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Data mapping, Materiality assessment

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Bloomberg Launches Data Mapping, Materiality Assessment Tool

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Bloomberg has launched data mapping, materiality assessment tool.

The tool will enable investors to assess the potential impact of a company’s operations on UNSDGs.

How the tool functions?

Bloomberg has integrated the UN Environmental Programme Finance Initiative’s Sector Impact Map into its ESG data, addressing investor demand for objective SDG-related data. The map identifies over 500 sectoral activities and 38 impact topics and the SDGs, and assesses their impact on the environment.

Bloomberg’s SDG Impact assessments offer investors market insights for corporate engagement and security selection, enabling benchmarking and fund classification, and can complement evolving regulatory reporting standards and legislative frameworks. The tool is available on the Bloomberg Terminal and via Bloomberg Data License for enterprise use.

The market for impact investing surpassed $1 trillion in assets worldwide in 2021, according to the Global Impact Investing Network. Yet, the UN estimates the funding gap to achieve the SDGs by 2030 at $2.5-3 trillion per year for developing countries (UN Sustainable Development Group). The new data mapping and materiality assessment will provide more clarity for investors seeking to direct capital towards sustainable assets and assess the alignment of private sector activity with the SDGs.

Quotes:

“UNEP FI works with the finance industry to mainstream impact analysis and management in business and finance, to help close the SDG funding gap. We have developed a range of impact management tools and resources across the three pillars of sustainable development and across economic sectors and activities, mapping related negative and positive impacts,” said Careen Abb, SDGs and Impact Lead at UNEP FI. “We are delighted the available resources are being used to help to mainstream impact management, and to accelerate the transition to an economy that helps deliver the SDGs.”

“Bloomberg’s ESG data, research and analytics help clients mitigate risk and comply with new and emerging regulatory requirements, and pursue investments aligned with their sustainability commitments,” said Patricia Torres, Global Head, Sustainable Finance Solutions, Bloomberg.


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LDN targets

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Restore 1.5 Billion Hectares of Degraded Land to Meet LDN Targets

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The world is uniting to accelerate initiatives in a bid to meet the UN Sustainable Development Goals’ LDN targets 2030 deadline.

The UN Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) has warned that to meet the Sustainable Development Goals’ LDN targets by 2030, 1.5 billion hectares of degraded land must be restored.

Alternatively, halting any new land degradation and accelerating existing commitments to restore 1 billion hectares can surpass the LDN target.

In a promising commitment, the report states that 109 countries have set voluntary Land Degradation Neutrality Target Setting Programme (LDN TSP) targets for 2030. 21 more countries are in the process of doing the same.

Between 2016 to 2019, sources globally donated $5 billion to combat desertification, land degradation, and drought. The initiative helped 124 countries tackle issues like drought, land degradation, and desertification, facilitating their TDN goal.

Caution:

The UNCCD report notes that the world has lost productive and healthy land due to degradation, and the rate is accelerating.

According to the report, 100 million hectares of arable land have been lost to degradation every year. Between 2015 and 2019, Eastern and Central Asia, Latin America, and the Caribbean saw the worst impact.

Based on national data compiled from 126 countries, the researchers asserted that the loss was twice the size of Greenland.

The impact:

Botswana has reduced land degradation in sub-Saharan Africa from 36% to 17%. The sub-Saharan African region is utilizing 45.3 million hectares for neutrality, including restoration and preventative measures. The country has identified 1.42 million hectares as bright spot areas, which have been restored using appropriate remediation techniques.

Between 2015 and 2019, the Dominican Republic experienced a decrease in its percentage of degraded land from 49% to 31%. Restoration work is ongoing on 240,000 hectares in the Yaque del Norte River basin and cocoa-producing regions of San Francisco de Macoris province.

Uzbekistan, in Central Asia, exhibited the highest degraded land percentage (26.1%). The drying up of the Aral Sea has led to the degradation of three million hectares of land in Uzbekistan. It planted saxaul on 1.6 million hectares between 2018 and 2022 to mitigate dust and salt emissions from the Aral Sea’s drained bottom.

Quotes:

Barron Orr, Chief Scientist, UNCCD, said, “Although global trends are going in the wrong direction, it is still possible to not only meet but exceed land degradation neutrality goals. This can be done by stopping further degradation while accelerating efforts on existing commitments to restore one billion hectares of land by 2030 with funding and action hand-in-hand.”

