Resilience Dispatch #40: Nature’s Investment Frontier

Apr 1, 2025
Photo credit: Lucia Carolina Larrea
In this edition: Nature’s investment frontier: Practical paths forward for biodiversity markets and finance
Missed our last Dispatch? Our impact in 2024

In this edition

INTRODUCTION: NATURE’S INVESTMENT FRONTIER 

Dear friends,

Biodiversity-based investment themes are suddenly in the spotlight, after years of feeling like a bit of an understudy to the carbon market. Given a ballooning finance gap for nature, and the obvious materiality of nature risk to business, there is renewed interest in economic instruments that can drive private investment toward interventions to avert biodiversity loss or restore degraded ecosystems, and in doing so generate attractive cash flows.

Hopes are high for new economic growth models based on restoration and regeneration—a whole “restoration economy,” with jobs that would be difficult to outsource, roboticize, or replace with AI (although new technology can certainly drive better results at scale). This is already happening in the United States, where ecological restoration now employs more people than coal mining.

It’s a future worth pursuing. The current capitalist economic system is one of the most powerful human achievements. Without it, our modern world wouldn’t exist. But it has a potentially fatal flaw: it’s blind to the older operating system that runs life on Earth—the interconnected web of living systems in forests, coral reefs, wetlands, and all ecosystems. This “NatureOS” makes life possible. Yet, unless nature’s products become “natural resources” (wood, food, minerals), our “EconomyOS” doesn’t consider them valuable.

This report offers some perspectives from experts in biodiversity and nature finance on what the forward path looks like to reconnect these systems, and specifically to drive more private investment into nature and biodiversity. It begins with a look back on what we’ve learned. After all, these economic instruments have been around for decades. The first habitat credit banks appeared in the United States in the early 1980s.

There are sizeable opportunities on the horizon, connected to a wave of new infrastructure investment globally to expand that model to new geographies, as Mariana Sarmiento, Charles Bedford, and Dr. Timothy Male argue. But a reality check is due on what is likely to really attract demand, Ben Guillon and I argue. A “Field of Dreams” mentality (“If you build it, they will come”) is likely to get entrepreneurs in trouble.

On the demand side, biodiversity credits and other conservation assets offer a path to not simply fix the damage, but go “nature positive” by creating more nature than there was before. These ambitions need to be grounded in the mitigation hierarchy, or credits could be used for greenwashing, warn Martine Maron, Fabien Quétier, and Amrei von Hase.

Biodiversity might lend itself well to being “stacked” with or “stapled on” to other investments in carbon and value chains. Julia McCarthy and Ryan Sarsfield (“Beetles in a pay stack,” page 33) offer a useful framework for thinking about how to do this effectively.

This report is ultimately a set of perspectives from people with a collective century’s worth of experience in biodiversity markets. It offers no “silver bullet” solutions, and you may not agree with all of it; I doubt all of the authors agree with one another on some of the issues raised. We hope you’ll find it thought-provoking, and more importantly, useful in doing good work. A special thanks to Ecosystem Marketplace’s Advisory Group (Ricardo Bayon, Kate Hamilton, Yuejia Peng, and David Tepper) for their support on this work.

Michael Jenkins and Genevieve Bennett

Foreword: Practical paths forward for biodiversity markets and finance

Ricardo Bayon, Kate Hamilton, Yuejia Peng, David Tepper, Michael Jenkins, and Genevieve Bennett

Our economic system does not typically value nature unless it becomes “natural resources.” People have tried numerous solutions to bring more value to nature over the years, yet they all still seem to operate in silos, with little time spent looking across markets or considering the broader view. In this report, we are excited to bring this broader view to the table. [Keep reading on page 2.]

Nature’s rulebook: Biodiversity’s unique position in environmental finance

Genevieve Bennett

There are important differences between carbon and biodiversity as conservation asset class categories. To explain those differences, it’s helpful to ask a basic question: What are environmental markets for? It turns out there are actually two different blueprints when you look at the history of market-based mechanisms driving value to nature. [Keep reading on page 4.]

