nyanga ranch, comprising 100,000 hectares of savannah together with 4,000 head of Ndama and other mixed breed cattle on October 9, 2022.
Pupils rise their hands to answer a question at the local school at Nyanga ranch, on October 10, 2022.
Men does repairs on a bulding that accommodates workers at Nyanga ranch, on October 10, 2022.
Sunset at the Nyanga river on October 9, 2022.
Gabon’s per capita GDP ranks among Africa’s highest, but there’s little evidence of wealth past or present in Nyanga. Photographer: Guillem Sartorio/Bloomberg

On the ground, the threat feels distant. About the size of Israel, the province is Gabon’s poorest, with just three paved roads, two hospitals and few public services. Residents have gone looking for better opportunities in Gabon’s main cities, leaving a population of around 53,000.

The Grande Mayumba project says it will generate as many as 4,000 jobs, mirroring President Ali Bongo’s Gabon Émergent, the country’s three-pillar development strategy based on industry, the environment and a services economy. Most will work in forestry or ranching, but a handful will staff a luxury ecolodge under construction in neighboring Ogooué-Maritime province. For $2,000 per night or so, well-heeled tourists will be able to see hippos frolic in the surf and ghost crabs dash in and out of the waves.

When ACDG figures out how to stabilize a runway on the sandy soils, guests will be able to access the lodge by plane. Until then, it’s a half-day journey from the nearest main town, by car, river barge and speedboat. The last leg is by quadbike along a strip of beach frequented by buffalo and the odd elephant, tide permitting.

Aerial view from Petit Loango, a 20-bed eco-lodge under construction at Petit Loango on the coastline of Gabon’s flagship Loango National Park on October 12, 2022. Based around the forestLAB research centre based at Petit Loango, the lodge aims to set a benchmark for nature-based tourism in Equatorial Africa.
Men work in the construction of a back-of-house infrastructure that will accomodate staff at Petit Loango, a 20-bed eco-lodge under construction at Petit Loango on the coastline of Gabon’s flagship Loango National Park on October 12, 2022. Based around the forestLAB research centre based at Petit Loango, the lodge aims to set a benchmark for nature-based tourism in Equatorial Africa.
A man stands in front of the 1km airstrip under construction at a 20-bed eco-lodge under construction at Petit Loango on the coastline of Gabon’s flagship Loango National Park on October 12, 2022. Based around the forestLAB research centre based at Petit Loango, the lodge aims to set a benchmark for nature-based tourism in Equatorial Africa.
Plans of the construction of the Petit Loango, a 20-bed eco-lodge under construction at Petit Loango on the coastline of Gabon’s flagship Loango National Park on October 12, 2022. Based around the forestLAB research centre based at Petit Loango, the lodge aims to set a benchmark for nature-based tourism in Equatorial Africa.
Africa Conservation Development Corp, Grande Mayumba’s parent company, is constructing a luxury ecolodge in neighboring Ogooué-Maritime province. For $2,000 per night, it will welcome well-heeled tourists eager to see hippos frolic in the surf and ghost crabs dashing in and out of the waves. When ACDG figures out how to stabilize a runway on the sandy soils, guests will be able access the lodge by plane. Photographer: Guillem Sartorio/Bloomberg

In its original plans, Grande Mayumba expected its model to generate as many as 200 million credits over the next 25 years. At today’s prices, that would be worth about $2 billion, according to data provider Allied Offsets, roughly equal to Gabon’s sovereign wealth fund.

So far that’s yet to materialize. The British bank Standard Chartered Plc and Swiss trading firm Vitol SA have expressed interest, but neither have culminated in a deal. Investors are getting antsy.

Josh Ponte, a former gorilla researcher and special adviser to the President of Gabon and now an ACDG director, bemoaned the delay in carbon-credit revenue.

“The carbon play was a core incentive,” he said, sitting on a rudimentary platform that will eventually be a dining room. Other than some staff lodging, there’s little more to see. “But there’s since been a reality check on the timeline of the carbon credits, how they’ll work, and how they’ll fit with government strategy. It’s really tiring our investors.”

Directors at at ACDG, Kevin Leo-Smith (left) and Josh Ponte (right) examine camera traps near the site where Petit Loango lodge will be built on October 12, 2022. As part of the forestLAB bio-monitoring programme, 10 camera traps were deployed at Petit Loango between April and July 2022. The camera traps recorded at least 21 species – the most frequently documented being blue duiker, red-capped mangabey and forest elephant. Other species recorded included forest buffalo, red river hog, chimpanzee, gorilla, hippopotamus, giant pangolin, leopard, crocodile, nile monitor and water chevrotain.
A forest elephant roams near Gamba on October 12, 2022.
Josh Ponte (center right), who now serves as an ACDG director, checks camera traps near future site of the Petit Loango lodge. The camera traps recorded over 20 species, including forest elephants. Photographer: Guillem Sartorio/Bloomberg

Gabon Vert, the environmental pillar of the Bongo administration’s development plan, frames both its deal with ACDG and the country’s plans to issue its own, sovereign carbon offsets. Gabon’s offering will rely on different math. It plans to tally the CO2 its trees suck out of the atmosphere, subtract its own emissions, and sell the difference to other, more polluting countries as “net sequestration” credits.

