By Sandy Lowitt
There has been a lot of talk about mobilising and unlocking Global North financial commitments to help developing countries meet their decarbonisation commitments.
In South Africa, the conversation is complemented by how to crowd in private sector finance, given the country’s limited fiscal space. While the discourse is understandably focused on the issues of mobilisation and unlocking (for example the International Partners Group’s $8.5 billion (R150bn) Just Energy Transition Partnership offer), there has been precious little conversation about how such funding (if and when it becomes available) will be deployed in the real economy.
To deploy finance from either the Global North or the local financial sector will require the allocation of capital to specific investments. When more than 50 South African financiers were asked if they had a working understanding of what would constitute a just transition transaction, 100% responded that they did not.
The Impact Investing Institute of the UK recently published its framework for a just transition investment vehicle. The framework built on the G7 blueprint for a just transition which comprised three elements: environmental and climate action, community voice, and, socio-economic improvement.
The framework applies three criteria to the G7 elements. First, a qualifying investment vehicle must commit to all three elements. Second, the vehicle must do no harm. Finally, investments must deliver outcomes and impacts in two of the three elements.
The III contribution is an important global first. It tries to answer the question: What does good (or good enough) look like in the context of a just transition vehicle or investment. However, because the aim of the framework is to maximise the volume of finance mobilised, it sets the qualifying criteria bar low.
For example, in the framework, an investment can be counted as a just transaction investment if it delivers a net positive environmental and socio-economic improvement impact, even if it excludes any community or labour participation.
Some local commentators have suggested that the III framework be adopted in South Africa. The strongest argument for the view is that it will facilitate inbound investment. Other commentators feel that given South Africa’s historic legacy and current baseline of poverty, unemployment and inequality, the III qualifying bar is too low in the domestic context.
This view, which takes into account the need for meaningful buy in from a range of stakeholders, recognises that while a significant volume of just transition funding will be required, the quality of just transition finance will be as important (if not more important) than the quantum.
Research is under way to develop a framework to evaluate what could qualify as a just transition transaction in a South African context. The framework includes pre-screening criteria; eligibility criteria organised around dual qualifying objectives and activities; and the idea that “just” is not an absolute term but covers a spectrum of ambition.
The framework allows for just transition transactions and more ambitious just transition plus transactions. The level of ambition is differentiated by a transaction’s commitment to meaningful empowerment of historically disadvantaged communities or groups through a specific menu of possible actions. More ambitious transactions should be incentivised by superior financing terms and conditions and preferential access to concessionary finance and credit enhancements.
Research is also being undertaken on just transition indicators, measurement and reporting. The challenge here is the dilemma of needing to have indicators, which are material to a specific investment and context specific – while being standardised and comparable as required by the finance community.
There are three key takeaways from the local research. First, considerable and focused attention needs to be paid to the pragmatic issues which need to be in place before just transition funding can begin to flow. Second, providing clarity on a just transition transaction definition and measurement will take time. It will be an iterative process, which must be based on learning by doing and experimentation. Finally, in the short run, delivering proof of concept investments is seen as critical to unlocking on-the-ground financial flows.
Sandy Lowitt is a Research Fellow at Trade and Industrial Policy Strategies.
BUSINESS REPORT