Luis Barreto / WWF-UK
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Financial institutions must address deforestation and conversion risks

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Deforestation worldwide is a huge problem - and not only for nature. Financial institutions are highly exposed to the impacts of deforestation, ecosystem conversion and the associated human rights risks. WWF has recently published a new report on this topic which highlights the risks posed to financial institutions by deforestation and land conversion, and provides practical guidance for how private financial institutions can eliminate these risks from portfolios.

Below I provide a short overview of our new report, 'Seeing the forest for the trees - a practical guide for financial institutions to take action against deforestation and conversion risks. There is no pathway to net-zero without protecting and restoring nature. Feel free to comment or reach out if you have any further questions.

Avital Meijeren Karp
Adviseur Green Finance
Lees alle blogs van Avital

Forests and other natural ecosystems provide services of fundamental importance to human well-being - from regulating our climate to maintaining biodiversity and supporting human health and livelihoods. But despite their importance, ecosystems are being destroyed at a rapidly accelerating rate: almost 50% of the world’s habitable land has now been lost, with half of this destruction taking place in the last 100 years. We must protect ecosystems from degradation and destruction, and live off the ‘interest’ they provide rather than eating into the ‘capital’ itself.

There are three types of risks to take into consideration:

  • Physical risk results from the impacts of deforestation and conversion negatively affecting those businesses that depend on these ecosystems. This has a knock-on impact on the financial institutions that support or invest in them.
  • Transition risk arises from policy measures, litigation, changing consumer preferences, and technological developments that come into force to combat the rate of deforestation and ecosystem conversion. Financial institutions not prepared for these changes are exposed to significant potential losses.
  • Systemic risk refers to the larger-scale risk of the breakdown of an entire system. It is usually made up of a combination of tipping points that result in a variety of physical and transition risks.

Five steps for eliminating risk and driving change

Financial institutions are in a unique position to reverse nature loss and help restore natural systems. WWF offers detailed step-by-step guidance on eliminating risks.

  1. Before being able to take action effectively, a financial institution must develop a clear understanding of its risk profile.
  2. Develop a policy that effectively targets these risks, ensuring sufficient breadth, including a credible target and setting clear expectations for clients and investees.
  3. Incorporate deforestation, conversion and associated human rights factors into ongoing risk management and other decision-making processes.
  4. Active, early engagement is essential to support clients and investees in their journey to align their activities with the terms of the financial institution’s deforestation- and conversion-free policy.
  5. Regular, transparent reporting ensures recognition for the progress being made and generates pressure on other financial institutions to eliminate deforestation and conversion from their portfolios.

Nature positive finance opportunities

The opportunity is now. Financial institutions are at this moment well-placed to direct capital towards nature-positive activities that protect and restore key landscapes. Financial institutions developing ‘green financial products’ and instruments that embrace sustainability can capture these opportunities, for instance via green bonds, sustainable fund investments or sustainability-linked loans.

Peter van der Werf, Executive Director Active Ownership at Robeco, one of the companies that are integrating biodiversity more and more in their asset management: "By signing the COP26 Glasgow deforestation pledge, Robeco committed to work towards eliminating agricultural-driven deforestation from our investment portfolios by 2025. This requires not only integrating the value of biodiversity into our investment decisions but also using our leverage as investors to push companies, governments and data providers to play their part in ending native vegetation conversion".

Want to know more?

Feel free to get into contact. We aim to encourage a meaningful shift in finance by integrating nature into all financial decision making. Download the report and visit the DFCD section on our website.

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