The Japan Times - Green bonds offer hope, and risk, in Africa's climate fight

EUR -
AED 4.244563
AFN 73.954261
ALL 96.19808
AMD 435.820975
ANG 2.068501
AOA 1059.624051
ARS 1597.518135
AUD 1.674929
AWG 2.081405
AZN 1.963518
BAM 1.97127
BBD 2.326266
BDT 141.712131
BGN 1.975164
BHD 0.436231
BIF 3425.001048
BMD 1.155533
BND 1.491102
BOB 7.980631
BRL 6.001952
BSD 1.154969
BTN 109.904511
BWP 15.93304
BYN 3.434655
BYR 22648.454971
BZD 2.322829
CAD 1.607659
CDF 2640.393566
CHF 0.92385
CLF 0.027117
CLP 1070.729218
CNY 7.967059
CNH 7.958734
COP 4257.25088
CRC 537.016734
CUC 1.155533
CUP 30.621636
CVE 110.786755
CZK 24.550483
DJF 205.361016
DKK 7.472812
DOP 69.446814
DZD 153.961114
EGP 63.004535
ERN 17.333001
ETB 181.476507
FJD 2.584581
FKP 0.875939
GBP 0.873683
GEL 3.107907
GGP 0.875939
GHS 12.71075
GIP 0.875939
GMD 85.509227
GNF 10139.80616
GTQ 8.837392
GYD 241.707926
HKD 9.059439
HNL 30.734875
HRK 7.535582
HTG 151.589648
HUF 384.064673
IDR 19585.482543
ILS 3.647499
IMP 0.875939
INR 108.024521
IQD 1513.748776
IRR 1520537.534597
ISK 143.405264
JEP 0.875939
JMD 182.723985
JOD 0.819303
JPY 183.482554
KES 150.21911
KGS 101.051469
KHR 4633.689537
KMF 495.149978
KPW 1039.950807
KRW 1740.164148
KWD 0.357672
KYD 0.962453
KZT 550.278486
LAK 25363.958791
LBP 103430.761926
LKR 364.361016
LRD 212.242573
LSL 19.725255
LTL 3.41199
LVL 0.69897
LYD 7.401192
MAD 10.79557
MDL 20.454523
MGA 4827.819041
MKD 61.63945
MMK 2426.040195
MNT 4126.420078
MOP 9.326128
MRU 46.348211
MUR 54.449049
MVR 17.876734
MWK 2007.161566
MXN 20.726229
MYR 4.678801
MZN 73.896662
NAD 19.725052
NGN 1601.257711
NIO 42.443197
NOK 11.194779
NPR 175.847016
NZD 2.011898
OMR 0.444272
PAB 1.154964
PEN 4.039717
PGK 5.073108
PHP 69.786128
PKR 322.629123
PLN 4.2909
PYG 7481.715145
QAR 4.210766
RON 5.099253
RSD 117.436879
RUB 93.945797
RWF 1687.078789
SAR 4.336691
SBD 9.292843
SCR 16.243316
SDG 694.475647
SEK 10.942555
SGD 1.486131
SHP 0.866949
SLE 28.368569
SLL 24230.970494
SOS 660.389749
SRD 43.186939
STD 23917.208717
STN 25.103963
SVC 10.106357
SYP 127.750061
SZL 19.725097
THB 37.68172
TJS 11.070378
TMT 4.055922
TND 3.385265
TOP 2.782247
TRY 51.368949
TTD 7.846613
TWD 36.921606
TZS 2990.879841
UAH 50.741328
UGX 4348.142247
USD 1.155533
UYU 46.857731
UZS 14092.232731
VES 546.888371
VND 30436.750201
VUV 139.060756
WST 3.199988
XAF 661.14555
XAG 0.015378
XAU 0.000247
XCD 3.122887
XCG 2.081536
XDR 0.821529
XOF 659.23284
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.768001
ZAR 19.54588
ZMK 10401.190063
ZMW 22.077258
ZWL 372.081289
  • CMSC

