January 20, 2022
We need all the funding we can get to protect ecosystems from damage by humans. The global shortfall in funding to halt biodiversity decline has been estimated at $700 billion US dollars annually, and nature-based solutions (NBS) to climate change could mitigate GHGs by up to 78.2 megatonnes (CO2-equivalent) annually in Canada by 2030 – if sources of funding are found. Philanthropic and public funders motivated by environmental and social concerns will not be able to fill this funding gap alone.
One way to narrow this funding gap is to be more explicit about the economic benefits of nature-based solutions to human problems like climate change or water management. There are a few basic economic metrics that capture a tiny fraction of the value of NBS projects – some of which can’t be quantified – but could attract new funders for these projects. For example:
Some NBS practitioners, particularly bigger organizations like Ducks Unlimited and the Nature Conservancy of Canada, are already using these economic metrics to attract funding. But overall, NBS practitioners use them less than other environmental organizations. For example:
Why is this? There are many reasons, but we suggest two important ones:
A new guidebook from Smart Prosperity Institute argues that neither of these facts needs to prevent NBS practitioners from using economic metrics to access additional funding, because:
Economic metrics capture a tiny fraction of the value of NBS projects. But economic metrics do not need to be comprehensive to notify prospective funders that they have an economic interest in funding a project; they only need to reliably capture what the prospective funder stands to gain.
Over time, we hope that more funders will be attracted by the environmental and social benefits of NBS projects, and by a broader range of economic benefits. There can be no economic activity without healthy ecosystems, and there are several initiatives that aim to sensitize economically-minded funders to this fact – from pollution pricing to natural asset accounting and beyond. But in the meantime, given the urgency of the climate and biodiversity crises, NBS practitioners can make pragmatic use of our selected economic metrics to attract additional funding.
NBS practitioners do not need in-house economic expertise to use our selected economic metrics to attract additional funding, we argue. This is important, since it lets them focus on projects’ environmental and social impacts.
Economic metrics for NBS projects are sometimes misused, which undermines their usefulness as a tool to attract funding. For example, a lack of standardization and best practices in estimating the economic value of ecosystem services provided by wetlands has made some Canadian municipalities distrustful of these estimates. We share best practices in the guidebook – notably, how to transfer estimates from existing studies while accounting for important differences in context.
Governments can make more economic metrics accessible to NBS practitioners – further increasing the funding opportunities available to them – by improving data availability and accessibility. Among other things, we recommend:
Organizations like the Municipal Natural Assets Initiative have been working for years on securing new funding streams for NBS projects using economic metrics. This guidebook is meant to contribute to this effort. We hope to help NBS practitioners feel confident that they can use economic metrics in a way that doesn’t compromise or distract from their main focus: protecting ecosystems and the people who live in them.
Learn more - Register now for our free February 10th event “Money doesn’t grow on trees: The complexity of how we value nature” which will explore the nuance and complexity of assigning economic value to nature.