LAPU-LAPU CITY, Cebu—Experts from 20 countries across Europe, Asia and the Pacific recently discussed effective solutions and share experiences and best practices in biodiversity conservation financing.
In an effort to close the significant gap in resources needed to properly conserve nature and the resources it provides, governments across the region are implementing finance solutions that can fit a particular country’s economic and natural context.
In the Philippines, a strong partnership between the government and the United Nations Development Programme’s (UNDP) Biodiversity Finance Initiative (Biofin) has formed with the Department of Environment and Natural Resources, through the Biodiversity Management Bureau, several finance solutions to address the huge financing gap, estimated at P19 billion ($349 million) annually.
Occidental Mindoro Rep. Josephine Ramirez-Sato, Biofin legislative champion, said biodiversity protection is a shared problem that affects all people the world over and it’s crucial to bring about better policies for biodiversity conservation.
“We are beginning to understand why we need to urgently win the fight for biodiversity conservation and preservation. We need decisive leadership across the government, private sector and in the communities. If we are to stand a chance in seeing our biodiversity flourish, we need to go beyond business as usual,” she said.
Sato is a key proponent of the recently enacted Expanded National Integrated Protected Areas System (E-Nipas) Act and other Biofin bills, such as the Malampaya Fund Bill and the Philippine Genetic Resources Access and Benefit Sharing Bill.
The E-Nipas Act, which ensured 94 new protected areas in the Philippines, now have secure sources of funding, allowing better conservation management of diverse natural capital and rich ecosystems found across the country.
Globally, the annual financing need has been estimated to be between $150 billion and $440 billion.
This funding gap, evident in both developed and developing countries, is a major challenge, hampering the achievements of both the Convention on Biological Diversity’s Strategic Plan and the Sustainable Development Goals. However, it represents between just 0.2 percent and 0.6 percent of the estimated $73 trillion of global GDP.
Biofin offers a new methodology to improve the integration of biodiversity into fiscal policy, financial planning and the financial system at both the national and subnational levels. It supports countries to implement a suite of appropriate finance solutions tailored to the country’s context and works directly with the governments, private sector and civil society to advocate for better finance for nature.
“With significantly increased fiscal space and very high levels of domestic liquidity, financing for biodiversity should not be a challenge in middle-income countries like the Philippines,” said UNDP Country Director Titon Mitra.
“Rather, the challenge is to create an appreciation of the fact that financing biodiversity conservation is an investment that generates both a public good and a financial return. We perhaps more readily appreciate the aesthetic value of biodiversity and less well appreciate the wealth that can be created from the genetic resources and ecosystem values of well-managed biodiversity areas.” he said.
Biofin Program Manager Onno van den Heuvel highlighted the importance of practitioners from countries with similar challenges and opportunities coming together to learn from each other.
“This gathering aims to highlight the variety of experiences of each of the Biofin countries,” he said.
“Learning from country experiences and best practices in biodiversity financing helps countries improve how they mobilize new resources, realign existing resources, prevent future costs and improve delivery of existing finance for biodiversity conservation.”