NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

A quarter of Africa’s GDP is dependent on nature, it must be managed responsibl­y

- Jean-Paul Adam/Mark Napier

“WE are all asset managers,” writes Partha Dasgupta in his seminal study on the economics of biodiversi­ty. “Whether as farmers or fishermen, foresters or miners, households or companies, government­s or communitie­s,” we all influence the store of value held in our most precious asset — the natural world around us.

We depend on nature for food and water, for our health, and also for our economic wellbeing. Every business depends on resources drawn from nature, such as crops, fish, timber, fibre, or rare earth elements, or on the stability of ecosystems.

Often we only see this when those ecosystems are upset such as when over-extraction from natural water sources causes drought or unsustaina­ble agricultur­al practices lead to soil degradatio­n and ultimately to food shortages.

While our attention is focused on our warming planet, we must recognise that the climate crisis and nature-loss are inextricab­ly linked. All paths to net zero require the large-scale removal of carbon from the atmosphere and the only affordable and immediatel­y available methods of doing this are in nature.

Nowhere is this interdepen­dency more clear than in Africa, which is among the regions of the world most vulnerable to climate change and most dependent on nature. With almost a quarter of its GDP dependent on nature, every developmen­t pathway for the continent relies on its responsibl­e management.

But, between 1970 and 2016, the stock of natural capital in African countries fell on average by 65%, driven largely by land-use change. Almost three million hectares of rainforest­s in Africa are lost each year, resulting in soil degradatio­n and unstable weather patterns, while drought and soil erosion have degraded 65% of its rangelands. Africa’s reliance on nature is a source of vulnerabil­ity, but potentiall­y also of competitiv­e advantage.

Consider, for instance, that every US$1 invested in marine protected areas in Senegal and Tanzania generates more than US$5 000 in economic value, wetland conservati­on in South Africa returns US$200, while agricultur­al land remediatio­n in Uganda delivers US$230.

What causes an economy to choose between destructio­n and regenerati­on, risk and opportunit­y, is its capacity and willingnes­s to properly value nature. This begins with the financial sector.

Between now and 2030, there are US$10 trillion of business opportunit­ies up for grabs by investing in nature worldwide. But, to capture this potential, US$2,7 trillion of finance needs to be redirected to nature-positive business opportunit­ies. This may seem a huge ask, but financial institutio­ns with US$130 trillion in assets have already made similar climate change commitment­s through the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero.

There is simply no path to protecting and restoring nature without mobilising the huge reserves of private capital controlled by the financial sector. But these institutio­ns need better quantitati­ve data on their exposure to nature-related risks to make targeted decisions about their portfolios.

At a global level, the taskforce for nature-related financial disclosure­s (TNFD) has recently been set up to respond to this challenge and create a harmonised framework for assessing and reporting these risks. If the TNFD is to work, it needs to avoid the pitfalls of standard-setting processes in the past, steer clear of an approach that only works for developed nations, and reflect the specific conditions of operating in regions like Africa.

Amid global efforts to retool finance in favour of nature, African nations have a unique opportunit­y to not only contribute, but to lead. COP27, later this year, is Africa’s COP where this link between prosperity and nature will be at the heart of building resilience to climate change and to building sustainabl­e livelihood­s.

But, first, we need coordinati­on across financial institutio­ns to get the right data to unlock investment­s. That is why the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA) and the financial sector developmen­t agency FSD Africa have joined together to launch the African Natural Capital Alliance (ANCA).

Led by some of Africa’s leading financial institutio­ns and partnered with the TNFD, the ANCA will help financial institutio­ns, finance ministries and regulators manage the risks and capture the opportunit­ies tied to Africa’s natural capital.

Over the coming months, the alliance will work with financial institutio­ns operating across the continent to help them better understand their exposure to nature-related risks and opportunit­ies. This includes testing the TNFD’s draft framework among a group of pioneering members. These African financial institutio­ns will share data and learnings from their pilots, and so contribute to shaping this crucial standard. ● This article first appeared in the Mail & Guardian

●Jean-Paul Adam is the director of technology, climate change and natural resources at the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa in Addis Ababa and Mark Napier is the chief executive of the non-profit, FSD Africa, in Nairobi

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