| Literature DB >> 34103490 |
U Rashid Sumaila1, Melissa Walsh2, Kelly Hoareau3, Anthony Cox4, Louise Teh5, Patrízia Abdallah6, Wisdom Akpalu7, Zuzy Anna8, Dominique Benzaken9, Beatrice Crona10, Timothy Fitzgerald11, Louise Heaps12, Ibrahim Issifu5, Katia Karousakis4, Glenn Marie Lange13, Amanda Leland11, Dana Miller14, Karen Sack15, Durreen Shahnaz16, Torsten Thiele17, Niels Vestergaard18, Nobuyuki Yagi19, Junjie Zhang20.
Abstract
The ocean, which regulates climate and supports vital ecosystem services, is crucial to our Earth system and livelihoods. Yet, it is threatened by anthropogenic pressures and climate change. A healthy ocean that supports a sustainable ocean economy requires adequate financing vehicles that generate, invest, align, and account for financial capital to achieve sustained ocean health and governance. However, the current finance gap is large; we identify key barriers to financing a sustainable ocean economy and suggest how to mitigate them, to incentivize the kind of public and private investments needed for topnotch science and management in support of a sustainable ocean economy.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34103490 PMCID: PMC8187415 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-23168-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Characterization of major ocean finance capital types.
Summary of major capital types, the level of risk vs. return for each capital type, and the key providers of these capital[14].
Summary of major capital types and key providers of these capital[3].
| Capital type | Description | Key players/providers |
|---|---|---|
| Impact-only | ||
| Corpoate Social Responsibility investment | This is usually long term, but small scale in comparison to larger types of commercial finance. Expected rates of return are usually below market rates | Philantropic foundations, NGOs, international financial institutions, corporations, official development assistance (ODA) agencies |
| Public grants | ||
| Philanthropic grants | ||
| Public financing | ||
| Official development assistance | ||
| Debt | ||
| Loans | Low-risk, low-reward types of capital that offer low or market rates of return. They are variable in scale, ranging from micro-finance to large-scale corporate loans | Private and public sector, e.g. governments, corporations, multilateral development banks. ODA agencies, crowd funding |
| Bonds | ||
| Equity | ||
| Public equity | Equity involves taking an ownership stake in an investment. Some types of equity are high risk, high-reward and can offer greater than market return. The scale of equity is very variable, ranging from micro-finance to multi-million dollar investments | Private finance secctor, e.g. equity investors, venture capitalists, commercial banks, pension funds |
| Equity investment (investment funds) | ||
| Blended finance | Combines official development assistance with other private or public resources, in order to ‘leverage’ additional funds from other actors. It generally provides below market rates of return | Same providers as for debt, equity, and impact capital |
| Subsidies | Financial aid, commonly provided by governments, to an economic sector in order to promote economic and social policy | Public sector (governments) |
Examples of established and emerging sectors in the ocean economy.
| Established sectors | Emerging sectors |
|---|---|
| Capture fisheries | Marine aquaculture |
| Seafood processing | Deep and ultra-deep-water oil and gas |
| Shipping | Offshore wind energy |
| Ports | Ocean renewable energy |
| Shipbuilding and repair | Marine and seabed mining |
| Offshore oil and gas | Maritime safety and surveillance |
| Marine manufacturing and construction | Marine biotechnology |
| Maritime and coastal tourism | High-tech marine products and services |
| Marine business services | |
| Marine research and development and education | |
| Dredging |
Source: OECD[1].
Fig. 2Ocean economic sectors.
Depiction of the four broad economic sectors that make up the ocean economy: extractable natural resources, natural capital, marine and coastal development, and knowledge and creativity.
Fig. 3Ocean finance gap.
Current investments are insufficient to support a sustainable ocean economy, resulting in a large ocean finance gap.
Fig. 4Creating an enabling environment for ocean finance.
Barriers and options for action in support of sustainable ocean finance.
Fig. 5Actions that create barriers to, and opportunities for, a sustainable ocean economy.
Key barriers to the flow of finance to the ocean economy and opportunities for action to remove them.
| Ocean sector type | Example investments |
|---|---|
| Natural capital: development and investment flows are directed to the natural assets that underpin ecosystem services, e.g. conservation and restoration of natural systems, and do not involve the creation of built structures. Perceived investment risks in this sector are relatively high as natural capital is not a conventional invesment | Natural infrastructure: Proposed restoration of Louisiana wetland ecosystems for flood defence (Project Scale: <US$100 million)[ |
| Extractable natural resources: involve human activities that remove or produce a physical good from the ocean. These sectors, such as fisheries, have received extensive investment for many years. As such, sustainable development of these sectors involve redirecting existing investment towards sustainable pathways, while simultaneously generating new sources of capital. | Wild-caught marine fisheries (small scale): Development of aggregated fish processing site, sourcing from multiple small-scale fisheries (Project scale: <US$ 1 million)[ |
| Marine & coastal development: creation of new, fixed, physical assets at sea and along the coast. These include sectors, such as shipping, that occur physically on the ocean (e.g. maritime transportation, ocean-based renewable energy), or land-based sectors that have a clear marine impact, e.g. marine ecotourism, port, harbour, and boat construction, waste management. Sectors such as shiping have been invested in for many years, and will require redirecting capital towards sustainability, whereasnewer sectors such as marine ecotourism will need new sources of capital. | Nature-based infrastructure: Public investment in nature-based generation of new beaches, North Sea coast (Project Scale: <US$100 m)[ Maritime transportation: Fleet-wide vessel retrofitting for fuel efficiency and lower emissions (Project Scale: >US$100 million)[ |
| Knowledge and creative sector: includes academic, non-academic, professional, and public sector services that conduct research and development activities to create new knowledge and innovation for a sustainable ocean economy. Some of these emerging sectors, e.g. ocean technology development, may be perceived as high risk, and require new sources of high-risk high-reward capital. | Academic research: Ongoing establishment of a new Blue economy Institute at the University of Nairobi (Project Scale: >US$100 million). |