CT Online Desk
More than 130 world leaders take
centerstage as they address the United Nations climate conference in
The private sector can no longer
be on the periphery of energy transition efforts, Commonwealth
Secretary-General Patricia Scotland has insisted on the sidelines of the UN
Climate Change Conference.
Speaking at the Business
Philanthropy Climate Forum — a first-of-its-kind event held alongside COP28 in
The event brought together over
1,300 CEOs and philanthropists, as well as 250 foundation heads from 55
countries, with the aim of facilitating a paradigm shift toward collaborative,
action-oriented participation.
Addressing the forum,
“The private sector is exposed to
the impacts, and it is central to the solution, not just through the provision
of capital, but through your capacity to innovate.”
In the inaugural year of the
global stocktake, it has become evident at this COP that, despite ongoing
global efforts to offset emissions, the gap between current progress and
necessary benchmarks continues to widen, according to
In order to meet the ambitious
target of achieving net zero, an estimated $4 trillion is needed each year
until 2030. This includes an unprecedented investment required for deploying
the vital technology essential to accelerate the energy transition, as outlined
by the secretary-general.
In 2021, climate finance flow
amounted to $630 billion, just a sixth of the required amount, emphasized
She added, “We cannot fill this
gap without the private sector … without accessing the right private sector support
potential to unlock transformational investment in mitigation and adaptation,
especially for small, vulnerable, and developing countries.”
Scotland emphasized the necessity
of collaborative efforts to create the right environment to enable these
investments, addressing upfront costs, long time horizons, and the absence of
data — factors that can make a crucial difference and fulfill the required
conditions.
The notion that the private
sector is independent of the effects of climate change is not one that is
rooted in truth, Anil Soni, CEO of the World Health Organization Foundation,
said while speaking on a panel at the forum.
He emphasized the cascading
effects of natural disasters and severe weather events, which ultimately
disrupt supply chains and affect businesses.
Soni cited the cholera outbreak
in
“Because of all of that, you see
climate change in practice through health effects; you see it in conflict, and
you see it in your business returns. Businesses should be motivated because,
you know, this is going to affect your supply chain, and you know what’s going
to affect your customers,” he explained.
Speaking at the forum, Brian
Moynihan, CEO of Bank of America, reaffirmed that the private sector is the
necessary piece needed to bridge the gap. He deemed the energy transition a
business and operational challenge that the private sector must deploy its
talent, capabilities, and money to overcome.
Moynihan emphasized that the
public sector cannot achieve this massive undertaking alone.
He stated, “They (the public
sector) don’t have the money and the talent that’s in this room, represented by
all of you. So, we’ve got 48 hours to get to work. Let’s take action; let’s
make progress.”
As one of the key private sector
players at the forum, Amazon’s Chief Sustainability Officer Kara Hurst
highlighted the company’s shift in investments toward companies that can
develop new technologies for achieving net-zero goals.
Amazon, for the third consecutive
year, held the position of the largest corporate purchaser of renewables
globally, with a 23 gigawatt portfolio,
Through the BPCF, the company
aims to “share how we’re doing this, and we want our supply chains to be
involved in that as well. So, there’s a lot of work to do collaboratively in
these areas, and a lot that I think that we can do together and collectively.”
During his inaugural address,
Jafar Badr, chairman of the BPCF, stressed that governments, businesses and
philanthropists cannot continue to operate in silos, adding that the private
sector must fulfill its crucial role in ensuring a just transition.
Referring to the breadth of
nationalities and organizations at the event, Jafar said: “This unprecedented
scale and diversity sends a clear and powerful signal that the private sector
is ready to engage. And in doing so, business and philanthropy will become the
connective tissue between COP presidencies.”
He added: “This powerful
partnership can facilitate consistent progress towards Net Zero, no matter
which way the political winds are blowing in capitals around the world.”
The call for more private sector
involvement was echoed by the head of the Financial Services Regulatory
Authority at Abu Dhabi Global Markets, Emmanuel Givanakis.
Speaking at the forum, the CEO
insisted that regulators need to show more flexibility to adapt to the evolving
landscape of sustainable finance.
“The public sector can’t do
everything, it's gotta be a combination of both. We are all in this together,
this great thing that we are going through is something we’re all having to
tackle – we can’t ignore it anymore,” Givanakis said.
“Policymakers need to facilitate
better governance around transition, seeing companies start to think about
transition as part of their journey going forward,” he added.
Givanakis praised the recent
actions of the sustainable finance working group in the UAE, which has come out
with a set of high-level principles encouraging boards to deal with financial
risk around transition and climate change.
In March last year, ADGM built
the world’s first regulated carbon trading exchange and clearing house in
partnership with the global greenhouse house gas company, AirCarbon Exchange.
“That framework in essence, took
carbon as a carbon-offsets and created them in what we call environmental
instruments, and that's just part of the journey, and carbon markets in
themselves are not the solution to transition alone. They're just one segment,”
Givanakis said.
Another critical area of emphasis
in Givanakis’s agenda involves bonds and sustainably linked instruments,
underscoring the importance of the finance industry directing capital to the
right places, whether in the southern or northern hemisphere, to address global
climate challenges.
Referring to forecasts by the
International Energy Agency on the evolving landscape of energy sources,
particularly focusing on solar and wind energy, Shemara Wikramanayake, CEO of
financial services group
However, she added: “There are
intermittent sources of energy, and the transition journey is a meandering one,
not just for those in finance, but in the real economy.”
Additionally, Wikramanayake
provided an example in the shipping industry, illustrating how a shift from
liquefied natural gas to methanol has proven successful in reducing emissions.
“We have now 200 ships and
shipyard being developed and running on methanol instead of LNG because human
innovation and technology bring costs down,” she said.
On the note of calling people to
action, Givanakis concluded his statements by encouraging open-mindedness and
innovation in addressing challenges, particularly emphasizing that existing solutions
may not be the only answer.
“Don't think that the only solutions are the ones that we already have. If we put our minds together we can solve a lot of problems, and major ones like climate change,” he said.