Anyone can issue carbon credits, and anyone can buy them. Most developers use third-party verification bodies to vouch for the quality of their offerings. Gabon doesn’t plan to do so. Fledgling exchanges are also trying to streamline trade, but for now, over-the-counter, bilateral deals are the most common.

It’s not clear the markets will bite. Gabon’s plans have been met with caution. It’s yet to sell some 90 million credits it already generated for past carbon absorption using an established albeit contested approach.

“It always makes me nervous when people say they’re going to roll out their own methodology,” said Danny Cullenward, policy director at nonprofit research group CarbonPlan. “It’s really easy to manipulate the methodology intentionally or incidentally to produce outcomes that are less credible or inconsistent with other key points of data.”

Methodology aside, political uncertainty hangs over Gabon. The fate of Gabon Vert may depend on the outcome of the presidential election later this year.

Though a member of the Bongo family has led Gabon for the past 56 years, the current presidency is under a cloud. Ali Bongo won his most recent election by fewer than 10,000 votes, triggering charges of ballot-rigging and days of violent protest. A 2019 coup attempt failed, and Bongo has had a stroke.

Ahead of this year’s presidential election, the government has embarked on an aggressive green diplomacy push. In February, a delegation joined the UK’s environment ministry and King Charles III to chat conservation. This week, Emmanuel Macron will attend a “One Forest” summit in Libreville, the first time a French president has visited the country in about a decade.

The Grande Mayumba project was already halted once, in 2015, when Gabon’s then-oil minister gave the site of a proposed port to a Moroccan company, despite an agreement that assigned it to ACDG. Development stalled until the dispute was resolved in 2018.

“If the president were to change, I’m not convinced that the model has got deep enough roots yet to be fully sustainable,” said Lee White, environment minister in Bongo’s government. The project also is facing a groundswell of opposition from local communities and NGOs. A grassroots campaign called “No to Grande Mayumba” calls for the suspension of the plan, saying restrictions on access to resources threaten the custom and livelihoods of subsistence farmers who haven’t been adequately consulted.

“There’s sacred forest here and the local population should be consulted on what can and can’t be cut down,” said Nicole Nouhando, governor of Nyanga province who’s broadly supportive of ACDG’s plans.

ACDG has had its own turmoil. Alan Bernstein, the South African safari entrepreneur who founded the company, left after a falling-out with its biggest investors. ACDG says he no longer holds stock in the group; Bernstein says he is seeking compensation after an initial court settlement in January.

Aerial view of Libreville on October 8, 2022.
Aerial view of a primary forest in the Nyanga region on October 12, 2022.
During a two-hour flight from the capital of Gabon, Libreville, to a cattle ranch in the southernmost province Nyanga, the land below is a nearly unbroken stretch of textured green carpet. Photographer: Guillem Sartorio/Bloomberg

For now, Gabon and ACDG are pushing ahead. In the absence of oversight, their success depends less on whether the credits help avert climate change and more on whether and how much a buyer will pay.

In December, US oil company Hess Corp. sealed the first purchase agreement for a similar kind of “high forest, low deforestation” credits with Guyana. Earlier in the year, the International Civil Aviation Organization said those credits could be used by airlines to offset their emissions. Experts have cautioned the credits will fail to serve their purpose.

If ACDG or Gabon can make a deal, it will add fuel to the efforts of other rainforest nations across the world’s tropical belt.

It could also pit the government at odds with the private sector. Gabon is one of a handful of countries with agreements to generate and trade their own carbon credits under a new carbon market run by the United Nations, according to Trove Research Ltd., a carbon analytics company. Last year, White castigated TotalEnergies over a new forest-based credits plan in Gabon. “They don’t have the rights” to that carbon, he said.

ACDG retains the government’s support. The success of the Grande Mayumba project would encourage “forest countries to continue preserving their forests,” said Daouda of Gabon’s sovereign wealth fund, which will market the country’s carbon credits. For him, it would answer the country’s big question in the affirmative: “It would mean that today, the world is recognizing that a living tree has higher value than a dead one.” —With Akshat Rathi and Ben Elgin

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New platform to boost environmental impact financing in Africa

Today, the European Investment Bank (EIB) and the Green Climate Fund (GCF) announced their collaboration in the Green and Resilience Debt Platform, a vehicle that aims to boost climate finance in Africa. The platform contributes to the European Union’s Global Green Bond Initiative, which relies on a governance structure defined by the European Commission and European development finance institutions. It will be implemented in partnership with the United Nations Development Programme and United Nations Capital Development Fund. The announcement came in the margins of the First EIB Group Forum in Luxembourg, which gathers policymakers, financial institutions and business leaders to discuss pressing issues of the time.

