Please find below links to websites, reports and articles that discuss nature and finance. These are regularly updated and shared in the monthly GFI Hive newsletter.

Adaptation Gap Report: Running on Empty

Date published: November 2025

This report from UNEP estimates developing countries will need US$310–365 billion annually for adaptation by 2035, far above current flows of US$26 billion. Finance needs are 12–14 times higher than existing support, risking missed climate goals. While private sector potential and policy progress exist, both public and private finance must scale without burdening vulnerable nations with debt.

Unlocking Private Finance for Nature as Infrastructure

Date published: November 2025

This report from AIIB calls for treating nature as critical infrastructure, using Public-Private Partnerships for Nature (PPPNs) to mobilize investment at scale. It highlights guarantees, insurance, and biodiversity credits as underused tools to accelerate financing. Governments, MDBs, and financial institutions must mainstream nature into economic systems, regulation, and planning to unlock private capital and deliver resilience outcomes.

Re-WIRE Agri-Food Value Chains

Date published: November 2025

This report from the Food and Land Use Coalition highlights mounting pressures on agri-food value chains, from climate risks to human rights concerns, with impacts on people, planet, and business resilience. Re-WIRE provides an analytical framework to identify risks and opportunities across eight commodity-country chains, including soy and beef in Brazil, and is now being refined with input from businesses, farmers, governments, and civil society.

Nature Handbook for Food & Drink Manufacturers

Date published: October 2025

This handbook from the Food & Drink Federation addresses rising climate risks threatening food security and the sector’s reliance on nature. It guides UK manufacturers in assessing land-based supply chain risks and implementing strategies for resilience. Focused on achieving Nature Positive by 2030, it promotes biodiversity restoration, climate adaptation, and global action through practical steps, case studies, and collaborative frameworks.

Investing in Critical Systems

Date published: October 2025

This report from Landscape Finance Lab highlights that an additional $200 billion annually is needed by 2030 to meet biodiversity targets under the Kunming-Montreal Framework. Private finance remains underutilized, often lacking landscape integration. Landscape initiatives offer scalable, de-risked platforms combining restoration, conservation, and governance, aligning public, private, and blended finance for systemic impact and nature-positive outcomes.

Natural Capital: A guide for institutional investors

Date published: October 2025

This online guide produced by Kana Earth outlines a framework for institutional investors exploring natural capital allocations. In partnership with leading firms, it details strategies across private markets including real estate, infrastructure and nature based solutions, highlighting financial returns and ecological benefits. As climate risks rise, natural capital is becoming central to resilient portfolios, offering income, diversification and alignment with global sustainability goals.

Farming with nature: mapping the growth opportunity for UK agriculture

Date published: October 2025

This report from Lloyds Bank shows that UK agriculture must align with nature restoration to ensure long-term food security and rural prosperity. It highlights how sustainable farming is commercially viable with data, finance, and policy support. Mapping 5.1 million hectares, it identifies key risks and opportunities, urging coordinated action and investment to drive resilience and nature recovery across the sector.

Financing Climate Adaptation and Nature-Based Infrastructure

Date published: October 2025

This report from the World Bank assesses opportunities to increase private sector participation and financing for climate adaptation and nature-based infrastructure in Emerging and Developing Economies (EMDEs). These regions face growing risks from climate change, including extreme weather and ecosystem degradation. Economic and population growth further strain natural systems. Mobilizing private investment is essential to build resilience and protect biodiversity and ecosystem services.

For the world’s largest companies, climate physical risks have a $1.2 trillion annual price tag by the 2050s

Date published: October 2025

This report from S&P Global projects that climate physical risks could cost the world’s largest companies $1.2 trillion annually by 2050, with extreme heat and water stress as key drivers. Utility companies face the highest impact, with electric utilities averaging $4.6 billion in annual costs. Despite growing risk assessments, few firms quantify the financial impact of these risks.

Investing in nature: Mobilising private finance for environmental recovery in the UK

Date published: October 2025

This report by Aviva warns that nature’s rapid deterioration threatens global economies and UK financial assets, with over half of global GDP reliant on healthy ecosystems. It urges stronger public policy to attract private investment in nature restoration, aligning global and UK biodiversity goals, and developing markets to support ecosystem recovery and long-term economic resilience.

Optimizing for with Nature-Based Projects in the Voluntary Carbon Market

Date published: October 2025

This report from JPMorganChase highlights the growing interest in financing nature-based carbon projects through the voluntary carbon market. It introduces six principles to guide dual carbon and biodiversity outcomes, emphasizing local context, adaptive management, and long-term impact. The report calls for clearer frameworks and market signals to support high-quality, nature-positive investments aligned with global biodiversity goals.

Nature's Price Tag: The economic cost of nature loss

Date published: September 2025

This report reveals nature’s critical role in the global economy and the escalating financial risks of ecosystem decline. Driven by climate change, overexploitation, and pollution, nature loss could cost eight key sectors up to $430 billion annually—$2.15 trillion in five years. It urges immediate action, offering tools for investors to mitigate risks and build resilience before costs spiral.

Nature Economics: Analysis of the case for Australian Government investment in nature

Date published: September 2025

This report reveals that Australia’s biodiversity contributes $511 billion annually—more than mining or finance—yet receives just 0.1% of the federal budget. Underinvestment has led to ecosystem collapse and world-leading mammal extinctions. Allocating 1% could boost land productivity by 40%, protect infrastructure supporting 20% of GDP, and improve disaster resilience, public health, and climate adaptation.

Finance Solutions for Nature: Pathways to Returns and Outcomes

Date published: September 2025

This report reveals that nature is becoming a strategic investment focus, yet markets struggle to value it. This report offers a framework for investors and institutions to unlock capital for nature through 37 financial solutions, highlighting 10 scalable options. It emphasizes a flexible toolkit over a single solution, combining mainstream finance with nature-specific models to build credible, investable markets for ecosystem outcomes.

Mainstreaming Natural Capital: Advancing the Global Agenda to Mainstream Nature in Decision-Making

Date published: September 2025

This community paper discusses how the global economy has lifted millions from poverty but undervalues nature, treating it as limitless. As environmental trade-offs intensify, a shift is needed to integrate natural capital into decision-making. This approach values ecosystems as essential assets for resilience. Despite growing interest, nature remains underrepresented in economic metrics.  outlines pathways to mainstream natural capital for sustainable development.

Scaling Up Biodiversity-Positive Incentives

Date published: September 2025

This report focuses on how biodiversity is vital to human and economic well-being and yet it’s rapidly declining. The Kunming-Montreal Framework’s Target 18 promotes biodiversity-positive incentives like taxes, subsidies, and ecosystem payments. Though effective, uptake is limited. This report outlines ten recommendations to improve design, scale, and impact—emphasizing clear goals, stakeholder engagement, transparency, and policy coherence to reverse biodiversity loss by 2030.

Quantifying the Unseen: Building a Nature and Biodiversity Risk-Adjusted Sovereign Index

Date published: September 2025

This report covers how nature and biodiversity are increasingly seen as material to corporate and investment decisions due to their impact on economic stability. While nature-related risk methodologies exist for various asset classes, sovereign debt remains underexplored. A new framework assesses countries based on biodiversity impact, nature dependencies, and policies, showing how ecological factors can influence sovereign risk and support sustainable investment strategies.

Driving Demand: Business Action on Nature in the UK

Date published: September 2025

This report reveals that while UK businesses recognise their role in the nature crisis, they face uncertainty and competing pressures. Progress is fragmented, with two main gaps: alignment with global environmental targets and disconnects between risk management and credit supply. Confusion over ‘nature investment’ terms remains. The findings aim to guide systemic improvements and inform both business and government action.

Priority Action for deforestation and conversion-free finance

Date published: September 2025

Released at Climate Week NYC 2025, the DCF Advisory Group’s report urges a transformation of global financial flows to prevent deforestation and ecosystem conversion. It provides actionable steps for aligning finance with sustainable land use, calling on policymakers and institutions to de-risk supply chains, protect biodiversity, and foster long-term economic resilience through deforestation- and conversion-free strategies.

Discussion Paper: Nature Impact Target Setting for Banks

Date published: August 2025

UNEP FI and UNEP-WCMC have co-authored a discussion paper that proposes an approach for banks to set impact targets for nature. This approach builds on the on the previous PRB Biodiversity Target Setting Guidance and Nature Target Setting Guidance, as well as existing frameworks such as the Taskforce on Nature-related Financial Disclosures (TNFD) Locate, Evaluate, Assess, and Prepare (LEAP) approach and the Science Based Targets Network (SBTN) target-setting process.

The Disclosure Dividend 2025

Date published: August 2025

CDP’s report draws on analysis from disclosures of nearly 25,000 companies in 2024, covering over two thirds of global market capitalisation. It reveals that companies can achieve significant returns by investing in climate action and addressing environmental risks, with some firms seeing up to $21 back for every $1 invested. Alongside this potential return, the report shows significant losses are already accumulating from environmental risks and resilience issues and gives several statistics to demonstrate this. For example, the European Union’s agriculture sector is already losing €28 billion each year as a result of extreme weather.

Global Wetland Outlook 2025

Date published: July 2025

This report produced by the Scientific and Technical Review Panel (STRP) of the Convention on Wetlands, reveals that at least 400 million hectares of wetlands have been lost since 1970, with nearly a quarter of those remaining in a degraded state. These losses significantly impact water availability, biodiversity, climate stability and human well-being. The report estimates that the world’s remaining wetlands contribute up to $39 trillion in benefits each year, yet conservation funding remains far below what is required.

Tiger Landscapes Investment Fund Brief

Date published: July 2025

This brief discusses the Tiger Landscapes Investment Fund (TLIF), developed to channel private sector investment into businesses that support the protection, restoration, and sustainable management of tiger landscapes. It aims to create a fit-for-purpose financing mechanism tailored to each country’s unique biodiversity financing context, enhancing financial sustainability and delivering long-term biodiversity benefits.