Photo credit: Lucia Carolina Larrea
Offsets and investments: Thoughts on de-linking economic development and biodiversity loss

Adam Davis

As the author grapples with the challenges of building a business and making investments, the “Big Problem” is how inadequate the available financial resources for nature are, compared to the resources for destructive and damaging human activity. Provided is a discussion on the concept of mitigating harm from economic activity. [Keep reading on page 12.]

How we harness an infrastructure boom to close the biodiversity finance gap

Mariana Sarmiento, Charles Bedford, and Dr. Timothy Male

Global-record levels of investment in infrastructure are, ironically, posing a massive threat to our planet’s infrastructure. With this uptick, especially in investments aligned with the Sustainable Development Goals, the timing is opportune to develop habitat banking systems into robust parts of the infrastructure finance landscape—delivering faster, more cost-effective, and more durable ecological restoration. [Keep reading on page 18.]

Design for demand: What actually drives private finance for nature?

Ben Guillon and Genevieve Bennett

Conservation finance often follows a flawed development path. Projects typically start with worthy ecological goals, then attempt to retrofit market demand, rather than starting with understanding who might pay and why. Instead of asking, “How can we fund this important conservation project?” we should ask, “How might we create environmental solutions that deliver enough value for specific customers that they would pay for them?”. [Keep reading on page 22.]

Photo credit: Lucia Carolina Larrea
No shortcuts to nature positive

Martine Maron, Fabien Quétier, and Amrei Von Hase

There’s high energy out there these days around biodiversity crediting as a tool to achieve “nature positive” goals. But for “nature positive” to succeed, it must build on lessons learned and avoid some of the stumbles of the voluntary carbon market. [Keep reading on page 30.]

Photo credit: Roshni Lodhia for The Nature Conservancy
Beetles in a pay stack: Stacking and bundling in biodiversity credit markets

Julia McCarthy and Ryan Sarsfield

What good is an ecosystem? Or rather, what goods are an ecosystem? Clean water and air, climate regulation, flood and erosion management, biodiversity, and on and on. Can we value just one enough to get the rest for free? Should we put a price on each one and sell them separately? Here we’ll have a crack at untangling how bundling and stacking fit into the growing biodiversity credit market using examples from the US and UK. [Keep reading on page 33.]

A FEW FOUNDATIONAL CONCEPTS
Biodiversity markets are rapidly evolving. Below, we’ve outlined a few foundational concepts that are important to set the scene. For a full overview, see page eight of Nature’s investment frontier: Practical paths forward for biodiversity markets and finance.

THE MITIGATION HIERARCHY

When a development project is likely to have negative impacts on biodiversity, project designers and regulators can follow these steps to avoid, minimize, and rehabilitate negative impacts, and then offset or compensate for any remaining damage. Although development projects with net-negative impacts to biodiversity might still be approved if there is overriding public interest, the idea is to divert development from places that are more biologically valuable and encourage development in places where impacts are relatively low.

Figure 1. The mitigation hierarchy
Source: Forest Trends 2025.
OFFSETS AND COMPENSATION

Offsets should be used only as a last resort. They refer to actions taken to compensate for quantified residual adverse impacts to species, habitat quality, ecological function, and/or ecosystem services that cannot be avoided, minimized, and/or rehabilitated. Offsets might take the form of restoration of degraded ecosystems, creation of new ecosystems or habitats, or protecting existing high-quality ecosystems at risk of degradation or loss (also known as an “averted risk” approach).

CREDITS

Like offsets, credits are a measurable unit of biodiversity outcome which is both durable and additional. However, they refer to purely positive outcomes: there is no explicit connection to a negative impact somewhere in the world requiring compensation. As a result, the equivalence (“like for like”) requirement we find in biodiversity offsetting best practices doesn’t apply. Credits should enter the picture only in the context of the process the mitigation hierarchy sets out.

Figure 2. Biodiversity credits versus biodiversity offsets and compensation
Source: Forest Trends 2025.