The new platform will focus on climate resilience and blue bonds in Africa. It will provide technical assistance to partner countries, promote a climate sensitive investment environment, create a pipeline of bankable green investments, and strengthen domestic and regional green debt ecosystems and financial institutions. It will also provide access to anchor investments in green bond issuances.

GCF will provide financing through its Project Preparation Facility window to support the design and establishment of the Green and Resilience Debt Platform. This support will initially focus on Cote d’Ivoire and Kenya with the potential for additional countries to be added. GCF will examine the platform’s feasibility and impact in these countries, in playing a unique role to align large financial flows with each country’s Nationally Determined Contribution and National Adaptation Plan.

A green, inclusive and resilient economic development worldwide requires an unprecedented scale of investment, particularly in high-quality infrastructure. Green bonds are widely recognized as part of the solution. Global experience has shown they are key in mobilising capital from private investors for investments with environmental impact. However, emerging and developing economies face specific barriers when it comes to green bonds. Their respective markets remain largely underdeveloped and continue to grow at a much slower pace than those of developed countries. The situation is particularly grim in least developed countries on the African continent. Africa accounted for only 0.077% of the total bond issuances 2021. In 2019/2020, only 3% of the total climate finance provided worldwide went to sub-Saharan Africa.

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Horn of Africa drought worse than 2011

1. Horn of Africa drought persists

Three years of drought conditions in the Horn of Africa show no signs of letting up, according to a Kenya-based climate monitoring group. The IGAD Climate Prediction and Applications Center (ICPAC) says that below average rainfall is expected over the next three months, which is normally the region’s rainy season.

“In parts of Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, and Uganda that have been most affected by the recent drought, this could be the 6th failed consecutive rainfall season,” ICPAC predicts.

In contrast “wetter than normal conditions are expected over the cross-border areas of Ethiopia and South Sudan, north-western Kenya, and parts of central and southern Tanzania”, says the climate centre. Temperatures are also likely to be higher across the region, it adds.

The IGAD Climate Prediction and Applications Center (ICPAC) says that below average rainfall is expected over the next three months, which is normally the region's rainy season.

The IGAD Climate Prediction and Applications Center (ICPAC) says that below average rainfall is expected over the next three months, which is normally the region’s rainy season. Image: ICPAC

In the most severely affected areas, drought conditions are worse than in 2010-2011 when hundreds of thousands of people died, according to ICPAC. An estimated 23 million people are currently “highly food insecure” in Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia, and 11 million livestock in the region have died, it says.

IGAD has also announced plans to partner with the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) to help address the crisis. “These prolonged and recurrent climate change induced droughts will further worsen other existing, mutually exacerbating humanitarian challenges in the region, including the ongoing hunger crisis, the impacts of COVID-19 and internal displacement,” said IFRC director Mohammed Mukhier. “We need an all-hands-on-deck approach to strengthen food systems, livelihoods, and climate resilience.”

2. Plastic use in G20 could nearly double by 2050

Plastic use in G20 countries is on course to nearly double by the middle of the century unless a comprehensive and legally binding global treaty to curb consumption is drawn up, according to research.

Existing programmes to boost recycling or cut single-use plastic consumption only “scratched the surface” and a more comprehensive global plan is required, according to Back to Blue, a research group run by the Economist Impact think-tank and the Nippon Foundation, a private philanthropic organisation.

The United Nations began talks in November on an agreement to tackle plastic pollution. Around 175 countries have signed up to the talks which aim to draw up a legally binding treaty by the end of 2024.

However, if negotiations fail, annual plastic production in G20 countries could rise to 451 million tonnes by 2050 according to current rates of growth, Back to Blue says – up nearly three-quarters from 2019.

“There should be no illusions that the treaty negotiations will be anything but difficult and treacherous,” the research group said. “The chances of failure – not just that no treaty emerges but one that is too weak to reverse the plastic tide – are considerable.”

It’s calling for a more aggressive ban on single-use plastic, together with higher production taxes and mandatory schemes to make firms responsible for the entire lifespan of their products, including recycling and disposal.

3. News in brief: Top climate crisis stories this week

The fossil fuel industry is failing to tackle methane emissions despite its pledges to uncover and fix leaking infrastructure, according to a report by the International Energy Agency (IEA). The global energy industry released some 135 million tonnes of the potent greenhouse gas into the atmosphere in 2022 – only slightly below the record amount released in 2019.

Developed nations' failure to deliver on a decade-old commitment to pay billions in annual climate financing to developing nations is a "travesty".

Developed nations’ failure to deliver on a decade-old commitment to pay billions in annual climate financing to developing nations is a “travesty”. Image: IEA

Developed nations’ failure to deliver on a decade-old commitment to pay billions in annual climate financing to developing nations is a “travesty”, according to Achim Steiner, administrator of the UN Development Programme. Wealthy nations are yet to deliver on the 2009 pledge to provide $100 billion per year to help developing nations mitigate rising global temperatures.