Best Practice Guide: Community Inclusion for Community Benefit

Date published: May 2025

After 18 months of development with expert stakeholders, the Best Practice Guide for Community Inclusion has been released. This resource is intended to be a useful starting point for nature-based projects who may be new to meaningful community engagement, or a helpful lever for those established projects demonstrating best practice requirements to funders/investors.

The Private Equity Opportunity in Climate Adaptation and Resilience

Date published: May 2025

BCG has developed a Climate Adaptation and Resilience Investment Opportunity Map, which lays out the landscape for private investors. This report dives into six investable subsectors, including nature-based solutions as well as opportunities that avoid or reduce nature harm, projecting their growth, segmenting the markets, and identifying investment trends in each of them.

2025 Global Survey of Nature Risk Management at Financial Firms

Date published: May 2025

The Global Association of Risk Professionals undertook its second global survey of nature risk management, comprising 48 financial firms. The survey results provide valuable insights of current nature risk management practices across the financial services industry, and suggests priority areas for improvement.

Asking Better Questions on Nature

Date published: May 2025

The TNFD has published this guide to help senior executives across business and finance surface critical insights about nature-related dependencies, impacts, risks and opportunities to inform their decision making. The guide features 12 key questions that board directors may wish to ask company executives and consider in board meetings, and the sort of analysis they should expect to see from their organisations to support those discussions.

The role of natural capital in the UK's green economy

Date published: May 2025

This report by the Environmental Audit Committee provides a set of recommendations based on their view of the extent that existing policies and programmes of government departments and non-departmental public bodies contribute to environmental protection and sustainable development.

Principles for high-integrity insetting in the land sector

Date published: May 2025

Published by Conservation International, this report proposes a definition and six accompanying principles for high-integrity carbon emissions insetting for the land sector. It was developed alongside 40 organisations and reveals key opportunities and challenges.

From risk to reward: Making the UK the carbon markets capital of the world

Date published: May 2025

This report puts forward a vision of the UK in 2035 as the global capital for carbon markets, highlighting the tangible benefits of achieving this vision and how it can be delivered with a particular focus on nature-based carbon removal and nature markets.

How Insurance Can Address Nature-related Risks: A Summary Guide

Date published: May 2025

This summary guide by Biofin and UNDP is written to assist countries in preparing their National Biodiversity Finance Plans. It makes the case for insurance as a potential finance solution that can address risks associated with loss of ecosystems, species and genetic biodiversity.

Assessing the impacts and dependencies on nature

Date published: April 2025

ZSL and Scottish Widows release a case study on how asset owners can navigate nature-related issues using openly available tools, sector-level analysis, and frameworks such as the TNFD.

Healthy Debt on a Healthy Planet

Date published: April 2025

This expert review presents a suite of policy recommendations aimed at helping countries break free of escalating debt burdens, climate change and nature loss. The recommendations provide practical proposals on how to unlock finance for sustainable development.

Compliance Checker for JDE Peet

Date published: April 2025

Coffee Watch and Aid Environment have published a sustainability risk profile linking JDE Peet to forest-risk commodities in the scope of the EU regulation on deforestation-free products, by mapping the company’s coffee sourcing areas, links to deforestation hotspots, and location of assets and infrastructure linked to commodities imports.

Nature's Investment Frontier

Date published: April 2025

This report, by Environment Marketplace, explores a diverse and informed perspective on the development of markets and finance for biodiversity over the course of decades of experimentation. It covers topics such as offsets, credit stacking and nature positive.

Nature risk insights

Date published: March 2025

In this report, AXA XL and Nature Positive aim to support companies in integrating nature-related risks into their risk management strategy by improving companies’ understanding of nature-related risks for a select list of industries and how these risks might impact their operations. They also showcase actions that are already available to reduce negative impacts on nature and promote nature protection and restoration.

The nature of our economy

Date published: March 2025

This report, authored by Green Alliance, provides solutions tor the problems identified in the Dasgupta Review, which was commissioned by the UK Treasury in 2021. It provides actionable proposals across three key areas: the macroeconomy, microeconomy and political reform, enabling nature to be factored into economic decision making.

Assessing the multiple benefits of Natural Flood Management

Date published: March 2025

A report commissioned by RSA Insurance and The Wildlife Trusts shows that every £1 invested in Natural Flood Management (NFM) is expected to deliver £10 of benefits over 30 years, highlighting the cost efficiency as well as effectiveness of nature-based solutions in managing flood risks.

Balancing Bankability and Integrity: Fostering Investment Ready Solutions

Date published: March 2025

This report, prepared by WWF’s NbS accelerator team, explores the opportunities and challenges of private finance in NbS for investors, practitioners, standard setters and regulators. The research identified four key categories of tensions between bankability and integrity for NbS, and examines these tensions with a solutions oriented approach. The four categories of tensions are temporal mismatch, value mismatch, governance challenges, and stakeholder risk-benefit imbalances.

2025 Nature Finance Market Outlook

Date published: March 2025

This report by Posaidon Capital provides a perspective across equities, fixed income and private markets, as well as an outlook on the nature credit and commodities market. The report concludes that integration of geospatial analysis into financial decision-making will have material impacts for information markets, new financial products and long term risk management, and that this shift will incorporate natural capital valuation into capital and investment markets.

Integrating Nature & Biodiversity into Investment - an Asset Owner Perspective

Date published: February 2025

This report examines how asset owners are integrating nature-related considerations into their sustainability priorities. Through interviews with 20 asset owners and managers across the UK, Europe, Asia-Pacific, North America and Latin America, their responses highlight although 85% are incorporating nature into their strategies, many asset owners and managers are still in the early stages of assessing risks and opportunities. This report, authored by Pensions for Purpose, also presents best practice steps for pension schemes.

Investing in Continuous Cover Forestry in Europe

Date published: February 2025

This white paper was authored by SLM and makes the business case for investment in Continuous Cover Forestry (CCF). It highlights the benefits of Continuous Cover Forestry in the context of Europe’s existing timber industry, policy support, and limitations of CCF. The paper also sets out findings from SLM’s financial modelling that demonstrates returns to investors.

Accountability for Nature

Date published: February 2025

This report provides an overview of the key trends in methods proposed by the seven leading frameworks and standards for private sector assessment and disclosure on nature-related issues. These include the TNFD, ESRS, SBTN and ISSB Standards. This report was co-authored by the UNEP-WCMC) and the United Nations Environment Programme Finance Initiative (UNEP FI).

BNG in Practice

Date published: February 2025

One year on from the launch of mandatory Biodiversity Net Gain (BNG), this report summarises uptake and learnings from 142 practitioners and policy stakeholders. Subsequently, it makes over 20 recommendations to government, delivery organisations and supporting bodies. This report was authored by the Institution of Environmental Sciences.

UK National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan

Date published: February 2025

The UK’s NBSAP has been published following last year’s COP16 in Columbia. It is a responsibility of every country committed to the Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF) and outlines a country’s plan to protect and manage its biodiversity, identifying national priorities, actions, and commitments to address biodiversity loss. The UK’s NBSAP commits the UK to achieving all 23 of the GBF targets and was a joint collaboration between all four of the UK’s devolved administrations.

The Business Case for Nature

Date published: January 2025

Accounting for Sustainability (A4S) has released a guidance series to give finance teams practical guidance and tools to help them understand nature-related impacts and dependencies, and take steps to integrate nature-related risks and opportunities into business strategy and decision-making processes.

Achieving 2050 vision for biodiversity

Date published: January 2025

This assessment by the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) identifies the three underlying causes of biodiversity loss and concludes with four principles to guide the change, five strategies to advance the change, six broad approaches, and five challenges.

Nature positive transitions: sectors

Date published: January 2025

The World Economic Forum’s Nature Positive Transitions report series explores pathways to halt and reverse nature loss by 2030. The series focuses on seven sectors – including the automotive, chemical, and offshore wind sectors – and highlights the dual impacts and dependencies of these industries on nature, alongside the priority actions businesses can take to avoid and reduce negative impacts, mitigate nature-related risks, and build resilience.

Protected Planet Report 2024

Date published: January 2025

This report by UNEP-WCMC, IUCN and others provides the first official review of global progress towards the world’s commitment to Target 3 of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework. This Target aims to safeguard the world’s biodiversity through protected and conserved areas.

Insuring a resilient nature-positive future

Date published: December 2024

The UNEP-FI’s Principles for Sustainable Insurance (PSI) has released this guide to provide actions to help both non-life and life & health primary insurers fulfil their dual responsibility as an economic enabler and risk manager. It emphasises the need to address nature-related dependencies, impacts, risks, and opportunities across the insurance value chain in contribution to a resilient economy.

TNFD for UK Commercial Real Estate

Date published: December 2024

This guide by the Better Buildings Partnership (BBP) provides commercial real estate organisations with practical guidance to implement the TNFD framework and make informed nature-related disclosures. It aims to help these organisations integrate nature-related considerations into their investment strategies and disclosures, aligning their actions with the TNFD framework.

Nature for Boards: A primer

Date published: December 2024

Recognising that Non-Executive Directors (NEDs) play a critical role in integrating nature-related risks and opportunities into corporate governance, this primer provides an understanding of future-facing leadership and offers practical guidance for boards regarding how to exercise their role effectively when it comes to nature. It also includes questions that boards can ask to stimulate discussion on nature. This primer was authored by Pollination in collaboration with Chapter Zero and Korn Ferry.

Why nature matters for business

Date published: December 2024

The Aldersgate Group has released this briefing to set out why nature is vital for the UK economy, and the policy and regulation required from government to enable businesses to contribute to the protection and restoration of the natural environment. It calls on governments to take action on multiple fronts, including the creation of an effective framework for delivery of the Environmental Improvement Plan, Land Use Framework and nature targets.

