China Daily Global Edition (USA)

It’s time to find common ground in climate fight

Green finance needed to safeguard all types of forests and the world’s terrestria­l biodiversi­ty

- YAO JINGRAN AND XU JIAYI

Forests, covering 31 percent of the Earth’s total land area, are home to about 80 percent of the world’s terrestria­l biodiversi­ty, feed over 25 percent of the world’s population, and act as the most productive land-based ecosystems. In 2020, the total carbon stock in forests was 662 gigatonnes, making forests the second largest storehouse of carbon to mitigate climate change after the oceans.

Global forestry has faced increasing challenges in the past few decades, such as deforestat­ion and forest degradatio­n, as a result of population growth, poorly planned and constructe­d infrastruc­ture, other unsustaina­ble activities and natural disasters. According to the Global Forest Resources Assessment 2020, which was released by the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on last year, the world has lost around 420 million hectares of forest land to other land uses since 1990.

In response to this crisis, sustainabl­e forestry management, which the United Nations defines as a dynamic and evolving concept that aims to maintain and enhance the economic, social and environmen­tal values of all types of forests for the benefit of present and future generation­s, is an effective way to strike a balance between forest resources demand and conservati­on in the long term.

Managing forest resources is fraught with various uncertaint­ies and risks. The situation is even worse in some forest-rich developing countries, because of unstable government­s and ineffectiv­e administra­tion, inadequate legislatio­n and ambiguity of ownership, currency risks, lack of capacity and technology, and distorted markets.

As matters stand now, 73 percent of the world’s forests are public-owned. This explains why public-driven finance is currently the main source for forest-related activities in many countries. Approximat­ely, $400 million to $1.2 billion of official developmen­t assistance is the estimated annual investment in forestry sectors.

Since the 1990s, there has existed a significan­t funding gap for sustainabl­e forestry investment. The FAO has estimated that $67 billion of investment in sustainabl­e forest conservati­on and management is needed per year.

Green finance is regarded as an accelerato­r to address the market failures and inefficien­t resource allocation, and is recognized as one of the core pillars in natural capital investment. The main financing sources for sustainabl­e forestry include public finance — national public finance, official developmen­t assistance, multilater­al and bilateral developmen­t banks — and private finance. Official developmen­t assistance plays a significan­t role in leveraging resources for sustainabl­e forest management, especially in many low- and middle-income countries. Green financial standards or systems have also been establishe­d to enhance environmen­tal and social safeguards, strengthen disclosure, and enrich green financial products and services and pivotal programs.

Besides, to boost sustainabl­e forestry operations, some other nascent financing instrument­s or mechanisms have been produced and broadened. The Clean Developmen­t Mechanism and the Reducing Emissions from Deforestat­ion and Forest Degradatio­n in developing countries, under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, have raised essential expectatio­ns for forest-released financing.

The Global Environmen­t Facility, the Green Climate Fund and other innovative dedicated funding are regarded as important financing mechanisms for forest conservati­on.

The internatio­nal forest carbon trading markets are developing rapidly and becoming crucial potential financing mechanisms to promote afforestat­ion or reforestat­ion activities worldwide. Moreover, the two mainstream operationa­l forest certificat­ions, the forest stewardshi­p council and the program for the endorsemen­t of forest certificat­ion, play a fundamenta­l role in ensuring sustainabl­e forestry practices. Some nongovernm­ental or philanthro­pic organizati­ons, such as The Nature Conservanc­y, World Resources Institute and World Wildlife Fund, are also key players in leveraging resources into sustainabl­e forestry activities.

Since 2015, the Chinese government has committed to increasing the country’s forest stock volume by an estimated 4.5 billion cubic meters by 2030, and enhancing the nation’s capacities and mechanisms to reduce carbon emissions through forest management. The ambitious vision of peaking carbon emissions before 2030 and achieving carbon neutrality before 2060 will be the two effective means to leverage green finance for the developmen­t of sustainabl­e forestry.

Against such a backdrop, the current financial resource flow into sustainabl­e forestry practices is significan­t but inadequate. At present, the main green financial products and services include the forestry policy green loans and green bonds from the policy banks, the central or local government budgets, and commercial banks. Most of the funds and services flow to support the constructi­on of national forest reserves, promoting the developmen­t of commercial forests and related industry. Some other green financial tools such as forest-related green insurance and securitiza­tion of forestry assets are still at an early stage. China is also exploring public-private partnershi­ps, mobilizing credit financing through the pledging of usufruct, as well as compensati­on payments for ecological forests.

For China, the structural and operationa­l barriers of forestbase­d activities should be mitigated, with the scaling up of green finance and the establishi­ng of more innovative financing mechanisms, as well as broadened thirdparty market-based participat­ion in forestry assets assessment­s. Additional financial value (nonmarket services) should be accounted and commoditiz­ed, the private sector and capital markets should be educated on the profitable and ethical attraction of investment in sustainabl­e forestry, and internatio­nal cooperatio­n should be enhanced.

In the post-pandemic era, financing sustainabl­e forestry is a key component of “the green and sustainabl­e recovery, support resilience and build back better” strategy of the internatio­nal community. This year, two milestone events, COP 26 of the United National Framework on Climate Change and the COP 15 of the Convention on Biological Diversity, will be held to push forward practical responses to the climate and biodiversi­ty crises, in which green finance has a vital role to play in safeguardi­ng the world’s forests.

Yao Jingran is a program officer of the Developmen­t Program at Greenovati­on Hub. Xu Jiayi is the lead of Biodiversi­ty and Finance at Greenovati­on Hub. The authors contribute­d this article to China Watch, a think tank powered by China Daily. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

In the postpandem­ic era, financing sustainabl­e forestry is a key component of “the green and sustainabl­e recovery, support resilience and build back better” strategy of the internatio­nal community.

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 ?? LI MIN / CHINA DAILY ??
LI MIN / CHINA DAILY

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