
Impact Tokens: A blockchain-based solution for impact investing
Key Messages
- Impact investing, which seeks to generate positive, measurable social and environmental impacts alongside a financial return, faces challenges to better address the financing needs of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
- Blockchain technology offers solutions that are particularly promising to address the underlying challenges of the impact investing industry by converting non-financial value such as impact into digital tokens that can be tracked.
- Impact tokens describe a group of digital tokens used on a blockchain with the specific goal of unlocking investments for projects with positive social and environmental impacts in support of the SDGs.
The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) invite a range of public and private sector actors to support its agenda of ending poverty, protecting the planet and ensuring that all people enjoy peace and prosperity by 2030. They offer a solid framework for investors and corporations to follow and align their activities and investments accordingly. This has spurred a growth in impact investing, which is an investment approach seeking to generate positive, measurable social and environmental impacts alongside a financial return. However, according to a 2018 survey done by the Global Impact Investing Network (GIIN), the following barriers are still preventing impact investing from scaling up to better address the financing needs of the SDGs:
- Appropriate capital across the risk/return spectrum
- A common understanding of the definition and segmentation of the impact investing market
- Suitable exit options
- Sophistication of impact measurement practice
- High-quality investment opportunities.
Blockchain technology offers new investment and economic opportunities by enabling the transfer of value in a frictionless manner, providing trust as an immutable ledger and converting assets into digital tokens that can be programmed through smart contracts. Blockchain offers solutions that are particularly promising to address the underlying challenges of the impact investing industry. “Impact tokens” describe a group of tokens with the specific goal of unlocking investments for projects with positive social and environmental impacts. A review of over 200 projects that are either active or in development gleaned four key benefits of impact tokens:
- Increasing trust between parties
- Promoting financial and social inclusion
- Improving data collection and accelerating monitoring, reporting and verification processes
- Incentivizing behaviours that promote sustainability.
Most of the reviewed cases focus on digitizing existing marketplaces, reducing transaction costs and creating new platforms for exchanging non-financial value such as impact, natural capital and data. This paper looks at some of the key characteristics of these tokens; how they can be applied in sectors such as agriculture, fisheries, education or energy; how they can provide verified proof of impact for investors; and, ultimately, how they can address each of the five barriers to upscaling impact investing.
Participating experts
You might also be interested in
IGF Case Study: Environmental and Social Impact Assessments in Mining Legal Frameworks
This publication contrasts the legal frameworks for environmental and social impact assessments in three mineral-rich jurisdictions.
Building a Net-Zero World: How U.S. Finance Can Strengthen Clean Energy Manufacturing Abroad
The world needs to rapidly expand and diversify clean energy supply chains to achieve net-zero carbon dioxide emissions by 2050 and mitigate dangerous climate impacts. While some sectors, such as solar photovoltaic manufacturing, are on track to hit their 2030 targets, there are major shortfalls in the production of many other clean energy products.
India's renewable energy ambitions could exceed 500 GW: ISA
India is poised not only to achieve its ambitious target of 500-gigawatts renewable energy capacity by 2030 but also surpass it, driven by an anticipated decline in battery prices by 2025, according to Ajay Mathur, Director General of the International Solar Alliance. Mathur said a fall in battery prices by 2025 could drive the widespread adoption of solar plus battery solutions, leading to the realization of India's ambitious target of installing 500 GW of renewable energy capacity by 2030—one of the five commitments Prime Minister Narendra Modi made during the 2021 Glasgow climate talks.
Border Carbon Adjustments: Pivotal design choices for policy-makers
This policy brief covers the pivotal choices in the design of border carbon adjustments, aiming to provide useful insights to policy-makers and set the ground for the broader discussions about the best practices.