Fostering Green Finance for Sustainable Development: A Focus on Textile and Leather Small Medium Enterprises in Pakistan
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methodology
2.1. Systematic Literature Search Strategy
2.2. Interview Protocol Development and Interview Results Analysis
2.3. Stakeholder Mapping
2.4. Gaps Analysis
3. Results
3.1. The Current State of Smes, Environmental Challenges, and Green Finance
3.1.1. Textile and Leather SME Landscape in Pakistan
3.1.2. Key Sustainability Problems in Leather and Textile Sectors
3.1.3. Sustainable Consumption and Production and opportunities in Pakistan
3.2. Interviewees
3.2.1. Overview of Key Players and Activities
- Develop policies and implementation instruments for SME growth and finance, as well as sector specific legislation, to create an environment where SMEs may easily obtain the necessary assistance and resources;
- Build the capacity of SMEs to receive available financing through (finance-focused) business development assistance, SCP technical support, and certifications;
- Deliver tailored financing to SMEs for investment in SCP and management.
3.2.2. Government
Financial Authorities and Regulators
Environmental Protection Regulators
3.2.3. Financers
Commercial Banks
- NBP accounted for 8% of total SME financing in the banking sector.
- Big five banks Habib Bank Limited, Allied Bank Limited, Muslim Commercial Bank (MCB) Limited and United Bank Limited constituted the second-largest share of SME financing.
- Public sector banks particularly the Bank of Punjab, Bank of Khyber, and First Women’s Bank Limited possessed the third largest share.
- Growing lending by Islamic banks, including Meezan Bank, Dubai Islamic, and Dawood Islamic Bank (incorporated within Al Baraka Bank as Burj Bank in 2011) were the next largest pool of SME lenders.
- Specialized banks accounted for a relatively low share (2.19%), with SME Bank (supported by Government of Pakistan) as the largest within this.
Microfinance Institutions
3.2.4. Intermediaries
Credit Bureaus
Cleaner Production Centers
Industry and Trade Associations
3.3. Gap Analysis of Green Finance for SMEs in Textile and Leather Sectors
3.3.1. Barriers to Sustainable Consumption and Production by SMEs
- Some SMEs lack the knowledge and the technical competencies and have limited resources and time constraints to identify and implement SCP improvements.
- Some SMEs possess limited capacities to produce bankable feasibility reports and investment plans due to a lack of financial capacity building and skills among SMEs—exacerbated by the seasonality of production and cash flow with peaks during the Eid festival time.
- Some SMEs have limited access to the finance required to support these SCP investments due to a variety of factors, including the dependency of textile/leather SMEs in Pakistan on personal/family capital and a lack of tailored financing (with appropriate collateral/security and other conditions) for SCP investments.
3.3.2. Available Product Offerings of Green Finance for SMEs
3.3.3. Green Finance
Environmental Risk Management
Green Business Facilitation
Barriers in Facilitating Green Finance for (Textile and Leather) SMEs
4. Discussion
- Conducive ecosystem: Gaps in coordination among ecosystem actors, particularly government, financial institutions, and intermediaries. Despite promising examples of support provided by regulators, consultants, and intermediaries working directly with banks and SMEs, further coordination among and capacity building support to actors is required to align their activities with the green financing activities, influenced by due diligence pressures throughout supply chains and desires for effective environmental compliance.
- Bankable green investments in the pipeline: SMEs have limited access to specialized business advising and funding for SCP education and investment. Access to specific finance products and capacity-building assistance to evaluate and invest in SCP initiatives remains a significant barrier for SMEs in the textile/leather sectors.
- Green finance products for textile and leather enterprises: There is not much support for green businesses, and environmental risk management is not a big part of what banks do. Banks typically have a difficult time defining and aligning their internal processes for product development with their green investment goals. This is especially true when these goals have to do with environmental risk assessment and lending decisions that are specific to a sector.
- Streamline and strengthen regulatory regime for green financing and environmental compliance. Solutions are required that engage actors (including regulators, financers, and SME intermediaries) to address the key gaps.
- Expand technical assistance to banks for green financing. Despite encouraging examples of support offered by regulatory agencies, consultants, and intermediaries working directly with financial institutions and small and medium enterprises, additional coordination and capacity-building support to actors is needed to align their initiatives with green financing activities, which are influenced by due diligence pressures throughout supply chains and the willingness for efficient environmental compliance.
- Development of environmental risk management within the core business. The majority of banks have difficulty defining and aligning their internal production process with green financial goals, particularly as these objectives are related to industry-specific environmental risk assessment and lending choices.
- Design tailored financial products that enable green investments by SMEs. There is a lack of targeted capacity building and finance for SCP education and investment amongst SME’s. Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in the textile and leather industries struggle to cope with and gain access to customized finance products and capacity-building resources in order to determine and participate in SCP activities.
- Share knowledge and regional best practices among stakeholders.
- As a result of the existing insufficient investment level in the green industry, particularly in the post-COVID-19 era, policy adjustments are needed. The globe after COVID-19 needs to embrace a green financial mechanism by implementing different financial policies and tools. We recommend policymakers to consider strategies that might boost the return rate on funding provided by the FIs.
