France's Axa Plows $49 Million Into Amazon Reforestation
18 July 2023 - 9:29PM
Dow Jones News
By Paulo Trevisani
Brazil's Mombak Gestora de Recursos said Tuesday that France's
AXA Investment Managers has committed $49 million to support its
efforts to remove carbon dioxide from the air by reforesting the
Amazon.
AXA has also taken a minority stake in Mombak, a start-up
focused on carbon removal using native species. The Brazilian firm
aims to generate credits that can be sold to companies willing to
reduce their carbon footprint.
"It is impossible to reach [climate protection goals] if we
don't remove carbon from the atmosphere," besides curbing
emissions, Mombak Chief Executive Peter Fernandez said. "And the
largest opportunity to do carbon removal is in Brazil."
Fernandez said a major global technology corporation is under
contract to buy Mombak's carbon credits, but he declined to reveal
the buyer's name.
So-called voluntary carbon markets, where offsets are traded
regardless of government-imposed emission caps, have been under
scrutiny amid doubts about whether the credits really equal the
amount of carbon reductions they are supposed to represent.
Fernandez said credits linked to Mombak's reforestation projects
are high-quality ones.
Carbon removal projects have attracted the interest of global
corporations. Last year, Stripe, Alphabet, Meta Platforms, Shopify
and McKinsey Sustainability launched Frontier, a so-called advance
market commitment, to link buyers and sellers of carbon
removal.
AXA IM Alts, the French firm's alternative investment unit, has
over 185 billion euros (around $208 billion) of assets under
management. In September, it launched its Natural Capital strategy
to invest in nature-based solutions to climate change.
"We were drawn to Mombak because they share our focus on
operational and scientific excellence," said Adam Gibbon, who leads
Natural Capital, in an email. Gibbon said such initiatives need to
be scaled "if we are to achieve net-zero and avert the ongoing
biodiversity crisis."
Mombak said it plans to reforest more than 10,000 hectares, or
nearly 25,000 acres, an area larger than Lake Superior, of degraded
pastureland and generate up to six million carbon credits, each one
equal to 1 metric ton of CO2 removed from the air.
A variety of approaches are being deployed around the world to
remove greenhouse gas from the air, including machines that suck
CO2 for underground storage. Growing trees is a more traditional
way to achieve similar results. Regrowing a complex ecosystem such
as the Amazon rainforest, however, can be challenging.
"Crucially, rapid reforestation is vital for the Amazon," said
Eduardo Ferreira, managing director of Latin America as Climate
Impact Partners, a provider of carbon offset projects that isn't
involved with Mombak. "This does not mean that there isn't a need
for engineered removals, but as they become more readily available,
they should be used alongside nature-based removals."
Mombak's Fernandez says his firm is making one of the largest
private, nature-based carbon removal projects in the Brazilian
Amazon.
Brazil, as large as the contiguous U.S., is home to around 60%
of the Amazon, the world's largest rainforest. It is a rich
ecosystem that has been shrinking fast, attacked by loggers, cattle
ranchers, soy farmers, miners and land grabbers.
Fernandez said Mombak already has a contract with a farm about
half the size of Manhattan, N.Y. It is in the municipality of Mae
do Rio, in Para, a mineral-rich state three times as large as
California where for decades cattle ranches and soy crops have
increasingly replaced the rainforest.
More than 500 trees have already been planted since the farm was
acquired in January, he said, with funds from its initial
investors, including U.S.-based Bain Capital Partnership
Strategies.
Mombak plans to plant up to 90 different species, all native to
the Amazon, Fernandez said.
Write to Paulo Trevisani at paulo.trevisani@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
July 18, 2023 07:14 ET (11:14 GMT)
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