Total ecosystem collapse is “inevitable” unless unprecedented current wildlife losses are reversed, The Guardian reports. Scientists studying the Permian-Triassic extinction event of 250 million years ago, known as the “Great Dying”, found that ecosystems can reach a tipping point from which they are unlikely to recover.

The carbon price in the EU’s emissions trading system has gone over 100 euros ($105) per tonne for the first time, reports the Financial Times. It’s seen as a landmark moment as it may encourage companies to invest in technologies to fight the climate crisis, like carbon capture, utilization and storage.

A team of influential economists has published a report urging China to adopt a new development model based on “wellbeing” rather than GDP growth in order to fulfil its 2060 net-zero emissions goals. China aims to bring emissions to a peak by 2030, though at what level they will peak is currently unclear.

France is preparing to introduce restrictions on water use in parts of the country from March, in an unprecedented move for the time of year. It follows the driest winter in 64 years.

New data shows that only 0.4% of companies have a credible climate transition plan, reports Energy Monitor. An assessment of 18,600 companies by non-profit the Carbon Disclosure Project found that only 81 of the 4,000 claiming to have a climate transition project in place had a plan that met all of its key indicators for transition.

4. More on the climate crisis on Agenda

Resource recovery and waste management are essential parts of a circular economy. However, two experts from Saahas Zero Waste argue that there is large-scale global resistance to taking accountability for the materials we use and consume.

A Berlin neighbourhood will embark on a novel experiment this coming summer: eliminating parking spaces. The idea behind the project is to devote the space usually reserved for cars to other uses like growing plants or providing recreation.

Australia and New Zealand have both faced a series of devastating floods triggered by the climate crisis and the return of the La Niña weather pattern. In the aftermath of Cyclone Gabrielle, a climate expert explains how Australia’s experiences might offer New Zealand a guide for recovering.

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Protecting our oceans: The Blue Wave Expedition

The ocean is a vital part of human life and the global economy, providing food, jobs, and livelihoods for over 3 billion people. However, climate change, overfishing, and pollution are threatening the ocean and the prosperity of people in developing countries. Coral reefs, mangrove forests, and marine populations have already suffered, with a third of global fish stocks depleted. If these trends continue, no stocks may be left for commercial fishing in the Asia-Pacific region by 2048. By 2052, the weight of plastic in the ocean could surpass that of fish, and up to 90% of coral reefs may be lost. Despite these challenges, the ocean remains the planet’s largest natural asset, delivering countless benefits to humanity.

  • The ocean is responsible for the oxygen in every other breath we take. It supplies 15% of humanity’s protein needs.
  • It helps to slow climate change by absorbing 30% of carbon dioxide emissions and 90% of the excess heat trapped by greenhouse gases.
  • It serves as the highway for some 90% of internationally traded goods, via the shipping sector.
  • If the ocean were a country, at several trillion dollars per year of economic activity, the ocean would rank 7th on the list of largest nations by GDP.
  • It is the source of hundreds of millions of jobs, in fisheries, aquaculture, shipping, tourism, energy production and other sectors.

Protecting the ocean from the many threats it faces is not only a moral imperative but also a promising financial opportunity. By responsibly managing the ocean, we can benefit both the environment and the economies of emerging markets. Before the COVID-19 pandemic, the ocean economy was on track to double between 2010 and 2030, reaching $3 trillion and employing 40 million people. The financial sector is starting to recognise the potential of a healthy ocean. It has a key role in shifting the global economic system towards rebuilding ocean prosperity, restoring biodiversity, and regenerating ocean health.

A thriving Blue Economy supports the sustainable use of coastal and marine resources, promoting economic growth, better livelihoods, and more jobs while preserving the integrity and health of these ecosystems. However, keeping the world’s oceans clean will require ambitious projects supported by innovative financing.

It’s upon this basis that FSDA and BFA Global partnered to launch TECA in April 2022; a first-of-its-kind venture launcher, to create fintech start-ups with solutions that enable climate resilience in the most vulnerable communities around the world, with an initial focus on Africa. The first wave, “The Blue Wave”, was set out to address challenges affecting the Blue Economy. It is expected that future waves will take on other challenges on climate change. The team kicked off activities by building a community of diverse, and engaged experts and enthusiasts to collaboratively ideate, strategise, and connect to provide feedback, and support a network for prospective founders as they launch their ventures.

BFA built an active online community interested in TECA and the Blue Economy in Africa on Circle, which onboarded 221 members who are active on the platform to date. The Wave Expedition Series; a series of online webinars in which the TECA Community learnt about and discussed opportunity areas and contributed to building the wave’s ‘Atlas of Opportunity’, ran from May to July 2022 with a total of six expeditions.  

Sourcing for the first cohort of entrepreneurs was completed in August 2022, with selection based on talent, passion and commitment to building innovative solutions for a climate-resilient future. 30 fellows/entrepreneurs were onboarded in the inaugural wave with 50% being female, and representing 7 African countries: Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Ethiopia, Egypt, South Africa and Zimbabwe. The fellows kicked off with a huddle in Diani on the Kenyan coast in September 2022, with the huddle objectives being team bonding and trust building, testing hypothesis, exposure to the blue economy and working towards goals as a team (brainstorming together and building together).