Ibrahim Thiaw, Executive Secretary UNCCD, said, “… we are seeing some bright spots. Countries are effectively tackling desertification, land degradation, and drought. As we gather in Uzbekistan next month, the message is clear: land degradation demands immediate attention.”

The report coincides with the 21st session of the Committee for the Review of the Implementation of the Convention scheduled to meet in Samarkand, Uzbekistan, from November 13–17, 2023.


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Forests and carbon emissions: the tide will turn

Sonal Desai


Our forests are getting the global attention they have always deserved.

Recent developments:

European Union on June 29, 2023, introduced a regulation on deforestation-free products. In a press release, the EU said, “The main driver of these processes is the expansion of agricultural land that is linked to the production of commodities like soy, beef, palm oil, wood, cocoa, coffee, rubber and some of their derived products, such as leather, chocolate, tyres, or furniture. As a major economy and consumer of these commodities linked to deforestation and forest degradation, the EU is partly responsible for this problem and it wants to lead the way to solving it.”

How this translates into a real-world scenario is this: operators trading these commodities in the EU market must have a certificate or legal documents to prove that the products do not originate from recently deforested land or have contributed to forest degradation.

Advantage or disadvantage?

Even as the world deliberates on the new developments and a concentrated effort to re-forest the deforested areas and stop further damage. When the European Union introduced a regulation on deforestation-free products, back home some observers believed that India will be in an advantageous position as the country has clearly demarcated agricultural and forest land.

However, Nagaraj Prakasam, author of the book, Back to Bharat—In search of a sustainable future, and a farmer, cautioned that it is time to ascribe value in modern and scientific terms to much that we have considered old or traditional or tribal. Compare, for instance, the carbon footprint of a farmer living in a village of thatched-roof houses whose family weaves textiles to someone living in Bengaluru, New York or London.

“Obviously, he is more considerate about the future than his counterparts elsewhere, but we call him poor instead of celebrating his simplicity and providing him carbon credits. We have become focused on encouraging carbon fixers, without appreciating or rewarding the carbon preventers. While India’s GDP, totalling $3.6 trillion, is one-eighth that of the US whose GDP is $25 trillion (IMF 2022), per capita carbon emission in the US is 6.9 times more than that in India. If carbon is the new gold, then who is rich? India’s per capita greenhouse gases (GHG) emissions, at 2.7 tonnes of CO2, are significantly lower than the global average (6.6 tonnes), the US’s (18.4 tonnes), or China’s (8.2 tonnes), a fact we need to recognize urgently,” Mr Prakasam noted.

The background:

Forests that have traditionally contributed a large part of the green cover on Planet Earth, are slowly and gradually diminishing.

The reasons are aplenty: increased population, rapid urbanization, climate change, migration, industrial agriculture, timber logging, mining, expansion and infrastructure, and draught among others. The impact is just not on the economy, but wildlife, natural conversation and bio-diversity as well as human beings—the entire extended value chain.

Data and analysis:

According to Our World in Data, globally we deforest around ten million hectares of forest every year. That’s an area the size of Portugal every year. Around half of this deforestation is offset by regrowing forests, so overall we lose around five million hectares each year. Nearly all – 95% – of this deforestation occurs in the tropics.

The London School of Economics and political science in a paper on the scale of deforestation and its role in climate change noted that land use change, principally deforestation, contributes 12–20% of global greenhouse gas emissions. Forest degradation (changes that negatively affect a forest’s structure or function but that do not decrease its area), and the destruction of tropical peatlands, also contribute to these emissions. As a result of deforestation and degradation, some tropical forests now emit more carbon than they capture, turning them from a carbon ‘sink’ into a carbon source.

While the regulators are tightening compliance standards and introducing or upgrading frameworks at regular intervals to combat climate change and mitigate risk, the focus on forests (our green cover) has gained prominence in the last few years.

The roadmap:

The good news is that the global forums effectively led by the UN and EU, WB, ADB, and back home, the GoI are making efforts to salvage the natural resource.

Take for example, the UN’s SDG 15 which aims to protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems, sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, and halt and reverse land degradation and halt biodiversity loss.