Navigating Nature-related Regulations for Banks: Mapping the Policy Landscape

Date published: December 2024

The UN Environment Programme Finance Initiative (UNEP FI) has identified 29 jurisdictions, totalling more than €75 trillion of banking assets, that have started reflecting nature-related considerations in their regulations. This report, published jointly with WWF, comes at a time when central banks and financial supervisors are starting to acknowledge the necessity of tackling nature-related financial risks as part of their prudential mandate.

Financing the Nature-based Solutions Sector

Date published: November 2024

Triodos describes the potential range of Nature-based Solution (NbS) projects and how they should be financed in a holistic and sustainable manner. Companies and projects are provided as case studies, and the opportunities and challenges associated with financing NbS.

BSI Flex 702 Nature Markets – Supply of Biodiversity Benefits

Date published: November 2024

The Nature Investment Standards Programme is led by BSI and supported by Defra and has released a specification that defines requirements for biodiversity outcomes suitable for inset and offset projects, including terrestrial and marine habitats. This set of requirements adds to the previously published nature market principles.

Nature Action 100 Company Benchmark Key Findings 2024

Date published: October 2024

This report by Nature Action 100 show that most companies are still in the early stages of addressing their nature-related impacts and dependencies. They outline a benchmark comparison across 6 indicators, including nature-related assessments, targets and progress against targets.

Nature in the Boardroom

Date published: October 2024

UNEPFI in partnership with Deloitte provide guidance for integration of nature considerations into governance frameworks by providing questions for Boards of financial institutions to ask of their management teams to identify, manage, and report on nature-related risks and opportunities.

Report: Investing in Nature as Infrastructure

Date published: October 2024

This report presents high level opportunities for investing in nature as infrastructure by using innovative financing instruments. It is intended as a high-level guide to set the direction and build momentum particularly among multilateral development banks.

Report: Framework for high integrity biodiversity credit markets

Date published: October 2024

This report provides a detailed framework, including definitions and methods of scaling. The IAPB also provides key findings and a roadmap of next steps to enable the creation of high integrity biodiversity markets.

Report: The Role of Insurance in Unlocking Nature Finance

Date published: October 2024

This report lays out key areas that the insurance sector can unlock finance for Nature: risk transfer, protection of natural assets, enabling trade in environmental markets and governance.

Report: Champions for Nature: Raising Ambition, Sustaining Impact

Date published: October 2024

This compendium of insights covers policy coherence, sustainable land use, valuing natural capital, the Nature-climate nexus and inclusion of Indigenous Peoples.

Report: Investing in Natural Capital: Innovations Supporting Much-Needed Financing for Nature

Date published: October 2024

This insight report aims to provide a framework for evaluating how innovation across technology, financial instruments, business models and new investments can mobilise more investment for natural capital.

Report: Corporate Nature Targets

Date published: October 2024

This report focuses on the EU policy requirements for corporate
nature target setting and reporting as set by the Corporate
Sustainability Reporting Directive
and its associated
European Sustainability Reporting Standards.
It provides insights on how entities should establish credible,
tailored nature targets that align with Science-Based Targets for Nature.

Report: Global Roadmap for a Nature-Positive Economy

Date published: October 2024

This report lays out a global roadmap for a Nature-positive economy. It addresses key pillars including Nature-positive transition pathways, data and metrics, private capital markets, international financial institutions and trade and the global commons.

Report: National Nature-Positive Pathways to Guide Policy and Private Sector Action

Date published: October 2024

This report, co-authored by WWF and Aviva, demonstrates why the UK government should directly develop, or commission the development of, national sectoral pathways to deliver the nature-positive goals for the UK set out in the Global Biodiversity Framework. It also has a high-level Nature Positive Pathway for the agriculture sector in the UK.

Report: Investing in Natural Capital: Innovations supporting much-needed financing for Nature

Date published: October 2024

This report by the WEF provides a concise explainer on natural capital, nature financing instruments and business models. These concepts are explained through a set of nine global case studies that bring innovations into the nature-investment value chain.

Report: Nature-related Risk: Handbook for Financial Institutions

Date published: October 2024

This report, by the Climate Financial Risk Forum, provides an introduction to Nature by defining nature-related risks and transmission channels for financial institutions, with examples. It also lays out methods of integrating nature into existing risk management practices.

Report: Opportunity Blossoms The Business of Curbing Nature Loss

Date published: October 2024

BloombergNEF reveals 12 case studies of companies that provide scalable solutions to address the five major drivers of nature loss across the agri-food, materials, industrials, consumer discretionary and data services industries. These range from multi-billion-dollar publicly listed enterprises to small-scale start-ups completing early rounds of fundraising.

Report: Banking for Change: Addressing Financial Risk as a Barrier to Farm Transition

Date published: October 2024

This report by the Soil Association Exchange highlights findings from three months of farmer-led research. Of c. 120 farmers and other stakeholders, 66.1% of whom agreed or strongly agreed that financial and business risks are barriers to transitioning farming systems. The report has subsequent recommendations for banks, development finance, funders and the agriculture sector.

White paper: Our insights from engaging with more than 280 companies about nature and biodiversity

Date published: October 2024

Danske Bank has published a white paper on nature and biodiversity where it shares its insights from engaging with more than 280 companies. They address five key questions:
1. Why is nature and biodiversity a critical agenda?
2. What motivated our engagements, and what have we discovered so far?
3. Based on our engagement, what are our reflections on the overall agenda in the context of the Global Biodiversity Framework and its ambitions?
4. What recommendations can we offer to other financial institutions undertaking similar engagements?
5. What needs must be addressed to elevate this agenda to the necessary level and activate the financial sector effectively?

Report: Working with nature Integrating nature-based solutions across urban environments and landscapes

Date published: October 2024

Date published: October 2024
This paper, published by Lloyds Banking Group and the RSPB, focuses on NbS for water management, exploring how integrating nature into land management and urban infrastructure can safeguard biodiversity and support wider adaptation to the effects of climate change. It also showcases NbS already underway across agricultural and urban environments in the UK, highlighting the raft of positive outcomes these can bring for nature, climate, and people and the steps we need to take to unlock their delivery at scale.

Discussion Paper: Global Roadmap for a Nature Positive Economy

Date published: October 2024

This Global Roadmap for a Nature-Positive
Economy sets out an agenda for action on how
to reform the economic rules of the international economic and financial system. By
doing so, this Roadmap aims to stimulate discussion
and progress towards building a nature-positive
economy, particularly among economic and financial
decision-makers in government, the private sector and
international institutions.

Report: Through the Wilderness: The role of Insurance in Unlocking Nature Finance

Date published: October 2024

This report, published by Howden and Pollination, explores how the insurance sector can drive a step change in the investments needed to tackle the interdependent global climate change and biodiversity crises. The report sets out four core roles of insurance to underscore this point: risk transfer to mobilise capital, protecting natural assets, enabling trading in environmental markets, and governance.

Report: National Nature-positive pathways to guide policy and private sector action

Date published: October 2024

This report, published by WWF and Aviva, outlines the case for the development of government-endorsed nature-positive sectoral pathways, so that the private sector and the Government can tackle the nature emergency together. It also sets out the illustrative nature-positive pathway for the agriculture sector in the UK.

Report: Investing in Natural Capital: Innovations Supporting Much-Needed Financing for Nature

Date published: September 2024

This insight report aims to provide a framework for evaluating how innovation can mobilize more investment for natural capital. This framework is broken down by stage of value chain and has case studies that illustrate where innovation is boosting investment into nature.

Report: Scaling nature finance now: The opportunity for investors in Brazil and beyond

Date published: September 2024

Report from leading nature finance organisations provides insights on the size of the investment opportunity; market data on the growth in the pipeline of investible Nature-based Solutions (NbS); expert perspectives on project success factors and what needs to happen next to scale private financing and investment. Data from Capital for Climate identifies at least $1.67B of capital allocated to NbS in the country in the last 12 months, while IFACC are progressing efforts to mobilise $1 billion in disbursements to projects by 2025.

Report: Financing a sustainable global bioeconomy

Date published: September 2024

A report from World Bioeconomy Forum and NatureFinance with support from many civil society organisations explores the current and prospective interplay between finance and the bioeconomy. Key findings include that the bioeconomy holds the potential to become the counterpart investment opportunity to the existing trillion-dollar-a-year clean tech investment landscape.

Report: How the WWF Risk Filter Suite can support disclosure under the EU Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive on Water and Biodiversity (ESRS E3 and E4)

Date published: September 2024

WWF’s Risk Filter Suite (RFS) brings together the water and biodiversity risk filters together into a free, online platform, providing a spatially explicit nature risk assessment tool which can support CSRD disclosures. It is designed to be used as a corporate and portfolio-level screening and prioritisation tool.

Paper: Integrating climate adaptation and natural capital into macroeconomic frameworks and debt sustainability

Date published: September 2024

This paper by Systemiq, published in New York Climate Week, highlights that climate change and nature loss have macroeconomic implications and urges the International Monetary Fund to systematically assess climate and nature risks, as well as investments in resilience for all countries, recognising that investment in natural capital is critical for adaptation.

Report: SBTN Validation Pilot Summary Report

Date published: September 2024

SBTN have published outcomes from their pilot programme that saw leading companies (such as Tesco, GSK, H&M and Nestle) set targets for their land and freshwater impacts. 10 of the 17 pilot companies passed the validation of one or more freshwater targets.

Toolkit: Nature Investor Toolkit

Date published: September 2024

The Responsible Investment Association Australasia (RIAA) has launched this toolkit to guide investors with a framework through nature-related risks and opportunities in areas including stewardship, policy and communication. The toolkit categorises nature-related investment opportunities into three areas: nature-aligned investments, nature-positive investments and transition opportunities.

Report: Biodiversity and Development Finance 2015-2022

Date published: September 2024

This report by the OECD finds that biodiversity funding hit $25.8 billion globally in 2022, largely driven by loans provided by multilateral institutions. It also notes that wealthy nations have one year to plug the $5bn nature finance gap.