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Leather Sector | Textile Sector | |
---|---|---|
Water | High use of water by leather industries, contamination/degradation of surface/groundwater resources, and biodiversity from effluents, particularly throughout tanning with high total dissolved solids (TDS) and heavy metals. | High water uses and chemical in the textile industry result in the pollution of water resources, including high total dissolved solids, VOCs, heavy metals, and chemicals. |
Land | Damage to the soil from dumpsites, inappropriate disposal/discharge of waste and wastewater plus chemicals applied during pre-treatment, tanning and finishing, and tannery wastewater treatment sludge. | Mishandling of non-hazardous solid waste (e.g., process leftovers from cutting and packaging within ready-made garment units) and hazardous sludge from wastewater treatment with high levels of chemical contamination. |
Air | Emissions from energy consumption, particularly boilers (generally gas or wood fired engines, operating through power breaks) plus noxious emissions that are particularly harmful to human health. | Emissions from energy consumption coupled with air pollution from manufacturing processes, e.g., from ovens and boilers, thermic fluid heaters, singeing, stenters, use of solvents, and spillage/wastewater treatment. |
Category | SCP Methods |
---|---|
Purchasing and Storage |
|
Process Operation |
|
Maintenance |
|
Process Optimization and Process Control |
|
Equipment and Infrastructure |
|
For Financial Institutions|Supply-Side Barriers | For Leather/Textile SMEs|Demand-Side Barriers | |
---|---|---|
Small ticket size of typical sustainable production financing tends to fall below preferred level for investment funds and lenders. High transaction costs for assessment and due diligence of smaller enterprises. Potential preference for SCP investments in clusters (e.g., for combined water treatment facility) but banks do not have demand from SMEs in clusters. | Ticket Size | Lack of tailored financial products to meet green investment needs of leather/textile SMEs. Lack of solutions to support investments by SME clusters, where SCP investments (e.g., water processing of effluent treatment facilities) not always suited to investment and installation by one SME. |
Risk aversion of investors and financers with high return expectations to SMEs, including of foreign investors with lack of common approach to risk profiling. Lower rate of return for low carbon projects. | Risk/Return Profiles | Higher risks with lower returns for early-stage enterprises due to internal/market constraints. Lack of willingness to pay by SME decision makers/management for SCP improvements, with SCP investments seen as added costs rather than valuable investments. Unfavorable interest rates plus small industries must compete with larger ones under same conditions. Reluctance of SMEs to approach banks for financing due to gaps in Islamic banking solutions and desire to avoid increased liabilities. |
Limited understanding of SCP in terms of technology involved monitoring models and feasibility assessment. Lack of monetary indicators for returns and expected payback periods for SCP/green investments by SMEs. | Green SCP Technologies | Lack of assessment frameworks for green SCP technology and investments, supported by mutually agreed monitoring and verification of streams to validate feasibility. Absence of an aggregation model for technology providers to de-risk financing for and offer SCP technologies to their clients, e.g., via end user financing for textile/leather SMEs. |
Short-term orientation of lending and investment cycles hinders investment in systemic process improvements. | Time Horizon | Longer/unclear time horizon for green SP investments to capitalise. |
Perception by banks as risky credit with difficult credit assessment and appraisal. Lack of financial documentation among SMEs makes the job of project manager within bank challenging in preforming credit risk assessments. | Security/Collateral | Tend to fail to meet collateral requirements or prove sufficient track record or credit history. |
Low levels of green finance success stories and clear repayment trajectories among textile/leather SMEs. | Impact at Scale | Internal and market barriers to assessing and developing green investment plan or technical analysis. |
Banks without internal structures and incentives to finance cleaner production by leather/textile SMES. Lack of clear definitions and knowledge of “green finance” and “green/sustainable investments”. | Human Capital and Skills | Poor financial literacy and awareness of green finance/SCP opportunities. Limited financial, accounting, and planning expertise, as well as a lack of entrepreneurial concepts. |
Lack of mandatory frameworks for green finance for leather/textile SMEs in Pakistan, with regulatory gaps/differences between federal and provincial levels of government (particularly with environmental law and standards). Limited oversight/feedback from regulators, including banks that responded to SBP’s questionnaire on GBG implementation. | Regulatory and Legal Frameworks | Lack of market-based incentives/rebates for investment in cleaner production especially challenging for smaller scale SP projects (e.g., disincentive of continual government subsidies for fossil fuels or low effluent charges), complicated by variations in federal versus provincial regulations Immediacy of SCP investment (e.g., in wastewater treatment and management) not yet recognized by private sector. Low levels of compliance with international standards (e.g., leather working group) threatens export-relevance/value of SMEs. |
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Kumar, L.; Nadeem, F.; Sloan, M.; Restle-Steinert, J.; Deitch, M.J.; Ali Naqvi, S.; Kumar, A.; Sassanelli, C. Fostering Green Finance for Sustainable Development: A Focus on Textile and Leather Small Medium Enterprises in Pakistan. Sustainability 2022, 14, 11908. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141911908
Kumar L, Nadeem F, Sloan M, Restle-Steinert J, Deitch MJ, Ali Naqvi S, Kumar A, Sassanelli C. Fostering Green Finance for Sustainable Development: A Focus on Textile and Leather Small Medium Enterprises in Pakistan. Sustainability. 2022; 14(19):11908. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141911908
Chicago/Turabian StyleKumar, Love, Farah Nadeem, Maggie Sloan, Jonas Restle-Steinert, Matthew J. Deitch, Sohail Ali Naqvi, Avinash Kumar, and Claudio Sassanelli. 2022. "Fostering Green Finance for Sustainable Development: A Focus on Textile and Leather Small Medium Enterprises in Pakistan" Sustainability 14, no. 19: 11908. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141911908
APA StyleKumar, L., Nadeem, F., Sloan, M., Restle-Steinert, J., Deitch, M. J., Ali Naqvi, S., Kumar, A., & Sassanelli, C. (2022). Fostering Green Finance for Sustainable Development: A Focus on Textile and Leather Small Medium Enterprises in Pakistan. Sustainability, 14(19), 11908. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141911908