An end to deforestation is critical

Halting deforestation is essential to reaching the goals of the Paris Agreement, an expert panel argued at the PRI in Person conference in San Francisco.

Forest restoration is a natural way of reducing carbon emissions, yet 17 per cent of South America’s Amazon rainforest has suffered deforestation and been cleared. Scientists say the tipping point at which deforestation is irreversible is 25 per cent clearance.

If the tipping point were reached, about 60 per cent of the forest would fall into degraded savanna, they estimate, releasing more carbon into the atmosphere and destroying the climatic stability of the region. It would be irreversible because new rain forest wouldn’t be able to spring from the degraded area.

“If we want to be on the safe side, let’s stop Amazon deforestation and bring it to zero completely,” argued Carlos Nobre, Institute of Advanced Studies, University of São Paulo, and senior fellow of World Resources Institute Brazil.

The agricultural sector has an enormous global footprint, Nobre said. It takes up 40 per cent of the earth’s surface, consumes 70 per cent of water resources and pumps out greenhouse gas emissions linked to deforestation. Deforestation is running at the rate of one football pitch of clearance a second, attributed to palm, soya and cattle production, Nobre said.

The destruction of South America’s savannas is also a grave problem, he said. These mostly flat, forested plateaus are being lost to industrial-scale agriculture, particularly soya production driven by automation and shifting diets away from animal protein – despite low productivity in Amazon lands for soya and cattle.

Sponsored Content

It is not only farming that’s putting the Amazon at risk. Global warming is accentuating the problem, changing the crucial “short episode” rainfall patterns on which the forest depends and heightening the risk of fire, particularly through more lightning strikes.

“The dry seasons are becoming longer,” said Nobre, who added that unprecedented periods of drought and flood in recent years illustrated the changing climate and instability in the system.

At €486 billion ($568.5 billion) Dutch asset manager APG, the position is that combating deforestation is part of its fiduciary duty to ensure an orderly transition to a low-carbon world.

“When investors talk about climate change, they talk a lot about fossil fuels and energy, but forestry, land use, food and farming [are] a huge part of climate transition,” APG Asset Management’s Lucian Peppelenbos said.

But investing to combat deforestation and in support of sustainable land use is challenging. It involves navigating land use and country risk.

“We need to bring down the risk profile of land use,” Peppelenbos said. Nevertheless, he does note a strong underlying investment case. “Farm and timberland have strong fundamentals in the transition to a low-carbon economy that make a great investment case.”

Together with other investors, the pension fund engages with companies on sustainable palm production and is now pushing its investee companies on sustainable soya and beef production. The fund also benchmarks companies on how they are addressing deforestation, particularly how they reach out down their supply chains.

Investment opportunities in the sector include new funds such as Amsterdam-based SAIL Ventures’ &Green fund, which invests directly in sustainable land use. It provides long-term stable capital that seeks a double bottom line of zero deforestation and a financial return from commodity production.

“Investors like how increased engagement on the environmental side reduces asset risk,” Sail Ventures CIO Johnny Brom said. “The &Green funds prove that commodity supply chains can be delinked from deforestation.”

Dutch agribusiness Bunge has a zero-deforestation commitment across its supply chain.

“We have to meet our commitments and apply policy regardless of complexity on the ground,” said Stewart Lindsay, vice-president, global corporate affairs, at Bunge, which operates in 40 countries.

Technology is allowing the company to monitor deforestation in new ways, access new suppliers and increase supply-chain transparency.

“We are spending more time doing independent satellite monitoring of farms where we buy palm oil; it gives us a closer independent look at where we are buying to monitor changes on the ground.”

This is allowing the company to integrate deforestation planning into its investment strategy, making decisions based on low environment risk and high agricultural return.

In another initiative to help combat deforestation, the company is offering 10-year finance to farmers in its supply chain. Lindsay observed that just because palm production is not certified doesn’t mean it isn’t sustainable and cited the need to increase downstream – or consumer – demand for certified palm.

“It is a premium product. If that demand doesn’t go up for certified products, [we] will have to maintain commitment in different ways.”[vc_subscription_cta s_cta_text=”Sign up to our weekly newsletter for regular news flashes and industry insights.” text_color=”#0c0c0c” bg_color=”” button_url=”/subscribe/” button_text=”Subscribe” btn_color=”” btn_bg_color=”#c0091f”]

Leave a Comment

How the Future Fund built a TPA culture that scales

How the Future Fund built a TPA culture that scales

The total portfolio approach has allowed Australia’s sovereign wealth fund to capture the themes that will power markets and economies for decades to come, said director of thought leadership Craig Thorburn – but that doesn’t mean it’s not hard to scale.

Sort content by

Investors unpack regime-based portfolio thinking 

Funds are operating in an extraordinary environment, with Scott Chan, chief investment officer of CalSTRS, saying he has never witnessed so many “large shifts stacked on top of the other” in his investment career. Amid the change, investors are increasingly shifting to a scenario and regime-based asset allocation.  

AI investors face post-Moore’s Law reality

Mark Horowitz, a leading computer scientist and electrical engineer at Stanford University, has declared that Moore’s Law is “basically over”, which will have significant ramifications for artificial intelligence investors who are counting on more computing power to feed into more complex models.  

Public-private partnerships key to fixing US infrastructure

The size of the current infrastructure investment gap and the speed at which it is widening mean there is both a desire and a need for more public-private partnerships to unlock funding. Investors say that collaboration with local governments and raising public awareness of private investment benefits are crucial. 

Federal backing vital for US innovation: Stanford president 

Stanford president Jonathan Levin said the university’s top priority is maintaining the partnership with the federal government while safeguarding its operational freedom, as the institution balances financial reliance on Washington and political scrutiny from the Trump administration. 

Debt beats equity in data centre boom as scarce capital lifts credit yields

Asset owners continue to weigh up the shifting risk-return attributes of the booming data centre sector including deal structures, refinancing, energy requirements, and the future of AI.

Why CalPERS doesn’t want to miss the climate revolution

If CalPERS had put more money into the Silicon Valley companies in its own backyard earlier it might be fully funded by now, jokes its sustainable investment head. But it won’t miss the same opportunities in climate investing.

Previous