Launched ahead of the start of the COP26 summit, the #BackBlue Ocean Finance Commitment, spearheaded by the Ocean Risk and Resilience Action Alliance (ORRAA), aims to encourage financial and insurance companies to incorporate ocean conservation in their business decisions.
“The scale and urgency of the challenges posed by ocean-derived risks call for a transformative and global response,” said Ulrike Decoene, group chief communication, brand, and sustainability officer at AXA. “Through the #BackBlue Ocean Finance Commitment, the private sector, including the insurance and wider finance industry, can collectively empower and mobilize action to build resilience providing long-term benefits for ocean-linked economies, local communities, and biodiversity across the world.”
John Haley, WTW chief executive officer agreed, adding that his company “sees that climate risk and ocean risk together equal financial risk.”
“We are excited to #BackBlue to drive action from financial institutions for a sustainable ocean and a sustainable blue economy,” he said.
International advisory and management firm Palladium is also one of the first to commit to the program, with more businesses expected to add their signatures in coming weeks.
“It is encouraging to have the first wave of signatories to the #BackBlue Ocean Finance Commitment and today we are calling on other financial institutions to sign up,” said Karen Sack, executive director and co-chair of ORRAA. “While it is focused on the private sector, this really is in everyone’s long term interest. The climate emergency is Code Red for the planet – responding to that requires us to #BackBlue.”
The #BackBlue Ocean Finance Commitment combines the following elements to ensure that a blue lens is applied to decision-making by the sector:
The initiative is also being backed by the UN Race to Resilience, World Economic Forum, Friends of Ocean Action, International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), and the United Nations Environment Program Finance Initiative (UNEPFI).
“A healthy ocean plays a vital role in regulating the global climate, and mitigating the impacts of the climate crisis,” said Jessica Smith, nature lead at the UNEPFI. “Ambitious action needs to be taken from all strands of society – including private finance – in order to deliver a sustainable blue economy that fully values natural capital.”
Last May, the UK became the second G7 country after Canada to become a full member of the ORRAA. All G7 nations are observers of ORRAA, as are India, Mexico, Norway, and Fiji.