    -0.4028

    21.9

    -1.84%

  • JRI

    0.3800

    12.3

    +3.09%

  • BCC

    0.9000

    75.85

    +1.19%

  • GSK

    0.9600

    55.19

    +1.74%

  • BCE

    0.0100

    25.24

    +0.04%

  • BTI

    0.2100

    58.47

    +0.36%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • RIO

    4.4700

    93.29

    +4.79%

  • CMSD

    -0.4000

    22.1

    -1.81%

  • NGG

    0.9100

    84.6

    +1.08%

  • BP

    -0.3500

    47

    -0.74%

  • RYCEF

    0.7600

    15.05

    +5.05%

  • RELX

    0.4000

    33.15

    +1.21%

  • AZN

    3.3400

    197.22

    +1.69%

  • VOD

    0.3200

    15.02

    +2.13%

Green bonds offer hope, and risk, in Africa's climate fight
Green bonds offer hope, and risk, in Africa's climate fight / Photo: Kola Sulaimon - AFP/File

Green bonds offer hope, and risk, in Africa's climate fight

It only took two days for Nigeria to raise $59 million through green bonds -- part of a funding drive for climate and environmental projects in a nation still hooked on oil.

Text size:

Africa remains a small player in the green bond market, and the debt instrument is underused -- but it is becoming a fast-growing source of funding for the world's poorest continent, which is at the forefront of climate change.

Green bonds are similar to sovereign bonds: Investors are paid interest on what is essentially a loan to the government, but in this case the money funds environmentally friendly projects.

But the continent's investment risk profile means that countries pay a high interest rate to borrow money.

Nigeria is paying 19-percent interest on the green bonds it issued earlier in June. By comparison, France is paying three-percent interest on its latest green bonds.

Nigeria's recent fundraising round is slated to put money into a slew of renewable energy, eco-friendly housing, conservation and infrastructure projects.

"Nigeria is a continental leader in the African green bond market," Lagos-based law firm Udo Udoma & Belo-Osagie told AFP in a note.

"However, to unlock the full potential of green bonds, especially in Africa, we need stronger regulatory frameworks, better project pipelines, capacity-building for issuers and enhanced investor confidence."

- Green bonds on the rise -

The continent accounted for only about $5 billion of the 2.2 trillion global green bond market in 2023, according to data from the Africa Policy Research Institute.

But that came on the back of a 125 percent increase in issuances that year and "significant growth" in the market, it said.

Nigeria was the first African state to issue sovereign green bonds, selling $30 million in 2017 and then another $41 million in 2019.

The west African nation was following an example set by Johannesburg in 2014, when the South African municipality paved the way on the continent by issuing nearly $140 million in green bonds to investors.

Since then, Kenyan developer Acorn Holdings issued east Africa's first green bonds in 2019, raising more than $40 million to finance what it called environmentally friendly student housing.

Tanzania's CRDB Bank launched its first green bonds in 2023, raising $300 million for financing renewable energy as well as infrastructure and water supply projects.

The biggest coup came last year in Ivory Coast, where $1.5 billion was raised.

Yet the continent remains underfinanced, with Nairobi-based nonprofit FSD Africa blaming "unstable macroeconomic conditions," a risky political and business environment and "a shortage of bankable green projects".

Currency depreciation and high inflation also create risks for investors. In response, governments have to offer "a risk premium to attract investors."

China and the United States, the world's two biggest polluters, dominate the green bond market as they seek ways to fund their energy transitions.

Their leadership is not surprising "given that they are carbon-intensive economies who have contributed more in the global climate crisis," said Alex Oche, an environmental law expert at Nigeria's Institute for Oil, Gas, Environment, Energy and Sustainable Development.

- Failed projects, 'greenwashing' -

Africa is responsible for just roughly four percent of global emissions that contribute to climate change.

Yet its poorer countries remain some of the least prepared to deal with the fallout of successive crises, from erratic rainfall to shifting fishing stocks, linked to rising global temperatures.

"The future of green bonds in Africa and globally is promising, but it will depend heavily on credibility, innovation and inclusive growth," said law firm Udo Udoma & Belo-Osagie.

Beyond an influx of cash, a better regulatory framework is also needed, experts said.

Razaq Fatai, a researcher for Nigerian consulting firm Vestance, studied previous projects financed by green bonds and warned that several appeared to resemble "greenwashing" -- including a reforestation project in Oyo state where "the community was not involved" in the planning.

"After a couple of years, most of the trees were dying," he said.

"If you continue to do that, continue to spend money like that, you just end up just wasting public resources, and then you have to pay interest on those debts that we encourage."

Y.Watanabe--JT