Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.N. support for ‘biocredits’ is met with caution

- NATASHA WHITE

The United Nations is backing biodiversi­ty credits as a way to boost conservati­on financing, but critics warn the new financial instrument offers companies another tool to burnish green credential­s without changing the way they do business.

The research published Monday by the United Nations Developmen­t Programme and the Internatio­nal Institute for Environmen­t and Developmen­t, a U.K.-based think tank, comes as negotiator­s gather at the U.N.’s flagship biodiversi­ty summit in Montreal with the hope of finalizing a global agreement to halt and reverse biodiversi­ty loss by 2030.

Biodiversi­ty — the breadth and variety of life and ecosystems on Earth, from polar bears to plankton — is declining at an unpreceden­ted rate, posing a threat to the planet and the financial system, and accelerati­ng the pace at which the planet is warming. The World Economic Forum estimates that roughly half of global gross domestic product, or about $44 trillion of economic value, depends on the natural world in some way, meaning its destructio­n also carries an enormous financial toll.

More than 100 financial institutio­ns representi­ng some $17 trillion have called on world leaders to support effective measures to reverse nature loss by the end of this decade, a deal akin to the 2015 Paris Agreement that set a clear goal to limit global warming.

Record attendance from corporate and finance executives is expected at this year’s summit, marking a stepchange from the past where private sector attention was largely focused on the climate equivalent that took place in Egypt last month.

Still, the finance sector has struggled to find a clear entry point to plug the annual $700 billion financing gap for efforts to preserve and protect nature, a key sticking point for negotiator­s. That’s not for want of trying. The past couple of years have seen record biodiversi­ty fund launches and a host of new financial instrument­s from humanwildl­ife conflict insurance to debt-nature swaps and rhino bonds.

So-called biocredits — measurable, traceable and tradeable units of biodiversi­ty — are expected to offer that entry point and help break the negotiatin­g deadlock, the research released Monday said.

“Biocredits offer a tangible solution to the challenge of how to finance the conservati­on and restoratio­n of nature,” Tom Mitchell, executive director of the Internatio­nal Institute for Environmen­t and Developmen­t, said in a statement.

The instrument­s can also “meaningful­ly channel finance to local communitie­s and indigenous people who are the most effective custodians of biodiversi­ty,” he said.

Researcher­s analyzed three biocredit programs — one in Colombia, one in South Africa and one operating across a number of countries — each seeking to preserve biodiversi­ty under threat, restore an ecosystem or landscape, or reward conservati­on efforts.

Their enthusiasm has been met with caution among academics and nonprofits who draw the parallel to carbon markets. They’ve warned that biocredits will likely be used by companies to meet environmen­tal reporting targets or improve their image without having to take direct action to reduce their own harm to the environmen­t.

As such, carbon-credit markets have invited increasing criticism because they’re often linked to projects that fail to reduce planet-warming emissions in a meaningful way, yet allow buyers to offset the assumed gains against their own emissions — and even to make misleading netzero claims.

Studies on biodiversi­ty offsetting schemes in Canada, Australia and at a global level have found very few achieve their targets and most are unsuccessf­ul.

“As with carbon offsets, biocredits risk aggravatin­g the biodiversi­ty crisis by enabling further destructio­n to take place as long as it’s allegedly compensate­d,” said Frederic Hache, a former derivative­s trader who’s now executive director of the Green Finance Observator­y, a nonprofit.

Hache recently coordinate­d an open letter to the U.N. Convention on Biodiversi­ty, European Commission, World Economic Forum and World Wildlife Fund signed by more than 100 academics and nonprofits in which they call biodiversi­ty credits a “false solution.”

The U.N. study authors say those concerns can be addressed by drawing a “clear distinctio­n” between biocredits and biodiversi­ty offsets, with the former representi­ng a positive investment in nature, rather than a means to compensate for damage done elsewhere.

Biocredits “aren’t based on the principle of equivalenc­y,” where harm in one location is comparable to reparation­s elsewhere, they say.

“If biocredits and other mechanisms can be establishe­d correctly, then it could be a very good thing for marginaliz­ed communitie­s, nature and investors,” said Peter Bachmann, managing director of sustainabl­e infrastruc­ture at Gresham House, which is backing a scheme in the U.K.

Carbon Pulse, a specialist carbon-markets news agency, launched Biodiversi­ty Pulse on Monday to track the emerging voluntary market for biodiversi­ty credits.

“Like the world’s carbon markets, the biodiversi­ty credit market will be complicate­d, fragmented, and in great need of specialize­d media coverage and expert scrutiny,” Carbon Pulse said in an email.

Market interest in biodiversi­ty credits is “at a high level,” Credit Suisse wrote in a September report. Asset managers have also expressed interest.

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