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Knowledge for policy

Knowledge Centre for Biodiversity

We enhance the knowledge base, facilitate its sharing and foster cross-sectorial policy dialogue for EU policy making in biodiversity and related fields.

  • Page | Last updated: 29 Jun 2023

Brief me on biodiversity financing

Adequate and well-targeted financial resources are a critical factor for halting and reversing biodiversity loss worldwide.

Last updated: 12/07/2022

The European Commission, through the Knowledge Centre for Biodiversity, aims at collecting, synthesising and communicating knowledge on biodiversity financing.

Biodiversity financing can be defined as expenditures that contribute to biodiversity conservation, restoration or sustainable use, whether by directly targeting these objectives or by having positive effects on them (“nature-positive”). Such expenditures come from a variety of sources. Public domestic expenditures, mainly from government budgets (including from the EU and its Member States), represent the majority of biodiversity financing. Since a large part of the world’s biodiversity is located in developing or emerging countries, international financial flows such as official development assistance (ODA) also play a crucial role, including to help leverage domestic funding. The private sector also provides funding through philanthropy, contributions to non-governmental organisations, market-based instruments, green bonds and other channels, although biodiversity finance is still less developed than climate finance. 

Adequate and well-targeted financial resources are a critical factor for halting and reversing biodiversity loss worldwide. At the global level, available estimates (see Publications on biodiversity financing) indicate that the current scale of finance is largely insufficient for achieving biodiversity objectives. Scaling up the mobilisation of resources from all sources, as part of a broad transformative agenda, is a key issue in the negotiations on the post-2020 global biodiversity framework, to be adopted at the 15th Conference of the Parties of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD). Significant investments will be needed from the EU to contribute to international efforts as well as to implement the transformations needed to put Europe’s own biodiversity on a path to recovery, as foreseen in the EU Biodiversity Strategy for 2030.

Reducing the global financing gap will also require, more broadly, to channel overall public and private capital flows away from activities estimated to have negative impacts on biodiversity. This implies in particular the reform of government support, including subsidies, that is harmful to biodiversity, currently amounting to at least USD 800 billion per year according to recent estimates (see Publications on biodiversity financing). 

Parties to the CBD are requested to report on their international financial flows and domestic expenditures in support of biodiversity. Besides, biodiversity-related ODA flows are reported to the OECD-Development Assistance Committee, which ensures a relatively good tracking of these flows. Nevertheless, it is currently difficult to collect complete and consistent data on biodiversity financing, in particular for private flows. Efforts are on-going at the EU and international level to better track and report financial flows in support of biodiversity in order to ensure the efficient mobilisation and deployment of resources.