Global Call for Adopting ‘Blue Finance’ to Support Sea Life Sustainability

Global calls increase to adopt sustainable financial tools (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Global calls increase to adopt sustainable financial tools (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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Global Call for Adopting ‘Blue Finance’ to Support Sea Life Sustainability

Global calls increase to adopt sustainable financial tools (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Global calls increase to adopt sustainable financial tools (Asharq Al-Awsat)

An international report stressed the importance of blue finance to support the sustainability of marine life, beaches, and oceans.

Richard Attias Foundation issued a report on the need to engage the private finance, business, and investment community to protect the oceans and create a healthy future.

A significant milestone was reached two weeks ago when five key international institutions announced they would consolidate their efforts into a joint global guidance document to help with global market consistency and transparency.

An appreciable share of the ocean and water-related projects are currently included under the mantle of sustainable bonds.

It is also clear that an instrument tailored explicitly to deploying capital towards the blue economy will help accelerate and track investment while creating stronger linkages between investment and industry performance against the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

The founding president of the World Ocean Council, Paul Holthus, called for exploring how to mobilize private sector financing for the oceans.

The report indicated that just 1.6 percent of overseas development aid goes towards the 14th SDG life below water.

SDG 14 is also the least funded of all the SDGs, both from an ODA and philanthropic point of view.

“While the recent $1 billion pledge to scale up philanthropic funding for the oceans is a welcome boost, it will not be enough to mobilize the $175 billion we need annually to deliver on SDG 14.”

According to the report, blue bonds offer a promising avenue to close the financial gap.

Seychelles initiated these tools in 2018 as a sovereign blue bond to help direct capital towards protecting marine resources and developing the maritime economy.

Since then, they’ve been issued by corporate and multilateral issuers, from Bank of China’s $961 million blue bonds to finance marine-related projects to the Asian Development Bank’s $151 million bond as part of its $5 billion action plan for healthy oceans in the region.

The argument for blue finance is that projects that improve water resources' health and sustainability deliver substantial economic value, given the central place of water in the world economy and the livelihoods of millions.

“One marine protection scheme in Mexico’s Baja peninsula, for instance, led to a 400 percent increase in fish stocks within a decade, reversing the toll of decades of overfishing,” read the report.

Existing blue carbon solutions such as seaweed farming, kelp forest conservation, and mangrove restoration could help cut emissions by 0.4 to 1.2 GtCO2e per year, with emerging solutions adding up to another 1.8GtCO2e, for a total of 3GtCO2e, or nearly 10 percent of all global energy-related emissions in 2021.

The report noted that blue bonds had attracted less interest than other sustainable debt products such as green bonds.

“These enjoyed a 49 percent growth rate in annual issuance in the five years leading up to 2021, reaching $620 billion in 2021, and inspiring offshoots, like social impact or sustainability bonds.”



In Freezing Temperatures, Swimmers in China Plunge into a River for Health and Joy

 A resident swims in a pool carved from ice on the frozen Songhua river in Harbin in northeastern China's Heilongjiang province, Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2025. (AP)
A resident swims in a pool carved from ice on the frozen Songhua river in Harbin in northeastern China's Heilongjiang province, Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2025. (AP)
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In Freezing Temperatures, Swimmers in China Plunge into a River for Health and Joy

 A resident swims in a pool carved from ice on the frozen Songhua river in Harbin in northeastern China's Heilongjiang province, Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2025. (AP)
A resident swims in a pool carved from ice on the frozen Songhua river in Harbin in northeastern China's Heilongjiang province, Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2025. (AP)

Even as the mercury dropped below freezing, enthusiasm soared among about a dozen hardy swimmers during an annual ritual in northeast China’s ice city of Harbin.

The swimmers had trained daily throughout the year for this moment.

They first had to carve out a pool in the Songhua River, thawing the 10-centimeter (4-inch) thick ice that froze overnight. Then they stripped down and, one by one, plunged into the bone-chilling waters of the pool about 10 meters (33 feet) long.

Some said their limbs were already numb when the air temperature fell to minus 13 degrees Celsius (8 degrees Fahrenheit).

Chen Xia, from the eastern coastal province of Zhejiang, dived into the river even though she was suffering from a cold. She said the waters in her home city were warmer than those in Harbin, where the temperature was about 0 C (32 F).

The experience strengthened her confidence in winter swimming, a sport she has been devoted to for about two decades.

“I felt prickling all over my body,” said Chen, 56. “But it still made me feel blissful."

Harbin resident Yu Xiaofeng said winter swimming in her city can be dated back to the 1970s, after locals saw Russian Orthodox faithful being baptized in the river. In 1983, the city's winter swimming association was established.

Yu, 61, said she found a sense of a big family and joy during her 30 years of swimming.

“Since the pandemic, we came up with a slogan: Rather suffer through winter swimming than line up at the hospital,” she said, adding that winter swimmers appeared to have better health than others.

You Decang, 76, said swimming kept him healthy and he had never caught a cold.

"If I go just one day without winter swimming, I feel quite uncomfortable,” he said.