 

TECA Huddle 1

 

Related article: 4 Innovation Opportunities to Unlock the Potential of Blue Carbon

Over a 4-month period, the fellows were taken through a mentorship and coaching program, including a “How I Launched” series to refine their venture ideas, after which they did one mock pitch, then a final pitch before a panel. The venture ideas were scored based on a 5-criteria matrix: compelling vision, team-solution fit, scalability/viability, impact on communities in blue spaces, and impact on blue ecosystems. 7 ventures demonstrated that they had refined their problem-solution fit and were working towards a minimum viable product (MVP), and thus qualified for an initial grant of £55,000. TECA will continue to build a diverse and engaged community through the Circle platform and publication of knowledge products. They will also work toward securing further funding for a second wave in FY23-24. 

Here are some of the initiatives that have been implemented by the communities in Kwale county as discovered in the expedition:

Mikoko Pamoja Mangrove Restoration

Nestled between sandy beaches, still waters and coconut palms, the Mikoko Pamoja project — Swahili for “mangroves together” — has for nearly a decade quietly plodded away, conserving over 264 acres of mangroves while simultaneously planting new seedlings. About 4,000 new mangroves are planted yearly, steadily swelling Gazi Bay’s forests. The project is an integrated people-centred approach, with a particular focus on women, to address the triple crisis – poverty, climate change, and nature – at the local level.

 

Mangrove

Restoring mangroves is beyond conventional forestry. Besides developing nurseries and supplying seedlings, there is a lot more that must be considered in mangrove restoration, according to Swabra Mohammed; the secretary of Gazi Women Group. Her group established a nursery in 2018 and have sold seedlings for restoration. To the fellows, the huddle was an eye-opener. Over and above species zonation and assessing hydrology, they gained knowledge on identifying mature propagules of various species. The huddle was holistic and practical as it enabled the fellows to identify the challenges and opportunities in mangrove ecosystem restoration and blue carbon monetisation. With deliberate conservation, comes natural perks. Fisherfolk casting nets in nearby shallow waters have seen an abundance of species return to the mangrove-laden shores, now a breeding ground for fish flourishing in the expanded habitat. And project leaders hail the benefits of cleaner air for people who live in or near the forests.

Mangrove 1

Kibuyuni Seaweed Farming

It is estimated that Kenya earns around $2.5 billion annually from its ocean resources, a positive indication that there can be a potential growth of the country’s GDP through the embrace of Blue Economy. At Kibuyuni village in Kwale County, a group of 50 members is already making fortunes from seaweed farming. This project has improved the livelihoods of many families in the area.

Seaweed farming

According to Fatuma Mohamed, who chairs the Kibuyuni Seaweed Farmers Group, the project began in 2010 after KMFRI, conducted research that identified a seaweed species suitable for the area. The group, which at that time had 27 members, received funding from PACT Kenya in 2011 to improve their project. They currently cultivate two seaweed species, with a harvest cycle of 30-45 days, and sell around 50 tonnes, generating sales of approximately KES 1.5 million. The group invests their earnings in table banking and merry-go-round initiatives.

Seaweed farming

We are just beginning to explore how innovation can help us build climate resilience. It’s essential that more people get involved in supporting the development of solutions that can meet the challenges we face now and in the future, and ensure that we use our natural resources in a sustainable way.

TECA Huddle Participants

The 2nd TECA blue economy wave will launch soon in partnership with BFA, IUCN and Ocean Hub Africa and aims to attract 50 fellows and launch 10 new ventures across sub-Saharan Africa.  This was announced in the ocean conference, where the 7 grantees from wave 1 had an opportunity to learn more about the blue economy and pitch to potential funders.FSD Africa is committed to playing its part in bringing together the right people and resources to create a world that is better prepared for the effects of climate change. By serving as a catalyst and bringing people together, FSD Africa can help create a more climate-resilient world.

Photo credits: BFA Global

African tech start-ups rise up to combat climate change

AfricArena’s much-anticipated annual report says climate-tech can be grouped into three broad sectors of impact: directly mitigating or removing emissions, helping us to adapt to the impacts of climate change, and enhancing our understanding of the climate.

These products or services usually fall within sectors such as agri-technology, afforestation, carbon capture, trade and reporting, geo-engineering, bio-technology, built environments, and nature-based solutions.

In 2021, investments in climate-tech surged globally to $87.5 billion dollars from a low of $28 billion in the second half of 2020, according to a report by PwC. The US climate-tech firms raised the largest share, followed by Europe and China. Most of the capital funding growth targeted climate-tech-based businesses that had impacts in cutting carbon emissions through renewable energy and electric vehicle products and services.

