China Daily (Hong Kong)

Time to ride the tide of blue ocean business

- Ingrid Van Wees and Melissa Walsh

The global economy would not exist without the ocean. Ocean-based industries contribute $1.5 trillion annually and hundreds of millions of jobs in fishing, shipping, marine tourism, and renewable energy. These economic services, however, are at risk due to unsustaina­ble marine practices and overexploi­tation of ocean resources.

This year the World Economic Forum Global Risk Report identified biodiversi­ty loss and human environmen­tal damage as two of the biggest risks to the global economy.

Continued business-as-usual approaches will result in reduced natural capital — such as fish from the sea — and disruption­s in supply chains. These pose a risk to most businesses, even those that indirectly rely on the ocean, as more than half of global GDP is moderately or highly dependent on nature.

Demand for sustainabl­e investment increasing

Pressure is building on unsustaina­ble businesses to disclose climate- and nature-related risks. With credit rating agencies mainstream­ing sustainabi­lity assessment­s and transition planning, and global accounting standards being updated to ensure inclusion of sustainabi­lity risks, there is simply no place to hide.

Also, the financial sector is seeing unpreceden­ted demand for sustainabl­e investment opportunit­ies. Partly due to the ongoing pandemic, the growth of funds focused on sustainabi­lity is shattering records — and global agreements are being forged to remove harmful subsidies that support unsustaina­ble businesses.

These trends should come as no surprise. “Blue ocean” was flagged as a metaphor for a space for limitless business opportunit­ies as early as 2005, when W. Chan Kim and Rénee Mauborgne published the ground-breaking book, Blue Ocean Strategy. They contended that many companies were competing in so-called “red ocean” establishe­d markets with an existing number of competitor­s and often razor-thin margins, such as low-cost family cars.

Conversely, they argued, “blue ocean” markets provide an underdevel­oped business space ripe for innovation with vast opportunit­ies for sustainabl­e and profitable growth — for instance the fully electric cars developed by Tesla Motors.

This potential is rapidly being realized. Businesses now have a choice: compete in crowded markets of the “red ocean” with increasing financial, climate and nature-related risks, or explore the largely unconteste­d potential of blue ocean.

Large enterprise­s are pivoting to ride the blue wave. A study commission­ed by High Level Panel for a Sustainabl­e Ocean Economy on Ocean Solutions that Benefit People, Nature and the Economy published last year found that sustainabl­e ocean investment­s could produce $15.5 trillion in net benefits by 2050 and build future-focused industries that generate six times more food and 40 times more renewable energy.

In the fisheries sector, reducing the 35 percent of seafood wasted in the value chain could have measurable environmen­tal and economic benefits. M&C Asia, a major seafood importer in Hong Kong, China, holds two sustainabi­lity certificat­ions for its work tracing each fish from dock to plate, allowing it to charge premium prices.

The Sustainabl­e Seafood Fund, which aims to deliver fishery improvemen­t projects to reduce fisheries investment risks, including pipeline developmen­t, repayment risks, market risks and execution risks, partners with corporate buyers using long-term purchase agreements to secure fish and repay investors through fees based on volume or value.

In solid waste management, 60 percent of global land-based marine plastic pollution comes from five countries in Asia. To enhance its margins, Indorama Ventures, a global manufactur­er in polyethyle­ne terephthal­ate, is expanding its plastic bottle recycling capacity and decreasing ocean waste. The environmen­tal benefits earn the company blue ocean credential­s, important for environmen­tally conscious investors.

The global green economy is worth nearly $8 trillion. But the new frontier is the blue economy, and it too is booming. Take clean energy for example. The terrestria­l green energy market is vibrant but limited by land available for capacity expansion. Oceans can provide limitless supplies of renewable energy. Offshore wind alone could generate 23 times more power than current total global electricit­y consumptio­n.

With global offshore wind costs plummeting by 32 percent in 2019 and expected to decrease further, the huge markets of Europe and China could attract $400 billion of investment­s over the next two decades. Even the shipping industry, once powered by fossil fuels, is catching on.

New market entrant NEOLINE is developing a sail-based maritime transporta­tion business in the North Atlantic, offering decarboniz­ed shipping that is price-stabilized due to significan­tly lower exposure to fuel prices.

We should look to the seas, especially to sustainabl­e aquacultur­e, also to feed the world. First-movers like Norwegian company Cermaq are developing facial recognitio­n technology for salmon farming to conduct biological tests on each animal, enabling targeted applicatio­ns of food and chemicals and reducing environmen­tal and economic waste.

Oceans 2050, a foundation establishe­d by the granddaugh­ter of legendary ocean explorer and conservati­onist Jacques Cousteau, focuses on advocacy for ocean abundance restoratio­n and is pioneering regenerati­ve seaweed aquacultur­e that will sell both carbon credits and a premium food product while creating jobs for vulnerable coastal and island communitie­s in 12 countries in Asia, Europe, and North and South America. This trend is not limited to fish and other seafood. Traditiona­l crops are being grown in underwater pods to conserve energy, water, and chemicals.

Purpose-built companies are being developed with the primary aim of investing in nature to make our oceans healthy and more resilient. CLS is a global company operating in 90 countries to provide high-tech fisheries management products and services, such as electronic monitoring systems.

Aquaai Corporatio­n builds robotic fish that combine real-time data, artificial intelligen­ce, and machine learning to deliver marine monitoring and compliance services. Other innovators include WIPSEA, which stands for Wildlife Process Solutions for Environmen­tal Assessment and uses drones and big data to improve marine megafauna monitoring, and the CHARM foundation that invented coral-farming robots.

The time to seize blue opportunit­ies is now

The pandemic has offered government­s around the world a chance to “build back bluer” by using the economic pause to re-imagine sustainabl­e developmen­t and reinvigora­te stimulus spending on the environmen­t. For companies considerin­g new blue opportunit­ies, the time is now to get preferenti­al access to new funds. Many are already taking advantage.

Investors such as Mirova are capitalizi­ng funds for private ocean investment­s such as the Althelia Sustainabl­e Oceans Fund at $132 million. Funding is also available to design blended publicpriv­ate blue investment­s through the global network for blended finance, Convergenc­e.

Accelerato­rs such as Katapult Ocean are investing in blue start-ups, while platforms like Investible Oceans are connecting businesses to investors. The “1000 Ocean Startups” coalition is bringing together the global ecosystem of incubators, accelerato­rs, competitio­ns, matching platforms and venture capital firms supporting start-ups for ocean impact.

The global blue economy is fast becoming a profitable, sustainabl­e reality. The question facing traditiona­l businesses now is: Will you be part of the pollution, or part of the solution?

Ingrid Van Wees is the vice-president for Finance and Risk Management of the Asian Developmen­t Bank; and Melissa Walsh is the program manager of the Ocean Finance Initiative at the ADB. The views don’t necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

 ?? SHI YU / CHINA DAILY ??
SHI YU / CHINA DAILY

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