Report: Accelerating Investments for Nature-based Solutions in the Global South

Date published: August 2024

This report provides an understanding of NbS, details the difficulties associated with scaling and implementing such solutions, and proposes a framework to map and estimate the benefits of NbS in the Global South. This framework will allow users to:
a) identify an intervention as an NbS,
b) demarcate its benefits, and
c) estimate the cost-to-benefit ratio by providing a
standardised approach to assess and report on their
outcomes and costs.

Report: Stocktake on Nature-related Risks Supervisory and regulatory approaches and perspectives on financial risk

Date published: July 2024

The FSB has surveyed financial authorities from participating FSB member jurisdictions and international organisations on their current and planned initiatives on nature-related risks.
The report provides insights on authorities’ approaches, recognising the early stage of work on nature-related financial risks and the diversity of authorities’ mandates and approaches to date.

Report: State of Nature-related disclosures: Assessing TNFD alignment of nature-related disclosures by firms in high-risk sectors

Date published: July 2024

This report assesses the current state of nature-related reporting against the TNFD’s core disclosures. It reveals that firms assessed from most sectors on the way to aligning their disclosure with the TNFD framework, with 56% of the 16 firms in the sample disclosing information relevant to all 14 Core Recommendations, and 100% of firms having set nature-related targets.

Research report: Nature Positive solar investment: industry guidance

Date published: July 2024

Finance & Investment in Nature-Positive Energy (FINE) have published an industry-leading research report on nature-positive investment opportunities in the solar energy sector. Led by the University of York, Lancaster University an NextEnergy Capital, the NextEnergy Solar Fund explores integration of finance and biodiversity in transition towards a nature-positive future.

Briefing: Navigating Troubled Waters A briefing for directors of financial institutions

Date published: June 2024

This briefing covers water as the dominant nature-related financial risk that could constitute 7-9% of global GDP. It sets out a clear business case as to why directors of financial institutions should analyse their water-related risks in more detail. It puts forward a call to action for boards and directors to adopt a systems approach, assess risks and opportunities, use change levers at their disposal and document and disclose the overall risk strategy.

Report: SCALING OCEAN FINANCE Blue bonds and innovative debt instruments for a sustainable ocean economy in MENAT and APAC

Date published: June 2024

This report offers a vision for the opportunity for blue bonds to accelerate a sustainable ocean economy in the Middle East and North Africa (MENAT), the Asia and North Pacific (APAC) regions APAC and beyond. It also highlights urgent priority actions to achieve this vision.

Buyers of Ecosystem Services in Voluntary Markets

Date published: June 2024

Briefing: Financing the Nature-Positive Transition

Date published: June 2024

This CEO briefing released during London Climate Action Week summarises a research collaboration between the World Economic Forum and Oliver Wyman, finding that lead financial institutions have begun to request nature-related data from companies. The briefing identifies opportunities for banks, investors and insurers to develop nature transition plans

Report: Financing for Regenerative Agriculture

Date published: June 2024

This report by Pollination, TIFS and the Rockefeller Foundation is aimed at financiers with access to flexible, scaled capital to highlight market maturity and example instruments for regenerative agriculture investment. The report calls on the private sector to see regenerative agriculture as an investment opportunity.

Report: Natural Climate Solutions for the Voluntary Carbon Market

Date published: June 2024

ERM along with the WBCSD have co-authored a report that outlines natural solutions that can address climate change while also replenishing biodiversity and delivering social benefits. The report details a step guide in developing an investible natural climate solution, aligned with the investment process.

Roadmap: High Integrity Marine Natural Capital Markets in the UK: A Roadmap for Action

Date published: May 2024

Finance Earth, in collaboration with Pollination, the Crown Estate and the Blue Marine Foundation, have published 7 recommendations alongside an implementation roadmap to deliver high quality natural capital markets in the UK. These recommendations are mapped to barriers as well as provide a detailed timeline for each recommendation.

Guide: Investing in Nature: Opportunities for Intuitional Investors

Date published: May 2024

This short guide, co-authored by the Sustainable Markets Initiative and GFI, seeks to demystify the various opportunities available to investors to increase private capital flows into Nature, and draws on the experience and insights of asset managers within this emerging sector. It also presents detailed case studies designed to support the decisions made by investors

Report: Rewilding Finance

Date published: May 2024

Written by Rewilding Britain, this report takes a deep dive into mechanisms that can support rewilding financing in the UK and focuses on actors including practitioners, project partners, funders and brokers within the rewilding ecosystem. The report lays out 5 recommendations, each of which details a case study that showcases the recommendation in practice.

Report: The Global Bioeconomy

Date published: May 2024

This report details a preliminary stocktake of G20 strategies and practices in contribution to the Brazilian G20 Presidency’s Global Initiative on Bioeconomy, including how G20 members are advancing the bioeconomy as a basis for:
Facilitating members’ learning and engagement,
Enabling G20 members’ action and
Increasing cooperation in areas of common interest.
The report includes a section on financing which lays out the types of nature markets used, including asset, intrinsic, derivative and credit markets.

Report: Implementing Statutory Biodiversity Net Gain

Date published: May 2024

In this report, the National Audit Office examines the progress that Defra and Natural England have made in implementing statutory Biodiversity Net Gain (BNG), and whether they have done so in a way that maximises benefits and effectively manages risks. The report goes on to make recommendations aimed at supporting Defra and Natural England to maximise value and manage risks to statutory BNG as policy implementation becomes business as usual.

Issue Paper: Definition of a Biodiversity Credit 

Date published: May 2024

The Biodiversity Credit Alliance (BCA) proposes that “a biodiversity credit is a certificate that represents a measured and evidence-based unit of positive biodiversity outcome that is durable and additional to what would have otherwise occurred.” The report goes on to define terms within the definition, and highlights issues for further discussion such as transparency, trading rules and liability for performance failure.

The Future for Nature in Transition Planning

Date published: April 2024

This paper draws on the expertise of the Transition Plan Taskforce (TPT) Nature Working Group to make recommendations on the future of nature in transition planning beyond the current TPT Disclosure Framework and associated guidance. It considers how the TPT’s approach to climate transition planning could be applied to nature objectives, and what can be done to create the enabling environment needed for business to implement this approach within transition plans.

Global Survey of Nature Risk Management at Financial Firms

Date published: April 2024

GARP has undertaken its first global survey of nature risk management across the financial system, with the intention of examining both the risks and opportunities within a financial firm’s portfolios (rather than its direct operations). There were 48 firms in this year’s Survey, comprising 37 banks, seven asset managers, and four insurers. Among other things, the survey shows that:
31% of the firms report that their regulators have published formal expectations for nature risk management, and another 13% expect their regulators to do so.
Nearly half of the boards in the sample have oversight of nature-related risks and opportunities.
Just 17% of firms are using metrics, targets, or limits to assess drivers of nature-related risks.

CPIC Conservation Investment Blueprints - Agriculture and Forestry Projects

Date published: April 2024

CPIC has published four additional blueprints to add to its existing repository, including: Belterra’s use of blended finance in managing agroforestry systems in Brazil; the RSPB’s use of a commercial debt facility to refinance the acquisition of its habitat bank site for S106 payments in England; Heal Rewilding’s leveraging a blend of concessional and commercial debt alongside public and private donations, for nature recovery projects in England; and Koa’s use of a low-interest loan from the Landscape Resilience Fund and IDH Farmfit Fund to scale its use of agricultural by-products.in Ghana.

Biodiversity Disclosure Initiatives

Date published: April 2024

This Thematic Report from Arcadis, ICF and the European Business and Biodiversity Platform specifically focuses on biodiversity disclosure initiatives – both regulatory and voluntary- to highlight the major differences and similarities. The report covers 6 biodiversity disclosure initiatives: the European Sustainability Reporting Standard (ESRS) E4 on biodiversity and ecosystems (part of CSRD); the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR); French Energy and Climate Law, Article 29; Taskforce on Nature-related Financial Disclosures (TNFD) recommendations and guidance; Biodiversity Standard of the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI); Biodiversity disclosure requirements by CDP.

Standards Framework: Nature markets - Overarching principles and framework - Specification

Date published: March 2024

The British Standards Institution (BSI) has released Version 1 of its Overarching Principles Standard, the first of a suite of upcoming standards as part of the Nature Investment Standards programme. This is intended to establish an overarching framework to ensure the functioning of high-integrity nature markets as they are developed. The document is available for public consultation until 1 May 2024.

Guidance Paper: How Can Biodiversity Finance Plans Support NBSAPs?

Date published: March 2024

BIOFIN has published guidance on how Biodiversity Finance Plans (BFPs) can support countries in developing national biodiversity strategy and action plans (NBSAPs). While NBSAPs are the main policy instrument for implementing biodiversity targets at the national level, BFPs focus on closing the biodiversity funding gap, and can thereby support the attainment of NBSAP targets.

Policy Paper: The Carbon Credit Price and National Tree Planting Impact of Woodland Carbon Code Admittance to the UK-ETS.

Date published: February 2024

A new policy paper has been released by Foresight Group and King’s College London to assess the price impact on Woodland Carbon Units, of admitting the Woodland Carbon Code (WCC) into the UK Emissions Trading System (UK-ETS). The paper bases its modelling on the forestry sector but also examines best-practice examples from other regional markets and suggests a number of key recommendations for policymakers, regulators, and investors.

Research Paper: Nature-Based Solutions & Risk Management. Recommendations for Integrating Nature into Risk Science & Insurance

Date published: February 2024

A report by the Center for Coastal Resilience at the University of Santa Cruz, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and Guy Carpenter has been published that sets out 15 recommendations to further integrating NbS into risk science and insurance business operations in the United States. The recommendations fall under four themes: risk models; insurance coverages; public-private partnerships; and financing opportunities.

Guidance Paper: Investing in Regenerative Agriculture: Reflections from the Past Decade

Date published: February 2024

SLM Partners has released a new white paper aimed at investors seeking to invest in regenerative agriculture. The report sets out the investment and environmental case for regenerative agriculture, while also highlighting the risks and challenges that investors may face when starting the investment journey.

