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The financial impact of climate change in Namibia

by reporter
August 13, 2025
in Opinions
48
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By Veruscka Gertze

Namibia is already feeling the true cost effects of climate change. It’s no longer theoretical. Unpredictable weather, increasing droughts, and unpredictable seasons are already changing how we farm, build, invest, and make plans for the future.

Agriculture, energy, insurance, and infrastructure sectors are especially exposed. In the countryside of the developing world, agriculture provides the main source of income, but when rains do not come or heatwaves hit, harvests fall, livestock perish, and families lose earnings. It doesn’t just hurt families, it hurts banks, insurers, and investors alike, as loans are not paid back and claims accumulate.

For the insurance industry, climatic event claims are increasing and cost more. As dangers escalate, policies become more expensive or less available. Insurers are now reassessing how they price risk, taking advantage of new data analytics and innovative products like parametric insurance to hedge against climate-related events.

The energy industry tells a different story. Namibia has long relied on imported electricity, making the country vulnerable to external shocks. But with vast potential for green hydrogen, solar, and wind energy, Namibia also has the potential to be a clean energy pioneer. Renewable investment can help enhance regional supply, create jobs, and gain access to new markets for regional exports.

Green hydrogen, for one, has already started piquing the interest of foreign investors and could place Namibia in the global picture as one of the region’s most important clean energy producers.

Across the board, climate change is forcing individuals and institutions to rethink how they manage risk and spot opportunity. Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) factors are more and more front and centre in investment decision-making.

Green bonds and climate-responsible funds are among the financial instruments on the increase. But this transformation is not the exclusive domain of large institutions. Families and regular individuals are now incorporating climate risk into property acquisitions, business investments, or retirement strategies. As an illustration, it is now increasingly common to ask about flood risk in buying land or consider how water scarcity might affect a farm investment.

Namibia is also undertaking national climate-smart agriculture, water security, and green infrastructure plans. This gives the financial sector a chance to also be aligned with these goals. Policymakers, investors, and planners can all simultaneously unlock funding for projects enhancing climate resilience, such as improving rural infrastructure, spurring eco-entrepreneurs, or preserving natural resources

And though risks are serious, there is vast opportunity as well. Clean energy projects, green start-ups, sustainable agriculture, and climate fintech are proliferating. There is a real chance to steer investment into ideas that not only save the planet but also are sound for long-term wealth and jobs.

Climate change is a disruptor, but it’s also a catalyst for innovation and new thinking. For Namibia to prosper, we need to build financial systems and strategies that look forward, not back. That means imagining a future where resilience, sustainability, and shared progress are embedded within the definition of success.

To put it simply, climate change adaptation is not only the smart thing to do, it is one of the strongest investment strategies of our time.

* Veruscka Gertze is a Wealth Manager at Old Mutual Wealth Namibia

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