Supported by Singapore’s Economic Development Board (EDB), The Nature Conservancy (TNC) set up its Singapore office late last year, targeting sustainability initiatives aligned with the national Green Plan 2030.
One of TNC’s current priorities is advocating for nature-based solutions, which may help Singapore meet its goal of greening 80% of her city buildings by 2030, whether by using recycled construction materials or repurposing underutilised spaces into urban farms.
Thomas Brzostowski, TNC’s interim Singapore country director, told GovInsider that EDB has been a key partner in helping the global NGO understand local priorities and capacity needs, as well as linking them up with other ecosystem players in the country.
“Singapore is more and more an important place for us to have a presence. It is a place for us to convene, to innovate and to create new partnerships that will want to help Singapore achieve its climate sustainability goals,” he shared.
Singapore: A sustainability partnerships hub
Beyond helping Singapore achieve local climate sustainability goals, TNC envisions the city-state to take on a more significant role in APAC.
“Singapore is increasingly becoming a hub for green, sustainable, and blended finance from both the private and public sectors. With so many international companies headquartered here with corporate sustainability programmes, we want to partner with them to achieve those as well,” said Brzostowski.
“[Additionally,] Singapore is a more important place for us to convene global expertise, resources and partnerships to scale up our work across APAC, including Mongolia, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea.”
That said, the other three of TNC’s priorities pointed to collaborations with financers, researchers, and private corporations.
Funding gap: Are we seeing the outcomes?
Southeast Asian think-tank Fulcrum pointed to a significant climate funding gap in the region, amounting to four to five percent of the GDP of Southeast Asia.
This was echoed by Rockefeller Foundation and BCG Research’s findings, which showed that climate finance is concentrated in China, Western Europe, and North America, accounting for about 80% of investment flows in 2020.
NatureVest, TNC’s in-house impact investment arm is currently tapping on its new Singapore office to accelerate the number of deals within APAC. Launched in 2014, NatureVest has 15 international deals to-date, with only one of them based in APAC.
Brzostowski highlighted Singapore’s advantages as an international finance hub and her proximity to other APAC countries, and hopes that TNC’s new Singapore office would help to bring project implementations closer to climate investments.