However, as the report states, there has been a decrease in the number of deals being signed off with climate-tech based start-ups due to the pressures of the global economy with risks of a suggested recession on the horizon.

Venture capital firms and investors have thus invested into the safety and stability of well-established climate-tech businesses in their growth stages of funding, such as Northvolt, TeraWatts, PerraPower, Climeworks, and EnergyX. According to HoloniQ’s Climate Tech 2022 report, 83 climate-tech-based unicorns took 80% of the funding.

Despite this, there are still many climate-tech start-ups in Africa that are bettering the world through sustainable technologies. One example is M-Kopa Solar, a Kenyan start-up that provides affordable and clean energy to people living off-grid. Another example is Solar Freeze, a Kenyan company that provides off-grid solar-powered refrigeration to smallholder farmers in Africa. These start-ups are helping to address the energy needs of people in rural areas, where electricity is often unreliable or unavailable.

SunCulture, a Kenyan company, produces solar-powered irrigation systems for smallholder farmers. These systems allow farmers to irrigate their crops more efficiently and effectively, reducing water usage and increasing crop yields. Sun Culture has also developed a financing model that allows farmers to pay for the systems over time, making them more affordable and accessible.

Another promising African climate-tech start-up is Ecoligo, a company that provides solar energy solutions to small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in emerging markets. Ecoligo offers a financing model that allows SMEs to install solar energy systems with no upfront cost, paying for them over time through the savings generated by the system.

This makes solar energy more accessible and affordable for SMEs, which often struggle to secure financing for such projects.

Economic opportunities

These start-ups, and many others like them, are not only addressing the urgent need to address climate change but also creating economic opportunities in Africa. It is clear that climate technology has moved well beyond a proof of concept and offers investors significant financial returns and the opportunity for outsized environmental and social impact. Climate-tech is now an asset class that presents a major commercial opportunity.

However, it is important to note that there is still much work to be done to channel this investment appropriately. There is a need to ensure that climate-tech investment is channelled towards sustainable technologies that have a real impact on reducing emissions and mitigating climate change.

Moreover, there is a need to ensure that these technologies are accessible and affordable for people in developing countries, where the impacts of climate change are often felt most severely.

In conclusion, the State of Tech in Africa report on climate change provides valuable insights into the challenges and opportunities facing the continent in the fight against climate change. While Africa faces unique challenges due to its geography, socioeconomic factors, and limited technological infrastructure, the report highlights how technology can be leveraged to mitigate the impacts of climate change and build a more sustainable future.

It is clear that African governments, businesses, and individuals must work together to adopt and implement innovative solutions that address the complex issues related to climate change. The report emphasises the importance of investing in renewable energy, promoting sustainable agriculture, and creating resilient infrastructure to adapt to changing climate conditions.

As we move forward, it is essential to recognise that climate change is not just an environmental issue but also a social, economic, and political challenge. Therefore, we must prioritise collaboration and collective action to ensure a sustainable future for the continent.

The State of Tech in Africa 2023 report – and its specific analysis on climate change – serves as a wake-up call for all of us to take action and make a positive impact on the world. We must embrace the power of technology to drive innovation and create solutions that benefit both people and the planet. With the right mindset and a concerted effort, we can build a brighter future for Africa and the world as a whole.

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African Startups to Receive $385,000 to Develop Solutions for the Blue Economy

Triggering Exponential Climate Action (TECA) has announced the selection of seven startups that would benefit from the $385,000 startup grant, with each receiving $55,000 in funding to advance their solutions for the blue economy in Africa.

The startup founders were selected following their participation in TECA’s fellowship program, where they were supported to create ideas for companies in the blue economy, build teams, and form companies.

Each startup will receive $27,500 in seed capital and $27,500 in hands-on venture building support to progress financial and tech-enabled solutions that bolster the climate resilience of communities and ecosystems in and around the oceans, lakes, and rivers across the Eastern region of Africa.

Announcing the grant, Chairman and Chief Innovation Officer at BFA Global, David del Ser, said: “Through the TECA program, we are proud to support and accelerate the development of innovative solutions that will protect and sustain the environment and vulnerable communities in the Eastern coast of Africa. These seven startups represent the forefront of the blue economy in Africa, and we look forward to seeing the impact of their financial and tech-enabled solutions on communities and ecosystems.”

Digital Economy Director at FSD Africa, Juliet Munro, said: “The ventures that have been formed through the TECA program are an inspiration. They represent young Africans – including women – coming forward with great ideas and solutions to climate-related challenges, in this case, in the blue economy. I’m proud that FSD Africa is supporting this initiative, which leverages finance and technology to help build resilience and create opportunity in the context of climate adversity. Through our partnership with BFA Global, we plan to roll out TECA beyond the blue economy to also solve for other challenges and geographies across Africa.”

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Seven blue economy startups secure seed funding to enhance climate resilience in Africa

ImpactAlpha, February 15 – Community-powered mangrove restoration. Restocking local fish supplies. A marketplace for seaweed farmers.