Legal Templates: Nature as Director

Date published: March 2024

The Earth Law Centre’s Nature Governance Agency has uploaded four new legal templates to the Earth Law Portal, designed to help UK businesses and organizations bring a Nature Director onto their board of directors. These four templates include a Nature Director Nomination Policy, a Nature Director Document Tracker, a Nature Director Document Changes, and a Nature Director Commitment Level to Implementation Matrix (CLIM). The templates were developed and adapted from the advice of Shearman & Sterling LLP.

Report: Global Risks Report 2024

Date published: February 2024

The World Economic Forum (WEF) has published its 19th edition of the Global Risks Report. This speaks on a number of material risks that relate to the environment and ranks five of these in the top 10 risks that will dominate the global economy in 10 years time. These include:
1st – Extreme weather events.

2nd – Critical change to Earth systems.

3rd – Biodiversity loss and ecosystem collapse.

4th – Natural resource shortages.

10th – Pollution.

Report: Accountability for Nature: Comparison of Nature-related Assessment and Disclosure Frameworks and Standards

Date published: January 2024

This report, co-authored by the United Nations Environment Programme World Conservation Monitoring Centre (UNEP-WCMC) and the United Nations Environment Programme Finance Initiative (UNEP FI), provides an overview of the key methodological and conceptual trends among the private sector assessment and disclosure approaches on nature-related issues. It provides comparative research on seven leading standards, frameworks and systems for assessment and disclosure on nature-related issues, such as the SBTN guidance, CDP and the TNFD.

Report: A Roadmap for Financing a Regenerative Agriculture Transition in England

Date published: January 2024

Led by WWF and Natwest Group, this roadmap is a product of a series of cross-sector workshops and provides an overview of the Government action needed to mobilise private financial investment for a regenerative agricultural transition in England.

Financing Nature Based Solutions for Adaptation at Scale: Learning from Specialised Investment Managers and Nature Funds

Date published: December 2023

This report is a first output from the project “Global Tools to Unlock Capital for Investments in Nature-Based
Solutions” of the Global Center on Adaptation in partnership with the Environmental Change Institute (ECI) at the University of Oxford. This first output reviews the status of nature finance globally, to learn from the role played by nature-focussed funds and their investment managers, understand what works, and draw conclusions for how we might mobilise more financing for nature-based solutions for adaptation

Discussion Paper: Financing nature: a transformative action agenda

Date published: December 2023

This discussion paper from SystemIQ aims to deepen the action agenda for nature finance by proposing five urgent, systemic action items to mobilize capital for nature and four investment priorities for financial institutions.

Report: Paying for Quality, State of the Voluntary Carbon Markets 2023

Date published: November 2023

Ecosystem Marketplace has published its latest summary of global voluntary carbon markets to provide updating pricing, trends and other relevant data and insights related to Article 6 of the Paris Agreement. It includes several data points around nature-based carbon credit sales.

Report: UNEP Adaptation Gap Report  

Date published: November 2023

The report finds that the adaptation finance needs of developing countries are 10-18 times as big as international public finance flows. This is over 50% higher than the previous range estimate, and the current adaptation finance gap is now estimated at US$194-366 billion per year. This report identifies seven ways to increase financing, including through domestic expenditure and international and private sector finance.

Report: UNEP Emissions Gap Report 

Date published: November 2023

The report finds that as things stand, fully implementing unconditional Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) made under the Paris Agreement would put the world on track for limiting temperature rise to 2.9°C above pre-industrial levels this century. Fully implementing conditional NDCs would lower this to 2.5°C. Today, the projected increase is 3%. However, predicted 2030 greenhouse gas emissions still must fall by 28% for the Paris Agreement 2°C pathway and 42% for the 1.5°C pathway.

Report: Let's Discuss Nature with Climate: Engagement Guide

Date published: October 2023

The Centre for Sustainable Finance (CISL)’s new Let’s Discuss Nature with Climate Engagement Guide details how banks and investment managers can accelerate the transition to a nature-positive economy by engaging with portfolio clients and investee companies on nature protection and restoration through existing climate mitigation efforts. The Guide presents a five-phase approach to integrate nature into existing engagements on climate.

Report: The State of UK Nature Markets 2023

Date published: October 2023

This report is an assessment of the condition of UK nature markets with particular reference to the framework for high-integrity nature markets published by the Financing Nature Recovery coalition in June 2022. The coalition included some 60 organisations and was led by Broadway Initiative along with the Green Finance Institute and Finance Earth.

Publication: Nature Markets Principles

Date published: October 2023

These Principles have been collectively published by Finance Earth, the Wildlife Trusts, RSPB, Woodland Trust, National Trust and Federated Hermes Limited. They are aimed at enhancing the integrity and effectiveness of nature markets linked to carbon and nature credits. They are designed as a stop-gap, to influence market practice today and to contribute to emerging Government Policy and Regulation. The Principles may be used voluntarily by all market participants and to assist with policy development.

Report: The High Cost of Cheap Water  

Date published: October 2023

Released on World Food Day, the World Wildlife Fund (WWF)’s The High Cost of Cheap Water report finds the annual economic value of water and freshwater ecosystems is estimated to be USD 58 trillion – equivalent to 60% of global Gross Domestic Product (GDP). The report finds that direct economic benefits, such as water consumption for households, irrigated agriculture and industries, amount to a minimum of USD 7.5 trillion annually. It also estimates that the unseen benefits – which include purifying water, enhancing soil health, storing carbon, and protecting communities from extreme floods and droughts – are seven times higher at around USD 50 trillion annually.

Report: State of Voluntary Biodiversity Credits Market: A Global Review of Biodiversity Credit Schemes

Date published: October 2023

Pollination analysed eight biodiversity credit schemes across the globe, providing a view of the supply side of this fast-emerging market. The report identifies key characteristics and market trends across the eight schemes. It also identifies six key attributes of voluntary biodiversity credit schemes that should be prioritised for improvement over coming years

Report: Nature Finance Focus: Tracking global trends in nature investment

Date published: September 2023

In this report, Pollination sets out the findings from its survey of 557 investors across the globe that are engaged in nature investment. The survey aimed to understand what is motivating their work, where they see risk and opportunity, and how the investment footprint on nature is evolving today.

Guide: Bonds to Finance the Sustainable Blue Economy

Date published: September 2023

This voluntary Guidance is for broad use by the market to provide issuers with guidance on the key components involved in launching a credible “blue bond,” to aid investors by promoting availability of information to evaluate the environmental impact of their “blue bond” investments, and, and to assist underwriters by offering vital steps that will facilitate transactions that preserve the integrity of
the market.

Roadmap: Eliminating Commodity-Driven Deforestation Finance Sector Roadmap

Date published: September 2023

This Roadmap recommends the key steps needed for financial institutions to eliminate commodity-driven deforestation, conversion, and associated human rights abuses from their portfolio by 2025. The Roadmap focuses on finance provided to clients/holdings (including companies, projects, and financial institutions) which produce, process, procure and finance the highest-risk agricultural commodities, which are responsible for over two thirds of tropical deforestation.

Briefing Paper: Nature-Positive Insurance: Evolving Thinking and Practices

Date published: September 2023

UNEP FI’s Principles for Sustainable Insurance Initiative (PSI) and Nature Teams co-authored this paper articulating the role that insurers can play in supporting the goals of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework. The paper includes recommendations on managing nature-related risks and on innovative solutions and new opportunities to insure nature. Furthermore, this paper identifies gaps in knowledge, tools, methods and standards and proposes a roadmap to speed up and scale up nature-positive insurance.

Report: Developing High-Integrity Marine Natural Capital Markets in the UK

Date published: September 2023

Commissioned by The Crown Estate and Blue Marine Foundation, and led by Finance Earth and Pollination, this report identifies barriers to developing high-integrity marine natural capital markets in the UK and outlines recommendations for unlocking vital investment into marine natural capital, drawing on input from almost 100 stakeholders.

Report: Nature-related Financial Risks: A Conceptual Framework to guide Action by Central Banks and Supervisors

Date published: September 2023

The Network for Greening the Financial System (NGFS) published the beta version of its Conceptual Framework for Nature-Related Financial Risks to guide policies and action by central banks and financial supervisors. The Framework seeks to create a shared science-based understanding of, and common language for, these nature-related financial risks to help central banks and financial supervisors navigate the complexities and challenges associated with assessing and addressing these risks.

Report: A global Centre for Nature Finance

Date published: September 2023

The City of London Corporation and PwC, with support from the Green Finance Institute, have collaborated to outline a vision for an innovative and world leading global centre for nature finance that supports the ambition of the Global Biodiversity Framework. It provides seven recommendations for the UK Government, regulators, and the Financial Services sector. The report also recommends for Government to “address marine biodiversity as a matter of urgency” in its nature markets.

Report: State of Nature

Date published: September 2023

The State of Nature Partnership is formed of 50 conservation-linked organisations. Its first report uses the latest and best data from biological monitoring and recording schemes to provide a benchmark for the status of the UK’s wildlife. It finds nearly one in six species are threatened with extinction. Pollinators such as bees, hoverflies and moths, have decreased by 18% on average, whilst predatory insects, like the 2-spot Ladybird which help control crop pests, have declined by more than a third.

Discussion Paper: Catalysing finance and insurance for nature-based solutions

Date published: August 2023

This report by Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH, outlines several case studies that highlight private sector initiatives in emerging markets, from marine ecosystems to agriculture. The report showcases the scope for stronger collaboration between the public and private sectors.

Report: Making Nature Markets Work

Date published: August 2023

The Taskforce on Nature Markets published its final report that sets out seven recommendations to embed nature and social equity goals into global finance. The recommendations call integrating nature considerations across economic, financial, and social policies and regulations, equitable sharing of benefits, prosecution of crimes against nature, and establishing transparent measures of the state of nature.

