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Closing the Funding Gap: Biodiversity Finance Mechanisms

Mao, Julia Qian LU orcid (2025)
Abstract
The Kunming-Montréal Global Biodiversity Framework, adopted at COP15, establishes a clear mandate to mobilize funding from diverse sources to address the escalating biodiversity crisis. Despite growing awareness and commitment to biodiversity conservation, a substantial financing gap persists, hindering efforts to protect and restore ecosystems effectively. This chapter provides an in-depth examination of financial mechanisms designed to bridge this gap, presenting both established and emerging strategies. Drawing on recent studies quantifying the biodiversity funding gap, the chapter synthesizes global and national insights to illuminate the scale of the challenge. It underscores the urgent need for innovative financial mechanisms to... (More)
The Kunming-Montréal Global Biodiversity Framework, adopted at COP15, establishes a clear mandate to mobilize funding from diverse sources to address the escalating biodiversity crisis. Despite growing awareness and commitment to biodiversity conservation, a substantial financing gap persists, hindering efforts to protect and restore ecosystems effectively. This chapter provides an in-depth examination of financial mechanisms designed to bridge this gap, presenting both established and emerging strategies. Drawing on recent studies quantifying the biodiversity funding gap, the chapter synthesizes global and national insights to illuminate the scale of the challenge. It underscores the urgent need for innovative financial mechanisms to mitigate biodiversity loss and ensure the long-term sustainability of natural ecosystems. Applying an updated framework, the chapter categorizes and analyzes biodiversity finance mechanisms in the context of their evolution and growing innovation. It examines traditional approaches such as domestic government funding, international grants and transfers, and conservation trust funds, as well as novel mechanisms like payments for ecosystem services, biodiversity offsets, and ecological fiscal transfers. The chapter also emphasizes the interplay between biodiversity and climate, highlighting opportunities for synergy across environmental themes.

This chapter reveals a transformative shift in biodiversity finance, moving from reliance on external funding and public budgets to market-based and self-generated mechanisms. Simultaneously, it emphasizes the critical role of public policy and government in enabling and regulating these approaches, even within market-driven models. By offering a comprehensive overview of biodiversity finance mechanisms, this chapter lays the groundwork for subsequent discussions on specific financial instruments, including biodiversity bonds, credits, insurance, and certification schemes. It serves as an essential resource for policymakers, investors, conservation practitioners, and researchers seeking to advance biodiversity conservation through innovative financial mechanisms. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Working paper/Preprint
publication status
published
subject
publisher
Zenodo
DOI
10.5281/zenodo.17311904
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
3b8dc602-2515-4832-85f7-7e3502389219
date added to LUP
2025-10-10 15:02:07
date last changed
2025-10-17 04:45:54
@misc{3b8dc602-2515-4832-85f7-7e3502389219,
  abstract     = {{The Kunming-Montréal Global Biodiversity Framework, adopted at COP15, establishes a clear mandate to mobilize funding from diverse sources to address the escalating biodiversity crisis. Despite growing awareness and commitment to biodiversity conservation, a substantial financing gap persists, hindering efforts to protect and restore ecosystems effectively. This chapter provides an in-depth examination of financial mechanisms designed to bridge this gap, presenting both established and emerging strategies. Drawing on recent studies quantifying the biodiversity funding gap, the chapter synthesizes global and national insights to illuminate the scale of the challenge. It underscores the urgent need for innovative financial mechanisms to mitigate biodiversity loss and ensure the long-term sustainability of natural ecosystems. Applying an updated framework, the chapter categorizes and analyzes biodiversity finance mechanisms in the context of their evolution and growing innovation. It examines traditional approaches such as domestic government funding, international grants and transfers, and conservation trust funds, as well as novel mechanisms like payments for ecosystem services, biodiversity offsets, and ecological fiscal transfers. The chapter also emphasizes the interplay between biodiversity and climate, highlighting opportunities for synergy across environmental themes.<br/><br/>This chapter reveals a transformative shift in biodiversity finance, moving from reliance on external funding and public budgets to market-based and self-generated mechanisms. Simultaneously, it emphasizes the critical role of public policy and government in enabling and regulating these approaches, even within market-driven models. By offering a comprehensive overview of biodiversity finance mechanisms, this chapter lays the groundwork for subsequent discussions on specific financial instruments, including biodiversity bonds, credits, insurance, and certification schemes. It serves as an essential resource for policymakers, investors, conservation practitioners, and researchers seeking to advance biodiversity conservation through innovative financial mechanisms.}},
  author       = {{Mao, Julia Qian}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{10}},
  note         = {{Preprint}},
  publisher    = {{Zenodo}},
  title        = {{Closing the Funding Gap: Biodiversity Finance Mechanisms}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17311904}},
  doi          = {{10.5281/zenodo.17311904}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}