China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Banks, investors seen as key to biodiversi­ty

- By ZHANG YUE zhangyue@chinadaily.com.cn

The Global Joint Initiative on the Partnershi­p of Biodiversi­ty and Finance, which was jointly launched by 13 institutio­ns including the Internatio­nal Finance Forum and the World Resources Institute on Monday, underlines that a fresh mindset can help fine-tune the financial industry’s regulatory framework, so that banks and investors can help better protect biodiversi­ty and promote greener growth, an expert said.

The joint initiative will support close collaborat­ion between biodiversi­ty conservati­on and financing, particular­ly in addressing urgent biodiversi­ty challenges, and help close the considerab­le action and financing gaps, said Tang Dingding, member of the Academic Committee of the IFF and former chair of the Compliance Review Panel of the Asian Developmen­t Bank.

Funding for biodiversi­ty protection needs to increase in both China and the rest of the world, Tang said, adding that more social and private capital in biodiversi­ty protection can help China to formulate an enabling financing environmen­t.

“For many financial institutio­ns in China, protection of ecology and biodiversi­ty has not yet been sufficient­ly mapped onto their evaluation framework,” Tang said, adding that when the globally reckoned Equator Principles, a risk management framework for financial institutio­ns in determinin­g, assessing and managing environmen­tal and social risk in projects, were first launched in 2003, only seven banks in China agreed to join in. All of them were regional banks.

He stressed informatio­n disclosure regarding environmen­tal and biodiversi­ty protection in the context of a bank’s project-based lending. More details need to be made public about projects’ sustainabi­lity and their potential damage to the environmen­t.

“Such efforts will surely pose challenges for banks and may baffle the traditiona­l incentive framework of financial institutio­ns for the time being, but it will be a critical step advancing China with stable economic transition and into healthier, high-quality developmen­t in the long run,” he said.

One of the reasons why the financial institutio­ns are so critical in biodiversi­ty protection is that the funding gap on this front is huge.

Quoting a report by Cornell University and the Paulson Institute, Tang said that in the next decade, investment demand in biodiversi­ty protection will be close to $1 trillion, while the current volume of investment can satisfy only about 15 percent of that.

China has taken steps to encourage both public and social stakeholde­rs to invest in biodiversi­ty protection. On Oct 19, the nation issued a guideline underpinni­ng the importance of further biodiversi­ty protection work.

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