Report: Nature in Green Finance

Date published: August 2023

This new Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) report reveals nature is consistently overlooked in financial decision-making by most financial institutions, despite stepping up climate considerations. It offers an analysis of efforts across governance, strategy and implementation, risk management, and metrics and targets mechanisms of most financial institutions.

High Level Roadmap: Aligning financial flows with the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework

Date published: July 2023

Published by the UNEP Finance Initiative, this Roadmap suggests recommendations for actors across the financial landscape on integrating the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF) within their policies and decision-making processes.

Report: Reaping the rewards: Cultivating a fair transition for farming

Date published: July 2023

This report from the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) recommends that the government allocate £2.4 billion a year for the next decade in England for environmental land priorities, accompanied by a strengthening of the regulatory baseline for farming in the UK, in line with aims and targets for net zero and the recovery of nature on land. The report also advises that government should end subsidies in the form of de-linked payments to farms with over £100,000 net annual profit from food sales, starting in 2024.

Report: Harnessing Biodiversity Credits for People and Planet

Date published: June 2023

This report was developed by NatureFinance in association with Carbone 4 and in collaboration with the Global Environment Facility (GEF). The first part of the paper provides an overview of recent developments in the biodiversity credits landscape. The second part of the report proposes a Global Roadmap – first introduced at the Summit for a New Global Financing Pact held in Paris in July 2023.

Report: Progress in reducing emissions 2023 Report to Parliament

Date published: June 2023

This report finds that the UK must urgently double down on adaptation action and set the right policies, institutions and capabilities in place to build a net zero, resilient and nature-positive economy. Significant gaps in the UK’s climate policy regime are slowing the flow of finance towards projects that can help manage the impact of extreme heat, floods, storms, and drought in the UK. Action on adaptation, including nature based solutions, is lagging behind and the risks are mounting.

Discussion Paper: Integrity Principles for Nature Investment Standards

Date published: June 2023

Within the UK there is a need for a common set of overarching principles that would apply to nature-based environmental improvement projects and the quantification of ecosystem services. As part of its four-year Nature Investment Standards Programme, the British Standards Institution (BSI) has published its first discussion paper on Integrity Principles that covers the proposed scope of the integrity principles standard, key success criteria for the development of the integrity principles standard and examples of principles in action.

Database: Finance Resource (FIRE) Database for Biodiversity

Date published: June 2023

The UNDP and BIOFIN has launched a new biodiversity finance resource database – FIRE – which aims to close the financing gap for biodiversity conservation by listing over 200 funding opportunities globally.

FIRE is envisioned to be a comprehensive database that serves principally all kind of biodiversity projects (private, public or by civil society) to identify additional funding possibilities (both refundable and non-refundable).

Report: A Guide to Action on Nature 

Date published: June 2023

The Association for British Insurers (ABI) has published guidance to help insurers and long-term savings providers become ‘nature positive’ in helping tackle the decline in the UK’s nature. This guidance sets out the compelling case for action by the industry, including that nature loss exposes the homes and businesses that ABI members protect across the UK to a wide range of risks, which in turn will impact markets and financial performance. It aims to help firms begin to assess the risks and opportunities, and develop a strategy for action.

Review: Nature Finance Review 2023

Date published: May 2023

The Ecosystems Knowledge Network have recently published this review of the nature finance project pipeline in the UK. Data from 219 projects were included in the review, including 177 place-based (sub-regional) projects and 42 projects designed to enable recipients and providers of nature finance to interact. It also identifies the developmental stages of these projects according to the GFI’s Investment Readiness Toolkit.

Report: What the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework means for Responsible Banks

Date published: May 2023

As part of a series of publications to help financial institutions understand the relevance and implications of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF), this briefing provides banks a first overview of how the GBF applies to their industry. It aims to support the industry in managing associated risks, capturing relevant opportunities and preparing for anticipated policy developments that will yield new compliance and disclosure requirements.

Report: Article 6 Explainer

Date published: May 2023

The Paris Agreement paved the way for a new era of carbon trading with the establishment of Article 6, which enables countries to collaborate in achieving their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) by trading mitigation outcomes. This paper, published by The Nature Conservancy, offers straightforward guidance on what was further decided at COP27 and dives into the complex implications of Article 6 for NDCs, nature and the VCM.

Report: Stepping up on Biodiversity - What the Kunming‑Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework means for responsible investors

Date published: April 2023

In December 2022, 196 countries adopted the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF), providing a global framework to halt and reverse nature loss by 2030. This report, from the UNEP Finance Initiative (UNEP FI), the Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI) and the Finance for Biodiversity Foundation, provides an overview of the key implications for investors of the goals and targets of the GBF. It aims to support investors in managing associated risks and preparing for anticipated policy developments.

Report: Biodiversity Finance Factbook

Date published: April 2023

This Bloomberg NEF report aims to kickstart and frame discussions on current finance flows to nature, where funding should be prioritized and how to make this happen. It develops a weighted framework to guide biodiversity restoration and preservation funding priorities to maximize impact. It is founded on the principle that funding is required where biodiversity is plentiful, providing value, and at risk. The highest funding priorities are large middle-income countries such as Brazil, China, Indonesia, and India. The report highlights that blended finance has a role to play, as well as risk-mitigation mechanisms.

Discussion paper: Biodiversity Credit Markets - the Role of Law, Regulation and Policy

Date published: April 2023

The Taskforce on Nature Markets collaborated with Pollination to write this paper exploring requirements and recommendations for a legal, policy and regulatory framework to guide the development of high integrity biodiversity credit markets. The paper examines case studies, identifying current biodiversity credit market initiatives in both the private and government sectors, highlighting initiatives underway in New Zealand, Colombia, Australia, Niue and other parts of the world, and proposes five high-level principles and recommendations to ensure high-integrity outcomes

Report: Driving Finance for Sustainable Food Systems

Date published: April 2023

This report aims to: 1) raise awareness of the importance and role of the agrifood sector in solving the triple planetary crisis as well as contributing to sustainable development; 2) provide an overview of the key opportunities for financial institutions to enhance financial flows to sustainable food systems (through impact management and targets, risk mitigation strategies and financial innovation); and 3) foster an enabling environment for driving capital towards sustainable food systems.

Report: Natural Capital Markets: What farmers and policy makers need to know

Date published: April 2023

This report seeks to understand how new and emerging markets in natural capital fit into a changing landscape for farmers. It explores some of the opportunities and risks from a farmer’s perspective, and the barriers that are currently preventing significant levels of take-up from farmers of the emerging ‘natural capital’ markets

Report: Mobilising Private Investment in Natural Capital

Date published: April 2023

Finance Earth was commissioned by the Scottish Government, in partnership with NatureScot, to explore how voluntary carbon markets can be harnessed to accelerate the delivery of high-integrity peatland restoration across Scotland. The report aims to understand both the financial and non-financial barriers to peatland restoration, and sets-out recommendations on how public capital can be used most effectively to crowd in private investment into peatland restoration. It proposes two key mechanisms be developed, a Scotland Carbon Fund (SCF) and a Price Floor Guarantee (PFG).

Discussion paper: Banking Sector Risk in the Aftermath of Climate Change and Environmental-Related Natural Disasters

Date published: March 2023

This paper provides preliminary estimates of the aggregate impact of physical risks from climate and environmental-related natural disasters on bank balance sheets across 184 countries over nearly 40 years. The paper finds that severe disaster episodes lead to an increase in the level of systemwide non-performing loans, which is persistent over time.

Discussion paper: The Future of Biodiversity Credits Markets

Date published: March 2023

One of the main themes in this paper is that the expanding biodiversity credit markets create both potential and risks – the risks are that these markets result in greenwashing and value only aspects of nature that offer short term economic rewards. The paper puts forward a taxonomy for biodiversity credit markets, namely as philanthropic claims / certificates; regulatory (mandated) offsets; biodiversity-linked carbon offsets; in-setting credits; biodiversity offsets; and biodiversity financial asset. The report draws on NatureFinance’s roles in the GEF’s Working Group on Innovative Mechanisms to Address the Biodiversity Financing Needs, and on its joint work with the Taskforce on Nature Markets.

Report: Financial Markets for Transforming the Global Food System

Date published: March 2023

Private finance plays an important role in driving the global food system. This Planet Tracker report estimates nearly USD 9 trillion of private finance is currently supporting the global food system (63% of its estimated asset value of USD 14 trillion). The report sets out four food system transformation themes that financial institutions should focus on when constructing a food system investment strategy:
Responsible supply chains
Increase food system true cost efficiency
Reduce Pollution
Sustainable Product offerings
The report also identifies six priority actions financial insitutions should aim to achieve before 2030 in order to create an economically, socially and environmentally sustainable global food system.

Report: Innovative Finance for Nature and People

Date published: February 2023

The report identifies several areas for targeted action by Government to support investment in adaptation across the economy and makes recommendations for a well-defined vision the UK to adapt to Climate Change. It finds that across all climate risks facing the UK, the necessary additional investment in climate resilience required could be in excess of £10 billion per year this decade.

Report: Getting Underway: 2022 Baseline assessment of asset managers' approaches to addressing environmental and social risks in seafood-related investments

Date published: February 2023

600 million people’s livelihoods worldwide are supported by global seafood production. This WWF collaboration with UNEP FI, the FAIRR Initiative, World Benchmarking Alliance and Planet Tracker lists recommendations for investors in the blue economy to collectively engage seafood companies on critical nature and biodiversity related impacts and risks. The initiative’s goal will be to assist investors in strengthening their demands and standards for companies’ commitments to and implementation of best practice in seafood sustainability.

Report: Fertile Ground: Accelerating the Transition to net Zero Agriculture

Date published: March 2023

The report contains six recommendations and nine guiding principles for how government and policy makers can work with the banking sector to help farmers reach Net Zero. Bankers for Net Zero is an initiative that brings together leaders from 13 of the UK’s leading banks, along with representatives from business and government. The initiative was established in 2020.

