How forgiving debt could help save Earth

Al Jazeera

How forgiving debt could help save Earth

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New report suggests forgiving the debts of some of the worlds poorest countries could help them fight climate change. In Kenya, the coronavirus pandemic has dried up ecotourism, cutting off sources of funding that help protect wildlife and pay an income to communities working to preserve nature. But forgiving a share of Kenyas hefty foreign debt, in exchange for the government devoting those resources to fighting climate change threats and biodiversity loss, could tackle several big problems at once, researchers said on Tuesday. As part of pandemic economic rescue packages, governments have an opportunity to address simultaneously the crises of debt, climate and biodiversity destruction, researchers from the London-based International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED) wrote in a report. It ranks countries that would benefit most from such debt swaps based on their vulnerability to climate change, richness of biodiversity, indebtedness and creditworthiness. At the top of the list are Cape Verde an island nation off the coast of West Africa Vietnam, Honduras, Kenya, Nicaragua and Papua New Guinea. In Vietnam, for example, swapping debt for nature and climate protection could help farmers in the Mekong Delta a major food-growing area at high risk of sea level rise switch to salt-tolerant crop varieties, said the reports co-author Paul Steele. Opening up budget space could also expand a government effort that pays farmers, particularly in the poorest indigenous communities, to plant trees and conserve forests, he said. Most of the $8 trillion in debt owed by developing nations in 2019 before the virus crisis is held by wealthy countries in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, China and large asset managers, Steele said. All might have good reason to consider such swaps, he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. China, for instance, is the host of the next Convention on Biological Diversity summit, now delayed to 2021, which aims to increase finance for nature protection, among other goals. As the biggest holder of bilateral debt with developing nations, China could set an example by testing out debt swaps, and recently mentioned them at an Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank meeting, Steele said. Asset managers facing debt write-offs as a result of the coronavirus-linked downturn might opt to put them to productive use which could both support ailing economies and reduce the need for more debt relief in the future, Steele said. Some investors that have made commitments to net-zero emissions by 2050 could also consider debt swaps as part of their broader mission, he added. Debt-for-nature and debt-for-climate swaps are a relatively new idea. The Seychelles in 2018 signed a $27m deal brokered through The Nature Conservancy, with the freed-up cash going to set up a big marine reserve, Steele said. Similar agreements might particularly suit other small island developing states in the Caribbean or Pacific with large debt, high climate vulnerability and rich biodiversity, he said. In all the swaps, money would be made available for climate and nature protection under a results-based payment system, in which the debtor nation must do what it promises to obtain the debt relief, he said. While Britain no longer holds much developing-country debt after forgiving most of it decades ago, as host of next years major United Nations climate summit it could put pressure on creditors in Londons financial centre to participate in such swaps, he said. These deals may become more attractive and important as debt rises in developing countries battling the coronavirus pandemic and economic downturns, researchers noted. Developing-world debt was already reaching record levels before the coronavirus crisis, rising to 170 percent of gross domestic product across the countries in 2019 from 110 percent in 2010, according to the International Monetary Fund.