BUSINESS LAW &TAX
SEPTEMBER 2023 WWW.BUSINESSLIVE.CO.ZA
A REVIEW OF DEVELOPMENTS IN CORPORATE AND TAX LAW
Yardstick for accountability in Namibia’s green economy
THE COLOUR OF THE FUTURE
Put citizens and civil society at the heart of just •renewable energy and green hydrogen finance Wayne Rukero ENSafrica
E
xperts estimate that, globally, $100bn of climate finance is being lost every year through a lack of accountability, transparency and participation. As such, there is growing public demand for access to information relating to the Namibian government and its role in just renewable energy and green hydrogen projects. It is also vital for development finance institutions, institutional investors, governments and developers to pull together and upscale conversations around green accountability. Global spending on climate change is nearing $2.4-
trillion annually and so high standards of accountability and transparency are essential to avoid corruption and mismanagement and to ramp up the just renewable energy and green hydrogen industry. In addition, to optimise the benefit of investments into the green economy, transparency, equity and inclusion must be at the heart of renewable energy and green hydrogen finance decisionmaking.
THE BASIS FOR A MORE COHERENT GREEN ACCOUNTABILITY FRAMEWORK EXISTS IN THE PARIS AGREEMENT
CONCEPTUALISING GREEN ACCOUNTABILITY Green accountability is an approach that creates systemic ways for people to have a voice and role in decisions related to just renewable energy and green hydrogen that most affect their lives. It places citizens and civil society at the heart of just renewable energy and green hydrogen finance to direct funding, implement solutions and hold decision-makers accountable for effective and equitable finance and action. It is a process through which communities on the front lines of the climate crisis can co-create and oversee climate prevention, mitigation and adaptation efforts; reduce corruption in climaterelated programming; and ensure greater inclusion and
/123RF — DJVSTOCK equity within their societies. The basis for a more coherent green accountability framework exists in the Paris Agreement. It enshrines the principles of country ownership, transparency and public participation and recognises the rights of indigenous peoples, local communities and vulnerable groups, as well as gender equality. Article 13 of the agreement establishes an enhanced transparency framework to build trust among parties and promote effective implementation, providing the ability to track progress towards climate goals.
However, this does not go far enough in terms of putting in place broad, global standards for accountability, monitoring the transparency of climate finance or ensuring meaningful participation of communities in this process.
CREATING SYSTEMS FOR ACCOUNTABLE GREEN FINANCE Ideally, financing of just renewable energy and green hydrogen projects should not only succeed in reducing carbon emissions. It ought also to address inequality and exclusion. By adopting a joint approach that considers both
the supply and demand side of governance, carbon emissions may be reduced, resilience ignited and a way paved for more inclusive and sustainable growth. Civil society could play a crucial role in co-creating systems for accountable just renewable energy and green hydrogen finance. A participatory and transparent architecture for just renewable energy and green hydrogen finance that truly puts people at the centre of the energy transition agenda is therefore essential. It has been known that in times CONTINUED ON PAGE 2