Report: IPCC AR6 Synthesis Report

Date published: March 2023

The Synthesis Report is the last of the Sixth Assessment Report (AR6) products. It synthesises the contents of the three Working Groups Assessment Reports and the Special Reports. The report has been called a final warning on 1.5C. One of its main findings is that with current policies, 3.2°C of global warming is projected by 2100. In response to the report, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called on developed countries to accelerate their plans, moving their 2050 pledges to end emissions up to 2040.

Framework: Nature Markets Framework 

Date published: March 2023

The UK Government has published its Nature Markets Framework alongside the Green Finance Strategy. The Nature Markets Framework sets out how government will guide and support the development of nature markets capable of supporting elevated investment levels, whilst ensuring their integrity and principles. Detail is included on:
Core principles for nature markets
Stacking and bundling
Additionality tests
Blending public and private finance
Work with the British Standards Institute to develop overarching standards for nature markets

Green Finance Strategy 2.0

Date published: March 2023

The UK Government has published its updated Green Finance Strategy (GFS).

Welcoming the GFS, Dr. Rhian-Mari Thomas OBE, CEO of the Green Finance Institute, said: “While the first Green Finance Strategy focused on planning and targets, this one is about delivering capital to finance our climate and nature goals. The Green Finance Institute’s pioneering strategy of positioning finance as the enabler of sectoral transitions is recognised as key to achieving net zero. The Strategy sets out a step change in how the UK will mobilise the finance needed to limit catastrophic warming and catalyse investment into nature.”

“Today’s announcement broadens our mandate to work with government and the market to accelerate the mobilisation of capital to restore and protect nature as well as to decarbonise critical sectors, alongside well-designed long-term policy. Going forward, we will help develop innovative approaches to deploying government capital to crowd in private finance, maximising impact, and value for money. This is the only coherent pathway to economic growth and net zero, and the GFI is delighted to be a partner to the Government in this process.”

Report: Climate Change Committee - Investment for a Well Adapted UK

Date published: February 2023

The report identifies several areas for targeted action by Government to support investment in adaptation across the economy and makes recommendations for a well-defined vision the UK to adapt to Climate Change. It finds that across all climate risks facing the UK, the necessary additional investment in climate resilience required could be in excess of £10 billion per year this decade.

Report: Global Canopy's Forest 500

Date published: February 2023

2023 – A watershed year for action on deforestation. The report finds that 201 (40%) of the companies and financial institutions most at risk of driving deforestation still haven’t set a single deforestation policy. It also reveals that $527 billion of finance flowed from financial institutions to Forest 500 companies with no deforestation policies last year, at risk of fuelling climate change and biodiversity loss.

Environmental Improvement Plan

Date published: January 2023

Five years ago, the 25 Year Environment Plan (25YEP) set out Defra’s vision for a quarter-of-a century of action to help the natural world regain and retain good health. Defra has published an update to its 25YEP, setting out a framework to deliver on its vision. The EIP uses the 10 goals set out in the 25YEP as the basis to set out the progress made under each target, and the plan to deliver the overarching goals. The EIP announces the government’s intention to launch a new multi-million pound Species Survival Fund targeted at protecting the UK’s rarest species, as well as protect 30% of the UK’s land and sea for nature through the Nature Recovery Network.

Report: Environmental Finance Biodiversity Insights 2023

Date published: January 2023

Environmental Finance has published its Biodiversity Insights 2023 report, outlining how investors are incorporating biodiversity concerns into their decisions in light of the Global Biodiversity Framework agreed at COP15.

Report: Mission Zero - Independent Review of Net Zero

Date published: January 2023

Former energy minister Chris Skidmore has published his Net Zero Review, outlining the opportunities of net zero. The review makes 129 recommendations, including those to support ‘net zero nature’ with nature-based solutions.

Within Pillar 3: Net Zero and the Economy of the report, Skidmore highlights the role of land use in reaching net zero and calls for the publication of the Land Use Framework, the embedding of nature in transition plans and the development of a pipeline of nature-based solutions in the UK.

Report: Green expectations: engaging people on changing land use for climate and nature

Date published: January 2023

Green Alliance examines whether expected changes to land use and management will create a need for new policy and mechanisms to rebalance interests between different communities. This report proposes three changes that would reduce tensions within communities and make sure their benefits from altering land use and management are maximised.

Report: Shaping UK Land Use: priorities for food, nature and climate

Date published: January 2023

In this report, Green Alliance models five land use scenarios that restore nature, achieve net zero carbon emissions and provide good food, each prioritising different goals. These scenarios explore how the innate trade-offs in land use interact. They reveal several insights, which Green Alliance uses to recommend a ‘balanced priorities scenario’ for government to pursue with farmers, land managers and other actors.

Report: Global Risks Report 2023

Date published: January 2023

The Global Risks Report explores some of the most severe risks the world may face over the next ten years.

Failure to mitigate climate change, failure of climate-change adaptation, natural disasters and extreme weather events, and biodiversity loss and ecosystem collapse are the top four risks.

Report: In Debt to the Planet

Date published: December 2022

This ShareAction report analyses the actions taken by the 25 largest consumer banks in Europe to respond to the climate and nature crises. Mean scores for climate action across this cohort of banks was 48%, and just 35% for biodiversity action. The report provides leading practice examples, and concludes with a list of recommendations.

Report: When Finance Talks Nature

Date published: December 2022

This WWF report finds that most of the growing number of government-led sustainable finance investment frameworks – or “sustainable finance taxonomies” – fail to adequately address nature loss. This report aims to provide insights and recommendations on how to address nature-related environmental objectives in government-driven sustainable investment and financial risk management frameworks.

Report: Nature in the Balance: What Companies Can Do To Restore Natural Capital

Date published: December 2022

This McKinsey report examines the state of natural capital, the economic sectors depending on and affecting it, and the opportunities for companies to help reduce those demands. It sizes the actions corporations could take to act as catalysts to return the planet to a “safe operating space for humanity”.

Guide: Act Now! The Why and How of Biodiversity Integration by Financial Institutions

Date published: December 2022

The Guide provides financial institutions with advice on how to integrate biodiversity into their financing activities and decision making, as well as how to start measuring impact and setting targets.

Paper: Biodiversity Risk: Legal Implications for Companies and their Directors

Date published: December 2022

This report from the Commonwealth Climate and Law Initiative finds that directors may face the risk of a liability for a failure to consider biodiversity risks in governance and disclosure if this breaches the duties of care and loyalty.

White paper: The Post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework and What it Means for Business

Date published: December 2022

This white paper provides context and potential implications for 10 of the draft GBF’s 22 proposed action targets that are most likely to result in changes to business strategies or operations across multiple sectors, and presents case studies of companies that are already taking action to mitigate nature-related risks in their operations, while investing in new business opportunities that contribute positively to the targets of the GBF.

Report: State of Finance for Nature 2022

Date published: December 2022

The second edition of the State of Finance for Nature report reveals that nature-based solutions are still significantly under-financed. If the world wants to halt biodiversity loss, limit climate change to below 1.5C and achieve land degradation neutrality by 2030, current finance flows to NbS must urgently double by 2025 and triple by 2030.

Discussion Paper: Our role in Natural Capital Markets

Date published: November 2022

In this discussion paper, the UK Investment Bank outlines its initial thoughts on how UKIB can help catalyse investments in natural capital markets.

It identifies three areas of the market that would benefit from more established business models, clearer policy drivers, and developed market infrastructure;
the voluntary carbon market; Biodiversity net gain; water services

UKIB will further develop its expertise in market segments across the natural capital market.

Report: High-Quality Blue Carbon Principles and Guidance

Date published: November 2022

The World Economic Forum launched its Guide for Sustainable Ocean-Based Carbon Markets at Sharm El-Sheikh. The report aims to provide consistent and accepted standards for blue carbon projects and credits for credit purchasers, investors, suppliers, and project developers.

Guide: Biodiversity Measurement Approaches

Date published: November 2022

Finance For Biodiversity has published the 2nd Edition of its ‘Guide on Biodiversity Measurement Approaches’. This guide provides a comprehensive summary of the kinds of biodiversity measurement tools that are available and in use by financial institutions.

Report: Overview of Initiatives for Financial Institutions on Biodiversity

Date published: November 2022

Finance For Biodiversity has also published the 6th update to its ‘Overview of Initiatives for Financial Institutions on Biodiversity’. This guide provides a comprehensive overview of the main biodiversity-related initiatives currently targeting financial institutions.

Report: Our Climate's Secret Ally

Date published: November 2022

This new WWF report analyses the key scientific findings from the three Working Group contributions to the Sixth Assessment Report (AR6) of the IPCC and insists on the power of nature in helping the world reach the 1.5 Degrees target.

Future of Food Part 3 – Can Markets Save Nature? Investing in Nature to Tackle Biodiversity Loss and Enhance Food Security

Date published: October 2022

This paper published by the Imperial College London Business School focuses on the financial opportunity surrounding natural assets and sustainable agriculture.
It reviews what financial structures exist now and what sort of architecture needs to be built to make nature investible.

Report: TNFD Financial Markets Readiness Assessment

Date published: October 2022

The new TNFD Financial Markets Readiness Assessment report published by UNEP FI and UNDP identifies the existing incentives and barriers for financial institutions to integrate nature-related risk assessment and reporting in the decision-making process, and explores how the Taskforce can help develop these opportunities and overcome these challenges.

Paper: Nature in an era of crises: shaping purposeful nature markets

Date Published: September 2022

This paper maps key aspects of nature markets and includes a systematic economic quantification of nature markets globally, in USD. It finds that nature-based markets, including agriculture, voluntary carbon credits and nature-based solutions could be worth more than $7 trillion a year, making them equivalent to 8.6 per cent of global GDP.

