Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

‘A green transition will require trillions of dollars’

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IT’LL be a “tall order” to find the cash, but there’s hope. The shift to a low and zero carbon future will require cutting edge technologi­cal innovation alongside huge levels of investment.

The importance of the latter was hammered home during a recent panel discussion moderated by CNBC’s Steve Sedgwick.

“There’s reason for great encouragem­ent in what we’ve seen . . . [happening] in the last year,” Mark Dooley, global head of Macquarie Asset Management’s Green Investment Group, said.

Referencin­g the global situation, Dooley added: “We’ve just had our first year, in 2022, where we punched through a trillion dollars going into the energy transition — a trillion dollars.”

“Now, there are plenty of authoritie­s saying that that needs to quickly escalate to US$4 trillion, which is a dizzyingly large amount of money . . . as an annual spend.”

According to the Internatio­nal Energy Agency, clean energy investment will need to hit over US$4 trillion a year by 2030 in its Net Zero Emissions by 2050 Scenario.

Reaching this kind of figure will require a huge effort from both the public and private sector, and the stakes are high.

That’s because cutting human-made carbon dioxide emissions to net-zero by 2050 is seen as crucial when it comes to meeting the Paris Agreement’s goal of limiting global warming to “1.5°C above pre-industrial levels.”

The challenge is huge, and the UN has noted that 1.5 degrees Celsius is viewed as being “the upper limit” when it comes to avoiding the worst consequenc­es of climate change.

The IEA is not the only organisati­on highlighti­ng the vast amounts of money needed going forward.

Elsewhere, the Internatio­nal Renewable Energy Agency says cumulative investment­s need to hit US$44 trillion by 2030 if we’re to stay on a pathway to 1.5 degrees.

What it calls “transition technologi­es” would account for 80 percent, or US$35 trillion, of this.

As CNBC’s discussion progressed, Dooley broke down where he thought investment would go in the years ahead.

“It’s actually a lot of different categories of activity, drawing on lots of different sources of capital,” he explained.

“A lot of that 4 trillion is grid, is transmissi­on grid, a very large portion of it.”

“A lot of it is individual­s choosing to buy electric vehicles and taking other measures,” he later added.

“And yes, a lot of it is about big projects, the kind of thing that lies at the centre of the business that I look after.”

“It’s a tall order, but the feeling that we have, the experience we have, is that the investor appetite to be part of this transition is enormous.”

This appetite was there for both establishe­d technologi­es and newer ones, Dooley went on to argue.

“We are very much impressed by the scale of the task in front of us, but there are a lot of very encouragin­g signs that the money will be there as soon as we can produce . . . the projects.”

Among those appearing alongside Dooley was Angela Wilkinson, secretary general and CEO of the World Energy Council, a London-based organisati­on establishe­d in 1923.

“There is no way you detach the market from politics and energy — ever,” she said.

“You don’t just have geopolitic­s, you have sociopolit­ics as well . . . the local politics as well.”

Wilkinson went on to state that, realistica­lly, “we’re going to have to have a blended mix of state and markets working through this — and those are going to take very lumpy forms in different parts of the world.”

Wilkinson also spoke of a “humanising energy transition” and the importance of moving away from “narratives of fear of the future to enabling more people to see opportunit­y and benefit for themselves at every level of society.”

“We have technologi­sed this debate, we have financiali­sed this debate, but we have yet to humanise it,” she added.

“And believe me, it’s hundreds of thousands of smaller steps rather than a great big technology leap or a financial leap that’s really going to make the progress.” — CNBC

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