Nature-based credit markets at a crossroads

09 December 2023, Version 1
This content is an early or alternative research output and has not been peer-reviewed by Cambridge University Press at the time of posting.

Abstract

A swathe of recent impact evaluations demonstrating disappointing results suggest nature-based credits (derived from carbon or biodiversity offsets) are at a crossroads. Either nature-based credit markets are fundamentally reformed to adopt the latest scientific understanding on additionality, leakage and permanence, rebuilding investor confidence and allowing them to upscale, or they will continue to demonstrate non-additionality, lose investor confidence and constrain one of our most promising tools for drawing private investment into conservation. Scientific credibility can be established by releasing nature-based credits ex-post after proven demonstrably additional relative to a statistically-derived counterfactual. Credit markets must also be reformed to make them robust to, rather than resistant to, scientific improvements in credit estimation methods by conservatively estimating benefits whenever there is uncertainty. These principles imply a greater degree of regulation to ensure fundamental demand for these high-integrity, higher-priced mitigation outcomes. We argue these principles are necessary to support credit markets associated with sufficient market confidence to attract investment and deliver the environmental benefit embedded in the ambitions of the Kunming-Montreal and Paris agreements.

Keywords

Biodiversity
Carbon
Investment
impact evaluation
credits
paris agreement
kunming-montreal agreement

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