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Nedbank’s launches green economy fund

Nedbank’s Green Economy Strategy sets out to create sustainable jobs and build wealth while furthering the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals.

At the recent Nedbank Green Indaba, Poovi Pillay, executive head of corporate social investment at Nedbank, announced that the bank had set up a Green Economy Fund with an initial capital investment of R10 million.

He said that the fund is intended to provide funding for up to 100 start-ups in the waste, water, energy, and agricultural sectors – the four sectors targeted by Nedbank’s Green Economy Strategy to create sustainable jobs and build wealth while furthering the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals.

‘Too many start-ups fail to last more than a year, and one of the main reasons is that they are not eligible to receive finance via conventional funding models. Our fund has been created specifically to provide this vital lifeline to enable more green-economy SMEs to survive until they are ready for conventional funding,” Pillay said.

\The indaba, which was held at the bank’s headquarters on Rivonia Road, Sandton, celebrated the success of Nedbank’s Green Economy Strategy, which was announced as the centrepiece of its corporate social investment programme at the end of 2021.

Pillay said the strategy aims to make substantial changes to how the bank seeks to drive positive change in South Africa. He said Nedbank aimed to create sustainable jobs with a focus on the youth and rural communities and groups that are marginalised.

He said the bank was also focusing on measuring the impact its investments in the green economy are making. The bank has developed a method of assessing a project’s social return on investment – which covers the financial impact it makes on the beneficiary, the economic impact of the jobs and skills created, the impact on the environment, and, lastly, the amelioration of social conditions. The latter includes an improved standard of living and an increase in average household income.

“South Africa faces many challenges, but each one of them is a potential set of opportunities for those with the vision to see them. One of our key success levers is that we believe that green businesses have to create wealth and grow the total economy. The green economy has the potential to kickstart the economy,” Pillay said.

“We also believe very strongly that the green economy has to be inclusive, opening up more opportunities for those who are currently excluded.”

Pillay stressed the fact that the green economy concept is more than the framework for Nedbank’s CSI spending – ultimately it will be the guiding principle for how the bank does business. In line with its aim of being financial experts who do good.

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