Biodiversity Bonds
« Back to Glossary IndexBiodiversity Bonds finance projects protecting and restoring natural ecosystems, addressing the annual $700 billion biodiversity financing gap identified by the Paulson Institute. Structure involves green bonds specifically allocated to habitat conservation, species protection, and ecosystem services with impact measurement through biodiversity metrics. The World Bank’s $150 million rhino bond links returns to black rhino population growth in South Africa. Benefits include addressing interconnected climate-biodiversity crises, unlocking natural capital value, and meeting post-2020 biodiversity framework goals. Measurement challenges require developing standardized metrics beyond simple area coverage to ecosystem health indicators. Risks encompass verification difficulties, long timescales for ecosystem recovery, and potential conflicts with local communities. Payment for ecosystem services provides revenue models through carbon sequestration, watershed protection, and ecotourism. Recent innovations include biodiversity credits similar to carbon markets and nature-based solutions combining climate and biodiversity benefits. Biodiversity bonds demonstrate financial innovation for nature conservation, crucial as ecosystems collapse though requiring new measurement frameworks and value recognition.