Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Nature charities target ‘greenwashi­ng’

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THE UK’s biggest nature charities have released a set of principles for environmen­tal “credits” to combat corporate “greenwashi­ng”.

The Wildlife Trusts, RSPB, Woodland Trust and National Trust have published the guidelines on “nature markets”.

This involves companies buying carbon credits, biodiversi­ty units, nutrient credits and natural flood management payments as a way to offset their impact.

The Government, which aims to grow annual private investment in nature by at least £500 million by 2027, published its Nature Markets Framework in May and is working with the British Standards Institute to develop standards for green financing.

It comes as a lack of regulation for these emerging markets has led to the exposure of poor quality schemes and accusation­s of businesses using them to “greenwash” – making themselves appear environmen­tally friendly rather than taking significan­t positive action.

The charities said they have developed the set of voluntary principles for science-based investment to support high integrity natural capital markets in the UK.

They worked with Finance Earth and Federated Hermes – a global leader in responsibl­e investment management – which will manage the Government-backed UK Nature Impact Fund that aims to stimulate institutio­nal investment at scale in high quality nature restoratio­n projects across the UK. The charities said the UK Nature Impact Fund intends to adopt the Nature Markets Principles and apply them across all its activities in UK nature markets.

These include supply-side and demand-side criteria such as transparen­cy, verifiabil­ity, and additional­ity, meaning the benefits would not have likely come to fruition without the provided capital.

James Alexander, chairman of Finance Earth, said: “These principles have been co-developed as a stop-gap to influence market practice today and to contribute to the much-needed emerging government policy and regulation.

“The Nature Markets Principles have been informed by a range of credible UK and internatio­nal sources, as well as the practical delivery experience of the UK’s leading nature charities whose aim is to support the developmen­t and long-term operation of high integrity, high quality and high impact UK markets for nature restoratio­n and enhancemen­t.

“Enshrined in the principles are the need for projects to be science-based, transparen­t and verifiable, ideally in perpetuity and benefiting local communitie­s as well as society more broadly.

“There are also stipulatio­ns about who the producers of the credits will do business with, ruling out those companies dependent on environmen­tally damaging activities such as fossil fuel extraction.”

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