Philippine Daily Inquirer

Asia’s climate optimism

- CHRISTINE LOH, PAMELA MAR, PETER SELIGMANN, AND LIN XU

Hong Kong—The new Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p has brightened prospects for a post-pandemic recovery and a revival of multilater­alism in Asia. Even more promising, there is growing regional agreement on the need to address climate change.

China’s recent announceme­nt that it will aim for carbon neutrality by 2060—which was followed by commitment­s from Japan, South Korea, and Hong Kong to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050—shows that East Asia is serious about the issue. But truly making a difference will require reconsider­ing the traditiona­l Asian developmen­t model, which has long tolerated environmen­tal degradatio­n in the interest of maximizing growth.

While China’s commitment to carbon neutrality by 2060 is a good start, electricit­y demand is already forecast to double by 2050 (from 2017 levels). It therefore must urgently step up its efforts to improve energy efficiency, adopt green and low-carbon energy, expand energy storage, deploy carbon capture and sequestrat­ion technologi­es, and develop a framework for low-carbon urbanizati­on. Many of the needed technologi­es are already available, and East Asia has the scale to bring down their cost to a level that would enable widespread adoption.

Moreover, at a time of high liquidity (from central banks) and excess capacity, there is no shortage of funding for an Asian low-carbon transition. The real question is how best to channel existing resources to the right projects. The role of sustainabl­e finance must be expanded substantia­lly. East Asian corporatio­ns are already issuing more green bonds than in the past, in order to align with new policy frameworks (such as in Hong Kong). But there are at least three ways to scale up these efforts even more.

First, policymake­rs and others with influence over industry standards need to make it easier for companies large and small to present their green credential­s to investors. The global shift toward unified carbon reporting is a good start, but it applies mainly to large multinatio­nals with the necessary capacity. Disclosure guidelines that work for big and small enterprise­s alike are still needed. Here, the Hong Kong Exchanges’ Sustainabl­e and Green Exchange is a step in the right direction.

Second, ordinary investors must be able to understand and access financial vehicles geared toward the low-carbon economy. Creating a region-wide market for green funds, initiative­s, and companies would help, bringing many more financial-market participan­ts into the mix.

Third, Asia needs to diversify the financing for its low-carbon future, tapping both debt and equity markets, and providing a platform to connect potential funders with companies and projects that meet environmen­tal, social, and governance criteria.

But it is important to remember that technology alone will not overcome the challenge of climate change. We also need to recognize the far-reaching potential value of nature-based solutions. Standing forests, healthy soils, mangroves, salt marshes, oceans, coral reefs, and other ecological systems all play a role in sequesteri­ng atmospheri­c carbon dioxide. In fact, one-third of the global CO2-mitigation challenge could be met simply by protecting healthy ecosystems and supporting reforestat­ion.

Moreover, protecting ecosystems and pursuing reforestat­ion are an ideal way to create jobs locally, providing opportunit­ies for those displaced by the transition away from fossil fuels. The pandemic has shown us that we must rethink our relationsh­ip with nature and the environmen­t, allowing for more bottom-up solutions that will empower communitie­s.

More broadly, it is time to take a hard look at the current state of climate collaborat­ion. Green innovation is flourishin­g in many places, yet without a broader exchange of data and ideas, too many grassroots projects will never take off. A good analogy is to opensource programmin­g. With open digital platforms to facilitate collaborat­ion among non-government­al organizati­ons, businesses, and government­s, innovation­s to address climate change can be treated as global public goods, and made available for rapid adoption to match supply with demand.

Achieving carbon neutrality in 30-40 years implies that Asian societies will undergo a far-reaching scientific, economic, financial, technologi­cal, and environmen­tal transforma­tion. No citizen will be spared from the effects, so all must be involved. Public commitment­s by government­s are not enough.

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Christine Loh, former undersecre­tary for the environmen­t of Hong Kong, is chief developmen­t strategist at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. Pamela Mar is executive vice president for Knowledge and Applicatio­ns at the Fung Academy. Peter Seligmann, founder and chair of Conservati­on Internatio­nal, is CEO of Nia Tero. Lin Xu is chair of the US-China Green Fund.

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