December 13, 2022

Cashing in on the Climate Crisis through Agricultural Digitalisation

Emerging Cases in Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines
Digital agriculture and climate financialisation illustration

Our new report explores how the climate crisis is being turned into an investment opportunity for financial actors, and how agricultural digitalisation is facilitating the commodification of climate into assets that can be traded. It highlights cases from Malaysia, Indonesia and Philippines.

Our findings show the proliferation of “green” financial instruments like green bonds, promotion of carbon farming to generate carbon credits and for offsets, increasing speculation in carbon trading especially via the introduction of blockchain, and the growing interest of sovereign wealth funds in food and agriculture related technologies. We also highlight the ways in which governments, regional institutions and inter-governmental initiatives are facilitating the financialisation of climate by promoting and enabling digital technologies in agriculture and carbon trading.

The use of agricultural digitalisation to create or enable financial instruments and assets using the climate crisis as justification is a nefarious strategy to evade any real action on the climate crisis while increasing revenue streams, pushing a positive public image on the climate front, and expanding and entrenching control over food and agriculture. Beyond the green veneer, we realize that these technologies are actually carbon-intensive and their sustainability claims are highly dubious. They turn farmers into data extractors, locking them into practices dictated by corporations, undermining farmers’ rights and autonomy, and are used by these corporations to keep emitting greenhouse gasses.

Financialization of climate through agricultural digitalisation is yet another means of monetizing data extracted from farmers, their fields and nature, powered by digital technologies that are dependent on extraction of natural resources. These technologies are far from neutral, inherently top-down and rarely developed for the interest of smallholder farmers. Instead of pushing for tricks and false solutions that distract attention from real solutions to the climate crisis, the Global North and corporations should pay reparations that could be used to advance community-based mitigation and adaptation actions such as agroecological approaches in food production and the promotion of dynamic territorial markets without sacrificing biodiversity, the environment and peoples’ rights. 

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