Triggering Exponential Climate Action, or TECA, invested $27,500 each in seven oceans and seafood enterprises in Kenya, Egypt, South Africa, Uganda, Zimbabwe and Tanzania.

The partnership between BFA Global and FSD Africa also provides the companies with hands-on support.

“We look forward to seeing the impact of their financial and tech-enabled solutions on communities and ecosystems,” said BFA Global’s David del Ser.

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TNFD Momentum Gathers After COP15

Final beta version to follow on heels of agreement on Target 15 in new Global Biodiversity Framework. 

Following the adoption of the Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF) at Montreal’s COP15, the Taskforce on Nature-related Financial Disclosures (TNFD) said the release of its V0.4 beta framework in March would further assist firms in assessing and reporting on biodiversity and nature-related risks.

Speaking at the TNFD’s ‘Moving to Action After Montreal’ webinar,  David Craig, Co-chair of the TNFD, called the GBF an “ambitious framework” and highlighted its role in “halt[ing] the degradation of nature and biodiversity”. He also underlined the importance of the GBF in ensuring “harmony in nature” by addressing restoring natural ecosystems, which the TNFD’s disclosure framework aims to support.

The GBF featured 23 targets and four goals, but Target 15 is viewed as vital to private-sector management of biodiversity-related risks.

Also speaking on the webinar, Emily McKensie, Technical Director at the TNFD, said there were “key points of conceptual alignment” between the finalised GBF – including Target 15 – and the TNFD framework.

Harmony in nature 

Target 15 requires governments to encourage companies and financial institutions disclose their risks, dependencies and impacts on biodiversity along their operations, supply and value chains, and portfolios.

“Target 15 means that disclosures on nature impacts, dependencies and risk are coming and we’re seeing more and more activity to support these,” said Craig. “The TNFD is a framework and a tool to support Target 15.”

McKensie underlined the momentum the TNFD could offer the GBF and Target 15, through its focus on helping firms and investors to disclose and risk manage nature-related impacts and dependencies.

She also highlighted the TNFD framework’s ability to help “operationalise” which organisations will regularly monitor, assess and disclose nature risks, dependencies and impacts, resulting in a “clear connection” to Target 15.

However, the GBF was accused of being “watered down” by a number of observers due the word ‘mandatory’ being excluded from the framework.

Maelle Pelisson, Advocacy Director at Business for Nature, who was privy to the behind-the-scenes negotiations at COP15, admitted that mandatory disclosures would have helped in “levelling the playing field” and demonstrating urgency.

Speaking on the webinar, Pelisson told onlookers the GBF would still help businesses to access data required to accelerate action on reducing negative impacts on nature. Pelisson also welcomed the engagement of businesses at COP15, as well as the rapid growth in momentum surrounding biodiversity and nature.

“We’ve seen this momentum growing so fast from March to December last year,” she said. “We can only expect that it will continue growing now that [the GBF] been adopted.”

September launch and beyond 

According to Craig, disclosures are important because they “demonstrate accountability”, but he stressed that they are “meaningless” unless companies take action.

“What’s really important is that companies have invested the time the talent, the knowledge and the skills,” he said. “Don’t underestimate the urgency of the crisis, but also the urgency of the movement,” he added. “The GBF agreement is ambitious [but] it’s real targets will be set by governments and businesses who will see growing pressure and action to align on these targets.”

The TNFD framework builds on the four core pillars of the Taskforce on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) for corporates and investors, and is expected to be incorporated into the disclosure standards of existing sustainability standards bodies and national laws.

Alexis Gazzo, Europe West Sustainability Co-leader at EY, told attendees on the webinar that implementation of TNFD guidance will be much faster than TCFD due to the framework “building on the foundations that have been set up for climate”.

The TNFD will run a formal consultation where market participants can submit responses to a full draft of the beta framework from March until 1 June. The pilot testing of the framework, which has been running since 1 July 2022, will also finish on the same day.

The final beta framework is expected to provide additional guidance on disclosure metrics, measurement of impacts, dependencies and risks across supply chains, and the sector-specific reporting requirements, including agriculture, aquaculture and mining.

TNFD’s framework will then be finalised in September 2023.

The next UN Biodiversity Conference (COP16) is scheduled to take place in Turkey in 2024. It will likely see countries providing updates and reviews of their national biodiversity plans targets. Countries will also be expected to develop their national financial plans as a part of their resource mobilisation for implementation.

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7 African Startups To Receive $385k In Developing Solutions For Blue Economy

Today, climate resilience venture launcher Triggering Exponential Climate Action (TECA) has announced the selection of seven startups to each receive $55,000 in funding to advance their solutions for the blue economy in Africa.

The startup founders were selected following their participation in TECA’s fellowship program, where they were supported to create ideas for companies in the blue economy, build teams, and form companies.

The TECA program, managed by BFA Global and supported by FSD Africa, was created to accelerate the development of climate-resilient solutions to protect and sustain the environment and

vulnerable communities. Each startup will receive $27,500 in seed capital and $27,500 in hands-on venture building support to progress financial and tech-enabled solutions that bolster the climate resilience of communities and ecosystems in and around the oceans, lakes, and rivers across the Eastern region of Africa.