The paper also offers insights into legal frameworks and rights of nature as well as considerations for embedding equity in nature markets. The paper calls for robust governance of rapidly expanding nature markets to avoid greenwash, halt illegal markets and deliver nature positive and more equitable outcomes

Briefing Paper: Biodiversity Credits: Unlocking Financial Markets for Nature-Positive Outcomes

Date Published: September 2022

This briefing paper encapsulates the core thinking,
issues and questions surrounding the credible and
inclusive launch of biodiversity credits markets.
It presents four case studies on new biodiversity
credits products, from New Zealand, Colombia and
Australia, plus one with global reach.

Report: Land of opportunity: a new land use framework to restore nature and level up Britain

Date Published: August, 2022

The Green Alliance has published a new report on how the government’s new Land Use Framework, expected in 2023, can support farm businesses across the country to play a leading role in achieving national climate and nature targets without damaging food security.

Report: Common success factors for bankable nature-based solutions

Date Published: August, 2022

This report analyses 16 ‘bankable’ nature-based solutions projects from around the world in order to identify common factors for success, and improve the understanding of the business models, blends of investors and financial resources that are being successfully used to support NbS globally. This report was developed by South Pole together with WWF.

Report: Assessment Report on Diverse Values and Valuation of Nature

Date Published: July, 2022

The way nature is valued in political and economic decisions is both a key driver of the global biodiversity crisis and a vital opportunity to address it, according to a four-year methodological assessment by 82 scientists and experts from every region of the world.
The Assessment Report on the Diverse Values and Valuation of Nature finds that there is a dominant global focus on short-term profits and economic growth, often excluding the consideration of multiple values of nature in policy decisions.

Report: Financing UK Nature Recovery Coalition's Recommendations and Roadmap

Date Published: June, 2022

The Financing Nature Recovery UK Recommendations and Roadmap set out how to make the UK an attractive market for nature-based investment to help drive nature recovery.

The overall report outlines how to unlock existing barriers and deliver high-integrity environmental markets that drive private investment and nature recovery across the UK. It sets out a framework to modernise regulation, leverage public expenditure and secure large-scale private investment in nature and biodiversity each year by 2030.

Report: Blue Carbon: The potential of coastal and oceanic climate action

Date Published: May, 2022

McKinsey’s new report, Blue Carbon: The potential of coastal and economic climate action, sizes Blue Carbon nature based solutions and measures their impacts, costs, and likely access to future funding. It highlights the latest scientific research and estimates abatement or conservation potential on a 2050 timeline. Deep dives on kelp reforestation and bottom trawling show how economies of scale in these emerging solutions could help reduce costs. The report also comments on the potential of blue carbon credit sales.

Report: Managing Carbon Assets from Investments in Nature Climate Solutions

Date Published: April, 2022

In this paper, New Forests provides investors with guidance
on managing carbon through greenhouse gas (GHG)
accounting for the land sector or through nature-based
carbon credits and the intersection of these approaches
with emerging net zero standards.
This guidance seeks to support investors’ understanding
of how to integrate sustainable landscape management
with optimised returns, climate impact, and portfolio
decarbonisation.

Principles: Scottish Government Interim Principles for Responsible Investment in Natural Capital

Date Published: March, 2022

The Scottish Government has set out six principles that set out their ambitions and expectations for a high-integrity market for responsible private investment in natural capital. This is targeted towards communities, investors, land owners, public bodies and other market stakeholders.

Report: Opportunities for Growing Investment in Preserving our Natural Heritage and Supporting Nature Recovery

Date Published: March, 2022

The UK National Lottery Heritage Fund commissioned Finance Earth to review the state of green finance for nature restoration in the UK. This report offers deep insights into the barriers and solutions to financing nature.

Report: Scaling Investments in Nature

Date Published: February, 2022

This report from the World Economic Forum lays out suggestions for scaling private investment in nature. It highlights several best practices of companies, and touches on financing models. It also points to where governments can play a more supportive role.

Report: The State of Finance for Nature in the G20

Date Published: January, 2022

This report attempts to capture the complete amount and future need for G20 country spending on nature-based solutions assets and activities.
It calls for G20 countries to scale-up annual nature-based solutions spending to $285 billion by 2050, and provides recommendations to align development and economic recovery with nature goals through setting quantifiable monetary objectives, governance and policy options, and devices to facilitate systemic changes to meet this investment gap.

Report: Natural Capital, the Battle for Control

Date Published: January, 2022

Green Alliance’s report highlights natural capital investment opportunities and challenges within the UK farming sector, providing a helpful source for the finance sector looking to work with farming communities – while drawing attention to potential risks posed by the emergence of natural capital markets.

Report: Insuring NbS in the UK

Date Published: December, 2021

This report from Howden and Blackford discusses the role of insurers in supporting green infrastructure, forestry and carbon markets. The authors estimate that, due to the growth in carbon markets, the
associated insurance industry could be worth $1.3 billion
globally and up to $2-4 billion in blue sky scenarios.

Tool: An Investor Framework for Nature-based Solutions

Date Published: December, 2021

Chatham House’s Sustainability Accelerator has developed (through consulting with the finance sector) a learning tool to facilitate the inclusion of nature-based solutions within comprehensive portfolio decarbonization strategies. The framework outlines the drivers of risk and return when analyzing prospects for investing in nature-based solutions – initially focusing on forests.

Website: Nature Finance Impact Hub

Consultancy Accelar’s Nature Finance Impact Hub launched in October 2021 and offers free registration to access a map of international (and UK) investment deals and funds. It also provides information on ecosystem services, impacts and returns.

Report: Finance Gap for UK Nature Report

Date Published: October 2021

GFI commissioned environmental economics consultancy, eftec, to assess the finance gap for key nature targets for the UK over the decade ahead. The report highlights a £44 billion to £97 billion gap for the UK and breaks out the gap by region and also by habitat and nature goal ie. clean water, natural flood management, biodiversity protection.

Report: CPIC Conservation Finance 2021 Report

Date published: September 2021

CPIC’s inaugural conservation finance report highlights useful data such as deal types, average deal size and investor types within its conservation finance investment universe. It also includes a handful of case studies, and discusses the challenges and recommendations for growing private investment in nature.

Report: Biodiversity: Ecosystem at the Heart of Business

Date Published: July 2021

This report from Citi GPS focuses on the question of why businesses and investors should care about biodiversity loss. It illustrates the increasing
attention that financial institutions are paying to analyzing biodiversity risks, and highlights the need for more granular information that these institutions need to make better decisions.

Report: A Market Review of Nature-Based Solutions

Date Published: May 2021

This report from the Green Purposes Company and Finance Earth lays out NbS investments by type, and offers short summaries of several transactions -including their expected returns. It also provides aggregated data from 88 transactions to show sector investment by ecosystem, investor type and geographical location of deals. Finally, the report offers a set of recommendations to grow private investment in NbS.

Report: State of Finance for Nature

Date Published: May 2021

This UNEP report urges a tripling of investment in NbS before 2030 from current estimates of $133 billion in yearly flows. It discusses opportunities to scale up investment using policy levers and public sector funding as a derisking tool. The report also offers snippets of international financing solutions and a list of recommendations.

Report: Unlocking Investments in Regenerative Agriculture

Date Published: May 2021

This report from CREO – a group of family offices and wealth owners – offers many interesting case studies of investment opportunities within regenerative agriculture in the US, with other examples from Brazil and the Netherlands. The appendix offers a list of regenerative agriculture funds globally.

Report: Dasgupta Review: A Pathway for Action for the Financial Sector

Date Published: May 2021

GFI convened and consulted with over 40 representatives from banks, asset managers, asset owners, standard setters and conservation finance specialists to respond to the Dasgupta Review’s findings. The result is set of recommendations from the sector that focus on assessing nature-related risk and driving investment into nature. The report offers several short case studies of investments in nature in addition to broader examples where the finance sector is supporting a nature-positive transition.

Report/Book: The Little Book of Investing in Nature

Date Published: January 2021

Global Canopy’s Little Book of Investing in Nature identifies steps towards generating, delivering and realigning finance for biodiversity, as well as highlighting the need to avoid investments in activities that damage the natural resources we depend on. It features more than 40 mechanisms and 25 case studies of investment projects (some purely public sector, some private and some blended finance).

Report: Facilitating Local Natural Capital Investment: Literature Review

Date Published: January 2021

Finance Earth and eftec produced this literature review and report for NatureScot that highlights different financing models for nature and ecosystem services. It offers helpful descriptions and examples of various models such as environmental impact bonds, local nature bonds and timberland investment management organisations, and discusses how these could be adapted to Scotland’s nature investment aspirations.

Report: Financing Nature: Closing the Biodiversity Finance Gap

Date Published: October 2020

This extensive report from the Paulson Institute, Nature Conservancy and Cornell Atkinson Center for Sustainability, discusses in detail the estimated investment in biodiversity globally ($124bn to $143bn as of 2019). It also highlights the global finance gap for biodiversity and the financial and policy mechanisms to help close the gap, including examples of current models and supportive policies.

Report: Accelerating Private Investment in Nature-based Solutions

Date Published: July 2020

This report from the Broadway Initiative discusses the barriers to private investment in nature within the UK. It lays out different aggregation models of catchment markets, habitat banks and aggregation brokers such as LENS

Report: Scottish £1 bn Investment Routemap

Date Published: January 2020

Over a period of months the Scottish Wildlife Trust and SEPA brought together multiple stakeholders, including the finance sector, to develop a set of investment ideas for nature restoration and nature-based solutions for Scotland.

Report: Emerging Funding Opportunities for the Natural Environment

Date Published: February 2020

This report, carried out by Finance Earth (formerly Environmental Finance) and commissioned by the Esmee Fairbairn Foundation, highlights investment opportunities in natural capital across the UK by habitat.

Report: Investing in Nature

Date Published: November 2019

This report from The Nature Conservancy and Environmental Finance (now Finance Earth) highlights the challenges of nature-based investing and discusses what investors need. While written in 2019, the information still holds true, and several interesting case studies are included.