Research released today shows dozens of green technologies are now cheaper than incumbent fossil-fuel products in emerging markets, sparking a wave of climate investing
COP28, Dubai: Dozens of green technologies are now lower cost than incumbent technologies across the emerging world, sparking a wave of new green investments that could potentially reach $330B per year over the next decade and spur green development.
The Investor Roadmap for Inclusive Green Growth report, released today by LeapFrog Investments, CGAP (a global partnership housed at the World Bank), and Temasek, analysed a range of sectors across emerging markets to determine their commercial viability. It found technologies like electric scooters in India, rooftop solar in Kenya, and smart farming in Vietnam are already 14%- 75% cheaper than incumbent products, offering low-income consumers huge savings of as much as $500 a year.
These ‘green discounts’ have triggered a wave of sustainable investing across mobility, energy, built environment and the agriculture sectors in emerging markets, as investors place big bets on companies like Indian solar company Ola Electric and African renewable financier Sun King, hoping to scale the green champions of the future as 5 billion people in these markets rise into prosperity.
Among the key findings of the report:
- The green discount: Analysis across mobility, energy, agriculture, and built environment sectors in emerging markets reveals dozens of investible opportunities where the price of green goods and services is out-competing incumbent dirty technologies by up to 75%. The top four investible opportunities include:
- The opportunity is immense: Around $330B a year, or $3.3 trillion by 2030, is needed to deliver a green transition across these four sectors in South Asia, Southeast Asia and Africa. Current investments account for about 5% of this annual total, leaving a significant funding gap and investment opportunity. Across the last 10 years, sustainable deal funding across these four segments has grown on average 22%-47% per annum, and continues to rise.
- Urgent investment is needed: without a green transition in emerging markets, rising incomes across Southeast Asia, South Asia and Africa will translate into dramatic rises in emissions. If developed markets meet <2 degree scenarios, but new investment doesn’t flow to emerging markets, then Africa, South Asia and Southeast Asia could account for 73% of global emissions by 2050, up from 25% today.
- Green Technologies can improve lives: To ensure a just green transition for those who have contributed the least to the climate crisis, green technologies and practices need to be both affordable and readily available for low-income consumers. These investable opportunities show emerging markets can leapfrog a generation of polluting, expensive technology and infrastructure with clean alternatives. This can improve incomes, health, and food security.