How the Financial Sector can Implement Climate Action in Africa
Dr. Richard Munang
Multiple Award-Winning Environmental Thought Leader | Strategic and Innovative Leadership| Climate Change & Sustainable Development Expert | Author of "Mindset Change"|. All opinions expressed are my own.
“Rain does not fall on one roof alone.” Quips an African proverb. The changing climate impacts every country, person, and sector equally. It presents both risks and opportunities, and financial sectors are not exempt from these risks and opportunities.
Climate change ?is already shrinking Africa’s economies, and in less than 8 years, the continent's gross domestic product will?shrink ?by 15%. These losses manifest through lost productivity and damage to key economic sectors – like agriculture, infrastructure, and energy. In financing such sectors, financial institutions should demand that certain actors prioritise climate-resilient actions that will buffer against climate change risk.
For example, when it comes to?agriculture , climate change threatens to lower yields of key staples by up to 40%. Ecosystem-based adaptation approaches have been proven to buffer against climate-induced losses and increase yields by up to 128%. A good example is the Za? or Tassa technique, a traditional soil conservation approach that has been?proven ?to increase yields by up to 500%. Alternatively, climate change threatens to lower water available for agriculture by up to 40%. Climate-resilient solutions like solar irrigation will go a long way in addressing water security issues. Solar irrigation has been?proven ?to increase yields by up to 100%, water savings by 40 to 80%, and incomes by up to 80%.
Tapping into an untapped constituency
This cannot be effectively done without tapping into the informal sector players, who are the biggest constituency in Africa’s economies. Africa’s informal sector employs over?80% of the population , meaning these bear the brunt of climate change risk. At the same time, they are least served by formal financial systems because they are perceived as high risk. Up to?90% of these informal sector actors ?trade in cash and are outside formal financial systems in?Africa .
There, however, exists an?over $300 billion ?lending gap in the informal sector that represents an opportunity for formal financers but which remains untapped because of the perceived high risk of this informal sector.
Financers should target financing climate-resilient solutions such as nature-based solutions among these informal sector actors to not only climate-proof this significant at-risk constituency but also tap opportunities from their productivity. To diversify risk, formal financing can be channelled through communal cooperatives, which are low-risk structures that are accessible and already highly used by these informal actors.
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Tapping into non-traditional sources of financial inflows
Diaspora remittances in Africa have been a steady source of inflows and will be?between ?$46 to $65 billion in 2022. These remittances are to ordinary citizens, mostly in the informal sector. Banks can start considering account holders who are stable recipients of such remittances and provide credit/loan products based on clients' remittance flows and account balances. Such loans could be tied to adaptation and entrepreneurial exploits to finance the acquisition of climate action solutions that can enhance their productivity – such as the solar dryers, for instance, to enable climate-proofed value addition.
Policy recommendations
Provision of tax incentives like zero-rating of equipment to develop climate action solutions that are needed at the informal sector level where most of the population is engaged. An example is zero-rating materials and components needed to develop solar dryers or zero-rating solar irrigation solutions that can increase yields by up to 100% and incomes by up to 80%.
Developing de-risking tools to incentivize local accessible financing structures of communal cooperatives. Africa collects up to $500 billion in taxes. Part of this is the $3 billion spent annually for socially driven resilience-building activities.
Instead of direct social expenditures, part of this can be used by central banks as security to indemnify local financing structures of communal cooperatives and micro-finance institutions so they can offer affordable financing for informal sector players engaged in developing the climate action solutions needed by the informal sector.
Leveraging school curriculum to inculcate climate action from an enterprise dimension. Entrepreneurship curriculum at all levels of learning needs to integrate a component of how climate actions can become investment and entrepreneurship opportunities. Curriculums also need to prioritise enabling learners to find purpose and develop a passion for climate action.
Data for policy coherence. Data from climate action solutions can inform relevant policy incentives and catalyze further uptake of climate actions. Climate action solutions of solar dryers have been shown to cut postharvest losses, which is an agriculture function, and create enterprise opportunities for youth and the informal sector, which is a planning function. This data can be used to inform policy incentives in these sectors that enable the further upscaling of these climate action solutions of solar dryers as tools to achieve these sectorial priorities.
CEO. Jyoti Ventures
2 年Thanks for sharing Sir Dr. Richard Munang Yes. But. Unorganized sector is really a #hazardous sector. Sir Yogesh Hindustani spent almost 2 years in Mumbai for #sustainability #recycling Most of the time at only 3 suburbs. 1. Vasaai 2. Nalasopara. 3. Virar. What he saw he says was nauseating. Had not even imagined the extent of Hazard. From September 2015 to Mid February 2017. Says E-waste was being handled very shabbily. Sir says E-WASTE IS ONLY FOR ORGANIZED SECTOR. The 2nd M of MSME. Engineering Plastics Recycling for the S of MSME. Only Commodity Plastics for the 1st M of MSME. This #segmentation #organization #management is very important. I also believe that above 3 should be given top priority. Thanks Dr. Richard Munang Berssabeh Gete Dominique CIANTAR Women Centre For Self Empowerment and development MSME Business Forum India Pamela Hoekstra Shainaz Mohammed (SHE/HER) H.E. Dr. Edna Joyce (Fatima) Santos, MD,DPBO,SBO
Energy/Climate Advisor @ UNEP | climate finance | sustainable finance | public policy
2 年in some countries like Nigeria with 80% mobile phone penetration, large chunk of the informal sector players have access to mobile phones which is another derisking tool to ensure their financial inclusion..the cooperative model should be explored in solution pooling, where players can have joint access to common solutions that add value to their activities or produce. other opportunities include supporting informal sector players such as smallholder farmers to earn quality carbon credit from their vast acreage of land through sustainable agricultural land-use practices..revenue from carbon credit could inturn serve as subsidy for investment in the sector...
Projects Developer|| Forest Landscape Restoration || Climate-Smart Agriculture || Sustainability Consultant || Community Development || Improved Cookstoves & Livelihoods || Project Management||
2 年Thanks
Corporate and Marketing Communication Specialist
2 年Interesting!