“Through the TECA program, we are proud to support and accelerate the development of innovative solutions that will protect and sustain the environment and vulnerable communities in the Eastern coast of Africa. These seven startups represent the forefront of the blue economy in Africa, and we look forward to seeing the impact of their financial and tech-enabled solutions on communities and ecosystems,” said David del Ser, Chairman and Chief Innovation Officer at BFA Global.

“The ventures that have been formed through the TECA program are an inspiration. They represent young Africans – including women – coming forward with great ideas and solutions to climate-related challenges, in this case, in the blue economy. I’m proud that FSD Africa is supporting this initiative, which leverages finance and technology to help build resilience and create opportunity in the context of climate adversity. Through our partnership with BFA Global, we plan to roll out TECA beyond the blue economy to also solve for other challenges and geographies across Africa.” said Juliet Munro,

Digital Economy Director at FSD Africa.

Founders of the seven startups selected in the current cohort originate from six countries in Africa—Kenya, Egypt, South Africa, Uganda, Zimbabwe and Tanzania—with ideas focusing on bridging existing gaps in: aquaculture; ecotourism; measurement, reporting, and verification (MRV) in conservation; seaweed value chain; mangrove restoration and protection; and financial services for fisher folk. The startup companies and their solutions are:

  • AquaTrack: a data-driven solution for sustainable aquaculture production. They aim to provide a water quality monitoring device for fish farmers seeking to increase production and efficiency in their farms.
  • Carboni Bank: a community-centred platform for tourists to offset their carbon emissions and support local climate initiatives.
  • ConserVate: utilizing innovative digital technology to build local capacity for monitoring reporting and credible verification (MRV) of conservation impact for both funders and implementers to reverse the effects of climate change.
  • Mwani Blu: building a seaweed marketplace with high-level traceability, providing women smallholder farmers with dignified and stable incomes.
  • RegisTree: empowering coastal communities to be agents of climate change mitigation by facilitating their role in mangrove restoration and protection.
  • Vua Solutions: a fintech company seeking to provide affordable and responsible financial services to people working in the blue economy.
  • Wezesha Aqua Farms: seeking to address the dwindling wild capture fisheries stocks that negatively impact the livelihoods and socioeconomic status of local fishing communities around the great lakes region in Eastern Africa.

To further invest in the success of these startups, TECA will provide comprehensive venture building support that includes mentorship, capacity building, business model refinement, and support launching their products and services in the market.

Startups working on climate resilience solutions are encouraged to apply for the next TECA cohort.

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Africa getting little of $382m renewable energy projects cash

Renewable energy projects attracted investments worth $382 billion globally in 2021, according to the International Energy Agency, but only $13 billion, or three percent of that, funded projects in Africa, highlighting a major funding gap foiling green transition and energy access on the continent.

With only 48 percent of African population having access to electricity, experts say investment in the continent’s renewable energy sector could both leapfrog the green transition efforts and connect more people to the grid.

Despite this, it has been established that investors with the capacity to invest in this sector shy away from the African market, a problem which brought together several stakeholders in the energy sector in Nairobi this week, attempting to change the narrative.

At a forum convened by the World Resources Institute (WRI) and the Children’s Investment Fund Foundation, participants drawn from the private sector, government, civil society organisations from Kenya and beyond deliberated on how investors can be mobilised to support Africa’s green transition through investments.

Reluctant to invest

Rebekah Shirley, WRI’s deputy regional director told the forum that private sector players are reluctant to invest in this sector, creating a funding gap of billions of dollars every year, despite the wide access gap.

“Even in other regions of the world where energy access is still a challenge like the Southeast Asia, we don’t see funding gaps of this magnitude, why Africa?” she posed.

Alex Wachira, principal secretary for the state department of energy, said that there is a list of challenges contributing to the energy gap, even in Kenya, which slow down economic growth in the country.

“We (the Ministry of Energy) are aware of the many challenges attributed to this, including limited incentives to attract private sector investors,” he said in a speech read by a representative.

Lack of political will

Another challenge identified is the lack of political will for appropriate legislation and implementation of policies to incentivise private sector investment in renewable energy projects, especially in rural areas.

For instance, only two of Kenya’s 47 counties have drafted energy plans that would give way to appropriate energy policies, deprioritising renewable energy projects at the local governments.

This, according to Eva Sawe – a senior programmes officer at the Council of Governors, is because lawmakers have not been sensitised on why renewable energy projects should be a priority.

But even with the right policies and incentives to support private sector investment in renewable energy on the continent, investors said there is a still a shortage of talent in Africa limiting the production capacity of companies investing in the sector.

“If an investor is coming into the country to do any renewable energy project, the first hurdle they will face is the lack of skilled people,” said Andrew Amadi, the chief executive of Kenya Renewable Energy Association.

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