When it comes to helping the world transition to a low-carbon future, developing nations are in a unique position to lead—but they can’t do it alone. Investments are needed. Luckily, the opportunities are promising for climate-savvy investors and companies with operations in the developing world.
In developing countries, low-carbon investments, such as those in energy-efficiency upgrades and low-carbon transportation, can open new markets for clean technologies and sustainable products while reducing pollution in local communities, ensuring energy and food independence by supporting local and distributed sources of power and agriculture, and alleviating poverty by providing new job opportunities. Many countries are already taking advantage of these opportunities. Ethiopia, for example, is using a green growth strategy to eradicate poverty and address climate change. To enhance these opportunities, global companies and investors can play a key role.
There are four reasons why global companies should consider investments in the developing world to mitigate climate change:
- Government spending on climate is on the rise. In anticipation of new policy priorities that could be set at the United Nations Conference of Parties in Paris in 2015, the international community is poised to invest billions of dollars in clean energy, much of it in developing nations. During the UN Climate Summit 2014 in New York, leaders announced plans to invest more than US$200 billion to finance clean energy and support resilience among vulnerable nations. In its new “Better Growth, Better Climate” report, the Global Commission on the Economy and Climate calls for governments to triple their investments in clean energy research and development. The international community also is increasing financial innovations such as green bonds, feed-in tariffs, and risk-sharing instruments.
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In developing countries, low-carbon investments, such as those in energy-efficiency upgrades and low-carbon transportation, can open new markets for clean technologies and sustainable products while reducing pollution in local communities, ensuring energy and food independence by supporting local and distributed sources of power and agriculture, and alleviating poverty by providing new job opportunities.
- Investments in sustainable infrastructure are a relative bargain. It is easier to build new low-carbon infrastructure than it is to transform fossil-fuel-dependent systems. As vulnerable populations develop, there is an opportunity for them to shape their energy future with sustainable technologies such as electric vehicles and distributed renewable energy generation. The United States and Europe are now dealing with the expensive challenge of upgrading their electricity grids, while the Indian state of Gujarat, with its less centralized power generation, has been able to spur rapid renewable energy development.
- There’s less cultural resistance in the developing world when it comes to low-carbon solutions. Many developing nations are more open to low-carbon transportation, historically relying more on affordable options such as walking, cycling, animal power, ride-sharing, and transit services. In these regions, there is less of a need to overcome cultural resistance that presents hurdles in developed countries like the United States and Australia, where urban sprawl and dependence on fossil fuel-based transportation are cultural norms. Even in China, where bicycles and pedestrians traditionally dominated city landscapes, a culture of car-dependent urbanites has emerged—with car ownership up twentyfold in the past decade. Investors can counteract this trend in China and in other developing nations by marketing low-carbon transportation options, which can also open up markets for clean technologies and catalyze a highly efficient mobility system that will increase the countries’ economic productivity.
Despite these opportunities, investments in developing nations can be complex. To lower risk and ensure community support, it is important for companies to engage in an inclusive and robust stakeholder process that responds to community development needs and sustainable growth priorities. Hitachi did this successfully in its global business strategy, which emphasized extensive stakeholder input to help address global sustainability challenges such as energy use, urban development, health care, and water scarcity in emerging markets such as Brazil, China, and Indonesia.
There is a strong case for the business community to focus on the developing world when it comes to investments in low-carbon initiatives. Doing so will not only serve the companies’ business interests, but also will help pave the way to the “cleaner, greener, more prosperous future for all” that UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon talked about in his opening day remarks for New York’s Climate Week 2014. But, as Ban also pointed out, “We do not have any time to waste now.”
Sekita Grant is an associate, advisory services, BSR. This article was originally published on Ensia.com.