In lieu of the same, experts recently deliberated on methods to achieve global forest goals and ways to enhance sustainable forest management at an event on United Nations Forum on Forests.

The initiative gained significance as the UN Forum for Forests has pegged the year 2023 as a pivotal year for the United Nations Strategic Plan on Forests and the 2030 Agenda on Sustainable Development. Contextually, it has revealed specific forest-based actions that address interconnections and advance the fight against climate change for sustainable development.

Similarly, the European Union prepared the world with the introduction of a regulation on deforestation-free products.

Likewise, the Lok Sabha (lower house of the Parliament in India) has passed the Forest (Conservation) Amendment Bill 2023, last week. While more details and clarity are awaited, I believe that the bill will enable permission to use or clear the forest land for security installations. It is true that the India’s forest cover is increasing. Going by that yardstick, the Indian agricultural segment has a wider market opening up globally.

These are some of the recent policy developments in the two regions. We anticipate that more will follow in the future.


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UNSDG 6, Clean Water and Sanitation

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L&T Bags Water & Effluent Treatment Contracts from UP

Sonal Desai


Very soon, around 50 lakh citizens from the districts of Ballia and Firozabad in Uttar Pradesh will get access to safe and potable drinking water.

The Water & Effluent Treatment Business of L&T Construction has secured orders from the State Water & Sanitation Mission to develop a water supply scheme for the Hanumanganj multi-group of villages in the state.

The project is part of a larger scheme of water supply projects planned by the State Government with an objective to provide piped drinking water to every household (under Jal Jeevan Mission).

The scope of the projects include design and construction of 1 intake structure, 1 water treatment plant of capacity 148 MLD, transmission and distribution pipelines of 5534 Kms, 13 clear water reservoirs of aggregate capacity 25 ML, 504 overhead service reservoirs of aggregate capacity 115.4 ML, 13 pumphouses, electromechanical & instrumentation works and 10 years operation & maintenance. The automation aspect measurement of input & output water quantity and quality through SCADA and other instrumentation works, L&T Construction said in a statement.

With the project, the state government has box ticked Goal 6 of the UNSDGs (Ensure access to water and sanitation for all) which is aimed to offer access to safe water, sanitation and hygiene–the most basic human need for health and well-being.

In yet another unrelated development, L&T Construction has also secured an order from the National Thermal Power Corporation (NTPC) for make-up water system & ash disposal cum ash water recirculation system (AWRS) package at Talcher. The scope of work includes design, engineering, supply, construction, erection, and testing & commissioning as a part of NTPC’s expansion plan of Talcher Thermal Power Plant.

The make-up water system is a critical component for efficient power plant operations, ensuring continuous and reliable water supply. The Ash Disposal cum AWRS Package is equally important, providing a robust and sustainable solution for managing and disposing of ash generated during the power generation process.


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GCF, CPF partner for sustainable forests

Sonal Desai


As the world works to reverse/restrict the harmful impact of deforestation, the Collaborative Partnership on Forests (CPF) has signed a new collaboration partnership.

The Green Climate Fund (GCF), one of the world’s largest providers of forest finance, has joined the CPF in a bid to end deforestation and ensure the sustainable management of forests and trees.

The collaboration comes at an opportune time when the world is rapidly being depleted of its forest cover. The impact is not just on the wildlife and local indigenous people. The negative outreach spans across continents as a result of climate change and global warming. Tropical deforestation and unsustainable forest management contribute nearly 13 percent of the annual global net carbon emissions. Forest fires, heatwaves, melting glaciers, and rising sea levels bear testimony to the neglect or unscrupulous use of their resources. Forest destruction will also have a bearing on the Paris Agreement and the UNSDGs.

The partnership is the driving force for the implementation of the international forest agenda, providing technical and policy guidance and spearheading a coherent effort to meet global forest goals, GCP said in a press release.

“Sustainable forest and land use management are essential to avert catastrophic climate change, preserve biodiversity and create new sources of livelihoods. GCF is delighted to be joining the Collaborative Partnership on Forests to strengthen and deepen our engagement in this critical area. There are many barriers to financing forest conservation, sustainable use,d restoration efforts. GCF supports its partners in overcoming these barriers through policy development and de-risking the first application of new climate solutions to establish a successful track record and catalyze finance at scale,” said Yannick Glemarec, Executive Director of the Green Climate Fund.


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