Africa’s Untapped Opportunity

Eva Warigia, Associate Director, Investor Relations at New Forests, explains how responsibly-managed plantation forestry in Sub-Saharan Africa is becoming an increasingly attractive asset class.

The African continent hosts 17% of the world’s forests. However, nearly four million hectares of these are lost each year, leading to a 3% loss of gross domestic product associated with soil and nutrient depletion, according to a report by the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization. The report points out…

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From Co-benefits to Core Benefits

Social impacts on local communities can make or break carbon sequestration projects. 

The prime purpose of voluntary carbon markets (VCMs) is to limit climate change, by allocating capital to projects that offset, remove or avoid emissions through the generation and sale of credits.  Despite controversies, VCMs are growing. A 2023 survey of businesses across the US, UK and Europe found that 89%…

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Take Five: Twin Peaks

A selection of the major stories impacting ESG investors, in five easy pieces. 

Developed countries have belatedly reached a target for climate finance, only to be set a new one for nature.

Ten years after – It might have taken them a little more than a decade, but at last they got there. Developed nations mobilised US$115.9 billion of climate finance for developing countries in 2022, it was revealed this week, exceeding for the first time the US$100 billion annual level set in Copenhagen in 2009. According to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), last year saw a record 30% annual rise in climate finance, meaning the target – originally unveiled at COP 15 – was reached two years late. The total includes more than US$20 billion in attributable private finance, as well as bilateral and multilateral public sector funding, plus export credits. Importantly, adaptation finance accounted for US$32.4 billion of the total – three times the 2016 level. Discussions on a New Collective Quantified Goal (NCQG) on climate finance for the post-2025 period, which made little progress at COP28, should progress next week’s Bonn Climate Conference, where the agenda will also include carbon credits, adaptation finance and the Global Stocktake, ahead of COP29. In anticipation of the NCQG, the OECD released an analysis recommending use of public sector interventions to directly or indirectly finance climate action. But measures to support the goals of the Paris Agreement must now sit alongside those needed to realise the objectives of the Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF). At a Nairobi summit that concluded yesterday, the UN Convention on Biological Diversity called for investments of at least US$200 billion a year from all sources, and for reform of US$500 billion in harmful subsidies to achieve the GBF’s Goal D: invest and collaborate for nature. These and other recommendations will be discussed at COP16 in Colombia in October.

Gap analysis – A lack of progress on gender equality in the workplace has been underlined by the International Labour Organization (ILO) in a report reflecting fewer jobs and lower pay for women, especially in low-income countries. According to an update to the ILO’s annual World Employment and Social Outlook, the ‘jobs gap’ – which measures the number of persons without a job but who want to work – stands at 22.8% for women in low-income countries, versus 15.3% for men. This contrasts with a gap

US Seeks to Boost Carbon Market Credibility

Policies and principles aim to heighten VCM participation and support investment in developing markets’ clean energy transition.

New guidelines unveiled by the US government will improve trust in the voluntary carbon market (VCM) by reinforcing the need for high integrity carbon credits, according to market participants. Three US government departments issued a Joint Statement of Policy and new Principles for Responsible Participation which outlined practices to support…

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Carbon Markets can Move the Needle

Improvements in technology and measurement are showing that forest conservation projects do work – and should be accelerated, says Antoine Rostand, Co-founder of Kayrros.

The voluntary carbon market continues to divide opinion. Just recently, the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) provoked a backlash – including from within the organisation itself – when it revised its Corporate Net Zero Standard to let companies use environmental attribute certificates, including carbon offsetting schemes. A group that claimed to speak for the “overwhelming majority” of SBTi staff said they were “deeply concerned’ by the move”. SBTi later appeared to backtrack, saying that there were “no changes” to its standards and a formal draft of rules on carbon offsetting would be presented in July.

The strength of the reaction shows how polarised – a now-familiar term – the conversation has become. This does no one any good: we’re all conscripts in the battle to prevent the climate crisis spiralling out of control. Taking swipes at each other merely wastes precious time. We need to find a way to direct the flow of money from those who have a lot of it to those who have much less, and who are, by virtue of where they live, charged with protecting resources on which we all depend.

The climate finance gap – the difference between the amount of funding allocated for climate-related activities and the amount actually needed to effectively address climate change – stood, as of late 2022, at US$2.61 trillion a year. According to BloombergNEF’s ‘Long-Term Carbon Offsets Outlook 2024’ report, carbon credits could reach US$238 per tonne in 2050, and the market could be worth US$1.1 trillion annually by the same year.

Support for the green transition

The world cannot afford the green transition without the carbon market. This is the hard truth of the matter. The good news is that, despite the scepticism and the bad press, the carbon market does, in fact, work. In June last year, we used our Forest Carbon Monitor to assess more than 90% of the Amazon, which is the world’s largest rainforest and one of the world’s largest carbon sinks. Our analysis, which we ran by processing terabytes of satellite data with AI, showed that of 75 reviewed conservation and emissions-reduction projects funded by the carbon market, just five showed the same static deforestation rates. In other words, 96% were working.

More recent analyses have yielded similar

Listen to the Science

As the fallout continues over the Science Based Targets initiative’s approach to offsets, questions arise over the net zero target-setting landscape for corporates. 

In 2024, the number of listed companies with a climate commitment validated by the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) jumped to 20% from just 12% in 2023. In 2020, a mere 1% of listed companies had a decarbonisation target validated by the organisation.

According to SBTI’s website, the number of companies and financial institutions setting greenhouse gas (GHG) reduction targets and having them validated doubled to 4,204 by the end of 2023 from 2,079 in 2022.

This steep growth marks SBTi as a focal point of corporate climate action, said Guy Turner, Head of Carbon Markets at MSCI. “It holds a significant cachet among companies,” he explained.

But SBTi’s status as the gold standard for companies serious about decarbonising in line with the Paris Agreement took a serious hit last month after a highly public spat between staff and executives.

On 9 April, SBTi’s board of trustees released a public statement  announcing a consultation on allowing validated companies to use carbon credits to offset their Scope 3 emissions. Mere hours later, SBTi staff and advisors fired off a letter to management, calling for the statement to be withdrawn and for the resignation of CEO Luiz Fernando Do Amaral and any board members who supported the decision.

The incident reheats the long-running debate on whether credits are a credible way for companies to reduce their carbon emissions. But it also raises questions about whether organisations are fit to assess and accredit the decarbonisation strategies of corporates.

Cottage industry

MSCI’s Turner addressed this issue in a LinkedIn post that went viral, arguing that while NGOs have played a critical role in the creation of global decarbonisation frameworks and benchmarks to date, an update to their modus operandi was needed, given high stakes measured in degrees of global warming and investment dollars.

Using the voluntary carbon markets (VCMs) as an example, he noted that what used to be a cottage industry is now in the mainstream. Billions of dollars are dependent on decisions made by its ecosystem of verification bodies and carbon credit sellers. “I don’t think the organisations have grown up in line with the decisions they are making.”

SBTi, a UK-registered charity, is a collaboration between the UN Global Compact and NGOs CDP, World Resources Institute and the